TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

“Stop The Airport From Being Built In Mahaska County” Group Hosting Night of Action May 25

OSKALOOSA — A small opposition group operating a Facebook page called Stop The Airport From Being Built In Mahaska County, will be holding an evening of action event at the ISU Extension auditorium at 7:00 PM on Thursday, May 25th.

The event will kick off with an informative briefing on the past, present and future of efforts to stop the airport.  Attendees will also have the opportunity to sign petitions that would allow Osky voters to decide not only on the airport, but the recent 4 to 3 lane conversion on Market Street and A Avenue, as well as their right to petition their city government.

The May 25th Night of Action event will be open to the public, however, only those living in the city limits of Oskaloosa and who are registered to vote are eligible to sign petitions.

Mahaska County Community Foundation Wraps up 2023 Grant Cycle

OSKALOOSA — The Mahaska County Community Foundation (MCCF) is pleased to announce that the 2023 grant cycle has concluded, with just over $110,000 awarded for projects within Mahaska County.  The checks have been distributed to the recipients, with these organizations now hard at work putting these dollars into good use to benefit many Mahaska County citizens.  

The MCCF is in large degree a creation of the Iowa Legislature, which diverts eight-tenths of one percent (0.8%) of the total gambling tax to the 84 counties that do not contain a gambling facility.  However, this revenue can only go to a Qualified Community Foundation, which has strict rules and regulations to follow.  The MCCF is such a Foundation, and its 8-member Board covers all areas of the County, including representatives not only from Oskaloosa but also from Leighton/Pella, New Sharon, and University Park.  Of the funds received, MCCF grants out 75% of the monies via its grant application process, with the remaining 25% added to the permanent endowment fund from which the revenue can also be used for grants.  The MCCF’s permanent endowment fund is also intended to attract additional donations to provide a greater funding source.  This permanent endowment fund qualifies for the Endow Iowa Tax Credit program which allows doners to receive significant tax benefits for their donations.

MCCF Secretary and Bank Iowa Vice President Calvin Bandstra, stated “The MCCF has been in existence since 2006.  At that time, only $45,000 was available for grants, with that amount now more than doubled.  The non-profit organizations in Mahaska County have taken note of this, and now work hard to qualify for these funds.  This year’s grant applications had an exceptionally high quality and variety to them, and we Board Members of MCCF hope that trend continues, even though it makes the grant selection process more difficult.” 

In addition to the grants given to specific organizations in specific communities, two successful grant applications had a county-wide flavor.  One was a $6,135 grant to the Mahaska County Extension office of Iowa State University for projector/speaker project for its auditorium; the other was a $15,000 grant to the Southern Iowa Fair for renovations to the 4-H/FFA Sale Barn.

The following is the list of grants awarded:

$7,500 Mahaska Future View—New Community Engagement/Marketing Program sponsored by the Mahaska County Chamber, Oskaloosa Schools, and others

10,000 Mahaska County Recreation Foundation—Hip Shades for new baseball fields at Lacey Complex

20,000 City of University Park—Expansion and updating of City Park

8,000 Eddyville Little League—Baseball field improvements

2,000 Friends of George Daily Auditorium—Free student tickets for 25th anniversary of Youth Theatre

7,000 Fine Arts Council and Events (FACE) of Mahaska County—Renovation project

11,000 Mahaska County Historical Society/Nelson Pioneer Farm—Self-guided tour signage

6,135 Mahaska County/ISU Extension—Auditorium improvements

2,500 New Sharon Little League—Improvements to the Reed ballfield

5,000 William Penn University—Touring Musician performance and workshop for area students

15,000 Southern Iowa Fair—Renovations to the 4-H and FFA sale barn

10,000 Mahaska County YMCA—Expansion of group fitness programming

5,000 Friends of the Stilwell Library (New Sharon)—Technology updates

1,000 Mobility Worldwide of Leighton—Printer/Copy Machine replacement

_____

$110,135 Total Grants Awarded

Oskaloosa Indians State Track and Field Results

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa Indians sent a busload of athletes to the Iowa high school state track and field meets Thursday through Friday. Below are the team’s results by day and event; Oskaloosa competed at the 3A level.

