Local News
Record Levels Expected At Wappapello
April 27th 2011 by News

By Annabeth Miller,
ShowMe Times Editor
Due to the significant rains in recent days, levels at the lake are closing recreation areas, boat landings, and beaches.
The scene Tuesday evening at the Bill Emerson Visitor Center as families stopped and walked along the top of the hillside looking out over the Reservoir, the lake and Redman Creek area. The parking lot at the Redman area had water at about the mid point by 5:30 Tuesday evening, and the entire recreation area – baskeball courts, playground equipment and picnic areas – were under several feet of water.
The Corps of Engineers reported that as of 3 p.m. on Tuesday the lake level was at 387.07 feet. The crest was forecast was set for Friday at 394.0 feet – but that was without additional rain. That rain did, indeed, arrive later Tuesday night.
The discharge at the spillway was increased on Tuesday to 10,000 cfs (cubic feet per second). The parking lot at the spillway was busy with visitors stopping to watch the cascade through the reservoir and hear the roar of the water.
At Girl Scout Cove, the water was covered the Holly Huntington Campfire Circle and lapped at the steps on the hillside – approximately 50 yards from the normal waterfront. Gazing out to the water the top12 inches of the flagpole at the Girl Scout waterfront is all that is visable above the water.
“Visitors to the lake are urged to use caution in flash flood-prone areas and when traveling low roads near the lake,” Doug Nichols of the Corps said. “D Highway at Hattie’s Ford floods at elevation 388.0 feet NGVD. All access to the Lake are either flooded or have been closed. Inflows have caused floating debris such as logs, limbs, etc., on the lake. Many recreational facilities are being closed due to this high water.”
For up-to-date lake information and facility closings, call the Wappapello Lake Hotline at (573) 222-8139 or toll-free at 1-877-LAKE-INFO (1-877-525-3463) or call the Wappapello Lake Management Office at (573) 222-8562. The website for the Lake office is www.mvs.usace.army.mil/wappapello.
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Last Updated on April 27th 2011 by News
https://showmetimes.com/Blogpost/uija/Record-Levels-Expected-At-Wappapello
Dexter To Salute World War II Veterans
April 26th 2011 by News

By Annabeth Miller,
ShowMe Times Editor
They are called “the Greatest Generation.”
President Franklin D. Roosevelt said their generation had a “rendezvous with destiny."
They served their country – and the free world, really – in places like Saipan, Anzio, Guadalcanal, in North Africa, the beaches of Normandy, in the skies above Europe, and the jungles of Burma, as well as back in America at places like Camp Pendleton and Fort Ord.
Now, six decades after their service, dedication and sacrifice to America and the world, they are being recognized and honored.
A group of 30 World War II veterans will officially depart on a journey to remember: The Honor Tour to Washington, D.C. There they will see the historic sites in Washington and pay a special visit to “their” monument, the National World War II Memorial on the National Mall. The tour is sponsored by the Honor Tour group and coordinated by Rob Callahan.
Dexter will host the group of veterans - as well as other World War II veterans, families and friends - for a special ceremony beginning at 8:30 a.m., Friday, April 29 at the Bearcat Event Center on Grant Street.
“My hope is that the community will come and be a part of this ceremony,” said Dr. Roger Alsup, principal at Dexter’s T.S. Hill Middle School. He has chaired the community planning committee for Friday’s event.
“This has really been sponsored by the community. The school is providing the facility and the manpower, but it is the community that is honoring the veterans. We have had a community planning committee that has put this together and I think it is going to be a good program. I really hope the community will come and be a part,” Alsup said.
Alsup said the students at Southwest and Central elementary schools have practiced walking to the BEC and getting seated for the ceremony. In addition, he said the staff at the middle school and high school would talk to students about the significance of the event.
“We want them to realize what this ceremony is for and it’s significance,” Alsup said.
“I think our community supports our military and veterans, and I like having these opportunities to show our appreciation,” Alsup said. “I think a lot of people understand how important World War II was for us – how much it impacted us.”
Participating in the program will be:
• DHS Jazz Band, directed by Scott Rybolt{br] • DHS Honors Choir, directed by MaryRuth Boone
• DHS Student Body President, leading the Pledge of Allegiance
• Dr. Thomas Sharp, Superintendent of Schools
• Retired Brigadier General Charles Kruse
• “Replica” vocal trio
Groups like the American Legion, Legion Auxiliary, the DAR, the Stars and Stripes Museum, and other groups have joined to make the event possible. The employees at Dexter Wal-Mart helped pack snack bags to be given to each of the traveling veterans, the Dexter Fire Department has planned special water cannon salutes to honor the veterans. Dexter city department are all working together to make it a special day for the veterans, their families and the community.
Special exhibits will be setup both inside and out at the BEC for the veterans and the community. Stoddard County’s own Stars and Stripes Museum and the Four Star Military Uniform organization from Blytheville, Ark., will have displays - including World War II era uniforms - inside the lobby of the BEC. The Military Vehicle Group from Cape Girardeau will have vehicles and other large equipment outside the center for the veterans and community to see.
The Honor Tour is on a tight schedule. After departing Dexter’s Bearcat Event Center, they will travel north to catch their flight out of St. Louis to Washington, D.C.
At the conclusion of the program the veterans will board their bus to begin the first leg of their journey. The bus will travel east on Grant Street to Catalpa, and north on Catalpa to Stoddard Street. Event organizers encourage the community to line Stoddard Street from Catalpa to the City Administration Building to honor the veterans. The Boy Scouts will have the American flag on display along Stoddard Street for that morning.
Last Updated on April 26th 2011 by News
https://showmetimes.com/Blogpost/uij8/Dexter-To-Salute-World-War-II-Veterans
Levee Breaks In Poplar Bluff
April 26th 2011 by News

