Panama Canal expansion could impact Missouri ports

MODOT officials say the widened canal will open more freight shipment opportunities to Missouri.

Franklin School construction proceeds as planned

The $10 million project is being constructed next to the old school. It will open for the 2012 school year.

Dino's Pizza damaged by fire

The Cape Girardeau Fire Department estimates $250,000 in damages, but the building is not a total loss.

Mississippi River Basin nitrate pollution remains high

Nitrates flowing from the Mississippi River into the Gulf of Mexico contribute to the formation of areas known as dead zones.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Blunt visits floodway, meets with Corps, farmers

CHARLESTON, MO (KRCU) - Army Corps of Engineers officials and Mississippi County farmers met with Senator Roy Blunt Thursday to discuss the restoration of the Birds Point-New Madrid floodway.

The Corps is currently building a temporary levee to 51 feet - more than eleven feet lower than the original levee that was detonated in May to relieve massive flooding on the Mississippi River.

Senator Blunt visited the 170 thousand acre floodway and wants the federal government to fulfill its obligation to Southeast Missouri farmers.

"Hopefully we’re going to reach a good common sense solution here that does what the federal government is now required to do, which is to restore the protection level to where it was before the Corps exercised the half of the plan that takes it down," Blunt said. "The other half of the plan is you have to put it back up."

Blunt says Washington must meet its obligations in Mississippi County. He added that he requested a study to investigate if some federally-declared disasters are only declared as such for political reasons.

"I believe that the federal government has to step in, and has long been committed to step in, in areas where the federal government decides to create the problem," Blunt said. "And such as the federal levees or the federal flood plan, all of that that has been the responsibility of the federal government for a long time."

Farmers argued the Corps ignores local input. Many urged the Corps to rebuild the levee to its original 62-and-a-half feet and to include a concrete spillway at 60 feet.

Mississippi County Presiding Commissioner Carlin Bennett called the spillway approach a common sense solution that would save taxpayer money and provide floodway farmers with equal protection.

"That way you get natural overtopping," Bennett said. "You would get quite a bit of water coming in to the system when needed, when the river needs relief. But the second the river no longer needed the relief the water would stop dumping in because it would drop down below the level of that concrete spillway."

Bennett says the spillway option is the consensus choice for Mississippi County farmers.

Ed Marshall farms the floodway and is the president of Levee District Number 3. He's onboard with the spillway option.

"I think that’s a whole lot better deal than putting dynamite in a levee that you blow up and it costs 35 million dollars to put the levee back," Marshall said. "Not to mention the dirt, the farmers, the roads, the infrastructure, everything that is completely demolished. You know, I think it’s crazy."

Corps officials say the spillway plan is under consideration. They say the levee will be rebuilt to its original 62 feet when adequate funding is released. The temporary levee will be complete by November 16.

Jacob McCleland, KRCU

Cape Girardeau businesses gain from winning teams

CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO (KRCU) - It’s no secret college athletics can supply an injection of money into the local economy. And that’s especially true when the teams are winning.

Downtown businesses are anxiously awaiting this weekend’s football home opener between Southeast Missouri State University and Southern Illinois University.

Chuck Martin, Executive Director of the Cape Girardeau Convention and Visitors Bureau, says certain events, like homecoming and family weekend, tend to draw bigger crowds.

"Certainly we see a big uptick in the amount of people that are staying in our hotels, eating in the restaurants, filling their tanks at our gas stations, and shopping at our shops," Martin says. "So there is a very direct correlation, with those bigger events, especially."

Martin says certain rivalries, such as Murray State or SIU, can generate more revenue because they bring a bigger fan base.

However, this spike in fans only helps certain businesses because fans from schools like Southern Illinois do not stay in hotels.

Drew Yount, KRCU

ST. LOUIS, MO (ST. LOUIS PUBLIC RADIO) - The same weather system that brought almost three weeks of dangerous heat to the St. Louis region in July is causing record-setting temperatures this week as well.

But relief is on the way.

National Weather Service meteorologist Mark Britt says the large area of high pressure that’s been sitting over the southern United States for most of the summer will occasionally expand.

When that happens, the heat that’s been blistering Texas for months creeps into the Midwest.

But Britt says because we’re a few weeks closer to fall, this current heat wave won’t stick around as long.

"We’re starting to see a little stronger storm systems move around the ridge of high pressure and so that allows cold fronts to stay through Missouri and Illinois for a bit longer than they did earlier," Britt said.

Britt says longer-range models show below-normal temperatures for most of September, though he says a few hot days are still possible.

Rachel Lippmann, St. Louis Public Radio

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Big Oak Tree State Park and Towosahgy State Historic Site to re-open

EAST PRAIRIE, MO (KRCU) - Big Oak Tree State Park and Towosahgy State Historic Site will both re-open this weekend.

