MPR News PM Update
July 20, 2020

Cooler, wet and stormy Tuesday -- and the rest of this weekThere’s no heat wave in sight, but instead, we’ll have cloudy and stormy days this week. And tomorrow is no exception: A chance of rain and thunderstorms with highs in the mid-60s to the upper 70s across Minnesota.

Four tornadoes touched down in Minnesota over the weekend. Two of them occurred along the Minnesota-Wisconsin border near the Twin Cities metro area Saturday night. The other two were in central Minnesota, north of the metro. The twisters did some damage but fortunately caused no reported injuries. 

For the first time since the pandemic, 900-plus new cases reported in Minnesota today. The new mark is nearly 100 cases higher than in late May when there were up to 840 new cases confirmed a day. And unlike other increases, Monday’s case count rose significantly despite a 17 percent drop in daily tests from the previous day. Patterns in Monday’s data reflect what’s been happening for three weeks now: New case counts leap as deaths and hospitalizations flatten -- with four more deaths reported and 247 Minnesotans currently hospitalized.

Another grim first today: 9-month-old dies of COVID-19 in MinnesotaIt’s the state’s first death of a child. State health officials said the Clay County child didn’t have any underlying health condition and is among the youngest deaths recorded in the country from COVID-19. The state has asked the CDC to do some additional investigation and analysis, officials said.

Racial disparities driven by COVID-19 go beyond health issues. People of color take a bigger economic toll than white. That’s according to data compiled by ProPublica, which show much higher unemployment rates for people of color than white people. For young Black workers, who already had a high unemployment rate before the pandemic, the situation has gotten even worse, with almost 1 in 3 unemployed since the pandemic began.

— Jiwon Choi, MPR News |  @ChoiGEE1

Turn Up Your Support!
 
Lawmakers: Deal near on police changes
With a special session of the Legislature due to end Monday, leading lawmakers said they were close to a deal on police accountability measures. Other agreements, notably on a public works construction bill, were not in sight.

Earlier: Special session enters second week with little accomplished
 
SPONSOR

 
 
Biden snags support from Muslim American officials
Several prominent Muslim American elected officials endorsed Joe Biden for president in a letter organized by Emgage Action ahead of an online summit that starts Monday and features the presumptive Democratic nominee.
 
President Trump to return to daily briefings
President Donald Trump met with GOP congressional leaders, who are pushing for a much smaller relief package than Democrats. Citing TV ratings, Trump said he would resume daily press briefings.
 
As schools reopen, how much can kids spread COVID?
Studies show children have lower rates of COVID-19 and have milder symptoms than adults. But there's less information on how much kids spread the virus, which is key to safely reopen schools.
 
Help on the way for battered north Mpls. businesses
North Minneapolis was hit hard in the uprising following George Floyd’s killing. The destruction spread to more than 100 businesses — many of them locally owned shops that were already flat on their backs from the economic fallout from COVID-19.

MPR News with Angela Davis: Rebuilding, reopening and returning to Minneapolis
Waiting for justice for Floyd:  North siders work the land as an act of healing
June 8: Ransacked north Minneapolis clinic seeks larger justice
 

Preference CenterUnsubscribe

This email was sent by: Minnesota Public Radio
480 Cedar Street Saint Paul, MN, 55101