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Driver Injured in Rollover Accident in Jefferson County

JEFFERSON COUNTY – A rollover accident in Jefferson County last week resulted in serious injuries to the driver.

According to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, the accident was reported on Thursday, January 8, at approximately 11:55am. It occurred at the intersection of Highway 34 and Dewberry Avenue, east of Batavia. 

Deputies arrived on scene at around noon and observed a Freightliner (roll off truck) on its top in the south side ditch on the eastbound side of Highway 34. The truck had one occupant, who was pinned within the vehicle. The driver needed to be extracted by mechanical means. 

As a result of the crash, the driver suffered from serious injuries and was transported by ambulance to the Jefferson County Health Center, later to be transported to the University of Iowa Hospital. Authorities have not publicly released an update on the driver’s condition.

The identity of the driver has not been released by authorities and the crash remains under investigation.

Megan Moroney Reveals Track Listing For “Cloud 9”

With Megan Moroney‘s highly anticipated third album, “Cloud 9,” due next month, the singer has released the track list, which reveals a few high profile collaborations. In a video clip posted to her socials, she’s seen stepping out of a small plane and looking into the sky, where the tracklist is spelled out by a skywriter. The album will consist of 15 tracks, including the already-released “6 Months Later” and “Beautiful Things,” and two collabs with Ed Sheeran and Kacey Musgraves. “Cloud 9” comes out February 20th.

“Cloud 9” tracklist:

  1. “Cloud 9”
  2. “Medicine”
  3. “6 Months Later”
  4. “Stupid”
  5. “Beautiful Things”
  6. “Convincing”
  7. “Liars & Tigers & Bears”
  8. “I Only Miss You” featuring Ed Sheeran
  9. “Wedding Dress”
  10. “Change of Heart”
  11. “Bells & Whistles” featuring Kacey Musgraves
  12. “Table for Two”
  13. “Wish I Didn’t”
  14. “Who Hurt You?”
  15. “Waiting on the Rain”

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1992, Garth Brooks rose to #1 on the Billboard country singles chart with “Unanswered Prayers”
  • Today in 1993, Marty Stuart earned his first-ever gold album for “This One’s Gonna Hurt You.”
  • Today in 1993, the video, “Reba In Concert,” was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1996, Tim Rushlow of Little Texas became the proud father of daughter, Bailey Nicole.
  • Today in 1998, Shania Twain inducted the Mamas & the Papas into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York.
  • Today in 1999, “The Very Best Of John Denver” was certified gold and platinum.
  • Today in 2006, Sugarland’s appearance on “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno” was marked by the absence of original member Kristen Hall. It was seen as a sign of her departure, which the group announced days later.
  • Today in 2009, Lady Antebellum’s “I Run To You” was released.
  • Today in 2014, a Yoplait ad featuring Eddie Rabbitt’s “I Love A Rainy Night” had its first airing on TV.
  • Today in 2017, Little Big Town’s Kimberly Schlapman and husband Stephen announce they’d adopted daughter, Dolly Grace Schlapman. She joined their other daughter, Daisy Pearl, who was born in 2007.
  • Today in 2018, Carrie Underwood’s “The Champion” hit the airwaves.
  • Today in 2018, Florida Georgia Line earned a gold single from the RIAA for “Smooth” and Justin Moore’s single, “Somebody Else Will,” also went gold.
  • Today in 2019, Chris Stapleton sang “Whiskey River” to launch the A&E taping of “Willie: Life & Songs Of An American Outlaw” at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. The lineup includedEric Church, George Strait, Emmylou Harris, Sturgill Simpson, Lyle Lovett, Alison Krauss and Jamey Johnson.
  • Today in 2019, Tom T. Hall and John Prine were announced as 2019 inductees in the Songwriters Hall of Fame, part of a class that included Cat Stevens, Missy Elliott and Jack Tempchin.
  • Today in 2020, Tanya Tucker welcomed surprise guest Billy Ray Cyrus to duet on “Old Town Road” in a concert at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. Tucker’s guests also included Billy Joe Shaver, Lee Ann Womack, Johnny Rodriguez, Dennis Quaid, Jamey Johnson and Margo Price, who joins Tucker on “Love Me Like You Used To.”
  • Today in 2021, the Jimmie Allen/ Brad Paisley single, “Freedom Was A Highway,” hit the airwaves. The same day, Tim McGraw & Tyler Hubbard’s single, “Undivided,” was also released.

