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Oskaloosa City Council meets Monday

The Oskaloosa City Council will have a busy evening Monday (6/6).  They’ll hold a study session at 4:45pm to discuss a request for tax incentives.  Christner Properties plans to develop a building in the 700 block of High Avenue West that would include a laundry and possibly a restaurant.  Christner says they won’t be able to go through with the project unless they get a property tax abatement.  City staff has an alternative in mind.  Also, during the study session, the City Council will discuss updating the City’s building codes.

Then at the Oskaloosa City Council’s regular meeting at 6:00, the Council will hold public hearings on selling two properties that the City owns.  The Council will also consider revisions to the Mahaska County Solid Waste Management Commission 28E agreement.

Ottumwa receives grant for Blessings Soup Kitchen

The City of Ottumwa has received a $100,000 Community Development Block Grant for the Blessings Soup Kitchen Food Program Assistance Project.  The money will be used to buy two commercial stoves, two commercial refrigerators, two commercial freezers, three double convection ovens, a sink, a pasta cooker and a washer and dryer.  Blessings Director Sheri Locke says the number of meals Blessings serves each day has doubled since the pandemic to 250 to 300 meals per day…and they’re doing that with the kind of appliances you have in your home.

Election 2022: Primaries shift focus to control of US House

By THOMAS BEAUMONT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A midterm primary season that opened with elections testing former President Donald Trump’s sway among Republicans enters a new phase this week with U.S. House contests that will shape the future of Congress.

From the New Jersey suburbs to Iowa’s capital city to California’s Central Valley, primary elections on Tuesday will determine which Republicans will take on some of the most prominent Democrats who helped flip control of the U.S. House four years ago.

For these members of the class of 2018, the matchups are unfolding in a dramatically different environment. Trump is out of the White House, replaced by a president of their own party whose approval ratings are plummeting. Moderate voters in the suburbs who swung to Democrats during the Trump era may be open to Republicans again, frustrated by a series of challenges ranging from inflation to rising gas prices and a shortage of baby formula.

Against that backdrop, some of the vulnerable Democrats who will learn who their Republican opponents will be this week said they are braced for an intense campaign season. They plan to spend the coming months in a relentless effort to stay focused on solutions to local problems.

“I’m going to work only on issues that have a deep impact in our community,” U.S. Rep. Josh Harder, D-Calif., said in an interview.

Representing a district with workers who commute up to 90 miles to jobs near San Francisco, Harder said he plans to emphasize his push — so far unsuccessful — to repeal the federal gas tax. He’s also co-sponsored legislation, which passed the House last month, to crack down on alleged price gouging by oil companies and other energy producers, a bill facing steep odds in the U.S. Senate, split evenly among Democrats and Republicans.

“These are local issues with national connections,” he said, noting his votes in the House “only have an impact if they’re actually seen, understood and felt by people in a district just like this.”

Meredith Kelly, a senior adviser to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in 2018, said this week’s races are “previews of some real battles for the fall in swing districts.”

“These are incumbents who are battle-tested, who not only won in 2018 but held on in 2020, for many in a tougher year than some expected,” she said.

Republicans need to gain only five seats to win control of the House in the fall. Few Democratic seats are more at risk than that of Rep. Cindy Axne, whose Iowa district stretches from Democratic-leaning Des Moines to GOP-friendly suburbs and staunchly conservative farmland in Iowa’s southwest corner.

Axne squeaked to reelection by 1.4 percentage points in 2020, as Trump edged Biden in the district by only one-tenth of a percentage point. Redistricting last year swapped some conservative western Iowa counties in her current district to even more conservative, though very lightly populated, poor, rural counties along the Missouri border.

Facing such a daunting environment, she exemplifies the go-local approach of many vulnerable Democrats.

At a recent stop in Davis County, new to the district where Axne is running and where Trump won nearly 74 percent of the vote, she ticked through expanded broadband internet and availability of corn-based ethanol as parts of the $1 trillion infrastructure bill Biden signed in November. More local still, she noted the new telehealth unit at the hospital in nearby Albia, a town of about 3,700 in a low-income, rural county in south-central Iowa.

“That’s my bill,” she told the lunchtime audience at a diner in Bloomfield. “I am absolutely addressing issues related to rural America.”

But other Democrats say they will go beyond so-called local pocketbook economic issues.

