Missouri
Clean-up starts after homes, cars damaged from Mid-Missouri hailstorm – ABC17NEWS
COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)
Whereas Friday’s storm solely lasted a couple of minutes, the hail and rain left their mark. Harm and dings to houses, vehicles, and even yard grills could possibly be seen throughout Mid-Missouri Saturday.
“I’ve most likely been on most likely 40 roofs at present since eight o’clock this morning,” Mark, the gross sales supervisor with Premier Property Providers out of Jefferson Metropolis mentioned. “We’re seeing something from ping pong measurement hail to something that is a baseball measurement hail. Lots of wind-driven hail that did injury to siding.”
The corporate is one in all many restoration and development companies responding to property injury within the Columbia space. Many spent Saturday afternoon responding to calls and giving declare estimates for insurance coverage.
“I do not care in case you put it on the day earlier than this storm,” Joe McDevitt the proprietor of Black and White Roofing out of Lake Ozarks mentioned. “It is going to be broken. There’s not a shingle on the market that will take this hail.”
Each firms gave warning. Storms like this will put Columbia on a map, and make it extra of a goal for some firms attempting to make a fast buck.
“We have seen a number of contractors throughout the surrounding cities,” Wes Grant with Black and White Roofing mentioned. “And that is most likely going to be obligatory, there’s not sufficient contractors in Columbia to get the entire restoration executed. However if you see contractors from out of state, it’s good to be cautious.”
Positively do your analysis in your firm,” McDevitt added.
Missouri
Missouri's GOP lawmakers vote to kick Planned Parenthood off Medicaid
Lawmakers in Missouri are trying to defund Planned Parenthood by taking it off Medicaid rolls, even for the most basic of health care services. It’s a move they ve tried for years in a state where almost all abortions are already banned.
Jeff Roberson ~ Associated Press, file
JEFFERSON CITY Missouris Republican-led Legislature on Wednesday passed a bill to ban Medicaid funding from going to Planned Parenthood, a move they have tried for years in a state where almost all abortions are banned.
The bill, approved 106-48 Wednesday in the House, aims to make it illegal for Missouris Medicaid program to reimburse Planned Parenthood for health care services to low-income patients, such as pap smears and cancer screenings.
Abortions are not covered by Medicaid, and almost all abortions are illegal in Missouri. But abortion opponents say Planned Parenthood should not receive any public funding because clinics in other states provide abortions.
My rhetorical question is: Is Planned Parenthood sending monies from our state budget to other states to allow for women to have an abortion? Republican Rep. Brian Seitz asked during Wednesday debate on the House floor. “Abortion is murder.
House Democratic Minority Leader Crystal Quade in a statement described the bill as “an act of petty vengeance by Republicans against one of largest providers of womens health care in Missouri.
Planned Parenthood cautioned that other reproductive health care providers that serve Medicaid patients in Missouri do not have the capacity to take on all of Planned Parenthoods patients.
Experts are clear: there are not enough other providers in the health care safety-net system to absorb Planned Parenthoods patients, the regions Planned Parenthood said in a statement Wednesday. At Planned Parenthood, well continue to do everything we can to continue serving our patients no matter what.
Few states Arkansas, Mississippi and Texas, according to Planned Parenthood have successfully blocked Medicaid funding for the organization.
A February state Supreme Court ruling found that Missouri lawmakers latest attempt at defunding Planned Parenthood was unconstitutional.
While past efforts to kick Planned Parenthood off Missouris Medicaid program have been struck down by courts, this year, GOP lawmakers are taking another approach and passing the ban as a policy bill in hopes of avoiding another legal showdown.
Some House Democrats predicted the latest defunding bill likely will be fruitless, too. They pointed to a pending constitutional amendment that could go before Missouri voters this fall and would restore abortion rights in the state.
The abortion-rights campaign needs to collect at least 172,000 voter signatures by May 5 to get on the ballot.
A spokesperson for Gov. Mike Parson on Wednesday did not immediately respond to an Associated Press request for comment on whether the Republican intends to sign the latest Planned Parenthood defunding bill. But his support is expected.
Missouri
New Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch has contract approved. Here are the details
That’s that.
The UM System Board of Curators officially approved the contract of new Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch during a special meeting on Wednesday afternoon, a university spokesperson confirmed to the Columbia Daily Tribune.
The curators quickly went into an executive session in their 3 p.m. meeting, with four statutes cited to take the meeting behind closed doors. One of them — 610.021(3) RSMo — concerns “hiring, firing, disciplining or promoting of particular employees by a public governmental body.”
