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Two dead in Washington house fire

Two people are dead after a weekend house fire in Washington.  Around 2:30am Saturday (5/2), Washington County Communications was told of a house fire at 2687 Wayland Road.  When the fire was put out, the bodies of 58-year-old Sherry Lynn Bertsch and 66-year-old Michael Lee Shannan were found in the home and both were pronounced dead at the scene.  The State Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating.

Miranda Lambert & Hubby Hitting The Road In Airstream

Miranda Lambert may not be able to be on tour, but that isn’t stopping her from hitting the road. The singer announced on social media that she and hubby Brendan McLoughlin are going to start traveling via her 2020 Airstream Globetrotter, she calls “The Sheriff.”

“I’ve been everywhere but I haven’t seen much of anything,” she writes. “I’ve been touring for 19 years and most times we just roll in , play our show , and roll to the next town. I’ve only gotten to spend some real time in a few of the places I’ve been.”

She explains, “After spending these last few months at home (a much-needed break and time to nest❤️) I realized something. Just because I can’t travel and play shows doesn’t mean I can’t travel and make music.”

In the post she calls her hubby the “most amazing travel companion,” and then introduces fans to The Sheriff. Miranda already has several vintage trailers, but she says this is her first new one.

Finally, she notes, “Until I get back on Elvira and tour, I’ll be pulling this rig all over the country. I know that seeing the world through the windshield again will bring creative vibes. #highwayvagabonds #livinlikehippies #BandMetour.”

Uptick in Iowa coronavirus cases

There’s been a sharp increase in the number of Iowans who have tested positive for coronavirus.  Friday morning (5/1) it was announced that another 739 people have tested positive for a pandemic total of 7884. 25 of those new positives are from Jasper County (one child, 12 adults, 8 middle aged adults, 3 older adults and one elderly adult), seven from Wapello County (3 adults and 4 middle aged adults), four in Mahaska County (one adult and 3 middle aged adults), two in Marion County (both adults) and one each in Keokuk (one middle aged adult) and Poweshiek Counties (one middle aged adult).  Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds explains why there has been such an increase.

“Because of the large number of tests we’ve conducted recently, we do anticipate the overall numbers that will be reported this weekend, they may be higher than usual, as we’ve seen in today’s numbers.  So please keep in mind that a high volume of tests conducted this week were among essential workers in communities or facilities where virus activity is high.”

Reynolds adds 2899 additional Iowans have recovered from COVID-19 and 2186 people have tested negative for coronavirus and over 37-thousand people in the state have tested negative through the pandemic.

Remember, you can hear Governor Reynolds’ daily news conference every weekday morning at 11 on the No Coast Network.

*The Iowa Department of Public Health considers a child to be someone under the age of 17, an adult to be 18 to 40, a middle aged adult 41 to 60, an older adult aged 61 to 80 and an elderly adult to be 81 or older.

NASCAR to resume season May 17 with seven races in 10 days

By JENNA FRYER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR plans to restart its engines with a flurry of races at two historic tracks.

NASCAR said Thursday it is set to return May 17 with an elite Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway in South Carolina, the first of seven events in an 11-day stretch across the top three series.

There will be no practice, no qualifying and drivers will jump into their cars for the first time since March 8 and attempt to tackle “The Track Too Tough To Tame.”

“Events are going to look different than they have in the past,” said John Bobo, NASCAR vice president of racing operations.

NASCAR has set guidelines to safely hold the events using CDC guidelines on social distancing and personal protective equipment. The entire venue will be used to maintain distancing in garage stalls and where the haulers are parked, while drivers will have to self-isolate in their motorhomes as they prepare to compete.

“Our priority right now is to try and get back racing in a safe way,” said Steve O’Donnell, chief racing development officer.

NASCAR follows the UFC as the first major sports organizations to get back to work since the coronavirus pandemic shut down U.S. sports in mid-March. The Professional Bull Racing Series resumed competition last weekend and there has been some horse racing.

NASCAR’s revised schedule goes only through May and has a pair of Wednesday Cup races, fulfilling fans’ longtime plea for midweek events. The first of those races will be at Darlington, three days after the return race at the 70-year-old, egg-shaped oval.

