Arts Fund strives to assist St. Joseph arts organizations

Ashley Luthans

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A local program is helping to fund arts groups in St. Joseph.

The Arts Fund assists several agencies in St. Joseph, providing an average of 15% of each organizations funding.

There are seven organizations who received funding this year:

Allied Arts Council

Creative Arts Production

Performing Arts Association

Robidoux Resident Theatre

Saint Joseph Symphony

St. Joseph Community Chorus

St. Joseph Youth Chorale

Jessica Agnew, the executive director of the Allied Arts Council, has a love for the arts. She explained that the Arts Fund provides a lot of help to local arts agencies.

“For most of these organizations, this Arts Fund can be anywhere from 10-35% of their operating budget, and that can really help them with their cause,” Agnew said.

Agnew shared more about where money from the Arts Fund goes.

“So with the Arts Fund, it is the only arts grant and fund that specifically goes back to the arts in our community,” Agnew said. “So every dollar raised comes back to the community.”

The director of strategic communications for the Allied Arts Council, Brooke McBride, said the arts are beneficial for St. Joseph economically.

“I’m born and raised in St. Joe, but I did not realize the economic impact that these organizations have,” McBride said. “We, as an arts community, brought in over $2.5 million in local, federal and state tax revenue in just one year.”

McBride explained that by supporting the arts in St. Joseph, you are also supporting the city as a whole.

“It’s a part of our community and it makes our community better and makes it livable,” McBride said. “It helps us recruit new families, new positions and it helps improve our Downtown, which is something the city is always trying to focus on.”

Agnew also said that art is all around us, and it is crucial to support that in St. Joseph.

“The vitality of our world depends on arts,” Agnew said. “And to be able to have the opportunities we have in this community is huge and we can’t do it without the support of others.”

The Arts Fund has raised approximately $7 million for local arts organizations since 1982.

In order to donate to the Arts Fund, visit stjoearts.org or call 816-233-0231.

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St. Joseph law enforcement agencies sponsors ‘Prescription Take Back’

Patrick Holleron

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The Youth Alliance Partners, Buchanan County Sheriff’s Department and the St. Joseph Police Department will be sponsoring a Prescription Take Back event for safe disposal of prescription drugs.

Anyone can drop off controlled, non-controlled, over the counter substances and sharps they wish to get rid of.

“It’s always a good time to be mindful of the dangers that substances pose, especially to our young people,” Youth Alliance Partners executive director Robin Hammond said. “It’s a free way to dispose of those medications, All you have to do is drive up and hand the medications over. We have law enforcement on hand to take those medications.”

The Missouri Department of Mental Health compiled data from 2021 to 2022 of substances youth and teens in the 6th-12th grades have used. They found that 3.5% used over the counter medication and 3.3% used prescription drugs.

The event will be held at 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, April 26 in the East hills Parking Lot off of Woodbine Road.

For additional information or questions contact the Youth Alliance Partners at (816)-232-0050.

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Madison High School cancels classes on Monday

Curtis Jackson

REXBURG, Idaho (KIFI) — Madison School District reported that classes at Madison High School will be canceled on Monday, April 21, 2025, due to a gas leak.

They said students involved in extracurricular activities can reach out their coaches for more information.

Classes will resume on Tuesday.

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Columbia indefinitely suspends recycling pickup after storms damage recycling plant

Lucas Geisler

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

Columbia has indefinitely suspended commercial and residential recycling pickup after the city’s recycling plant was damaged during a strong storm Sunday afternoon.

Columbia Utilities spokesman Jason West said this also applies to the public drop-off centers, saying they will be unavailable to the public. Recycling workers have been asked not to report for work on Monday.

The Material Recovery Facility at the Columbia Landfill in the northeast part of the city handles all recycling for the city. The city was already researching options on how to improve or replace the MRF. The building was nearing the end of “its useful life” due to aging equipment.

The National Weather Service will survey damage in Boone County on Monday. First responders kept busy throughout the city on Sunday with fallen trees and power lines. The Columbia Fire Department responded to 30 calls across the city, including five homes and several city-owned structures. No one was reported hurt in any of the calls.

“The majority of the damage appeared to be in the northeastern section of town, including the Creasy Springs and Paris Road areas,” a city news release said.

