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Sieda Community Action Hosting Sieda Sneaker Soirée April 21

OTTUMWA, IA — Sieda Community Action will be holding their annual banquet and silent auction, the Sieda Sneaker Soirée, on Friday, April 21 at the Bridgeview Center in Ottumwa. The event is an opportunity to celebrate the great work Sieda does throughout Southeast Iowa and is the organization’s largest fundraiser of the year.

This is the first year Sieda’s banquet will be a Sneaker Soirée. Guests at the event are invited to wear their favorite tennis shoes along with whatever they’d normally wear to the banquet. “We just thought this would be a fun way for people to get dressed up a bit, but also feel less formal or stuffy.” said Tammy Hotek, the Deputy Director at Sieda Community Action.

“For the past decade, it has been my pleasure to be the Executive Director of Sieda Community Action. I know this organization and our amazing staff work tirelessly to address the causes and conditions of poverty and have a lasting impact on our community. We and our Presenting Sponsor, South Ottumwa Savings Bank, hope folks from all over our service area will dig out their favorite sneakers, tennis shoes, skaters, or casual shoes and help Sieda raise money to change the lives of low-income families.” said Brian Dunn, Sieda’s Executive Director.

For more information on the event people can visit www.sieda.org. Tickets are available at the Sieda Resources Centers in Appanoose, Jefferson, Mahaksa, and Wapello Counties or online at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/2023-sneaker-soiree-tickets-534999928187.

Sieda Community Action, a private non-profit organization established in 1965 as a Community Action Agency, is tasked with providing a range of programs designed to address the causes and conditions of poverty. These programs strengthen families and personal relationships, promote child development, remove barriers to overcoming poverty, and help individuals and families with basic needs.

Marion County Board of Supervisors Approves FY24 Budget

By Sam Parsons

The Marion County Board of Supervisors met on Tuesday and officially approved the county budget and property tax levy rate for FY24. The board approved the levy rate of $9.78 per $1,000 of valuation, a $0.10 decrease from this year’s property tax levy rate. That marks the fifth consecutive year in which the Marion County Board has decreased the property tax levy rate; it had been about $10.73 as recently as FY20. Board member Mark Raymie said that it was important to lower the rate as assessments have been going up, a concern which he said was best to raise to lawmakers at the state level.

“The trend has been to decrease the overall levy rate from preceding boards and this board,” Raymie said. “I’m very proud of the fact that board members look for ways to reign in costs [and] return dollars to the taxpayer, but also fully fund the services and economic activities that we have undertaken. That’s unusual for a county our size.

“People have been receiving their assessments,” Raymie continued, “and they are shocked at the valuations. And so we get the question a lot about the increase in property taxes because of that part of the math formula. I want to continue to encourage our residents: talk to your state representatives. They will push back, and they will say, along with the lobbying groups, that it’s local boards of supervisors, local school boards, your city councils, that are responsible. And that is inaccurate.”

The county’s budget was also approved, which included an estimated $31.3 million in total revenues, a decrease of about $3.5 million from the current fiscal year, and an estimated $40.4 million in expenditures, an increase of about $3.7 million over the current fiscal year.

And the board approved the county’s secondary roads department budget, which had approximately $10.2 million in total expenditures.

Kenny Rogers’ Posthumous ‘Life Is Like A Song’ Album Coming In June

Kenny Rogers left us decades of incredible music when he passed away three years ago – but for some people, that’s not enough. For those people, we have wonderful news. A new Kenny album is on the way June 2!

