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22-year-old arrested in connection with shooting and wounding of 3-year-old

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Riandten Brant/Photo courtesy of Buchanan County Sheriff’s Dept.

A 22-year-old St. Joseph man has been charged in connection with the shooting and wounding of a three-year-old girl this past weekend.

Riandten C. E. Brant also faces drug charges.

The Buchanan County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office this afternoon charged Brant with a Class C felony of endangering the welfare of a child in the first degree, claiming that on June 22nd, Brant possessed methamphetamine at 1610 Beattie Street, the residence of the child, identified only as “A.B.” in the felony complaint.

Court papers disclose that police issued a search warrant at the residence and found Brant with 28.5 grams of methamphetamine in the basement of the residence.

Police first went to the residence on a shooting call.

St. Joseph Police says the three-year-old was shot late Saturday morning. She is listed in stable condition.

Missouri makes 2nd request to President Trump for major disaster declaration

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Missouri has asked President Donald Trump to issue a second major disaster declaration as the state recovers from a second round of flooding as well as severe storms, including tornadoes.

The formal request was made today by Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe, acting on behalf of Gov. Mike Parson, who is out of the country.

According to the governor’s office, state and local officials examined 1,650 primary homes, of which 953 had been destroyed or sustained major damage. The assessments also showed that 125 of 251 businesses examined had been destroyed or sustained major damage from storms since April 29th.

The governor’s office is requesting individual assistance for 41 Missouri counties which would allow residents to seek federal assistance with temporary housing, housing repairs, replacement of damaged belongings, vehicles, and other qualifying expenses as a result of the flooding and storms. Those counties are Adair, Andrew, Atchison, Barton, Boone, Buchanan, Callaway, Carroll, Chariton, Christian, Clark, Cole, Cooper, Dallas, Douglas, Gasconade, Greene, Grundy, Harrison, Hickory, Holt, Howard, Jackson, Jasper, Jefferson, Laclede, Lafayette, Lewis, Lincoln, Livingston, Macon, Miller, Osage, Pike, Platte, Polk, Pulaski, Saline, St. Charles, St. Louis, and Ste. Genevieve.

Seven teams began conducting joint damage assessments today for federal public assistance, which would allow local governments and nonprofit agencies to offset some of the cost of disaster response as well as help repair damaged roads, bridges, and other infrastructure.

The governor’s office says the state expects to request public assistance once joint Preliminary Damage Assessments are completed in 64 counties. Those counties are Adair, Andrew, Atchison, Barry, Barton, Bates, Bollinger, Buchanan, Caldwell, Camden, Carroll, Cedar, Chariton, Clark, Cole, Dade, Dallas, Daviess, Douglas, Dunklin, Gentry, Grundy, Harrison, Henry, Hickory, Holt, Jasper, Knox, Laclede, Lafayette, Lewis, Linn, Livingston, Macon, Maries, Marion, Mercer, Miller, Mississippi, Monroe, New Madrid, Nodaway, Ozark, Pemiscot, Perry, Pike, Pulaski, Putnam, Ralls, Ray, St. Clair, Ste. Genevieve, Saline, Schuyler, Scotland, Shannon, Shelby, Stoddard, Sullivan, Taney, Texas, Vernon, Webster, and Wright.

Additional joint damage assessments for public assistance may be conducted in more Missouri counties as additional information is gathered locally when floodwaters recede.

To assist families impacted by flooding and severe storms, several Multi-Agency Resource Centers are being organized across the state.

Three MARCs will take place this week, in Independence, Brunswick, and Boonville:

Tuesday, June 25

Silverstein Eye Centers Arena

19100 E. Valley Pkwy | Independence, MO 64055

11 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Wednesday, June 26

Brunswick R-2 High School

1008 County Road | Brunswick, MO 65236

11 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Friday, June 28

Open Bible Praise Center

16991 Hwy 87 | Boonville, MO 65233

11 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Individuals with unmet needs should continue to contact United Way 211. Call 2-1-1 for assistance or visit http://211helps.org. Find more information as it becomes available about disaster resources, including additional MARC locations at http://recovery.mo.gov.

