New Buchanan County EMS facility is safer, more spacious

Jenna Wilson

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Construction is nearly complete on the new Buchanan County EMS facility in Downtown St. Joseph. 

The facility, which broke ground last year at 701 S. Seventh Street, was built to meet the area’s growing demand for emergency medical services. 

“We envisioned having a facility that would accommodate three ambulances, should our volumes increase,” said Wally Patrick, the executive director of Buchanan County EMS. 

Buchanan County EMS has reported a rise in emergency calls within the Downtown area. To meet this growing demand, the new facility will be staffed with three ambulances on-site at all times. 

“Since this is our busiest area, when a truck responds to a call from here, a unit from another post backfills,” Patrick said. “That way, there are always one to two ambulances moving through this area 24 hours a day.”

Local residents say the facility is long overdue, especially amid growing concerns about crime in the area. 

“I’m glad a new facility is coming Downtown,” resident James Studli said. “It seems like there’s always shootings, drive-bys, homeless people dying — just all kinds of things like that. It’s sad for our city.”

In response to safety concerns for both residents and first responders, EMS crews are taking extra precautions as the facility nears completion. 

“In the wake of that very unfortunate incident in Kansas City several weeks ago, the safety of our crews is paramount,” Patrick said. “That’s why the new facility includes rapid-closing doors and gates, storm rooms and even ballistic vests available for staff, if needed.”

Nationally, the average EMS response time is around nine minutes. Buchanan County EMS currently averages about six minutes and hopes the new facility will further reduce that time. 

The Downtown EMS facility is expected to open before July 4. 

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Ring the bell, not the phone: Lawmakers push for focused classrooms

Kirsten Stokes

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A new piece of Missouri legislation, Senate Bill 68, is sparking conversations about the role of technology in classrooms.

The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Mike Henderson, R-Desloge, proses a statewide policy that would restrict the use of personal electronic devices, such as cellphones, during the entire school day.

In an X post made by State Sen. Henderson in February, he thanked the Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe for support on SB 68.

“Removing cellphones from classrooms are important for the wellbeing and education of Missouri’s students.,” State Sen. Henderson said on X. “Students deserve to learn in distraction-free environments and this bill is a big step in the right direction.”

This bell-to-bell ban would encompass class time, lunch breaks and passing periods. Exceptions are outlined for emergencies, health-related needs and instructional purposes when authorized by a teacher.

While the SJSD board of education hasn’t discussed this bill as a whole, Board President Latonya Williams said it will take effort for administrators, teachers and parents to keep children off their phones during class.

“If this is a rule, everyone needs to be involved in the implementation of that rule. Administration will need a lot of the buy-in from parents as well,” Williams said.

The ban does allow individual school districts the flexibility to determine how the rule is to be implemented, choosing methods like phones in lockers, locking devices in magnetic pouches or stricter timeframes for phone access.

For upper grades, Williams said the current rules of cellphone usage in schools includes using phones at the beginning of the day, during lunch and after the final bell. However, she said the implementation is the problem.

“It just kind of depends on the school as much as I’m aware,” Williams said. “I know that the admin are doing as much as they are able to do but implementation on a phone is really difficult.”

In addition to the no cellphone policy in the bill, it’s accompanied by Get the Lead Out of School Drinking Water (Section 160.077), Cardiac Emergency Response Plans (Section 160.482) and Stop the Bleed Act (Section 160. 485), along with others.

With the support of Gov. Kehoe the bill will likely be signed into law.

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New discount shoe store opens on the South Side

Kyle Schmidt

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Residents lined up outside of $10 Shoes N’ Boots for their grand opening at 10 a.m. Tuesday, May 20.

Store owner Laura Munsell said her and her family have been working on this project for two to three months prior to opening.

“(We) really want to offer affordable footwear for our local community,” Munsell said. “We know things are expensive so (we’re) looking to give everyone a great deal.”

Munsell’s niece Jennifer Moore said she spent over $200 buying shoes for her five kids at a different store.”I could have gotten twice as many shoes for my kids for half the price if I had come here,” Moore said.

The store offers a variety of shoe and boot brands for kids or adults to choose from, with about 4,000 pairs of shoes on display in the store front and more in the back.

One South Side resident was surprised everything was $10 and shared what it means to have a new business in town.

“It means a lot,” Peggy Steele said. “I just moved to the South Side less than a year ago and I’d like to see more business here.”

The family-operated shop is run 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday at 6948 King Hill Ave.