Guess who?
Veatch is now officially Missouri’s athletic director.
Here are the details of his five-year contract, provided in a memorandum of understanding signed Tuesday, April 23, and sent to the Columbia Daily Tribune by a university spokesperson.
What is Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch’s salary?
Laird Veatch will earn $1.3 million dollars in annual guaranteed compensation at Missouri. His deal is due to end April 30, 2029.
His deal is broken down into three parts: Base salary ($900,000 per year); Non-Salary compensation ($200,000); and deferred compensation ($200,000).
Both his base salary and non-salary compensation will be paid in equal monthly installments. His deferred compensation will be paid annually.
Veatch’s deal also includes several merit incentives.
The new Missouri athletic director can earn $50,000 if Missouri wins an SEC football title, and can add another $50,000 if Eli Drinkwitz’s team claims a national championship.
For men’s basketball, Veatch is awarded $10,000 if Dennis Gates’ Missouri team wins an SEC title; a further $15,000 if the Tigers make the Final Four; and an additional $25,000 if they take home a national title.
If Missouri student-athletes graduate at a 90% combined success rate across all sports, Veatch makes $25,000. If Veatch reaches “philanthropy, ticket sales and other revenue generation targets set annually” by UM System President Mun Choi, Veatch earns $75,000. Those targets are currently unknown.
Before leaving for the open AD role at Arizona, former Missouri athletic director Desireé Reed Francois signed a contract extension with Missouri in April 2023 that saw her total compensation jump to $1.25 million annually. Her Missouri annual contract was broken down as $900,000 in base salary; $350,000 in non-salary compensation; and $250,000 in deferred compensation. She was only eligible to receive the deferred compensation at the end of her deal.
Veatch is Missouri’s fourth athletic director in the past nine years. The university also put in a clause that makes sure it isn’t searching for No. 5 any time soon.
The contract states that “the AD recognizes that their promise to work for the University for the entire term is important to the University, and that the nature of their position is unique.”
On that note, the contract also stipulates that should Veatch choose to terminate his deal without cause, he will pay the university 50% of his cumulative base salary plus whatever he would have been paid in non-salary compensation.
That means, if he leaves for another job with, for example, one year remaining on his deal, he would owe $450,000 (half of his base salary) plus $200,000 in non-salary compensation for a total of $650,000 in liquidated damages. The cost of leaving Missouri begins at about $3.25 million and falls each year for Missouri’s new AD.
On the flip side, and very similarly, if Missouri terminates Veatch’s contract without cause, the university owes Veatch half of his annual base salary plus the full amount he would have received in non-salary compensation. Veatch also would be paid whatever he had accrued in deferred compensation. That means his buyout begins at approximately $1.65 million, which will fall with each passing year.
What’s next for Veatch?
Veatch, who MU hired away after a near-five-year stint at Memphis, could be introduced to the public as soon as Friday. His official start date is May 1.
More: 3 questions facing new Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch on Day 1
The new head of the Missouri athletic department returns for a second stint in Columbia, after serving in various roles for MU in the late 1990s and early 2000s. At Missouri, Veatch held titles such as assistant AD for development; director of athletics development for major giving; and director of annual giving and development coordinator. He also worked for Learfield Sports, managing Mizzou Sports Properties between 2003-06.
Veatch is a former Kansas State linebacker and team captain under Hall of Fame head coach Bill Snyder. The new Missouri AD has worked in athletic departments at Memphis, Florida, Iowa State, Texas and his alma mater K-State.
The university formed an 11-person search committee and hired the search firm TurnKey ZRG to find its next AD.
Veatch will undertake a $250 million redevelopment to the Memorial Stadium north concourse, with the athletic department poised to foot half of that bill and a considerable chunk of those funds still needing to be raised.
The Missouri football team itself, however, appears to be in its most stable position in a decade. The Tigers went 11-2 last season, a year that culminated in a Cotton Bowl victory over Ohio State, before extending Drinkwitz through the 2028 season.
In Mizzou Arena, Gates and the men’s basketball team are coming off a historically poor season with a historically successful recruiting performance. The Tigers have one of the nation’s top transfer classes and will bring the country’s No. 4 high school class to Columbia this summer. Veatch likely will face questions about MU women’s basketball coach Robin Pingeton, who has entered the final year of her contract.
More: 5 things to know about new Missouri athletic director Laird Veatch
Missouri
Jerry Nelson: Missouri Meanderings
Missouri is the Show Me State, so when my wife and I recently visited Kansas City we decided to see what Missouri had to show us.
