Winona Chronicle

Your Window to the Bluffs Since 2026

Winona, Minnesota

Category: Opinion

  • Editorial: Winona Must Protect Its Bluffs From Unchecked Development

    The bluffs that frame Winona are more than scenic backdrop. They are the defining feature of our community — the reason visitors come, the reason residents stay, and the ecological foundation of the Mississippi River valley ecosystem we all depend upon.

    Yet as development pressure increases along the bluff ridgelines in Winona County, our current zoning protections are proving inadequate. The recent proposal to build a 40-unit housing development on a blufftop overlooking Garvin Heights should alarm every resident who values what makes this place special.

    We are not opposed to growth. Winona needs housing, and we welcome thoughtful development. But blufftop construction carries irreversible consequences: disrupted water drainage patterns, habitat fragmentation, and the permanent alteration of viewsheds that belong to the entire community.

    We urge the County Board to adopt a comprehensive bluff overlay district that sets clear building setbacks, height limits, and impervious surface standards for ridgeline parcels. The bluffs are not renewable. Once they are developed, they are gone.

  • Letter to the Editor: In Praise of Winona’s Library System

    Dear Editor,

    In an age when public institutions face constant budget pressure, I want to celebrate one that consistently exceeds expectations: the Winona Public Library.

    Last month alone, the library hosted a coding workshop for teens, a Medicare information session for seniors, an ESL conversation group, and a Saturday morning story hour that my granddaughter looks forward to all week. The staff know their patrons by name and go out of their way to help, whether it’s tracking down an obscure interlibrary loan or helping someone navigate an online job application.

    In a community our size, the library is more than a building full of books — it’s the great equalizer, offering every resident free access to knowledge, technology, and community. We should be proud of what we have, and we should fund it accordingly.

    Dorothy Kazmierczak, East Burns Valley