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Obituaries March 21st

Ronnie Perry Guinn Sr.
1938 – 2019

Ronnie P. Guinn Sr. 80, of Faucett, Missouri passed away Monday, March 18, 2019 at his farm in Dearborn, MO.

He was born November 27, 1938 in De Kalb, MO, son of the late Hazel and Auda Guinn. He graduated from DeKalb High School in 1956, and he was a life long farmer. He married Maxine Turner on August 23, 1964, and she precedes him in death. He enjoyed tractor pulling, hunting, mushroom hunting, and hunting arrowheads and Indian artifacts, and working around the farm.

Ronnie was preceded in death by his wife and his parents. Survivors include: son, Ronald “Rube” (Staci) Guinn, Jr. of Weston, MO, granddaughter, Karli Elizabeth Guinn, brothers, Gary (Barbara) Guinn, Atchison, KS and Bill (Marilyn) Guinn, DeKalb, MO, and sister, JoAnn Nanninga of Maryville, MO.

Funeral Services: 10:00 am Monday, March 25, 2019 at Rupp Funeral Home, Rev. Jim Barnett officiating. The family will receive friends from 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM on Sunday at the Rupp Funeral Home. The Interment will be at the Westlawn Cemetery, DeKalb, Missouri. Memorials are requested to a Charity of the donors choice.

 

Dorothy A. Nelson
1924 – 2019

Dorothy Alice Nelson, 94, of Guilford, Missouri, passed away Sunday, February 17, 2019, at a St. Joseph, Missouri, healthcare facility.

She was born September 11, 1924, in Rea, Missouri, to Edwin Robert and Maggie Lillian (Jessup) Dudley. She was the youngest of 11 children.

She graduated from Savannah High School in 1942 after attending Guilford, Missouri, schools for all but her senior year. She married Buford Nelson on November 7th of that year. He died on June 7, 1980. Dorothy was a homemaker and a member of Guilford Community of Christ Church.

Besides her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by her nine brothers, Oscar, Tom, Hugh, Robert, Raymond, Lewis, Glenn, William, and Frank Dudley; sister, Georgette Lininger Aegerter; and great-grandchild, Mira Ravipudi.

Survivors are her children, Lillian Freemyer (Delmar), Conception Junction, Missouri, whom she made her home with for the last several years, Max Nelson (Bette), Amazonia, Missouri, Ernest Nelson (Nancy), and Judy Estes (Jim), St. Joseph; grandchildren, Doug and Bryan Freemyer, Shelley Ravipudi, Sean Nelson, Bobbi Messner, Jolynn Atoe, Jarrett Estes, Cindy Nelson, Amy Mathias, Travis Buckles, and Wendi Cervera; 27 great-grandchildren; 14 great-great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Celebration of Life 10:00 A.M. Saturday, April 6, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. Visitation one hour prior to the service. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Guilford Community of Christ, c/o Rex Hayden, 40567 State Hwy N, Bolckow, MO 64427. Online guest book and obituary at www.meierhoffer.com.

 

L. Raymond Sipes
1918 – 2019

L. Raymond Sipes, 101, St. Joseph, Missouri, passed away Wednesday, March 20, 2019.
He was born March 3, 1918 in Oregon, Missouri.

Raymond married Dorothy Jane Flack June 6, 1942. She preceded him in death January 30, 1997.
He was a 1937 graduate of Oregon High School, Oregon, Missouri and later served in WWII in the U.S. Army Corps from 1942 to 1945.

Raymond was a member of First Baptist Church in St. Joseph, Missouri where he also served as deacon for 66 years. He worked at Stan Lucas Pontiac-Cadillac and Greg Buick as a parts manager.
Raymond enjoyed fishing, catfish dinners, rabbit hunting, country music, working in the yard, house renovations and flowers.

He was also preceded in death by his parents, George and Lucille (Garner) Sipes; brother, Billy Sipes; sister, Marie Bolin.

Survivors include son, Ronald Sipes; daughter, Linda Lancey (Larry); grandchildren, Jennifer Perkins (John) and Jeremy Lancey; great-grandchildren, Zachary and Rachel Perkins; numerous nieces and nephews.