President Trump issued a disaster declaration May 20th for local governments and nonprofit agencies in Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Carroll, Chariton, Holt, Mississippi, New Madrid, Pemiscot, Perry, Platte, Ray, and Ste. Genevieve Counties to help in recovery from the initial round of flooding, which began March 11th.

The declaration made federal assistance available for the repair of damaged roads, bridges, and other public infrastructure, along with emergency response costs associated with the storms and flooding; an estimated $25 million in damage.

Gov. Parson declared a state of emergency in Missouri May 21st as a round of severe weather, including a tornado that struck the state’s Capital City.

 

St. Joseph health officials working to educate parents about the dangers lead poses to children

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

St. Joseph Health Director Debra Bradley speaks at a news conference./Brent Martin photo

New regulations go only so far as St. Joseph city officials work to reduce the risk of lead poisoning for the community’s youngest members.

The Environmental Protection Agency has announced stricter lead standards.

EPA Region 7 Administrator Jim Gulliford says his office is working with St. Joseph health officials to warn parents and others about the dangers of lead poisoning in pre-1978 construction.

“The importance of pre-78 housing is that after 1978 lead was prohibited in paints used in homes and housing,” Gulliford says during a St. Joseph news conference. “So, we particularly look at pre-78 housing as places where there may be lead exposures for children.”

Gulliford says the standard was changed after studies emerged that raised continued concerns about the exposure to lead by very young children, leading the EPA to lower acceptable dust-lead hazard standards for floors from 40 micrograms of lead per square foot to 10 and for window sills dropping it from 250 to 100. It is the first change in the standards since 2001.

St. Joseph Health Director Debra Bradley says her office is running educational campaigns aimed especially at parents and child care providers about new, tighter EPA dust-lead standards for floors and window sills.

“Lead is a heavy metal that occurs naturally in rock and when previously it was added to paint it would enhance color and durability, but lead is an element and it doesn’t go away, which is why once lead is discovered in a home, following EPA guidelines for safety is imperative,” Bradley says.

Bradley says lead poisoning can go undetected, but she says parents need to know there is a simple blood test children can take.

“Children with elevated blood levels can experience serious health effects,” according to Bradley. “If you know your child has lead poisoning, talk to your pediatrician or the city of St. Joseph Health Department about what you can do.”

Bradley says the city will work with parents, no matter how receptive they are to the message.

“It’s kind of a mixed response,” Bradley says of the city’s work with parents on the issue. “There are some parents who are extremely protective and want to do everything they can for their kiddos and then there are others who are a little apprehensive of government involvement and so they’re a little cautious. But, we try to develop that rapport with them, so that they can understand that we’re here to help them and their family and that we just want to make it better for their kids.”

EPA tightens rules on lead in effort to prevent lead poisoning in young children

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

EPA Region 7 Administrator Jim Gulliford addresses a news conference in St. Joseph./Photo by Brent Martin

New, tougher regulations on exposure to lead have been implemented by the Environmental Protection Agency.

EPA Region 7 Administrator, Jim Gulliford, tells reporters at a St. Joseph news conference research has proven even small amounts of lead can prove harmful to young children.

“And that’s why today EPA is announcing significantly new and more strict standards for lead dust in homes built before 1978 along with schools and child care facilities as well to protect, again, children in those early developmental years from exposure to lead,” Gulliford says.

The EPA states the United States has greatly reduced the risk of lead exposure to young children, from birth to age six, since the 1970s. New studies though indicate there is no real safe level of lead for such young children. The EPA is lowering the dust-lead hazard standards from 40 micrograms of lead per square foot to 10 on floors and from 250 micrograms to 100 on window sills in buildings built prior to 1978, when lead was banned from paint.

The EPA will work with St. Joseph city officials to educate the public on the threat of lead contamination, especially to the growth and development of children. The EPA reports lead-contaminated dust from chipped or peeling lead-based paint can lead to elevated blood lead levels in children.