“We are so excited to be here in the community,” Munsell said. “We are really hoping everybody will come out and give us a chance and find some great footwear.”

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Onvida Health announces collaboration with AI platform Ambience Healthcare

Manoah Tuiasosopo

YUMA, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – The use of artificial intelligence (AI) is making its way into health care.

Onvida Health announced a collaboration with Ambience Healthcare, the leading AI platform for clinical documentation.

The company offers a system that listens and creates thorough and compliant documentation in real time.

This means it could free up physicians to spend more time caring for patients and less time on paperwork.

Onvida Health says this new collaboration will improve documentation integrity as well as the workload for physicians.

Dr. Marc Chasin, the Senior VP & Chief Information Officer at Onvida Health, says, “It decreases the burnout potential for providers by allowing them to really get back to why they went into medicine, which is to treat patients, allowing the doctor to really focus on the care and and the science and delivering appropriate medicine as opposed to the cognitive burden they feel by documenting and typing on their computer.”

The pilot program will begin this June among 100 providers.

They will test out the system, make improvements, and roll out the system to all medical groups later this summer.

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One dead in multi-vehicle crash on Missouri Route 6

Crystal Olney

ST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — A 49-year-old woman is dead following a four-vehicle crash Monday on Missouri Route 6, near Bessie Ellison Elementary.

The multi-vehicle crash around occurred around 3:30 p.m. as a 49-year-old Clarksdale, Missouri, woman was traveling east on State Route 6 in a 2017 Lincoln MKZ and crossed the center line, according to a Missouri State Highway Patrol crash report.

Her vehicle struck the rear driver’s side of a 2021 Nissan Rouge occupied by a 63-year-old St. Joseph woman and a 9-year-old girl, of St. Joseph. The Nissan went off the roadway and hit a concrete barrier. The 63-year-old and 9-year-old sustained minor injuries.

The driver of the Lincoln then went off the roadway, struck a concrete barrier, returned to the highway, crossed the center line and clipped the rear driver’s side of a 2016 Ford F150. The Ford was driven by a 44-year-old St. Joseph man who was not injured.

After hitting the Ford, the 49-year-old driver struck the front of a 2021 Chevrolet Tahoe driven by a 37-year-old St. Joseph woman, who had minor injuries. A 9-year-old boy, who sustained moderate injuries, and 12-year-old girl, who had minor injuries, were passengers in the Tahoe.

The 49-year-old Clarksdale woman was pronounced dead at Mosaic Life Care in St. Joseph, according to the crash report.

All occupants and drivers in the crash were wearing seat belts, except the 37-year-old St. Joseph woman.

The Missouri Department of Transportation and law enforcement closed down State Route 6 from Route W to Hurlingen Road for several hours Monday night.

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Columbia man pleads guilty to deadly 2023 shooting

Gabrielle Teiner

COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Columbia man pleaded guilty to murder in the courtroom an hour before jury selection was set to start on Tuesday.

John Williamson III, 28, was sentenced to 27 years after pleading guilty to second-degree murder for the shooting of a woman on Typhoon Court in December 2023.

He pleaded to amended charges of second-degree murder after initially being charged with first-degree murder, armed criminal action and unlawful use of a weapon.

Williamson was in accompanied in the court room by his attorney, Carissa Tarnowski. Shortly after he entered his plea of guilty, Tarnowski addressed the court room and stated Williamson would reflect on the shooting for the next 27 years, but believed the shooting was an accident.

This caused confusion in the courtroom, and ultimately led to Judge Stephanie Morrell clarifying with Williamson that he was, in fact, pleading guilty to second-degree murder, meaning he intended to harm her.

Court documents state he shot Azairah Brownlee, 27, of Columbia on Dec. 8, 2023, in the neck. She later died at the hospital.

According to the statement, a witness told police that Williamson was Brownlee’s ex-boyfriend. Police reported Williamson jumped into the bed of the truck that Brownlee and the witness were sitting in and began yelling.

The witness told police Brownlee was tired of Williamson banging on the truck and got out. The two started fighting, resulting in them falling to the ground. Police said the witness reported hearing gunshots and said Williamson admitted to shooting Brownlee.

“Azairah…she was sweet you know, she cared about family. She cared about friends. She cared about who she cared about,” Brownlee’s cousin Kenya Kellin told ABC 17 News after Tuesday’s hearing. “And to see her gone for a tragedy like this, it’s heartbreaking because I didn’t expect for my family to go through a tragedy like this.”

Johnson said he found the agreed upon sentence for Williamson to be a punishment that reflects accountability. However, he said justice in murder cases is never truly reached.

