Monday, May 05, 2025

Jason Smith: Recognizing our great teachers


(From Seventh District Congressman Jason Smith)

During the week of May 5, our nation celebrates Teacher Appreciation Week, where we recognize all the wonderful teachers who give our kids the tools they need to succeed in the years ahead. Missouri is blessed to have some of the best teachers anywhere, and I’m grateful for the job so many of them do.

Last year, three outstanding teachers in Southeast and South Central Missouri were recognized for their efforts. Erin Douglas, a 2nd grade teacher at Central R-3 in Park Hills; Theresa Taylor, a high school business teacher at Cape Central in Cape Girardeau; and Hope Hunter, the librarian at Lucy Wortham James Elementary in St. James R-1 were all named Regional Teachers of the Year, and deservedly so. Our community was so proud these teachers received recognition last year, and I’m sure this year’s winners will be equally phenomenal.








One of the things I’ve always felt passionately about – even when I first began public service in the State House – was the idea that the best government is that which is closest to the people, and nowhere is this more true than when it comes to education. Local communities know their people and the needs of their kids the best, and if left unburdened by one-size-fits-all federal mandates, our teachers can produce the brightest, most well-rounded students possible. 

That’s why I’m excited that President Trump, along with Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, signed an executive order on March 20 calling on Secretary McMahon to work with Congress to return control over our children’s education future to the states. I’m enthusiastically on board with helping the President reduce the size and scope of the U.S. Department of Education in favor of more state and local control over education.

I also know so many teachers have worked hard and feel like the federal retirement system has left them at a disadvantage relative to other working Americans. In November 2023, I took the Ways and Means Committee down to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to hear from teachers, firefighters, nurses, police officers, and trash collectors about how obscure government formulas known as the Windfall Elimination Provision and the Government Pension Offset were reducing their retirement benefits. We then followed up that hearing with another one in Washington to discuss solutions to the problem, and Congress passed the Social Security Fairness Act in November 2024. 






As Chairman, I want to make sure the law is implemented as quickly as possible to get the relief into the hands of deserving teachers and other professionals. That is why I wrote to the Social Security Administration on January 10 of this year demanding they implement the law expeditiously and efficiently. Thankfully President Trump and his administration are prioritizing this relief, and these benefits began being paid in February.

My own life is better off because of the teachers in Dent County who helped shape me, and it’s why I will remain passionate about ensuring Missouri teachers receive the recognition they deserve, the flexibility they need to meet the needs of individual students, and the financial security they are owed. If you see a teacher next week, thank them for what they do to help make Missouri the best place to live.

Sunday, May 04, 2025

Agenda posted for Joplin City Council meeting



 JOPLIN CITY COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING AGENDA
MONDAY, MAY 5, 2025
5th FLOOR COUNCIL CHAMBERS
602 S. MAIN ST. JOPLIN MO
6:00 P.M.



1.

Call to Order

Invocation
Pledge of Allegiance of the United States of America
2.

Roll Call

3.

Presentations

1.

Joplin Sports Authority Quarterly Update

4.

Finalization of Consent Agenda

5.

Reports and Communications

1.

News From The Public Information Office

6.

Citizen Requests and Petitions

7.

Public Hearings

1.

Public Hearing Procedures

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-269

AN ORDINANCE providing to vacate a utility easement, lying north of property described as 2100 E Rolla St, City of Joplin, Newton County, Missouri. 

3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-268

AN ORDINANCE amending Ordinance No. 2022-274, passed by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022, by removing from R-1 (Single-Family Residential) and include in District C-1 (Neighborhood Commercial) property as described below and generally known as 410 W 26th St, Joplin, Jasper County, Missouri. 

8.

Consent Agenda

1.

Minutes of the April 21, 2025, City Council Meeting

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-116

AN ORDINANCE approving a Work Authorization with Allgeier, Martin and Associates, Inc. in the not to exceed amount of One Hundred Fifty Thousand and 00/100 DOLLARS ($150,000.00) for engineering services associated with MS4 Permit and Floodplain Management Support and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin.

