Wednesday, April 29, 2026

May 7 Protest


Stand with us to protest Derrick Van Orden's vote to cut our healthcare so that billionaires can get even more tax breaks!

Our leaders must prioritize working Wisconsinites, not strip us of our healthcare so that billionaires can continue not paying their fair share.

Our voices are stronger together!

WHEN: Thursday, May 7th at 9:45 am

WHERE: Van Orden's Congressional Office 210 7th St S, La Crosse, WI 54601

COALITION PARTNERS INCLUDE: Birds on a Wire, Chippewa Valley Indivisible Committee to Protect Healthcare, Opportunity Wisconsin, SEIU Wisconsin, Working Families Power

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Pool Talk

From the School District of La Crosse:

Help shape the future of northside pools
Posted by School District of La Crosse on Monday, Apr 27 at 11:00 AM in School District of La Crosse, Neighborhood Associations Group

Dear families, staff, and community members,

We have an important opportunity in front of us, and we want you to be part of it.

The City of La Crosse and the School District of La Crosse invite community members to take part in a series of Pool Collaboration Information Sessions beginning this week.

For more than 40 years, two pools have served the north side community. Today, both facilities are aging, and leaders are taking a closer look at what comes next.

The City’s outdoor pool at Logan Middle School will close this summer due to condition and cost concerns. The indoor pool at Logan High School remains open but is nearing the end of its lifespan, with increasing repair needs and limitations that prevent hosting competitions.

Because of this, the City and School District are exploring the possibility of a shared indoor, year-round aquatic facility. The goal is to create a space that supports student learning during the school day and expands access for community use in the evenings, weekends, and summer.

No decisions have been made.

These upcoming sessions are an important part of the process. They are designed to give community members a clear understanding of the current challenges, answer questions, and create space for ideas and feedback that will help shape what comes next.

The proposed concept includes space for both recreation and competition, along with community amenities designed to serve swimmers of all ages. The YMCA is also part of the conversation, helping explore a shared-use model that supports long-term sustainability and access.

Community input will play a key role in guiding next steps.

Upcoming Sessions:
  • April 29, 6:00 p.m. — Black River Beach House
  • May 7, 6:00 p.m. — South Side Neighborhood Center
  • May 13, 12:00 p.m. — Virtual
  • May 19, 6:00 p.m. — Logan Middle School
  • May 20, 12:00 p.m. — Virtual

Community members are encouraged to attend any session that fits their schedule.

A community survey will be mailed to households across La Crosse in the coming week by the City and School District, offering more information and another opportunity for community members to share their input.

Be part of the conversation. Ask questions. Share your perspective. Help shape what comes next.

We hope to see you there.

Monday, April 27, 2026

Join a group - League of Women Voters

Whether it's defending democracy, working for social justice, or fighting for meaningful climate action, one of the most powerful things an individual can do is join a group. Among historian Timothy Snyder's Twenty Lessons on Fighting Tyranny from the Twentieth Century are several that encourage us to band and hold together 

2. Defend institutions. It is institutions that help us to preserve decency. They need our help as well. Do not speak of “our institutions” unless you make them yours by acting on their behalf. Institutions do not protect themselves. So choose an institution you care about and take its side. 

3. Beware the one-party state. The parties that remade states and suppressed rivals were not omnipotent from the start. They exploited a historic moment to make political life impossible for their opponents. So support the multi-party system and defend the rules of democratic elections.

13. Practice corporeal politics. Power wants your body softening in your chair and your emotions dissipating on the screen. Get outside. Put your body in unfamiliar places with unfamiliar people. Make new friends and march with them.

15. Contribute to good causes. Be active in organizations, political or not, that express your own view of life. Pick a charity or two and set up autopay.  

One example of a fighting, determined organization with a long history of perseverance and success is the League of Women Voters. Established in 1920, just before a one-vote margin in Tennessee pushed ratification of the 19th Amendment over the line, the LWV has been educating about, advocating for, and supporting voting rights for more than 100 years.

You've probably seen the La Crosse area League (founded in 1924) registering voters at the Interstate Fair, in high schools, at Pride in the Park and Juneteenth and Earth Fair, and at polling places. The league also offers voter education, candidate information, issues forums, help with understanding legislation that impacts voting rights, and information about other issues, from legislative maps to environmental concerns, that impact us all. They also offer monthly programs, special speakers, and a book club.

