Missouri’s first case of measles comes from traveler

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Less than a week ago the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) confirmed the first case of measles in the state.

The case stems from an international traveler passing through Taney County, whose vaccination status is not confirmed. There hasn’t been any exposure since the child arrived in Taney County.

“The person is from a foreign country,” Dr. George Turabelidze of the Missouri State Health Department said. “They were traveling for a few days to Missouri and they happened to develop measle symptoms upon arrival. And they came straight to health care. That’s where the diagnosis was made. And most of the exposures were limited to healthcare personnel”

Locals, like Franklin Voorhes, aren’t concerned about the recent case spreading. If anything, Voorhes believes it should serve as a reminder to be informed on the significance of vaccinations.

“I think anybody who is unvaccinated probably didn’t get the benefit of education of how vaccines work and what vaccines are,” Voorhes said. “At the end of the day, it’s a personal choice, but I’m not going to make anyone get vaccinated. I do question the decision making process of the education that somebody has if they’re not vaccinated.”

If you or someone close to you thinks they have come in contact with the measles, it’s recommended to quarantine and notify a health care provider prior to being tested. 

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Columbia’s storm emergency declaration is the first in more than a decade

Erika McGuire

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia has issued just its second emergency declaration in the last 15 years.

The City of Columbia declared a disaster on Monday after the National Weather Service confirmed an EF-1 tornado touched down Sunday in northeast Columbia.

Then-city manager John Glascock signed a disaster declaration on March 20, 2020, at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. That declaration was rescinded more than a year later, on May 29, 2021.

A local emergency declaration is often the first step in getting aid from the state and federal governments for disaster cleanup, if the cost of the damage is high enough.

First, local officials will assess the damage and submit their findings to the governor. Then, the governor sends a request for federal assistance to the president by sending a formal disaster declaration.

The president will then decide whether a major disaster or emergency declaration will be approved. If it is federal aid will be given.

It’s not clear yet how much the storm damage repair and cleanup will cost the city government. Columbia’s recycling processing center was damaged, as was a reactor at the city landfill that generates electricity from landfill gas.

Boone County Presiding Commissioner Kip Kendrick said the county would need to tally more than $866,000 in uninsured and underinsured damage to get assistance. With estimates of the cost to repair the recycling facility still out, it’s not clear whether the county will reach that level.

According to Kendrick, the city’s recycling plant is insured for about $5.7 million. If rebuilding cost go beyond that the county could possibly reach that threshold.

For state assistance, Missouri must meet a public assistance damage threshold of over $11 million.

Missouri has had severe weather across the state, but the state emergency management agency reports other counties have not reached that threshold, Kendrick said in an email Tuesday.

 “At this point, I am not optimistic that Boone County or the State of Missouri will meet the federal thresholds for a disaster declaration. However, this may change pending the outcome of the City of Columbia’s insurance adjustment later this week,” Kendrick said.

The insurance provider will be in Columbia Thursday to assess the damage.

“We will continue to monitor developments closely and provide updates as more accurate damage and insurance data becomes available,” Kendrick added.

High-power electric lines operated by Columbia Water and Light were also brought down in the storm.

The city has suspended recycling indefinitely and closed all eight of its recycling drop-off locations.

Residents are urged to hold onto their recyclables for now while the city figures out what next steps it’s going to take.

According to the city, plans for a new recycling facility were already in the works, as the current plant off Paris Road in northeast Columbia was built in 2002 and is operated manually. City officials say they planned to have a new facility built by 2027 or 2028, but now that timeline may be expedited following the recent storm damage.

After a study, the new facility will likely be built in the landfill area and is expected to be automated, according to the city.

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Cleaning chemicals reportedly cause nursing home evacuation and two hospitalizations

Celeste Springer

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – The Colorado Springs Fire Department (CSFD) says a portion of a nursing home has been evacuated, and hazmat crews are on scene at 104 Lois Ln.

CSFD says a small wing of the building was evacuated as a precaution. Preliminary readings did not come up with anything, but the hazmat team is inside getting more readings.