The posthumous set of previously unreleased tracks is called “Life Is Like A Song,” and it features ten tracks (twelve if you buy the digital version), and includes three duets, with Kim KeyesJamie O’Neal and Dolly Parton. Much of the collection is Kenny’s rendition of songs made famous by other artists, including Eric Clapton‘s “Wonderful Tonight,” the Temptations‘ “I Wish it Would Rain” and Lionel Richie‘s “Goodbye.” For those that can’t wait, two tracks have been released: the Temptations classic and the swampy, rocking “Love Is A Drug.” Check out the entire track list for “Life Is Like A Song”:

1. “Love Is a Drug”
2. “I Wish It Would Rain”
3. “Am I Too Late” (with Kim Keyes)
4. “Tell Me That You Love Me” (with Dolly Parton)
5. “Straight Into Love” (with Jamie O’Neal)
6. “Wonderful Tonight”
7. “Catchin’ Grasshoppers”
8. “That’s Love To Me”
9. “I Will Wait For You”
10. “Goodbye”
11. “Say Hello to Heaven” (digital deluxe bonus track)
12. “At Last” (digital deluxe bonus track)

Source: Taste Of Country

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1959, George Jones’ “White Lightning” picked up his first #1 country single in Billboard magazine as a recording artist.
  • Today in 1963, Bill Anderson’s “Still” reached #1 on Billboard’s country chart.
  • Today in 1965, Roger Miller set a record by winning five GRAMMYS in one night. No other country star has ever won that many at one time.
  • Today in 1970, Bettie Azevedez picked up five trophies on behalf of Merle Haggard in the Academy Of Country & Western Music awards at the Hollywood Palladium.
  • Today in 1996, Lonestar’s “No News” topped Billboard for the first time.
  • Today in 2002, Faith Hill was inducted into the Mississippi Musicians Hall of Fame. She wasn’t there, though, and only about 70 people attended the induction ceremony at the University of Southern Mississippi. Other new inductees include jazz diva Cassandra Wilson; former Miss America Mary Ann Mobley; Walter Turnbull, the founder and conductor of the Boys Choir of Harlem; blues great Howlin’ Wolf; pop musician Van Dyke Parks; and former member of the Temptations David Ruffin.
  • Today in 2003, Andy Griggs, Kris Kristofferson, Jeffrey Steele and others teamed up to play in a Waylon Jennings tribute concert in Scottsdale, Arizona. The event was one of three shows with the theme “Crossing the Bound’ries,” an acoustic evening of Waylon music and anecdotes that also raised funds for the Make-A-Wish foundation. Also participating were Waylon’s widow, Jessi Coulter, and son Shooter Jennings.
  • Today in 2005, Willie Nelson’s attorney sent a Texas Senator a letter declining to have a toll road named for the singer. Nelson told the Austin American-Statesman, “I’d put my name on an electric chair, too, but I don’t think that’d be too great a thing.”
  • Today in 2009, Big Machine released Taylor Swift’s “You Belong With Me” to radio.
  • Today in 2012, Jana Kramer performed “Why Ya Wanna” as she made her Grand Ole Opry debut.
  • Today in 2013, Jason Aldean performed the first of a handful of stadium dates on his 2013 itinerary, at Sanford Stadium in Athens, Georgia, with Luke Bryan, Jake Owens and Thomas Rhett. Ludacris made a surprise appearance.
  • Today in 2014, Taylor Swift made a surprise cameo appearance during Seth Rogen’s show-opening monologue on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live.” “You’re getting really upset,” she exclaimed. “And whenever a man shows emotion, I appear!”
  • Today in 2014, the late Johnny Cash was atop the “Billboard” country albums chart with “Out Among The Stars.”
  • Today in 2015, Trace Adkins embarked on a USO tour that took him to Kuwait, Afghanistan and Germany.
  • Today in 2018, Jason Aldean dropped his album, “Rearview Town.”
  • Today in 2018, the John Prine album, “The Tree Of Forgiveness,” was released.
  • Today in 2019, George Strait’s “Honky Tonk Time Machine” was locked in the top spot on the Billboard country albums chart.
  • Today in 2020, Luke Bryan’s single, “One Margarita,” was released.
  • Today in 2020, “Biography: Kenny Rogers” aired on A&E. On it, Rogers and Dolly Parton sang their classic, “Islands In The Stream,” and featured interviews included thoughts from Lady A, Justin Moore, Reba McEntire, Jamey Johnson, Kim Carnes and Chris Stapleton.
  • Today in 2021, the Dustin Lynch single, “Thinking ‘Bout You,” which features MacKenzie Porter, hit the airwaves.
  • Today in 2021, Morgan Wallen wrote a letter to fans, announcing he was dropping out of the upcoming Luke Bryan tour as he continues to work out personal issues.