The deadly shooting outside a Utah church grew out of a dispute between funeral goers, police say

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A complicated crime scene and uncooperative witnesses hindered Salt Lake City police efforts to investigate a fatal shooting outside a house of worship belonging to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The shooting in a church parking lot Wednesday night left two people dead and six injured, including five who remained hospitalized with police protection Thursday. Investigators said the shooting erupted from a dispute between people who knew each other and were attending a funeral.

No arrests had been made as of early Thursday evening. Authorities say they do not know whether the shooting was gang-related and that they are having trouble getting witnesses to cooperate.

Police do not believe the shooting was random or motivated by animus against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, known widely as the Mormon church.

“Our houses of worship are sacred, whatever the affiliation,” Salt Lake City Police Chief Brian Redd said Thursday. “We should all protect those spaces. We should all respect those spaces.”

All the shooting victims were adults. Vaea Tulikihihifo, 46, and Sione Vatuvei, 38, were identified as the two people killed.

The red brick church in northwest Salt Lake City mostly serves Tongan congregants and holds regular worship services in their native tongue, according to its website.

Latter-day Saint missionaries first arrived in Tonga in the early 1890s, according to the church’s website. At first, they had little success and the mission closed in 1897. But a decade later, missionaries opened a school in Neiafu, Tonga’s second-largest town, and began preaching across the islands. Dozens of other schools were started by missionaries and seven remain open. The church’s membership in Tonga has grown to 68,000 and 175 congregations.

“Since the 19th century, the church has had a really, really prominent place in Tongan society. Depending on who you ask, somewhere between one-third and two-thirds of everybody who lives in Tonga are members of the LDS church,” said Matthew Bowman, a Claremont Graduate University professor specializing in U.S. religious history.

Today, more than a quarter of the Tongan population in the U.S. resides in Utah, where the church is headquartered. The state’s Tongan population is about 23,000 and is mostly concentrated in Salt Lake County, according to census data.

On Wednesday night, residents from a housing complex next to the church flooded outside to help victims and console dozens of people who had been attending a funeral for a man identified by family on social media as Asi Sekona. Several family members could not immediately be reached for comment.

Brennan McIntire said he and his wife, Kenna, heard several loud gunshots from their apartment next to the church parking lot while watching TV. He jumped off the couch and ran outside in flip-flops to see what happened.

“As soon as I came over, I see someone on the ground,” he said. “People are attending to him and crying and arguing.”

Kenna McIntire came outside soon after and was rattled at the sight of first responders lifting an unconscious woman into an ambulance while people huddled around and sobbed.

The couple said they hear gunshots in their neighborhood almost daily, but never right outside their door.

“It was really heartbreaking to hear and see,” Kenna McIntire said.

About 100 law enforcement vehicles were at the scene in the aftermath, and helicopters flew overhead. Police said they were reviewing license plate readers and surveillance videos from nearby businesses in their search for suspects.

The church was cooperating with law enforcement and said it was grateful for first responders’ quick efforts.

“We extend prayers for all who have been impacted by this tragedy and express deep concern that any sacred space intended for worship should be subjected to violence of any kind,” church spokesperson Sam Penrod said.

Latter-day Saints have been on heightened alert since four people were killed when a former Marine opened fire in one of their churches in Michigan in September and set it ablaze. The FBI found that he was motivated by “anti-religious beliefs” against the church.

Water Summary Update: 2025 drought conditions vary significantly throughout the year

DES MOINES – Drought conditions improved in the summer months across the state but then degraded again with a dry fall, according to the latest Water Summary Update.