Farewell Services 1:00 P.M. Monday, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. Interment Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will gather with friends 2:00 to 4:00 P.M. Sunday, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. In lieu of flowers the family request donations to the First Baptist Church. Online guest book and obituary at www.meierhoffer.com.

 

Ellen Lee Sherrill
1930 – 2019

Ellen Lee Sherrill, 88, St. Petersburg, Florida formerly of St. Joseph, Missouri, passed away Friday, March 15, 2019.

She was born June 26, 1930 in Hermann, Missouri.

Ellen worked at Whitaker Cable for many years, then later retired from Silgan Containers.
She enjoyed walking, crafts and reading.

She was preceded in death by her son, Terry Sherrill; parents, Herbert and Caroline (Sperry) Streck); brothers, Virgil and Burnett Streck.

Survivors include daughter, Charlene Leslie; son, Steven Sherrill (Barbara); grandchildren, Dana McDaniel (Keith), Daniel Leslie, Brandy Long (Matt), Brooke Sherrill (Steve Roberts), Rachel Harrison, Annette Deguchi (Tony), Misty Strickland, Johnny Sherrill; 11 great-grandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews.

Farewell Services 10:00 A.M. Saturday, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. Interment Memorial Park Cemetery. The family will gather with friends 5:00 to 7:00 P.M. Friday, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory. Online guest book and obituary at www.meierhoffer.com.

Watch: KHP captures another levee break near Atchison

ATCHISON COUNTY, Kan. (AP) — The Latest on flooding in the Midwest (all times local):

Another levee has breached as high water levels make their way down the flooding Missouri River.

Buchanan County, Missouri, Emergency Director Management Bill Brinton says an agriculture levee breached around 11 a.m. Thursday just across the river from Atchison, Kansas, where the river is expected to crest at record levels.

The Missouri towns of Winthrop and Lewis and Clark Village are at risk of taking on water as the size of the breach grows. But Brinton says most of the 200 people who live in the area already left.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says the levee is one of about 20 that have breached in Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska. Crests in St. Joseph, Missouri, are expected to be the third-highest on record, although only about half a dozen homes in the city aren’t protected by a federal levee.

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Thursday’s Closing Grain Bids

March 21st, 2019

 

St Joseph

 

Yellow Corn

3.57 – 3.62

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

8.52 – 8.61

LifeLine Foods

3.66

 

 

Atchison

Yellow Corn

 3.70 – 3.78

Soybeans

 8.50

Hard Wheat

 4.32

Soft Wheat

 4.26

 

 

Kansas City Truck Bids

Yellow Corn

3.57 – 3.70

White Corn

3.86 – 3.93

Soybeans

8.58 – 8.84

Hard Wheat

4.32 – 4.77

Soft Wheat

 4.37 – 4.52

Sorghum

5.93 – 6.02


USDA Cash Grain Prices

For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.

ASF Outbreak Spreading Throughout Asia

The African Swine Fever virus is continuing to march through parts of Asia and Europe. A National Pork Board update says it’s causing increasing disruption to the world’s pork production. Much of the ASF concern centers on China, for good reason, because it’s number one in global pork production.

The World Organization for Animal Health now says nearly all of China’s provincial-level administrative units have reported one or more ASF outbreaks. That means all but the far western portion of China now has at least some level of ASF exposure. Official reports now say China has had to cull approximately one million pigs since the outbreak got going last August. However, there are unofficial reports say the actual number of lost animals may be ten times the official number.

Economist Steve Meyer with Kerns and Associates, says China’s breeding herd is down 19 percent from a year ago. Total market hogs are down 16 percent from 2018. Non-governmental reports from U.S. pork industry visitors are calling China’s ASF outbreak “endemic,” which means there is little hope of containing the disease or getting rid of it any time soon. Good evidence of this designation is the fact that ASF has now been confirmed in neighboring Vietnam, where 17 provinces in the northern part of the country have confirmed cases of the disease.