MEET THE H & S FEED & COUNTRY STORE PET OF THE WEEK: “AJAX”

This week’s H & S Feed & Country Store Pet of the Week is “Ajax”, a 7 year old Pit/Lab Mix. Ajax is a happy go lucky chap who not only loves both adults and kids, but also gets along great with other dogs and doesn’t seem to mind cats. Ajax loves to play and he’s housetrained as well as fully vaccinated and vetted.

If you’d like to set up an appointment to meet Ajax or any of the pets at Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter, visit https://www.stephenmemorial.org/ and fill out an adoption application.

Check out our visit about Ajax with Shanna from Stephen Memorial Animal Shelter here:

 

To fight cancer, EPA wants sterilizer companies to emit less

(AP) The Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday proposed limiting the use of the chemical ethylene oxide after finding a higher than expected cancer risk at facilities that use it to sterilize billions of medical devices each year.

The EPA says its proposal will reduce ethylene oxide emissions by roughly 80% by targeting 86 medical sterilization facilities across the United States. The companies will also have to test for the antimicrobial chemical in the air and make sure their pollution controls are working properly.

“EPA’s number one priority is protecting people’s health and safety,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan said in a statement. The agency’s proposals “would significantly reduce worker and community exposure to harmful levels of ethylene oxide,” he said.

Darya Minovi, a senior research analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists, called the action overdue by “almost a decade” and said it should have gone further to require monitoring at facility fence lines so people know what is entering their neighborhoods.

“I’m relieved and pleased that the EPA has finally issued proposed standards that are based on their own scientists’ recommendations on an updated, higher cancer risk value,” Minovi said in a statement.

The tightened safeguards are driven by the EPA’s better understanding that ethylene oxide’s threat is severe. The chemical is classified as a pesticide. A worker in a medical sterilizing plant, over the course of a career, could see their risk shoot up by as much as one extra case of cancer for every 10 people exposed. The EPA’s generally acceptable increase in lifetime cancer risk is 1 in 10,000.

Ethylene oxide is a gas used to sterilize roughly half of all medical devices and is also used to ensure the safety of certain spices and other food products. It is used to clean everything from catheters to syringes, pacemakers and plastic surgical gowns. Brief exposure isn’t considered a danger, but breathing it long term elevates the risk of breast cancer and lymphoma, according to the agency.

In 2016, the EPA updated its assessment of ethylene oxide’s danger based on information about exposed workers at sterilizing facilities, finding the chemical was many times more threatening than previously known. Analysis released by the agency two years later found that cancer risk was too high near some medical sterilization plants and some other facilities that release ethylene oxide.

“That set off a regulatory alarm bell,” said Marvin Brown, an attorney at the environmental group Earthjustice.

Public concern grew. Sterigenics shuttered a medical sterilization plant in a Chicago suburb after monitoring found emissions spikes in nearby neighborhoods. They eventually settled numerous lawsuits.

In 2022, the EPA laid out the risk faced by residents who live near medical sterilization facilities. In Laredo, Texas, for example, residents and activists fought to clean up a sterilization facility run by Missouri-based Midwest Sterilization Corp. It was one of 23 sterilizers in the United States that the EPA said posed a risk for people nearby.

“This, for us, feels like a win,” said Sheila Serna, the climate science and policy director at the environmental group Rio Grande International Study Center. She said despite improvements at the Laredo facility, the risk is still too high. Her group sued the EPA in December, pushing it to tighten ethylene oxide protections. She agreed with Minovi that the proposal should require fence line monitoring as well as protections at warehouses where sterilized products are temporarily stored.

