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pvcpanelhs · 6 years ago
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Missouri’s top health official has history of controversies
FILE -In this June 5, 2019, file photo, Dr. Randall Williams, Director of the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, speaks with reporters outside the courthouse after Circuit Judge Michael Stelzer heard his testimony concerning the renewal of Planned Parenthood’s abortion clinic license in St. Louis. As director of the state’s Department of Health and Senior Services, Williams oversees the agency that licenses health care facilities, tracks the spread of disease and is now setting up the state’s medical marijuana program. Each of those services has spawned disputes in Missouri, with the most recent involving the political storm surrounding the move to close the state’s Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis. (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP, File)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri’s top health official, the face of the effort to end abortions at the only clinic in the state that performs them, has generated controversy since taking the helm of the Missouri department after a sometimes tumultuous tenure at a similar job in North Carolina.
As director of the state’s Department of Health and Senior Services, Dr. Randall Williams oversees the agency that licenses health care facilities, tracks the spread of disease and is now setting up the state’s medical marijuana program. Each of those services has spawned disputes in Missouri, with the most recent involving the political storm surrounding the move to close the state’s Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Louis.
Williams told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in response to written questions that he anticipated criticism when he took the job.
"Our job is to ensure the nearly 4,000 licensed health facilities are complying with current Missouri laws and regulations," Williams said. "As for feedback, both positive and negative, I try to use it to help make us better at serving the people of Missouri."
Williams is at the front of a debate that coincides with Republican Gov. Mike Parson signing legislation last month that will prohibit women from terminating pregnancies after eight weeks except in medical emergencies.
Williams, 62, did not address his own views on abortion, saying only, "Abortion is legal in Missouri, and I want it to be safe."
The 62-year-old obstetrician said he delivered more than 2,000 babies while in private practice in Raleigh, North Carolina, from 1989 to 2015. North Carolina Gov. Patrick McCrory named him health director for his state in 2015. Williams came to Missouri in 2017 as former Gov. Eric Greitens assembled his cabinet.
The health department is in a dispute with Planned Parenthood over renewal of the clinic’s license to perform abortions. The department conducted a two-month investigation at the clinic and outlined 30 deficiencies. The state says the clinic has addressed only a handful to its satisfaction.
Planned Parenthood has accused the administration of politicizing state health regulations to restrict abortion access.
Williams said politics have nothing to do with his department’s decision to revoke the clinic’s license.
Williams has sparred with Missouri lawmakers on several occasions. Last year, House budget writers scolded him for bungling a program that helps get stroke and heart attack patients to the most appropriate facility in the shortest amount of time.
That dust-up came after Parson vetoed $153,000 from the program, setting off fears the program might be discontinued. Williams said the veto was a way to force hospitals to pay more to fund the program. He and the governor played down potential problems, arguing that their maneuver would not result in a break in service. Lawmakers said they were misled about the intent of the veto.
Williams has also been accused several times of being secretive. Citing confidentiality laws, he refused to release information about an outbreak of the tick-borne Bourbon virus. Lawmakers responded by cutting eight positions in his agency’s budget.
Cole County Circuit Judge Patricia Joyce found the health department violated open records laws when it refused to release lab tests of a liquid thrown at St. Louis County police officers during 2017 protests sparked by the acquittal of white former police Officer Jason Stockley in the fatal shooting of black suspect Anthony Lamar Smith. The judge ordered the release of the results and told the state to pay the American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri, which sought the records, $10,754 in fines and legal fees. The liquid was identified as apple cider vinegar.
That ruling came two days after the Post-Dispatch sued the agency to obtain records of applicants seeking to sell and grow medical marijuana in Missouri. Circuit Judge Daniel R. Green ruled in the Post-Dispatch’s favor.
The health department also eliminated geographic details from its reporting of West Nile virus cases, citing privacy concerns.
"One of our agency’s top priorities is to follow the law and provide transparency and access to public information while using an abundance of caution to follow the law and protect confidential information," Williams said.
Williams has faced similar controversies in North Carolina.
In 2016, North Carolina’s toxicologist testified in a lawsuit that Williams and other environmental officials attempted to "play down the risk" of coal ash contamination of drinking wells by rescinding a do-not-drink notice. The toxicologist said the state was telling people the water was safe when it knew it wasn’t.
Williams said he rescinded the warning notices because they were stirring up unwarranted fears.
That dispute led to the resignation of at least one North Carolina health official, who said she couldn’t support how Williams had downplayed the risks.
He was unanimously confirmed by the Missouri Senate.
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Information from: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, http://www.stltoday.com
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pvcpanelhs · 6 years ago
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A doctor’s OK is required for Missouri’s medical marijuana program. Many won’t write one
But he said his University City eye clinic isn’t certifying people for Missouri’s medical marijuana program.
People across the state are looking for doctors to certify them to buy marijuana for medical use, a process that started June 4. But they’re running into resistance. Marijuana isn’t regulated by the Food and Drug Administration — the federal government classifies it as an illegal drug. There are no federally approved standard dosages or safety testing, a less-rigorous review process and no insurance coverage, leading some family doctors and primary care physicians to shy away from certifying patients.
Missouri is the 33rd state to legalize marijuana for medical use. In other states, the majority of marijuana patients have been certified by a small number of independent physicians or marijuana-specific clinics, Viets said.
Clinics are already popping up in the St. Louis region from Ferguson to west St. Louis County, advertising certification for about $200. On Wednesday, Green Health Docs, in Creve Coeur, had scheduled 48 appointments for a six-hour window. The Maryland-based multi-state company, which also has locations in Columbia and Kansas City, has been receiving inquiries from marijuana hopefuls since February.