Update: Kan. House Approves Medicaid Expansion, But The Fight Isn’t Over

TOPEKA — Late Thursday morning, the Kansas House passed Medicaid expansion in 69-54 vote. The measure now moves to the State Senate for final approval.

The following statement is from Governor Laura Kelly.

“Today a bipartisan coalition in the Kansas House put politics aside and came together to pass Medicaid expansion. I’m proud of their work – and the work of so many advocates and citizens who worked tirelessly to make their voices heard on this issue.
“Medicaid expansion is one of the most critical issues impacting our state’s future. It will allow up to 150,000 more Kansans access to affordable healthcare, support local hospitals and clinics, and impact our economy for the better.
“Over 70 percent of Kansans support Medicaid expansion. I encourage the Kansas Senate to join me, this bipartisan coalition, business leaders and the overwhelming majority of Kansans in support of Medicaid expansion. The time for blocking progress has long since passed. Now is the time to expand Medicaid.”

————-
JIM MCLEAN

A demonstration at the Kansas Statehouse came earlier this week, before the House voted to expand Medicaid coverage in the state.
JIM MCLEAN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

A coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans powered past objections from conservative leaders in the Kansas House Wednesday to approve Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s Medicaid expansion proposal.

Albeit a slightly revised version.

“We’ve discussed this for five years, we absolutely cannot let this chance slip through our fingers,” said Rep. Kathy Wolfe Moore, a Kansas City Democrat.

In summary, the bill would:

•           Expand KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, to cover Kansans earning less than 138 percent of the federal poverty level — $17,236 for an individual or $35,535 for a family of four. The Kansas Health Institute estimates that 90,000 of the 130,000 Kansans expected to enroll would be non-disabled adults who are not currently eligible for KanCare. The remaining 40,000 would be children.

•           Require the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to refer all non-disabled adults who are unemployed or working fewer than 20 hours a week to a job training program.

Parents caring for young children would be exempt. The Commonwealth Fund estimated in a 2017 report that only 11 percent of Kansans likely to enroll in expansion coverage are unemployed. Some Republicans favor a “work requirement.” But Gov. Kelly says she won’t agree to one because it would be a “nightmare” to administer.

•           Establish a working group to identify additional revenue sources to offset the state’s share of expansion costs. The Affordable Care Act requires the federal government to fund no less than 90 percent of expansion costs. Expansion opponents fear budget pressures will eventually force a reduction in that funding. Should that happen, an amendment added to the bill during Wednesday’s debate would require state officials to repeal expansion.

Cost an issue

The governor’s budget office estimates that the state’s share of expansion costs in the first full year would be approximately $34 million.

A recent estimate by the Kansas Health Institute put the cost at $41.7 million. The lion’s share of that would come from “privilege fees” paid by the managed care organizations that administer KanCare and projected savings generated from using federal dollars to cover services and programs now funded by the state.

Neither the state nor the KHI estimate include a projection of how much economic activity triggered by an infusion of nearly $1 billion in additional federal Medicaid funding would increase state revenues. New research done by economists at Kansas State University indicates the spike in revenue would be nearly enough to cover the state’s share of expansion costs.

An amendment added to the bill at the urging of Rep. Troy Waymaster, the Republican chair of the House Appropriations Committee, would also help defray expansion costs by requiring beneficiaries to pay $25 a month for their coverage. Family premiums would be capped at $100 a month. Waymaster estimated the payments would generate between $26 million and $45 million a year.

What’s next

Assuming the expansion bill clears a final vote in the House, it would go to the Senate. Expansion advocates say they believe they have to votes to also pass it there, but the margin may be narrower.

However, both Senate President Susan Wagle and Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning are opposed to it.

Denning, an Overland Park Republican, has said in a recent interview he’d “be willing to have (a) conversation with the governor” about terms of expanding Medicaid.

Multiple polls showing that sizeable majorities of Kansas voters favor expansion should motivate Denning, Wagle and others to seek a compromise, Kelly said.

“This is something,” Kelly said, “they don’t want to be talking about next year in an election year.” 

