On this day in 1978, Willie Nelson released his landmark album “Stardust.” It went on to spend 10 years on the country charts, selling over five million copies.
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Meet the H&S Feed & Country Store Pet of the Week: Bella
This week’s H&S Feed & Country Store Pet of the Week from Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter is Bella! Bella is a 5-6 month old chocolate lab mix. She is still a puppy so has lots of energy, loves to play, and is very active. She does get along well with other dogs and is curious with cats but not aggressive. She does keep her kennel clean at the shelter overnight so they think she could be easily house trained. Bella is spayed and does have her rabies vaccination. If you are interested please go to www.stephenmemorial.org and fill out and submit an application.
Check out our chat about Bella with Terry Gott from Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter here:
Maren Morris Back To Working Out After Baby
Maren Morris welcomed son Hayes only two months ago, but according to her trainer she’s already working out.
“We are back to training again and I’m so proud of her,” Erin Oprea tells “Us Weekly. “She worked up until basically the day, I think we trained like a day or two before she had the baby. And then we’re back at it.”
Oprea calls Maren a “riot,” sharing, “I love that girl. She’s just a cool person. Just a good person.”
The trainer notes she’s not pushing Maren to lose the weight, and instead is trying to get her to just “stay healthy.” She explains, “so I really want her to enjoy the journey and not stress over it because one, there’s not an end date. So I was, like, let’s just kind of enjoy this time while working towards feeling our best.”
Source: Us Weekly
On this day in 2011: Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton get hitched
On this day in 2011, Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton got hitched at the Don Strange Ranch near Boerne, Texas, in front of Reba McEntire, Dierks Bentley, Martina McBride and The Bellamy Brothers. Fast forward to July 20th, 2015 – and the couple announced that they were divorcing after four years of marriage. Hours later, it was confirmed that the divorce was final. As it turns out, Blake had filed three weeks earlier…the world only found out once the deal was done.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igN6bjzpSBQ
Trump ramps up expulsions of migrant youth, citing virus
By NOMAAN MERCHANT and SONIA PÉREZ D.
HOUSTON (AP) — The young migrants and asylum seekers swim across the Rio Grande and clamber into the dense brush of Texas. Many are teens who left Central America on their own; others were sent along by parents from refugee camps in Mexico. They are as young as 10.
Under U.S. law they would normally be allowed to live with relatives while their cases wind through immigration courts. Instead the Trump administration is quickly expelling them under an emergency declaration citing the coronavirus pandemic, with 600 minors expelled in April alone.
The expulsions are the latest administration measure aimed at preventing the entry of migrant children, following other programs such as the since-rescinded “zero tolerance” policy that resulted in thousands of family separations.
Border agencies say they have to restrict asylum claims and border crossings during the pandemic to prevent the virus’ spread. Migrants’ advocates call that a pretext to dispense with federal protections for children.
In interviews with The Associated Press, two recently expelled teens said border agents told them they wouldn’t be allowed to request asylum. They were placed in cells, fingerprinted and given a medical exam. Then, after four days, they were flown back to their home country of Guatemala. The AP is withholding the teens’ last names to protect their privacy.
Brenda, 16, left Guatemala in hopes of reaching the U.S. to eventually work and help her family. Her father works on a farm, but it’s not enough.
“We barely eat,” she said.
Her family borrowed $13,000 to pay a smuggler and months later she crossed illegally. Authorities later took her into custody in April at a Texas stash house, she said.
“I did ask to talk to my brother because he wanted to get a lawyer, because he wanted to fight for my case,” she said. “But they told me they were not letting people talk to anyone. No matter how much I fought, they were not letting anyone stay.”
She is now under quarantine at her family’s home.
Similarly, Osvaldo, 17, said agents wouldn’t let him call his father. He was held with other children in a cold room and issued a foil blanket as well as a new mask and pair of gloves each of the four days he was in custody.
Someone took his temperature before he was deported, but he wasn’t tested for the coronavirus until he was back in Guatemala. Osvaldo was given no immigration paperwork, just the medical report from his examination.
“I thought they would help me or let me fight my case,” Osvaldo said, “but no.”
A 10-year-old boy and his mother, whom the AP is not identifying because she fears retribution for speaking publicly, spent months at a squalid camp in Matamoros, Mexico, across from Brownsville, Texas, waiting for their immigration court dates under the Trump administration program known as “Remain in Mexico.”
When she lost an initial decision, she decided he would be better off temporarily with her brother in the United States. She watched him swim across the Rio Grande.
The woman expected he would be be treated the same as before, when such children were picked up by the U.S. Border Patrol and taken to Department of Health and Human Services facilities for eventual placement with a sponsor, usually a relative.
But the mother heard nothing until six days later, when her family received a call from a shelter in Honduras.
“They had thrown him out to Honduras,” she said. “We didn’t know anything.”
The boy now lives with an aunt in the capital, Tegucigalpa. Another relative has agreed to take him back to the family’s rural village, if the mother returns to care for him. But she fears her former partner, who abused and threatened both of them.
“He doesn’t want to eat. All he does is cry,” the woman said. “I never imagined they would send him back there.”
Their case was first reported by CBS News.
Amy Cohen, a psychiatrist who works with the family and leads the advocacy group Every Last One, criticized the government’s treatment of the boy and other children.
“This boy has gone through multiple traumas, ending with the experience of being placed on a plane by himself and flown to a country where no one knew he was coming,” she said.
