We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

SJPD investigating Tuesday morning explosion

St. Joseph Police are investigating after an explosion Tuesday morning on 22nd Street.

According to Capt. Jeff Wilson with the police department, a call came in shortly before 9 a.m. Tuesday about an explosion in the 600 block of S. 22nd Street. According to witness statements, an explosive device put into the sewer blew the lid and concrete cover off and into the street.

Wilson said no one was injured.

Police have not identified the explosive device yet. Wilson said there is no suspect in custody as of early Tuesday afternoon, but the investigation is progressing.

Free admission to many area museums offered on Saturday

Visiting one or more of the many area museums will free of charge on Saturday.

Museum Day, created by Smithsonian Magazine, started over a decade ago and 40,000 institutions are expected to participate, including museums in St. Joseph.

St. Joseph Museums Public Relations Officer Kathy Reno said there are a variety of museums in the area with something for everyone.

“Each museum kind of does their own thing, they have their own hours, they may be having docents more on site that day.. I would check with each museum that you’re interested in visiting, and check out their hours on their website and plan your day,” Reno said. “I do think this day is a lot of fun… You might want to do the Remington Nature Center, which I know my three-year-old granddaughter just adores. So you can also think about the age of the people in your family and plan your day that way.”

Reno said one of the things being offered at the Glore Psychiatric Museum is guided tours of the history of mental health treatments.

“We thought we would provide our best guides and give you the experience of it. It can be intense and it helps if you have a guide and they make it interesting,” Reno said. “They’ll include one of the tunnels in the tour. Tunnels once connected the main buildings of the hospital. There is one that is accessible that was part of a patient art project.. Quite unusual.”

Guided tours of the history of mental health treatments will be given at 11 a.m. and at 1, 2, and 3 p.m. at the Glore Psychiatric Museum. At the St. Joseph Museum, the featured exhibit is World War I St. Joseph:  Community and Conflict.  At the Wyeth-Tootle Mansion, docents will be available to share the history of the Mansion and visitors can tour “Intersections of Time and Buildings,” “The Architecture of E. J. Eckel,” “Confluence:  The Great Flood of 1993,” and “Ruth Warrick:  Fame and Politics.”

Museum Day takes place Saturday, Sept. 22, 2018. For more information and a list of museums participating in the area, click here.

Chamber hosting event to discuss Proposition D with Lt. Governor

Kehoe

The St. Joseph Chamber of Commerce will be hosting Missouri Lt. Governor Mike Kehoe this week to discuss an upcoming ballot measure.

Chamber Director of Communications and Marketing Kristi Bailey said at the Cocktails and Politics event, Kehoe will be answering questions about Proposition D, which will be on the ballot in November.

“If this issue is approved, it will phase in a 2.5 cent annual increase to Missouri’s motor fuel tax over a period of four years… the funds will go to improve our state’s roads and bridges and some of the funding will go to local communities,” Bailey said. “So this is an important issue for Missouri voters and we’re happy that he’s going to be here to talk it out with us and get feedback from our residents.”

The event is free and open to the public. It will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. on Wednesday at Gallery on Sixth located at 107 S. Sixth St. in downtown St. Joseph. 

Hunters can “Share the Harvest” to help Missourians in need

With deer hunting season beginning this weekend, the Missouri Department of Conservation is encouraging deer hunters around the state to share their harvest.

Northwest Region Protection District Supervisor Ken Polley said the Share the Harvest program started in 1992 as a way to encourage hunters to share their harvest with people in need.

“Over the years, over four million pounds of lean, healthy venison have been donated to various food pantries and food banks across the state of Missouri and then they’re dispersed to people to use it,” Polley said. “Last year, 289,200 pounds of venison was donated and we work with food banks across the state to disperse this meat. They are very appreciative when the food banks receive this meat because the people that come to the food banks to get food, the venison is very popular and it goes very quickly when they receive the supply.”

Polley said if a hunter would like to donate a deer to Share the Harvest, after they harvest and check their animal in, they can take it to one of the approved Share the Harvest processors. Approved processors in the area include Clark’s Custom Meat in Buchanan County at 8411 SW 59 Hwy in St. Joseph and Brendle’s Butcher Block in Clinton County at 90 1/2 South 4th in Gower.

“Hunters can either donate… five or 10 pounds of their deer that they harvest and then take to get processed or… if they do a whole deer donation, all or at least part of the processing fee is covered through a statewide program administered by the Conservation Federation of Missouri to help encourage hunters to donate their deer,” Polley said.

Archery deer season opens up on Saturday in Missouri.

“We always remind archery hunters, in particular, or anyone that hunts from a deer stand, be sure they’re wearing a proper safety harness to keep them safe in their deer stand while they’re on their deer hunt,” Polley said. “We’re (also) encouraging hunters to… properly dispose of your deer carcass. If you harvest a deer and are going to process it yourself, it’s important to dispose of the carcass to minimize any chance of disease spread.”

