TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

NAIA Cancels Spring Season

The NAIA, the national governing body for small colleges including William Penn, announced Monday (3/16) that it was cancelling its spring sports seasons, effective immediately. That covers baseball, softball, track and field and lacrosse.  In its statement, the NAIA said no athlete competing in a spring sport this year would lose a year of eligibility…and any athlete who was enrolled full-time will be awarded two additional semester terms of attendance.

Oskaloosa Early Childhood Center project advances

The Oskaloosa Early Childhood Education and Recreation Center project moved closer to becoming reality Monday (3/16).  The Oskaloosa City Council at its regular meeting awarded a $27 million contract to Rochon Corporation to build the center, accepted deeds from several land-owners for land to build the center, and approved a letter of intent for the Mahaska County YMCA to operate the center.  Oskaloosa Mayor David Krutzfeldt says he’s excited about these developments.

“We have been working on this thing for years, trying to get things stretched out.  What are we going to do as far as funding the thing…getting those agreements in place.  Then getting the thing designed.  Then once we got it designed, ‘Gee whiz, can we afford this thing? ‘ And so then getting the bids back, ‘By golly, we can.’

“All the pieces are falling in place now .  And so we’re very excited to be able tonight, to be able to say ‘Yes, we’re going to go ahead and borrow the money.  Yes, we have all the financing lined up.  Yes, we’re going to be able to construct this thing, so let’s get started.'”

Krutzfeldt says ground should be broken on the project in April.  The timetable is for the Early Childhood Education Center to open in July of 2021 with the new YMCA to open in September of 2021.

Schools that have announced closing

Here are the area school districts that will be closed for at least the next four weeks:  Oskaloosa, Ottumwa, Sigourney, Albia, Centerville, Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont, Keota, Knoxville, Lynnville-Sully, Montezuma, North Mahaska, Pella, Twin Cedars and Pekin schools have announced they’ll be closed for the next four weeks.

ACM Awards Postponed Until September

We’re going to have to wait a lot longer to find out who wins this year’s ACM Awards. The Academy of Country Music just announced they’re delaying this year’s award show until September, with the program still airing on CBS. The ACM, featuring host Keith Urban, was supposed to take place April 5th from Las Vegas.

“The ACM Awards is a tentpole event for our Country Music industry, and the Academy of Country Music and dick clark productions went to great lengths to find a safe solution for the show to go on so that we can honor our artist community,” Damon Whiteside, CEO of the Academy of Country Music, announced in a statement. “This decision involved many partners, stakeholders and the industry who we have been in constant conversations with over the past several days as the situation has developed.”

He adds, “We look forward to identifying a future date that we can celebrate with our Country community safely.”

All events surrounding the ACMs have also been canceled, including ACM Party for a Cause, ACM Beach Bash and more. Information on how to get refunds will be available on the ACM website.

Source: ACM

Albia hospital is restricting visitors

Monroe County Hospital and Clinics in Albia is now placing temporary restrictions on visitors because of coronavirus concerns.  As of now, only immediate family, loved ones and clergy will be allowed to visit patients at the hospital.  Any visitor with a respiratory illness is required to wear a mask upon entering the hospital.  If a visitor with a respiratory illness is not making an essential visit, that person will not be allowed to visit until they’ve recovered.  Only those 16 or older will be allowed to visit.  And only two visitors at a time per patient will be allowed.

Thomas cleared of child endangerment; A hung jury regarding her daughter’s murder

There’s been a hung jury in an Ottumwa murder case.  Kelsie Thomas was charged with first degree murder and child endangerment causing death in the 2018 death of her 5-year-old daughter, Cloe Chandler. On Friday (2/13), a Wapello County jury found Thomas not guilty of the child endangerment charge, but could not reach a verdict on the murder charge.  Wapello County Attorney Reuben Neff says he plans to re-try Thomas on the murder charge.  She remains in custody in the Wapello County Jail on $500,000 cash only bond.

LGBTQ students escorted out of Iowa Capitol

BY 

A group of students was escorted out of the Iowa capitol by state troopers after some transgender students refused to leave a men’s restroom and use gender-neutral restrooms instead.

Iowa Safe Schools executive director Nate Monson says the LGBTQ students were at the capitol to lobby legislators. “Students were using the restrooms that they identify with and under the Iowa Civil Rights Act for the past 13 years, that’s been a protected class,” Monson says. “The state troopers at the capitol told our students that was not the case and they physically escorted about 150 students LGBTQ youth out the door.”

Someone had called capitol police to report an adult and minor females were in a men’s restroom. A video posted online shows a trooper telling the group his concern was about “some type of possible sexual activity” in the restroom. No one was arrested, but a couple of dozen students wound up waiting on the capitol steps for nearly three hours for a school bus to pick them up.

Fifteen-year-old Morgan Gooden of Mitchellville says students in the group aren’t mad, but they are annoyed.

“We all just want this to stop,” Gooden says. “This was supposed to be our day to talk to legislators…and they had to ruin it for us over a bathroom.”

Monson, who organized the lobby day, is seeking a meeting with the governor and the state public safety commissioner to discuss the incident.

Americans adjust to new life, hunker down amid coronavirus

By MICHELLE R. SMITH and GILLIAN FLACCUS

AP – Workers lost their jobs, parents came up with impromptu home lesson plans for children kept home from shuttered schools. Families fretted over dwindling retirement accounts, the health of elderly parents, and every cough and sneeze in their midst.

Millions of people settled into new and disrupted routines Thursday as the coronavirus began to uproot almost every facet of American life.

