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Legislature sends mobile home park bill to governor

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RADIO IOWA – Republicans in the Iowa Senate have sent the governor a bill to require that the owners of mobile home parks provide notices of rent increases or utility hikes 90 days in advance. Current law requires 60 days notice. The bill requires any new mobile home park owner to honor existing leases and it gives the residents of manufactured housing an avenue to seek damages if they’re denied essential services, like access to running water.

“This bill provides protections to some of the most vulnerable Iowans and it increases their rights under Iowa law,” Senator Amy Sinclair, a Republican from Allerton, said.

Democrats voted against the measure, saying it does little to address the concerns of mobile home park residents after out-of-state investors take ove. Senate Minority Leader Zach Wahls of Coralville says mobile home park residents in his area are frightened they’ll be unable to keep up with sizable rent increases.

“We can do better than this,” Wahls said. “Let’s vote this bill down and start over.”

The owners of mobile home parks lease the lots on which the manufactured housing sits. Senator Herman Quirmbach of Ames, a Democrat, said the economics are tilted.

“The park owner essentially can hold the owner of the mobile home hostage,” Quirmbach said. “They can’t afford to move it.”

Sinclair said the bill “strikes a balance” between landlords and tenants and is far better than doing nothing at all.

“I understand that it might not be everything that everybody wants, but sometimes striking that balance means that not everybody is happy with the end result,” Sinclair said.

The House passed the bill earlier this month, with two Democrats joining Republicans in voting for it.

Final season of greyhound racing underway

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RADIO IOWA – Greyhound racing in Iowa is starting its final lap. The Iowa Greyhound Park in Dubuque opened for the final time in a season that Racing and Gaming administrator Brian Ohorilko says it will last one month.

“It is a short meet the general manager indicated that he has plenty of greyhounds and enough personnel,” Ohorilko says. Ohorilko says the Racing and Gaming Commission approved a move prior to Saturday’s opening races to allow the season to have enough dogs to race.

“Part of being able to make that work we were informed that they needed to increase some of those purse amounts — and so some of the money that was being held in reserve from Iowa Greyhound park will go into the purse account,” he says. Ohorilko says it will end more than 35 years of dog track racing.

“It will be the last meet here in Iowa and then…there will not be greyhound racing in Iowa after this meet,” Ohoriko says. “And in fact, after this meet that after 2022, there will only be one state that has greyhound racing left, and that that is West Virginia.”

The Iowa Legislature approved a plan about seven years ago to phase out greyhound racing in the state. The final race at the Iowa Greyhound Park in Dubuque is on May 15th. The Racing and Gaming Commission website shows the first dog races began at the Dubuque Greyhound Park, which opened in June of 1985.

Ottumwa city-wide drop-off day Saturday

Have any large items you’re looking to get rid of?  The City of Ottumwa and Bridge City Sanitation are holding a city-wide drop-off day this Saturday (4/23) from 7 to 11am at the Ottumwa Water Works, or Hydro, parking lot. Ottumwa Community Development Director Zach Simonson tells us what sort of things you can drop off.

“Folks can complete their spring cleaning by bringing in bulky items, old couches, mattresses, old furniture, things like that that people are trying to get rid of.  They can dispose of all of that for free in the Hydro parking lot.”

Simonson says they won’t accept construction debris, hazardous materials, tires, recyclables, yard waste and commercial waste.  They also won’t accept anything from out of town—only from Ottumwa residents, so you’ll need a driver’s license with a valid Ottumwa address.

Dolly Parton Shares The Worst Advice She’s Gotten

Dolly Parton has received a lot of advice over the course of her career, but not all of it’s been good. In case you missed it, the singer opened up about the worst advice she ever got, during an appearance on “WorkLife with Adam Grant” podcast.

“The main advice that people wanted to give me was to change my look – to go simpler with my hair and the way that I dress,” Dolly shared. “Not to look so cheap, nobody was ever going to take me seriously, they would say.”  She noted, “People wanted me to change, they thought I looked cheap. But I patterned my look after the town tramp.”

As for why, Dolly shared, “Everybody said, ‘She’s trash.’ And in my little girl mind, I thought, ‘Well, that’s what I’m going to be when I grow up.’ It was really like a look I was after,” noting, “I wasn’t a natural beauty. So, I just like to look the way I look.” She added, “I’m so outgoing inside in my personality, that I need the way I look to match all of that.”

