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Incoming Senate Appropriations Chairman brings experience with state budget in flux

Republican state Senator Dan Hegeman of Cosby. Photo courtesy Missourinet.

(Missourinet) – When incoming Missouri Senate President Pro-Tem Dave Schatz, R-Sullivan, announced that Senator Dan Hegeman would be the next chairman of the chamber’s Appropriations Committee, he made reference to the Cosby Republican’s financial experience in the state Legislature.

“Senator Hegeman brings over a decade of state budget experience to the table,” said Schatz.

Hegeman served 11 years as a state representative, having been first elected in 1990 before term-limits were imposed in 1994. He was a member of the Budget Committee for the entirety of his tenure in the lower chamber. He’s also been a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee for the past two years and served as county clerk, the chief budget officer, in Andrew County for five years during his time away from the Legislature.

The University of Missouri graduate enters into a budget leadership position when it’s not exactly known why the state is experiencing a financial shortfall after finishing the last fiscal year in June with a $280 million surplus. As of the end of October, Missouri had a $110 million deficit in the current year. There’s no danger of any withholding of funds for state services in the near term with last year’s excess providing a $180 million surplus, but the monthly numbers are being closely examined by the Department of Revenue and state Budget Director Dan Haug.

Meanwhile, state lawmakers, the executive branch and an economist from the University of Missouri are meeting in December to figure out the Consensus Revenue Estimate (CRE), the key monetary figure mutually agreed upon that’s used to construct the operating budget.  Estimates will be formulated for the rest of the current fiscal year, and for fiscal year 2020, which begins next July.

Although outgoing Senate Appropriations Chairman Dan Brown, R-Rolla, will play a major role in determining the upcoming CRE, Hegeman is expecting to be consulted during discussions.

He thinks part of the budget shortfall is linked to an error in figuring income tax tables, a problem that’s since been corrected by the Revenue Department.

“The fact that they redid the tables this fall indicates that that is certainly part of the problem,” said Hegeman.  “I think that many economists and our budget staff think that this will turn around once people start filing their income taxes.”

The Revenue Department announced in late September it was reworking the tables after determining it was under collecting income taxes from individuals. The agency said the unexpected decrease in withholding is due to a longstanding inaccurate calculation of the federal tax deduction that had previously gone undetected.

It’s thought that another possible reason for the current shortfall could be tied to the Congressional tax overhaul that went into effect at the beginning of 2018. Hegeman says it’s not certain how changes in Washington are affecting Missouri tax collections.

“That’s one theory that I’ve heard that’s out there,” Hegeman said. “(I) don’t know that for a fact, but that’s one idea that’s out there as to why the revenues may be coming in short.”

Missouri income taxes are tied to the federal standard deduction which was doubled by Congress – from $6,350 to $12,000 for individuals and from $12,700 to $24,000 for those filing jointly. Hegeman said there’s some concern that the state may not have adjusted correctly for the change, although filing for 2018 income taxes won’t begin until January.

The newly re-elected state Senator points out that certain tax credits are causing some of the shortfall.

“I know there’s been a lot of tax credit applications and tax credit refunds going out there right now,” Hegeman said.  “That’s been some of the deficit attributed to that.”

Regardless of how tax collections play out over the short term, Missouri’s overall income tax rate will be significantly reduced beginning January 1.

A bill signed into law this year will drop the income tax rate most Missourians pay by four-tenths of a percent. Hegeman defends the legislation as responsible, saying it eliminates numerous tax exemptions to be largely revenue neutral, allowing for more Missourians to pay lower taxes.

“Certainly, anytime we can close some of these loopholes and provide a benefit to a broader base, there are many of us that believe that’s a positive tax policy decision to make,” said Hegeman.

Combined with another tax cut triggered by increases in revenue collections, the state’s income tax rate will drop from the current 5.9% to 5.4% in January.

After years of being involved in the public budgeting process doing what he calls “yeoman’s work,” Hegeman says he’s ready to assume a bigger role in managing Missouri’s finances.