Thursday

Boys Shuttle Hurdle Relay Prelims (Dom Piersel, JT Baker, Waylon Bolibaugh, Tatum Westercamp): 1:02.21 (SB), 11th

Girls 200m Prelims (Maleah Walker): 26.47, 15th

Girls 100m Prelims (Maleah Walker): 13.10, 15th

Girls Shuttle Hurdle Relay Prelims (Sadie Blommers, Lydia Van Veldhuizen, Emmalee Wells-Stout, Hannah Quang): 1:10.12, 15th

Friday

Boys Long Jump (Tatum Westercamp): 20-01.00, 16th

Girls Distance Medley (Hannah Quang, Maleah Walker, Evelyn Adam, Tierney Carter): 4:22.82, 16th

Girls 100m Hurdle Prelims (Hannah Quang): 15.83 (PR), 12th

Boys 110m Hurdle Prelims (Tatum Westercamp): 14.61 (PR), 4th

Girls Long Jump (Maleah Walker): 16-11.00, 6th

Girls 400m Hurdles (Evelyn Adam): 1:10.86 (PR), 15th

Girls 400m Hurdles (Emmalee Wells-Stout): 1:12.95 (PR), 22nd

Boys 400m Hurdles (Waylon Bolibaugh): 58.10 (PR), 13th

Girls 4×400 Relay Prelims (Ryleigh Wilken, Hannah Quang, Evelyn Adam, Tierney Carter): 4:13.73 (SB), 20th

Saturday

Girls 800m (Tierney Carter): 2:23.04 (PR), 15th

Boys 110m Hurdle Final (Tatum Westercamp): 14.53 (PR), 4th

Girls 1500m (Tierney Carter): 5:14.40 (PR), 21st

Oskaloosa Track and Field: State Meet Results, Day 1

By Sam Parsons

Yesterday, members of the Oskaloosa Indians track and field team suited up for day 1 of the state meet at the Blue Oval. The Indians competed in 4 preliminary events.

In the 3A boys Shuttle Hurdle Relay prelims, the team of Dom Piersel, JT Baker, Waylon Bolibaugh, and Tatum Westercamp finished in 1:02.21, good for 3rd out of 4 in a tough heat behind Cedar Rapids Xavier and ADM. This was good for 11th overall out of the 24 teams participating in the event.

Senior Maleah Walker ran in both the 100m and 200m prelims, and placed 15th overall (out of 24 competitors) in both. She ran a 13.10 in the 100m and a 26.47 in the 200m, placing 6th and 5th in those respective heats.

The fourth and final event that featured Oskaloosa was the girls Shuttle Hurdle Relay prelims with the team of Sadie Blommers, Lydia Van Veldhuizen, Emmalee Wells-Stout, and Hannah Quang placing 3rd in their heat behind Solon and Carlisle. Their time of 1:10.12 wound up ranking 16th in the state in prelims.

Osky’s first event today (5/19) will see Tatum Westercamp competing in the 3A boys long jump around 2pm.

More than 30 million US drivers don’t know if they’re at risk from a rare but dangerous airbag blast

DETROIT (AP) — More than 33 million people in the United States are driving vehicles that contain a potentially deadly threat: Airbag inflators that in rare cases can explode in a collision and spew shrapnel.

Few of them know it.

And because of a dispute between federal safety regulators and an airbag parts manufacturer, they aren’t likely to find out anytime soon.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is demanding that the manufacturer, ARC Automotive of Knoxville, Tennessee, recall 67 million inflators that could explode with such force as to blow apart a metal canister and expel shrapnel. But ARC is refusing to do so, setting up a possible court fight with the agency.

NHTSA argues that the recall is justified because two people have been killed in the United States and Canada and at least seven others have been injured by ARC’s inflators. The explosions, which first occurred in 2009, have continued as recently as this year.