CWD or Chronic Wasting Disease has been found in 11 counties in Missouri: Adair, Cedar, Cole, Franklin, Jefferson, Linn, Macon, Perry, Polk, St. Clair, and Ste. Genevieve. Deer donated to Share the Harvest must be tested for CWD if harvested from any of those counties. Find a list of participating processors online.

For more information about hunting season or the Share the Harvest program, go to mdc.mo.gov or contact a district or regional MDC office or local conservation agent.

How social media has changed recruiting at MWSU and in college athletics

By Sarah Thomack
St. Joseph Post

Before an athlete plays for a university, coaches check out a player’s skills on the field or on the court and online.

Twitter and other social media platforms have been around for over a decade, so coaches and their staff have adapted and now take the time to check out how a player interacts online versus what their character is like in real life.

“There’s been sometimes where I get on there and I’m like, ‘Man, there’s no way I’m recruiting that guy,’ and there’s, ‘Heck yeah, that’s the type of guy I want to recruit,’” said Matt Williamson, Head Football Coach at Missouri Western State University. “If I’m recruiting a kid… I’ll immediately just flip through his top twenty or thirty, what he’s tweeting and retweeting, and you can kind of find out about a person pretty quick. What people put on there, is kind of who they are… and so you can kind of find out a little bit about a person.”

Williamson said he prefers using Twitter over other social media platforms, as it seems to be the most popular in the college sports world. Williamson said Twitter makes it easier to interact with recruits and he encourages athletes looking to continue their football careers beyond high school to have a Twitter account.

“(From) the recruiting aspect of it, you can kind of keep up to date with them, you might not be able to talk with them, you might… be swiping through or scrolling and see he played in the all-star game and had 10 tackles,” Williamson said. “You didn’t know that before because you’re not able to track the other 250 kids you’re all kind of recruiting at the same time. So you see that, it reminds you and you can shoot him a message, ‘Hey man, you had a great game.’ It’s just kind of a reminder for everybody, keeps everybody on each other’s minds.”

As a coach, there are detailed NCAA rules to follow when it comes to contact with recruits at certain times during the recruiting process. When social media came onto the scene, the NCAA saw the need to add rules regarding social media and what coaches can and cannot do and when they can contact a player during the recruitment process. Since the NCAA issued rules regarding social media and recruiting, changes have been implemented through the years to keep up with how social media has grown and evolved.

While coaches check out player’s social media, they, in turn, use social media to show their personality, spread their team mentality and culture and the school’s brand to recruits. Coach Williamson, along with Missouri Western Head Men’s Basketball Coach Sundance Wicks are both active on Twitter using their hashtags #GriffUp #BallTilYouFall and #BYOJ (Bring Your Own Juice).

“You can get your brand out across the world,” Williamson said. “As much as everything gets tagged and retweeted and.. If you can really stamp your brand and who you are as a team or your logo, people just continue to see your stuff so you get to stay on their mind consistently. Your brand, your product, your university, all look more attractive and it’s just like a little reminder for kids that are thinking about that school or your school.”

Once a player is on the team, they are expected to still be conscientious about what they post and represent themselves, their family and the university well. Williamson said three or four people on staff will monitor their football player’s social media activity and talk with them about any concerns. Coach Wicks said he and staff seek to educate and guide players even when it comes to social media. Wicks said they like to have fun with it and staff will go over social media hot topics and talk with players about any questionable posts.

“Our program is pretty simple, we just say don’t do anything to embarrass your name, your family’s name, your program and your community,” Wicks said. “We say promote positivity. Positive things about our program, about our community, about your family, even about you.”

Recently, on the professional level, several Major League Baseball players and NFL draft picks had several offensive Tweets from six or more years ago resurface. That prompted public conversations around each player’s character and whether dismissing it by saying, “they were just a kid” is acceptable. Wicks points out that players now often have had Twitter accounts since they were 14 and “there’s a lot of things that people say that they don’t understand the implications years down the line.”

Both Williamson and Wicks said, with anything similar that may happen with their players, they look to the future and want to know what the player learns moving forward.

“When stuff like that comes out, and you want to confront a person about it, the question I would ask is, ‘Did you learn from it? Have you grown on from that person, from whatever that was, whatever you did, whatever spurred on that moment in time?’” Wicks said. “When it comes to a question about a kid’s past, I will ask kids that we recruit about certain things that I’ve seen and I’m going to ask them, ‘Tell me what you’ve learned from it.’ If they haven’t learned from it, we’ll see that character trait again because you can be fooled in this process… Life is always about growth and progress… and so are we going to infinitely try to become better people and try to use these platforms for good or are we going to try and turn them and make them bad.”

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File