Both areas are located near East Prairie. They were closed following the Birds Point levee breach and inundated by 12 to 16 feet of water and sand.

Starting this weekend, visitors will be able to access Big Oak Tree State Park’s main day-use area and hike on the boardwalk.

Bill Bryan is the director of Missouri State Parks. He says most of the park is in good condition, but he has concerns about sections of the park that are off the beaten path.

"There’s about 100 acres in the park that has a significant amount of sand and sediment on it that washed in with the floodwaters that really threaten the really large, mature, spectacular pecan and oak trees," Bryan says.

The 100 acres in question equate to about 10% of the park.

Bryan says the visitor’s center will have to be demolished. FEMA will help cover the costs for a significant amount of the park’s damages.

Towosahgy State Historic Site is a Mississippian culture village site near East Prairie. State Parks Director Bill Bryan says there is evidence that over 250 people inhabited Towosahgy more than one thousand years ago.

"That site weathered the flood pretty well," Bryan said. "We didn’t have any damage to the cultural site itself. We did lose some of our interpretive panels and our interpretive kiosk and restroom facility. So we’re going to have to do some rebuilding there. But the good news is the historic and cultural assets are intact."

Big Oak Tree State Park is re-opening in time for its annual “Living History Day” on September 10.

Jacob McCleland, KRCU

McCaskill on waste in Iraq and Afghanistan

KANSAS CITY, MO (KCUR) - An investigation published Wednesday, figures that at least 30 billion, but probably 60 billion dollars, have been wasted in Iraq and Afghanistan. Senator Clair McCaskill thinks those figures are low, but she says it’s not going to be easy to cut the waste, fraud and abuse.

McCaskill, a Democrat, says contractors have a lot to do with the losses. They’ve become an enormous part of the defense effort, especially overseas, and one that she says they aren’t well regulated, not at all.

The Wartime Contracting Commission agrees, and suggests more than a dozen ways tighten scrutiny on contractors, weed out the careless, and criminals … and save billions a year.

 But McCaskill says some powerful companies will likely go to war over those reforms.

"These are very profitable corporations, that have relied, extensively in terms of their bottom line, on sloppy contracting procedures, that have been embraced by the Department of Defense, the Department of State and USAID," the Senator from Missouri said.

It isn’t just contractors. The report shows that project selection has caused a lot of the waste in Iraq and Afghanistan. Things like power plants that, once built, are not maintained.

Frank Morris, KCUR

Lady Redhawks soccer team look to improve on so-so start

CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO (KRCU) - The Southeast Missouri State University women’s soccer team has started their season 2-2, but they’re looking to improve as the season continues.

After a number two finish last season and a heartbreaking loss in the semi-finals of the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament, the women’s soccer team is hoping to continue their dominance on the soccer pitch this season.

They are ranked second in the OVC in preseason polls, but are on track to finish higher.

Coach Heather Nelson says the team has several returning players who will help lead the team.

"In midfield we have, I think, one of the best players in the OVC back, and that’s Vanessa Hart," Nelson says. "She’s a nice holding center midfielder, she can buy time for the forwards to make runs, but she can also play quickly and she’s also an attacking threat herself."

Nelson says returning players are a strong part of the team, and some new faces are making an impact.

"We’ve been able to create a lot of offense, probably the most that we’ve actually done in years with this program. That’s a credit to some of our newcomers that have definitely shown to be threats, Jessie Crabtree, transfer from the University of Missouri, and also Erin Shulman, a freshman of the Springfield, Illinois area," coach Nelson said.

The lady Redhawks will face off at Evansville on September 2.

Drew Yount, KRCU

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Isle of Capri pours casino basin

CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO (KRCU) - The Isle of Capri casino construction took a big step forward Tuesday night.

Construction crews poured a 41 thousand square foot concrete slab for over 12 hours. The slab will serve as the basin where the casino floor will float.

Missouri law requires that casinos are built within 1000 feet of a river and the gaming floor must float.

Isle of Capri’s Vice President of Design and Construction Dick Meister explained the casino's requirements according to Missouri law.

"In Missouri we can build a basin of 41,000 square feet and then put a barge of about 41,000 square feet and let it float. As long as there is two feet of water under the barge and a couple of feet on either side to swim around. However, when you walk into the barge, at end of the day, inside the building, you will not know that you have gone from the building to barge and back and forth. It’s a very seamless transition the way these are built now,” Meister said.

The concrete was poured overnight so that concrete trucks would not interfere with traffic.

Approximately 40 concrete trucks per hour arrived at the construction zone, hauling concrete from three Delta plants in Cape Girardeau and Jackson.

Meister says the basin must be completely flat. It cannot be off by more that one-eighth of an inch throughout it’s forty-one thousand square feet.

Jacob McCleland, KRCU