JEFFERSON CITY – The Missouri Home Small Enterprise Committee voted Monday to move Home invoice 730, a invoice that may block any bans on evictions by native governments. The invoice obtained seven “ayes” and one “current” from the committee.
The invoice is in response to the federal eviction moratorium that was current in the course of the pandemic, starting in March 2020.
Throughout that point, landlords, buyers and property house owners couldn’t evict individuals on account of non-payment of hire.
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“I feel the hope is simply to attempt to present some safety for buyers, huge and small, that weren’t afforded to them in the course of the COVID disaster,” Rep. Chris Brown (R-Kansas Metropolis) the sponsor of HB 730, advised KOMU 8 Information on Jan. 30, when the invoice was introduced to the committee.
Empower Missouri, a housing rights advocacy group, submitted testimony in opposition to HB 730. They’re hopeful that the legislature as a complete will take into account making some tweaks to the invoice.
The group acknowledged the monetary pressure the federal eviction moratorium had on property house owners, however its focus has at all times been tenants.
Brown advised the committee that the textual content of HB 730 permits the governor to institute an eviction moratorium within the case of an emergency.
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Mallory Rusch, the manager director of Empower Missouri, mentioned she hopes that if a sure space within the state is below an emergency order, the native leaders can determine whether or not or not an eviction moratorium is the suitable plan of action for his or her residents.
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Rusch says the federal eviction moratorium in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic helped 1000’s of Missouri households.
“We might have been going through a reasonably extreme homelessness disaster as a state if that eviction moratorium wouldn’t have been in place,” Rusch mentioned.
For the reason that invoice has been handed within the Small Enterprise Committee, the following step for the invoice is to go to the Guidelines Committee. If the invoice is handed in that committee, it is going to be added to the calendar to be heard on the Home flooring.
Empower Missouri is hopeful that their beneficial tweaks may be added within the hearings to return.
“I feel that we’re very hopeful that we are able to work with the sponsor, each on the Home aspect [and] comparable laws has been filed on the Senate aspect,” Rusch mentioned. “We’ll be approaching the sponsors of the Senate laws as properly, since in the end these two payments must come collectively.”
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The group plans to request that compromising language may be put in place in an effort to shield renters alongside landlords within the case of a future main emergency within the state.
BISMARCK — Like many Bismarck-Mandan natives, Chris Tello grew up in a community where the mighty Missouri River was the go-to place for summer sun and fun.
He fondly recalls boating the wide, blue river and family outings to ride the Lewis and Clark Riverboat or visit Captain Meriwether’s Landing, a former train depot-turned-restaurant by the Grant Marsh Bridge.
Now Tello is grown, has a family of his own and still enjoys the river. But he also depends on it for his livelihood.
Three summers ago, Tello opened the Huckleberry House restaurant at Bismarck’s 1700 River Road — the same spot where Captain Meriwether’s stood before it was ravaged by flood waters in 2011 and had to be demolished.
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Inspired by the post-and-beam warehouses that lined the riverfront in the 19th century, the restaurant seats 84 inside and 100 on the deck. It is an airy, window-filled space with glass garage doors offering a spectacular river view.
The cuisine, described as “Nordic-inspired modern comfort food,” seems cozy and familiar for locals with Scandinavian or German-Russian roots. Fleischkuechle. Kuchen. Swedish meatballs. Knoephla soup.
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But these comforting standards have been upgraded in creative and surprising ways. The Huckleberry’s chef, Cody Monson, may be from Williston, N.D., but his Le Cordon Bleu training shows in the mild curry he infuses into the knoephla or the humble local chokecherry he transforms into a sweet-and-sour gastrique sauce.
The end result, Tello said, is food that is familiar, but carries a whimsical twist. “People are used to tater tot hotdish, but then we do that in a different way,” he said. “We elevate it a little bit, but it’s still approachable.”
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Getting their Hucks in a row
Tello didn’t start out in food, but in finance.
The St. Mary’s Central High School grad earned a bachelor’s in finance and entrepreneurial management from the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management in 2006. Different positions with IBM took him from Rochester, Minn., to New York. He also lived briefly in Detroit and Kansas City.
While exploring these different communities helped shape Tello’s appreciation for diverse cuisines, he couldn’t envision running the “rat race” of corporate America for the rest of his career.
