Morning Edition

Cathy Wurzer
Cathy Wurzer
MPR

Morning Edition, with Cathy Wurzer in St. Paul and NPR hosts in Washington and Los Angeles, brings you all the news from overnight and the information you need to start your day. Listen from 4 to 9 a.m. every weekday.

Morning Announcements | Weather chats with Mark Seeley

Legislature will consider breaking up the Department of Human Services
Calls to restructure the Minnesota Department of Human Services are intensifying after a legislative auditor described "troubling dysfunction" in the agency. One of the people who will be at the center of that discussion is State Senator Michelle Benson, R-Ham Lake. She spoke with Morning Edition host Cathy Wurzer.
Mark Seeley: A wet October is what we'll remember
Very wet and cool is how most Minnesotans will remember October 2019, and rightfully so. This October ranked as the 21st coolest and the 6th wettest in state history. Retired University of Minnesota meteorologist Mark Seeley discusses the weather with Morning Edition host Cathy Wurzer.
Duluth, Minneapolis push for state’s first fees on disposable bags
Minneapolis’ ordinance would charge a nickel for all disposable bags. Duluth’s would only apply to plastic bags. The proposals come two years after state lawmakers blocked the efforts of Minneapolis and other cities to impose outright bans on plastic bags.
Time to fall back? One Minnesota company gets rid of clocks instead
For decades, a crew of nearly two dozen people fanned out across 3M’s 409-acre campus, and worked in 12-hour shifts twice a year to set clocks back in the fall and ahead in the spring.
New tax credit for ag land might help rural schools increase funding
Schools in rural districts have struggled to pass property tax increases to pay for new schools at least in part because farmers have often opposed big property tax increases on farm land. A new tax credit will significantly reduce the share farmers pay, and rural schools hope the change will make it easier to replace aging buildings.
Water Gremlin, state meet in Ramsey County court over closure of the plant
The White Bear Township company makes car battery terminals and fishing weights out of lead. Lead can be difficult to control without a strict program that workers and management follow, industry experts say.