Advertisements for the “Coming Out party” promised “doctor signing medical cards” and “medical cards signed all day.” Thomas said Friday the intent was to offer a stigma-free place where, for $99, qualifying patients could get certified after providing their medical records, watching an informational video about marijuana, undergoing a psychiatric exam and visiting with her.
Some states with medical marijuana programs have asked doctors to register as marijuana-friendly or as willing to prescribe marijuana dosages for patients. Missouri only asks doctors to certify that their patient has a qualifying condition. The state will not require certified patients to have specified dosages prescribed — they will be able to enter a dispensary and buy up to four ounces of marijuana or its equivalent in infused products each month. A person who wants more marijuana needs two physician certifications.
Physicians groups including the St. Louis Metropolitan Medical Society and the Missouri State Medical Association opposed the ballot initiative voters approved in November that legalized marijuana for medical use.
Coltyn Turner, in a 2018 photos, stands outside his home in Jerseyville holding a wheelchair that he was confined to in 2014 because of symptoms of Crohn’s disease. Turner credits marijuana treatments with his recovery. Photo courtesy of Coltyn’s Crue foundation.
“I would say to doctors and people who are skeptical about cannabis that there isn’t really anything that we could say or do to convince you 100% until you see firsthand how this is helping someone you know,” said Coltyn Turner, a marijuana patient in Jerseyville who recently started a foundation to raise money for cannabis research.
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pvcpanelhs · 6 years ago
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Woman, Baltimore County firefighter injured in Parkville after car crashes into building
A car crashed into the Home Center building on Taylor Avenue in Parkville Thursday afternoon. (Baltimore County Fire Dept.)
A woman and a Baltimore County firefighter were injured after the woman crashed her car into the side of a Parkville business this afternoon.
The Baltimore County Fire Department wrote on Facebook the crash happened at 1:37 p.m. when the woman crashed into the Home Center business in the 1700 block of Taylor Ave.
The car overturned and the woman was taken to a local hospital with minor injuries, the department said.
Spokeswoman Elise Armacost said a firefighter was also taken to the hospital with minor injuries he sustained while responding to the crash.
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pvcpanelhs · 6 years ago
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13 Big-Ticket Shows Coming Up Near Parkville-Overlea
(Shutterstock)
PARKVILLE-OVERLEA, MD — Ever wanted to see Singing Sensations Youth Choir Spring Concert or New Found Glory live in action? How about Jonas Brothers or Hamilton? These are just a few of the big-ticket shows headed for venues in the Parkville-Overlea area over the coming weeks and months. Check out our weekly roundup of listings below for all the exciting details, dates and ticket prices.
Want to check out more great events in your area? Click here to find local tickets. (Pro tip: Enter the promo code "PatchTickets10" at checkout to get 10 percent off!)
CONCERTS | CLASSICAL
When: Saturday, May 25, 2019 | 5:00 pmWhere: Murphy Fine Arts Center, Baltimore, MDPrice: $172 and up
CONCERTS | ALTERNATIVE
When: Thursday, Jun 6, 2019 | 7:30 pmWhere: Baltimore Soundstage, Baltimore, MDPrice: $28 and up
THEATER | MUSICAL / PLAY
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When: Tuesday, Jun 4, 2019 | 8:00 pmWhere: Hippodrome Theatre At The France-Merrick PAC, Baltimore, MDPrice: $25 and up
SPORTS | BASEBALL
When: Tuesday, May 21, 2019 | 7:05 pmWhere: Oriole Park At Camden Yards, Baltimore, MDPrice: $15 and up
CONCERTS | POP / ROCK
When: Saturday, Nov 30, 2019 | 7:30 pmWhere: Royal Farms Arena, Baltimore, MDPrice: $81 and up
THEATER | MUSICAL / PLAY
When: Tuesday, Jun 25, 2019 | 8:00 pmWhere: Hippodrome Theatre At The France-Merrick PAC, Baltimore, MDPrice: $230 and up
SPORTS | FOOTBALL
When: Thursday, Aug 8, 2019 | 7:30 pmWhere: M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, MDPrice: $8 and up
CONCERTS | COUNTRY / FOLK
When: Thursday, Jul 18, 2019 | 7:00 pmWhere: Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MDPrice: $66 and up
THEATER | MUSICAL / PLAY
When: Wednesday, Oct 9, 2019 | 8:00 pmWhere: Hippodrome Theatre At The France-Merrick PAC, Baltimore, MDPrice: $72 and up
CONCERTS | POP / ROCK
When: Sunday, Jul 21, 2019 | 7:00 pmWhere: Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MDPrice: $45 and up
THEATER | CIRQUE DU SOLEIL
When: Wednesday, Jul 3, 2019 | 7:30 pmWhere: Royal Farms Arena, Baltimore, MDPrice: $60 and up
CONCERTS | POP / ROCK
When: Wednesday, Jun 12, 2019 | 6:30 pmWhere: Lyric Opera House – MD, Baltimore, MDPrice: $56 and up
THEATER | MUSICAL / PLAY
When: Wednesday, Nov 13, 2019 | 8:00 pmWhere: Hippodrome Theatre At The France-Merrick PAC, Baltimore, MDPrice: $99 and up
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pvcpanelhs · 6 years ago
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Parkville man frustrated with city over lack of information about land development
Parkville City Hall.
(KCTV5 News)
PARKVILLE, MO (KCTV) — A resident in Parkville is pushing back against the city government and, after months of asking for information, they’ve asked the state to step in.
Less than 7,000 people live in Parkville, but the small town just north of the KC city limit is trying to grow.
