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“Lilies All Summer” Presentation to be Held

OSKALOOSA — The Mahaska County Master Gardeners are hosting Kristi Evans, President of the Iowa Regional Lily Society and NALS Lily Judge as a speaker on Tuesday, May 13, 2025 at 7 pm.  She will present “Lilies all Summer”.  Her presentation will be held at the Mahaska County Extension Office, 212 North I Street Oskaloosa.  Kristi is from Albia and has grown lilies for many years.  She grows many types of lilies, including Asiatic, Orientals, trumpets, tigers and others.

This event is open to the public and for anyone wishing to learn about the topic both adults and youth.  There is no fee to attend, due to Iowa State Unvierisity Extension and Outreach – Mahaska County and Mahaska County Master Gardener support.  Prior registration is NOT required, but appreciated.  To register please call the Mahaska County Extension office 641-673-5841 or email Suzette Striegel, Mahaska County Extension Horticulturist at  striegel@iastate.edu.

Road Closure over Red Rock Dam May 12-14

KNOXVILLE, Iowa – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District, announces a full road closure to Highway T15 across the Red Rock Dam May 12-14. The closure is necessary for the ongoing rehabilitation project on the Red Rock Dam gates.

Additional partial and full road closures may be needed throughout 2025. For more information, contact the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at Lake Red Rock at 641-828-7522 or by email at: lakeredrock@usace.army.mil.

Weekly Fuel Report

DES MOINES — The price of regular unleaded gasoline fell 5 cents, averaging $2.92 across Iowa according to AAA.

Crude Oil Summary

  • The price of global crude oil rose this week on the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) by $.27 per barrel over last week, currently priced at $58.78.
  • Brent crude oil fell by $1.44 and is currently priced at $61.74.
  • One year ago, WTI crude sold for $79.97 and Brent crude was $82.69.

Motor Fuels

  • As of Wednesday, the price of regular unleaded gasoline averaged $2.92 across Iowa according to AAA.
    • Prices fell 5 cents from last week’s price and are down 36 cents from a year ago.
    • The national average on Wednesday was $3.15, down cents from last week’s price.
  • Retail diesel prices in Iowa fell 5 cents this week with a statewide average of $3.29.
    • One year ago, diesel prices averaged $3.70 in Iowa.
    • The current Iowa diesel price is 25 cents lower than the national average of $3.54.
  • The current Des Moines Terminal/Rack Prices are $1.96 for U87-E10, $2.54 for Unleaded 87 (clear), $2.16 for ULSD#2, $2.40 for ULSD#1, and $1.92 per gallon for E-70 prices.

Heating Fuels

  • Natural gas prices were up $.32 at the Henry Hub reporting site and are currently priced at $3.64 MMbtu.
  • We will continue reporting retail heating oil and propane prices in Iowa in October.

Tips for saving energy on the road or at home are available at energy.gov and fueleconomy.gov.

Iowa Finance Authority Awards more than $9.5M in Federal Housing Tax Credits for the Construction of more than 300 Rental Homes in 9 Communities

DES MOINES — The Iowa Finance Authority Board of Directors awarded a total of more than $9.5 million in federal housing tax credits to support the construction and rehabilitation of a total of 331 affordable rental homes for Iowans. The awards were made to ten rental housing projects located in Cerro Gordo, Jasper, Johnson, Polk, Pottawattamie, Scott, Sioux and Webster counties.

The Brockton Place Project in Newton, a senior housing project, was awarded $1.3 million to aid in the construction of 44 senior housing units.

“Housing is a critical pillar in fostering strong, thriving communities across the state of Iowa,” said Iowa Finance Authority Director Debi Durham. “Congratulations to all nine communities receiving tax credits today, with a special recognition to the four designated as Iowa Thriving Communities — Des Moines, Fort Dodge, Mason City and Newton — for their outstanding efforts in leveraging innovative practices to attract housing opportunities for their workforce.”