“No matter what we do, we’re always coming into a case after something bad has happened and trying to figure out what to do about that,” Johnson said.

Johnson said he believes the case highlights the seriousness of domestic violence, noting that the case was a part of a string of ongoing domestic violence. According to Johnson, a case between Williamson and Brownlee was being prosecuted where he allegedly beat her with a handgun, but Brownlee was not able to assist in it.

Johnson said his office has dealt with many cases where a woman–through her own choices or intimidation– decides not to make herself available to prosecute the domestic violence.

“Ultimately, it escalates to the point where the person ends up killing the woman,” Johnson said. “So, I would really encourage people who know about, or people who are being the victims of domestic violence to come and talk to us about those cases because we want to make sure that people have agency in prosecuting the cases.”

True North of Columbia is one of several places in Mid-Missouri that offers resources and services to victims of domestic violence. Resources include:

24/7 Crisis Hotline: A confidential, around-the-clock phone line where trained advocates provide immediate crisis support, safety planning, and resource referrals;

Emergency Shelter: Safe, confidential housing for survivors and their children who are fleeing abusive situations;

Court Advocacy: Assistance navigating protective orders, court accompaniment, and referrals to legal services like Mid-Missouri Legal Services and the Child and Family Justice Clinic;

Counseling Services: Trauma-informed counseling and support groups for survivors;

Case Management: Help with safety planning, goal setting, referrals for housing, employment, childcare, and medical services;

Children’s Programming: Helps children who have witnessed violence heal and supports their parents through the transition;

Hospital Advocacy: Staff and volunteers provide 24/7 advocacy at the hospital;

Community Education and Prevention: Trainings and awareness campaigns to educate the community about intimate partner violence, sexual violence, sex trafficking, and stalking. Promote healthy relationships through partnership with the Columbia Police Department to youth and young adults in Boone County.

“Intimate partner violence is often very hidden and under reported because of the stigma surrounding it,” Executive Director Michele Snodderley told ABC 17 News via email “It is a public health, human rights, and community safety issue that affects people of every age, race, gender, and socioeconomic status.”

ABC 17 News asked Tarnowski for comment. She declined to provide further comment than what was said in the courtroom.

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EPISD votes to keep Lamar Elementary open

Nicole Ardila

Update (9:15 p.m.) — In a 5 to 2 vote, EPISD school board has voted to keep Lamar Elementary open this upcoming school year.

Board president Leah Hanany, Vice President Dr. Jack Loveridge, District 3 Trustee Alex Cuellar, District 4 Trustee Mindy Sutton, and District 5 Trustee Robert Osterland voted in favor of Lamar.

District 6 Trustee Valerie Beals and District 7 Trustee Daniel Call voted against the motion.

“The bottom line is an A-rated school, two time National Blue Ribbon School, a school that scored in the top 1% for student belonging, should have never been, considered for closure in the first place,” said Hanany.

ABC-7 spoke to a parent of Lamar students who said that she’s excited. They live close to Lamar and don’t want to move schools.

“This is going to take a lot of strain off of them financially, and emotionally knowing they can keep their kids there,” said Erika Morales.

Daniel Call was the most vocal trustee at the meeting. “Financially, we’re on the Titanic and it’s sinking,” he said.

Call said that the district has a projected $31 million deficit for next year and bringing Lamar back would add $3 million more.

“This is like having a $31 million bonfire and throwing another $3.2 million on top of that. It’s insane.”

Hanany emphasized transparency for the community, and that having this conversation is important for the future. She said schools like Lamar are the ones they should be keeping open.

“If we are not looking at academic excellence first and foremost, and we are doing a great disservice to the students in this district. It is my intention and our intention as a board. I think going forward that academic excellence will be the absolute priority for this district.”

EL PASO, Texas (KVIA) — The El Paso Independent School District School Board will be meeting on Tuesday, expected to vote on a possible reverse of a plan to close one elementary school.

Lamar Elementary Schools is one of 8 elementary schools they voted to close.

This plan was proposed by Superintendent Diana Sayavedra and her administration, which approved it back in November on a 4-3 vote.

Only two of the trustees who voted to close the school remain on the board.

The newest board president, Leah Hanany, told El Paso Matters that Lamar Elementary is an A-rated school that serves a big population of socio-economically disadvantaged students.

ABC-7 requested a comment from EPISD and they responded with a statement saying in part:

“… This decision reflects a collaborative effort to balance the district’s commitment to delivering high-quality education for all students with the need to ensure long-term stability and sustainability…”

The board will be meeting at 5 p.m.