At the end of 2018, the city approved a plan for grassland near I-435 and 45 Highway.
“The development that was approved is consistent with the city’s master plan that has been in place for many years,” said Joe Parente, Parkville City Administrator.
However, one resident is not happy.
“He’s just had enough, yeah,” said Eddie Greim, the attorney for Jason Maki. “I think they realized this was a controversial development and they wanted to move quietly and quickly through."
Maki lives near the land that will be developed soon. He has also filed more than 20 Sunshine Law requests to learn more about why Parkville decided to build there.
“There was concern that there was discussion going on behind the scenes,” Greim said.
Parente told KCTV5 News that wasn’t happening.
“These were just informational meetings,” Parente said. “The board did not engage in discussing or decision making or anything like that.”
However, when we sat down and looked at the paperwork, we found an email from Parente specifically saying to meet in small groups.
If every alderman in Parkville met at the same time and in the same place, they would have had quorum. A quorum is just a majority.
For example, if there are five people who are elected officials and they meet, the meeting would be subject to the Sunshine Law because they are all there and they could vote.
However, if three of those five people leave, the remaining two can’t hold a vote because they don’t have a quorum .
Now, the Missouri attorney general is investigating. Parente said they just handed over more than 50,000 records.
“A lot of these responses were provided,” Parente said. “So, some of those complaints are moot, in our view, and we’re going to respond that way.”
“I mean, it’s part of the playbook for people that want to hide things and that’s what they’re following,” Greim said, with regard to the delay.
Several of the alderman and the mayor, Nan Johnson, are up for reelection on Tuesday, April 2.
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pvcpanelhs · 7 years ago
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4 Factors to Consider When Moving to Parkville
If you are expanding your business, make sure that there is a market for your products or services in Parkville. Most small business fails because of lack of enough customers. Do a thorough market research. Start a business in this place if there is a market for your products. Your business will grow quickly.
These are the factors to consider when moving to Parkville. It is important to rent a good apartment. Make sure that there is a market for your products and services. Select a good school for your kids. And make sure that you can afford to live there comfortably.
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pvcpanelhs · 7 years ago
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KCK man dies in Parkville head-on crash on Missouri 9
UPDATED: The Missouri Highway Patrol has changed its original report and now says the 15-year-old passenger in the southbound vehicle was wearing a seat belt.
A Kansas City, Kan., man died Sunday in a head-on collision in Parkville when his car was hit head-on by a vehicle that crossed over into his path.
Larry G. Kelly, 75, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Kelly was traveling north on Missouri 9 near Riss Lake in Parkville about 2 p.m. when a vehicle in the southbound lane crossed into his path, the Missouri Highway Patrol reported.
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The driver of the other vehicle, a 35-year-old Kansas City woman, and her 15-year-old passenger suffered serious injuries.
Kelly was wearing a seat belt, the report said. In the other car, the passenger was wearing a seat belt but the driver was not.
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pvcpanelhs · 7 years ago
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Eric Greitens, Missouri Governor and Rising Republican Star, Resigns Amid Scandal
Gov. Eric Greitens of Missouri announced his resignation at the state Capitol, in Jefferson City, Mo., on Tuesday.
Eric Greitens was a decorated Navy SEAL unit who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, the founder of a veterans’ charity in Missouri and a Rhodes scholar. Chiseled and charismatic, he was elected governor of Missouri and seen by his fellow Republicans as a potential superstar in the party, someone with the brains and political instincts to perhaps rise all the way to the White House.
But on Tuesday, Mr. Greitens abruptly resigned, more than four months into a scandal involving a sexual relationship with his former hairdresser and claims that he had taken an explicit photograph of her without her permission. He was also accused by prosecutors of misusing his charity’s donor list for political purposes.
Defiant but somber, Mr. Greitens, who was voted into office in 2016, insisted that he had committed no crimes or “any offense worthy of this treatment.” He described “legal harassment of colleagues, friends and campaign workers” and said “it’s clear that for the forces that oppose us that there is no end in sight.”
“This ordeal has been designed to cause an incredible amount of strain on my family,” Mr. Greitens said. He added: “I cannot allow those forces to continue to cause pain and difficulty to the people that I love.”
It was both a shocking end to his governorship and a kind of catharsis for the Missouri Republican Party after a grinding spring of allegations, criminal charges, angry denials and court proceedings involving Mr. Greitens.
The scandal had spread far beyond the governor, threatening to sink the chances of another prominent Missouri Republican, Josh Hawley, the attorney general, who is expected to face a tight Senate race against Senator Claire McCaskill, a Democrat. (On Tuesday, Mr. Hawley applauded Mr. Greitens for doing “the right thing today.”)
For months, the governor had defiantly refused to resign, even as a Republican-dominated legislative committee investigated him, read aloud for the record a lurid and lengthy account of his behavior and warned that impeachment was possible.
For Republicans, the prospect of an end to all of it brought a measure of relief.
“There’s not going to be this constant battle going on, this dragging people through the mud,” said State Representative Kathie Conway, a Republican who for months had suggested that Mr. Greitens resign. “But I think that there’s still so much healing to do.”
Mr. Greitens’s resignation will take effect on Friday. Lt. Gov. Michael L. Parson, a Republican from rural southwestern Missouri, who previously served as a sheriff and state senator and is seen as having longstanding alliances with state lawmakers, will take over for the rest of Mr. Greitens’s term, which ends in January 2021.
Missouri will remain firmly in the hands of Republicans, who control both the governor’s office and the legislature. Rarely has a lieutenant governor in Missouri taken over in this way, midway through a term; in 2000, Mel Carnahan, then the governor, was killed in a plane crash and Roger Wilson, the lieutenant governor, took his place.
