The new Oskaloosa Early Learning Center won’t be ready for the start of the new school year. Oskaloosa Director of Student Services Melanie Hatch says there have been delays in construction of the new Early Learning Center and YMCA. Hatch says the school year will begin August 26 at the Webster Building at 508 South 7th Street. Pre-Kindergarten classes will be held at Webster until the Early Learning Center is completed—and that’s expected to be after Labor Day.
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Fire damages Hotel Ottumwa
People staying at Hotel Ottumwa had to be evacuated Monday afternoon (8/9) because of a fire. Around 5:15pm, Ottumwa firefighters were called to the hotel on a report of heavy smoke inside the building. The fire reportedly started on the sixth floor and one person was hospitalized. All of the hotel’s guests and residents had to be evacuated because of water leaking from the sixth floor on to the fifth floor, as well as smoke damage. The cause of the fire is not known at this time.
More Performers Added To ACM Honors
The 14th annual ACM Honors is going down August 25th at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium, and now even more performers have signed on for the event.
The latest additions include Keith Urban, Toby Keith, the show’s host Carly Pearce, Jessie Jo Dillon, Nicolle Galyon, Jamey Johnson, Jordan Reynolds, Laura Veltz, and Sam Williams. They join previously announced performers Lauren Alaina, Devin Dawson, Sara Evans, HARDY, Chris Janson, Lady A, Ashley McBryde, RaeLynn and Lee Ann Womack.
In addition, the evenings presenters include Chris Janson, Trace Adkins and Sarah Trahern.
This year’s honorees include Luke Combs, Dan + Shay, Loretta Lynn, Rascal Flatts, Lady A, Toby Keith and more.
Fans will be able to watch the event, which will be live streamed on Circle Network social media channels, with a TV special airing at a later date.
Source: ACM
This day in Country Music History
- Today in 1971, a summit meeting of past and present stars of country music took place at Woodland Studios in Nashville as recording began on “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” a triple album released in 1972 by the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Legends on the album included “Mother” Maybelle Carter, Earl Scruggs, Roy Acuff and Merle Travis.
- Today in 1977, Kenny Rogers’ self-titled album was certified gold.
- Today in 1990, Mark Chesnutt began his first concert tour in Highland, Texas.
- Today in 1991, Vince Gill became a member of the Grand Ole Opry.
- Today in 1994, Alan Jackson’s “Here In The Real World” album was certified double platinum.
- Today in 1998, George Strait’s album, “Carryin’ Your Love With Me,” was certified triple platinum while his “Lead On” album was certified double platinum.
- Today in 1998, Reba McEntire’s “Greatest Hits Volume II” was certified for sales of 5-million.
- Today in 1998, the “Souvenirs” album by Vince Gill was certified double platinum.
- Today in 1998, “The Patsy Cline Collection” was certified platinum.
- Today in 1999, Kenny Chesney’s “I Will Stand” album was certified platinum.
- Today in 2000, there were two only country acts to appear on the 2nd annual Family Television Awards. Reba McEntire hosted the festivities, and Billy Gilman performed.
- Today in 2000, then-Vice President Al Gore personally asked Mary Chapin Carpenter to perform at the Democratic National Convention. Mary Chapin was asked to perform a song from her “Stones In The Road” album called “Why Walk, When You Can Fly.”
- Today in 2000, Jo Dee Messina hit another milestone in her career as it was announced that her album, “Burn,” had debuted on Billboard’s Country Album chart at #1.
- Today in 2001, Cyndi Thomson made her Grand Ole Opry debut.
- Today in 2001, Martie Seidel became Martie Maguire when she married hubby Gareth in a supersecret ceremony in Hawaii. The happy couple was able to keep their news quiet until late-September, when the Dixie Chicks performed on the “Tribute to Heroes” special – Martie was seen wearing what looked to be a wedding ring, and she soon admitted through reps that she and Gareth had indeed exchanged vows. The couple split in 2013 and share three daughters.
- Today in 2001, Oak Ridge Boy William Lee Golden and his wife, Brenda, welcomed their new son, William Solomon Golden, into the world at 11:04am local time at Baptist Hospital in Nashville. And even though little William arrived 12 days early, he weighed in at a healthy 6-pounds, 13 ¾-ounces.
- Today in 2001, Clint Black hosted the Family Television Awards. He and wife Lisa Hartman Black performed their chart-topping hit, “When I Said I Do,” on the show. Interestingly, the program, which honors the best in family-oriented viewing, was the couple’s first televised appearance since the birth of their daughter, Lily Pearl, that May.