Documents:
  1. CB2025-116.pdf
3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-117

AN ORDINANCE authorizing the City of Joplin to enter into a work authorization with Allgeier, Martin and Associates, Inc. for engineering consultation services in the not to exceed amount of Seventy-Nine Thousand Five Hundred and 00/100 Dollars ($79,500.00) for the 2025 Evaluation and Rehabilitation Toolbox for Wastewater Collection System and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

Documents:
  1. CB2025-117.pdf
4.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-121

AN ORDINANCE approving an amended work authorization with Olsson Inc. in the not to exceed amount of One Hundred Ninety-Nine Thousand Five Hundred Eighty Dollars ($199,580.00) for ARPA Stormwater additional design scope and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and setting a date when this ordinance shall become effective.

Documents:
  1. CB2025-121.pdf
5.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-271

AN ORDINANCE authorizing the City of Joplin, Missouri, to enter into an Agreement with the Economic Security Corporation, for the purpose of cooperation in the provision of affordable housing; and authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin.

Documents:
  1. CB2025-271.pdf
9.

Resolutions

10.

Ordinances - Emergency

1.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-353

AN ORDINANCE approving the contract by and between the City of Joplin and B&D Yardbuilders for the demolition of the structure(s) and clearing of a lot located at 126 S Pearl  Ave. in the City of Joplin, Missouri, for Six Thousand Four Hundred Seventy-Eight dollars ($6,478.00); providing how the cost thereof shall be paid; how the assessment thereof shall be made; and containing an emergency clause. 

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-513

AN ORDINANCE    approving the Real Estate Contract by and between the City of Joplin, Missouri, a Municipal Corporation, and Terry Wright, for the sale of one parcel located at 1215 Hill Street, totaling approximately 3,150 square feet of land; and authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and containing an emergency clause.    

3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-514

AN ORDINANCE    approving the Real Estate Contract by and between the City of Joplin, Missouri, a Municipal Corporation, and Lauren White, for the sale of one parcel located at 129 North Maple Street, totaling approximately 6,200 square feet of land; and authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and containing an emergency clause.    

4.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-515

AN ORDINANCE    approving the Real Estate Contract by and between the City of Joplin, Missouri, a Municipal Corporation, and Lauren White, for the sale of one parcel located at 831 South Ozark Street, totaling approximately 6,000 square feet of land; and authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and containing an emergency clause.    

11.

Ordinances - First Reading

1.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-120

AN ORDINANCE approving an Agreement and Purchase Order 2025A with Ace Pipe Cleaning, Inc. for the 2025 Evaluation and Rehabilitation Toolbox for Wastewater Collection System in the amount of Seven Hundred Fifty Thousand and 00/100 Dollars ($750,000.00) and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-516

AN ORDINANCE    adopting an updated step pay plan by reference the City Salary Administration Plan; establishing the annual salary of certain Classified and Unclassified positions for Fiscal Year 2024-2025; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2025-611

AN ORDINANCE approving a Contract by and between the City of Joplin and RAVENii, LLC., to implement Co-Managed Services and Network Upgrades; authorizing the City Manager to execute said Contract by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and containing an effective date.

12.

Ordinances - Second Reading and Third Reading

13.

Unfinished Business

14.

New Business



Eric Burlison: President Trump is delivering on promises to put everyday Americans first


(From Seventh District Congressman Eric Burlison)

Tuesday marked 100 days since President Trump’s historic return to the White House, and his administration is moving at an unprecedented pace. 

He’s signed more executive orders in his first 100 days than any president in U.S. history—delivering on promises to secure the border, rein in the federal bureaucracy, and put everyday Americans first.








Already, illegal crossings at the border have dropped by 94%, the Department of Government Efficiency has identified billions of dollars in government waste, and Trump is unleashing American energy by dismantling Joe Biden’s "Green New Scam."

Looking ahead, Congress must match the President’s boldness and codify these executive actions into lasting law.

Saturday, May 03, 2025

Nancy Hughes: You can walk in a basketball game?

“Whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did.”

I John 2:6 (NIV)


As we walked into the gym, I whispered to my husband, “There’s Brian,” and pointed to the tall, dark-haired young man on the basketball court. “He is terrific,” I continued as we sat down to watch the game. “His Christian faith is very important to him, and he is such a great role model to talk to younger kids about making good choices. He lives what he believes, and everybody knows it.” My husband responded, “That’s a big responsibility for a boy in high school.”