Mr. Greitens’s public problems began in January with his admission of an extramarital affair. He and his wife, Sheena, described the situation as a “deeply personal mistake” in a joint statement, adding: “Eric took responsibility, and we dealt with this together honestly and privately.” But in the months that followed, the scandal only grew, even as Mr. Greitens tried to move past it, making statements on tax cuts and funds to produce biodiesel.
The governor’s former hairdresser described an alarming sexual encounter, in which she said that he had taken a photo and threatened to share it if she told anyone about them. All the while, questions began to emerge about whether he had used the veterans’ charity list to help his political campaign in 2016.
Mr. Greitens’s resignation ends the need for an impeachment process. But it is unclear whether his criminal problems are over. The prosecutor in Jackson County, which includes much of Kansas City, is still investigating him and could refile an invasion-of-privacy charge that was dropped earlier this month, stemming from the hairdresser’s accusation that Mr. Greitens had taken an explicit photo.
In addition, the governor faces one felony charge: tampering with computer data, in connection to misuse of the donor list. A lawyer for Mr. Greitens has called the charge “absurd.”
Shortly after he announced his resignation, Kimberly Gardner, the St. Louis prosecutor, said in a statement that she had “reached a fair and just resolution” of the computer tampering charge, and that details would be announced Wednesday.
Mr. Greitens offered few details about his decision to resign, and Missouri politicians speculated about reasons he might have quit now — after months of fighting back. Earlier on Tuesday, a judge had ordered the governor’s campaign fund and a political action group tied to Mr. Greitens to turn over documents to lawmakers considering impeachment, a decision seen as a major blow to the governor.
For Mr. Greitens, 44, it was a fall as dramatic and sudden as his rise had been.
He burst onto the political scene only a few years ago, shedding his former identity as a Democrat in a widely shared essay on FoxNews.com in July 2015, in which he called liberals “world-class hypocrites.” “They talk a great game about helping the most vulnerable, with ideas that feel good and fashionable,” he wrote. “The problem is their ideas don’t work, and often hurt the exact people they claim to help.”
Married and a father of two, Mr. Greitens swept into the governor’s office in 2017, which was previously held by a two-term Democrat, Jay Nixon. But he made few friends even among his fellow Republicans in Jefferson City, the capital, frequently clashing with lawmakers and members of the local press corps.
Then, in January, just hours after the governor’s state of the state address, KMOV, a St. Louis television station, aired a recording of Mr. Greitens’s former hairdresser, speaking about Mr. Greitens with her husband at the time.
The woman, who apparently did not know she was being recorded, told her then-husband that Mr. Greitens had threatened to release a compromising photograph of her if she told anyone about their relationship.
After the affair became public, Mr. Greitens asked Missourians for forgiveness and said he had worked through the issue with his wife. But he has insisted that he committed no crime.
An explosive report from the House legislative committee, released in April, told a different story. According to the account the woman gave legislators, she went to Mr. Greitens’s home on his invitation one morning, where he suggested that they work out together; then he blindfolded her, taped her hands to pull-up rings and began kissing her.
He then tore off her shirt, pulled down her pants and took a picture of her with his cellphone, she said. Shortly after, he coerced her into performing oral sex, she said in the report.
They had subsequent sexual encounters over a period of months in 2015, she said.
Lawmakers from both parties said they were surprised to see Mr. Greitens quit after fighting for months to stay in office.
“I thought he would fight it all the way to the end,” said Ms. Conway, the Republican. “I was fully prepared to have to go in and vote yes or no on impeachment.”
State Representative Clem Smith, a Democrat from the St. Louis suburb of Velda Village Hills, said he had also thought Mr. Greitens was going to stay in office and try to keep his job.
“I don’t think it was the most genius thing to do,” Mr. Smith said of the governor’s decision to hang on for so long. “But they say he’s an ambitious person, an outsider who came in taking pages from President Trump’s playbook.”
Even with the governor’s departure, the scandal could still help Democrats in November, Mr. Smith said. Uncertain for now, he said, is how much.
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pvcpanelhs · 7 years ago
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ERC Cos. Breaks Ground on MO Luxury Apartments
ERC Chief Investment Officer Justin VanLandschoot
ERC Companies has broken ground on the PURE St. Peters Apartments, a 143-unit luxury apartment community in St. Peters, Mo.
“ERC is known for providing cost effective housing options with a sense of place,” Justin VanLandschoot, ERC’s chief investment officer, told MHN.
Located at 100 Pure St., the PURE St. Peters Apartments will offer both one- and two-bedroom units, all with granite countertops, subway tile backsplashes, plank flooring and a washer/dryer. It will also offer corporate housing opportunities and flexible lease terms.
The property offers a smoke-free community, a pool with sundeck, a fitness center and professional onsite management through 2B Residential. The community is also pet-friendly.
It’s located close by the Barnes-Jewish St. Peters Hospital and the new Amazon fulfillment center.
“The appeal of this property is easy access to I-70, walkability to shops and restaurants and a convenient location to major employers such as BJC and Amazon,” Carla Powell 2B Residential’s vice president, told MHN.
An Up-and-Coming Area
According to Powell, St. Charles County is growing at an amazing pace but there is a lack of newer apartments for renters by choice.
“Most properties in St. Charles County are located in more of a suburban location,” Powell said. “This location allows for more of a suburban-urban feel which allows for amazing walkability to local restaurants and shopping venues. For those people who can afford to buy, but choose to rent, we hope to help fill that niche.”