The Internal Revenue Service makes an annual per capita allocation of federal tax credits to each state for the Federal Housing Tax Credit program. The Iowa Finance Authority is charged with allocating those credits to affordable housing developers. The developers who receive tax credits sell them to investors to generate equity for the housing developments.

The Iowa Finance Authority received 23 applications requesting over $27 million in housing tax credits in the 2025 tax credit round. IFA had a total of approximately $9.8 million available to allocate. The actual awards total nearly $95 million because the credits are committed annually for a 10-year period.

In addition to the federal housing tax credit awards, the projects received a total of $2.5 million in HOME program funds and a total of $1.5 million through the National Housing Trust Fund.

Knoxville Man Arrested after Accidentally Shooting Himself in Drive-By

KNOXVILLE – A Knoxville man was arrested yesterday following a drive-by shooting in which he shot himself in the leg, causing him to go to the emergency room, where he was apprehended by authorities.

The Knoxville Police Department says that yesterday morning, at around 2:12am, officers were called to the 1400 block of N. Grant Street in Knoxville regarding gun shots coming from a moving vehicle. Officers arrived and spoke with the caller, who shared Ring doorbell camera footage with them. The footage showed a vehicle traveling northbound while gunshots were audible.

Four minutes later, officers were dispatched to the Knoxville Hospital regarding a person who came to the emergency room with a gunshot wound to the leg. Police were able to connect the vehicle in the video from N. Grant Street to the vehicle in the parking lot of the emergency room.

Officers spoke with the gunshot wound victim, who was identified as Peyton Lee Cole Phillips of Knoxville, as well as a witness at the emergency room. It was determined that Phillips was the person firing the gun from the passenger seat of the moving vehicle on N. Grant Street and had unintentionally shot himself in his left leg. Officers later recovered a firearm, two spent shell casings, ammunition, marijuana, and drug paraphernalia from the vehicle.

Police were also able to collect two spent shell casings from the 1400 block of N. Grant Street. While on N. Grant Street, officers located a home that appeared to have a bullet hole in a front-facing window. Officers spoke with the occupants of the home, who stated that they had heard what sounded like gunshots, but did not realize that their home had been struck by a bullet.

Police say that, based on the investigation, it is not believed at this time that Phillips targeted any person while firing the weapon from the moving vehicle.

Later in the day yesterday, Phillips was arrested and charged with two felonies, including Intimidation with a Dangerous Weapon and Reckless Use of a Firearm Causing Bodily Injury, as well as several misdemeanors, including Reckless Use of a Firearm Causing Property Damage, Reckless Use of a Firearm, Possession or Carrying a Dangerous Weapon while Under the Influence, Person Ineligible to Carry Weapons, Use of a Dangerous Weapon in the Commission of a Crime, Possession of a Controlled Substance (Marijuana), and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

One Tech Tip: Skype shut down for good, but users still have these alternatives

LONDON (AP) — Skype is dead. What now?

Microsoft’s shutdown of Skype on May 5 sent millions of users scrambling to find an alternative to the pioneering internet phone service.

Skype, which Microsoft bought in 2011, was beloved by a dwindling group of users who appreciated how it let them make cheap long-distance calls as well as communicate with other users through chat messages, voice or video calls.

Some liked its simplicity and ease of use — an advantage, for example, when setting up a communications app for an elderly parent living far away.

Or they just used it out of habit.

Skype was founded in 2003 and was among the first in a wave of communication services that used voice over internet protocol technology (VoIP), which converts audio into a digital signal.

Skype’s disappearance also inconveniences Americans and other expatriates living overseas who signed up because they needed an U.S.-based number to receive text authentication codes from, say, a bank back home. It was also handy for calling 800 numbers for free even if you weren’t living in North America.

Here is a guide for life after Skype:

What’s happening

Microsoft announced in late February that it was shutting down Skype on May 5 and shifting some of its services to Microsoft Teams, its flagship office videoconferencing and group collaboration platform.

Skype users can use their existing accounts to log into Teams and have the option to automatically migrate their contacts and chats.

If you had a Skype number or a calling subscription, it stopped automatically renewing on April 3.