“I certainly look to be guiding the process and moving our appropriations/budget process through the system, getting the state budget done in a timely fashion,” Hegeman said. “It’s one of our only constitutional mandated duties that the Legislature needs to accomplish.”

Most states have a statute or a constitutional requirement to balance their budgets, with Vermont being the notable exception.

NWS: Near whiteout conditions are possible Sunday across northern Missouri

(Missourinet) – The National Weather Service (NWS) in Pleasant Hill has issued a winter storm watch for Sunday.

The NWS is warning that parts of northern Missouri could see four to eight inches of snow on Sunday.

Meteorologist Spencer Mell says the watch area includes St. Joseph, Chillicothe, Kirksville, Maryville and Trenton. Kansas City is also included.

“Right now we’re looking for again that transition to happen during the Sunday morning hours,” Mell says. “So basically from late Sunday morning through Sunday afternoon is when we’re going to see the bulk of that accumulation occur.”

He says rain is expected to change to snow in far northwest Missouri by 3 a.m. on Sunday.

Northeast Kansas, southeast Nebraska and southern Iowa are also included in the winter storm watch area.

Mell tells Missourinet wind gusts of 35 to 45 miles per hour are possible on Sunday, in the impacted areas.

“So that’s going to cause some big problems with travelers out there, as far as blowing and drifting snow,” says Mell. “And even create perhaps some whiteout conditions out there.”

The NWS winter storm watch will likely turn into a warning by Saturday. They are urging you to check your vehicle and to pack an emergency supply kit, and to continue to monitor weather forecasts.

“If you can push your travel plans up to Saturday to get back to your locations that would be great. If not, it may be best served to wait it out until Monday,” Mell says.

While Columbia and Jefferson City are not in the watch area, Mell says residents there will see about one to two inches of snow.

Vandeven hired to return to role as state K-12 education commissioner

Missouri Commissioner of Education, Dr. Margie Vandeven (courtesy; Missourinet)

(Missourinet) – In 2019, the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education will be led by none other than former K-12 education commissioner Margie Vandeven.

She was unanimously chosen Monday to lead the department of about 1,650 workers.

The Missouri Board of Education met behind closed doors Monday in Jefferson City. Members spent about nine hours interviewing finalists one by one and then made a decision.

Other finalists for the job included familiar faces. Interim commissioner Roger Dorson and Superintendent Eric Knost of Rockwood School District in St. Louis County were also in the running. The fourth candidate is unknown.

Vandeven says she was nominated for the job. The department head will earn an annual salary of about $200,000. She will work with 518 Missouri public school districts.

Tuesday’s announcement comes nearly one year after drama broke loose and five previous board members voted in favor of ousting Vandeven. The members, who are no longer serving, were appointed by former Gov. Eric Greitens with the intent of firing Vandeven.

Dorson had been leading the charge since Vandeven’s removal last year.

Rolla attorney indicted in 18 counts alleging sexual assault

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley. File photo courtesy Missourinet.

(Missourinet) – Missouri’s attorney general says a grand jury in south-central Missouri’s Phelps County has indicted an attorney on 18 sex-related felonies.

Attorney General Josh Hawley (R) says the 18 felony counts involve alleged sexual assaults of four different women.

Thirty-two-year-old Brant Lee Shockley of St. James was taken into custody on Friday. The alleged incidents happened at Shockley’s home and at his Phelps County offices and date back to 2014.

“The charges in this case are abhorrent,” Hawley says in a news release. “Sexual assault has no place in Missouri. When people in positions of power take advantage of that power, they must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Rolla Police are investigating the case, along with Phelps County Sheriff’s deputies and the Missouri State Highway Patrol. Hawley’s office is prosecuting the case and has been appointed special prosecutor, because of a conflict at the request of the Phelps County Prosecutor’s office.