PURE St. Peters will be leased and managed by 2B Residential and are projected to open this fall.
ERC also recently received approval to develop the Meadows in Lake, a 220-unit apartment community in St. Louis, which is expected to be completed next spring.
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pvcpanelhs · 7 years ago
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Additional Information About 8217 Wilson Ave, Parkville, MD 21234
8217 Wilson Ave, Parkville, MD 21234 8217 Wilson Ave, Parkville, MD 21234
Lot Size Area: 5000
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pvcpanelhs · 7 years ago
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2018 Predictions for the Missouri Housing Market
There are several reasons why potential home buyers are cautious this year as they browse the selection of homes available. There is a significant demand for available homes on the market all throughout the nation. Some areas need any type of housing while others are desperate for more affordable housing options.
The decrease in inventory makes choosing a home difficult for buyers who are looking for a specific type of home or one within a particular price range. It also makes it difficult for buyers who would like more time to make such an important decision. Since there are few homes available, buyers are urged to act quickly if they find a property they are interested in, or else it could be too late.
If you are interested in relocating to St. Louis or any other area in Missouri, it is important that you learn more about the current state of the Missouri housing market and how it will affect your decision.
Is This a Good Time to Buy a House?
The Best Places to Buy a Home Within the Missouri Housing Market
Missouri is home to big cities and beautiful rural areas allowing home buyers to choose from a variety of small towns and metro locations. Here are some of the best places to call home if you are planning to relocate to Missouri this year.
Kansas City
Kansas City is considered by many as the best big city to live in. There are many who even prefer it to living in St. Louis. There are plenty of local amenities to keep the entire family busy. And the city is known for having a low cost of living, high graduation rates, and amazing weather throughout the year.
Kansas City is located on the western edge of the state and borders with the State of Kansas. It is the largest city in all of Missouri and the 37th largest in the nation based on population alone.
Columbia
Columbia, Missouri is a college town that has plenty to offer young adults hoping to improve their education or seek out employment opportunities. There are three institutions in the city including the University of Missouri, Stephens College, and Columbia College.
All three schools are located in the downtown Columbia area. The University of Missouri contributes to the local economy and culture. And the downtown area is filled with fine dining opportunities and local entertainment that attracts tourists to the town.
Rolla
If you are looking for a small town to move to, Rolla, Missouri is a great place to check out. It is located between St. Louis and Springfield, so that you are not too far away from all the necessities the major cities offer.
The Missouri University of Science and Technology has located there as well as the Mark Twain National Forest. The city offers excellent opportunities for education and those who love to explore the great outdoors.
The Best Housing Markets in Missouri
Five cities located in Kansas and Missouri were recently included in the Best Real Estate Markets report from WalletHub. Overland Park located in Kansas ranked in the number 18 spot for the nation. The second-largest city in Kansas has a population of 188,966.
The affordability ranking for Overland Park was at #41 when compared to 300 other U.S. Cities.
Additional cities that were considered some of the best housing markets in the nation include Kansas City, Springfield, Wichita, KS, and St. Louis.
What Should We Expect from the Housing Market in 2018?
Whether you are looking for a single-family home or hope to invest in a rental property, it is a good idea to know what your options are. Sellers are expected to have an easier time making good deals as there is a great need for housing inventory. Renters may also learn that they have more negotiating power during this time as affordable housing options are scarce.
Although the current housing market may seem to be struggling in some areas, experts predict that there will be an increase in home ownership all throughout the nation as we head into the second part of 2018. Affordable homes can still be found in many areas throughout the country, allowing first-time home buyers the opportunity to make their home ownership dreams a reality.
The 2018 Predictions for the Missouri Housing Market
Based on statistics from the real estate website Zillow, the average home value in Missouri is at $148,469. Home value has been on the rise in the state since last year, at a rate of 4.9%. Zillow expects the value of homes to continue to rise as much as 3.9% by 2019.
The median price per square foot of homes in Missouri is $107. That is a substantial increase from the amount of $84 from September 2012.
The average amount of days that homes stay on the market in Missouri is currently at 85. The Missouri Market Health data shows that the state has a score of 3.6 out of 10. However, home sales are expected to rise within the coming months as the threat of higher interest rates are expected to arrive by the end of the year.
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Fight over Greitens’ school board appointees spills into Missouri House
Missouri Capitol
JEFFERSON CITY • A day before a Senate panel weighs in on one of Gov. Eric Greitens’ controversial appointees to the state school board, a House panel debated a plan to rein in the governor’s ability to name people to key boards and commissions.
Under legislation outlined Tuesday, the governor would be barred from using many of the tactics he employed to stack the school board and other commissions with his appointees. For example, he would have to inform the Senate of any appointments made to state boards or commissions when the Legislature is not in session.
The proposal also would slow down the appointment process and require more transparency when a governor names members to the scores of boards and commissions that oversee state laws and regulations.
It also would bar appointees who haven’t been confirmed by the Senate from voting if they were appointed at a time when the Legislature is not session.
Starting in July, the now-embattled governor appointed 10 individuals to the state board overseeing policies affecting the state’s 900,000 school children. Of those 10, two declined the appointment and one resigned saying he was being pressured to fire former state Schools Commissioner Margie Vandeven. Two others were removed by the Republican governor after they said they were being pushed to remove the commissioner.
In December, with some of the board’s membership still in flux, the board met behind closed doors and voted 5-3 to fire Vandeven, setting off at least two lawsuits over how the appointment process was manipulated by Greitens.
The five Greitens appointees, Jennifer Edwards, Eddy Justice, Doug Russell, Marvin Jungmeyer and Eric Teeman, are awaiting confirmation by the Senate.