Columbia resident Brad Belcher has lived in a home on Bear Creek drive in Columbia for five years. Belcher said he was standing in the doorway of his home around 5 p.m. Sunday, when he heard a loud burst of wind and saw a tree coming toward his home.

“It’s totaled. Like you can see through my house…there’s trees in the living room, in the kitchen,” Belcher said. “It fell on my truck, too like so you gotta worry about cars, you gotta worry about your home.”

Belcher said he, and his two daughters who were in the basement when the tree fell onto the home all made it out safely.

Cara Joos lives next door to Belcher and said she heard a loud noise around the time the tree fell onto the home. Joos said it was hard to tell what was happening when she looked outside due to the heavy rainfall at the time.

She said it was the most she’s ever felt in danger during her years of living in Missouri.

“I’ve lived in this part of the world for a long time, so tornadoes aren’t anything new and everybody says it sounds like a train and it was like the closest… It was like a train that was far off but it was really loud,” Joos said.

The Columbia Utilities outage map reported more than 2,600 customers without power as of 7:50 p.m. It had reached a peak of nearly 4,000 customers after a strong storm went through the city just before 6 p.m. The Bradford Research Farm in Columbia recorded a 66 mph gust during that storm.

Boone County emergency management authorities reported power lines and trees down, along with flooded roads across the county.

A line of storms earlier in the day caused significant damage in part of Callaway County.

QUESTION OF THE DAY: Did you see damage in your area from the Easter Sunday storms?

Matthew Sanders

Two waves of severe storms hit Mid-Missouri on Easter Sunday, with damage spread out across the area.

Tornado warnings were issued in most Mid-Missouri counties during one or both of the two waves, including the Lake of the Ozarks area, Columbia, Jefferson City and Fulton. Heavy damage was reported in Columbia and in Callaway County, with flash flooding afflicting areas near the lake.

More will be revealed over the coming days, including whether a tornado touched down in Callaway County. But people across Mid-Missouri are left cleaning up this week.

Did you see any damage in your area? Let us know by voting in the poll.

Tornado determined to have hit Columbia on Easter Sunday

Marie Moyer

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

An EF-1 hit Columbia on Easter Sunday, the National Weather Service determined.

Weather service crews were in Columbia assessing damage Monday. The Boone County Office of Emergency Management said in a news release Monday afternoon that an EF-1 tornado was responsible for the damage, including at the city’s landfill and recycling center.

The release said the tornado touched down briefly.

Columbia’s city manager also signed an emergency declaration ahead of Monday night’s city council meeting.

City of Columbia utility workers were replacing 15 broken high-voltage poles along Paris Road, the utility said in a social media post Monday morning.

About 100 customers are affected, the utility said.

“The current estimate is it will take 72 hours to complete the repairs,” the post says.

About 4,000 customers were dark at the peak of the outages on Sunday. Boone Electric Cooperative also reported about 4,000 members without power, but power was restored to nearly all of them by early Monday.

Boone County Office of Emergency Management Deputy Director Jake Waller said in an email that Boone County’s Community Emergency Response Team deployed 12 volunteers to conduct preliminary damage assessment throughout the community.

The assessments, in partnership with Columbia-based Missouri Task Force 1, was ongoing Monday.

National Weather Service meteorologist Matt Beitscher said Monday afternoon that the assessment could take days or even weeks. He said no deaths were reported in the storms and just one injury — in New Bloomfield.

“We encourage anybody who has damage that they have not yet reported to either local law enforcement or the National Weather Service to do so,” Beitscher said. “The surveying process starts today, but it takes days, weeks, sometimes months to finalize, and any new information is very helpful. So any information they can provide about damage when it occurred, and pictures would be fantastic.”

The damage appears to be from a mix of straight-line and tornado winds, Beitscher said. Winds gusts of over 60 mph were recorded in Columbia on Sunday evening.

In a news release from the city, the Columbia Fire Department reported damage around Creasy Springs and Paris Road. CFD also responded to around 30 calls, including damage to about five homes and several city buildings.

Columbia Utilities also reported significant damage to the City of Columbia Material Recovery Facility. The city’s recycling has been suspended indefinitely. City spokeswoman Sydney Olsen said the biogas plant at the landfill — which harvests methane to generate electricity — was also damaged.

City of Columbia Communications and Outreach Supervisor Jason West says resident are urged to hold onto their recyclables for now as they work to figure out options to move forward.