If your account still has credit, you can access Skype’s dial pad from the web portal or Teams to make calls.

Skype numbers won’t immediately expire on May 5 so you’ll still be able to receive calls until your subscription expires. But you’ll have to use Teams or keep the Skype dial pad open on the web portal to receive them.

Porting your number(s)

If your Skype number hasn’t expired and you don’t want to lose it, you should transfer it to another provider.

Skype numbers can be ported to a phone carrier or any number of other VoIP services. But you’ll have to start the process through the new provider, not Skype.

Google Voice

Google users can access the online search giant’s internet phone service to make calls from a smartphone or a desktop web browser. You can get your own Google Voice phone number and use features like call forwarding and voicemail. Or you can port your number from another service like Skype, but it will cost $20.

Calls to U.S., Canadian or Puerto Rican numbers are free. Rates for other countries vary.

The free version of Google Voice is only available to U.S. residents physically located in the 48 contiguous states, so that means expatriate Americans can only use it if they registered before they moved overseas.

“You cannot sign up for a Google Voice number while outside the USA,” according to a help page. “Do not try to circumvent this by using a VPN.”

Viber

Owned by Japan’s Rakuten, Viber was long considered one of the closest competitors to Skype. One key difference is that Skype users don’t need a phone number and are identified by their usernames, while Viber users need a number to register for service.

Similar to Skype, Viber users can buy credit or packages to call phone numbers around the world but it’s no longer possible to get a Viber number to receive calls.

Zoom

The videoconferencing service that’s become a byword for online company meetings offers a calling service, Zoom Phone, and features like number porting and the ability to send and receive SMS text messages.

Take note that Zoom Phone isn’t free. There are various calling plans that involve a monthly subscription cost and extra fees for international calls.

Teams

Microsoft users have the option of making calls on Teams, dubbed Teams Phone. Like Zoom Phone, you’ll need to buy a subscription and pay extra for international calls.

But it’s not an option for regular people because Microsoft says Teams Phone isn’t for consumer use and is only available to small and medium-sized businesses.

Wireless Carriers

If you absolutely need a U.S. number but live overseas, sign up for service with a low-cost virtual wireless carrier that offers cheap cellphone plans or pay-as-you-go rates.

One provider, Tello, offers monthly plans for as little as $5 and says users can activate its service even if they’re living outside the U.S.

Because mobile virtual network operators like Tello are essentially wireless phone companies that piggyback off a bigger carrier’s physical network, you can’t use it to make calls on a computer or an app.

VoIP it

There are a slew of Skype pretenders offering phone calls over the internet, such as Zoiper, VoIP.ms, CallCentric, Mytello, and Virtual Landline. Many are aimed at business users.

Some are capitalizing on Skype’s disappearance. Hushed, which started as an anonymous calling app, bills itself as a Skype alternative. Users can buy a phone number from the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom or Puerto Rico or port their own number.

It warns that some of its numbers aren’t guaranteed to work with third-party verification text messages.

“We do not intentionally block anyone from receiving these codes, but it’s common that some services will prevent verification texts from being sent to certain phone numbers due to their own security policies,” Hushed says on its website.

Park your number

Maybe you can’t decide which calling service you want to switch to. If you want to save your current number, there are services to just park your number like NumberBarn.com and Parkmyphone.com.

They let you store a phone number for a monthly fee while relaying any text messages sent to that number. You can port the number to another service whenever you want.

Beware, you can only port in U.S. or Canadian phone numbers.

eSIMs

What about an international eSIM? They’re the virtual version of the mobile phone SIM card that you can buy and add to your phone when you’re on a trip to save on roaming fees.

They offer cheap data access rates so you can use the internet without worrying about racking up a huge bill when you get home.

Unfortunately, you can’t port a Skype number to an international eSIM because of “the fundamental differences” between VoIP services and traditional mobile networks, said Pedro Maiquez, co-founder of eSIM provider Holafly. “Skype numbers are not tied to a mobile carrier’s physical infrastructure, making them incompatible with mobile eSIM solutions.”