- Today in 2001, one of the biggest stars on the planet became of the brightest in the sky as members of Shania Twain’s announced they had paid to have a star registered in Shania’s name – it’s in the constellation Virgo.
- Today in 2002, for the first time since their 1998 Grand Ole Opry debut, Natalie Maines, Martie Maguire and Emily Robison – aka the Dixie Chicks – made their follow-up performance on the legendary stage of the Grand Ole Opry.
- Today in 2006, Kenny Chesney’s nine-minute “You Save Me” video aired on CMT for the first time.
- Today in 2009, Lady Antebellum’s single, “Need You Now,” hit the airwaves.
- Today in 2009, Brooks & Dunn announced in a short note that they would be ending their partnership after one last tour. The message? “It’s time to call it a day.” And while the pair – aka Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks – have continued recording solo music, they have since offered a reunion of sorts through a series of shows in Las Vegas with Reba McEntire.
- Today in 2012, Jason Aldean’s “Take A Little Ride” video premiered on CMT.
- Today in 2014, Cole Swindell wrote his future hit, “You Should Be Here,” with songwriter Ashley Gorley at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. All this while he was prepping to open for Luke Bryan.
- Today in 2016, Eric Church earned a gold single from the RIAA for “Record Year.”
‘Nowhere to run’: UN report says global warming nears limits
By SETH BORENSTEIN
AP – Earth is getting so hot that temperatures in about a decade will probably blow past a level of warming that world leaders have sought to prevent, according to a report released Monday that the United Nations called a “code red for humanity.”
“It’s just guaranteed that it’s going to get worse,” said report co-author Linda Mearns, a senior climate scientist at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research. “Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide.”
But scientists also eased back a bit on the likelihood of the absolute worst climate catastrophes.
The authoritative Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, which calls climate change clearly human-caused and “unequivocal,” makes more precise and warmer forecasts for the 21st century than it did last time it was issued in 2013.
Each of five scenarios for the future, based on how much carbon emissions are cut, passes the more stringent of two thresholds set in the 2015 Paris climate agreement. World leaders agreed then to try to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above levels in the late 19th century because problems mount quickly after that. The world has already warmed nearly 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit) since then.
Under each scenario, the report said, the world will cross the 1.5-degree-Celsius warming mark in the 2030s, earlier than some past predictions. Warming has ramped up in recent years, data shows.
“Our report shows that we need to be prepared for going into that level of warming in the coming decades. But we can avoid further levels of warming by acting on greenhouse gas emissions,” said report co-chair Valerie Masson-Delmotte, a climate scientist at France’s Laboratory of Climate and Environment Sciences at the University of Paris-Saclay.
In three scenarios, the world will also likely exceed 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial times — the less stringent Paris goal — with far worse heat waves, droughts and flood-inducing downpours unless there are deep emissions cuts, the report said.
“This report tells us that recent changes in the climate are widespread, rapid and intensifying, unprecedented in thousands of years,” said IPCC Vice Chair Ko Barrett, senior climate adviser for the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
With crucial international climate negotiations coming up in Scotland in November, world leaders said the report is causing them to try harder to cut carbon pollution. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken called it “a stark reminder.”
The 3,000-plus-page report from 234 scientists said warming is already accelerating sea level rise and worsening extremes such as heat waves, droughts, floods and storms. Tropical cyclones are getting stronger and wetter, while Arctic sea ice is dwindling in the summer and permafrost is thawing. All of these trends will get worse, the report said.
For example, the kind of heat wave that used to happen only once every 50 years now happens once a decade, and if the world warms another degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit), it will happen twice every seven years, the report said.
As the planet warms, places will get hit more not just by extreme weather but by multiple climate disasters at once, the report said. That’s like what’s now happening in the Western U.S., where heat waves, drought and wildfires compound the damage, Mearns said. Extreme heat is also driving massive fires in Greece and Turkey.
Some harm from climate change — dwindling ice sheets, rising sea levels and changes in the oceans as they lose oxygen and become more acidic — is “irreversible for centuries to millennia,” the report said.
The world is “locked in” to 15 to 30 centimeters (6 to 12 inches) of sea level rise by mid-century, said report co-author Bob Kopp of Rutgers University.
Scientists have issued this message for more than three decades, but the world hasn’t listened, said United Nations Environment Program Executive Director Inger Andersen.
For the first time, the report offers an interactive atlas for people to see what has happened and may happen to where they live.
Nearly all of the warming that has happened on Earth can be blamed on emissions of heat-trapping gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. At most, natural forces or simple randomness can explain one- or two-tenths of a degree of warming, the report said.