Not five seconds later, Brian and an opponent began jockeying for position during a play, but the intensity quickly escalated to bumping and shoving – hard – and then a whistle from the referee and a double foul call. My husband glanced at me with eyebrows raised, but before I could say one word, Brian reached over, patted his opponent on the rear, and said, “Sorry about that.”








He could have huffed and puffed and stomped around, but he didn’t. He could have scowled at the referee as many ball players do when they don’t agree with a call. But to Brian, it was not a question of whether or not he had fouled; it was a matter of respecting the referee who made the call. Brian wanted to be a Christian example, no matter where he was or what he was doing.

I cannot help but think of him when I read I John 2:6. Not only did Brian claim Jesus as his Lord, but he desired to walk with Him every day in every part of his life. Not just when he “walked” into church on Sunday or into the school on Tuesday or when he “walked” to Wednesday night youth group, but every single day and – yes – even during basketball games.

I have always said that more than anything, I want Jesus in control of my life and for others to know Him because I am trying to live as He did. But in all honesty, I don’t always “walk the walk” everywhere I go. I’ve been to movies where I would be embarrassed if the Lord were sitting next to me. And I have had conversations that Jesus would not want to be a part of because they did not resemble the attitude Christians should have at all.








If I am going to claim Him as my Lord, it has to be a full-time, 100% relationship. He has to be welcome everywhere I go, as I look to Him as my example. Period. I thank the Lord for Brian’s willingness to walk as Jesus did, no matter where he was. Even in a basketball game.

Father, I long to walk as you did so that others see you through me. May you be a part of my life every day. In Jesus’ Name. Amen.

...R.A.P. it up . . .

Reflect

Do you have any places that you do not “take” Jesus with you during the day or week?

If so, why are you not including Him in every minute of your day?

Apply

Journal your schedule for a week and see if there are times that you do not “walk as Jesus did.”

Write the Power Scriptures on note cards, keep them with you, and pull them out wherever needed to remind you to follow the example of Jesus.

Power

I John 2:6 (NIV) “Whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did.”

I Corinthians 11:1 (NIV) “Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ.”

Matthew 5:16 (NIV) “In the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.”

(For more of Nancy Hughes' writing, check out her blog, Encouragement from the War Room.)


Joplin R-8 names principals for Eastmorland, Jefferson elementary schools


(From Joplin Schools)

We are thrilled to share that two of our own Eagles have accepted positions as head Principals for the 2025-26 school year. Please help us congratulate Tylan Harris as the next principal at Eastmorland Elementary, and Josh Thompson as the next principal at Jefferson Elementary!

Mr. Harris currently serves as Assistant Principal at Irving Elementary, having been an educator in Joplin Schools since 2018. He began his time in the district as a fifth grade teacher at Jefferson Elementary, and held the position of head coach of the Freshman Football Team from 2020-2023. 








Prior to joining the field of education, Mr. Harris spent time in social work, behavior support, and client treatment supervision. As head principal at Eastmorland, he will succeed Heather Surbrugg, who is transitioning to building leadership at Joplin Early Childhood.

Currently serving as Assistant Principal at Soaring Heights Elementary since 2023, Mr. Thompson has been an educator in Joplin Schools since 2016. He has held positions teaching English Language Arts and Physical Education at East Middle School and served on the building’s Leadership Team. He was also head coach of the boys and girls soccer teams at Joplin High School from 2018-2023. 

As head principal at Jefferson Elementary, he will succeed Kern Sorrell, who has announced his retirement at the end of the 2024-25 academic year.

Trump appoints Ben Baker to top Missouri USDA post


(From the United States Department of Agriculture)

President Donald Trump's nomination of Rep. Ben Baker, R-Neosho, as Missouri state director of rural development was announced Friday by the U. S. Department of Agriculture.

Baker posted the following statement on his X account:

Thank you President @realDonaldTrump for your confidence in appointing me as the State Director of Rural Development for the @USDA

It will be a great honor to serve your administration to Make America Great Again!







The USDA news release is printed below:

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins today (Friday) announced the latest slate of presidential appointments for key Farm Service Agency (FSA) and Rural Development (RD) State Director roles.