Leaders of Iowa’s corn and pork industries see mixed bag after tariffs

By Rachel Cramer (Radio Iowa)

One month after the Trump administration announced sweeping tariffs on imports to the U.S., the pork and soybean industries are closely watching how countries respond.

Weekly export sales for U.S. pork recently hit a marketing year low, in part because China cancelled a contract for 12,000 metric tons.

Iowa State University Extension economist Chad Hart says agricultural export sales fluctuate, but aggregate data over the last four months shows countries are buying less U.S. pork.

“We’ve been seeing a fairly downward trend,” Hart says, “and I think pork producers have been factoring that in as they are looking at how they’re marketing their animals over time.”

Hart says the majority of soybean export sales have already been made and delivered for the current marketing year, which ends in August.

He says the U.S./China trade war could have a much greater impact on the soybean industry if retaliatory tariffs are still in place this fall.

“Everybody’s been watching, trying to read the tea leaves to see what impacts the tariffs are having,” Hart says, “and I would argue, it’s a mixed bag right now.”

Hart says corn exports have been up despite the tariff chatter, but countries have pulled back purchases of U.S. pork since January.

He says the 10 percent baseline tariffs on almost all imports into the U.S. could make it harder to find new trading partners for farm products.

Pella City Council Approves Contracts for Soccer Complex, Indoor Rec Center

By Sam Parsons

The Pella City Council held a regular meeting last night and held a public hearing on their soccer complex improvements project. The project is expected to be completed by the end of July of this year, and a contract was approved with Iowa Sports Turf Management, who submitted a low bid of just over $760,000.

The council also formally approved a contract with Stahl Construction for the Pella Indoor Recreation & Aquatics Center project. Last month, the council awarded the contract to Stahl in the amount of just under $30 million. The project is slated for substantial completion by May 13, 2027.

And the council discussed the city’s Community Center renovations project. In April of 2023, the city approved an agreement with Schemmer to conduct architectural and engineering services for the project, and the newest cost estimate for the base project was just over $7.8 million. No formal action was taken, but if the council approves the proposed design and floor plans, the project could be ready to bid by November.

The next regular city council meeting for the city of Pella is scheduled for May 20.

Hills and Trainer to Step into Co-Principal Roles at OES

OSKALOOSA — Big changes are bringing double the dedication to Oskaloosa Elementary School for the 2025-26 school year, as the district introduces a dynamic co-principal leadership model for the first time. Pending school board approval, two familiar faces will step into the shared role: Kailey Hills, who has served as the Elementary Associate Principal, and Katie Trainer, the Director of Oskaloosa Preschool. Together, Hills and Trainer bring a deep understanding of the district and a shared passion for nurturing young learners, ready to lead with teamwork, energy, and a strong commitment to student success.

The two leaders will officially begin their new duties on July 1 and are already actively involved with several aspects of the position. With Hill’s vacancy in the AP role, the two are leading the search for a new Associate Principal for the elementary school, and both are actively involved in district-wide vision culture leadership.

For Kailey Hills, stepping into the co-principal role is all about connection. “My top goal in this new position is to build strong, trusting relationships with students, families, and the community,” Hills shared. “I believe that when we work together and feel connected, we can create a truly supportive environment where every child feels seen, valued, and empowered to grow.” With a heart for collaboration and a commitment to the whole child, Hills is eager to listen, learn, and walk alongside students as they grow, academically, socially, and emotionally

“I’m honored to step into this new role and continue the incredible momentum we’ve built at Oskaloosa Elementary over the past three years,” said Kailey Hills. “We’ve seen measurable academic growth and a powerful shift in behavior leadership that has transformed the way we support students. I’m excited to keep moving forward, working alongside our dedicated educators to create a world-class learning environment where every child feels a sense of belonging and is equipped to thrive both in and out of the classroom.”

