TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

Mahaska County Board of Supervisors Approves Plans for 1st Phase of SE Connector Project

By Sam Parsons

The Mahaska County Board of Supervisors met this morning and approved the final plans for the first phase of the southeast connector project. The project would create a connection between Highway 63 and Highway 23 southeast of Oskaloosa, and it has been in the works for several years.

County Engineer Andrew McGuire explained that the first phase of the project would be primarily focused on grading. April 15 is the anticipated letting date, and McGuire said that construction could start by sometime in May, pending contract availability. If all goes according to plan, substantial completion of the grading would be expected by mid November.

The final plans for phase 1 were approved unanimously by the board. McGuire said that the second phase will involve the remainder of the paving along with some work on turn lanes for the two highways involved.

The board also approved a 28E agreement with the city of Eddyville for police protection services for the next fiscal year, and they approved resolutions for financial support of the Area 15 Regional Planning Commission and the Regional Planning Affiliation.

The next regular meeting for the Mahaska County Board of Supervisors is scheduled for February 17.

Semi Truck Driver Charged with Attempted Murder After Road Rage Incident

NEWTON — On Sunday, February 2, 2025, at 7:07 p.m., Newton Police responded to reports of gunfire during a road rage incident on Interstate 80. Investigators determined that the driver of a blue Peterbilt semi pulling a white grain trailer fired multiple rounds at another semi as the victim attempted to pass near the 164-mile marker. The victim pulled into Love’s Travel Center in Newton, while the suspect continued eastbound on I-80.

At approximately 7:36 p.m., Jasper County Deputies located a matching blue Peterbilt with a white grain trailer parked on the off-ramp at the 179-mile marker exit off I-80. The driver, identified as 56-year-old Patrick Lee Miller of Malvern, Iowa, was detained. A search warrant was executed on the semi, leading to the discovery of a handgun and multiple spent shell casings.

Miller was arrested and transported to the Jasper County Jail. He faces charges of:

  • Attempted Murder (Class B Felony)
  • Intimidation with a Dangerous Weapon (Class C Felony)
  • Going Armed with Intent (Class D Felony)
  • Reckless Use of a Firearm (Aggravated Misdemeanor)

The victim was not injured. Authorities confirm this was an isolated incident, and there is no ongoing threat to the public.

Lainey Wilson Announces 2025 “Whirlwind” Tour

Lainey Wilson‘s set to bring her “Whirlwind” tour to fans everywhere. With a clever video resembling a weather report, the singer said “Ya’ll know the crazy winds that have been whippin’ up in Europe? Well, that’s right, they are headed due west, right here to America.” Translation: after she’s done tearing up Europe, the tour will make its way to North America. Also appearing (or being mentioned) in the video are opening acts ERNEST, Muscadine Bloodline, Kaitlin Butts, Maddox Batson, Drake Milligan, Lauren Watkins and Zach Meadows. The North American leg kicks off May 30 in Panama City, Florida, with 37 dates taking her through the US and Canada, winding things up November 8 in Orlando, Florida. Check out Lainey’s website for more info.

Punxsutawney Phil sees his shadow, handlers say, predicting 6 more weeks of wintry weather

PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. (AP) — Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow Sunday and predicted six more weeks of wintry weather, his top-hatted handlers announced to a raucus, record-sized crowd at Gobbler’s Knob in Pennsylvania.

Phil was welcomed with chants of “Phil, Phil, Phil,” and pulled from a hatch on his tree stump shortly after sunrise before a member of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club read from a scroll in which he boasted: “Only I know — you can’t trust A.I.”

The woodchuck’s weather forecast is an annual ritual that goes back more than a century in western Pennsylvania, with far older roots in European folklore, but it took Bill Murray’s 1993 “Groundhog Day” movie to transform the event into what it is today, with tens of thousands of revelers at the scene and imitators scattered around the United States and beyond.

When Phil is deemed to have not seen his shadow, that is said to usher in an early spring. When he does see it, there will be six more weeks of winter.

The crowd was treated to a fireworks show, confetti and live music that ranged from the Ramones to “Pennsylvania Polka” as they awaited sunrise and Phil’s emergence. Gov. Josh Shapiro, local and state elected officials and a pair of pageant winners were among the dignitaries at the scene.

Self-employed New York gingerbread artist Jon Lovitch has attended the event for 33 years.

“I like the cold, you know, and this is probably the best and biggest midwinter party in the entire world,” Lovitch said in Punxsutawney. “And it’s just a really good time.”

Phil has predicted a longer winter far more often than an early spring, and one effort to track his accuracy concluded he was right less than half the time. What six more weeks of winter means is subjective.

Tom Dunkel, president of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, says there are two types of people who make the trek to Gobbler’s Knob: the faithful seeking to validate their beliefs and the doubters who want to confirm their skepticism.