The department says that they believe cleaning chemicals may have been improperly mixed and the vapor spread to the air vents.

Two people were sent to the hospital for “minor respiratory illness.” A third person was treated at the scene, CSFD said.

“Just wondered what was going on. And then they said that there was a chemical smell. So everybody was out real quick,” Ernest Beasley has lived at The Gardens Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for years. Beasley said he didn’t smell the gas, and the first time he heard about the gas was when a nurse came in to evacuate him from his room.

“They were just telling us that there was a chemical spill. And that everybody just needed to be out real quick,” Beasley said.

CSFD said they took extra precautions because of the at-risk population living at the center.

“The chlorine gas that’s produced. It’s pretty nasty stuff. If you take enough of it, it can be a real, genuine, medical emergency,” Capt. JJ Halsey with CSFD said.

23 of the 43 residents at the center were evacuated. Tonight, a facility spokesperson says all the residents are safe and everything is back to normal. That spokesperson couldn’t say exactly what the workers were doing when the chemicals mixed, creating the dangerous gas, but added that those chemicals are regularly used to clean rooms at the center.

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New Jefferson City Council members sworn in; housing developer incentives approved

Matthew Sanders

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

The new members of the Jefferson City Council were sworn in Monday night.

Derek Thomas was sworn in for the Third Ward seat, and Julie Allen was sworn in for the Fourth Ward.

The council also approved a nearly $85 million contract with Bartlett and West for design plans for the Madison Street parking garage demolition project and a housing incentive program that will reimburse developers for building new homes.

The program authorizes up to $560,000 to reimburse developers $5,000 for each new or renovated housing unit. Six companies are seeking reimbursements, according to documents prepared for the city council.

The council is hoping this will grow the workforce and population.

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United Way Team Player nominations open

Leah Rainwater

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Nominations are now open for the 2025 Team Player Award from United Way of Greater St. Joseph, in partnership with the St. Joseph Mustangs.

The award was created to celebrate and spotlight the powers of volunteerism and recognizes individuals or groups who selflessly support non-profit organizations throughout the St. Joseph area.

Each Friday during the 2025 St. Joseph Mustangs season, one volunteer or volunteer group will be recognized on the field during pregame festivities.

Honorees will receive admission for themselves and a guest to the game, a certificate of appreciation and a commemorative United Way T-shirt.

The deadline to nominate is Tuesday, May 6.

To submit a nomination, visit https://bit.ly/UWteamplayer25, or our website, www.stjosephunitedway.org.To learn more about the St. Joseph Mustangs and to see their 2025 schedule, visitwww.stjoemustangs.com.

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2 injured in crash on Ammon Road

Curtis Jackson

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) – Two people were injured in a two-car accident on Monday night, April 21, 2025.

It happened at 11 p.m. near the intersection of Ammon Road and Woodside Drive.

Bonneville County Sheriff’s office said the 32-year-old driver of a 2008 Ford Fusion struck a 1997 Honda Civic, driven by a 16-year-old, at a high rate of speed. Both cars were heading south on Ammon Road.

One of the cars struck a power pole, causing an outage in the area.

Deputies said the driver of the Ford Fusion was reported earlier by Jefferson County Sheriff Deputies as possibly being intoxicated. Deputies took a blood sample from the man to determine his impairment. The results have not been released.

Both drivers were taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Deputies are continuing to investigate the accident.

Power was restored a few hours later.

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One man seriously hurt after semi-truck on I-70 in Saline County

Madison Stuerman

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A 33-year-old man from Belton was seriously hurt after a crash between two semi-trucks on Interstate 70 in Saline County Monday afternoon.

According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report, the crash happened at 2:20 p.m. on Monday on I-70 westbound mile marker 65.2.

The crash report states that a 2023 Freightliner Cascadia, driven by a 46-year-old man from Michigan, was stopped for traffic congestion.

The 33-year-old truck driver tried to pass the first truck when it hit the towed unit of the Freightliner.

Troopers said the 33-year-old was seriously hurt and taken by helicopter to Centerpoint Medical Center in Independence. The other driver was not hurt.