Gulliford says the standards have been tightened to protect the very young.

“So, infants and young children especially vulnerable to lead paint exposure because their growing bodies absorb more lead than us as adults and their developing brains and nervous systems are more sensitive to the damaging effects of lead,” according to Gulliford.

Gulliford says the EPA is working with contractors on the issue, especially those who work in renovation of older homes. He says the agency is also attempting to help homeowners who do their own work on how best to prevent lead exposure.

Imagine St. Joseph 2040 tries to see city problems and potential clearly

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Gov. Mike Parson signs the St. Joseph Land Bank bill during a ceremony at City Hall./Photo by Brent Martin

A person relatively new to her position says she already sees progress as St. Joseph seeks to identify its most vexing problems and capitalize on its assets to revitalize the community.

Tama Wagner has been director of the Community Alliance since March, in charge of implementing the ambitious program known as Imagine St. Joseph 2040.

An entity soon coming to St. Joseph hopes to solve a longtime problem by capitalizing on one of its greatest assets.

It’s the Land Bank. Signed into law by Gov. Mike Parson during a ceremony at St. Joseph City Hall, the St. Joseph Land Bank will work to accumulate the money necessary to buy up abandoned properties and resale them for renovation, taking deteriorating structures and making them historic showcases.

Wagner says the Land Bank will give a big boost to those in St. Joseph already trying to revive its once-beautiful architecture.

“It’s a culmination of all of those people working on that very specific issue to get something done and throughout the plan there are initiatives that have that sort of commitment around them, from neighborhood revitalization to historic preservation to job creation,” Wagner tells listeners to the KFEQ Hotline.

One of the neighborhoods the St. Joseph Land Bank aims to help./Photo by Brent Martin

The website livability.com ranks St. Joseph second among its seven unexpected cities for architecture lovers. St. Joseph boasts hundreds of historic homes and businesses, many with stunning architecture. Yet, many have fallen into disrepair. The city counts nearly 5,000 abandoned or vacant buildings with nearly 500 without a known owner. The Land Bank hopes to accumulate enough capital to buy those buildings and pass them on to owners who will restore them to their former beauty.

Imagine St. Joseph 2040 has a three-fold strategic focus:  invest in people, create a better place, and grow prosperity.

Problems identified by the Community Alliance, made up of eight partners with 700 volunteers, includes homelessness and the lack of early childhood education.

Wagner says one of the partners, Mosaic Life Care, is focusing on addressing the root causes of homelessness in an effort to get people off the streets and back into life.

Another partner, the St. Joseph School District, is looking at ways to expand early childhood education.

“The school district just this month has looked at reopening Noyes Elementary School and providing early childhood education in that space, which is great for the Noyes neighborhood because it would reuse that school again, but also great for students coming into the district that they’re actually prepared to go to school,” Wagner says.

Wagner says collaboration and leadership are the keys to making improvements to St. Joseph.

“It’s going to take everybody working together and it’s going to take people in those groups to step up and raise their hands and say, ‘I’m willing to take the lead on this.’”

 

Trenton police officer wounded in struggle with prisoner is improving

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Trenton Officer Jasmine Diab/Photo from GoFundMe page

A Trenton police officer wounded in a struggle over her gun is recovering.

Twenty-four-year-old Jasmine Diab had been listed in critical, but stable condition at a Kansas City hospital. She has been upgraded to stable condition after undergoing surgeries to repair wounds from being shot in the abdomen by a prisoner she was transporting to St. Joseph.

Missouri State Highway Patrol Sergeant Jake Angle says Diab was taking 38-year-old Jamey Griffin to St. Joseph for mental evaluation in a Trenton police car when he grabbed for her gun.

“When they reached the city limits of Winston a struggle ensued inside the vehicle,” Angle says during the KFEQ Hotline. “During that struggle, the Trenton officer was shot in the abdomen. The suspect received a gunshot wound to the hand at which time the vehicle came to a slow, rolling stop on U.S. 69 close to a convenience store there in Winston, the Pit Stop.”