You don't have to be a woman to join the League! Everyone is welcome. Consider it. They are one of the oldest, strongest, fiercest defenders of our basic Constitutional rights and we need them now more than ever.

While the registration deadline has passed, there will be a member Meet and Greet on Thursday at JavaVino between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. Join online, buy your own refreshments, and network with this important crew.

If you join in the next week or so, consider attending the League's annual meeting on May 13 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Stoney Creek Conference Center in Onalaska. Registration by May 5 is required. 

Even if you can't join right now, you can still volunteer with the League or donate to the cause. Their website is full of useful voter information, especially the national league's Vote411 website and the local league's Candidate and Issues Info page.

Headlight/Taillight Repair

From Coulee DSA


There will be a free headlight/taillight repair clinic hosted by Coulee DSA. You must register for details. Register by texting 608-387-7497 with the following info: Your first name & license plate # OR make, model, and year of car. 

###

On a somewhat related note, if your ride is human-powered and you need a set of head & tail lights, check at the La Crosse Public Library circulation desk.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

May Day

  From Indivisible


May Day Actions

This May Day, we’re flexing our economic power as workers, students, and everyday people to send a clear message to the Trump regime: we will not do business as usual while they trample our rights, terrorize our communities, and drag us into a senseless war in Iran. 

NO WORK  *  NO SCHOOL  *  NO SHOPPING

Local Action (from La Crosse Indivisible):

UNPAID PEACEFUL PROTEST  
Friday, May 1st @ 12-2pm 
1600 Losey Blvd. S. 

This is across the street from Derrick Van Orden’s new office he is calling a "Battle Station.” This is the same guy who has repeatedly called the Democrats out for their violent rhetoric. He is running again this year to represent La Crosse and the 3rd District in Washington in the House of Representatives. He hasn’t had a town hall meeting in over a year. When he has met with constituents they have been handpicked photo ops, or he has accused them of being paid actors. 

We will also be accepting diaper donations for The Parenting Place.  

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Take real climate action

Sunday, the Sustainability Institute and others will host an EARTH Fair ftom 11 to 4 at Myrick Park. There will be music, food, kids' activities, information, demonstrations, and opportunities to connect and learn.

Will anyone be there with a display of the latest dire predictions about what's coming thanks to accelerating global heating due to still increasing greenhouse gas emissions? That should be the main event if we're honest.

But, honestly, we're not very honest when it comes to looking the climate crisis in the face and following through on commitments to really do something about it. We're still fighting global fossil fuel monsters; politicians, national and local, afraid to make necessary meaningful changes; systems that block or slow lower-emissions processes; and individuals who prefer to party on while the party boat is aimed straight at the waterfall.

Since summer 2019, when the City of La Crosse pledged to reduce community-wide carbon emissions--5% by 2020, 20% by 2025, 30% by 2030, 45% by 2035, 60% by 2040, 80% by 2045, 100% by 2050--global atmospheric carbon dioxide has increased from about 415 ppm to 430 ppm, indicating our local goals were too timid and too slow. 

A May assessment of city-wide greenhouse gas emissions concluded that local emissions are down just 12%, mostly thanks to Xcel energy's efforts to switch out fossil fuels with renewables. What's the city's plan to get on track or even ahead of the 2030 goal? That's something Earth Fair goers could ask city staff or elected officials they might meet at the fair.

A comprehensive Climate Action Plan (CAP) was approved by the city council in December 2022. It listed hundreds of action steps, not as a pick-and-choose menu, but as a complete guide. If we could accomplish each and every one of those steps, all together those actions might give us a chance to meet our goals. 

But, so far the plan has mostly gathered dust. Many of the priority "cross-cutting" steps meant to create an atmosphere and favorable conditions for the rest, have not been done or even started. Our CAP steering committee, with a minimal budget and facing city councils that really just don't get it (to be kind), has been stuck trying to accomplish much with too few resources and too little support.

As we saw with the bike lanes battle, even relatively simple steps to reduce transportation-related emissions that the state would have paid for are stymied by a timid council swayed by baseless, hysterical arguments by those who want nothing to change. 

But, things have to change.

The SHIFT initiative at Project Drawdown suggests ways individuals can start taking high-power climate action within five spheres: citizen, professional, investor, consumer, and role model. The top recommendations for individuals are pushing electeds for action, connecting with groups that are pushing for action, and encouraging all our connections, including neighbors and workplaces, to push for and take action.