By Andrew Cato,
ShowMe Times
After days of rain and forced evacuations on Monday, the levee along the Black River in Butler County has finally given way to the the forces of nature.
The Black River levee at County Road 607 in Poplar Bluff breached in at least two places Tuesday morning, a spokesman for the Butler County Sheriff’s Department said.
“There was a break and more than one break," the spokesman said at 11 a.m. Tuesday. “We went from evacuation to search and rescue operations.”
The sheriff’s spokesman did not know specific details concerning the number of households affected by the breach, or the number of people evacuated.
However, water patrol reported 59 water rescues over night Monday. About 1,000 people were displaced Tuesday morning and 230 people are at the Black River Coliseum.
The American Red Cross has established a center for evacuees at the Black River Coliseum in Poplar Bluff.
Last Updated on April 26th 2011 by Unknown
https://showmetimes.com/Blogpost/uij7/Levee-Breaks-In-Poplar-Bluff
Leaders Question Plan To Blow Levee
April 26th 2011 by News

BREAKING NEWS
By Annabeth Miller
ShowMe Times Editor
The plan by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to intentionally breach the Birds Point-New Madrid Floodway – and flood more than 100,000 acres of farmland in Southeast Missouri – is drawing the ire of a trio of Missouri elected officials.
U.S. Rep. Jo Ann Emerson, Missouri Governor Jay Nixon and Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder have all expressed their opposition to the plan proposed by the Corps.
“I am strongly opposed to any plan to blow the levee,” Kinder said in an exclusive interview Tuesday morning with the ShowMe Times. “It didn’t work for the stated purpose in 1937. I think this is a terrible plan.”
Kinder is concerned that the plan will not work in 2011 but it will also destroy thousands of acres of Missouri farmland.
“One important difference between now and back then is that the area in 1937 had the trees characteristic of a swamp, and they acted as breaks for water. The vast majority of those trees have virtually all been cleared and there is nothing to slow the speed of the water running into the floodway,” Kinder said.
Emerson also voiced strong concerns about a plan to intentionally breach the levee. On her Facebook network page early Tuesday morning, Emerson said she would be meeting in Mississippi County today with local leaders and the corps concerning the flooding along the Mississippi River.
“I am going to be meeting with local elected officials and the Army Corps of Engineers throughout the next few days,” Emerson said. “Southeast Missouri has been hit hard. My number one job today (Tuesday) is to make sure the corps exhausts every other option before blowing the fuse plug and causing massive devastation in the St. Johns/New Madrid Floodway.”
Emerson, Nixon and Kinder agree that the breaching of the Birds Point levee would be harmful.
“At this critical time, I have serious concerns about plans by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to intentionally breach the Birds Point levee along the Mississippi River near Mississippi and New Madrid counties,” Nixon said Monday afternoon.
Nixon said intentionally breaching the levee would affect hundreds of Missouri families, pour a tremendous about of water through the floodway, and flood 130,000 of prime farmland.
“As Missouri families deal with this dangerous flooding, intentionally breaching this levee would be a harmful and inappropriate action." Nixon said.
“We need to take this all the way to the White House if need be to slow this action down,” Kinder said.
The actual decision to intentionally blow the levee will not rest with the corps, but with the Mississippi River Commission. The Commission, established 1879, includes three corps officers, but also three civilians. Members of the MRV are nominated by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate.
Businessman R.D. James of New Madrid is one of the three civilian members of the MRC.
The commission will meet Tuesday afternoon and make its decision on the corps plan.
The Corps of Engineers in Memphis announced late Monday that it had started “readiness plans” to operate the floodway. In addition, it stepped up its floodfighting response in the region, opening offices in Cape Girardeau and Dyersburg, Tenn.
Related link:
[ http://www.mvm.usace.army.mil/Readiness/bpnm/bpnminfo.asp
Last Updated on April 26th 2011 by News
https://showmetimes.com/Blogpost/uij6/Leaders-Question-Plan-To-Blow-Levee
Area Colleges, Schools Closed Tuesday
April 26th 2011 by Unknown

Three Rivers College is closed Tuesday at its main campus in Poplar Bluff and campuses in Dexter, Sikeston, Malden and Kennett.
In addition, Central Methodist University classes in Poplar Bluff have been cancelled and Murray State University in Kentucky is closed on Tuesday due to storm damage in that region from Monday night.
Stoddard County Schools
Advance
Bell City
Puxico
Other Schools
Bunker R-III
Chaffee Head Start
Clearwater R-I Schools Delta R-V Schools
Doniphan R-I Schools East Carter County R-II
Greenville R-II
Lesterville R-IV
Marquand-Zion R-VI
Meadow Heights R-II
Naylor R-II Schools
Neelyville R-IV
New Hope Christian Academy
New Salem Baptist Academy
Oran R-III
Poplar Bluff R-I
Ripley County R-IV Schools
South Iron County R-I
Southern Reynolds Co. R-II
Twin Rivers R-X
Van Buren R-I
Westwood Baptist Academy
Woodland R-IV
Zalma R-V
Last Updated on April 26th 2011 by Unknown
https://showmetimes.com/Blogpost/uij2/Area-Colleges-Schools-Closed-Tuesday