Iowa ended the year with a statewide average total of 33.60 inches of precipitation, or 1.95 inches below normal. December’s preliminary statewide precipitation was 1.00 inches, or 0.37 inches below normal. The wettest conditions occurred in the southeast this month, bringing some relief to the area.

In 2024, Iowa finally ended a historically lengthy drought, but rainfall deficits remained into the new year. The early months of 2025 were marked by drought and dryness due to these deficits and below-normal rainfall. However, the summer months saw additional wet weather, resulting in drought-free conditions across the state throughout much of the summer and early fall. However, dry conditions returned in the fall, resulting in two drought regions being placed under a drought watch.

Statewide temperatures for the year were just under a degree and a half warmer than normal. The U.S. Drought Monitor (USDM) shows that by the end of 2025, some areas of Iowa had slipped back into abnormally dry conditions or drought conditions, mostly in northwest and eastern Iowa.

“The dry start to 2025 subsided after the state experienced above-average rainfall during the summer. Initial concerns about drought expansion eased, leading to the removal of the Iowa Drought Plan Drought Watch designation statewide for a total of five months of the year. However, dry conditions returned in the fall. The state saw below-average rainfall for 2025, but National Weather Service outlooks are stable. Continued normal or above normal precipitation in January and February is important to maintain average conditions in the typically dry winter months,” said Jessica Reese McIntyre, DNR Environmental Specialist.

For a thorough review of Iowa’s water resource trends, visit

 www.iowadnr.gov/watersummaryupdate.

Beyond the Cheers: Hawkeye Conference Students Unite to Redefine Sportsmanship

OSKALOOSA, Iowa – In a room filled with poster boards, pizza boxes, and student leaders from across central Iowa, the usual lines of rivalry blurred. Instead of chants aimed at opponents, students talked about respect, leadership, and how to cheer with pride. The Little Hawkeye Conference Student Section Training brought together representatives from every conference school, along with future member Ames, to set a new standard for sportsmanship, led by students.

Hosted by Oskaloosa Schools, the training focused on four agreed-upon conference norms. Cheer for your team, not against your opponent. No profanity. No animal noises or taunting. No singling out individual players. While the rules are simple, the intention behind them is larger.

“We’ve felt the need to make sportsmanship a priority, and that starts with our students,” said Jamie Jacobs, director of activities for Oskaloosa Schools. “We can’t expect it from them without giving them the tools to do it.”

Jacobs said the training was designed to empower students to lead change within their own student sections. Rather than relying on administrators or adults to intervene, students were encouraged to hold peers accountable and model positive behavior at games across all sports.

“We’re hoping students leave today with the skills to address their peers and say, This is how we do things here,” Jacobs said. “That’s how you promote positivity across conference events.”

Adult facilitators, including student council advisors and peer helper sponsors, guided team-building activities and discussions around soft skills. Representatives from the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union and the Iowa High School Athletic Association also reinforced expectations that align with state-level events.

For students like Grace Clark, a senior at Pella High School, the day offered a new perspective on competition.

“Every team wants to win. Every team wants to be the best,” Clark said. “But behind that, all of our administrators want us to be respectful and uplift one another while keeping that competitiveness.”

Clark said her biggest takeaway was realizing that intensity and kindness are not opposites.

“You can still have fun and want to win, but it can come from being kind,” she said. “Cheer for your team instead of downgrading the other one.”

Clark plans to take that message back to Pella’s student section immediately. She and her peers manage an Instagram account for their student section and plan to post photos of the posters they created during the training, along with explanations of the norms.

“At our next game, we’re going to be more intentional about stopping crudeness or insults,” Clark said. “Instead of laughing it off, we’re going to redirect and reinforce being positive toward our team.”

Sustainability was a recurring theme throughout the day. Clark said her school’s activities director has already discussed expanding the group beyond seniors and juniors, intentionally adding underclassmen who demonstrate leadership so the effort continues year after year.

“That way, it doesn’t end with us,” she said. “It keeps building.”

