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Regional Airport Authority buys land for proposed airport

The group seeking to build an airport just outside Oskaloosa has reached a deal to buy a parcel of land for that airport.  The South Central Regional Airport Agency agreed to buy property from the Elizabeth V. Barnard Living Trust.  At a special meeting late last week, the Oskaloosa City Council voted unanimously to put up $366,000 as its share of the purchase price.  According to City Council documents, the City of Pella will reimburse Oskaloosa 90 percent of that money once Pella receives grant money from the Federal Aviation Administration.  The City of Oskaloosa had the money to buy the property from proceeds of the sale of what’s called non-aeronautical land at the Oskaloosa Municipal Airport.

Playground closings

The Oskaloosa School District has now closed all school playgrounds until further notice.  And the City of Pella and Pella Community School District have closed all playgrounds effective immediately.  The City has closed the tennis courts and pickleball courts at Kiwanis Park and Caldwell Park until further notice.  Green spaces and trails in Pella will remain open, but you’re asked to practice social distancing…and if you’re feeling ill, stay at home.

Interpower helps in fighting coronavirus

An Oskaloosa business is doing its part to fight the coronavirus.

“Our operation alone will help get someplace in the neighborhood of 10,000 to 20,000 ventilators to market quickly.”

Bob Wersen is the President of Interpower, an Oskaloosa company that makes electrical cords for various products.  One products is ventilators that are used in hospitals to treat patients with respiratory problems like those caused by COVID-19.  Wersen says Interpower has extra capacity to make cords and that’s a good thing, because the demand is rising.

“We have an order board that shows how many cords we are scheduled to produce in each of the next four weeks.  And we have seen that grow by about 40% just in the last two weeks.”

Wersen was asked about making a product that is needed in a critical time.

“I feel really good about manufacturing a product that is absolutely critical to saving people’s lives. That really puts meaning into the process.  Sometimes the work can become routine and not very interesting.  When you know that it’s really important, it adds meaning to what we’re doing.”

Wersen says Interpower has been a supplier for several years to major medical producers in the US and the United Kingdom.

How will we vote? Outbreak revives debate on mail-in ballots

By NICHOLAS RICCARDI and RACHEL LA CORTE

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) — As the coronavirus pandemic knocks primary election after primary election off schedule, Democrats argue the outbreak shows the country needs to move toward one of their longtime goals — widespread voting by mail — to protect the November election.

But Democrats’ hopes for using the crisis to expand voting by mail face firm Republican opposition as well as significant logistical challenges. In some states, it would amount to a major revamp of their voting system just eight months before an election.

Vote-by-mail boosters already lost the first round of the fight. Democrats tried and failed to insert a broad mandate expanding voting by mail in the stimulus bill, a proposal that could cost as much as $2 billion. Instead, the bill included $400 million to help states adjust elections however they see fit before November.

But Democrats in Washington say they will keep pressing the issue, pointing to the increasing number of states that are shifting to mail-in voting for primaries as evidence that the time is right. A poll from the Pew Research Center released Monday found that about two-thirds of Americans would be uncomfortable voting at polling places during the outbreak.

“Practically every single Tuesday, we see another state reacting to their inability to run their election in the middle of this incredible health care pandemic,” said Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the first state to vote entirely through the mail. He called expanded mail voting “not even a close call.”

Former Vice President Joe Biden, the leading Democratic presidential candidate, joined the push Sunday. “We should be looking to all-mail ballots across the board,” Biden said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “We should be beginning to plan that in each of our states.”

Every state already allows some form of voting by mail, but only six Western states are set up to allow all-mail voting in every county, according to Wendy Underhill at the National Conference of State Legislatures. Meanwhile, 17 states require a formal excuse for voters to get ballots they can mail in, and some have additional requirements. In Alabama, for example, applications for ballots must be returned with a copy of a state ID.

Democrats have long sought to eliminate such rules — either on the state level or by federal mandate — arguing they are barriers to voting, particularly for minorities, the elderly or the disabled.

While Republicans have backed the trend toward mail voting, the party remains suspicious of widespread use of the method — even though there is evidence that its voters benefit the most from it.

President Donald Trump summed up GOP complaints about Democrats’ mail-in-voting proposal during an interview Monday on Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends.” “The things they had in there were crazy. They had things — levels of voting that if you ever agreed to it you’d never have a Republican elected in this country again,” Trump said of Democrats.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, told MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” show on Tuesday that she felt “sad that the president doesn’t have confidence in his own party” to convince Americans about a path forward and “a vision for the future.” She said it’s “the reality of life that we are going to have to have more vote by mail.”

Many Republicans argue that a major expansion of mail-in voting opens up new concerns about fraud and security and that the decisions should be made at the state level rather than be dictated by Congress.