NHTSA tentatively concluded, after an investigation that has lasted for eight years, that the inflators are defective. The agency’s documents show that the inflators date from at least the 2002 model year to January 2018, when ARC installed equipment on its manufacturing lines that could detect potential safety problems.

One of those who died was Marlene Beaudoin, a 40-year-old mother of 10 from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula who was struck by metal fragments when her 2015 Chevrolet Traverse SUV was involved in a minor crash in 2021. She and four of her sons had been on their way to get ice cream. The sons were not hurt.

ARC maintains that no safety defect exists, that NHTSA’s demand is based on a hypothesis rather than technical conclusions and that the agency has no authority to order a parts manufacturer to carry out recalls, which ARC contends are the responsibility of automakers.

In a letter to NHTSA, ARC said no automaker has found a defect common to all 67 million inflators, and no root cause has been identified in the inflator ruptures.

“ARC believes they resulted from random ‘one-off’ manufacturing anomalies that were properly addressed by vehicle manufacturers through lot-specific recalls,” the letter said.

In a statement, NHTSA indicated that both ARC and automakers are responsible for recalls and that it can seek a recall from a parts maker that supplies multiple automakers.

The next step is for NHTSA to issue a final ruling on whether the inflators are defective, then hold a public hearing. It potentially could take ARC to court to seek a recall order. NHTSA would not say when or whether any of this will happen.

In the meantime, owners of vehicles made by at least a dozen automakers — Chevrolet, Buick, GMC, Ford, Toyota, Stellantis, Volkswagen, Audi, BMW, Porsche, Hyundai and Kia — are left to wonder anxiously whether their vehicles contain driver or front passenger inflators made by ARC. (Some vehicles have ARC inflators on both sides.)

Because ARC supplies inflators that are included in other manufacturers’ airbags, there’s no easy way for vehicle owners to determine whether their inflators are made by ARC. Neither NHTSA nor ARC nor the automakers have released a full list of affected models.

The standoff with ARC has sent automakers struggling to find out just how many of their vehicles contain the inflators. The auto manufacturers are also asking NHTSA whether they must start doing recalls. Automakers know many of the models affected. But many say they’re still gathering information from later model years to determine which vehicles contain the affected inflators.

“We are still investigating,” said Maria Buczkowski, a spokeswoman for Ford. “We have not had any ARC airbag inflators rupture in the field.”

James Bell, a Kia spokesman, said, “We do not have a final count on vehicles that were built with ARC inflators, but the team is collecting the data.”

Toyota confirmed that some of its vehicles have ARC inflators but wouldn’t comment further.

Other automakers said they were trying to find a cause and were working with the government or didn’t respond to requests from The Associated Press for information.

NHTSA contends that byproducts from welding during manufacturing can clog a vent inside the inflator canister that’s designed to let gas escape to fill air bags quickly in a crash. Pressure can build to the point where the canister is blown apart.

Michael Brooks, executive director of the nonprofit Center for Auto Safety, called on NHTSA and the automakers to release a list of affected models.

“Customers, I think, have a right to know if there’s a potential defect in their car, particularly if it’s sitting a few inches from their chest and can explode,” Brooks said.

The situation, he said, is reminiscent of the early stages of the Takata air bag inflator recalls in 2001. It took years for all the affected vehicle models to be announced.

Both ARC and Takata used ammonium nitrate to inflate air bags. Takata’s situation was more dangerous, Brooks said, because in its inflators, the chemical could deteriorate over time when exposed to high heat and humidity. Unlike Takata, ARC uses ammonium nitrate only as a secondary chemical to inflate air bags. ARC’s problem appears to derive instead from a manufacturing defect.

From 2017 to 2022, the ARC problems triggered seven small recalls from automakers. On Friday, the same day NHTSA announced its action against ARC, General Motors announced the recall of nearly 1 million more.

The company said it’s recalling certain 2014 through 2017 GMC Acadia, Chevy Traverse and Buick Enclave SUVs because the ARC inflators can explode. The recall came after GM was told this year that the driver’s air bag ruptured in a 2017 Traverse. GM, which says it doesn’t know what caused the inflator to explode, has hired an engineering firm to help investigate.

