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What’s New at St. Louis Zoo’s Safari Parkl?

7 months 3 weeks ago
From St. Louis Post-Dispatch:  Construction of a safari-style zoo in north St. Louis County is well underway, with money from a special sales tax flowing in along with new animals. Martha Fischer, general curator at the facility, called WildCare Park, answered questions about progress there. And yes, it’s still expected to open in 2027. How’s […]
Kacey Crawley

How Can We Close the Skills Gap? Shop Teacher Has Ideas.

7 months 3 weeks ago
From Industry Week:  In manufacturing, if you ask “why” something failed enough times, you usually find out a person or process was wrong or out of place. That is the current state of vocational education in America. I have been a shop teacher for 14 years, and the reason I received my first job as […]
Kacey Crawley

Why a Plan to Fund Office-to-Housing Conversions Isn’t Working Yet

7 months 3 weeks ago
From Bloomberg:  Pittsburgh’s Gulf Tower is a 44-story Art Deco office building that once served as the headquarters of the Gulf Oil Company. Completed in 1932, the handsomely appointed skyscraper is a distinctive feature on the Steel City’s skyline; its stepped crown, modeled after the ancient Mausoleum of Halicarnassas, lights up with colors that can […]
Kacey Crawley

Colliers Hires New St. Louis Market Leader

7 months 3 weeks ago
From St. Louis Business Journal:  A national commercial real estate firm has a new market leader for St. Louis. Matthew Hrubes will lead the St. Louis office of Colliers, the Toronto-based global real estate firm, the company said Monday, which was also Hrubes’ first day in the role. As managing director and brokerage market leader […]
Kacey Crawley

What’s That Going to Be Off Old Carpenter Road Near Edwardsville?

7 months 3 weeks ago
From The Edwardsville Intelligencer:  Work has started on the new Cedar Ridge Development just outside of Edwardsville. The 36-home, 95.9-acre Cedar Ridge subdivision is located off Old Carpenter Road in unincorporated Madison County and will include lot sizes of at least two acres. The site is the former St. Catherine’s Golf Course. It opened in […]
Kacey Crawley

Stillwater Senior Living Male Athlete Of Month: Taurean Valentine Has Been Big Player For Warriors Boys Basketball Team

7 months 3 weeks ago
COLLINSVILLE - Taurean Valentine, a senior guard and forward for the Granite City High boys basketball team. scored eight points in the Warriors' 52-47 overtime win over Mundelein on Dec. 28, 2024, Granite's win in this year's Collinsville Prairie Farms Holiday Classic, but it was an important win, as the Warriors kept plugging away, and took the close game in the consolation quarterfinals. Valentine is currently averaging 4.5 points, and 3.8 rebounds-per-game, going along with a team-leading 24 assists and also making 10 steals, second most on the Warriors thus far. He helps provide leadership and encouragement to his teammates, many of whom didn't have varsity experience before this season. Valentine is a Stillwater Senior Living Male Athlete of the Month for the Warriors. In a postgame interview after the win over the Mustangs, Valentine felt good about the Granite win, and was also quick to praise his teammates for their help. "I"m feeling good," Valentine said. "There's

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Connecticut DMV and Top Lawmakers Vow to Review Towing Laws

7 months 3 weeks ago

This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with The Connecticut Mirror. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.

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The Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles said Monday the agency would undertake a “comprehensive review” of towing practices in response to an investigation by The Connecticut Mirror and ProPublica. The reporting found that some low-income residents were losing their cars because they couldn’t afford the recovery fees and had a short window to pay before towing companies were allowed to sell their vehicles.

The review comes as the 2025 legislative session opens Wednesday. The leader of the state House of Representatives said he will support efforts this session to lengthen the time period that tow truck companies have to wait before requesting the DMV’s permission to sell people’s vehicles.

“This will be a priority,” said House Speaker Matt Ritter, D-Hartford. “I mean, we are all pretty shocked by it.”

State law allows tow companies to seek permission from the DMV to sell a vehicle worth $1,500 or less just 15 days after towing it — one of the shortest such periods in the country, CT Mirror and ProPublica found.

The investigation, which was published Sunday, detailed how Connecticut’s laws have come to favor tow companies at the expense of owners. In many cases, people’s cars were towed from their apartment complexes not for violating the law, but because their complex-issued parking sticker had expired or they weren’t properly backed into a space.

As towing and storage charges mount, some towing companies set up additional barriers, like only taking cash. Others won’t release cars until they are registered in the person’s name, even if the driver just bought the vehicle and wasn’t required to register it yet under DMV rules.