“These people who are saying all these states have to change and vote by mail don’t know what they are talking about,” said John Merrill, Alabama’s Republican secretary of state who has worked to expand mail voting in his home state. “I think every state ought to be able to make up their mind about what to do in elections.”

There are other, practical hurdles. Mail-in voting requires an expensive upfront investment in machines to process mail ballots, poll workers and election judges to be retrained to use the devices and verify voters’ signatures on their envelopes and other wrinkles.

“You can’t just flip the switch and go from one system to another,” Underhill said. She noted that official ballots must be printed on durable paper stock, and states may not be able to secure enough for November without sufficient advanced planning. “You can’t just get it at Kinko’s.”

It’s also not clear that voting by mail is necessarily pandemic-proof. In Washington state, an early epicenter of the outbreak, Secretary of State Kim Wyman, a Republican, recommended that a special election set for April 28 across 18 counties be canceled because of the virus.

She noted that, under Washington law, voters can register up until Election Day, which requires personal contact with government workers. And sorting of mail ballots typically takes place in crowded offices.

“Most people focus on Election Day and people being able to return a ballot. But there’s lots of activities on the back-end in elections offices,” she said.

Many local officials are focused on finding ways to make voting in person safer. In Alabama, Merrill, who pushed local primaries back until mid-July because of the virus, said he plans to spend more money ensuring that polling stations are heavily cleaned and that poll workers have access to protective equipment and sanitizer.

He doesn’t want to try to change the state’s voting system in a few months. “We’re not for introducing new problems. We’re for fixing current problems, Merrill said.

Some Republicans see Democrats as trying to take advantage of a crisis.

“Some of these are things that have been kind of partisan issues for a long time and now are being presented as a kind of response to COVID-19,” said Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican who opposes a federal mandate. “I’ve called that crisis opportunism. I don’t think making big policy changes in response to a crisis is the right thing to do.”

Ohio’s March 17 primary was delayed at the last minute and changed to an almost-exclusively mail-in contest for April 28.

Michael McDonald, a professor at the University of Florida who tracks voting issues, notes secretaries of state have long resented mandates from Washington on how to conduct elections. But after upfront costs, mail voting is demonstrably cheaper than casting ballots in-person, McDonald said. It also may favor Republicans, whose voters tend to be older and more likely to cast absentee ballots, McDonald found, while Democrats are more likely to vote in person.

Mail voting can also delay election counts, especially in California, which allows voters to mail in their ballots on Election Day. The state is still counting votes from its March 3 primary, in part because the virus outbreak has scrambled staffing in county elections offices across the state.

California Secretary of State Alex Padilla, a Democrat, said he was disappointed that Congress balked at including voting reforms in the stimulus.

“They missed a golden opportunity to strengthen the resiliency of our elections system,” Padilla said.

___

Associated Press writers Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio, and Christina Cassidy in Atlanta contributed to this report.

Brad Paisley Launches #Gratitunes To Celebrate Medical Professionals

Yesterday was National Doctors Day, and to mark the occasion, and celebrate those on the front line of the coronavirus, the country community has launched a new campaign called Gratitunes.  The initiative supports the Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC) staff, with Brad Paisley launching the campaign with a performance of “Southern Comfort Zone.”

Brad urged folks to visit the gratitunes website and share their own #Gratitunes to the playlist “to be enjoyed by the doctors, nurses, and medical staff on the frontlines of fighting COVID-19.”

Other artists expected to take part in the campaign include Lauren Alaina, Sara Evans, Amy Grant, Dustin Lynch, Jewel, Lindsay Ell, Shane McAnally and Walker Hayes.

Check out the song HERE.

Source: Billboard

This day in 1962: Patsy Cline hits number one

Today in 1962, Patsy Cline hit the top of the country charts with “She’s Got You.”

According to the Ellis Nassour biography Honky Tonk Angel: The Intimate Story of Patsy Cline, writer Hank Cochran remembers calling Cline and telling her that he’d just written her next number 1 hit. She told him to come over to her house with a bottle of liquor and play it on the guitar for her and friend Dottie West who was visiting that afternoon. Cline was emotionally moved by its lyrics and loved the song so much that she learned it that night, calling up her manager and producer to sing it to them over the phone. At her next session, she recorded it. This was a rare instance, as Cline and her producer, Owen Bradley, often disagreed with each other’s choice of material. This time, they both agreed they had a hit.

The theme of the song revolves around material possessions of a lost love:

I’ve got the records, that we used to share
And they still sound the same, as when you were here
The only thing different, the only thing new
I’ve got the records … she’s got you.