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Project on Woodmen Road in Colorado Springs to improve traffic onto Interstate 25, prepare for repaving

Scott Harrison

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (KRDO) — Drivers may have noticed recent construction on a two-block segment of Woodmen Road between I-25, east to Campus Drive; it’s a project that started last week, continues through the end of next month, and has two objectives.

The first goal is reducing traffic in the two westbound turn lanes on Woodmen, onto the I-25 entrance ramp; congestion during peak periods often causes backups that blocks traffic in the left through lane on Woodmen.

Crews will resolve that issue by extending those turn lanes east to the Campus intersection; demolishing rebuilding and shifting the concrete center median; and closing one of two left turn lanes on eastbound Woodmen to northbound Campus.

Traffic studies have shown that only a single left turn lane is needed there.

During the project, the left turn lane on northbound Campus to westbound Woodmen is closed, although traffic continues to turn left from the single northbound through lane; it’s unclear whether traffic should be doing that.

Workers also will install new street signs and apply new lane markings; one lane of Woodmen in each direction in that area will be closed during construction but two through lanes each way will remain open; officials said that the project won’t affect access to the freeway in either direction.

The second reason for the project is to prepare that part of Woodmen for repaving this summer, under the 2C expanded repaving program; the city will resurface approximately two miles of the west end of Woodmen from just east of the Academy Boulevard interchange, to Woodmen Court.

As KRDO 13’s The Road Warrior reported last September, the pavement there has significantly deteriorated in the past few years because a previous repaving that added rubber from old tires into the asphalt, proved to be less durable than expected.

The technique has been widely used in California and Texas with the belief that the asphalt/rubber mixture would also provide smoother driving; however, it’s possible that the mixture couldn’t endure the high altitude, freeze-thaw cycles and abrupt temperature changes locally.

Many drivers have complained about the rough condition of Woodmen in that area, calling it one of the bumpiest streets in the city.

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Chukars win exhibition game against the Bandits

Maggie Moore

IDAHO FALLS, Idaho (KIFI) – The Idaho Falls Chukars came out on top against the Idaho Falls Bandits 13-4 in their first exhibition game of the season Monday.

The Bandits started off strong, leading the game 4-2 halfway through the game. But the Chukars picked up speed and scored most of their runs in the last three innings.

The Chukars head to Boise Tuesday for a six-game road series against the Hawks. Their official home-opener will be Tuesday May 27 against the Billings Mustangs.

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Bremner picks up second straight Big West Pitcher of the Week honor

Mike Klan

UC SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – UC Santa Barbara Baseball’s Tyler Bremner was named The Big West Pitcher of the Week for a second week in a row on Monday after the Gauchos’ ace turned in another career performance to earn his squad a spot in The Big West Championship. Bremner matched his career high with 13 K’s over seven shutout innings against Cal State Bakersfield on Friday, powering Santa Barbara to the 10-1 win that confirmed their place in the conference tournament.

Friday’s game was the sixth time in the last seven weeks that Bremner recorded double-digit strikeouts, as the San Diegan has run away with The Big West’s strikeout crown, claiming the conference punchout title for a second year in a row. After striking out 104 batters in 2024, Bremner has punched out 111 this season — 27 more than the next-closest Big West pitcher (which happens to be his teammate, Jackson Flora). He ranks eighth nationally and leads all pitchers west of Oklahoma in the category.

Friday’s action was all strikeouts early, as Bremner struck out the side in the first and third innings, with two more in the second. Through the first nine batters, the only non-K out that Bremner recorded was picking a runner off of first base as he faced the minimum through three. In both the fourth and fifth innings, Bremner fired back-to-back punchouts to escape second-and-third, one-out jams and preserve his scoreless outing. It also made for five consecutive innings with at least two strikeouts to start his day.

Thanks to Bremner’s work, the Gauchos qualified for The Big West Championship — the first since 1998 — which they will open on Wednesday, May 21 in a win-or-go-home game against Hawai’i at 12 noon from Goodwin Field in Fullerton. Defeat the Rainbow Warriors, and Santa Barbara will enter the tournament’s double-elimination bracket against UC Irvine. Bremner, already UC Santa Barbara Baseball’s career strikeouts leader, has the chance to become the first Gaucho to ever strike out 300 batters in his career, just five away from that mark. If he can rack up 18 more strikeouts, he will break Rodney Boone’s single-season program record.

(Article courtesy of UCSB Athletics).

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