The Attorney General’s office and Rolla Police encourage anyone with additional information about Shockley or this case to call Rolla Police at (573) 308-1213, or the Attorney General’s office at (573) 644-3068.

Online court records indicate Shockley’s bond has been set at $100,000, and he’s on house arrest from 6 p.m. until 6 a.m. daily.

Shockley is scheduled to appear in Phelps County Circuit Court in Rolla on December 4, before Judge Michael James Cordonnier.

If convicted, Shockley would face a lengthy prison sentence and would have to register as a sex offender.

(UPDATE) Finalists to interview Monday for Missouri education commissioner job

Missouri Commissioner of Education, Dr. Margie Vandeven (courtesy; Missourinet)

(Missourinet) – Missouri Board of Education President Charlie Shields says a finalist has been unanimously chosen for the permanent K-12 public school education commissioner position.

Next up is making an offer to the individual.

The board interviewed finalists Monday for the permanent post and former Education Commissioner Margie Vandeven is among the four finalists competing for her old job. Vandeven served in the position for about two years.

December 1 will mark one year since five Missouri Board of Education members appointed by former Gov. Eric Greitens voted to oust Vandeven. Those members are no longer serving. Greitens is suspected of devising a plan to choose members with the sole purpose of firing Vandeven.

Interim commissioner Roger Dorson and Superintendent Eric Knost of Rockwood School District in St. Louis County were also seen in the halls today at the Jefferson State Office Building in Jefferson City. The fourth candidate is unknown.

Dorson has been serving at the helm since Vandeven’s termination. During a board meeting this fall, President Shields complimented Dorson’s work and said members might choose to remove the interim label from Dorson’s title.

Knost has been leading Rockwood School District since 2014.

In September, the board launched its search for a permanent commissioner. Shields says the board plans to release information about the next commissioner as soon as possible. He says it hopes to have a new education leader in place by January.

The department head would oversee a staff of about 1,650 employees and work with 518 public school districts.

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(Missourinet) – The Missouri Board of Education is interviewing the four finalists Monday for the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education Commissioner job.

The identities of the candidates are unknown.

In September, the board launched its search for the new education chief. At the time, President Charlie Shields said the hope is to have a commissioner start in January.

December 1 will mark one year since the firing of Margie Vandeven as education commissioner. Roger Dorson has been serving at the helm since then and has said he will serve as interim commissioner as long as he’s needed.

Five previous board members were appointed by former Gov. Eric Greitens with the intention of firing Vandeven. Those members are no longer serving.

The education leader would oversee a staff of about 1,650 workers. The department is involved in the education of about 900,000 Missouri public school students in 518 districts.

St. Joseph corrections officer and others receive medals for acts of heroism

(Missourinet) – Loved ones and public safety officials gathered Tuesday to hear story after story outlining the courage of 49 Missouri public safety officials and four civilians who put their lives on the line to save others.

Gov. Mike Parson proclaimed Tuesday as Missouri Public Safety Recognition Day. During ceremonies in Jefferson City and St. Louis, medals and awards were handed out one by one to honor the individuals who showed extraordinary acts of heroism in 2017.

 

Three individuals have been given Missouri’s highest award – the Medal of Valor.

Logan Benjamin, Vandalia Police Department – On June 19, 2017, Corp. Benjamin saved a suicidal man hanging from a support beam. Benjamin entered the residence and lifted the man to prevent him from certain strangulation.

The man repeatedly hit Benjamin in the head. Struggling to prop the man up, Benjamin’s portable radio microphone fell to the ground, preventing him from calling for backup. During the violent struggle, Benjamin managed to call for assistance and used his tactical knife to cut the belt the man was hanging from. As both men fell to the ground, the suicidal man went for Benjamin’s knife. Benjamin drew his pistol and told the man to stop trying to hurt himself and Benjamin.

The suicidal man complied and was transported to a hospital for a mental health evaluation. He remains alive and well today.

