Gas prices drop more than $1 compared to this time last year
The 4th of July is less than two weeks away, and the summer travel season is in full swing.
John Lauritsen is an Emmy award-winning reporter from Montevideo, Minn. He joined WCCO-TV in late-July of 2007. Two days after he started, the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed.
Before his television career, John grew up on a farm near Milan, Minnesota and graduated from Montevideo Senior High School. He received a Master's Degree in mass communications from St. Cloud State University, and has also taught a class there as well. He credits growing up on a farm and going to school in a small town with helping him become the reporter he is today.
He began his career at KSAX-TV in Alexandria, Minn., before moving to Waterloo, Iowa, where he worked for KWWL-TV. John also worked at Channel 12 in Brooklyn Park, Minn., before coming to WCCO-TV. He has been a reporter, anchor, sports reporter, sports anchor, editor, producer, and photographer during his television career.
During his time at WCCO-TV, John has covered a variety of stories. He has reported on everything from floods to tornadoes to blizzards that have dumped nearly two feet of snow on Minnesota. You can also find John covering a crime story, a fire, a human interest story, or a sporting event.
John's favorite stories are those that highlight a special moment in someone's life. In 2008, he reported on a soldier who came home from Iraq and surprised his daughter at her volleyball game.
And though he isn't a fan of snakes, John reported on Minnesota's only poisonous snake population in southeastern Minnesota and he managed not to get bit in the process.
When he's not reporting, John can be found at the gym or playing in one of three volleyball leagues that keep him busy year-round. He also plays in a football league in the fall and is an active tennis player.
In 2009, he ran the Twin Cities Marathon for the first time. He has also tried surfing, skydiving and rock climbing, and is an avid reader whenever he can find time to sit down.
John lives in Maple Grove with his wife, Jessica, and children, Harlow and Bo.
The 4th of July is less than two weeks away, and the summer travel season is in full swing.
The facility is proactive, not reactive. It pulls in water from Crystal Lake and removes pollutants, like phosphorous, that are main ingredients for algae blooms.
No matter which way you approach Phelps Mill, you're going to hear the rush of the Otter Tail River. And you're going to see a site that's been here since the first automobiles were hitting the road.
Last fall, Renville County farmer Bill Voelz fell while working on a deer stand, and was paralyzed from the waist down. But after surgery and months of therapy, he finally got a chance to go home.
Social studies happens to be Nathan Ludwig's favorite subject. So, when he learned he could visit the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier if his essay won, he sat down and wrote from the heart.
The Minnesota Twins partnered with Courage Kenny Rehabilitation and the city of Brooklyn Park to put on an adaptive softball clinic on Friday.
With its light soil and good water supply, Dakota County has helped Minnesota rank number 2 in the nation when it comes to pea production.
A couple of years ago, the Zachmans turned the old dairy barn into a place to spend the night. The idea was then born to turn it into a regenerative farm, and a hands-on experience for visitors.
Back in February, Owen Hubert spent the first 16 minutes of his life without oxygen and without a heartbeat. But doctors and nurses never gave up on him.
You may have seen videos of Minnesota farmers dumping thousands of gallons of milk on their farms, because of oversupply and processing plants being unable to keep up. And finding a new home for milk isn't easy.
MnDOT cameras showed what appeared to be officials attempting to corral the pigs that had gotten loose. It's not yet clear the truck driver's condition, or whether they were seriously hurt in the crash.
John Lauritsen heads north to a Moorhead Dairy Queen, where the Dilly Bar was born nearly 70 years ago.
Crews battled two house fires at the same time in Eden Prairie overnight, and four people have been taken to the hospital. Neighbors described what they said sounded like explosions before the fires.
One-hundred-and-eighty years ago, bison were killed or driven off by European settlers and close to extinction. But last fall, eight females were reintroduced to the park, coming from Blue Mounds and Minneopa State Parks, where similar efforts are taking place.
John Lauritsen shows us some gigantic stones ended up just across the border in Wisconsin.