“When America’s farming communities prosper, the entire nation thrives. This new group of USDA appointees will ensure President Trump’s America First agenda is a reality in rural areas across the country. I am grateful for the leadership of these new state directors and look forward to their work reorienting the agency to put Farmers First again,” said Secretary Rollins.

FSA State Directors help implement President Trump’s America First agenda and execute the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) policies in planning, organizing, and administering FSA programs through state offices across the country. RD State Directors help affirm the mission of the Trump Administration by focusing on finding ways to empower rural America and unleash economic prosperity.








Ben Baker Appointed as State Director, Missouri Rural Development


Ben Baker serves as State Director for Rural Development in Missouri. He is a former Missouri State Representative with a focus on government efficiency and public service. He lives in Neosho, Missouri, with his wife, Naomi, and their two daughters, living a life grounded in faith, family, and a relentless drive to serve his community.

(Note: Though the USDA press release refers to Baker as a former Missouri state representative, I haven't seen any official notice that he has resigned.)

Remembering May 1, 1995: When the Oklahoma City bombing case came to Carthage


I'm two days late with this, but May 1 marked the 30th anniversary of an event that we thought was going to go down in history, but instead turned out to be an afterthought.

On the 30th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, I wrote about how I nearly made a catastrophic mistake because I was so focused on putting local news on page one of the Carthage Press that I would have not made the bombing a page-one story except that Publisher Jim Farley said it needed to be on page one.








Of course, I quickly realized the importance of the story and avoided being the only editor of a daily newspaper in the U. S. who didn't put the bombing on page one.

Twelve days after that, May 1, 1995, I had a chance to redeem myself and the Press news staff had an opportunity to turn the bombing into a local story. I wrote about that in my 2008 book The Turner Report and reposted it last night in my column on the Turner Report Newsletter. It's printed below.

***

It was mid-afternoon May 1 when two men in a white Thunderbird with Arizona license plates wheeled into the Kel-Lake Motel parking lot, jumped out of the car and headed to the motel office. One of the men was in his 50s, a tall, slender gentleman wearing a dark red cap and a blue flannel shirt. The other man, was in his late 20s, and had a stocky build, long black hair and a thin mustache. He wore a dark blue polo shirt.

The men were smiling as they entered the office. Wanda Jackson, who owned the motel with her husband Norman, greeted them.

“We’re looking for a room,” the older man said.

“We have some rooms.”

“Great. We would like to pay for a week,” the older man said, “but we would like to see the room first.” The men introduced themselves. The older man was Robert Jacks, while the younger one was Gary Allen Land.

“Do you have cable?” Land asked.

Assured that the rooms had cable, Land asked, “How about HBO?”

“Yes, we have HBO?”

Land nodded.

As Mrs. Jackson led the men to a room on the far end of the property, she struck up a conversation with the men. “What brings you to Missouri?” she asked.

“We’re looking to stay somewhere for a spell,” Jacks said. “We’re hoping to buy a place somewhere around here.”








As they approached the room, the men were surprised to see ducks and geese strolling through the property as if they owned it.

“Do you have those all the time?” Jacks asked.

“They come over from Kellogg Lake,” Mrs. Jackson explained.

She turned the key and opened the room, a plain-looking room with two beds and a television. After they looked over the room for a couple of moments, they agreed to take it, returned with Mrs. Jackson, signed the register and paid for a week’s stay.

A few moments later, the two jumped into the Thunderbird and drove off, returning about a half hour later with large boxes from Pizza Hut and what appeared to be enough beer to get them through the evening and maybe a few more evenings.

The next morning well before dawn, motel owner Norman Jackson glanced at the register and saw the names. “Gary Allen Land, Robert Jacks,” he said aloud, and the names were immediately familiar to him.

He told his wife, “These are the guys on CNN. These are the ones they are looking for about the Oklahoma City bombing.” The CNN report had not only included the names of Land and Jacks, but had also given a description and license number of the white Thunderbird with Arizona license plates, the same car that was parked in front of the motel.

Seeing a Missouri Highway Patrol car in the parking lot of the Flying W convenience store across the street, Jackson, taking extra care not to look like he was doing anything out of the ordinary, walked across the street and approached the trooper.