The report described five different future scenarios based on how much the world reduces carbon emissions. They are: a future with incredibly large and quick pollution cuts; another with intense pollution cuts but not quite as massive; a scenario with moderate emission cuts; a fourth scenario where current plans to make small pollution reductions continue; and a fifth possible future involving continued increases in carbon pollution.
In five previous reports, the world was on that final hottest path, often nicknamed “business as usual.” But this time, the world is somewhere between the moderate path and the small pollution reductions scenario because of progress to curb climate change, said report co-author Claudia Tebaldi, a scientist at the U.S. Pacific Northwest National Lab.
While calling the report “a code red for humanity,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres kept a sliver of hope that world leaders could still somehow prevent 1.5 degrees of warming, which he said is “perilously close.”
Alok Sharma, the president of the upcoming climate negotiations in Scotland, urged leaders to do more so they can “credibly say that we have kept 1.5 degrees alive.”
“Anything we can do to limit, to slow down, is going to pay off,” Tebaldi said. “And if we cannot get to 1.5, it’s probably going to be painful, but it’s better not to give up.”
In the report’s worst-case scenario, the world could be around 3.3 degrees Celsius (5.9 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter than now by the end of the century. But that scenario looks increasingly unlikely, said report co-author and climate scientist Zeke Hausfather, climate change director of the Breakthrough Institute.
“We are a lot less likely to get lucky and end up with less warming than we thought,” Hausfather said. “At the same time, the odds of ending up in a much worse place than we expected if we do reduce our emissions are notably lower.”
The report said ultra-catastrophic disasters — commonly called “tipping points,” like ice sheet collapses and the abrupt slowdown of ocean currents — are “low likelihood” but cannot be ruled out. The much talked-about shutdown of Atlantic ocean currents, which would trigger massive weather shifts, is something that’s unlikely to happen in this century, Kopp said.
A “major advance” in the understanding of how fast the world warms with each ton of carbon dioxide emitted allowed scientists to be far more precise in the scenarios in this report, Mason-Delmotte said.
In a new move, scientists emphasized how cutting airborne levels of methane — a powerful but short-lived gas that has soared to record levels — could help curb short-term warming. Lots of methane the atmosphere comes from leaks of natural gas, a major power source. Livestock also produces large amounts of the gas, a good chunk of it in cattle burps.
More than 100 countries have made informal pledges to achieve “net zero” human-caused carbon dioxide emissions sometime around mid-century, which will be a key part of the negotiations in Scotland. The report said those commitments are essential.
“It is still possible to forestall many of the most dire impacts,” Barrett said.
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Read more of AP’s climate coverage at http://www.apnews.com/Climate
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Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at @borenbears.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Trucking industry continues to face driver shortage
RADIO IOWA – Trucking companies continue to be behind when it comes to finding enough drivers to get behind the wheel.
Iowa Motor Truck Association president, Brenda Neville, says they’d been behind before the pandemic, and it has gotten worse.
“We had people that retired early during the pandemic, and then we have so many different jobs out there now that are fighting for the same people that we are trying to get into trucks,” Neville says. “Some of our members are reporting an even greater shortage of drivers than they have seen in several years. So, I certainly think that that is a problem we are seeing across all segments of the trucking industry.”
Neville says 57% of all truckers today are over the age of 45 and 23% are over the age of 55. That trend would see nearly one-quarter of the current trucking workforce hit retirement age in the next 10 years, not including the nearly eight percent of truck drivers currently working above the retirement age.
She says the industry has done a lot of things to try and lure people in. “We’re seeing an increase in wages, we’re seeing enhanced benefits packages. Some companies are looking at the amount of time that drivers are out on the road,” according to Neville. “I think they are really trying to be very creative, they are trying to be very aggressive, and we are seeing a number of different things. I think some companies are seeing some success with that.”
Neville says there are openings from the big rigs to smaller trucks. She says one positive is you can get into the industry relatively quickly. She says the training can be six months to one year depending on the program. “And you can be making some very good money very quickly without the debt of a two-year or four-year school,” Neville says.
Neville says you can determine how long you want to be on the road. “There’s a variety of different routes that you can take on that will meet your specific needs. Trucking companies have been very good and very creative at making those jobs much more attractive to a wide variety of people,” she says.
Neville says the industry needs an estimated 60,800 truck drivers immediately to fill open spots.
The governor recently signed a proclamation suspending the rules for truckers hauling fuel, as a lack of drivers has led to issues with keeping gas stations supplied.
