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Minnesota requests initial comments
Minnesota has asked interested parties to provide their first regulatory comments regarding the cultivation, processing and manufacturing of cannabis products. You can access the survey here. The survey is available until November 30.
This survey is intended to gather information and does not request comments on any specific regulation. However, it can be helpful for licensees to lay the groundwork for what is necessary for a healthy market.
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Melissa strengthens into Category 5 hurricane as it approaches Jamaica
Hurricane Melissa intensified to Category 5 on Monday as it approached Jamaica with up to 30 inches of rain and a potentially life-threatening storm surge.
Melissa is expected to make landfall on the island on Tuesday and pass through Cuba and the Bahamas until Wednesday.
Melissa was centered about 130 miles south-southwest of Kingston, Jamaica, and about 315 miles south-southwest of Guantánamo, Cuba, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said.
The hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 160 mph and was moving west at 3 mph, the center said.
Category 5 is the highest on the Saffir-Simpson scale with sustained winds exceeding 157 mph. Melissa is the most powerful hurricane in recent history to directly hit the small Caribbean nation.
Some local areas of eastern Jamaica could receive 40 inches of rain, while western Haiti could receive 16 inches, according to the hurricane center. “Catastrophic flash floods and numerous landslides are likely,” he warns.
The slow-moving storm killed at least three people in Haiti and a fourth person in the Dominican Republic, where another person remains missing.
“I want to urge Jamaicans to take this seriously,” said Desmond McKenzie, vice-president of the Jamaica Disaster Risk Management Council. “Don't play with Melissa. She's not a safe bet.”
The hurricane is expected to make landfall again later Tuesday in eastern Cuba. A hurricane warning was in effect for the provinces of Granma, Santiago de Cuba, Guantánamo and Holguin, while a tropical storm warning was in effect for Las Tunas. Up to 20 inches of rain was forecast for parts of Cuba, along with significant storm surge along the coast.
A record storm for Jamaica
Melissa could be the strongest hurricane Jamaica has seen in decades, said Evan Thompson, senior director of the Jamaica Weather Service. He warned that cleanup and damage assessment would be significantly delayed due to landslides, flooding and blocked roads.
In addition to rainfall, Melissa is likely to bring a potentially life-threatening storm surge to the southern coast of Jamaica, peaking about 4 meters above the ground, near and east of where Melissa's center makes landfall, the US center said.
“Don’t make stupid decisions,” warned Daryl Vaz, Jamaica’s Minister of Transport. “We are going through a very, very serious period in the coming days.”
A success on Hispaniola
The storm has already brought heavy rain to the Dominican Republic, where schools and government offices were ordered to remain closed Monday in four of the nine provinces still under red alert.
Melissa damaged more than 750 homes across the country, displacing more than 3,760 people. Floodwaters also cut off access to at least 48 communities, officials said.
In neighboring Haiti, the storm destroyed crops in three regions, including 37 acres of corn, at a time when at least 5.7 million people, more than half the country's population, are suffering hunger crisis levelswith 1.9 million people facing emergency levels of hunger.
“Floods are blocking access to agricultural land and markets, compromising harvests and the winter agricultural season,” the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations said.
Melissa is expected to continue to dump torrential rains on southern Haiti and the southern Dominican Republic in the coming days.
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Two Twin Cities theaters take on authoritarianism in their fall offerings

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US, China say trade deal moves closer as Trump, Xi prepare to meet

