MPR News AM Update
 
Good morning,

🎧 At 9 a.m. Angela Davis talks about the effect the pandemic had a on everyone involved in Minnesota education. Join her and a panel of education professionals as they talk about what they are seeing on the front lines of education and what to do to confront it. Here's what else we have planned today.

Blizzard conditions north, more snow statewide Thursday Get the latest on Updraft.
Trees in the snow
Winter storm warning
Periods of snow continue Thursday with the heaviest snowfall shifting north and west and bands continue to rotate around our storm system. Locally heavy totals will still fall along the North Shore. Temperatures will still be mild, in the upper 20s northwest to low to mid-30s.
An art piece in the middle of the room
Art Hounds recommend works that celebrate our connection with water

Anne Labovitz’s painting series “Water Stories” is on view at Minnesota Marine Art Museum. The podcast “Back Channel Radio” tells the history of the boathouse community on Wolf Spider Island. Meanwhile in Burnsville, the Church Basement Ladies are back in a new installment of the musical comedy.
 
What else we're watching:
Elko New Market's plan to tap aquifer for bottled water plant draws residents' ire. Leaders of the Scott County town say a California-based bottling company’s proposal would deliver jobs and growth. Critics worry it could jeopardize the health of the Prairie du Chien-Jordan aquifer in a region struggling already with severe to extreme drought.

Get cozy at these 10 Minneapolis coffee shops. There’s nothing like a warm beverage and welcoming surroundings to make the chill of winter melt into the background. A cozy coffee shop has appeal in all seasons, but the pull can feel especially strong this time of year. Here are 10 enticing options spread throughout Minneapolis.

Tips to keep you and your family safe from the tripledemic during the holidays. NPR asked a handful of public health experts how Americans should approach the holiday season. They suggest that Americans take stock of the risk and take appropriate safety measures to protect themselves and those who are most likely to face severe disease — including older people and the immunocompromised.

 
— Sam Stroozas, MPR News
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