Phil communicated his forecast to Dunkel through “Groundhog-ese” with the help of a special cane that Dunkel has inherited as the club’s leader. It’s not as if he speaks in English words.

“He’ll like wink, he’ll purr, he’ll chatter, he’ll — you know — nod,” Dunkel said.

Attendance is free but it cost $5 to take a bus and avoid a 1 mile (1.6 kilometer) trek from the middle of town to the stage where the prediction was made, some 80 miles (123 kilometers) northeast of Pittsburgh. The need for so many buses is why the local schools, where the sports mascot is the Chucks, close when Groundhog Day falls on a weekday.

Keith Post, his wife and a friend have watched the “Groundhog Day” movie in each of the past five years and decided this was the time to make the trip from Ohio to witness the event.

“We booked rooms almost a year in advance and we’re here,” Post said. “We’re doing it.”

A new welcome center opened four years ago and the club is working on an elaborate second living space for Phil and family so they can split time between Gobbler’s Knob and Phil’s longtime home at the town library. The club also put up large video screens and more powerful speakers this year to help attendees in the back of the crowd follow the proceedings.

“It’s a holiday where you don’t really owe anyone anything,” said A.J. Dereume, who among the club’s 15-member inner circle serves as Phil’s handler and held him up to loud cheers on Sunday. “You’re grasping onto the belief, you know, in something that’s just fun to believe in.”

Jackie Handley agreed a year ago to visit Punxsutawney for the first time to help a friend check off an item on their bucket list. They were ready for the subfreezing temperatures.

“It’s once in a lifetime — we’re probably not going to come back. And we have tons of warm clothes,” said Handley, who lives in Falls Church, Virginia.

After the forecast was made, club members and Phil posed for photos with people from the crowd.

Phil has a wife, Punxsutawney Phyllis, and two pups born this spring, Shadow and Sunny, although his family did not join him on stage for the big event. The groundhog family eats fruits and vegetables, get daily visits from Dereume and sees a veterinarian at least once a year.

The club’s lore is that Phil is the same woodchuck who has been issuing weather forecasts for the past century, thanks to an “elixir of life” that keeps him immortal.

“There’s only one Phil, and it’s not something that can be handed down,” Dunkel said. “Just like Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny, there’s only one.”

There have been Groundhog Day events in at least 28 U.S. states and Canadian provinces. In Pennsylvania, groundhogs predicted more winter Sunday in Mount Joy, Dover, York, Lebanon County and Lancaster County’s Manheim Township. But at the Slumbering Groundhog Lodge in Quarryville, Octoraro Orphie was said to predict spring is on the way.

In Georgia, about 50 miles (81 kilometers) southeast of Atlanta in Jackson, a groundhog named “General Beauregard Lee” saw his shadow, his handlers declared, meaning six more weeks of winter. It was said that Shubenacadie Sam at a wildlife park in Nova Scotia, Canada, also saw her shadow and predicted six more weeks of winter.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1958, Johnny Cash hit the top of the charts with “Ballad of a Teenage Queen.”
  • Today in 1959, Buddy Holly, The Big Bopper, and Ritchie Valens all died in a plane crash near Macon City, Iowa.
  • Today in 1978, Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson’s album “Waylon and Willie” was certified gold.
  • Today in 1993, George Strait’s “Pure Country” soundtrack was double-platinum.
  • Today in 1996, “(If You’re Not In It For Love) I’m Outta Here!” by Shania Twain hit the top of the charts.
  • Today in 2006, the Tommy Lee Jones movie, “The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada,” opened, featuring Dwight Yoakam and Levon Helm, with music by Merle Haggard, Augie Meyers, Freddy Fender, Hank Williams Jr., Flaco Jimenez and Roger Miller.
  • Today in 2009, “Don’t Think I Don’t Think About It” by Darius Rucker became a gold single.
  • Today in 2014, “This is How We Roll” by Florida Georgia Line, and featuring Luke Bryan, was released.
  • Today in 2015, Brantley Gilbert’s single, “More Than Miles,” was certified gold.
  • Today in 2016, Randy Travis joins several other mourners to sing “Amazing Grace” at a funeral in Bullard, Texas, for businessman Pierre de Wet. The service also featured a performance by Randy Owen.
  • Today in 2017, Lee Brice picked up a double-platinum single from the RIAA for “I Don’t Dance.”
  • Today in 2017, Reba McEntire’s two-disc gospel album, “Sing It Now: Songs Of Faith & Hope,” was released.
  • Today in 2019, Tim McGraw performed during the Super Bowl pre-game show on CBS-TV, with Kane Brown joining him off-camera for “I Like It, I Love It.” Gladys Knight sang the national anthem at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, where the New England Patriots down the Los Angeles Rams, 13-3.
  • Today in 2021, Kix Brooks and John Oates are announced as board members for the inaugural Music City Grand Prix, an IndyCar race slated for August.
  • Today in 2021, J. Osborne of the Brothers Osborne revealed he is gay in “Time” magazine. He is the first male country artist to come out while on the roster at a major label.