Michelle L. Vogel, Missouri Department of Corrections in northwest Missouri – On the night of Aug. 5, 2017, Corrections Officer Vogel rushed into a burning building in St. Joseph to rescue a four-year-old girl trapped inside. The fire happened to be in Vogel’s apartment complex and had spread throughout most of the first floor of the apartment.

Once Vogel saved the child, she sifted back through the thick smoke and intense heat and flames to make sure everyone else was out of the burning building. Vogel then helped the girl’s pregnant mother, who was outside having trouble breathing. Vogel later took children’s clothing to the family to assist them in the aftermath of the fire.

David Watkins, Jr., Mississippi County Sheriff’s Office in southeast Missouri – On March 10, 2017, a team from the Mississippi County Sheriff’s Office was serving a search warrant to a convicted felon suspected of drug trafficking at an apartment in Wyatt. Lt. Watkins and the team announced their presence and broke into the apartment. The suspect immediately fired – striking Watkins in the left leg and trapping him in the apartment with the gunman. Other members were forced to take cover on the ground outside.

Unable to stand, Watkins crawled into a nearby room. The team called for Watkins, but he intentionally did not answer. Watkins did not want to give away his location to the gunman.

The shooter, still armed with an AR-15, walked to the front door to look for the other officers. He then turned to find Watkins – prompting the gunman to raise his weapon. Watkins fired his gun striking the man in the upper torso. Watkins then staggered to his feet and held the gunman at gunpoint until his team could take over.

Leon Whitener III, St. Louis Fire Department – On April 22, 2017, Capt. Whitener, who was off duty, charged into a burning residential building to save an elderly disabled woman trapped inside. Whitener charged into the two-story building and up the stairs without any protective gear.

He was followed by Raymond Rayford, a tenant from another unit in the building. Whitener knew time was short because the smoke was building pressure in the room. They pushed the wheelchair-bound woman to the apartment doorway but furniture blocked the exit. Rayford threw the furniture out of the apartment to clear a path. Whitener and Rayford then hoisted the wheelchair over the stair railing and down the stair, careful to protect the woman and make a safe exit.

 

Four individuals have been given Missouri’s Public Safety Civilian Partnership Award.

Raymond Rayford, nominated by the St. Louis Fire Department – Rayford was given the award for his selfless actions on April 22, 2017 that likely saved the lives of a disabled woman trapped inside a burning building and Captain Whitener’s.

Charles Barney and Sandra Straw, nominated by Missouri State Highway Patrol – On Feb. 7, 2017, Sandra Straw was driving along Interstate 70 in western Missouri’s Lafayette County when she noticed Trooper Beau Ryun struggling with a combative driver.

Straw called 911 and then got out of her vehicle. She sat on the suspect’s legs in an attempt to restrain him – prompting the man to kick Straw in the face.

The second motorist, Barney, retrieved the trooper’s handcuffs and used the trooper’s radio to communicate with law enforcement. Barney then helped to restrain the driver – allowing the trooper to reach and use his pepper spray on the driver. With their help, the trooper was able to arrest the driver.

Cary Stewart, nominated by West Plains Fire Department in southern Missouri – On April 28, 2017, Cary Stewart, a West Plains resident and member of the West Plains City Council, participated as a member of the West Plains Fire Department team that rescued 92 people from historic floodwaters. The flooding swept vehicles off roads, homes and buildings off their foundations and put many people at great risk.

 

Two law enforcement officers have been awarded the Public Safety Medal of Merit.

Ryan Windham, Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop E – On March 6, 2017, Trooper Windham pulled over a motorist on Interstate 57 in Mississippi County for not having a front license plate. The driver refused to stop. A pursuit eventually ended when the driver slid off a roadway. A front seat passenger fled on foot. The backseat passenger exited and began firing his gun at Windham. Windham returned fire and moved toward the rear of his patrol car for cover. The suspect fired at least six rounds, three of which struck Windham’s vehicle, one hitting the vehicle’s spotlight, directly in front of Windham.