The investigation found that the 15-day window was sometimes less time than it takes to get a DMV registration appointment and less than the time it takes to get a hearing for a complaint challenging a tow.

When presented with the findings, DMV Commissioner Tony Guerrera said that the 15-day window “strikes the right balance for consumers and towers.”

But on Monday, Guerrera said in a statement that his agency will propose changes to the Legislature to ensure that policies are updated and clear.

“We will undertake a comprehensive review of the issues highlighted in the article and engage in substantive discussions with legislative advocates,” Guerrera said. “Our proactive approach will involve actively participating in the legislative development of proposals to modernize the regulation of tow companies.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for Gov. Ned Lamont said he is “open to reviewing proposed changes to the law.”

Legislative leaders said they are concerned about the impact of the towing law on low-income residents particularly.

Connecticut House Speaker Matt Ritter (Yehyun Kim/The Connecticut Mirror)

“It’s not a friendly system for people who have probably the least amount of time and resources to navigate a tricky system,” said Ritter. “So it really is a double whammy. It’s an unfair policy, and then the only way to undo it requires an inordinate amount of effort and time and resources that a lot of these individuals don’t have.”

State Rep. Roland Lemar, D-New Haven, the upcoming co-chair of the General Law Committee, said he’s already spoken with the DMV, Democratic leadership and the governor’s office about legislation he is drafting that would lengthen the 15-day window before a sale, expand the forms of payment that towing companies are required to take, and prohibit companies from patrolling private parking lots looking for cars to tow. Instead, they would be required to wait for a complaint.

“The tow trucks are just driving around looking for a problem,” he said.

A bill that Lemar proposed in 2023 to require tow companies to accept credit cards, in addition to other measures, passed the legislature’s Transportation Committee. But facing opposition from towing companies and property owners, it wasn’t called on the House floor.

Timothy Vibert, president of the Towing and Recovery Professionals of Connecticut, said towing companies are willing to talk about changes to the laws but that legislators don’t want to address the underlying reason for tows — lots of people driving unregistered and uninsured cars.

“The reason they’re being towed is because they’ve done something wrong,” Vibert said. “Yes, there are some unscrupulous towers out there, and that’s just the way they are, OK? But you can’t change every piece of legislation to push on and make the towers be the fall guy.”

John Souza, president of the Connecticut Coalition of Property Owners, said that 15 days seems like a short window, particularly for some of his tenants who get paid each month through Social Security, but allowing towers to patrol parking lots is helpful for larger apartment buildings. He doesn’t live at the rental properties he owns, he said, so it would be hard for him to call towing companies at all hours of the day.

“As a landlord, I get it,” Souza said. “You have to have rules, and people unfortunately take advantage. If the rules are too slack, people take advantage of them. There’s nothing worse than coming home after a long, hard day and someone’s in your parking space.”

House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford, said his office quickly researched the issue following the story’s publication and found there’s a longer window for reclaiming minibikes before sale than there is for some vehicles.

“Fifteen days seems like a very short amount of time for anybody to be able to react and kind of do whatever they have to do to try to secure their vehicle before there’s an opportunity for it to be sold,” Rojas said. “For those reasons, and perhaps others too, it merits a look for sure.”

He said the issue “struck a nerve” with him and others because of how important it is to have reliable access to transportation.

House Minority Leader Vincent Candelora, R-North Branford, said he is willing to consider changes to the state’s towing law.

“I’m concerned about the potentially predatory nature of towing practices in Connecticut,” Candelora said. “A number of years ago, I thought we had addressed this issue by requiring the posting of signs and the cost of towing prior to allowing the towing of vehicles, but obviously there seems to be an issue that still needs to be addressed.”

Leadership in the state Senate said they were interested in exploring the issue. Senate President Pro Tempore Martin Looney, D-New Haven, said there’s an “issue here about fairness” that should be examined.