Jim McLean is the senior correspondent for the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

 

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Southern Buchanan County levee fails, closing Highway 59 and access to Atchison, Kansas

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Levee breach in southern Buchanan County/Photo courtesy of the Kansas Highway Patrol

A levee north of Highway 59 in southern Buchanan County has been breached by floodwaters, forcing the closing of Highway 59 from Highway 45 to the Amelia Earhart Bridge into Atchison, Kansas.

Buchanan County Emergency Management Director Bill Brinton says floodwaters now threaten Winthrop as well as Lewis and Clark Village.

“We have notified all of the residents who live in southwest Buchanan County and then the city of Winthrop and Lewis and Clark Village. Most of the people who (live in) Lewis and Clark Village have self-evacuated,” Brinton says.

Brinton says emergency crews had been closely watching as floodwaters overtopped the levee. The levee gave way and failed late this morning, sending floodwaters over Highway 59 and throughout the area.

The levee break could relieve growing flooding concerns downstream.

“We just heard from the National Weather Service that we were about to have a record set near Atchison and, with the water flowing down, it’s now flowing out into Buchanan County and so it certainly is a flooding issue,” Brinton says.

The National Weather Service has revised upward the expected crest of the Missouri River at St. Joseph. The Weather Service says the river now has topped 28.5 feet and is projected to crest at 30.1 feet tomorrow morning around 7 o’clock.  NWS projects the Missouri River to drop below major flood stage Sunday evening.

 

Company won’t operate Branson duck boats in 2019 after fatal sinking

BRANSON, Mo. (AP) — The company that owns a duck boat that sank on a Missouri lake last year, killing 17 people , won’t operate the vessels this year and will instead open a replacement attraction in the tourist town of Branson.

First responders on the scene of the July 2018 lake accident -photo courtesy KYTV

Ripley Entertainment Suzanne Smagala-Potts announced plans for the new attraction, called Branson Top Op, on Thursday. She declined to comment on whether the boats would ever float again on Table Rock Lack, saying only that the company is focused on 2019 and hasn’t “looked in the future of what we may or may not do.”

The entertainment venue will include indoor laser tag and an interactive outdoor maze. It’s expected to open for Memorial Day weekend.

The company faces several lawsuits alleging that it launched the doomed boat despite warnings of severe weather.

Brazil Opens Up to More U.S. Wheat Imports

U.S. wheat growers are thrilled about a joint announcement from Washington and Brazil that says the South American country will establish a 750,000-ton quota for tariff-free wheat imports. A Small Grain Dot Org article says U.S. Wheat Associates and the National Association of Wheat Growers welcome the announcement because it fulfills a longstanding obligation under Brazil’s World Trade Organization commitments.

U.S. Wheat Associates Chairman Chris Kolstad says they’re grateful to the Trump Administration for championing the interests of U.S. farmers. “Specifically, we say thank you to Chief Agricultural Negotiator Gregg Doud and USDA Under Secretary Ted McKinney for prioritizing Brazil’s WTO commitments,” he says. “This new opportunity gives us a chance to build stronger relationships with Brazilian millers and a more consistent market there for U.S. wheat.”

Brazil was the largest importer of wheat in Latin America, as well as the fourth-largest in the world during the 2017-2018 marketing year. The move could bring some relief to U.S. farmers who have lost export sales after President Trump pulled out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and slapped tariffs on major trading partners, which prompted retaliation against U.S. farm goods.

Kansas sheriff investigates scam aimed at registered offenders

MONTGOMERY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an alleged scam aimed at registered offenders in Kansas.

According to a media release from the sheriff’s department, registered offenders reported receiving calls from a person posing as a deputy from the sheriff’s department. The caller claims the offender is not in compliance and urges the offender to send money to pay the fines or bond.

The Montgomery County sheriff reminded the public they do not call offenders or anyone to collect money. Investigators are working to learn the identity of the callers and bring them to justice, according to the release.

Anyone who receives a similar call should hang just hang up. If you received a call, the sheriff’s office wants you to contact law enforcement.

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