During a manhunt, all three occupants were arrested without incident. They were convicted felons and members of a violent gang with outstanding warrants.

Christopher Papineau, Columbia Police Department – On the evening of May 13, 2017, a Columbia police officer shot a gunman high on meth atop an event center. A graduation party was going on inside the event center and many residents were outdoors at a neighboring multi-story apartment complex.

Upon arriving to the scene, two officers were struck by the man’s shotgun pellets. A SWAT team was activated and attempted to negotiate with the man who said he wanted to kill or hurt officers.

The gunman was in a prone shooting position when a pedestrian walked into his field of fire. Officer Christopher Papineau fired a single shot to prevent the gunman from harming the pedestrian. The gunman fell from the roof and was pronounced dead.

 

Forty-one public safety officials have been awarded the Governor’s Medal, which is awarded to groups collectively working to resolve an emergency.

Shawn Bice, Chris Brockelbank, Jeremiah Jones, and M. Corbin Thompson, West Plains Fire Department and Christopher Kimes and Tyler Pond, Missouri State Highway Patrol Troop G – On April 28, 2017, record flooding covered West Plains with more than 10 inches of rain falling in a matter of hours. Responders’ rescue boats capsized, were disabled or could not be used because of treacherous conditions.

A trailer park east of West Plains had quickly flooded, trapping residents. There were reports of a person having a heart attack and people on the roofs of trailers that were being swept away.

West Plains Firefighters Bice, Brockelbank, Jones and Thompson, and troopers Kimes and Pond, were determined to approach the trailer park from railroad track on utility terrain vehicles. They then cut through thick brush and waded across a field in chest-high water.

The four firefighters and two troopers rescued seven residents who had to be carried to safety through the flooded field, floating debris, heavy rain, lightning and other obstacles.

Chris Bell, Gary Brower, Matt Cockrum, Richie Hammon, Grant Sholes and Kurt Wilbanks, West Plains Fire Department – On April 28, 2017, a second team of six West Plains firefighters and one civilian rescued 92 people from potentially catastrophic flash flooding.

Hundreds of homes were taken over by floodwaters. Howell County 911 was overwhelmed with rescue calls. Swift water rescue boats were not available.

The team of Captain Wilbanks, Engineers Bell, Hammon and Sholes and Firefighters Brower and Cockrum, along with West Plains City Councilman Cary Stewart, proceeded in a firetruck, using a pike pole to find the roadway. They continued to improvise in terribly adverse conditions – outfitting a borrowed johnboat and single paddle with forcible entry tools and rope rigging.

Four patients were delivered to the hospital by boat. Those rescued included the elderly, injured, a homebound elderly woman on oxygen and about three dozen college students who on a dormitory roof.

Private Louis Bollasina, Private Paul Clark, Captain Larry Conley, Private Marquis Hayes, Captain Michael Hostetler, Private Joe Johnson, Private Tim Mahnken, Private Patrick O’Brien, Private Patrick Pollihan, Captain Bryan Radley, Private Dave Ray, Private James Reynolds, Private Jeff Ronshausen, Private Dale Schultz, Private Tim Schultz, Battalion Chief Gary Steffens, Private Galen Taylor, Private John Vallero, Captain Joe Waring, EMT Andrew Beasley, Paramedic Daniel Goldfeld, Paramedic Dustin Lammert, EMT Antuan Knox, Paramedic Supervisor Colin McCoy, Paramedic Cameron Morton, EMT Nicholas Spiess, EMT Norman Walker, Paramedic James Wilson and Fire Equipment Dispatcher Angela Williams, St. Louis Fire Department – Shortly before 2 a.m. on Jan. 24, 2017, the St. Louis Fire Department was dispatched to a two-story, two family flat in north St. Louis that was on fire with multiple people trapped. Multiple fire and EMS companies were dispatched to the scene with all of them made aware that a quick and coordinated search of the building was essential.