Linus Morrison, a senior at Oskaloosa High School, said the training mirrored conversations happening at a national level. Morrison serves on the National Federation of State High School Associations student committee, where sportsmanship and school involvement are major points of focus.

“This is the same thing we’re talking about nationally,” Morrison said. “Teaching kids how to have sportsmanship, be involved and show school spirit.”

Morrison hopes the training helps students recognize the value of showing up.

“Coming to games is a big deal,” he said. “It’s part of the high school experience.”

He also acknowledged a broader challenge facing high school athletics, as fan behavior at collegiate and professional levels increasingly influences younger students.

“Sometimes that atmosphere trickles down,” Morrison said. “But if schools build a strong culture and legacy, students will stick together and take pride in doing things the right way.”

That idea of shared purpose resonated with Dan Branderhorst, activities director at Pella Christian High School. He said bringing students from rival schools together was a powerful step toward healthier competition.

“We’re gathering students to collaborate and partner so we’re on the same page,” Branderhorst said. “We want our events to be fun, excitable and special for athletes, while still being uplifting and appropriate.”

Branderhorst said rivalries are natural and can add energy to games, but they should never come at the expense of safety or respect.

“At the end of the day, we’re trying to accomplish the same things,” he said. “We want activities to be safe, fun for communities and meaningful for students.”

One of his favorite moments came not during a presentation, but around the tables.

“When you see students from different schools smiling, eating pizza together, creating posters and videos, it changes the dynamic,” Branderhorst said. “They realize we’re a lot alike.”

Students were chosen by their schools’ activities directors with attention to availability, a mix of grade levels, and demonstrated leadership among their peers. Finals schedules made attendance a challenge for some schools, but representation remained strong, underscoring the conference’s shared commitment.

Jacobs said the response from both students and adults reinforced the value of the effort.

“They’re passionate about being part of the change,” she said. “That’s encouraging.”

By the end of the day, the room was still filled with rival colors and school apparel, but the message was unified. Sportsmanship is not about losing a competitive edge. It is about channeling passion in a way that reflects pride, respect, and leadership. With students now equipped to lead that charge in their own sections, the Little Hawkeye Conference hopes this training becomes not a one-time event but an annual tradition that reshapes the culture of high school athletics from the student sections.

Friends of Mahaska County Conservation Resume “Push for 1 Million” Bag Recycling Campaign

OSKALOOSA — Friends of Mahaska County Conservation had hoped to reach the 1 million mark on plastic shopping/grocery bags collected for recycling with an aggressive goal of collecting 300,000 bags during 2025. Unfortunately, they did not reach our goal but they did collect 176,000 bags which is the second highest amount collected since they began in 2019. In addition to the 176,000 HDPE #2 bags, they also collected 600 pounds of LDPE #4 bags.

During 2025, the North Mahaska Elementary students collected over 23,000 bags in three weeks, E-cycle generated 2,500 bags, Central Church Bible School collected over 1,600 bags during Bible School and the Golden Goose Club collected over 32,000 bags for the campaign. The rest of the bags came from all of the Mahaska County residents who brought their bags to Mahaska County Conservation’s recycling buildings or mobile trailer or from other individuals that have supported the program.

Since 2019, they have collected over 16,000 pounds of bags from our various collection events, mobile trailer, collection buildings and local business partners. All bags are being taken to Plastic Recycling of Iowa Falls for processing and are not going to the Mahaska County Landfill or littering our countryside.

A new collection building has been placed at the Environmental Learning Center in the lower level gravel parking lot. This building has been constructed with recyclable material except for the new trim. Many thanks goes out to Mahaska County Solid Waste Manager Joe Farris for his help in obtaining this material that was otherwise destined for the landfill.

Mahaska County Conservation says they now need only 124,000 bags to reach their goal of 1 million.

