Latest news with #ElkRiver


New York Times
14 hours ago
- New York Times
Missouri Man Dies in Dam's Hydraulics While Trying to Save Trapped Boater
A Missouri man who jumped into a river to help a boater stranded in a dam died on Sunday after becoming trapped by the dam's hydraulics, the authorities said. The man, 54, was pronounced dead at a hospital Sunday evening, the Missouri State Highway Patrol said in an incident report. Emergency responders were dispatched to a water rescue of two people in the Elk River, , near Noel, Mo., at the southwest corner of the state, at around 5:35 p.m. on Sunday, the agency said in its report. One of the people had gone over a low-head dam in the river. According to the incident report, the man jumped into the water above the dam to help a boater who had become trapped in the powerful, washing machine-like waters at the base of the dam called the hydraulics. The man, whose name was not released, was then swept up by the current and pulled through the hydraulics, the agency said. He resurfaced downstream, where a bystander pulled him to safety, and emergency responders administered first aid. The man was transported to Ozarks Community Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The boater was uninjured, the highway patrol said. Lowhead dams are man-made structures that span waterways and allow water to continuously flow overtop, according to the environmental group American Rivers. They are sometimes referred to as 'drowning machines' because they can create a recirculating roller-like current at the base of the dam, which can trap people, boats or other objects, and make it nearly impossible to escape. About 50 fatalities typically occur each year at low-head dams across the United States, according to the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Yahoo
10-07-2025
- Yahoo
17-year-old Elk River girl's death in Brooklyn Park shooting ruled a homicide
A 17-year-old Elk River girl's death has been officially ruled a homicide. Zoe Kpanlin was shot in the chest July 1 near the intersection of Lakeland Avenue North and 70th Avenue North in Brooklyn Park, according to the Hennepin County Medical Examiner. There have been at least 23 homicide offenses in Brooklyn Park so far this year, according to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, were killed in their Brooklyn Park home in a targeted attack on June 14. St. Cloud lawn care rules change: What to know about new fees, grass height requirement Kpanlin was transported to North Memorial Health Hospital in Robbinsdale, where she died that same day. A Hennepin County Medical Examiner report states her death was a homicide. Brooklyn Park is a suburb of Minneapolis, and is about 22 miles south of Elk River, which is in Sherburne County. Upcoming Elk River court case: Trial set for man who allegedly told lesbian mothers to 'get out of Sherburne County' Sign up for our alerts to receive the latest updates on important news. Corey Schmidt covers politics and courts for the St. Cloud Times. He can be reached at cschmidt@ This article originally appeared on St. Cloud Times: Minnesota homicide: Elk River girl dies in shooting at Brooklyn Park

Yahoo
09-07-2025
- Yahoo
UPDATE: Teen fatally injured after being hit by jet ski on Elk River
Jul. 8—A 17-year-old girl from Tennessee was killed Monday after a jet ski struck her while she was swimming in the Elk River near the Clements area, according to Limestone County Coroner Mike West and the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency. West said he received a call at 1:43 p.m. and he drove to Athens-Limestone Hospital where the teenager had been admitted. He said she was declared dead about an hour later and her official cause of death was blunt force trauma. "She was in the water on a float and there was another person on a jet ski that was circling her and hit her accidentally," West said. "She was unconscious. They pulled her to the dock and when they got her out of the water, she was not responsive and didn't have a pulse. So then, they started CPR." According to ALEA, the girl fell off an inflatable tube being towed by an 11-foot Sea-Doo personal watercraft operated by another 17-year-old from Tennessee. After she fell from the tube, she was struck by a 10-foot Sea-Doo personal watercraft driven by a 48-year-old from Pulaski, Tennessee. West said Clements Volunteer Fire Department, Limestone County Sheriff's Office and Athens-Limestone Emergency Medical Services all responded to the scene on Bream Bluff Road. He said the Alabama Marine Police are investigating the case. Jet ski wrecks and fatalities are not something that happens often in Limestone County, according to West. "Usually it's kayakers," West said. — or 256-340-2442.