The main benefit of individual change, reducing one's "carbon footprint" (which we now know was a marketing scheme developed by the fossil fuel industry to push off responsibility for the climate crisis on people changing light bulbs) is in the behavior modeling. Individual's solar panels, electric vehicles, plant-based diets, investment divestment, and waste-less lives may not have much impact, but as a way to change others' and community behaviors, it's powerful.

Here's one individual behavior that can make an immediate and, possibly, long term difference: don't drive to the Earth Fair.* 

U.S. transportation-related emissions, mostly from us driving fossil fuel cars and light trucks around, are the highest of all sectors. Replacing driving with walking, biking, car-pooling, or taking public transit immediately reduces emissions and tailpipe and particle pollution. Taking the bus and inviting friends to ride with you can model and demonstrate more climate-friendly behaviors that can reduce emissions and improve the system for everyone.

The MTU will be free on Sunday and the hourly Route 4 will stretch a bit that day to drop off and pick up at the park. If you're not already on the 4 route, you can take your closest bus to the Transit Center and transfer there. Or you can carpool and park along the route, including the Jay Street ramp, Aldi South, or other lots and streets. Get more details here: http://lacrosseata.blogspot.com/p/earth-fair-bus.html

* Some will be driving to the fair to help people learn about another low-emissions way to travel - electric vehicles. Ask Me About My EV will be in the lower parking lot where volunteers will show their vehicles and talk about their experiences as EV owners--buying , charging, traveling, maintaining--and how solar + EV can be a cost-effective way to step out of the fossil fuel system.

Come to the Earth Fair. Take the bus. Connect with groups who are pushing for stronger, faster clinate action.

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Garden Season

Garden season has started. If you're a veteran gardener, you probably already have a plan and seeds. Maybe you've started seeds indoors or already planted your carrots, peas, and spinach.

The Horticulture Club at Western Technical College will have a plant sale on April 22 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. including vegetables, herbs, flowers, and bare root trees. Coulee Montessori's Plant Sale will be held at North Side Elementary May 8 through 10.

And GROW La Crosse will hold a plant sale at the  Western Tech greenhouse on May 7, 8, and 9.

If you don't have your own garden, volunteer at a community garden.

The Kane Street Community Garden is always looking for volunteers. This important resource annually produces thousands of pounds of food for our community thanks to hundreds of volunteers. This year, they are offering a compost program. Bring a five gallon bucket of acceptable kitchen scraps and get a bucket of compost for your home garden. Check their website for volunteer times and harvest rules.

The Community Victory Gardens at Aptiv on South Avenue and City Hall also welcome volunteers. Started by the City of La Crosse Planning Department in 2020 in response to COVID, these smaller gardens offer the chance to garden with others or on your own with a "pick what you need" policy for anyone who stops by. Group gardening times are Friday mornings from 8 to 9 at Aptiv (3000 South Ave.) starting April 24, and Tuesday evenings from 5 to 6 at City Hall starting April 28. But, if those times don't work for you, go when you can. If you'd like a little guidance, contact MinisterOfBeans at Gmail or call or text 608-315 -2693 to arrange a time.

In addition, GROW La Crosse maintains gardens at every La Crosse School District elementary school. Interns and volunteers are important to help maintain the gardens over the summer. Often, volunteers can pick from the gardens, too. Sign up at https://growlacrosse.org/get-involved/

If you just want food without gardening, check out the Community Food Forest at the YMCA, corner of Main Street and West Ave. Fruit trees and shrubs bear LOADS of fruit throughout the season. If you want to volunteer, get more info at https://www.laxymca.org/food-forest

Food prices are expected to rise and food availability decrease as WW T rages on and global warming accelerates. Supporting and strengthening local food systems, from neighborhood gardens to regional food producers, makes for a more resilient community. Learning to garden by volunteering, is a valuable free education opportunity with benefits. 


Saturday, April 18, 2026

Zoning info sessions

 

The City will be hosting two Joint Common Council/City Plan Commission Workshops to review and discuss proposed updates to the Zoning Code.

Community members are welcome to attend the listening sessions.