“I think the guys at the motel are the ones the FBI is looking for in the Oklahoma City bombing,” he said.

“What makes you think that?” the trooper asked.

After Jackson described the car and the names the men had written on the register, the trooper was convinced. The trooper checked the car, which was registered to Land. Two men in that same car had checked into a Vinita, Oklahoma motel the afternoon of the bombing, left the next morning, and returned later in the afternoon.

After the trooper called in, it was not long before state, federal, city and county law enforcement were in the area, using the Flying W as a command post.

The moment, the FBI arrived, it took charge and agents quietly went to the rooms of other guests to evacuate them and protect them in case anything went wrong with the arrest of Land and Jacks.

The agents did not rush making sure everyone was set up in their proper places before they even started the orderly evacuation of the other motel guests. George and Jacque Williams were sound asleep when two FBI agents knocked on their door at about 5:30 a.m. A groggy George Williams answered the door.

The agents flashed their badges and said, “You need to leave this room as quickly as possible.”

“What’s going on?” George Williams asked.

“I’m afraid we can’t tell you that, but you have to leave and you need to leave quietly.”

Williams said he would and in a few moments, he and his wife were on their way. One more guest was moved out of his room before the FBI contacted Land and Jacks. An agent called the motel room, where the men, surrounded by empty Bigfoot Pizza Hut boxes and beer cans that were just as empty, were wide awake, watching movies on HBO.

“You need to come out of the room with your hands over your heads,” the FBI agent said to Land, who had answered the phone. “Don’t make any sudden moves.”

More than 50 Missouri Highway Patrol troopers and federal agents were blanketing
the Kel-Lake Motel parking lot, aiming weapons at the motel room from every angle. It was a few moments before the door opened, and Land and Jacks exited the room, their hands over their heads.

FBI agents patted them down, handcuffed them, put them in a burgundy patrol car, and they were back on their way to Carthage.

Though Carthage Press Publisher Jim Farley did not write any stories for the Press, he served up a consistent flow of scoops for his reporters, from the police department and from other sources in government and business during the seven years I worked with him.

On the morning of May 2, 1995, Farley called me at home. He had received a tip that suspects in the Oklahoma City bombing were being arrested in Carthage.

“You’re kidding?”

“No, I’m not kidding. This is on the level,” he said.

I told him I would be right there. I was already almost out the door anyway and I only lived about six blocks from the Press. Shortly after I arrived, Ron Graber, the staff photographer, entered the office. I explained the situation and told him to be ready. We were going to offer comprehensive coverage of this story.

For once, we would have the advantage over the morning newspaper.

A few moments later, Lifestyles Editor Mary Guccione, a former Joplin Globe reporter who had worked for the Press for about two months, came in. Mary was an ambitious reporter who always tried to work her way into big stories, even though those did not always come with her job description. I told her she was going to play a big part in this one.

That left me with one more person to call. “I need to call Kaiser,” I said, referring to our police reporter Randee Kaiser.”

“You can’t call him,” Mary said. “He’s on vacation.”

“If I don’t call him, he’s never going to forgive me. He’ll want to be in on this one.”








When I called, his wife answered the phone and it appeared Randee was having a heck of a vacation. “He’s fixing the roof,” his wife said. She finally agreed to let me speak to him and either Randee’s scoop instincts immediately went into overdrive or he really didn’t want to spend his vacation working on the roof. I told him not to bother to come into the office. “Get out to the motel and work from there,” I said. “Have you got your camera and some film?”

“Yeah.”

I told Mary to get out to Kel-Lake and work with him. Ron was developing the rest of the film we had for that day’s newspaper, though we probably would not be using much of it. He and I stayed at the paper for the moment, while Randee and Mary worked the motel and the Flying W.

At that point, the men had not been brought into Carthage. I told Mary to make sure we had advance notice and we would have someone at the police station.

As you might expect, by this time the Carthage Press had company on this story, including representatives from just about every radio and television station in the Joplin/Carthage area, and reporters from Kansas City, Tulsa, and Springfield were on their way.

But we did have a jump on the competition and this was our home area. As Randee interviewed the motel owners and the other guests, Mary Guccione was across the street at the Flying W.