Citizens at the convenience store came to the aid of Diab and restrained Griffin until officers could arrive and take him into custody.

Jamey Griffin/Daviess County photo

Daviess County prosecutors charged Griffin with first-degree assault, armed criminal action, and shooting a weapon at or from a vehicle.

Angle says the dangerous incident demonstrates there are few things that are routine in police work.

“Anytime you’re dealing with a prisoner and you’re also talking about somebody that possibly their liberty is going to be taken away from them and sometimes those people choose to take desperate action,” Angle says. “I think that’s what happened in this situation. I think he felt that was an opportunity, possibly.”

Friends of Officer Diab have established an online fundraiser for her. Diab is a single mother to a five-year-old.

I-29 reopens, but don’t expect interstate conditions in southwest Iowa

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

I-29, near Mound City, when it first closed after Missouri River flooding in March./Photo by Brent Martin

Interstate 29 has reopened north of St. Joseph even with floodwaters lapping at its shoulders in southwest Iowa.

Area Engineer Adam Watson with the Northwest District of the Missouri Department of Transportation says MoDOT was waiting for word from Iowa before allowing through traffic to take I-29 again.

“It’s not going to be a perfect interstate, but it is open,” Watson tells listeners to the KFEQ Hotline. “There will be areas where there will be head-to-head traffic or you might even have to be under highway construction or rehabilitation where they’re doing the repairs still, but they were able to open it and as soon as they gave us word we were able to open up our section.”

The Iowa Department of Transportation reopened the interstate late Tuesday afternoon with the Missouri Department of Transportation following suit. IDOT had to wait for Missouri River floodwaters to recede and clean up to be completed to reopen the interstate. Traffic will be reduced to two lanes in some portions of I-29 in southwest Iowa.

Watson says both states will work to keep the interstate open to avoid a repeat of May 29th, when I-29 reopened only to be shut down almost immediately afterward when flooding caused its closure in southwest Iowa.

“Shortly after we reopened it,” Watson says. “So, we were like, ‘Wow, this is not as much fun as we would like.’ So, we got the closures, the barricades back in place and reclosed it,” “It was not our best day, but let’s be honest, we had fluid conditions and we were responding as we could.”

Watson warns motorists I-29 isn’t ups to interstate standards in Iowa, where it narrows to two-lanes in portions of the state where floodwaters remain high and right next to the pavement.

Watson says the reopening of the interstate removes a bottleneck in northwest Missouri traffic.

“We are excited about that,” Watson says. “We know that a lot of people were struggling with their transportation choices being a little bit limited here due to the natural disasters, but I’m glad we’re starting to get these arteries back open, slowly but surely. If we can get them all open here shortly, I’m not sure that’s going to be able to happen, but I hope we can make great strides in the next few days, weeks, as long as it takes.”

Other major thoroughfares remain closed, notably U.S. 159 to the Rulo bridge and U.S. 136 to the Brownville bridge. Emergency repair work had begun to reopen traffic between northwest Missouri and northeast Nebraska, but renewed flooding in late May forced crews to abandon their work until floodwaters recede. U.S. 59 in southern Buchanan County remains closed with floodwaters cutting off the route to the Missouri River bridge to Atchison, Kansas.

Interstate 29 reopens as floodwaters recede in southwest Iowa

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Interstate 29 has reopened.

Flooding in southwest Iowa caused I-29 to close twice this year. Once, the Missouri Department of Transportation reopened it briefly, only to close it again when the Iowa Department of Transportation closed the interstate just across the Missouri-Iowa state line.

MoDOT reports it reopened I-29 after Iowa transportation officials reopened it in southwest Iowa. Traffic might narrow to one lane in some locations between St. Joseph and I-80 at Council Bluffs in Iowa. MoDOT says both it and the Iowa Department of Transportation will work diligently to keep I-29 open as well as work to reopen other routes caused by flooding in mid-March and late May.