Midwest Sterilization said the company’s work helps provide life-saving medical care.

“Most of the changes proposed by the EPA have already been achieved by Midwest, or are currently being implemented,” the company said in a statement.

The EPA said many facilities have already sharply reduced emissions, but those that haven’t will now have to meet stricter requirements.

Scott Whitaker, president and CEO of the Advanced Medical Technology Association, said medical sterilizers provide a vital service and many devices “cannot be sterilized by another method.” He said the EPA’s risk assessment overstates the threat employees face and undervalues the protections they are already provided.

He added that the facilities are already at capacity and if some close, it could delay medical care. The 18-month time frame for installing technology to reduce emissions after the final rule is issued is “much too short,” Whitaker said in a statement. “It could take many months for abatement equipment to arrive. Supply chains and manufacturing are still recovering from the pandemic.”

Susan Buchanan, an environmental and occupational health physician at the University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health, said ethylene oxide is a “potent carcinogen” that is also very good at sterilizing medical equipment. She rejects arguments that the EPA overstated ethylene oxide’s risks.

“The EPA is full of really smart, diligent, nonaligned scientists,” she said. “If anything, the EPA is sometimes not protective enough.”

The EPA also wants to require protective vapor masks for people who work with high amounts of ethylene oxide and says some workplaces, including museums, should stop using it altogether because safer alternatives exist.

Tuesday’s proposal follows the EPA’s directive last week to cut emissions from chemical plants in general to reduce cancer risk. In part, that rule targeted manufactures of ethylene oxide. Tuesday’s proposal targets those who use it.

Bill would make breed specific dog bans illegal in Iowa

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

The Iowa House has voted to forbid cities and counties from having ordinances that ban certain breeds of dogs, like pit bulls. Representative Jacob Bossman, a Republican from Sioux City, said the bill will hopefully turn the focus to responsible dog ownership.

“It’s kind of a cop out for communities to say: ‘We’re just going to ban this breed or this breed,’ and it makes you feel good, but studies have shown it doesn’t get to the issue,” Bossman said.

The American Veterinary Medical Association says breed specific bans can give communities a false sense of security. The group says any dog can become aggressive and bite if they are unsupervised or not trained in how to interact with other dogs and humans.

“This bill will allow Iowans to responsibly own the dogs of their choice, live where they choose and will instead turn the focus on dogs that have problems rather than specific breeds,” he said.

Bossman is from Sioux City, where an ordinance banned pit bulls from city limits for 11 years. The ordinance was repealed in 2019. “There was a breed ban in Sioux City — don’t need to get into all the specifics — but I think it was generally accepted that it kind of failed,” Bossman said.

The bill passed the House on an 82-16 vote. One opponent said it dilutes the authority of local officials to respond to local concerns. Dozens of Iowa cities have ordinanes that either ban certain breeds of dogs or label specific breeds as dangerous or vicious.

Oskaloosa School Board Approves FY24 Budget and Tax Levy

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa Community School Board met last night and held a public hearing on their budget for FY24. The final levy rate that was approved by the board was $12.94 per $1,000 of valuation, which board member Chad Vink said was lower than the rate that was published.

The board also moved forward with two improvement projects. One was for improvements for the high school baseball field, intended to fix some drainage issues with the field. The district plans on working with Garden and Associates for the project.

The other project will see improvements to pavement at the Elementary and Middle Schools, including the concrete in front of the George Daily Auditorium, stairs in front of the middle school, and some of the concrete in the north parking lot. The contract for the project was awarded to TK Concrete for roughly $185,000.

Among other actions taken by the board was the approval of an out-of-state debate trip for students, the rejection of bids for the sale of the Webster School, the acceptance of the audit report for FY23, and renewal of their agreement with their food service management company.