As firefighters climbed the stairs, they located the first victim on the stairs, unconscious and barely breathing. The victim was carried out of the burning building and resuscitated on the front lawn. Fighting high heat, flames and near zero visibility, firefighters conducting a coordinated search located another adult and five children on the burning second floor, all of them unconscious and in respiratory arrest. The victims were quickly removed from the building and revived.

St. Louis Fire Chief Dennis Jenkerson has said that in his 40 years in the fire service, he has never seen a more coordinated and heroic search and rescue with such a positive outcome.

 

Chief of Department David Hall (Retired), Springfield Fire Department – has received the Hall of Fame Award for his 34 years of service as a firefighter, fire chief, fire service educator and homeland security leader.

Hall began his career as a volunteer firefighter with the Mountain Grove Volunteer Fire Department in 1983, Hall moved to the Springfield Fire Department in 1989, where he was elevated to chief of the department in 2009 and retired in 2017.

 

Frank Mininni, Normandy Police Department, Chief of Police – has been awarded with the Director’s Leadership Medal. Col. Mininni became Normandy Police chief in 2009, after serving 22 years with the department and steadily rose through the ranks. His two decades of experience made him aware of the gulf that existed between law enforcement and many residents in the north St. Louis County community.

Opening of deer season means increased traffic expected Friday

Photo courtesy Missourinet

(Missourinet) – Many hunters are headed to Missouri’s woods Saturday for the start of the firearms deer hunting season.

Highway Patrol Sgt. Eric Brown says the opening day makes Friday a busy time on the roads, especially mid-morning through the early evening hours.

“We will see a large amount of traffic,” Brown said. “It will actually rival what we see on Thanksgiving travel days and Memorial Day travel days.”

Deer hunting has about a $1 billion economic impact on the state and local economies each year.

October and November are historically the months with the highest number of traffic crashes involving deer in Missouri. Brown says motorists should be prepared.

“As these hunters head out early on Saturday morning, obviously you’re going to have to watch for deer strikes. The night before last, we had at least seven car vs. deer crashes in Troop B. That’s probably going to continue to increase as the rut really starts kicking into gear and as hunters start pushing deer around.”

Hunters can participate thirty minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset. The season runs Nov. 10 through Nov. 20 this year.

The Missouri Department of Conservation will be conducting mandatory chronic wasting disease sampling this weekend of deer harvested in 31 of the 48 counties of its CWD Management Zone. Deer can be presented at any mandatory sampling station and hunters can get free test results of their sampled deer. Stations will be open from 7:30 a.m. to at least 8 p.m.

Ashcroft: Tuesday’s ballot is one of the longest in Missouri history

(Missourinet) – Missouri’s Secretary of State predicts some counties will see a 60 percent voter turnout on Tuesday.

Hotly-contested races for U.S. Senate and State Auditor top Missouri’s ballot Tuesday, and ballot measures on issues like medical marijuana and transportation are also boosting voter interest.

Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft (R) has been in frequent contact with county clerks across the state.

“I think we’re going to be over 50 percent,” Ashcroft says. “We’re going to have some counties that may be even over 60, 65 percent. Some counties that may be more close to 40 percent. But overall we are going to be over 50 percent.”

Ashcroft says that would be a higher-than-average turnout for a midterm election.

“This should be well above 2014, maybe above the 2016 midterm. We may be looking more around 2010,” says Ashcroft.

The ballot includes four constitutional amendments and three propositions. Ashcroft says Tuesday’s election ballot will be one of the longest in Missouri history. The “Clean Missouri” ballot measure alone is seven paragraphs. That’s Constitutional Amendment One.

Ashcroft is urging you to request a sample ballot from your local election authority, and to read it before you get to your polling place.

“If they want, they can go ahead and educate themselves about the issues and the candidates, they can go ahead and mark that sample ballot. And when they go to vote, they can just pull that out of their pocket, refer to it,” Ashcroft says.

Ashcroft says you can also visit govotemissouri.com to read the full texts of each ballot measure. The Proposition C medical marijuana measure’s full text is 50 pages.