This was an odd couple of reporting if ever one existed. Randee stood well over six feet, with dark black hair and a fastidiously-groomed mustache, while Mary, a woman in her late 20s, stood only four feet 11 on tiptoes, spoke with an energetic Alvin and the Chipmunks type voice, and had an appearance of looking ready for the junior prom. It didn’t matter. They were both excellent reporters.

As Mary interviewed people at the Flying W, there was a feeling of relief that two of the Oklahoma City bombers had been captured, and astonishment that it happened in Carthage.

As Mary talked with everyone in sight, she was competing with the local television stations, which were passing their feeds along to the networks. The news of the arrests had people flocking to the convenience store. “It’s been a crazy morning,” clerk Crystil Hawkins told Mary. “I had to sneak in the backroads to get to work. I’ve never seen anything like it.”

The next stop for Robert Jacks and Gary Land was the Carthage police station and that created an immediate problem … the facility was far too small for the attention it was about to receive.

Jim Farley had enough information to let us know the stop would only be a temporary one and that federal officials were arranging transportation for the duo.

I used the computerized filing system Ron Graber had devised for the newspaper to look up information on progress on the construction of a new police station. One of the arguments for the facility was the limited capacity of the present station and nothing proved that point more than this situation. The Carthage Police Department was under siege from the media and the public.

For a while, until I asked the receptionists to hold the calls, I was dealing with reporters from Newsweek, Time, Associated Press, the New York Times, and many lesser outlets (at least from a circulation standpoint) wanting information about the two men.

Despite the limited size of my staff, I had some resources that many small newspapers did not have. In addition to having a publisher with an unerring nose for news, we also had veteran advertising salesman Stewart Johnson, who was an excellent photographer. We were able to place two photographers, Stewart and Ron Graber, at the police station awaiting the departure of Land and Jacks. It was not going to be easy to get good photographs. Not only was the police station far too small, but the streets around it were already packed with people who were awaiting the departure of the Oklahoma City bombing suspects, or “material witnesses,” as they were being called.

More than 20 media organizations were represented, including all three Joplin television stations, area radio stations, statewide and national news organizations and Carthage resident Richard Bliss, who was videotaping it for his company, Blissful Memories, which normally sold videotapes of school events, weddings, and parties.

Mayor Don Riley told me, “I would say if anything shows the need for a bigger police station in Carthage, this does.” This was not the first experience the station had with a major media event. At the beginning of January 1994, only 16 months earlier, the station had not been big enough to handle the local-only media onslaught following the arrest of a Carthage man for the murder of eight-year-old Douglas Ryan Ringler. The police station was so small that older incident reports had to be kept in a trailer behind the building.

As we waited outside the station, most of the crowd was in the street, effectively keeping traffic away. I worked the crowd, doing something I have always felt was the most overused and overrated segments in newspapers and television— the man-on-the-street interview. This time was a definite exception to my philosophy.

Debbie Parker, Carthage, had been at the scene of the Connor Hotel collapse in Joplin in November 1978, when rescue workers saved a man who had been buried beneath the rubble. “Before this,” she told me, “that was the biggest thing I had ever seen in person. This is something that everybody is interested in. Nobody can believe that such a thing could happen in the United States.








“And who would ever think that someone who might be involved with it would be in Carthage?”

Ms. Parker had been keeping a watchful eye, she said. “I saw the FBI going in there with two big, green bags. I don’t know what was in them.”

Many of those in the crowd wanted to be somewhere where a piece of history was taking place. One of those was 19-year-old Stacey Wecker, a 1994 Carthage Senior High School graduate whose high school volleyball career I had covered (I also covered a considerable amount of sports for The Press, including Carthage High School volleyball and girls basketball games, some junior high games, and some area contests.) “I just wanted to see if they really had John Doe,” Stacey said.

Despite the friendly conversations I was having with Ms. Parker and Stacey, there was a definite undercurrent of hate and resentment from this crowd. America had been angered by the deaths of 168 people in the Oklahoma City bombing and two of the men who might be responsible for that brutal act were only a few feet away from the crowd.

As I was talking with Stacey, one of the onlookers shouted, “They’re coming out, they’re coming out! I can see them!”

