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Another Mo. county creating veterans’ treatment court

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Another Missouri county is establishing a special program to help military veterans who facing certain criminal charges get special assistance as an alternative to jail or prison.

The Jefferson City News Tribune reports the veterans’ treatment court being established in Cole County will be the seventh in the state and the second in central Missouri.

Veterans’ courts in Missouri typically accept veterans who are charged with low-level offenses and pass a screening. They receive treatment through the Veterans Administration for problems such as service-related mental health and substance abuse issues.

Judge Pat Joyce of the 19th Judicial Circuit said Wednesday that officials in neighboring Osage and Morgan counties have agreed to refer qualifying veterans to the Cole County program.

Plans for Kemper Arena focus on youth sports

Kemper ArenaKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Two competing plans for the future of Kemper Arena in Kansas City focus heavily on youth sports, an industry that has been growing rapidly in recent years.

Kansas City-based Foutch Brothers has a $22 million plan to acquire the arena from the city and repurpose it for youth basketball, volleyball and other athletics. The Kansas City Star reports a consultant concluded this week the plan has merits.

The American Royal has proposed demolishing Kemper Arena and replacing it with a custom-designed $50 million multipurpose building that it says could be filled with even more youth sports offerings.

Kansas City council members are researching both options and trying to figure out what the city can afford before making a final recommendation later this month.

 

Ex-Kansas State player shot, killed in Cleveland

PoliceCLEVELAND (AP) — Authorities have identified a man shot and killed outside a Cleveland nightclub as former Kansas State University football player David Garrett.

The Plain Dealer in Cleveland reports the 26-year-old Garrett was shot in the chest around 3:25 a.m. Saturday outside Lavish Ultra Lounge on the city’s West side. He was transported to a nearby hospital, where he died shortly thereafter.

The Cuyahoga  County medical examiner identified Garrett.

Garrett played his senior season at T.W. Harvey High School in Painesville, joining Kansas State’s team in 2009. He was an Associated Press honorable mention All-Big 12 pick after the 2010 season.

Witnesses told police there was a fight inside the club that continued outside. Someone fired a shot and it hit Garrett.

No one’s been arrested. An investigation continues.

Upside-down Kansas, other surprises, enliven races

 

Roberts and Orman busy on the campaign trail- Courtesy photos
Roberts and Orman busy on the campaign trail- Courtesy photos

CHARLES BABINGTON, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — A free steak dinner for everyone who predicted the Senate races in Kansas and South Dakota would be in doubt three weeks from Election Day.

Or that the most-discussed campaign TV ad would show a smiling woman talking about castrating hogs.

These midterm congressional elections are serving up a tableful of surprises.

Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio isn’t in trouble after all. But three-term Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas is.

So, too, is Republican Gov. Sam Brownback in Kansas — one of the most Republican states.

President Barack Obama’s health law has faded as the all-important GOP issue in many places. Replacing it are new warnings about the threat of Ebola and Islamic terrorists.

Third-party candidates are injecting uncertainty into Maine’s gubernatorial race and South Dakota’s Senate race.

State health officials: 2nd Ebola case in Texas

EbolaDALLAS (AP) — Health officials say a health care worker at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital who provided care for the Ebola patient hospitalized there has tested positive for Ebola in a preliminary test.

A statement posted on the Texas Department of State Health Service’s website Sunday says “confirmatory testing will be conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.”

Officials say the health care worker reported a low grade fever Friday night and was isolated and referred for testing. Preliminary test results were received late Saturday.

Dr. David Lakey, commissioner of the Texas Department of State Health Services, says officials have “been preparing for this possibility.”

Health officials have interviewed the patient and are identifying any contacts or potential exposures.

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the U.S., died Wednesday in Dallas.?

Two Cameron teens hospitalized after truck overturns

CAMERON- Two Missouri teens were injured in an accident just after 2 p.m. DeKalb County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Chevy S-10 driven by Libby D. Brown, 16, Cameron, was southbound on Route EE five miles north of Cameron entering a set of curves. The driver failed to negotiate the curves. The vehicle traveled off the west side of the road and overturned.