📅 Monday, April 27, 2026
⏰ 5:00 – 7:00 PM
📍 Black River Beach House

Focus: Proposed updates to commercial, industrial, conservation, and related districts

These workshops are an opportunity to learn more about the proposed changes and stay informed about the future of development in our community.

In addition, another round of info sessions will be coming up soon.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Be a poll worker

From the League of Women Voters

Election workers are still needed and wanted in the City of La Crosse. If you are interested in learning more about how to ge an election worker--hours, duties, pay, etc.--please visit the City of La Crosse Clerk's web page at 

https://www.cityoflacrosse.org/your-government/departments/city-clerk/elections-and-voting/election-inspectors

Thursday, April 16, 2026

May Day Strong

 From MayDayStrong.org

On May 1, 2026, workers, students, and families rally, march, and take action across the country to demand a nation that puts workers over billionaires, with many refusing business as usual through No School. No Work. No Shopping.

Across the country, we are standing up and demanding: 
  • Tax the rich so our families, not their fortunes, come first. 
  • No ICE. 
  • No war.  
  • No private army serving authoritarian power. 
  • Expand democracy. 
  • Hands off our vote.
And it’s up to us to organize and act together.


We have created a real affordability agenda that works for all of us: we need to tax the rich to build the world we deserve. And we’re making it happen. This isn’t a dream: we’re making it a reality.

More than 100 pieces of legislation are already moving to build the world we need. Join us.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

No Other Land in Viroqua Friday

 


MadisonRafah.org

The Madison-Rafah Sister City Project (MRSCP)


FRIDAY, APRIL 17

REFRESHMENTS 6-6:45 pm
FILM 7-8:30 pm
Q&A 8:30-9 pm

Landmark Center
500 E Jefferson St, Viroqua 

$10

For more information, call 608-606-1910.

From Support Masafer Yatta:

No Other Land is the Oscar-winning film about the communities of Masafer Yatta that are being forcibly displaced by the Israeli army and settlers. We’re overjoyed that No Other Land is available NOW to rent or purchase on Apple TV, Amazon Prime, Google Play, YouTube, Gathr, and Kinema. You can also organize your own public or community screening anywhere in the US here.

100% of revenue goes directly to the communities of Masafer Yatta

We made No Other Land to create actual change on the ground. Now, we need your help to achieve it. No Other Land isn’t just a film — it’s our lives. Join us to fight to save Masafer Yatta and help us build a network of 50,000 supporters standing in solidarity with Masafer Yatta.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

April 25 & 26

 

Neighbors Day: Community Clean-Up + Chicken Q

Saturday, April 25 | 7:30-1pm

The Nature Place, La Crosse

Volunteers will rake leaves and trim shrubs for households around La Crosse from 7:30-1pm. Return to the Nature Place and enjoy a Chicken Q catered by Rooster Andy’s!
 
Buy a Chicken Q ticket to support Habitat for Humanity's mission. Tickets are $14 ahead of time and $15 at the door. Pickup NOO to 2:30 p.m. at the Nature Place.
 
On Sunday, April 26, it's EARTH FAIR at Myrick Park from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Music, demonstrations, community organizations, animals, food, plants, and more! 
 
 
Visit with local electric vehicle owners during the Ask Me About My EV event (11 a.m. to 2 p.m.) in the lower lot.  
 
Eat, drum, dance, visit the Farmers Market, play the Community Science game, take a marsh walk, learn about raptors, listen to stories, pet a baby animal.
 
Reduce your travel emissions - bike, carpool, or take the MTU Bus (FREE on 4/26!) The Route #4 will alter its route slightly to drop and pick up at the southeast corner of the park! 
 

 

 
 
 

 

Monday, April 13, 2026

TAX DAY PROTEST

From Opportunity Wisconsin

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 3 TO 5 P.M.

JACKSON PLAZA, LA CROSSE

Costs continue to rise across the board - groceries are unaffordable, energy costs keep going up, healthcare prices keep skyrocketing. Congress continues to vote to raise those costs whether it’s through tariffs, tax breaks for the ultra wealthy, or voting to spend a billion dollars a day on military strikes abroad, all while making cuts to necessary programs like Medicaid and SNAP.

They’re leaving tens of thousands of Wisconsinites to struggle, then patting themselves on the back. They claim victory in slightly larger tax returns but the reality is that those increases are completely offset by the disastrous economic strategies enabled by politicians like Derrick Van Orden.