We pointed our car at Springfield, the third most populous city in Missouri. Upon arriving at our hotel, we were told that our room wouldn’t be ready for several hours. All I can say about this is that my wife is the type of person who believes that if you aren’t early, you’re late.
We asked the clerk if there was anything that one could do in Springfield for a few hours, and she immediately recommended a visit to the Bass Pro Shops.
This sounded as good as anything, so we decided to give it a whirl. The Bass Pro Shops Outdoor World Ultimate Fishing Boat Outlet And Super-duper Hunting Gear Emporium occupies about 80 acres. Some of that is parking lot, but a good share of it is a ginormous building.
Walking into the store, my nose was instantly drawn to a particular aroma. They had a coffee shop! It had been at least ten minutes since my last jolt of java, so my wife and I purchased some hot liquid refreshments, sat on a bench and people watched.
We spotted several Exhausted Toddler Parent roadrunners and some prime examples of Fanatic Angler kingfishers. There was also a good number of Please Honey, I Really Need This Boat warblers.
The establishment proved to be as much of a museum as a retail outlet. I viewed numerous epically large game animals that had been stuffed and mounted and placed in epic poses. This included the mythical 30-point buck that was romanticized in the classic hunting tune “Da Turdy Point Buck” by the talented ensemble Bananas At Large.
We walked past a concrete enclosure that contained a small pond and what was, allegedly, a live alligator. I say “allegedly” because the creature didn’t move at all during the several minutes that we observed it. Perhaps dealing with all those allegations had worn out the alligator.
An escalator lofted visitors up to the entrance of an aquarium that boasted penguins as its main attraction. Admission was $42 per head which, with taxes and penguin perusing surcharges, would put a big hole in a Benjamin Franklin. We decided that penguins are cute, but not $100 worth of cute.
The next day we motored southeastward toward Poplar Bluff. The Ozarks rolled past our windows, wooded hills punctuated by small towns and an occasional farmstead. The landscape would sometimes open up to reveal an idyllic emerald valley where cows grazed peacefully in their leisurely, cow-like manner. It looked like heaven on toast.
I’m a farm boy from the prairie, so I couldn’t help but wonder why the flatlands weren’t being farmed. The answer could be seen in the roadcuts, which revealed limestone bedrock covered with a thin veneer of grayish topsoil. A guy would bust his plow if he tried to plow it.
Speaking of mythical creatures, we saw several bumper stickers that featured a bigfoot silhouette. I wasn’t sure what the message might be. Was the car’s owner proud of his family’s sasquatch? Or was he an Uber driver who was open to giving rides to bigfoots?
There is certainly plenty of forest where bigfoot could hide. I personally don’t believe in sasquatches, but then again, I have never been subjected to the eerie hoots and yawps that allegedly arise from midnight Missouri woodlands.
I notched a personal “first” during our drive when I espied a deceased armadillo at the roadside. Sadly, my wife wouldn’t let me stop and claim this trophy.
After viewing the solar eclipse at Poplar Bluff – one of the most memorable parts was seeing hundreds of miniature crescent suns projected onto the ground beneath the trees – we decided to head back to Kansas City. We didn’t realize until too late that approximately a million other motorists had the same idea.
We live in a low-population area. Our version of a traffic jam is when there are two cars ahead of us at a stop sign.
After weaving our way out of town, we hit the open road. Things went swimmingly for a few miles, but then traffic ground to a halt. Probably just some minor snag up ahead. Wrong!
The view out our windshield revealed a river of vehicles that stretched as far as the eye could see. This was a “first” that I would rather have missed.
As we crept along – sometimes attaining a heady 15 MPH – I closely watched the roadside for my armadillo.
Alas, he was nowhere to be seen. Maybe a bigfoot beat me to it.
If you’d like to contact Jerry Nelson to do some public speaking, or just to register your comments, you can email him at jjpcnels@itctel.com. His book, “Dear County Agent Guy,” is available at Workman.com and at booksellers everywhere.
-
World1 week ago
If not Ursula, then who? Seven in the wings for Commission top job
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Film Review: Season of Terror (1969) by Koji Wakamatsu
-
World1 week ago
Croatians vote in election pitting the PM against the country’s president
-
News1 week ago
GOP senators demand full trial in Mayorkas impeachment
-
Politics1 week ago
Trump trial: Jury selection to resume in New York City for 3rd day in former president's trial
-
World1 week ago
The Take: How Iran’s attack on Israel unfolded
-
World1 week ago
'You are a criminal!' Heckler blasts von der Leyen's stance on Israel
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Movie Review: The American Society of Magical Negroes