Organizers of Saturday's Women's March Minnesota are telling protesters, demonstrators and spectators to be ready for traffic delays, and it's advice motorists heading to or through St. Paul may want to heed. Or better yet, just avoid the area, city officials suggest.
The social justice rally - 20,000 or more people expected - coincides with a massive march in Washington D.C. and simultaneous events across the country, so look for it to be a traffic magnet.
Drivers using I-94 in Maple Grove are likely to experience delays, too. The Minnesota Department of Transportation will have the freeway closed to through traffic between the I-494/694/94 interchange and newly-opened portion of Hwy. 610 from 10 p.m. Friday through 5 a.m. Monday.
On the sports scene, the red-hot Wild face off Saturday against Anaheim and Sunday against Nashville. Puck drops at 7 both nights at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul.
The University of Minnesota men's basketball team has a date with Wisconsin at 3:30 p.m. Saturday at Williams Arena.
Traffic generating events at Target Center in downtown Minneapolis include country mega star Eric Church in concert Friday and the Red Hot Chili Peppers on Saturday.
Women's March
Warm weather by mid-January standards will likely swell crowds for the 10 a.m. gathering at St. Paul College (I-94 and Kellogg Blvd.), which will be followed by an 11 a.m. march down Concordia Avenue and John Ireland Boulevard to the State Capitol where an outdoor rally will be held on the south steps.