Whatever the woman saw, it was not the FBI with Land and Jacks. It was a false alarm. The crowd was growing impatient, especially those of us who were already past their deadlines, but also those who were supposed to be somewhere else. “I’ve got to go back to work,” Stacey said, but she didn’t move an inch. “I really want to see this.”

A few minutes after she said that, she received her opportunity. Everyone at 213 Lyon Street in Carthage thought they were seeing history in the making and perhaps they were.

FBI agents walked out of the building, with Land and Jacks in tow. The Carthage community, which like the rest of America had been stunned that something like the bombing could take place in our heartland, let the two suspects know what they thought of them in no uncertain terms.

“You bastards!” one man screamed at the top of his lungs, while others called them killers.

“I hope you die,” one mousy, brown-haired woman who did not look capable of such a statement, shouted.

A Carthage police officer on a megaphone shouted, “Get back.” His words were accompanied by the honking of horns from the federal agents’ cars.

The agents quickly circled the suspects to keep the crowd from doing any harm to the men. At that point, my only concern, a selfish one, was that the Carthage Press capture that history in the making.

The efforts to protect the suspects might keep us from getting the photos we needed … the photos which already had guaranteed that our paper would be at least two hours late in hitting the streets that afternoon … and if we did not get them, it would mean that might not sell enough papers to make that delay worthwhile.

I did not have to worry. Ron Graber and Stewart Johnson did not miss anything. Ron, the best photographer in southwest Missouri (and most other places), caught the photo that ran later that day at the top of page one of the Carthage Press—an FBI agent helping Robert Jacks into a car, surrounded by other federal agents.

It took a while for the crowd to clear enough for the motorcade to leave the station. Land and Jacks were the targets of more verbal attacks, obscene gestures, and waved fists, but no one approached the car.






 

After the crowd was cleared to the point where the federal motorcade could pass through, The Carthage Press contingent zipped back to office, which was about five blocks from the station. We had the material, now we had to write, get film developed, and somehow get our paper printed.

In about a six-hour time period, the Carthage Press staff put together a newspaper that turned out to be one of our best-selling editions of all time. The entire front page was devoted to the story, with Ron’s photo, along with Mary’s story about the scene at the police station at the top, above the banner.

Randee Kaiser’s account of the capture was featured above the fold, as well as a photo he took at the motel of law enforcement officers at work. We had four more stories and a Ron Graber photo on page three, including Mary’s interviews at the Flying W, Randee’s interviews with the motel owners, my account of the reaction at the police station, and my background story on the problem with the size of the police station.

An AP account of the developing story, was also included, which featured some background on the bombing. We used the back page for photos by Ron, Randee, and Stewart Johnson, including a photo of Jacks in the car, covering his face with his cap, a picture of Land and Jacks’ identification, Carthage Police Chief Ed Ellefsen addressing the media, FBI agents searching Room 1 at the Kel-Lake Motel, and onlookers shouting derogatory comments and more than a few obscenities at Land and Jacks as they left the station.

It was one of the biggest stories to ever happen in Carthage … and it was also one of the biggest wastes of time.

As it turned out, neither Robert Jacks nor Gary Allen Land had anything to do with the Oklahoma City bombing, so there was no reason for them not to sign their real names on the register. The two were traveling across the country, mostly following old Route 66, staying in motels, drinking beer, and eating Bigfoot Pizza from Pizza Hut…all on the disability checks Jacks was receiving from the federal government.

Even though it turned out not to be as big a story as we initially thought it was, the capture of Land and Jacks at the Kel-Lake Motel turned out to be one of those days that remind reporters why they got into the business in the first place.

We had the chance to thoroughly cover a local story with national significance and the Carthage Press staff made the most of it.

Friday, May 02, 2025

Jersey Mike's, Holiday Inn Route 66 Pub and Grill pass Joplin Health Department reinspections

 Jersey Mike's Subs, 1702 S. Range Line Road, which failed a Joplin Health Department inspection April 21, passed its reinspection Thursday.