The next regular Oskaloosa school board meeting will be held on May 9.

Clay Walker And Wife Expecting Baby Number Six

Clay Walker and wife Jessica announced yesterday that the couple is expecting! The is baby #6 for the pair; Clay also has two adult daughters from a previous marriage. The new member of the family, already known to be a daughter, is due this fall. “We are beyond excited about having a little girl!” Walker wrote in a press release. “Her brothers and sisters are awaiting her arrival. God is great!”

The couple’s new addition will join sons Christiaan, 2, Ezra Stephen, 5, Elijah Craig, 10, and William Clayton, 14, and daughter Mary-Elizabeth, 13, plus Walker’s adult daughters Skylor and MaClay.

Source: People

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1961, at the GRAMMYs, Marty Robbins won Best Country & Western Performance for “El Paso.”
  • Today in 1972, Nashville’s Municipal Auditorium hosted the first Fan Fair.
  • Today in 1980, Christy Pride hit the top of the charts with her remake of “Honky Tonk Blues.”
  • Today in 1986, the Judds topped the singles charts with “Grandpa (Tell Me ‘Bout the Good Ol’ Days).”
  • Today in 1989, Garth Brooks’ self-titled debut album was released.
  • Today in 1991, the single, “Down Home,” by Alabama was #1 on the charts.
  • Today in 1993, Tim McGraw released his self-titled debut album.
  • Today in 1994, the “Big Time” album by Little Texas was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1994, Dwight Yoakam’s “Hillbilly Deluxe” album was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1995, Alabama’s single, “Give Me One More Shot,” topped the country charts.
  • Today in 1996, Neal McCoy hit #1 with the single, “You Gotta Love That.”
  • Today in 1997, Travis Tritt married Theresa Nelson in Georgia. He sang “More Than You’ll Ever Know” to his bride.
  • Today in 1999, the “Greatest Hits” album by Diamond Rio was certified gold.
  • Today in 1999, Shania Twain became the only female artist in music history to sell at least 10-million units with back-to-back releases. Plus, her “Come On Over” album was given the first-ever Diamond Award.
  • Today in 2000, Bill Anderson and Jon Randall wrote “Whiskey Lullaby.”
  • Today in 2002, the annual gala, “An American Celebration At Ford’s Theater,” from Washington D.C. aired on ABC. SHeDAISY was among the list of folks entertaining President Bush, First Lady Laura Bush and a slew of other dignitaries.
  • Today in 2002, Brooks & Dunn’s “Neon Circus & Wild West Show” tour kicked off in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The show, which included Gary Allan, Chris Cagle, Trick Pony, Dwight Yoakam and Cledus T. Judd (as the emcee), wrapped in Holmdel, New Jersey on July 28th.
  • Today in 2010, as the Pultzer Prize winners were announced, Hank Williams was honored with a special citation for “craftsmanship as a songwriter.”
  • Today in 2014, Taylor Swift made a surprise cameo during Seth Rogen’s opening “Saturday Night Live” monologue, saying: “You’re getting really upset. And whenever a man shows emotion, I appear!”
  • Today in 2016, Merle Haggard covers abound as Keith Urban and Vince Gill co-host the All for the Hall benefit at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. Gill offered up “The Fightin’ Side Of Me,” Sam Hunt sang “The Way I Am” and Emmylou Harris performed “Kern River.” Also appearing were: Florida Georgia Line, Luke Bryan, Jason Isbell and Maddie & Tae.
  • Today in 2019. Blake Shelton’s video for “God’s Country” premiered on CMT.
  • Today in 2020, “Willie Nelson: American Outlaw–An All-Star Concert Celebration” airs on A&E, with George Strait duetting on “Good Hearted Woman.” Also aboard were Jamey Johnson, Eric Church, Emmylou Harris, Ray Benson, Lyle Lovett and Chris Stapleton, who teamed with Nelson on “Always On My Mind.”

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