“We disagree with NHTSA’s new sweeping request when extensive field testing has found no inherent defect,” ARC said in a statement.

While the recall demand is being sorted out, Brooks of the Center for Auto Safety recommends that owners of vehicles from the 12 affected brands insist that dealers disclose whether their particular vehicle contains an ARC inflator.

“The more customers who complain, the more pressure that puts on the manufacturers,” he said.

Iowa’s Unemployment Rate Decreases to 2.7 Percent in April

DES MOINES, IOWA – Iowa’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped to 2.7 percent in April from 2.8 percent in March while the state’s labor force added 4,300 new workers. The total number of Iowans with jobs increased to 1,681,400 in April, up 5,800 from the month before.

In comparison, the U.S. unemployment rate dropped to 3.4 percent in March.

Iowa’s labor force participation rate increased to 68.3 percent, up from 68.2 percent last month. The number of unemployed Iowans decreased to 46,800 in April from 48,300 in March.

“Iowa continues to have a strong labor market, and fantastic opportunities remain for those seeking jobs,” said Beth Townsend, Director of Iowa Workforce Development. “Manufacturing, health care, and retail grew significantly in April despite the external pressures of high inflation and rising interest rates that were felt in other industries. Iowa is the land of opportunity, and IWD can help make connections between workers and employers looking for help.”

Seasonally Adjusted Nonfarm Employment

A survey of Iowa businesses (separate from the survey of individuals used to create the unemployment rate) showed that Iowa establishments shed a slight 300 jobs between March and April, lowering total nonfarm employment to 1,592,800 jobs. This was the first loss since November 2022. Private services showed some weakness in April (-1,800 jobs), mostly within professional and business services. These losses were partially offset by gains in goods-producing establishments. Government gained 600 jobs.

Manufacturing added the most jobs in April (+1,400). Many of the jobs gained were within nondurable goods factories (+900) with much of the hiring being in animal slaughtering and processing. Durable goods factories increased by 500 jobs, with metal product production helping drive much of this advancement. This industry has fared well relative to last year, along with wood product production. Retail added 800 jobs in April and helped fuel a gain of 1,200 jobs in trade, transportation, and utilities. This gain is now the fifth consecutive for retail. Wholesale trade advanced by 600 with both durable and nondurable goods distributors showing improvement over March. Health care and social assistance gained 800 jobs in April following an increase of 900 in March. Aside from two minor losses in February and November, this sector has trended up since March 2022 with 6,900 jobs gained over the last 13 months. On the flip side, job losses were largest in professional and business services in April (-1,600). These losses were fueled by losses in administrative support, waste management, and remediation services (-1,100). This industry has shown some signs of weakness with losses in seven of the last eight months, shedding 4,00 jobs over that span. Smaller drops included other services (-1,100) and leisure and hospitality (-900), which saw some loss in arts, entertainment, and recreation, and construction (-400).

Over the past 12 months, education and health care has added the most jobs (+11,100). Health care and social assistance has increased by 6,800 jobs alone (+1,700 over the past two months). Manufacturing has faired well, advancing by 5,200 since last April. Durable good shops have outpaced nondurable goods factories with 3,100 jobs gained. Leisure and hospitality gained 4,400 with all the growth stemming from accommodations and food services. Annual losses are much smaller and concentrated in professional and business services (-1,800), which has suffered from cutbacks in administrative support and waste management services.

City council hires law firm to investigate Ottumwa Fire Dept.

By Ellis Codjoe (Radio Iowa)

The City of Ottumwa has hired an independent law firm to investigate its fire department.

Ottumwa’s City Council unanimously approved the hiring of Des Moines-based Dentons Davis Brown PC in a closed session. The session was held to review possible personnel concerns within the Ottumwa Fire Department. City officials did not discuss any reasons why the fire department has fallen under scrutiny, however,

Ottumwa Mayor Rick Johnson did mention two firefighters are on paid administrative leave and will remain so for the duration of the investigation.