Justice, a Republican Party fundraiser from Poplar Bluff, is scheduled to go before a Senate panel Wednesday that could signal the fate of the other appointees.
For now, without the new members being confirmed, the state board cannot meet because of a lack of a quorum.
The proposed changes were approved earlier in the Senate on a 22-10 vote, but its sponsor, Sen. Wayne Wallingford, R-Cape Girardeau, suggested a final version may be different because of constitutional concerns.
In addition to the school board changes, Greitens also used his appointment power to place his picks on the Missouri Housing Development Commission, which then carried out his plan to cut off state funding for low-income housing tax credits.
The governor also appointed new members to the Missouri Veterans Commission,who then forced the executive director, Larry Kay, to resign amid problems at the St. Louis Veterans Home.
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Auburn softball suffers devastating series loss at last place Missouri
Kaylee Carlson allowed three home runs in a 5-4 loss to Missouri(
For too long this season, Auburn softball asked its pitchers to be nearly perfect in order to win games.
On Saturday, last place Missouri got to Kaylee Carlson and Makayla Martin and No. 8 Auburn’s offense continued to sputter in a pair of devastating losses, 5-4 and 5-1, in Columbia that deal a likely death blow to Auburn’s chances of hosting an NCAA Super Regional.
Auburn (36-10, 9-8 SEC) led 3-0 in the top of the fifth inning when play resumed from Friday’s game, which was suspended due to weather.
Alyssa Rivera hit a solo home run to give Auburn a 4-0 lead in the top of the sixth but Missouri got it back in the bottom of the frame on a solo shot by Cayla Kessinger off Carlson.
Auburn’s ace had a three-run lead with one out in the seventh when Missouri rallied with a pair of single and pinch hitter Trenity Edwards hit a game-tying home run. Two batters later Kessinger hit a walk-off homer off Carlson, who had allowed just four home runs all season entering the series.
In Game 2, Missouri (24-21, 6-11 SEC) jumped on Martin early with a two-run single in the first.
Kendall Veach homered to make it 2-1 in the second as Martin lasted just one batter into the bottom of the frame.
Rylee Pierce hit a two-run homer off Chardonnay Harris to give Missouri a 4-1 lead after four and the home Tigers aded another run in the fifth.
Auburn, which had won four straight SEC series, will try to avoid the sweep on Sunday (12 p.m., SEC Network+).
James Crepea is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @JamesCrepea.
Davis Daniel allowed six runs in three-plus innings of work as Auburn fell to Mississippi State on Saturday at Plainsman Park. (Wade Rackley/Auburn Athletics)
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Woodneath Library project puts historic home in spotlight | The Kansas City Star
A capital campaign to restore an historic home adjoining Woodneath Library Center in Clay County will have its public launch April 6.
The aim of the public campaign, “A Home for Your Story,” is to raise funds to preserve the home and make it available for public and library space.
The campaign kickoff is from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Woodneath Library, 8900 N.E. Flintlock Road in Kansas City, North. The event will include tours of the home and a variety of activities — including a free performance by Mr. Stinky Feet & the Hiccups, a petting zoo, cotton candy and popcorn.
“We have lived near the beautiful historic home for many years now,” said Jeremiah Morgan, who is spearheading the campaign along with his wife Rebecca and the Mid-Continent Public Library system. “We are excited to help bring this home back to its role as a unique and beautiful place for our community to create, share, and connect.”
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Edwin and Naomi Crouch sold the property to Mid-Continent in 2008. Their son, John Crouch, still lives in Missouri and looks forward to the transformation of the 163-year-old home.
“My parents, Edwin and Naomi, took great pride in the family farm, especially our home,” Crouch said. “We as a family are very excited to see the progress being made on its restoration and look forward to the day when it will once again be open for social and educational events as it has been for generations.”
Information on the public campaign and the Story Center is available at mystorycenter.org.
Miles for Meals fundraiser slated for Apil 15
The annual Miles for Meals run to raise funds for senior citizens in Platte County is April 15 at Zona Rosa.
Funds raised during the 5K run and 2K walk/run will go to meals for seniors in need, as well as other programs such as socialization and transportation.
“Close to 200 mouths are being fed a day through Platte Senior Services” said Kelley Creek, senior center administrator. “Right now, we’re serving 175 seniors daily who receive a meal at home, and another 30 eat at the senior centers.”
Volunteers deliver meals and also check in with seniors, who may not have family or friends watching out for them.
“It’s more than just a meal,” Creek said.
Advance registration for the run is $30 for adults, $20 for seniors and $15 for children. Same-day registration is an extra $5. Register at platteseniors.org or at Platte Senior Services, 11724 N.W. Plaza Circle, Suite 700 in Kansas City, North.
The runs/walk begin at 8:30 a.m. on April 15 at Zona Rosa’s Town Square, with sign ins at 7:45 a.m.
Call 816-270-4100 or email [email protected] for more information.
Atkins-Johnson Farm announces spring schedule
The historic Atkins-Johnson Farm and Museum will host reenactments, exhibits and discussions for the public this spring.
The site’s opens at 11 a.m. on April 11 and includes the opening of a new exhibit, “Still Beauty: Scenes from an American Farm.” The exhibit features original photography taken at the historic site, done in black and white, by Matt Hankel.
The kickoff reception is from 6 to 8 p.m. on April 11 and Hankel will be available for questions.
The annual spring muster for the 3rd Missouri Infantry, a Civil War reenactment group, is from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on April 14. It will feature soldiers setting up tents, enlisting, drilling and cooking over open fires. The 3rd Missouri Infantry reenactment unit was established in 1976 to preserve U.S. Civil War heritage.