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — A trade deal between the United States and China is moving closer, officials from the world's two largest economies said Sunday as they reached an initial consensus that President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping should aim to finalize at their high-stakes meeting.
Any agreement would be a relief for international markets, even if it does not resolve underlying problems related to manufacturing imbalances and access to cutting-edge computer chips.
Beijing recently restricted exports of rare earth elements needed for cutting-edge technologies, and Trump responded by threatening to impose additional tariffs on Chinese products. The prospect of wider conflict risks weakening global economic growth.
China's top trade negotiator, Li Chenggang, told reporters that the two sides had reached an agreement. "preliminary consensus," while Trump's Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said there was "a very successful setting."
Trump also expressed confidence that a deal was within reach, saying the Chinese "we want to make a deal and we want to make a deal." The Republican president is due to meet Xi on Thursday in South Korea, the last stop on his trip to Asia. Trump reiterated that he plans to visit China in the future and suggested that Xi could come to Washington or Mar-a-Lago, Trump's private club in Florida.
Bessent told CBS "Face the nation" that the threat of additional higher tariffs on China was "effectively off the table." In interviews with several U.S. news shows, he said discussions with China had resulted in initial agreements to prevent fentanyl precursor chemicals from entering the United States, and that Beijing would take action. "substantial" purchases of soybeans and other agricultural products while postponing export controls on rare earths.
Progress toward a possible deal came at the annual Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in Kuala Lumpur, where Trump sought to burnish his reputation as an international negotiator.
Yet his deal-making style has led to serious disruption at home and abroad. His import taxes have muddied relations with his trading partners, while the U.S. government shutdown has brought him into disputes with Democrats.

Trump attends Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire ceremony
At the summit, Thailand and Cambodia signed an expanded ceasefire agreement in a ceremony attended by Trump. His threats of economic pressure prompted the two countries to end skirmishes along their disputed border earlier this year.
Thailand will release Cambodian prisoners and Cambodia will begin withdrawing its heavy artillery under the first phase of the deal. Regional observers will monitor the situation to ensure fighting does not resume.
"We did something that many people said was impossible to do," » Trump said. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet called this "historic day," and Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said the agreement creates "the building blocks of lasting peace."
The president signed economic framework agreements with Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia, some aimed at increasing trade in essential minerals. The United States wants to rely less on China, which has used its limited exports of key components in technology manufacturing as a bargaining chip in trade negotiations.
"It is very important that we cooperate as willing partners with each other to ensure that we can have smooth and secure supply chains, for quality of life, for our populations and for security," » said US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.

Trump reconnects with a key region of the world
Trump only attended the summit once during his first term, and U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth appeared unfamiliar with ASEAN during his confirmation hearing in January.
This year's event was an opportunity for Trump to reconnect with countries that have a combined economy of $3.8 trillion and 680 million people.
"The United States stands with you 100% and we intend to be a strong partner and friend for many generations to come." » Trump said. He described his counterparts as "spectacular leaders" and I said that "everything you touch turns to gold."
Trump's tariff threats have been credited with helping to spur negotiations between Thailand and Cambodia. Some of the worst modern fighting between the two countries took place over five days in July, killing dozens and displacing hundreds of thousands.
The president then threatened to suspend trade deals unless the fighting stopped. Since then, a fragile truce has persisted.
Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim welcomed the agreement between Thailand and Cambodia, telling the summit that "it reminds us that reconciliation is not a concession, but an act of courage."
Tariffs at the center of Trump's trip
Trump met with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in Kuala Lumpur, who was also attending the summit. There has been friction between them over Brazil's prosecution of Jair Bolsonaro, the country's former president and close Trump ally. Bolsonaro was convicted last month of trying to overturn his country's election results.
During their meeting, Trump said he might reduce tariffs on Brazil that he passed in an effort to show leniency to Bolsonaro.
"I think we should be able to make good deals for both countries," he said.
While Trump grew closer to Lula, he avoided Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney. The president is angry with Canada over a TV ad protesting his trade policies, and on his way to the summit he announced on social media that he would raise tariffs on Canada because of it.
One leader absent from the summit was Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Although he was close to Trump during his first term, the relationship has become more strained of late. Trump sparked irritation by boasting about resolving a recent dispute between India and Pakistan and by raising tariffs on India on its purchases of Russian oil.
Copyright 2025, NPR
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