OHS Students Raising Funds for Trip to Debate Nationals

By Sam Parsons

Two Oskaloosa High School students have qualified for the National Speech and Debate Tournament in Phoenix, Arizona, and are asking the community for help in raising funds for the trip.

OHS seniors Elliot Nelson and Abigail Lindgren have both qualified for nationals in Congressional Debates, and Nelson gave an idea of what it’s all about.

Lindgren said that the two of them would not only be representing Osky on the national stage, but also one of two Iowa districts.

The fundraising efforts include a speech showcase happening next Monday, as well as a GoFundMe.

Nelson said that they were off to a good start, but still had some distance to cover.

The National Speech and Debate Tournament will be held June 11-16. The GoFundMe can be accessed here.

Our full conversation with Elliot Nelson and Abigail Lindgren can be listened to below.

GARTH BROOKS TELLS KELLY CLARKSON HE ONCE SHOWERED WITH STEVEN TYLER

Garth Brooks stopped by “The Kelly Clarkson Show” and regaled Kelly – and the audience – with the story of how he once showered with Aerosmith‘s Steven Tyler – an off-hand comment he made that Kelly almost missed, doubling back to ask, “Did you say you showered with him??”

So Garth told the story of how he was showering before a concert in 2008 – he was set to perform “The Last Play At Shea” concert in New York with Billy Joel – “I’m in there showering, getting ready for the show – and I have soap in my eyes, I look around – and there’s Steven Tyler, he’s showering too!”

To be fair, the showers were communal – it was the old locker room at Shea Stadium. “How many people get to say that?” Garth asked, to which Kelly replied, “Well, who knows? He’s rock n’ roll!”

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1962, George Jones reached #1 on the Billboard Country chart with “She Thinks I Still Care.”
  • Today in 1965, Roger Miller received a gold single for “King of the Road.”
  • Today in 1977, “Smokey & The Bandit” premiered at Radio City Music Hall in New York starring Burt Reynolds, Sally Field, Jackie Gleason and Jerry Reed, singer of “East Bound And Down.” John Schneider appeared in a small walk-on role.
  • Today in 1979, Waylon Jennings and Jessi Cotler had a son, Waylon Albright “Shooter” Jennings. He grew up to become an artist earning a Top 10 country album with 2012’s “Family Man.” He played his father in the 2005 movie “Walk The Line.”
  • Today in 1989, Clint Black hit #1 with his very first single, “A Better Man.” He was the first country artist to reach the top spot with a debut single since Freddy Fender in 1975.
  • Today in 1990, Ronnie Dunn married his wife, Janine.
  • Today in 1992, Mercury released Billy Ray Cyrus’ debut album, “Some Gave All.”
  • Today in 1997, Trisha Yearwood’s version of “How Do I Live” was released.
  • Today in 1998, the “Hope Floats” soundtrack was released, featuring Garth Brooks, Deana Carter, Trisha Yearwood, Lila McCann and Martina McBride. Also released on this day: Terri Clark’s “How I Feel,” Gary Allan’s “It Would Be You” and Keith Harling’s “Write It In Stone.”
  • Today in 2000, Eric Heatherly made his debut on the Grand Ole Opry.
  • Today in 2000, Toby Keith officially became a “good ole boy” when he appeared in the CBS-TV movie, “The Dukes of Hazzard – Hazzard in Hollywood.”
  • Today in 2005, Toby Keith’s “As Good As I Once Was” video debuted on CMT.
  • Today in 2007, Sugarland copped the #1 position in Billboard with “Settlin'”
  • Today in 2013, Donald Trump declared Trace Adkins the winner of “The Celebrity Apprentice” over Penn Jillette on NBC. Adkins sang “Honky Tonk Badonkadonk” during the episode, which saw him collect checks from Wynonna Judd, Thompson Square, Billy Ray Cyrus and The Oak Ridge Boys.
  • Today in 2015, Kelsea Ballerini’s debut album, “The First Time,” was released.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.