In New Jersey, Rep. Tom Malinowski is focused on gas prices eating into the wallets of commuters in his district. But he’s also highlighting the potential that the U.S. Supreme Court may overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, which provided a nationwide right to an abortion.

“This gets very real very, very soon for a lot of people,” Malinowski said, especially in his district, heavy with younger, educated adults whom surveys show tend to support keeping abortion legal in all or most cases. “I think this does become much more of a voting issue.”

New Jersey state Sen. Tom Kean Jr., the favorite in Tuesday’s six-way GOP primary to face Malinowski, exemplifies the Republican message in these districts, fusing Democrats to Biden’s unpopularity especially over decades-high cost of living.

“Voters know Tom Malinowski and Joe Biden are directly responsible for the record high prices they’re paying on everything from gas to groceries,” Kean, who lost to Malinowski by 1.2 percentage points in 2020, said in a written statement Friday.

Though some Democrats say a threat to legal abortion could help Democrats not just hold but gain competitive seats, veteran Republican pollster David Winston says the strength of the economic headwinds outweigh even hot-button issues for voters on the left.

“There’s a distinction between issues that are important to people and that they consider very important, and then there are the issues they ultimately are going to consider when they walk into the voting booth,” said Winston, who has been a senior adviser to the National Republican Congressional Committee.

“When you have economic issues leading the way at a scale where people are dealing with such significant problems, it’s going to be about the economic issues.” Winston said.

Biden appeals for tougher gun laws: ‘How much more carnage?’

By ZEKE MILLER and WILL WEISSERT

WASHINGTON (AP) — “Enough, enough,” President Joe Biden exclaimed over and over as he delivered an impassioned address to the nation imploring Congress to take action against gun violence after mass shootings he said had turned schools, supermarkets and other everyday places into “killing fields.”

If legislators fail to act, he warned, voters should use their “outrage” to turn it into a central issue in November’s midterm elections.

Speaking at the White House on Thursday night, Biden acknowledged the stiff political headwinds as he sought to drive up pressure on Congress to pass stricter gun limits after such efforts failed following past attacks.

He repeated calls to restore a ban on the sale of assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines — and said if Congress won’t embrace all of his proposals, it must at least find compromises like keeping firearms from those with mental health issues or raising the age to buy assault-style weapons from 18 to 21.

“How much more carnage are we willing to accept?” Biden asked after last week’s shootings by an 18-year-old gunman, who killed 19 students and two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, and another attack Wednesday in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where a gunman shot and killed four people and himself at a medical office. “Don’t tell me raising the age won’t make a difference,” he said.

The most recent shootings came close on the heels of the May 14 assault in Buffalo, New York, where a white 18-year-old wearing military gear and livestreaming with a helmet camera opened fire with a rifle at a supermarket in a predominantly Black neighborhood, killing 10 people and wounding three others in what authorities described as “racially motivated violent extremism.”

“This time we have to take the time to do something,” Biden said, calling out the Senate, where 10 Republican votes would be needed to pass legislation.

For all the passion of Biden’s address, and for all his big asks and smaller fallback alternatives, any major action by Congress is still a long shot.

“I know how hard it is, but I’ll never give up, and if Congress fails, I believe this time a majority of the American people won’t give up either,” he added. “I believe the majority of you will act to turn your outrage into making this issue central to your vote.”

Adding a stark perspective to young people’s deaths, he noted that Centers for Disease Control data shows “guns are the number one killer of children in the United States of America,” ahead of car crashes.

“Over the last two decades, more school-age children have died from guns than on-duty police officers and active-duty military — combined,” he said.

Aware of persistent criticism from gun-rights advocates, Biden insisted his appeal wasn’t about “vilifying gun owners” or “taking away anybody’s guns.”

“We should be treating responsible gun owners as an example of how every gun owner should behave,” Biden said. “This isn’t about taking away anyone’s rights, it’s about protecting children, it’s about protecting families.”

He called on Congress to end “outrageous” protections for gun manufacturers, which severely limit their liability over how their firearms are used, comparing it to the tobacco industry, which has faced repeated litigation over its products’ role in causing cancer and other diseases.

“Imagine if the tobacco industry had been immune from being sued, where we’d be today,” Biden said.

All major broadcast networks broke away from regular programing to carry Biden’s remarks at 7:30 p.m. EDT, before the start of prime-time shows.