He returned to his hometown for an extended visit and to consider his next career move. Bolstered by the western North Dakota oil boom, Bismarck had welcomed interesting new eateries like Laughing Son Brewery and Fire Flour Pizza.
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If locals were receptive to these fresh, new dining concepts, he thought, maybe he could start something innovative there, too.
It also helped that he met Julia Kubesh, his future wife and owner of Hi Honey Salon, there. The couple and a third partner opened Terra Nomad, a combination coffee shop, clothing store and multipurpose event space in downtown Bismarck, in 2015.
In 2018, they were approached by Aaron Barth, executive director of the Missouri Valley Heritage Alliance (formerly the Fort Abraham Lincoln Foundation ). The alliance, which runs the Lewis and Clark Riverboat and cultivates historical tourism throughout the area, had leased land from the city with plans to rebuild a restaurant/visitors’ center/organization office/ticketing office at the site of the old Captain Merriwether’s.
It was part of a larger plan to enhance riverfront development with a manicured beach, a hotel and other attractions in the area.
“The Foundation would like to be able to turn this into a whole neighborhood,” Tello said. “I said, ‘Whatever it is, I want to be a part of it.’”
Tello then met Monson, who ran the Up North food truck. Tello had the vision and business background, while Monson had paid his dues in Twin Cities’ restaurants and had the necessary food and kitchen knowledge.
The alliance’s $3.5-million, 3,500-square-foot building, named The Heritage River Landing, was completed in 2022 following COVID delays. Its restaurant opened as the Huckleberry House, named after Samuel Clemens’/Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn and his river-rafting, steamboat-hopping ways. (Clemens himself was a former boatmate of legendary riverboat captain Grant Marsh, who piloted the upper Missouri River and for whom the bridge over the Landing is named.)
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Curried knoephla and lefse cake
The restaurant is open, airy and Nordic in design, with shiplap walls, soaring, exposed-rafter ceilings and sleek Scandinavian furnishings. Conversation areas and plants are gathered in convivial groupings, including a spot with a streamlined wood-burning stove.
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“We leaned into the Scandinavian, kind of minimalistic vibe,” said Tello. “In the summer, nine times out of 10, people are sitting outside. But when it gets to be winter, it’s very much like a chalet … it’s just as beautiful in the winter.”
Although the Huckleberry’s fare is described as “Nordic-inspired modern comfort food,” the current menu seems to contain as many German-Russian specialties as Scandinavian ones.
That means items like fleischkuechle minus the fleisch, or meat. Instead of a ground-beef filling inside a thick, deep-fried (and often greasy) bread pocket, it is light, crispy and filled with potatoes, onions, farmer’s cheese and dill. A thin drizzle of birch sap syrup adds a sweet note.
The pumpkin knoephla soup features the familiar creamy base and tiny dumplings, but also gets an unexpected South Asian twist from mild vadouvan curry (a mix of cumin, fenugreek, mustard seeds, cardamom, coriander, turmeric, cloves, nutmeg chile flakes, shallots and garlic).
German-Russian cheese buttons get gentrified with “almost burnt cream,” roasted cauliflower, smoked bison sausage, toasted rye crumb, crispy onions and thyme.
A few of the dishes are more German-German than German-Russian, like the schnitzel or the “fine schwein,” a smoked, bone-in pork loin served with sweet potato and ham hash, lingonberry-black garlic barbecue sauce and charred scallion.
The menu features some Nordic nods as well. The Huckleberry House’s take on smørbrød — the traditional, open-faced Scandinavian sandwich — consists of seared rare beef, whipped Danish blue cheese, mead-roasted onions, micro-arugala and grilled rye bread.
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Here, lefse is served as Ole and Lena never envisioned it: stacked high — like French crepe cakes — but layered with Dakota-made Sunbutter, a thick, indulgent cream and either fruit or a salted caramel drizzle.
Prices range from $9 for a bowl of Indian-infused knoephla soup to $33 for a dill and pepper-crusted ribeye served with chokecherry gastrique and the “loaded Hasselback potato.”
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Overall, customers have been receptive to the Huckleberry’s less-conventional spin on conventional standards. “People have loved it and it’s been different for the community, but like with anything, you can’t cater to everyone. We have to play a strategic role in that we want to push the boundaries but we don’t want to push it too much,” he said.