Charlotte Motor Speedway will then host the Coca-Cola 600 on May 24 to mark 60 consecutive years the longest race on the NASCAR schedule will be held on Memorial Day weekend. The track in Concord, outside NASCAR’s home base of Charlotte, will then host a Wednesday race three days later.

There also will be lower-tier Xfinity and Truck series races at the two tracks. The North Carolina governor has said the the Charlotte races can be held as long as health conditions in the area do not deteriorate.

“This has been a proactive effort to put our motorsports industry back to work and boost the morale of sports fans around the world,” said Marcus Smith, president and CEO of Speedway Motorsports. He said “sports fans around the world need this, a return to some sense of normalcy with live sports on TV, and NASCAR is uniquely positioned to deliver it from a competition standpoint.”

NASCAR suspended its season March 13 with only four of its 36 scheduled races completed. The stock car series, heavily reliant on television money and sponsor payments, has vowed to complete its full schedule. The revised schedule for now stays at tracks within driving distance of Charlotte-based race teams and in states that have started reopening.

O’Donnell said NASCAR wanted to get seven events completed within driving distance of North Carolina before it resumes competition in states that require air travel and hotels.

NASCAR has completed a fully revised schedule but would not reveal it Thursday as so much relies on the pandemic and guidelines in different states.

Darlington will now have three coveted Cup races for the first time in track history. It is also scheduled to open the playoffs with the Southern 500 on Sept. 6. Because the track now has two additional dates, NASCAR will lose two Cup races from its other properties. The same goes for Speedway Motorsports, which gained one additional race so far and will have to forfeit one at another facility.

“For the couple tracks where we need to move an event, we want to do that in the right way,” O’Donnell said. “We just want to take a little time here before we’re able to announce that.”

Almost all teams began returning to their shops this week with either a reduced initial workforce or in split shifts. Now that NASCAR has told the teams where it will be racing this month, they can start preparing cars suitable for the two tracks.

Although Florida and Texas invited NASCAR to compete in those states without spectators, the sanctioning body is holding off on announcing races in those states because of the travel required.

Ottumwa man charged with theft and burglary

He’s accused of theft and burglary in two counties.  The Wapello County Sheriff’s Office says 38-year-old Michael Moots was arrested after a search of a home on Cliffland Road turned up several stolen items, including a Dodge Dakota, ATV, car trailer, firearm and a large number of tools.  Moots was arrested and charged in Wapello County with four counts of theft and one count of burglary.  He is currently free on bond.  Also, the Davis County Sheriff’s Office has charged Moots with three counts of burglary, two counts of theft and two counts of criminal mischief.

Healthy pigs being killed as meatpacking backlog hits farms

By DAVID PITT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — After spending two decades raising pigs to send to slaughterhouses, Dean Meyer now faces the mentally draining, physically difficult task of killing them even before they leave his northwest Iowa farm.

Meyer said he and other farmers across the Midwest have been devastated by the prospect of euthanizing hundreds of thousands of hogs after the temporary closure of giant pork production plants due to the coronavirus.

The unprecedented dilemma for the U.S. pork industry has forced farmers to figure out how to kill healthy hogs and dispose of carcasses weighing up to 300 pounds (136 kilograms) in landfills, or by composting them on farms for fertilizer.

Meyer, who has already killed baby pigs to reduce his herd size, said it’s awful but necessary.

“Believe me, we’re double-stocking barns. We’re putting pigs in pens that we never had pigs in before just trying to hold them. We’re feeding them diets that have low energy just to try to stall their growth and just to maintain,” said Meyer, who also grows corn and soybeans on his family’s farm near Rock Rapids.

It’s all a result of colliding forces as plants that normally process up to 20,000 hogs a day are closing because of ill workers, leaving few options for farmers raising millions of hogs. Experts describe the pork industry as similar to an escalator that efficiently supplies the nation with food only as long as it never stops.

More than 60,000 farmers normally send about 115 million pigs a year to slaughter in the U.S. A little less than a quarter of those hogs are raised in Iowa, by far the biggest pork-producing state.