Biden has given major speeches on the coronavirus pandemic and the chaotic withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan. But the president has used such addresses sparingly during his nearly 18 months in office, especially during evening hours.

Earlier Thursday, Vice President Kamala Harris spoke about the Oklahoma shooting, saying, “All of us hold the people of Tulsa in our hearts, but we also reaffirm our commitment to passing commonsense gun safety laws.”

“No more excuses. Thoughts and prayers are important, but not enough,” Harris said. “We need Congress to act.”

Visiting Uvalde on Sunday, Biden mourned privately for three-plus hours with anguished families. Faced with chants of “do something” as he departed a church service, the president pledged, “We will.” In his address, he spoke of being passed a note by a woman in a Uvalde church grieving the loss of her grandchild, calling on people to come together and act.

His Thursday night address coincided with bipartisan talks that are intensifying among a core group of senators discussing modest gun policy changes. Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine said the group is “making rapid progress,” and Biden has spoken to Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, among those leading Democrats’ efforts on the issue.

Democrats are hoping Biden’s remarks encourage the bipartisan Senate talks and build pressure on the Republicans to strike an agreement. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden is “encouraged” by congressional negotiations but the president wants to give lawmakers “some space” to keep talking.

The private discussions in the Senate, which is split 50-50 between Democrats and Republicans, are not expected to produce the kinds of sweeping reforms being considered by the Democratic-led House — which has approved expansive background checks legislation and will next turn to an assault weapons ban.

A House package debated Thursday — and approved by a committee, 25-19 — is less sweeping but includes a provision raising the required age for buying semi-automatic firearms to 21. It still faces slim chances in the Senate.

Instead, the bipartisan senators are likely to come up with a more incremental package that would increase federal funding to support state gun safety efforts — with incentives for bolstering school security and mental health resources. The package may also encourage “red-flag laws” to keep firearms away from those who would do harm.

While the Senate approved a modest measure to encourage compliance with background checks after a 2017 church mass shooting in Texas and one in Parkland, Florida, the following year, no major legislation cleared the chamber following the devastating massacre of 20 children at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012.

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Associated Press Writer Lisa Mascaro contributed.

Two women killed, then gunman shot himself to death outside Ames church

BY 

Law enforcement officials say two young women were shot to death and the gunman killed himself last night in the parking lot of a church in Ames.

The Cornerstone Church was hosting a regular Thursday night event when the shootings happened shortly before 7 p.m. A youth minister said the congregation is grieving deeply for the women, who were church members, and the church is praying for all involved.

A prayer service is will be held at the church at 10 a.m. and a news conference is scheduled at the Sheriff’s Office in Nevada at 10:30 this morning to provide updates on the shooting. Cornerstone is considered the largest protestant church in Ames. It’s located near the junction of Interstate 35 and Highway 30.

Weekend festivals

Now that it’s summer, it’s festival season across the region.  Oskaloosa will hold its first Friday After Five event Friday night (6/3) on the town square.  There will be food trucks from 5 until 9pm, with live music from Muse Music musicians from 3 to 5pm, followed by Lauren Ashworth at 5 and Robert Deitch at 6.

Then coming up on Saturday afternoon (6/4), it’s the third annual Eveland Access Summerfest at the Eveland Access Campground in Oskaloosa.  Ashley Flaherty of Muse Music Store says there will be live music, plus much more.

“There will also be outdoor games for the whole family.  We do some yard games, there’s face painting, food trucks, dutch oven cooking demonstrations with samples.  We have Smokin Fatty’s catering coming in…that’s just donation per plate, so come hungry.  Camping is only $15 per night.”

Camp sites are available on a first come, first served basis.  Flaherty also reminds us that it’s free fishing weekend in Iowa this weekend.  The live music starts at 1pm Saturday at the Eveland Access Campground in Oskaloosa.

Two dead after wrong way crash in Jasper County

Two women are dead after a wrong way accident Thursday night (6/2) on Highway 163.  The Iowa State Patrol says just before 8pm, an SUV driven by 79-year-old Dorothy Findlow of Monroe was going the wrong way on the eastbound lane of Highway 163 in Jasper County.  At mile marker 22, Findlow’s vehicle hit an SUV driven by 46-year-old Delia Vance of Pella head on.  Findlow was airlifted to a Des Moines hospital, where she died from her injuries.  Vance was pronounced dead at the scene.