Also passing its reinspection was Holiday Inn Route 66 Pub and Grill, which failed its April 18 inspection

Other establishments that passed inspection Thursday and today included the following:

Big R's BBQ, 1220 E. 15th Street

Love's Travel Stop, 4013 S. 43 Highway








Flying J Travel Center, 11570 FF Highway

Casey's General Store, 403 N Main Street

Casey's General Store, 2808 W 7th Street

Thai Time Express, 1804 E. 32nd Street

Casey's General Store 4800 S. Range Line Road

Casey's General Store, 2604 N Range Line Road


Public hearings set for Spire's request for 15 percent rate increase


(From the Public Service Commission)

The Missouri Public Service Commission (PSC) is announcing local public hearings, starting on June 2, 2025, to receive customer comments in a natural gas rate increase request case filed by Spire Missouri Inc. d/b/a Spire. There will be in-person and virtual local public hearings.

On Nov. 25, 2024, Spire filed a request with the PSC for a rate increase that would total approximately $236 million. For the average residential customer, the proposed increase would be approximately 15% or $14 per month.








Below is the local public hearing schedule:

June 2 — St. Louis. University of Missouri St. Louis – Millennium Student Center, Room A, 17 Arnold Grobman Drive.
The hearing starts at Noon, beginning with a public information/question-and-answer session followed by the Commission receiving testimony from the public.

June 2 — Shrewsbury. Shrewsbury City Center, The Sunset Room, 5200 Shrewsbury Avenue. The hearing starts at 6 p.m., beginning with a public information/question-and-answer session followed by the Commission receiving testimony from the public.
June 3 — Virtual Local Public Hearing starts at Noon. See further details below**

June 3 — Virtual Local Public Hearing starts at 6 p.m. See further details below**
June 4 — St. Joseph. St. Joseph City Council Chambers—1100 Frederick Avenue.
The hearing starts at Noon, beginning with a public information/question-and-answer session followed by the Commission receiving testimony from the public.

June 4 — Kansas City. Gregg/Klice Community Center, 1600 East 17th Terrace.
The hearing starts at 6 p.m., beginning with a public information/question-and-answer session followed by the Commission receiving testimony from the public.

June 5 — Joplin. Missouri State Southern University - Corley Auditorium, 3950 Newman Road.
The hearing starts at 6 p.m., beginning with a public information/question-and-answer session followed by the Commission receiving testimony from the public.








**To attend a virtual local public hearing by telephone, at the time of the virtual hearing, call toll-free 1-855-718-6621, listen to the prompt and enter the meeting number/access code 2866 775 5885 for the June 3 hearing at Noon); or 2867 463 1122 for the June 3 hearing at 6 p.m.); followed by # (pound/hashtag symbol). If prompted for a password, enter 0107.

To attend a virtual local public hearing by video (internet), visit the website www.webex.com. You can also download the Cisco WebEx meetings application on your mobile device, laptop, desktop or tablet prior to the hearing and join the meeting at the hearing time by entering the corresponding meeting number/access code and password listed above.

The Commission has scheduled seven local public hearings. Any person may participate at any of the hearings, but are encouraged to attend the hearing corresponding to the location nearest to their service area for the most relevant information. In order to ensure broad participation and the ability for every citizen to offer comments, comments may be time-limited.

These local public hearings will be held in facilities that meet the accessibility requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Any person who needs additional accommodations to participate in these hearings should call the PSC’s hotline at 1-800-392-4211 or TDD Hotline at 1-800-829-7541 before the hearings.

To facilitate an orderly presentation that can be preserved for the record, members of the public who wish to participate in the virtual hearings should register, but are not required to register, by sending their first and last name, phone number, email address and the hearing they wish to attend to pscinfo@psc.mo.gov or by calling 1-800-392-4211 by 5 p.m. the day before the hearing.








If you are unable to attend a local public hearing and wish to make written comments, you may click the link below, contact the PSC, P.O. Box 360, Jefferson City, Mo. 65102, or by using the Commission’s electronic filing system (EFIS) at https://psc.mo.gov/General/Submit_Comments. From this webpage, click on “e-Filing Instructions” under the heading “Submit Comments in Writing”. When submitting comments, please reference File No. GR-2025-0107.

In addition, you may also provide comments or request additional information from the Office of the Public Counsel (Governor Office Building, P.O. Box 2230, Jefferson City, Mo. 65102-2230, telephone 1-866-922-2959 (toll-free) or 573-751-4857, email opcservice@opc.mo.gov). The Office of the Public Counsel is a separate state agency that represents the general public in matters before the Commission.