“Make sure everything is properly vetted, hopefully thats just going to be a couple of days and we can start up some type of service but maybe a partial service,” West said.

The facility is located off Route B in northeast Columbia and has been in operation since 2022. It is a manual facility meaning employees sort materials by hand. However the city was already in the process of getting a new building.

“Recommendation was a brand new facility, it would probably be a different location on the landfill property itself,” West said. “It would be more automated, instead of a two stream it would be a single stream that does all of the sorting, that is something we are talking to the city council about,”

“This will probably expedite the process,” West said.

Olsen said Columbia residents will get details about the resumption of recycling as soon as possible.

According to West, about four employees were at the facility conducting service drop-offs and left at about 5:15 p.m., which was about 15 minutes before the tornado warning in Boone County.

Employees were told not to show up for work Monday. The city says it is working on a temporary placement for staff while clean-up is underway.

“Obviously we’ll have some clean-up out here that they could help with as well but then we’ll find another spot for them in the city as we’re working on the next step,”West said.

If you do have storm debris that you need to get rid of, West said it can be dropped off at the landfill or at any of the mulch sties in Columbia as those are still open.

The city is responsible for the clean-up as it is in the city limits but it hopes other agencies will step up to help out.

As for payments made to the city for recycling services, West said that’s still being worked out and he’s asking residents to be patient as they figure out next steps.

Columbia’s Public Works Street Division crews responded to downed trees, street debris and temporary street flooding. The department will continue monitoring conditions and cleaning up debris in the area as the week progresses.

Residents are asked by Columbia Utilities and the Columbia Fire Department to avoid any remaining downed power lines and to never attempt to move them.

If you see downed lines, stay at least 30 feet away. If you see a downed transmission line, stay 100 feet away. To report a downed line, Columbia Utilities can be reached at 573-875-2555.

Residents can report property damage to the Boone County Office of Emergency Management at EM@BooneCountyMo.org. The United Way of Mid-Missouri is also providing resources to residents impacted by the storm and can be reached at 800-427-4626.

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I-25 southbound shut down while driver is airlifted to hospital – UPDATE: I-25 reopened

Michael Logerwell

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) – UPDATE: C-DOT reports I-25 has reopened.

ORIGINAL REPORT: The Colorado Department of Transportation announced I-25 southbound is closed due to a crash. The shutdown is between exits 119 and 122, near the Pikes Peak International Raceway.

The Colorado State Patrol tells KRDO13 the crash happened near milepost 117 just after 8:30 p.m. It was a single-vehicle motorcycle crash.

The interstate is currently shut down while first responders airlift the motorcyclist off the road. CSP anticipates a relatively short closure on I-25.

KRDO13 is working to learn more information.

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Mothers of Murdered Youth to close down nonprofit

Mackenzie Stafford

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) – A local nonprofit is closing down for good. Mothers of Murdered Youth (MOMY) is a group that’s known for providing a safe space for parents who have lost a child at the hands of someone else’s actions. The group advocates for families and educates on youth violence.

This group has impacted so many community members who have tragically lost a loved one or are just joining in to advocate against violence. But now the group says the community will have to uphold their message as they close their doors.

“27 years is a long time,” shared Jim Hughes, the Vice President of MOMY.

27 years is how long Mothers of Murdered Youth has been championing change in the community. It’s a club you never want to be a part of, according to Hughes, but he’s grateful they found him when they did.

“My son Nathan was murdered. He was robbed and stabbed; he lived 24 hours,” explained Hughes.

Jim Hughes fought for justice, going to every court hearing and advocating on his son’s behalf.

“After I put people in prison, I had, I had, no support. And then Mothers of Murdered Youth found me. And I said, that’s where I need to be. And I joined up right then,” shared Hughes.

The group was there for Hughes, helping him to speak about Nathan and honor his memory. In turn, Hughes helped others who joined the group to speak about their loved ones and their memories.

“It’s healing. It really is. None of us wants our child’s memory to fade away, you know? So we talk, we speak his name, their names. And if somebody else does, too, that’s just a joy,” Hughes continued, “Whenever you see a picture, or somebody shares one that you have never seen in your life– because there are no new pictures– that is just beyond, beyond, beyond anything, you know? So yeah, we keep their memories alive for sure.”