Officials estimate that about 700,000 pigs across the nation can’t be processed each week and must euthanized. Most of the hogs are being killed at farms, but up to 13,000 a day also may be euthanized at the JBS pork plant in Worthington, Minnesota.

U.S. Rep. Collin Peterson, a Minnesota Democrat who chairs the House Agriculture Committee, went to the plant Wednesday, in part to thank JBS officials for agreeing to kill the hogs at his request.

“The only thing they wanted out of me was for me to come down here and say I’m the one who asked for this, not them. … Blame me if you don’t like it,” he said.

To help farmers, the USDA already has set up a center that can supply the tools needed to euthanize hogs. That includes captive bolt guns and cartridges that can be shot into the heads of larger animals as well as chutes, trailers and personal protective equipment.

Iowa officials have asked that federal aid include funding for mental health services available to farmers and the veterinarians who help them.

Meyer said euthanizing healthy animals is a difficult decision for a farmer.

“It is a tough one,” he said. “We got keep our heads up and try to be resourceful and if we can make it through this cloud, I think there will be good opportunities if we’re left standing yet.”

The USDA has a program designed to connect farmers with local meat lockers and small processors that can slaughter some hogs and donate the meat to food banks. However, that effort has been hindered by the fact that small processors already were overwhelmed with customers who have turned away from mass-produced meat and instead bought a hog or cow to be processed locally.

Chuck Ryherd, owner of State Center Locker in State Center, Iowa, said he’s almost completely booked through the end of the year and has been turning away customers.

Chris Young, the executive director for the American Association of Meat Processors, a trade group for about 1,500 smaller meat lockers, said that while some local processors in Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin have been able to take a few extra hogs, the shortage is being felt nationwide.

“When the pandemic started, all across the country, a lot of these small processing plants with a retail store in the front were just overrun,” he said. “They’re still crazy busy. It hasn’t really backed off.”

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump used the Defense Production Act to order that large meat processors remain open, giving hog farmers hope the situation could improve.

However, Howard Roth, a Wisconsin farmer and president of the National Pork Producers Council, said farmers will need to keep euthanizing pigs as the slaughterhouses struggle to resume their full production. Farmers will definitely need federal help to keep them afloat.

“We are going to need indemnity money for these farmers,” he said. “This situation is unprecedented.”

Peterson also said he’ll seek a change in the law so that the USDA can retroactively compensate farmers for euthanizing healthy animals in such emergencies. He said the USDA told him it doesn’t have the authority at the moment to do that for healthy animals, just diseased animals, as it did during for chickens and turkeys in the bird flu outbreak.

“It’s going to be in there, I’ll guarantee you,” he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Steve Karnowski contributed to this report from Minneapolis.

Former Governor Culver Concerned about Workers

Former Iowa Governor Chet Culver is urging current Governor Kim Reynolds to back off policies that he says will force employees to be in unsafe workplaces that have had coronavirus outbreaks. Culver says in a letter to Reynolds that workers should not have to risk serious illness or death or face the loss of their unemployment benefits. He warned that her policy choices “will affect Iowans’ quality of life for generations to come.” Culver, a Democrat who served from 2007 to 2011, said the Republican governor’s policies have created an appearance “that the state’s most powerful business owners have exerted undue influence.”  He cited her push to keep open meatpacking plants that have been sources of community-wide outbreaks.

Florida Georgia Line Got Turned Down By Carrie Underwood

Earlier this year Florida Georgia Line made a plea on social media to try and get Carrie Underwood to collaborate with them on a song. Well, in case you missed it, the duo revealed that it’s not going to happen.

“No, we got turned down on that one,” Tyler Hubbard revealed on CMT Hot 20 Countdown. “You don’t win ‘em all. I guess she didn’t love it as much as we did, but that’s alright.”

The duo explained that Carrie was very nice when she declined, but apparently she was just too busy writing her book, “Find Your Path: Honor Your Body, Fuel Your Soul, and Get Strong with the Fit52 Life.”

“I think she said it was amazing and she’d love to, but it was right around her book tour release and so she was super busy and didn’t really have time,” Brian Kelley added. “But who knows, who knows where it will go. Now it’s just open game.”

Source: CMT Hot 20 Countdown

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