“Pledging Allegiance: Questions of Loyalty in Civil War Kansas and Missouri,” a reading and discussion is planned at 2 p.m. on April 14 at the Farm, 4109 N.E. Pleasant Valley Road in Gladstone.
The program comes from “Shared Stories of the Civil War,” a collection of reader’s theater scripts created from historical letters, diaries, newspaper articles and other documents.
“Shared Stories of the Civil War” is a partnership between Freedom’s Frontier National Heritage Area and the Kansas Humanities Council.
All events are free and open to the public. For more information about any of the programs, call 816-423-4107 or go to atkinsjohnsonfarm.com. Visitors should access Atkins-Johnson Farm from 64th Street or from Brighton and Pleasant Valley roads due to construction.
Barge takes part in 4-H Legislative Academy
Warren Barge, a seven-year member of Clay County 4-H, participated in the University of Missouri Extension 4-H Legislative Academy in February in Jefferson City.
Warren was one of 14 4-H youth to attend and had the opportunity to shadow Missouri State Representative T.J. Berry and State Senator Sandy Crawford. He was recognized with resolutions and introductions on both the Missouri House and Senate floors.
Parkville mayor visits Webelos
Webelos scouts from Parkville met with Mayor Nan Johnston in March as part of their requirements for the Building a Better World merit badge.
During her presentation, Johnston talked about how she got involved with city government and encouraged them to participate in projects to make the community a better place.
The scouts were from Webelos II Den 5 at St. Therese School.
“I spoke about the Eagle Scout project completed in 2015 that replaced the walking bridge in the Parkville Nature Sanctuary,” Johnston said in a press release. “I look forward to seeing what these scouts accomplish today and in the future.”
Northland Coalition seeks survey input
The Northland Coalition invites any adult, 18 and over, to take an online survey about the use/abuse of alcohol, marijuana, illegal drugs and prescription drugs among Northland youth.
“This brief survey will be so valuable to us,” said Laura Bruce of Tri-County Mental Health Services, which facilitates the Northland Coalition. “It will help us prioritize the communities’ concerns and inform us about how effective our current programs are.”
The survey takes 10 to 15 minutes and those who complete it will have the opportunity to enter a drawing for one of four $25 gift cards.
The online survey is available at www.northlandcoalition.com. For more information, contact Bruce at 816-877-0498 or [email protected],
Clay County announces food-service awards
Sixty food service establishments, including several schools, have received Food Excellence Awards from the Clay County Public Health Center.
The award recognizes the efforts of food employees and managers to ensure safe food for the community, said Becky Steiner, section chief for environmental health protection at the Clay County Public Health Center.
“Most food establishments in Clay County regularly meet high food safety standards,” Steiner said in a press release. “These Food Safety Excellence award recipients have made food safety a top priority, as demonstrated by top-notch inspection results during 2017.”
To see the complete list of award recipients go to www.clayhealth.com.
Environmental health protection conducted 1,376 routine food establishment inspections, 239 temporary food event inspections, and investigated 91 food-related complaints in 2017 in Clay County.
Play staged at Garrison School
A play about African-American educator Clarence Gantt will be presented at 3 p.m. on April 15 at the Garrison School Cultural Center, 502 N. Water in Liberty.
“Mr. Gantt, Modified,” tells the story of Gantt’s commitment to the education of the African-American children and youth in Liberty. He was principal for 25 years at Garrison School during the mid 1900s. After integration came to the school district, he was reassigned as a study-hall monitor at Liberty High School.
“He was quite a guy to go through what he did and keep his head up and keep reassuring us and pushing us, not in an negative way, but letting us know we can do it,” said Shelton Ponder, a former student and the creator and performer of the one-man play.
The performance is free, although donations will be accepted. For more information, call 816-429-8130.
Compiled by Norma King, Special to The Star
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Missouri man’s sudden death during Colorado family ski trip sparks social media movement
It was the "perfect storm," Jim Flath says of his 26-year-old son’s sudden death during a family ski vacation in Colorado. His youngest son, James, died Sunday — one day after he was diagnosed with the flu.
"It was a really unfortunate series of events," Flath, of Lee’s Summit, Missouri, told Fox News. "The flu combined with high altitude sickness … and he had sleep apnea, which may have caused some of the problems."
Feeling under the weather, James went to a nearby urgent care Saturday morning. Doctors told him he had the flu and to take it easy. His parents and his girlfriend planned to go out to dinner that night, but James decided to stay behind and rest in the condo, hoping he would recover quickly.
"He said, ‘Go have fun!’" Flath recalled. "I don’t think he or us realized how sick he was."
So, they left for a short period of time and returned to find James unresponsive.
"James loved life. He always liked doing things for other people and rooting for the underdog."
– Jim Flath
"He was breathing but we couldn’t revive him," Flath said.
The man’s family and friends were devastated by the news of James’ death. But Flath said they had to do something — they couldn’t just sit around being sad.
"We’re sad, obviously," Flath said. "But James loved life. He always liked doing things for other people and rooting for the underdog."
In order to celebrate the life James lived, his family started a social media movement called “Giver 4 Jimmer." The idea is to inspire others to pay it forward with acts of kindness — whether it’s paying someone’s bill or carrying someone’s heavy shopping bags.
"Everyone is angry at each other and if we can do something to help people be a little less angry and kinder to each other then why not?" Flath said.
With help from two of James’ friends, who work in social media, Flath created a Facebook page for the movement. More than 900 people have already followed the page.