Source: People

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1959, 12-year-old Dolly Parton released her first single, “Puppy Love.”
  • Today in 1977, the Glen Campbell hit “Southern Nights” went gold.
  • Today in 1987, the “Greatest Hits” album by Reba McEntire was released.
  • Today in 1987, Eddie Rabbitt performed at the White House Easter Egg Roll. Get it? Eddie “the Easter” Rabbitt?
  • Today in 1988, “The Last One To Know” album by Reba McEntire was certified gold.
  • Today in 1991, Willie Nelson was among the performers at an Earth Day benefit concert in Foxboro, Massachusetts.
  • Today in 1993, Patty Loveless’ “Only What I Feel” album was released.
  • Today in 1993, the “Honky Tonk Attitude” album by Joe Diffie was released.
  • Today in 1993, Shania Twain’s self-titled album was released.
  • Today in 1993, Tracy Lawrence’s album, “Alibis,” went gold.
  • Today in 1993, Mercury released Toby Keith’s self-titled debut album.
  • Today in 1996, Lee Roy Parnell was #1 on the country charts with “Heart’s Desire.”
  • Today in 2000, Diamond Rio announced plans for a “Fan Appreciation Concert.” The event, which included a silent auction served as a benefit for Kaia Jergenson, a David Lipscomb University student and basketball star who was tragically stricken with meningitis. As a result of the infection, both of Kaia’s legs, were amputated below the knee. The skyrocketing cost of Kaia’s care overwhelmed the family. Located in Nashville, David Lipscomb University is the alma mater of Diamond Rio’s lead singer, Marty Roe.
  • Today in 2000, Clay Davidson made his “Fox & Friends” debut with a performance of “Unconditional.”
  • Today in 2000, Randy Travis performed “A Little Left of Center” on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.”
  • Today in 2002, Toby Keith’s “My List” begun a five-week run at the top of the Billboard country list.
  • Today in 2008, Hank Williams, Steve Wariner and The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band were added to the Music City Walk of Fame.
  • Today in 2011, Jo Dee Messina sung the national anthem at a Nashville Predators playoff game. Carrie Underwood sung “Cowboy Casanova” during intermission while Vince Gill played the guitar.
  • Today in 2012, Eric Church’s “Springsteen” went gold.
  • Today in 2013, the Band Perry’s “Pioneer” debuted at #1 on the Billboard country albums chart.
  • Today in 2015, Willie Nelson uses 4/20 – ‘National Weed Day’ – to formally announce plans to launch Willie’s Reserve, his own brand of cannabis. The product will initially be available in Colorado and Washington, the only U.S. states where pot is legal.
  • Today in 2016, Jana Kramer’s single, “Whiskey,” went gold.
  • Today in 2016, Thomas Rhett sang “Die A Happy Man” in a guest role on ABC-TV’s “Nashville.”
  • Today in 2017, Rodney Atkins headlined the Back The Badge, a benefit for law enforcement at the Orleans Hotel in Las Vegas.
  • Today in 2017, a certified pilot – Dierks Bentley – was appointed to the board of commissioners that oversees the Nashville Airport. He resigned the post in 2018.
  • Today in 2019, Brooks & Dunn’s “Reboot” debuted at the top of the Billboard country albums chart. The project features a dozen previous hits remade with younger country acts, including Brothers Osborne, Thomas Rhett, Kane Brown, Brett Young, Ashley McBryde, Luke Combs and Kacey Musgraves.
  • Today in 2020, Upchurch’s album, “Everlasting Country,” was released.
  • Today in 2020, Lady A’s single “Champagne Night” hit the airwaves.
  • Today in 2021, Jana Kramer files for divorce from Mike Caussin, accusing him of adultery (again), in Williamson County, Tennessee. The divorce was finalized on July 22, 2021.

Russia ratchets up battle for control of eastern Ukraine

By ADAM SCHRECK

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia ratcheted up its battle for control of Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland, intensifying assaults on cities and towns along a front hundreds of miles long in what officials on both sides described as a new phase of the war.

After a Russian push to the capital failed to overrun the city, the Kremlin declared that its main goal was the capture of the eastern Donbas region. If successful, that offensive would give President Vladimir Putin a vital piece of Ukraine and a badly needed victory that he could present to the Russian people amid the war’s mounting casualties and the economic hardship caused by the West’s sanctions.

In recent weeks, Russian forces that withdrew from Kyiv have regrouped in preparation for an all-out offensive in the Donbas, where Moscow-backed separatists have been fighting Ukrainian forces for the past eight years and have declared two independent republics that have been recognized by Russia.

While Ukraine’s president and other officials said the offensive had started, observers noted that it was just the beginning of a new massive onslaught.

Ukraine’s military said early Tuesday that a “new phase of war” began a day earlier when “the occupiers made an attempt to break through our defenses along nearly the entire frontline.” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in an interview that “another phase of this operation is starting now.”

In what appeared to be an intensification of attacks, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said that air-launched missiles destroyed 13 Ukrainian troop and weapons locations while the air force struck 60 other Ukrainian military facilities, including missile warhead storage depots. Russian artillery hit 1,260 Ukrainian military facilities and 1,214 troops concentrations over the last 24 hours. The claims could not be independently verified.

The Pentagon cast the stepped-up campaign as “shaping operations” setting the stage for a broader offensive in the mostly Russian-speaking Donbas region.

The United States believes that Russian forces are “continuing to set the conditions for what they believe will be eventual success on the ground by putting in more forces, putting in more enablers, putting in more command and control capability for operations yet to come,” Pentagon press secretary John Kirby said Monday.

The assaults began that day along a boomerang-shaped front that stretches more than 300 miles (480 kilometers) from northeastern Ukraine to the country’s southeast.