He says he’ll continue to be there for others, but attributes rising costs and the closure of the building where they held meetings to the end of the nonprofit. He says they can’t keep asking their members to fund it all, and as he and the founder, Jennifer Romero, begin to run into health challenges, he says it’s all too much.

“Everything just piles on, and you just kind of go, it’s time, you know, the cost of meeting insurance now, you know, just everything costs,” explained Hughes.

They are planning one last get-together next Saturday, even if it’s your first time, they welcome all community members. The group asks that you message them on Facebook here for more information on the gathering.

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Ellicott Highway at Brackett Creek crossing closing Monday for flood damage repair

Scott Harrison

EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KRDO) — On Monday, for the second time in a week, officials have closed a road at a creek crossing to repair damage caused by flooding in June 2023.

The closure became effective just before 8 a.m.

It’s a situation that KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior has been following since repairs began late last year.

The latest closure is on Ellicott Highway across Brackett Creek, just north of the Falcon Highway intersection; it’s on a road that carries more, faster traffic and requires the largest amount of repair work.

Officials said that the road segment will remain closed until July 11.

Creek flooding covered the road and caused significant erosion damage; in addition to widening and stabilizing the channel, crews will install two large culverts under the road to convey creek drainage, install structures to slow the velocity of stormwater, and repave the damaged road segment with concrete.

Last week, the county also closed Garrett Road at the Black Squirrel Creek crossing near JD Johnson Road, to build a low-water crossing there; that closure continues until June 13.

On the same day last week, the JD Johnson creek crossing — just around the corner — reopened after construction of a similar structure.

Several neighbors wonder if the low-water crossings are the best solutions.

“I think it’ll be OK,” said Tiffany Severson. “I mean, it still seems like a temporary fix. Because in heavy rain the dirt road’s not gonna wash out, but the road is still gonna flood. And then they’re still gonna have to close it.”

Meanwhile, Luke and Mallory DeVries said that they can endure the detours as long as they know the damaged roads are being repaired — and they’ve even received some help from construction workers.

“The company that’s doing this build here on Garrett, they were kind enough to move dirt over to our lane — which is a private road — to enable us to smooth out the road and fill some gigantic potholes,” Luke explained. “So, that was kinda nice.”

His wife agrees.

“It has definitely made me re-think how I get around, because I don’t get around very well without GPS,” she said. “Hopefully, there will be no more big storms like that.”

The county is spending $8 million — mostly federal funds — on the repairs.

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Coachella billboard sparks controversy among families affected by Fentanyl Crisis

Shay Lawson

CABAZON, Calif. (KESQ)  – A billboard visible east facing on the I-10 freeway near Railroad Avenue is drawing intense backlash from grieving parents and anti-drug advocates who say it sends a dangerous message — especially during one of the biggest music festivals in the world.

Disco Lines billboard, which says “Accidentally smoked that s***, now I’m playing at Coachella,” is positioned along the route tens of thousands of attendees travel.

Disco Lines is the professional name of Thadeus Labuszewski, an American DJ.

Amber Royer lost her son to fentanyl poisoning and she is sounding the alarm.

She now leads Out of the Ashes, a local nonprofit focused on fentanyl awareness, overdose prevention, harm reduction and youth intervention.

She said the billboard glorifies drug use at a time when the fentanyl epidemic is claiming lives at an alarming rate.

“It makes it sound like drugs lead to success, fun and fame,” Royer said. “And that’s dangerous.”

She said for families who’ve lost loved ones to fentanyl poisoning or overdose, the message isn’t edgy or provocative—it’s painful.

“I’m not trying to censor their billboard. But I want responsibility,” Royer said. “It’s platforms like Coachella and artists like Disco Lines that are using mass advertising, and they have a duty to consider the population and the message that they’re sending, especially during this crisis.”

She said to use the platform for awareness, not shock value.

“Help us educate people about the very real dangers of today’s drug supply,” Royer said. “You can still be cool and you can still be clever without making light of an overdose culture.”

The billboard is owned by Lamar Advertising in Palm Springs, which declined to comment when asked about the concerns.

While protected by free speech laws, Royer said the ad has renewed debate about the social responsibility of public advertising—especially in areas where communities are actively working to save lives.

News Channel 3 reached out to Disco Lines management team for comment, but are still awaiting a response.

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