The family even created "Giver 4 Jimmer cards" for people to pass out after they’ve done an anonymous good deed. The bright green cards encourage others to follow suit.
Dozens of people across the country — from San Francisco to New England — have already shared their kind acts in honor of James with the Flath family.
"Paid for the woman’s groceries in front of me today," a woman from Kennedy, Texas, posted on the page Tuesday. "Wasn’t much but with tears in her eyes thanked me and told me how much it helped because her husband has cancer and they were struggling with their money."
"I saw this today and even though I am unemployed and financially struggling this year, I had a friend even worse off than I am," another man from Seattle explained. "So I anonymously went in and made a car payment for him ($212) so that he would not lose his car."
Reading about people’s kindness warms Flath’s heart.
"If we make some people’s lives better, that’s obviously a huge bonus," he said.
Flath recalled a time his son paid for a father’s meal when he noticed him "struggling" at breakfast with his young daughters. He also remembered how James would never forget to bring money with him to the gym so he could give homeless men who sat outside an extra buck or two.
"When he gave them money they’d pump him up and tell him how strong he looked. He’d brag that he has to buy his compliments," Flath recalled James joking.
Even with the positive response on social media, Flath admits it’s impossible not to feel sad about James’ death. The 26-year-old was supposed to be the best man for his brother’s destination wedding in April.
But whether he has good or bad days, Flath plans to keep the movement alive for as long as he possibly can.
"I don’t plan on ever shutting it down. I’ll have cards in my wallet forever," he added.
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Parkville, MD (21234)
Right NowWindE 7 mph Humidity32%Dew Point25°Pressure29.88 in Visibility10.0 mi
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Jobs report to show whether pay gains portend high inflation
WASHINGTON — The February U.S. jobs report being released Friday will help address a question on the minds of many: Is worker pay finally accelerating?
January’s jobs data had shown the sharpest year-over-year average pay increase in eight years. That news ignited a sustained sell-off in stocks on fears that inflation might be picking up.
In the week that followed the release of the January wage data, traders sent stock prices tumbling 10 percent — deep enough to qualify as a “correction” — for the first time in two years. And bond yields surged to their highest levels in four years. That increase reflected anticipation that the Federal Reserve might step up its rate hikes to control inflation.
A broad and sustained pickup in pay gains is considered good news by most people, especially since average wage increases have been mostly stagnant since the Great Recession ended in 2009. But Wall Street worries that an acceleration in pay would force companies to raise prices to cover their higher labor costs.
Higher corporate expenses could, in turn, depress profits and intensify inflation pressures. And if the Fed followed by raising short-term rates more quickly, the economy could slow and bonds would become more attractive relative to stocks.
Most economists foresee a slightly more tepid wage figure this time: They have forecast that the government’s February jobs report will show that average hourly wages grew 2.8 percent in February from 12 months earlier, down slightly from the 2.9 percent increase in January. It’s possible, too, that January’s wage increase will be revised lower on Friday.
“There’s been so much talk about inflation now that unless it’s a meaningful surprise to the upside, the market can absorb a stronger economy coupled with higher wages,” said Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential Financial. “The real inflationary impact tends to come when wages move up by 4 percent. We’re not there.”
Economists have forecast that the report will show employers added a solid 200,000 jobs in February, the same as in January, according to data provider FactSet. They have also predicted that the unemployment rate dipped to a low 4 percent from 4.1 percent, where it’s remained for four months.
But when the report is released at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time, attention will be fixed mainly on the wage figure.
“I think they’ll be watching that closer than any data point I can remember as of late,” said Emily Roland, head of capital markets research for John Hancock Investments.
January’s sharp wage increase might have reflected, in part, temporary factors. Some economists note, for example, that freezing temperatures that month might have kept many lower-paid workers off the job by shutting down construction sites and reducing retail and restaurant business. If so, the one-time loss of those lower-paying jobs might have given average overall pay increases an artificial boost in January.
In the meantime, economists are calculating how the Trump administration’s decision Friday to impose a 25 percent tariff on steel imports and a 10 percent tariff on aluminum might affect the job market. The Trade Partnership, a consulting firm, estimates that the tariffs will eliminate roughly 145,000 jobs.
Steel and aluminum producers would hire more people. But the gains would be more than offset, the firm calculates, by sharp losses among companies that use the metals, such as automakers, packaged food companies and those that make industrial machinery.
During 2017, the stock market, as measured by the S&P 500 index, surged 19 percent, partly on anticipation of corporate and individual tax cuts. Yet barely a month after the tax cuts became law, investors shifted their focus to the potential consequences: Faster growth that might intensify inflation and lead the Fed to accelerate its rate hikes.
There have been some signs that price pressures are picking up. But overall, inflation remains in check. The inflation gauge that the Fed tends to monitor most closely shows an increase of just 1.7 percent from a year earlier, below the central bank’s 2 percent target level.
Most economists expect growth to pick up in the coming months and to accelerate inflation slightly by year’s end. They have forecast that the economy will expand at just a 2 percent annual rate in the January-March quarter before topping 3 percent in the next two quarters.
For now, consumers have pulled back somewhat on spending despite income gains, thereby setting the stage for potentially stronger spending gains in coming months. After-tax incomes in January — which include benefit payments from the government and business income as well as wages — climbed by the most in a year. They were boosted, in part, by the Trump administration’s tax cuts and company bonuses that were paid out in response to corporate tax cuts.
And manufacturers expanded at the fastest pace in nearly 14 years in February, according to a survey of purchasing managers.
___
AP Business Writers Alex Veiga in Los Angeles and Stan Choe in New York contributed to this report.
Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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