Ottumwa Man Killed in Construction Accident

Mahaska County Sheriff’s Office Press Release:

On Wednesday, June 1st, 2022, at 5 pm, members of the Mahaska County Sheriff’s Office and the Mahaska Health Ambulance Service were dispatched to the 3300 block of Highway 92 on a medical call. This location is where Highway 92 crosses the North Skunk River and the bridge is currently under construction. While First Responders were enroute to this call, it was learned that a construction worker had been pinned by a piece of construction equipment. Prior to Law Enforcement’s arrival, other workers had been able to free the victim from this piece of equipment.

The victim of this construction accident was identified as 46-year-old Pablo Jesus Gomez­ Garcia of Ottumwa, Iowa. Gomez-Garcia was cared for on the scene by members of the Mahaska Health Ambulance Service and the Keokuk County Ambulance Service. A medical helicopter was called to the scene. Mr. Gomez-Garcia succumbed to his injuries prior to being evacuated from the scene.

The victim was later transported to the Iowa State Medical Examiner’s Office where an autopsy will be conducted. The investigation into this matter is continuing. The Mahaska County Sheriff’s Office was assisted by members of the Iowa State Patrol, the Ottumwa Police Department, the Mahaska County Sheriff’s Reserve Unit, the Mahaska County Dispatch Center and the What Cheer Fire and Rescue.

Griffiths Wins Thriller at SIS

By: Jerry Mackey

Oskaloosa, Iowa: Wednesday’s night racing action at the Southern Iowa Speedway went on as scheduled following a 30 minute delay due to a brief light rain shower that passed through between 6:30 and 7 pm. The light rain made for a fast tacky racing surface that saw all the cars race at a lightening fast pace.

The headliner of the night was the Parker Tree Service Hobby Stock main event. The father son duo of Brad Stephens (Dad) and Peyton (Son) led the 19 car starting field to the green flag. The main was stopped following a grinding crash that saw the cars of Tyler Haring and Cody Winn being hauled to the infield with extensive damage, both drivers were uninjured in the incident. The feature restarted with Brad Stephens setting the pace early before Tyler Overton was able to secure the point position. Overton would then be challenged by 7th starting Dustin Griffiths. The 10G of Griffiths and the 42T of Overton raced several laps with neither able to gain a clear advantage. With the crowd on their feet the two raced off of turn four headed to the checkers with the win still up for grabs. Griffiths chose the outside line and scored the win by a couple of feet ahead of Overton. Keaton Gordon ran third in a borrowed car ahead of Brad Stephens.

The Oskaloosa Quality Rentals Sportmod main event belonged to 17 year old Maguire Dejong on Wednesday night. Dejong took command starting from the outside front row starting position. Dejong went on to score the win ahead of sixth starting Curtis VanDerwal. VanDerwal closed on Dejong late in the race taking second by less than a car length.

MidStates Machine Stock Cars ran their 16 lap feature caution free on Wednesday night and the drivers provided another very close finish. Steve Byers scored his first ever feature win at the Mahaska County Monster and it was anything but easy as Byers held off Osky perennial front runner Nathan Wood for the win. Wood ran down Byers late in the race but settled for second by less than ½ a car length.

Terry Bickford added some points to his point lead in the Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts on Wednesday night. Bickford was able to assume the race lead following the departure of race leader Brandon Pickney. Bickford scored his third win in four nights of racing at Osky. Matt Moore finished a close second ahead of James Haring.

Jonathan Hughes hounded race leader Kelley Graham for 8 laps in the Clow Valve Company Non Wing Sprint Car feature before making the winning move in turn one. Hughes led the final two circuits for the win over Graham and Tyler Graves.

Wednesday, June 8th will be School Staff Appreciation night at the Southern Iowa Speedway. Teachers as well as all School employees will be admitted free with ID. Hot laps will get underway at 7:15 with racing to follow.