We’re coming together on tax day to fight for our neighbors and families, calling on republicans in congress and Derrick Van Orden to stop supporting economic policies that steal our tax return the moment we cash it!

Learn more & sign up here: https://www.mobilize.us/mobilize/event/937240/

Canadians R Us

Hey there! Did you know if you have a Canadian ancestor--parent, grandparent, great grandparents or even further back--YOU ARE A CANADIAN!

Yep.

According to a new law passed in March, "Canadian citizenship by descent under Bill C-3 is automatic and retroactive for people born before the law came into force. You do not need to apply for a 'grant' of citizenship. If you qualify, you are already a Canadian citizen — you simply need to apply for proof of citizenship (a citizenship certificate). There is no deadline to apply.

"Under the new law, citizenship now flows through multiple generations for anyone born before the law came into force. There is no generational limit for past births. If you can trace an unbroken line of descent to a Canadian citizen — whether that is your parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, or even further back — you may now be recognized as a Canadian citizen at birth."

Learn more here: https://immigration.ca/canadian-citizenship-by-descent-for-americans/


Sunday, April 12, 2026

April 14 - Gubernatorial candidate forum

 

Join Citizen Action of Wisconsin on Tuesday, April 14 at 6 p.m. online to hear from seven leading candidates for governor. Join virtually or at a watch party.

RSVP today at https://www.citizenactionwi.org/2026-governor-forum/! 

Citizen Action of Wisconsin has a strong record of endorsing in major state primaries, and we're looking to do just that in this race. We need a governor who will put Wisconsinite's values first. Healthcare, public education, reimagined safety, union rights, climate justice, and more are on the ballot.

Forum attendees will be asked for feedback on what they heard from candidates, and that feedback will be used to guide our endorsement decision!

 Prepare by watching this January 2026 candidate forum hosted by Main Street Action in Milwaukee.Read about candidates opinions on data centers from this Wisconsin Public TV web page. And visit the League of Women Voters' Vote411.org website to keep up on races and candidates

Tuesday's solid win by Chris Taylor for Supreme Court (by almost 20 points), resignations by  Republican legislators, and new fairer maps gives some hope that we can finally break free of the backward hell brought to us by the "Great Shellacking" of 2010 that saw Wisconsin become an anti-worker, anti-environment, anti-woman, anti-public service, pre-MAGA "laboratory of autocracy.:"

Let this forum be our signal to get involved full throttle by registering voters, working for candidates, door-knocking, phone-banking, donating, and bringing attention to the supreme importance of November's elections.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Take the Social Needs Survey


From La Crosse County: Please participate in the La Crosse County Survey found here and encourage friends and family who live in our county to do so.

The survey looks at accessibility, awareness, and satisfaction with La Crosse County services. It is being run by the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Department of Political Science and Public Administration in partnership with La Crosse County.


The goal is to make it an annual community check-in. It will also help us measure progress toward goals in our Strategic Plan. Participation is confidential. Overall results will be shared once the survey closes.


Please note that this survey is intended for current residents of La Crosse County only.


Take the survey.

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

WW T and our environment

We've all seen pictures of the utterly destroyed no man's land of World War I France or read about the devastation caused by bombs, toxic waste, and deforestation of World War II.

World War Trump is looking to be as bad or worse. He has kneecapped the fight to reduce carbon emissions as global heating is accelerating and red-line tipping points reached. Abroad he is supporting destruction of fossil fuel infrastructure and dropping banned and toxic chemicals in the middle East. Here, he is unleashing those sick with greed on our forests, sacred spaces, and boundary waters. He is ending or twisting environmental protection programs and tossing centuries of experience and knowledge out of science-based agencies.

All this hits close to home as research and programs to protect the upper Mississippi River are closed and defunded


On Wednesday, April 8, the Friends of the Refuge Mississippi River Polls 7 & 8 will host “The Fish Thief, ” a documentary primarily based on the science from the USGS Midwest Environmental Science Center in La Crosse. The film will be shown at the Weber Center (click here to reserve your seats). Tickets will also be available at the door. The reception (drinks and appetizers provided) will be from 5:30-6:30 p.m. in the Weber Center atrium. The screening will follow from 6:30-8, concluding with a panel discussion with the film's director, the Great Lakes Fishery Commission Sea Lamprey Control Program Director and others. Learn more at the group's Facebook page.