Under a 2008 anti-trafficking law and a federal court settlement known as the Flores agreement, children from countries other than Canada and Mexico must have access to legal counsel and cannot be immediately deported. They are also supposed to be released to family in the U.S. or otherwise held in the least restrictive setting possible. The rules are intended to prevent children from being mistreated or falling into the hands of criminals.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection began the expulsions in late March, using the emergency as justification for disregarding the Flores rules. CBP said it processed 166 children last month as “unaccompanied” minors, meaning they would be taken to HHS youth holding facilities and allowed to stay in the U.S. at least temporarily, and the remaining 600 were expelled.
But HHS says it received just 58 unaccompanied minors in April. Spokesmen for both agencies were not immediately able to address the discrepancy.
CBP says it exempts children from expulsion on a “case-by-case basis, such as when return to the home country is not possible or an agent suspects trafficking or sees signs of illness.” An agency spokesman declined to provide more specifics.
CBP acting Commissioner Mark Morgan said last week that the U.S. may keep expelling migrants even as states begin to ease coronavirus restrictions.
Meanwhile, as the virus has spread through immigration detention facilities, the U.S. has deported at least 100 people with COVID-19 to Guatemala, including minors.
Michelle Brané, director of migrant rights at the Women’s Refugee Commission, said the virus is an excuse for expelling children, and the Trump administration could admit them and still counter its spread through measures like temperature checks and quarantines.
“At the very heart of it,” she said, “it has always been about trying to block access to protection for children and families and asylum seekers.”
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Pérez D. reported from Guatemala City.
Parker steps down as Osky boys basketball coach
At Tuesday’s (5/12) Oskaloosa School Board meeting, Boys’ varsity basketball coach Ryan Parker resigned. You’ll remember Parker missed a good deal of last season due to kidney problems and eventually needed a kidney transplant. Parker coached the Indians to a Class 3A state title in 2019 and a second place finish at state in 2018. He will remain as Oskaloosa’s activities director.
Reynolds mulls over lifting coronavirus restrictions
Gov. Kim Reynolds said Tuesday (5/12) she’s still considering how far to go in lifting local public health restrictions, as the state reported 18 more deaths from the coronavirus.
Reynolds had planned to announce which business closures that she would allow to expire Friday (5/15) and which she would extend through May. But she said she was still looking at data, and now expects an announcement Wednesday.
Restaurants in 22 counties remain closed. Statewide, bars, salons, barber shops, movie theaters, casinos, museums and several other businesses are ordered closed until Friday.
Reynolds has hinted that parts of eastern Iowa that remain under restrictions, such as Iowa City and Cedar Rapids, are on a positive trajectory and could see some lifted.
But the Des Moines area has seen a large increase in cases, and cities like Sioux City and Waterloo are still managing the aftermath of huge meatpacking plant outbreaks.
Experts have warned that reopening too soon could lead to another wave of infections.
Meanwhile, the Polk County Sheriff’s Office announced Monday that 19 inmates at the county jail had tested positive for COVID-19. The office said in a news release that the jail is keeping affected inmates in isolation.
The state reported more than 500 new cases Tuesday, including 319 Sioux City-area workers who tested positive at a Tyson beef plant in Nebraska last month. Nebraska had delayed reporting those results to Iowa.
The 18 new deaths brought Iowa’s official count to 289.
Oskaloosa school year starts August 24
Oskaloosa Schools won’t start the school year early. At Tuesday night’s (5/12) meeting, the Oskaloosa School Board voted to start the 2020-21 school year on August 24. That’s the day that was set by the State of Iowa before the coronavirus outbreak. After the outbreak, Governor Reynolds waived the August 24 start date and said schools could start earlier this fall. While the Board considered starting early, they voted 5-2 to go with the August 24 start date. Oskaloosa Superintendent Paula Wright talks about starting on the 24th.
“We are going to make some tweaks throughout the calendar and I will make sure that gets on the website and gets updated for parents the next week. So no change to the start date.”
Board members Shawn Moyer and Amanda McGrew voted against the proposed calendar.
Carrie Underwood, Sam Hunt & More Added To CMT’s “Heroes” Special
CMT will pay tribute to heroes on the frontlines with the new special “CMT Celebrates Our Heroes: An Artists of the Year Special” airing June 3rd at 8 pm. Well, now some more artists have signed on.
The latest additions to the show include Brandi Carlile, Carrie Underwood, Darius Rucker, Kane Brown, Kristen Bell, Lauren Daigle, Luke Combs and Sam Hunt. They join previously announced performers Brothers Osborne, Florida Georgia Line, Kelsea Ballerini, Lady Antebellum, Little Big Town, Miranda Lambert, and Thomas Rhett.
The special, which will air in place of the network’s annual “Artist of the Year” event, will recognize COVID-19 heroes in areas of Healthcare, Education, Business, Community Leaders, Food Industry, Infrastructure, First Responders, US Military, and more.
All performances will be filmed directly from the artist’s homes and virtually produced by CMT.
Source: CMT
On this day in 2011: Tim McGraw is sued by his label
On this day in 2011: Tim McGraw was sued for breach of contract by Curb Records, which claimed that he recorded his “Emotional Traffic” album too soon after the previous release. Tim had also filed a countersuit, saying Curb had kept him in an ongoing state of “involuntary servitude” by forcing him to wait so long to record new albums. His filing claimed that was a way to stretch out his contract indefinitely. McGraw’s suit also alleged that Curb’s decision to release a total of seven greatest hits albums was a ploy to extend his contract against his will.
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