One challenge for the restaurant has been last summer’s road construction on both I-94 and River Road, which is the main access road to The Landing. The eatery especially depends on heavy summer business to make up for the leaner winter months, he added.
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However, business has been bolstered by The Landing’s appeal as an event spot. The building’s loft area seats 30 and is ideal for smaller gatherings. But the entire facility has also been rented out for everything from corporate parties to weddings with custom-built menus of Indian dishes.
Through it all, Tello said it’s the positive responses from customers that makes the long hours and hard work worthwhile. “When someone eats something and you kind of see their eyes and see they’re pleasantly surprised, I think we have that pretty frequently,” he said.
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Missouri lawmakers are criticizing Capitol Police for not being transparent enough during emergency situations.
A bipartisan panel of lawmakers told the chief of the Missouri Capitol Police Thursday they are concerned about their safety inside the statehouse. This comes after threats were made, but the General Assembly said it was not informed.
Now, members are calling for changes to the way the building is secured.
“These concerns stem from numerous occasions of threats, including bomb threats being made against the state Capitol building, without leadership in either body being notified,” Senate President Cindy O’Laughlin said during the committee hearing.
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In one of their first hearings of the year, leaders of both chambers said they are troubled about the gap in information. Lawmakers said they want an immediate update on threats.
When asked if she feels safe in the Capitol, O’Laughlin said yes.
“We just want to let people know the things that do concern us, and we want to think that we’re well versed in what is expected for us and people who visit the Capitol,” she said.
Sen. Rick Brattin, R-Harrisonville, chairs the Joint Committee on Capitol Security.
“Some people in the General Assembly and the staff have raised concerns and issues with that that have potentially hampered the capabilities of members and staff that would like to be efficiently and effectively able to perform and be a part of the solution and of the security apparatus of this building,” Brattin said.
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In a letter signed by O’Laughlin and House Speaker Jon Patterson, R-Lee’s Summit, to Chief Zim Schwartze, they questioned why there’s only one entrance for visitors after the state paid for more than one metal detector.
“Members of the General Assembly and staff alike have been stopped from entering the building through certain entrances, while some members of the public are not even screened before entering the building,” O’Laughlin said.
The meeting comes on the heels of Monday’s governor inauguration. Schwartze said a security plan has been in the works for months.
“It is a very comprehensive plan, and we’ve been meeting regularly, as well as a lot of phone calls and a lot of emails, and a lot of information has been shared,” Schwartze said.
Under current rules, people who have a concealed carry permit are allowed to enter the Capitol with a firearm but cannot be in any legislative meeting rooms or in the House or Senate chambers.
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The committee plans to meet again in the coming weeks.
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) – While ice-melting salt is a standard solution for managing icy surfaces during winter, it can pose significant risks to plants and the environment if not used responsibly.
The Missouri Department of Conservation experts emphasize balancing personal safety with environmental care.
“It can have impacts on your plants, and since we all like our trees and plants, you don’t want to do anything to hurt them,” said Francis Skalicky, “at the same time, you don’t want to do anything that’ll make you slip and fall on the ice.”
The damage caused by ice-melting salt often goes unnoticed until the next growing season. Symptoms of contamination may include discoloration, reduced foliage, or stunted growth. To minimize such effects, experts advise using salt sparingly.
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“A little bit of ice melt or rock salt goes a long way,” Skalicky added, “if you put a lot of it down, you’re causing environmental damage and also hurting your budget. The more you use, the less you’ll have for the next ice episode.”
For those seeking environmentally friendly options, some stores offer eco-friendly ice-melting salt.
Additionally, sand or kitty litter can provide traction on icy surfaces without harming nearby plants. These options, however, do not melt ice but can still enhance safety.
Selecting the correct type of ice-melting product for specific surfaces is also crucial.
Superintendent Jeff Dodson of North Wood Public Schools in Dent County says it’s not pretty.
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“We used a particular ice melt that was supposed to be OK for concrete,” Dodson said, “it didn’t create issues across the entire pad, but where water pooled, the thin top layer of concrete popped off. Aesthetically, it’s not as nice as it was when the project was completed.”
If you notice signs of salt damage in your plants, applying gypsum to the soil may help mitigate the effects. For more information on gypsum applications and other solutions, click here.
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