Has Your Car Been Towed in Connecticut? Share Your Story and Help Us Investigate.

by Ginny Monk and Dave Altimari, The Connecticut Mirror

Electric Vehicle Charging Bill Introduced in Creve Coeur

7 months 3 weeks ago
From West Newsmagazine:  Three months after discussing the need for legislation governing electric vehicle (EV) charging, the Creve Coeur City Council reviewed a bill that could provide such guidance. “We’ve been looking at this for quite some time,” Director of Community Development Jason Jaggi said. “For a little bit of background, what we’re trying to […]
Kacey Crawley

Big Lambert Redesign Contract Takes Local Firm Back to Roots

7 months 3 weeks ago
From St. Louis Business Journal:  Airport and city officials have taken the biggest step so far in the proposed $3 billion redevelopment of St. Louis Lambert International Airport by approving a design team with ties to the airport’s origins. HOK, the St. Louis-based international architecture firm leading the large team that won the design contract […]
Kacey Crawley

MO Safety Awards

7 months 3 weeks ago

Nominations are now being accepted for Public Safety Awards that honor both heroic first responders and civilians in Missouri. The MO Dept of Public Safety is looking to recognize those who took action beyond the call of duty with the Red White and Blue Heart Award, the MO Medal of Valor, the Gov’s Medal, and…

The post MO Safety Awards appeared first on The Big 550 KTRS.

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Trump refuses to rule out use of military force to take control of Greenland and the Panama Canal

7 months 3 weeks ago

PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump says he won’t rule out the use of military force to seize control of the Panama Canal and Greenland as he declared U.S. control of both to be vital to American national security. Speaking to reporters less than two weeks before he takes office on Jan. 20…

The post Trump refuses to rule out use of military force to take control of Greenland and the Panama Canal appeared first on The Big 550 KTRS.

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United Congregations of Metro East Receives Grant to Help East St. Louis Residents Clear Old Cannabis Records & Get a Fresh Start

7 months 3 weeks ago
EAST ST. LOUIS - United Congregations of Metro East, an organization that works to address social, racial, and economic issues in southeastern Illinois, has joined the New Leaf Illinois network to help people clear past cannabis and other eligible arrests or convictions off their records. New Leaf Illinois is a statewide network of nonprofit organizations, funded by the State of Illinois, that provides free expungement legal services. United Congregations of Metro East received a $25,000 grant from the Illinois Equal Justice Foundation to provides legal information, resources, and help navigating the justice system to people who are struggling with career advancement in the East St. Louis community and surrounding areas. “Transformation begins by prioritizing people and equipping them with the resources they need to thrive,” said Darnell Tingle, Director of United Congregations of Metro East. “Supporting record expungement empowers individuals to move beyond their pas

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Godfrey To Consider Banning Kratom

7 months 3 weeks ago
GODFREY - The Village of Godfrey is considering a ban on the sale or possession of kratom, which would impose fines for each violation and criminal penalties under certain circumstances. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Kratom “commonly refers to an herbal substance that can produce opioid and stimulant-like effects.” Most users report using kratom to manage pain or opioid addictions. “While there are no uses for kratom approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, people report using kratom to manage drug withdrawal symptoms and cravings (especially related to opioid use), pain, fatigue and mental health problems,” the NIDA states. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) notes kratom “is not controlled under the Controlled Substances Act,” leaving regulation to state and local governments. Kratom products can legally be sold in Illinois to individuals over 18 years old, but local municipalities have

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Edwardsville Arts Center to Hold ARTini Fundraiser, Free Classes and More

7 months 3 weeks ago
EDWARDSVILLE - The Edwardsville Arts Center is already looking ahead to an exciting year. Beth Browne, executive director of EAC, explained that their recent move to 340 Montclaire Avenue in Edwardsville was a big adjustment, but they still managed to increase their programming by 18% in 2024. Now, as 2025 gets underway, the center has big plans for the coming months, with several events lined up already. “Art just brings so much joy,” Browne said. “We’ve got lots of great programming coming forward, so we’re very excited about that.” EAC will kick off the year with ARTini, a night that “celebrates the fusion of art and mixology,” Browne said. On Saturday, March 8, 2025, community members are invited to the Leclaire Room at N.O. Nelson to enjoy art-inspired cocktails from 18 restaurants around the Edwardsville area. Artists will also be creating pieces onsite, which will then be auctioned off at the end of the night. You

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What’s Famous-Barr Building Worth? More Than St. Louis Hoped

7 months 3 weeks ago
From St. Louis Post-Dispatch:  Seizing one of downtown’s biggest vacant buildings will cost city officials more than they hoped. A court-appointed panel said Friday that the Railway Exchange building and its accompanying parking garage off Olive Street are worth $7.3 million, $2 million more than the city bid for the property. The news could complicate […]
Kacey Crawley

Modern Approaches to Informal Urban Gathering Places

7 months 3 weeks ago
From Urban Land:  LONG AGO, places such as museums were solely for admiring art, libraries were for reading and borrowing books, and offices were for work. These days, the boundaries between places and their purposes are blurred. Architects, city planners, and developers have taken note and now intentionally design “third spaces” for unexpected places. For […]
Kacey Crawley