“She’s Got You” was written as Cline’s follow-up single to her two previous big hits of the previous year, “I Fall to Pieces” and “Crazy”. “She’s Got You” was released on January 30, 1962, and immediately went to No. 1 on the Hot C&W Sides country chart, and to No. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song also went to number three on the Easy Listening chart. “She’s Got You” marked her first hit single in the United Kingdom, where it reached No. 43. “She’s Got You” later became classic and was one of the songs to help jump-start Cline’s career. The hit led to an appearance on American Bandstand with Dick Clark that February and led to Cline having her own show in Las Vegas in the following November. “She’s Got You” was followed by a few other minor hits that year, including “Imagine That”, “When I Get Thru’ With You”, “So Wrong”, and “Strange”. On August 6, 1962, Cline’s third album Sentimentally Yours was released, featuring “She’s Got You”.

“She’s Got You” has been recorded by numerous artists, such as Dean Martin (He’s Got You), Rosanne Cash, Ricky Van Shelton, LeAnn Rimes, Timi Yuro, Jimmy Buffett, Lee Ann Womack, Cat Power, Elvis Costello, Loretta Lynn and Rhiannon Giddens.

In 1977, the Loretta Lynn remake was a No. 1 country hit, when her tribute album to Cline called I Remember Patsy was released.

The song was covered by Don McLean on his 1987 compilation Greatest Hits Then & Now as “He’s Got You”. McLean’s version peaked at number 73 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart.

Source: Wikipedia

Nursing home patients dealing with COVID-19 restrictions

Since visitors are not allowed to visit patients in hospitals and nursing homes, those patients may feel a bit lonely at this time.  Tina Steffen, administrator at Oskaloosa Care Center, says her patients are doing better than expected.

“We have stepped up our activity program and trying to bring the joy out in their activities of daily living from day to day.  And we have had some children on the outside of the building that come and hold up signs and try to make their day that special.  The phone, we get a lot of phone calls from family.  We have a resident who calls out to their families.  We do some computer work with Face Time.  We’re trying to keep their spirits up and as a whole, we’re doing pretty good, believe it or not.”

And while a spouse may not have personal contact with their loved one in a nursing home, Steffen says there’s still a way for a couple to stay close.

“They will come to the door and they will look at them through the window.  They come up to the dining room.  But that separation anxiety can be there.  I have spouses here and I have them come and look through the window outside at them and they’re waving…and they’re doing well.”

Steffen says health care workers are making the best of a hardship time right now and doing well.

Navy hospital ship set to arrive in NYC harbor

NEW YORK (AP) — A Navy hospital ship with 1,000 beds is set to arrive Monday in New York City as officials pressed for more federal help. Mayor Bill de Blasio said President Donald Trump’s suggestion that thousands of medical masks are disappearing from New York City hospitals is “insulting” to front-line medical workers

Here are the latest coronavirus developments in New York:

HOSPITAL SHIP

A Navy hospital ship with 1,000 beds is scheduled to arrive Monday morning in New York Harbor to help relieve the coronavirus crisis gripping the city’s hospitals.

The USNS Comfort, which was sent to New York City after 9/11, will be used to treat non-coronavirus patients while hospitals treat people with COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo was expected to greet the vessel when it reaches the harbor and docks at a Manhattan cruise ship terminal. In addition to the 1,000 beds, the Comfort has 12 operating rooms that could be up and running within 24 hours.

The ship’s arrival comes as New York state’s death toll from the coronavirus outbreak climbed Sunday above 1,000, less than a month after the first known infection in the state.

Most of those deaths have occurred in just the past few days.

New York City, the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak, reported Sunday that its toll had risen to 776. The total number of statewide deaths isn’t expected to be released until Monday, but with at least 250 additional deaths recorded outside the city as of Sunday morning, the state’s total fatalities was at least 1,026.

___

MEDICAL MASKS

De Blasio and others criticized Trump for suggesting with no clear evidence that thousands of medical masks are disappearing from New York City hospitals.

At a Sunday briefing, the president told reporters they should be asking, “Where are the masks going? Are they going out the back door?”

Those remarks are “insulting” to hospital workers on the front lines of the city’s coronavirus crisis, de Blasio said Monday.

“It’s incredibly insensitive to people right now who are giving their all,” he said. “I don’t know what the president is talking about.”

Hospitals had warned staff early on during the outbreak to not take masks home with them, but no evidence has emerged of large-scale looting of supplies.

Kenneth Raske, president of the Greater New York Hospital Association, said in a statement that the workers “deserve better than their president suggesting that protective equipment is ‘going out the back door’ of New York hospitals.”

Coronavirus update

Iowa health officials have confirmed 38 more cases of the coronavirus and a fourth death. The Iowa Department of Public Health said Sunday (3/29) that the state now has 336 positive cases, up from 299 on Saturday (3/28). The latest death was a Linn County resident between the ages of 61 and 80. The virus has now been found in 50 of Iowa’s 99 counties.

As far as coronavirus cases in the No Coast Network listening area, five cases have now been reported in Poweshiek County with one death, Jasper County has four cases, two in Mahaska County, one in Keokuk County and one in Wapello County.

The Keokuk County case was announced Saturday as an adult between the ages of 18 and 40.

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