The 2019 International Truck was totaled while the 2023 Freightliner Cascadia had moderate damage.

Both drivers were reported to be wearing seat belts at the time of the crash, according to the report.

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Start of improvement project on Dublin Boulevard in Colorado Springs delayed

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Drivers bracing for two nights of closures this week on busy Dublin Boulevard near the Peterson Road intersection received an unexpected break.

City officials announced in a Monday afternoon release that they were postponing the $15 million Dublin Improvements project for two weeks, until early next month; no reason was given.

The overnight closures were to happen Tuesday and Wednesday, to allow crews to place concrete barriers that will establish a new traffic pattern during construction.

During the project, crews will make a variety of upgrades to a three-quarter-mile stretch of Dublin, from Marksheffel Road west to Fieler Drive. The segment will be widened from two to four lanes to match Dublin west of the project area, and to blend into the ongoing widening of Marksheffel in that area.

Other improvements include: Drainage work allowing more excess groundwater to drain into nearby Sand Creek, a center median similar to the existing median west of the project area, a traffic signal at the Dublin/Issaquah Drive intersection, and sidewalks where none currently exist.

Addressing a troublesome underground spring that developed last summer and fall — covered extensively by KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior — was supposed to be part of the project. However, when Ice began forming late in the year, crews accelerated their repair schedule and plugged the leak in January.

Robert Flores has lived along Dublin for 16 years and said the project is long overdue.

“But they need to do something about speeding,” he said. “It’s a big problem here. I’m surprised there haven’t been more crashes. Even on the street into my neighborhood (Fieler), cars don’t stop at the stop sign. They roll through it or ignore it entirely. We have kids around here. I hope something is done about that.”

Other neighbors dread the upcoming construction and fear that the project will create more traffic congestion in an already-busy corridor.

“We don’t like the fact that our lives are going to be disrupted for an extended period of time,” said Randy and Michelle Bourgeois, while taking a stroll along Dublin. “However, It’s needed. This section is a big bottleneck as it is.”

Another concern expressed by neighbors is the ability to turn left onto or off of Dublin from their neighborhoods during and after the project — something that already is challenging with the current amount of traffic.

“I’m worried that they’ll make it right turn only, out of our neighborhoods,” a neighbor said. “I hope that doesn’t happen. Traffic is only going to get heavier with all the houses they keep building in (nearby) Banning Lewis Ranch.”

Even with the postponement, officials expect to finish the project by the end of this year.

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Columbia city leaders approve two projects in council budget meeting

Jazsmin Halliburton

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia city leaders passed two items that would improve the Columbia Regional Airport parking lot, and the I-70/U.S. 63 Connector and St. Charles Road bridges.

The $1.5 million project involves demolishing the existing gravel parking lot surface and building a new paved parking lot across Airport Road from the terminal. An additional 57 parking spaces will be paved for $257,752.

The FAA will reimburse the city $1,308,781 for the project, according to the council memo. This leaves the City of Columbia to pay the remaining $267,717. The project is expected to be completed by summer 2025.

Project number two that was passed is the $1.7 million agreement to enhance the I-70/U.S. 63 Connector and St. Charles Road as part of phase one of the Improve I-70 project. According to the council memo, $1,095,000 has been committed for the design and construction of the enhancements. Of that amount, $600,000 is being contributed from the University of Missouri, $300,000 is being contributed from Boone County, and $195,000 is being contributed from other sources. The City has been asked to fund the difference of $649,241, which will be from the council reserve funds.

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QUESTION OF THE DAY: Should Columbia city leaders consider tax increases amid projected deficits?

Matthew Sanders

Inflation and slow sales tax growth are catching up with Columbia’s city budget.

City leaders project that without more revenue, the city will have to draw down $31.1 million from its cash reserves over the next six years. Columbia’s city manager has warned that expenses could outpace revenue as soon as Oct. 1 — the start of the 2026 fiscal year.

Several options for tax increases have been put on the table to address the budget gap.

Do you think the city should consider tax increases to deal with projected budget deficits? Let us know by voting in the poll.

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