Secretary Ashcroft also notes that your polling place Tuesday may be different than the one you voted at during the August primary.

While Cole County Circuit Judge Richard Callahan recently upheld Missouri’s photo ID measure, he stripped several key provisions from it. Ashcroft notes the state is appealing that decision.

Ashcroft emphasizes that if you are registered to vote, you can vote Tuesday. He encourages anyone with election questions to call his office at (866) 868-3245.

Polls open statewide Tuesday morning at 6 and close at 7 p.m.

VFW member discovers artifact in attic of Missouri post

VFW Commander Bud Davis says a member discovered a USS Missouri flag tucked away in the attic. Photo courtesy Missourinet.

(Missourinet) – A historic flag has been found at the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in southeast Missouri’s Farmington.

VFW Commander Bud Davis says a member discovered a USS Missouri flag tucked away in the attic. Japan surrendered on the USS Missouri battleship – putting an end to World War Two.

“I was like, ‘Are you kidding me? The ship that the Japanese actually surrendered to the U.S. on?’ He was like ‘Yeah, I found it up in the attic with a sign on it and a picture of the ship next to it.’”

Davis tells Missourinet affiliate KREI in Farmington they researched the flag.

“If it had 50 stars on it, it was after World War II. There was one year after World War II that they were flying 49 stars,” he says. “We counted the stars and it’s 48 stars. That’s World War II.”

Missouri received 11 battle stars for service in World War II, Korea and the Persian Gulf. It was decommissioned in 1992 after serving 16 years of active service. In 1998, the ship was donated to the USS Missouri Memorial Association and became a museum ship at the U.S. naval base of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.

Davis says the post has many artifacts important to the history of the United States and world.

“I would really love the community to be able to come down and see some of the things that have just been brought in over the years,” Davis says. “We’ve got maps from Germany from World War II. We’ve got more Vietnam veterans bringing in stuff.”

The post is fundraising to place the flag in a display case by Veterans Day next month.

Almost half a million Missourians to participate in “ShakeOut” earthquake drill

New Madrid Seismic Zone. Image courtesy of the Missouri Department of Public Safety | Missourinet.

(Missourinet) – The Missouri Statewide ‘ShakeOut” earthquake drill is taking place on Thursday.

Jeff Briggs is the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) Program Manager.  He says the state conducts the drill every year to keep residents aware that the danger exists.

“There is an earthquake risk in Missouri,” said Briggs.  “Because large earthquakes don’t happen frequently here, some people don’t know that there’s a risk of it.”

Briggs says the drill is also taking place to alert people about safety procedures because earthquakes strike without any warning such as weather patterns that precede tornadoes and floods.

“If a flood comes, it’s raining, and you see the river rise,” Briggs said. “With a tornado, you usually get a few minutes of warning on your phone or with a siren. But in an earthquake, the shaking is going to start and you’re going to have no warning at all. People need to know what to do in advance.”

“ShakeOut” participants will practice the “Drop, Cover, Hold On” technique during the one-minute drill beginning at 10:18 a.m.  Emergency management experts consider the method the appropriate action to reduce injury and death during earthquakes.

The procedure calls for participants to drop to their hands and knees, cover their heads and necks with their hands or by crawling under a table or desk, and then hold on until the shaking stops.

Missouri is not thought of as a location where major earthquakes take place.  But in 1811 and 1812 the state was rocked by at least three of the largest earthquakes ever to hit the continental United States.  They occurred in the New Madrid Seismic Zone in the southeast part of the state. According to SEMA, the biggest of those quakes “altered the flow of the Mississippi River, turned rich farmland into fields of sand and destroyed countless structures.”

More than 492,000 Missourians are taking part in the “ShakeOut,” led by more than 400,000 individuals at elementary, middle and high schools.  There’ll be almost 29,000 participants from colleges and universities and nearly 19,000 at healthcare facilities across the state.

 

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