Main & Market in Ottumwa closed for construction
A busy Ottumwa intersection will be closed starting Monday (8/9). The intersection of Main and Market Streets will be closed to replace brick pavers that have settled with new concrete. The brick paver crosswalks will also be replaced. Once that work is done, construction crews will move to the intersection of Main and Green Streets for the same type of work. Drivers will need to use alternate routes. The project is expected to take three to four weeks, weather permitting.
Heat Advisory Monday and Tuesday
You’ll want to spend some time in the shade. The National Weather Service has issued a Heat Advisory starting at Noon Monday (8/9) until 7pm Tuesday (8/10). A combination of warm temperatures plus high humidity will make it feel like it is 100 degrees or more. Heat related illnesses like heat stroke can happen in these conditions. The best advice is to drink plenty of fluids, stay in an air conditioned room, avoid working outside for long periods….and if you are working outside, get into the shade whenever possible. Again, a Heat Advisory goes into effect at Noon Monday until 7pm Tuesday.
Reba McEntire Recovering From Coronavirus
Despite being vaccinated, Reba McEntire came down with coronavirus along with boyfriend Rex Linn.
In a recent TikTok livestream, McEntire said, “I just want to say one thing: this has been a hard year and it’s getting rougher again. You guys, please stay safe. Wear your mask. Do what you have to do. Stay home. It’s not fun to get this. I did get it. Rex and I got it and it’s not fun. You don’t feel good. We were both vaccinated and we still got it, so stay safe, stay home, and be protected the best you can.”
The surge in COVID-19 cases across America is making her double think her plans for upcoming live shows. “I have no idea what plans for next year are. You know, the COVID thing has really hit hard and spikes are going everywhere right now … and it’s all over the country — this new variant. We have plans right now to go back on tour in January, February and March. We have plans with being with Brooks & Dunn at Caesars in December — the first two weeks, almost three weeks of December — but we don’t know if that’s going to go.”
This all comes just days after McEntire announced a postponement of her late mom’s memorial services due to the surge in COVID-19 cases.
Source: Reba McEntire
This day in Country Music History
- Today in 1975, Asleep at the Wheel entered the charts with “The Letter That Johnny Walker Wrote.”
- Today in 1988, Restless Heart had a top five single with “The Bluest Eyes In Texas.”
- Today in 1991, Mac Davis’ “Greatest Hits” album was certified gold.
- Today in 1991, Tanya Tucker was shaken, but unhurt when her tour bus ended up in the middle of a police chase in Dallas.
- Today in 1994, Johnny Cash withdrew from Woodstock ’94.
- Today in 1996, George Strait’s single, “Carried Away,” hit #1.
- Today in 1997, Elvis Week began in Memphis as fans commemorated the 20th anniversary of the death of Elvis Presley.
- Today in 1997, Lonestar topped the charts with the single, “Come Cryin’ To Me.”
- Today in 1998, Trisha Yearwood was #1 on the singles charts with “There Goes My Baby.”
- Today in 2003, Rascal Flatts’ Jay DeMarcus got engaged to his then-girlfriend, Allison Alderson, in New York City. The couple exchanged vows May 15th, 2004
- Today in 2005, Sugarland taped an installment of CMT’s Crossroads” with Bon Jovi in New York.
- Today in 2010, the single, “As She’s Walking Away,” by The Zac Brown Band Featuring Alan Jackson, hit the airwaves.
- Today in 2014, Jason Aldean began a 14-week ride at #1 on the “Billboard” country singles chart with “Burnin’ It Down.”
- Today in 2014, the Oak Ridge Boys’ Duane Allen was inducted in the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame during a ceremony at the Carthage Civic Center. He was also named an honorary admiral in the Texas Navy by governor Rick Perry.
- Today in 2015, Zac Brown Band became the first act to play three nights at Boston’s Fenway Park. The concert included a surprise appearance by Steven Tyler, who joins the band on “Walk This Way” and “Sweet Emotion.”
- Today in 2016, Dan + Shay’s Shay Mooney got engaged to former Miss Arkansas Hannah Billingsley – they were married October 20th the following year.
- Today in 2017, one day after Glen Campbell’s death, he was honored at the Grand Ole Opry with a mass performance of “Amazing Grace” by The Oak Ridge Boys, Luke Combs, Easton Corbin, Bill Anderson, Will Hoge, Michael Ray and Jeannie Seely. The same day, Toby Keith honored him during a concert at Coney Island in Brooklyn with a cover of “Wichita Lineman.”
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