Brown and a passenger Hanna R. Brown, 13, Cameron, were transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center.

The MSHP reported both were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Police shooting protests continue

ST. LOUIS (AP) – A weekend of peaceful daytime protests and nightly police standoffs is expected to continue Sunday in St. Louis as organizers prepare for a “wave of resistance” they anticipate will lead to widespread arrests the following day.

Organizers of the four-day Ferguson October summit to protest the early August police shooting death of Michael Brown are scheduled to train participants in nonviolent civil disobedience tactics Sunday morning.

On Monday, a “direct action” led by local and visiting clergy members is planned for Ferguson and other spots in and around St. Louis. Protest leaders don’t plan to release details until shortly ahead of time to avoid tipping off law enforcement.

A crowd that organizers estimated at 3,000 marched through downtown St. Louis on Saturday. Police reported no arrests or violent incidents.

WOTUS’ Large Dose of Anxiety

Farm BureauBY REBECCA FRENCH SMITH

It’s raining. For many, a rainy day conjures thoughts of sleeping in or, at the very least, a pajama day on the couch. If only it wasn’t a workday. For farmers this time of year, though, every day is a workday. However, rain means it’s a day not in the field but stuck indoors when corn needs to be shelled and soybeans harvested.

This rain also illustrates what the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) intend to now regulate with the proposed “Waters of the U.S.” (WOTUS) rule: every drop that comes from the sky. They would say that’s a stretch, but the language — not the EPA’s “intent” we hear so much about — used in the proposed rule leaves it open to just that.

Missouri Farm Bureau has used a little humor in the last few months to bring attention to WOTUS, because farmers and ranchers not only in Missouri but across the country see this rule as yet another power grab from bureaucrats in Washington, D.C.

Our video, “That’s Enough,” with MFB members Andy and Kacey Clay garnered national attention in June and July. A parody to Disney’s “Let It Go” from the animated movie “Frozen,” the video took place on a central Missouri farm where farmers’ concerns about the rule could be highlighted. Our efforts likely played, in no small part, a role in what brought the EPA to our doorstep to stump on the rule mid-summer.

On October 9, the reach of the rule became much clearer as groups from across the state convened at the MFB state headquarters to discuss in detail what the rule will mean to not only agriculture, but to home builders, small businesses, homeowners and more. U.S. Congressman Blaine Luetkemeyer and Ashley McDonald, environmental counsel for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, as well as the Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Missouri Municipal League, the National Federation of Independent Business and many others, agreed the rule would harm Missourians across the board and, more often than not, decisions affecting water quality are best made at the state and local level.

Perhaps the most jaw-dropping element shared at the roundtable was an interactive map that showed the visual extent to which the EPA intends to control. It amounted to a near-empty outline of the state of Missouri before to a near-solid map of coverage after, but even this was conservative.

Most of the time when it rains, farmers are thankful the water is nourishing their crops or animals, but if WOTUS stands, farmers, homeowners, builders, business owners, all of us, would temper that gratitude with a large dose of anxiety as well, wondering whether the EPA might show up on our doorsteps to enforce the regulation. Ditching the rule won’t resolve all of our anxiety about the federal government’s overreach, but it would be a good start. Please do your part to urge the EPA and Corps to withdraw the rule.

You can find a podcast of the entire roundtable discussion here.

Rebecca French Smith, of Columbia, Mo., is a multimedia specialist for the Missouri Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization.

Two hospitalized after 3-vehicle Clinton Co. crash

LATHROP- Two people were injured in an accident just after 2:30 p.m. on Saturday in Clinton County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1998 Honda Civic driven by Mojtaba Ale Mohammadi,31, Rolla, attempted to make a u-turn in the intersection of MO 116 at U.S. 169 five miles east of Lathrop. The Honda was struck in the driver’s side by a 2004 Ford F250 driven by Harold W. Thilking, 59, Napoleon. The 2004 Ford crossed the centerline and collided with a 2005 Ford F250 driven by Steve R. Uehling, 60, Polo.

Passengers Debra L. Thilking, 57, Napoleon, and Sandra M. Uehling, 52, Polo were transported to Liberty Hospital. No other injuries were reported.

The MSHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

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