Missouri closed I-29 to through traffic at U.S. 71 north of St. Joseph so traffic could be redirected away from the flooded interstate in Iowa. Missouri River flooding first closed the interstate in March. It reopened only to be closed again when renewed flooding swamped southwest Iowa and northwest Missouri in late May.

In fact, MoDOT reopened its portion of I-29 May 29th, but had to reclose the interstate to through traffic only hours later when flooding again closed I-29 in Iowa.

MoDOT suggested interstate commerce take U.S. 71 into Iowa or divert to I-35, but many truckers opted to travel U.S. 36 into northeast Kansas, then take U.S. 75 into Nebraska as an alternative route, clogging those two-lane roads for much of the spring.

Click here  for up-to-date information on the flood impact in northwest Missouri.

 

Waiting game: vital highways remain closed as water remains high

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Major highways remain closed as transportation officials work to repair damage left in the wake of the second flood of the four-state region.

Damage cannot be assessed for some roads, because water remains over the pavement.

Area Engineer Adam Watson with the Northwest District of the Missouri Department of Transportation says MoDOT still has Interstate 29 closed to through traffic at US 71, because floodwaters remain over the interstate in southwest Iowa after flooding returned at the end of May.

Watson says the biggest flood damage occurred west of the interstate to the Missouri River.

“The water just up and staying up between I-29 and the river is just devastating, that northwest corner of the state, both economically, with the ability to get around, with the collateral damage from the repairs:  rock truck after rock truck after rock truck, going to repair, whether it’s our highways, going to repair the railroad, whatever needed flood repairs,” Watson says as a guest of the KFEQ Hotline. “We understand it. It’s just a lot of damage.”

Bridges over the Missouri River, carrying traffic between northwest Missouri and southeast Nebraska, withstood the forces of Missouri River flooding, but remain closed to traffic.

Watson says flooding did ruin the approaches to the bridges, even wiping out smaller bridges over Missouri River tributaries; one that they are watching as floodwaters recede.

“(U.S.) 136, we had a bridge we were watching real closely from March and with the second event in May we might have substantial damage on that bridge,” Watson says. “We’re not sure, we haven’t been able to look. There is still too much water going over that section of 136 for us to really get a good idea of the damage, but personally I’m afraid we might have lost that bridge as well.”

Watson says emergency crews had begun making repairs from the March floods when the May floods forced them to abandon their work. He says the crews cannot return until the water goes down.

“The highways are covered with water. That’s why they’re closed,” according to Watson. “The approach bridges over the smaller tributaries, that’s where we had the damage, that’s where we had the bridges damaged. If the water goes down and we can get the roads cleaned and make the minor repairs. Even with those tributary bridges damaged, we’ll be able to get ‘work arounds’ so that they’ll be able to use the Missouri River crossings.”

U.S. 59 to Atchison, Kansas remains closed, waiting for floodwaters to recede in southern Buchanan County. Emergency repairs could get that link across the Missouri River open in a few days, rather than weeks.

Click here for the MoDOT Northwest Missouri Flooding report.

DeKalb County issues missing person advisory as search for 23-year-old Maysville woman continues

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Leah Marie Dawson/Photo courtesy of DeKalb County Sheriff’s Dept.

DeKalb County has issued an Endangered Person Advisory for a 23-year-old woman missing since June 4th.

The DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department says Leah Marie Dawson has been missing from 3111 NE State Rt. A in Maysville since 2am on June 4th.

Dawson is described as a while female, age 23, 5 foot 1 inch tall, weighing approximately 120 pounds, with brown hair, blue eyes, and a light complexion; clothing unknown.

The sheriff’s department says Dawson was last seen with her boyfriend in the Cameron area.  She has not gotten in touch with her family, which is unusual. She left all her personal belongings and pet cat at her residence in Maysville. Dawson does not have a working cell phone and no vehicle for transportation.

Anyone seeing the missing person, suspect, associate, or vehicle, or anyone having any information related to the endangered missing person should immediately dial 911 to contact the nearest law enforcement agency or call the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department at 816-449-5802.

 

 

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