The spate of event cancellations that drove home the gravity of the outbreak a day earlier only intensified Thursday, with Disney and Universal Orlando Resort shutting down theme parks, the NCAA calling off March Madness and Broadway theaters closing their doors in Manhattan. All the major professional sports announced they are halting play, and officials ordered a shutdown of every school in the state of Ohio for three weeks.

And with the cascade of closures, a new reality set in for American households.

In the Pacific Northwest, parents scrambled to devise homeschooling using library books or apps. Others, desperate to get to work, jumped on social media boards to seek child care or exchange tips about available babysitters.

Parents rushed to college campuses and drove away with their children’s belongings and bags of their clothing. College officials scrambled to pay for plane tickets home for others.

A mother in Seattle organized small outdoor play dates where the kids are told not to get too close to one another. The parents stood awkwardly, several feet apart.

Most big tech companies in San Francisco and Seattle have told employees to work from home, emptying out the downtown neighborhoods that are a hub for tech and venture capital firms. The restaurants, food trucks and other businesses that thrive off lunchtime crowds say that businesses has pretty much ground to a halt.

Keny and Nancy Pham own a pair of businesses outside of the Salesforce Tower in San Francisco — a nail salon and a Vietnamese Banh Mi restaurant — where they say sales have dropped more than 50 percent this week. The salon was empty Thursday at the usually busy lunch time.

Nobody wants to get manicures — because that involves hand touching. The salon typically gets about 100 clients a day and this week is down to about 10 a day, said Nancy Pham, co-owner of the Pampered Hands Nail Spa.

Keny Pham says he is concerned about finances and paying their $10,000 monthly rent, but he has other worries as well. They have a child and live with Keny’s elderly parents, whose health he is most worried about. And it’s hard not to look at customers as potential germ carriers. Pham has asked his half dozen employees to rotate shifts and work alternate days, for now.

“We don’t want to lay anyone off,” he said. “We have to come up with a way to survive.”

In Las Vegas, where so much of the economy is wedded to big crowds from concerts, tournaments, conventions and tourists, many suddenly found themselves out of work.

Las Vegas bartender Rique Rose works part-time at three different locations on the Las Vegas Strip, tending bar in event centers at the MGM Grand, the Mandalay Bay and in the T-Mobile arena, where the Las Vegas Golden Knights play.

First, he lost Friday and Saturday shifts with the cancellation of the Pac-12 men’s college basketball tournament. Then, he saw that the NHL was suspending the rest of its season. He’s still waiting to see if the Post Malone concert he was scheduled to work Saturday night will be canceled.

Every cancellation means more than missing out on his $8.25 minimum wage pay; he also loses approximately $200 in tips. He wonders how he will pay his bills.

“I guess we’re just going to have to endure it,” he sighed.

And American Airlines announced Thursday that one of its pilots based at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport tested positive for the virus.

More than 1,300 people have tested positive for coronavirus in the United States, and 40 people have died as of Thursday evening. About 128,000 people have been infected globally.

For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover from the new virus.

In every state, officials were taking dramatic new measures each day to keep the virus from spreading deeper into the country. And with each shuttered school, canceled outing, lost shift and work-from-home directive, people’s lives were being transformed in profound ways.

Mom Natasja Billiau came up with a quick homeschooling plan for 8-year-old Victor and 5-year-old Anna Laura after their public school in Seattle closed for the first full day Thursday. They kept as close to their regular school schedule as possible, she said, with recess times and lunch built in.

Billiau’s husband has been working from home since last week, and the family is moving to a new house in two weeks.

“Everything’s up in the air. I don’t know how I’m going to get it done, we’ll see,” she said. “It’s a day-by-day situation.”

She went forward with play dates, but everyone kept apart at a safe distance.

“And of course, as soon as we get home everybody has to wash hands,” she said.

Despite the scrambling and closures, for many people, life continued as usual. Hours after Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, announced it was sending students home and would complete the semester online, customers stood in a busy line and ate lunch elbow-to-elbow at a crowded taqueria not far from campus. Many were working to see the upside of hunkering down and “social distancing,” swapping recommendations for Netflix shows or good books.

Students at the University of Maryland in College Park are heading off to spring break this week and classes are moving online. On Thursday, students were packing up their belongings on a campus that was noticeably emptier than usual.

Signs posted on the front doors of the University of Maryland’s journalism school said, “If you are sick, please go home.”

Mike Davis, 60, drove over from Annapolis, Maryland, to help his son Nick, a 22-year-old senior, pack up his stuff. Davis said the school’s decision to keep students off campus for several weeks make sense.

Besides, he was looking forward to having his son around the house: “I’ve got three bags of mulch ready for him to spread.”

___

Associated Press Writers Jocelyn Gecker in San Francisco, Michelle Price in Las Vegas, Mike Kunzelman in College Park, Maryland, and Airlines Writer David Koenig in Dallas contributed to this report.

___

The Associated Press receives support for health and science coverage from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

___

Follow AP coverage of the virus outbreak at https://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

IHSAA limiting attendance at Boys Basketball State Tournament

If you have a ticket to Friday’s (3/13) Iowa Boys State High School Basketball Tournament, you might not be able to get in.  The IHSAA, which governs boys’ high school sports in Iowa, is restricting spectators over fears of the coronavirus.  The only people who will be allowed in to Wells Fargo Arena are team members, game officials, Iowa Events Center staff, credentialed media, essential  tournament workers and select school spectators.  Each school participating Friday will be limited to a party of 100 people free of charge, including team members.  The IHSAA recommends that immediate family members only should be part of that group.  If you bought advance tickets for Friday’s Boys State High School Basketball Tournament games, you can get a refund at the place where you bought the tickets.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.