Sinclair says moratorium on new Iowa casinos a ‘jump ball’ in Senate

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

A five-year moratorium on new state-licensed casinos easily passed the Iowa House yesterday, but Iowa Senate President Amy Sinclair suggests its chances in the Senate are far different.

“Honestly, I’d say the prospect of a moratorium is basically a jump ball in the senate,” she said. “…I don’t know. I’ve tried to do a soft vote count. I can’t honestly tell you where the senate will land.”

Sinclair indicates a provision tucked in the bill that makes the moratorium retroactive to January 1st of this year means there’s no rush to approve the bill before February 6. That’s when the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission is scheduled to decide whether to grant a state license for a casino in Cedar Rapids.

Sinclair said the bill that passed the House on a 68-31 vote yesterday will be sent to the Senate State Government Committee next week for review.

“I don’t believe there is any fast tracking that we can do,” Sinclair said, “that we would do.”

The Senate Local Government Committee passed its own version of a casino moratorium yesterday, but Sinclair said that bill also will be referred to the State Government Committee. The pace will allow for an important “philosophical conversation,” Sinclair said.

“This isn’t a Republican versus Democrat issue. This is an Iowa issue and the question is: Are there enough casinos in the state or are there not?,” Sinclair said. “The quetion is: Should we allow those established boards and commissions to do the job they were appointed to do or do we not?”

Vermicomposting Workshop to Be Held

OSKALOOSA — Learn to unleash the magic of vermicomposting and join Mahaska County Extension on Tuesday February 11 at 7:00 PM for a workshop led by Shannon Rabotski, ISU Extension and Outreach-Mahaska County Youth Coordinator (CYC). The workshop is open to the public and is for 4-Hers, 4-H aged youth and adults. It will be held at the Mahaska County Extension office auditorium (212 North I Street, Oskaloosa).

Vermicomposting is a technique which turns food scraps into gold for your garden! Learn to harness red wiggler worms, nature’s tiny workers, as you create and learn to maintain your very own worm bin.
This hands-on workshop. Participants are asked to bring a plastic bin with lid which fits tightly (it does not need to be new – just clean. Any size bin will work. However, the best bin size is 2’x3’ one foot deep. The bin should be opaque – NOT CLEAR.  Holes will be drilled in the bin bottom and lid at the workshop by Mahaska County Master Gardeners.
Participants will add shredded paper and coir as bedding to the bin. Participants will pay for the amount of worms and coconut coir they use for their bin. The worms and coir will be divided into lots of approximately 100 worms for $5. Please register in 4-H online if a youth or by calling 641-673-5841 if an adult to reserve worms and coir by Monday Feb 3.
Non worm bin creating participants are encouraged.  Please indicate you wish to observe when you register. Red Wiggler worms can not survive Iowa’s winter weather. Participants are recommended to take the worm bin directly home to a space heated to 55-77 degrees at the end of the workshop.
To learn more about what 4-H Has to Offer in Mahaska county visit https://www.extension.iastate.edu/mahaska/4h or stop by the  Mahaska County Extension office for more details on programs and clubs including membership and volunteer opportunities.

Under 2 Months Remaining for Chamber Scholarship Applications

OSKALOOSA — High school seniors living in Mahaska County and attending any high school are eligible to apply now for a Chamber Scholarship sponsored by the Mahaska Chamber & Development Group. Information is available from one’s school counselor or the web at https://www.mahaskachamber.org/resources/scholarships/ where you will find a link to the fillable form. Scholarships are sponsored by area businesses and industries. Last year $25,750 was distributed to 22 students.

The application requests information such as participation in school and community activities and a short essay. Be prepared with a PDF of your transcript. Online applications and school transcripts are due no later than Tuesday, April 1, 2025.
“Area businesses and individuals are encouraged to contribute to the Chamber Scholars program to provide deserving students with financial support as they pursue their academic and career goals. This program would not be possible without the generous contributions we receive annually from local business leaders and individuals. We encourage more community members to get involved, as this program continues to strengthen the partnership between education and community,” Morgan McClendon stated. “Another way to contribute to this special program is by participating in the annual Chamber Golf outing on Friday, May 9. Teams of four and hole sponsorships raise additional funds for the Chamber Scholars program.”
The Chamber Scholars program, now in its 29th year, continues to partner with the “52577 Scholarship.” Contributions to the program are tax deductible and can be made in any amount. If one chooses to donate $1,000 it will be awarded this year. If one wants to contribute to the perpetual scholarship fund through “52577”, any amount may be donated to be used in future years.
For further information to apply or to contribute to the fund contact the Mahaska Chamber at 641.672.2591 or email events@mahaskachamber.org

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.