Wednesday, June 1 Southern Iowa Speedway Feature Results (top5)

Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks

  1. 10G Dustin Griffiths-Hedrick
  2. 42T Tyler Overton-Carlisle
  3. 77 Keaton Gordon-Ottumwa
  4. 55 Brad Stephens-Bussey
  5. 73 Aaron Martin-Delta

Oskaloosa Quality Rentals Sportmods

  1. 30M Maguie Dejong-Montezuma
  2. 1V Curtis VanDerwal-Oskaloosa
  3. 55R Steven Berry-Ottumwa
  4. 29 Colton Livezey-New Sharon
  5. 27L Casey Lancaster-Glenwood, MO

MidStates Machine Stock Cars

  1. B17 Steve Byers-Indianola
  2. 52 Nathan Wood-Sigourney
  3. 14 Derrick Agee-Moberly, MO
  4. 85 Jason McDaniel-Eldon
  5. 10G Dustin Griffiths-Hedrick

Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts

  1. 63b Terry Bickford-Shannon City
  2. 2M Matt Moore-Ottumwa
  3. 2H James Haring-Oskaloosa
  4. 16 Seth Meinders-Ottumwa
  5. 29 Matt Miller-Waterloo

Clow Valve Company Non-Wing Sprints

  1. 67 Jonathan Hughes-Knoxville
  2. 25 Kelly Graham-Hedrick
  3. T4 Tyler Graves- Chariton
  4. 12 Doug Sylvester-Ottumwa
  5. 17 Steve Pumphrey-Fairfield 

House panel taking up gun bill in wake of mass shootings

By KEVIN FREKING

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House is beginning to put its stamp on gun legislation in response to mass shootings in Texas and New York by 18-year-old assailants who used semi-automatic rifles to kill 31 people, including 19 children.

The House Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing Thursday to advance legislation that would raise the age limit for purchasing a semi-automatic centerfire rifle from 18 to 21. The bill would make it a federal offense to import, manufacture or possess large-capacity magazines and would create a grant program to buy back such magazines. It also builds on the executive branch’s ban on bump-stock devices and so-called ghost guns that are privately made without serial numbers.

The Democratic legislation, called the Protecting Our Kids Act, was quickly added to the legislative docket after last week’s school shooting in Uvalde, Texas. A vote by the full House could come as early as next week.

With Republicans nearly in lockstep in their opposition, the House action will mostly be symbolic, serving to put lawmakers on record about gun control ahead of this year’s elections. The Senate is taking a different course, with a bipartisan group striving toward a compromise on gun safety legislation that can win enough GOP support to become law.

But Rep. Jerrold Nadler of New York, the Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, defends the proposals as being popular with Americans. He says it’s time for Congress to act.

“You say that it is too soon to take action? That we are ‘politicizing’ these tragedies to enact new policies?” Nadler said in prepared remarks for Thursday’s hearing obtained by The Associated Press. “It has been 23 years since Columbine. Fifteen years since Virginia Tech. Ten years since Sandy Hook. Seven years since Charleston. Four years since Parkland and Santa Fe and Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.”

He added: “Too soon? My friends, what the hell are you waiting for?”

Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the ranking Republican on the committee, told Fox News he’ll press his GOP colleagues to oppose the bill.

“I’m going to do everything I can to encourage my colleagues to oppose this … hodgepodge of bills that I don’t think would have made one difference in tragedies that we’ve seen recently,” Jordan said.

Any legislative response to the Uvalde and Buffalo, New York, shootings will have to get through the evenly divided Senate, where support from at least 10 Republicans would be needed to advance the measure to a final vote. A group of senators has been working behind the scenes this week in hopes of finding a consensus.

Ideas under discussion include expanded background checks for gun purchases and incentivizing red-flag laws that allow family members, school officials and others to go into court and secure an order requiring the police to seize guns from people considered a threat to themselves or others.

The broader bipartisan group of almost 10 senators met again Wednesday — “a very productive call,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., in an interview.

“There’s a tenor and tone, as well as real substantive discussion that seems different,” he said.

Blumenthal has been working with a Republican member of the group, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, on a proposal to send resources to the states for red-flag laws. He said he was “excited and encouraged” by the response from the group.

“It really is time for our Republican colleagues to put up or shut up,” Blumenthal said. “We’ve been down this road before.”

President Joe Biden was asked Wednesday if he was confident Congress would take action on gun legislation.

“I served in Congress for 36 years. I’m never confident, totally,” Biden said. “It depends, and I don’t know. I’ve not been in on the negotiations as they’re going on right now.”

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Associated Press writers Lisa Mascaro and Zeke Miller contributed to this report.

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