Forbes
10-06-2025
- Business
- Forbes
How JonnyPops' $100 Million Popsicle Business Licks The Competition
With flavors like Rainbow Superpower, Very Berry Lemonade and Unicorn, popsicle entrepreneurs Erik Brust and Connor Wray know how to channel their inner Willy Wonka, but their factory in Elk River, Minnesota is strictly for frozen confections. The two Forbes 30 Under 30 listers produce nearly 30 kinds of JonnyPops—made without anything artificial from just five ingredients or less—and in 13 years, their business has quietly become one of the hottest brands in the frozen aisle. JonnyPops are coveted by children, MAHA moms and nostalgic millennials alike, and this summer is primed to be the best yet. 'The energy of the summer is contagious,' says Brust, JonnyPops' 32-year-old CEO. 'This is our Super Bowl—and it just happens to be multiple months long.' Some 60% of JonnyPops' annual sales, which Forbes estimates at $100 million, come during the hottest six months of the year, Brust says. JonnyPops doesn't comment on its financials. But the brand, which Brust shares has been profitable from year one, and now pulls in an estimated 30% net margin, is the top seller among natural grocers' lineup of 'frozen novelties' nationwide, which grocery data provider Spins tracks as nearly $7 billion in annual retail sales. Brust believes that the business he and Wray, JonnyPops' 33-year-old chief financial officer, dreamed up in their dorm room at St. Olaf College, about an hour south of Minneapolis, is built for the long haul. 'We don't chase fads,' he says of the business, which was bootstrapped with friends and family, and has taken on no private equity funding. 'We're thinking about what's the next decade look like. This was never a grow-the-business-to-sell-it type idea.' But if the pair did decide to sell, even as the market for food deals has scaled back multiples amid uncertainty and volatility, JonnyPops could expect to get around $300 million or more. Mainstream ice cream bars like Dove and Klondike have been struggling as consumers opt for healthier brands. Their respective parent companies—Mars and Unilever—need brands like JonnyPops (which has been eating away at their sales) for future growth. That pressure is keeping the market for acquisitions relatively strong. Frozen treats are a fair consolidated industry, with Ferrero (Halo Top, Blue Bunny), Mars (Dove), Unilever (Ben & Jerry's, Talenti) and General Mills (Häagen-Dazs) controlling the majority of the market share. But there is still more room for growth: The $50 billion giant Mars, for example, has been investing in the development of its Dove bar line for the past three years with the goal of growing that business to more than $1 billion in annual sales globally. Brust first met Wray in 2010 in a physics class at St. Olaf. As Brust studied, he couldn't get his mind off an idea he had come up with while talking with his cousin Jonathan, known as Jonny, at a family wedding back in 2007. The two cousins had come up with the idea for a socially responsible business when they both realized they loved ice pops but were having concerns about the ingredients in popular brands. And after Jonny tragically died following a struggle with addiction, Brust and Wray decided to bring Jonny's dream to reality in his honor. They began making frozen smoothies-on-a-stick in their dorm with a blender, strawberries and cream. Their version had less than half the sugar and fat of traditional ice cream pops. For the first two years, the duo ran the business while they finished up college (and started their tradition of donating a portion of profits every year to organizations that support addiction recovery). They started with $4,000 spent (from savings from jobs during high school) on a stainless-steel ice cream machine from Brazil to make popsicles on a countertop and used a wedding banquet center's commercial kitchen during weekdays. On the weekends, they sold popsicles at farmers' markets and other local venues. 'We tried to make methodical investments as opposed to spending a whole bunch of money on a really big swing and hoping it works,' Brust recalls. 'We've been incrementally building year after year after year.' By 2018, JonnyPops were being sold at Kroger, Target, Walmart, Costco and the pair earned a spot on the 30 Under 30 food and drink list. But sales were still small, an estimated $5 million a year. So the duo pivoted from smoothies to making popsicles with no artificial ingredients or high-fructose corn syrup. The rebrand worked. In the five years following that shift, the business hit triple-digit sales growth each year, reaching an estimated $50 million by 2021. (JonnyPops declined to comment on its finances.) 'They were quick to realize that they were making a very, very high-quality product and the way they did that was unique, and so controlling production was essential,' says David Finch, a 59-year-old longtime food industry CEO, who met the then-college students while running a Minnesota-based contract manufacturer and became an advisor, investor and board director. 