Thursday, June 4, 2026
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Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Air quality alerts are back, but this time, wildfires aren't to blame
Caden Perry
Don't the Milwaukee skies look too clear for an air quality alert?
Yes and no. Your eyes aren't fooling you, the skies are clear Wednesday, June 3. Canadian wildfires are not at a level where smoke is carried across the Midwest yet.
But the air is still poor quality. The National Weather Service issued an air quality alert June 3 morning, the first one in 2026. An uncommon set of weather conditions is actually trapping ozone on the ground level we breathe in.
Normally, ozone emissions rise higher into the atmosphere. A layer of warm, slow air is holding those emissions down in what National Weather Service meteorologist Benjamin Sheppard described as a subsidence inversion pattern.
Ozone is highly toxic to the respiratory system and the American Lung Association describes it akin to a sunburn for your lungs. It forms in a reaction between nitrogen oxide and sunlight.
Milwaukee has an abundance of sunlight June 3 with sunny skies expected to persist all day Wednesday and Thursday, June 4.
Strung all together, industrial nitrous oxide is reacting to ample sunlight but the ozone byproduct isn't leaving our breathing air like it should.
Canada wildfires still too far away from Wisconsin for smoke concerns
It's tough to call out smoke forecasts very far in advance. Even if wildfires in Canada get to the abundant levels, the smoke might never affect Wisconsin if the weather doesn't carry the smoke to the area.
According to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, there are only a handful of wildfires near the Wisconsin border, and most are being held back as of June 3 morning.
The biggest threat for smoky conditions in Wisconsin are two Ontario wildfires considered "out of control," one east of Lake Nipigon and another east of Thunder Bay.
With winds moving especially slow in Wisconsin, it is highly unlikely the smoke will carry over to any part of the state.
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Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Cops Gone Wild: Milwaukee to pay $825,000 to end two police cases
David Clarey
The city of Milwaukee will pay $825,000 to resolve two claims brought forward after alleged police misconduct.
The payments will end legal action surrounding the death of a woman who was run over by a Milwaukee police officer in 2025, and in the lawsuit made by a couple who were repeatedly the subject of false claims to police and prompting numerous police responses between 2022 and 2023. Milwaukee Common Council passed the payments June 2.
The family of Haley Linville will receive $250,000 in connection to her Sept. 16, 2025, death.
A Milwaukee police officer was responding to the city's south side for a welfare check when, as Linville lay at the entrance of an alleyway, an officer ran her over. She later died at the hospital.
The other payment, for $575,000, will go to Niki Robinson and Patrick Tomlinson. Police were dispatched 45 times to their home over a two-year span. The city admitted in court documents that police knew the couple was being targeted by fake emergency calls.
The city denied searches related to the calls were illegal.
The payments still require Mayor Cavalier Johnson's signature for final approval. Spokesperson Jeff Fleming said the mayor will decide whether to sign off in coming days.
"He is inclined to support the council action," Fleming said in a text message.
An attorney for Linville's family initially sought over $21 million for her death, but Wisconsin state statute caps civil settlements at $250,000.
Ald. Marina Dimitrijevic, who abstained from voting on Linville settlement, said the amount was not enough for the family.
"We need to continue to hold people accountable," she said. "Quite frankly, too many women in particular I'm seeing not getting the standard of care they need from the city of Milwaukee."
City Attorney Evan Goyke brought the settlements to the Common Council. His office has agreed to several large settlements since Goyke began his term in 2024.
The Milwaukee Police Association, the union for rank-and-file officers, criticized Goyke for those settlements, arguing he has not done enough to defend officers.
In Milwaukee, taxpayers bear the costs of any settlements.
David Clarey is a public safety reporter at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. He can be reached at dclarey@usatodayco.com.