Russia said it struck several areas with missiles, including the northeastern city of Kharkiv as well as as areas around Zaporizhzhia and Dnipro west of the Donbas. Five civilians were killed in a barrage on Kharkiv, Gov. Oleh Synyehubov said Tuesday.

Moscow’s troops seized control of one town in the Donbas on Monday, according to Luhansk Gov. Serhiy Haidai. The breakthrough in Kreminna takes the Russians one small step closer to their apparent goal of encircling Ukrainian troops in the region by advancing on them from the north and south and squeezing them against territory held by Moscow’s troops to the east.

Oleksiy Danilov, secretary of Ukraine’s national security council, said that the defensive line had held elsewhere.

The capture of Kreminna also takes the Russians closer to the city of Slovyansk, whose loss by the Russia-backed separatists represented a humiliating setback for Moscow in the early stages of the separatist conflict in 2014.

Key to the campaign to take the east is the capture of Mariupol, a port city in the region that the Russians have besieged since the early days of the war.

Shelling continued there and Russia issued a fresh ultimatum Tuesday to the Ukrainian troops holed up there to surrender, saying those who come out will “keep their lives.” The Ukrainians have ignored previous such offers.

Securing Mariupol would free Russian troops up to move elsewhere in the Donbas, deprive Ukraine of a vital port, and complete a land bridge between Russia and the Crimean Peninsula, seized from Ukraine from 2014.

Denys Prokopenko, commander of the Azov Regiment of the Ukrainian National Guard that is guarding the last known Ukrainian pocket of resistance in Mariupol, said in a video message that Russia had begun dropping bunker-buster bombs on the Azovstal steel plant where the regiment was holding out.

Civilians are also believed to be sheltering at the plant, which covers the territory of about 11 square kilometers (over 4 square miles).

On Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a video address that a “significant part of the entire Russian army” is now concentrated on the battle for the Donbas.

“No matter how many Russian troops are driven there, we will fight,” Zelenskyy vowed. “We will defend ourselves.”

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Associated Press journalists Felipe Dana in Kharkiv, Ukraine; Nico Maounis and Philip Crowther in Lviv, Ukraine; and Robert Burns in Washington contributed to this report, as did other AP staff members around the world.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

2nd suspect arrested in deadly Iowa nightclub shooting

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A second suspect in a shooting at an Iowa nightclub that killed two people and injured 10 others was arrested Monday in a Chicago suburb, the U.S. Marshals Service said.

Dimione Jamal Walker, 29, was wanted in Linn County, Iowa, on charges of first-degree murder and other counts in the April 10 shooting during a crowded party inside the Taboo Nightclub and Lounge in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

He was also wanted in Illinois on a parole violation and by the U.S. Marshals on a bail warrant.

Law enforcement officers in Iowa determined Walker had left the state on the day after the shooting, the U.S. Marshals Service said in a news release.

Last week, the Marshals Service received information that Walker was in the Chicago area and he was arrested by the Great Lakes Task Force Monday in the Chicago suburb of Matteson. He’s currently being held by Chicago police.

Timothy Rush, 32, has been charged with second-degree murder and other counts in the shooting, which killed 35-year-old Nicole Owens and 25-year-old Michael Valentine, both of Cedar Rapids.

City and county approve grant application for connector road in Oskaloosa

The Mahaska County Board and City of Oskaloosa are both authorizing an application for a state grant to build a road to connect US Highway 63 and State Highway 23 on Oskaloosa’s south side.  At their respective meetings Monday (4/18), the Mahaska County Board and Oskaloosa City Council both voted to support the application for a $7.3 million RISE grant—that’s Revitalize Iowa’s Sound Economy—to go toward building a road linking the two highways.  The new road is still years in the making, but the idea is to direct truck traffic coming from the south toward the industrial area along Highway 23 without going through residential neighborhoods.  The overall project is expected to cost about $11.2 million. Mahaska County and the City of Oskaloosa will split the remainder of the cost.

CIS online art auction

Crisis Intervention Services in Oskaloosa is holding an online art auction to raise money.  Sarah Champoux, executive director of CIS, says the auction will be Wednesday, April 20.

“People can go online at 32auctions.com/CIS and from there, all day (Wednesday) from 8am to 7pm they can bid on items.  We have different artwork from some local artists.  Some of them are paintings, we have quilts, some of them are embroidery.  We have different bundles that include gift certificates for different shops.”

There’s more information on the Crisis Intervention Services Facebook page, and by calling 641-673-0336.

New Species Of Millipede Named After Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift has been given a new honor, well sort of. Scientists have just named a new millipede after the singer.  The new species of millipede from the Appalachian Mountains will now be known as the Nannaria swiftae, or the Swift Twisted-Claw Millipede.

Virginia Tech scientists Derek Hennen, Jackson Means, and Paul Marek named the Swift millipede, along with 15 other new species. Hennen, the lead author, is a Swiftie, and choose this specific millipede because as of now it’s only been found in Tennessee,

“Her music helped me get through the highs and lows of graduate school,” Hennen notes, “so naming a new millipede species after her is my way of saying thanks.”

So far Taylor hasn’t commented on her millepede.

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