'You can't do that with a business partner who's trying to figure out how he's going to make money along the way.' As the JonnyPops business grew, they learned how difficult it is to make layered popsicles of different flavors without fillers or gums at scale. They wanted to start from scratch, because the machinery used by bigger competitors hasn't been updated since the 1980s. That's why JonnyPops has 20 patents and trademarks, and why it self-manufactures. Retro Cool: "I remember having these cool, colorful pops when I was younger," says Whole Foods executive Juliana Bandin, "and JonnyPops takes me back to those memories with their flavors.' 'Everyone else is running these really old-style things that make the same widgets,' says Brust. 'We want to be inventive and push the boundaries and do things that have never been done before.' Since opening a larger factory in 2021—the 80,000-square-foot plant in Elk River—Brust now believes the company is set up for many years to come. JonnyPops has exclusive lines with Target and representation at 27,000 stores nationwide from H-E-B and Publix to Wegmans and Whole Foods. 'The brand fills the cup and then some on the nostalgia trend. I remember having these cool, colorful pops when I was younger, and JonnyPops takes me back to those memories with their flavors,' says Juliana Bandin, principal category merchant for frozen at Whole Foods. 'Flavor is the number one driver of purchase for frozen desserts, and when a brand nails that—while also offering products that are eye-catching, fun, and nostalgic—the sales speak for themselves.' But around 60% of grocery stores nationwide have yet to sell one of their popsicles, and that includes going nationwide with Walmart. Brust and Wray believe they can double their footprint but it will be incremental over several years. 'We have every bit of belief that our brand's going to get there, but we want to do it in the right way,' Wray says. 'When we launch with retailers, we want to have the right partnership, the right items going into the right places at the right time, with us beating the drum and having that discipline.' In the meantime, JonnyPops is one of the few brands growing while its category of competitors has faced some contractions in recent years. Sales are up around 3% so far this year, according to NilsenIQ grocery sales data, but for the three years prior, sales have fluctuated between growing 1% and declining 3%. The brand's success has also made it a target. Last summer, GoodPop, a competitor that formulates its popsicles with fruit juice and no added sugar, filed a class action lawsuit for false advertising, alleging that JonnyPops actually contains a lot of sugar and isn't as healthy as the company claims. (JonnyPops, which uses cane sugar, declined to comment on the ongoing litigation.) Otherwise, the trends are promising: More than 50% of JonnyPops' consumers and customers have discovered the product only within the last 18 to 20 months. 'Flavors are great, but more of we want the pops to be these magical experiences—things that people have never seen before,' says Brust. 'We have the mindset that our best product is yet to come.'


CBS News
06-06-2025
- CBS News
Authorities search Elk River landfill in disappearance of Jordan "Manny" Collins Jr.
An apartment building where Manny lived with his father is now marked as a crime scene An apartment building where Manny lived with his father is now marked as a crime scene An apartment building where Manny lived with his father is now marked as a crime scene A search involving multiple agencies is being conducted Friday north of the Twin Cities in the disappearance of 16-year-old Jordan Dupree Collins Jr., who went missing last month. According to the Anoka County Sheriff's Office, the search is being conducted at the Waste Management Landfill in Elk River. The search is in connection to Jordan Dupree Collins Jr., who went missing last month. Authorities believe Collins' disappearance was "against his will" and a person of interest was identified, but no arrests have been announced. Jordan Dupree Collins Ashley Berry/Minnesota BCA In a press conference held in late May with Collins' family, Anoka County Sheriff Brad Wise says he doesn't think this is a case of a teenager running away. Collins — who is commonly known by the nickname, Manny — was last seen on May 8 near the 4900 block of University Avenue Northeast. An apartment building near the intersection is now under investigation. Ashley Berry, Collins' mother, says her son has lived at the building with his father since mid-April, with plans to return to her in June. Investigators have spoken with Collins' father multiple times. Wise didn't identify the person of interest on Wednesday, but noted no one is in custody and no criminal charges have been filed. Agencies involved in the search include the Columbia Heights Police Department, Anoka County Sheriff's Office, Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and Federal Bureau of Investigation. NOTE: Video is from May 29, 2025.