January 27, 2012

Obama’s green jobs adviser: Missouri a common-sense location for expansion

President Obama’s green jobs adviser,  Van Jones , says Missouri and the Midwest are common-sense locations for green industries to expand. Open spaces, a solid work ethic and experience in working with advanced bio fuels are among those factors, he tells the Missourinet.Van Jones

He says the arguments that traditional manufacturing jobs pay more and will better boost the economy here simply aren’t true.

Jones says study after study has shown that green jobs have a wingspan from the GED to the Ph.D. and back again, and that workers that can be “reskilled” will make more money in the end. “A green-collar job is a blue-collar job, upgraded to better respect the environment,” he says. Jones’ Green for All Web site has in-depth information on green jobs, ranging from job descriptions to how to find them and more.

When asked whether Missouri should build a second nuclear power plant to meet energy demands, Jones says Obama’s plan does include nuclear power as long as alternative energy sources — solar, wind and hydro — are part of the whole energy formula. Jones says it’s ironic that many alternative energies were invented in the U.S., but that European countries are the ones who have taken our ideas and run with them. Germany, for instance, has been successful with solar power and has much less natural sunlight than the majority of the United States, Jones says. We have to decide, he says, “if either we want jobs of tomorrow in our country or some other country, and if we want to create the products of tomorrow in the U.S., or have to import them later on.”

Jessica Machetta reports [Download/listen MP3]
Interview (10 min MP3)

Greinke Leads KC over Detroit

Zack Greinke won his eighth game of the year as the Kansas City Royals topped the Detroit Tigers 6-1 at Kauffman Stadium Tuesday night.

Greinke tossed a complete game, scattering six hits while striking out eight and walking none to improve to 8-and-1. Greinke’s MLB leading ERA is now at 0.84 and the complete game was his fifth in ten starts.

Mitch Maier drove in three runs while Jose Guillen homered and knocked in two for KC, which has won two-of-three since a four-game slide.

The finale of the three game set is this afternoon at the "K". The teams have split the first two games and KC is within three games of the first-place Tigers in the AL Central. . Kyle Davies will start this afternoon’s rubber match against Detroit rookie Rick Porcello.

Cards Find Offense in Win

An offensive explosion and solid Adam Wainwright pitching lead the St.Louis Cardinals to a 8-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park Tuesday night. The win puts St. Louis back into a tie with Milwaukee atop the NL Central at 27-and-19.

Six different players drove in a run for the Cards, and four hit home runs. Nick Stavinoha’s first career homer, a solo shot in the second inning, opened the scoring. Colby Rasmus and Adam Wainwright hit solo blasts in the fourth, and Chris Duncan added a two-run long ball in the sixth. Duncan had a big game in the No. 2 spot, adding a single and a walk while batting in front of Albert Pujols for the first time this year.

Pujols drove in two runs with a sacrifice fly and an RBI single. Skip Schumaker had three hits, No. 9 hitter Joe Thurston added a single, a double, a walk and three runs.

 

 

Wainwright allowed just five hits and one run with nine strikeouts in seven innings for his fifth win.

The Cardinals and Brewers wrap up their three-game series with a matinee at Miller Park Wednesday starting at 12:05.. The teams have split the first two games. The Cards send Todd Wellemeyer to the bumpl agaginst Milwaukee’s Manny Parra.

Blues Sign McClement to 3-Year Deal

St. Louis Blues’ President John Davidson announced Tuesday the club has re-signed center Jay McClement to a multi-year contract.

"Jay played his best season in the NHL this past year on both ends of the ice and is one of the best defensive forwards in the league," said Davidson. "He will continue to provide strength and experience on the penalty kill as we move forward."

McClement, 26, led all forwards in the NHL with 315:08 of shorthanded time this past season. He was one of four Blues to play in all 82 games, a career-high and posted career-highs in points (26), goals (12) and assists (14). McClement recorded a career-high three-game goal scoring streak from Feb. 24-Feb. 28, scoring three goals over-the-span.

The Kingston, Ontario native has skated in 311 career NHL games, all with St. Louis, collecting 111 points (35 goals, 76 assists) along with 140 penalty minutes. McClement was originally St. Louis second round selection, 57th overall in the 2001 NHL Entry Draft.

 

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Recent Team Info:

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McClement Signs Multi-Year Contract

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Blues Extend Contracts for 3 Coaches

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Kekalainen Gets Contract Extension

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Lucky Dogs

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No Place Like Home

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Murray Nominated for Jack Adams Award

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Sonne Named WHL Player of the Year

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McKee Undergoes Successful Knee Surgery

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5 Blues to Play in World Championships

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Blues Assign Bishop to Peoria

Subscribe | More team news

 

 

Statistics:

2008-2009 Playoffs

SKATERS:

GP

G

A

+/-

Pts

A. Mcdonald

4

1

3

1

4

B. Boyes

4

2

1

-1

3

D. Backes

4

1

2

1

3

D. Perron

4

1

1

3

2

A. Steen

4

0

1

-3

1

B. Jackman

4

0

1

-2

1

B. Crombeen

4

0

0

-2

0

R. Polak

4

0

0

-3

0

T. Oshie

4

0

0

0

0

P. Berglund

4

0

0

0

0

 

GOALIES:

W

L

OT

Sv%

GAA

C. Mason

0

4

0

.916

2.34

Full Team Stats >>

 

 

 

Common trait shared in fatal traffic crashes

A common characteristic was shared by most of those who lost their lives in traffic accidents this Memorial Day weekend holiday. They weren’t wearing their safety belts.

Lt. John Hotz with the State Highway Patrol headquarters in Jefferson City says that of the six fatalities state troopers worked, five of those killed weren’t wearing seat belts. Hotz says simply that seat belts save lives, even in a roll-over.

"Several of these crashes involved vehicles that overturned and several of the occupants were ejected from the vehicle," Holtz says, "And we know that once you’re ejected from that vehicle your chances of surviving that crash are not very good."

Seven people died during the Memorial Day holiday weekend, down from the 11 fatalities last year. That continues a trend the highway patrol would like to keep going, a drop in overall traffic fatalities this year.

Troopers were out in force this past weekend, participating in the "Ten Mile Trooper" program, which stations troopers roughly ten miles apart on the interstates and major highways. Trooper visibility, according to Hotz, seems to slow motorists down and focus their attention.

"The increased presence, the increased enforcement, the increased awareness as well as the individual motorist doing the right thing can help continue this downward spiral that we’re seeing in traffic fatalities," Hotz says.

In total, state troopers investigated 348 traffic wrecks during the weekend, which resulted in 157 injuries.

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (1:20 MP3)