Katie Trainer enters her new role as co-principal with a deep appreciation for the strong foundation already established at Oskaloosa Elementary. “My goal as the new PK-5 Co-Principal is to continue moving forward the incredible work already happening at OES,” Trainer said. With a focus on collaboration, consistency, and shared leadership, she’s eager to tap into the strengths of the entire PK-5 team. Her vision centers on building safe, engaging, and inclusive learning environments where every child can thrive and every voice is valued.

“I’m super excited to continue the work we’ve been doing at Oskaloosa Elementary,” said Katie Trainer, reflecting on her new role as co-principal. “It’s an honor to keep serving the students, staff, and families in this community. I truly believe in the incredible team we have here, and I’m looking forward to building on the positive momentum that’s already in place.” With a background in early childhood education and expertise in behavior leadership, Trainer brings both experience and heart to her new position, ready to support students in meaningful and lasting ways.

Hills and Trainer will be working with the current Associate Principal, Steven Sattz, who will expand his leadership role by taking on additional district special education responsibilities, while continuing to serve the OES campus.

“We’re excited to introduce the co-principal model at Oskaloosa Elementary, and we couldn’t ask for two more capable leaders to take on this role than Kailey Hills and Katie Trainer,” said Superintendent Dr. Mike Fisher. “Both bring a wealth of experience, a deep understanding of our students’ needs, and a proven commitment to academic and emotional growth. They’ve played key roles in shaping the vision culture at OES and all Oskaloosa campuses.”

Hills earned her bachelor’s degree in elementary education from the University of Northern Iowa and a master’s degree in educational leadership from Drake University. She has spent all eight years of her career in education at Oskaloosa Schools, where she previously taught 4th grade and has served as Associate Principal for the past three years. Hills lives in Oskaloosa and is married to her husband, Brenden. They have two children: Ellie, who will start preschool next year, and Tripp, who turns one in August.

Trainer brings a strong background in early childhood education, having taught preschool and kindergarten special education in Waterloo Schools, preschool in Pella Schools, and kindergarten and KinderPrep at Oskaloosa before serving as the Early Childhood Director. She is married to Corey Trainer, a mental health therapist at Eunoia and former K-1 school counselor at OES, where he served for 11 years. Together, they have two sons, Sebastian and Sullivan, who are currently in 3rd and 1st grade at OES. The Trainer family loves being part of the Oskaloosa community and enjoys everything it has to offer, from summer band concerts on the square to programs at the George Daily Auditorium and playing pickleball at Trio.

Pope Francis donated a popemobile to serve as a mobile health unit for Gaza children

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Before he died, Pope Francis donated one of his popemobiles to be converted into a mobile health unit to serve the children of Gaza, officials said Monday.

The Jerusalem and Sweden branches of the Vatican’s Caritas charitable federation released photos of the repurposed vehicle on Monday. There is no word, though, on when it might be put to use. The donation was announced on the same day that Israel approved plans to seize the Gaza Strip and to stay in the Palestinian territory for an unspecified amount of time.

“When the humanitarian corridor to Gaza reopens, it (the popemobile) will be ready to give primary healthcare to children in Gaza,” Caritas Jerusalem said in a statement.

The vehicle will be outfitted with equipment for diagnosis, examination, and treatment. Caritas said it would have testing equipment, suture kits, syringes and needles, oxygen supply, vaccines, and a refrigerator.

“This vehicle represents the love, care and closeness shown by His Holiness for the most vulnerable, which he expressed throughout the crisis,” the secretary general of Caritas Jerusalem, Anton Asfar, said in a statement.

During Israel’s war in Gaza, Francis became increasingly outspoken in his criticism of the Israeli military’s harsh tactics while also demanding the return of hostages taken by Hamas on Oct. 7. Last year, he urged an investigation into whether Israel’s war amounted to genocide -– a charge Israel vehemently denies.

He repeatedly spoke out about the plight of people in Gaza, and had a nightly ritual that he even maintained while he was in the hospital in February with pneumonia: he would call the lone Catholic church in the Gaza Strip to see how people huddled inside were coping.

Francis died April 21 at age 88.

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