2026 Coffee and Conversations to Start Up Tomorrow

OSKALOOSA — The Mahaska Chamber & Development Group is getting ready for the Coffee & Conversation events. This engaging series of informative sessions provides Mahaska County residents with invaluable insights to state, county and local topics, fostering opportunities for community members to meet, learn, and discuss subjects important to community improvement. Join them at Smokey Row (109 S Market, St., Oskaloosa) from 8:30 AM to 9:30 AM for these enlightening conversations.

The dates for Coffee & Conversation and panel speakers are as follows:
January 10, 2026- City of Oskaloosa and Mahaska County
January 24, 2026 – Iowa Senate #19 Ken Rozenboom and Iowa Senate #44  Adrian Dickey
                 Iowa House #88 Helena Hayes and Iowa House #37 Barb Kniff-McCulla
February 14, 2026 – Stay tuned!
February 28, 2026 – Iowa Senate #19 Ken Rozenboom and Iowa Senate #44 Adrian Dickey
                  Iowa House #88 Helena Hayes and Iowa House #37 Barb Kniff-McCulla
 March 14, 2026- Stay tuned!
March 28, 2026 – Iowa Senate #19 Ken Rozenboom and Iowa Senate #44 Adrian Dickey
               Iowa House #88 Helena Hayes and Iowa House #37 Barb Kniff-McCulla
Please reach out to Deann De Groot at the Chamber with any questions about the forum at ddegroot@mahaskachamber.org or by phone 641.672.2591.

Chris Stapleton Announces More “All American Road Show” Dates

Chris Stapleton‘s 2026 is starting to take shape. The singer added 24 more shows to his growing tour schedule yesterday, and threw in some surprises, including dates alongside Lainey Wilson, Zach Top and more. For complete tour date and ticket information, visit Stapleton’s website. Tickets for the new shows go on sale January 16 at 10AM local time. See the first ten of the new dates listed below. 

May 23 — Nashville, Tenn. @ Nissan Stadium
June 11 — Jacksonville, Fla. @ Vystar Veterans Memorial Arena
June 13 — Tampa, Fla. @ Raymond James Stadium
June 17 — Burgettstown, Pa. @ The Pavilion at Star Lake
June 20 — Charlotte, N.C. @ Bank of America Stadium
June 24 — Hershey, Pa. @ Hersheypark Stadium
June 26 — North Charleston, S.C. @North Charleston Coliseum
July 8 — Mountain View, Calif. @ Shoreline Amphitheatre
July 10 — Chula Vista, Calif. @ North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre
July 17 — Portland, Ore. @ Providence Park

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1960, Patsy Cline became a member of the Grand Ole Opry.
  • Today in 1961, Johnny Horton’s “North to Alaska” reached #1 in Billboard.
  • Today in 1982, a five-mile stretch of Gallatin Road in Hendersonville, Tennessee was renamed the Johnny Cash Parkway.
  • Today in 1990, Willie Nelson’s “Stardust” album was certified quadruple-platinum.
  • Today in 2000, Shania Twain won People’s Choice award for Favorite Female Music Performer.
  • Today in 2004, Emmylou Harris and Dave Matthews cover the Lefty Frizzell classic “The Long Black Veil” as the latest addition of the Radney Foster-hosted “CMT Crossroads” debuts.
  • Today in 2007, Rascal Flatts’ “Life Is A Highway” earned two People’s Choice awards, Carrie Underwood also won two awards. Kenny Chesney and Bon Jovi’s won an award for “Who Says You Can’t Go Home.”
  • Today in 2009, Justin Moore’s “Small Town USA” was released.
  • Today in 2012, Blake Shelton achieved gold and platinum singles for “God Gave Me You.”
  • Today in 2015, Toby Keith performed “Beer For My Horses” to launch “CMT Ultimate Kickoff Party,” a 90-minute special celebrating the college football championship game. The lineup also featured Thomas Rhett, Lady Antebellum, Jake Owen, Maddie & Tae, Brett Eldredge and Big & Rich.
  • Today in 2017, Little Big Town performed the national anthem before the BCS National Championship Game at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, where the Clemson Tigers beat the Alabama Crimson Tide, 35-31.

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