January 27, 2012

Public input sought on Ozarks parks plan

The National Parks Service is reviewing three alternatives for a comprehensive parks plan in the Ozarks.

The last general management plan for the Ozark National Scenic Riverways was done in 1984 and public input forums are being held throughout the state to formulate a new plan. The end result with guide decisions at the park for the next 15 to 20 years.

Elisa Kunz with National Parks Service says three alternatives are being considered. The zones include land, water, developed, natural, resource-based recreation and primitive.

Kunz says many people are concerned about a possible change of allowable horsepower on the waterways. Others are looking at the zones from a horseback riders’ viewpoint and some want things to stay as they are.

"Some even want it to be changed back to how it was in 1964," she says.

Other concerns include too many tubing, canoeing, rafting, and boating on the river; too much lewd visitor behavior; pollution by people, vehicles, horses and motorboats; people are scaring wildlife and damaging habitat; invasive species of animals are moving in and spreading; some land uses and activities outside the park are damaging things inside the park, including water quality.

Kunz says the main planner is from Colorado, where National Parks have the same zone concept as well as the same challenges.

Seven zones are proposed for the park. That includes a Developed Zone, which would have buildings and visitor facilities like campgrounds and related services; Resource-based Recreation Zone; a Natural Zone; a Primitive Zone; a Mixed-Use Zone for motorized and non-motorized boating; a Season Mixed-Use Zone for non-motorized and lower horse-power motorized boating during the low-use season (non-motorized only during the rest of the year); and a Non-motorized Zone.

The parks service hosted forums around the state to get public input, which wrapped up in St. Louis Friday, June 26.

Public commentary can still be submitted online at nps.gov/ozar  or by sending a letter to: Superintendent, Ozark National Scenic Riverways, P.O. Box 490, Van Buren, MO, 63965.

Jessica Machetta reports [Download/listen MP3]
Elisa Kunz explains possible action alternatives

Senate hearing on reverse mortgages in U-City

 

A United States Senate committee looking at potential problems in the reverse mortgage industry holds a hearing today in University City.

Committee chairman Claire McCaskill says reverse mortgages can be a good tool for some people in limited circumstances. But they’re expensive and not right for many senior citizens. But she says they’re being marketed heavily to senior citizens because the federal government backs them and they can become predatory lending operations. She says a home equity loan is much less expensive and can be utilized in the same way in many cases.

She says the biggest problem is that people do not realize how expensive reverse mortgages are and that sometimes salesmen also market annuities as part of their pitch. McCaskill is not sure that’s ethical or moral.

The committee will hear from representatives of the industry as well as from those who investigate its shortcomings.

Upload comments from McCaskill (3:43 mp3)

Morneau’s homer leads Twins

Minnesota’s Justin Morneau hit a three run homer in the first inning off Cardinals starter Joel Pineiro and the offense struggled against another left handed starter as the Cardinals lose their final interleague game of the season 6-2 Sunday afternoon at Busch Stadium. 

After a lead off error and single by Joe Maurer, Morneau hit a 432 foot bomb to right field to put the Twins up.  Jason Kubel added an RBI single in the third inning after an error by Khalil Greener, and the Twins added another in the seventh off  Pineiro on a sac fly.  He gave up just three earned runs in his 6.2 innings.   

New Cardinal Mark DeRosa made his debut and made a great diving catch in left field in the fifth inning.  The Cardinals were no-hit by Francisco Liriano until he gave up back to back doubles to Ryan Ludwick and Rick Ankiel. 

Greinke reaches ten wins

Royals’ pitcher Zack Greinke is once again tied for the major league lead with 10 wins after going 6.1 innings Sunday afternoon at Pittsburgh as the Royals won 3-2.  Greinke is now tied with Roy Halladay, Kevin Slowey, and Tim Wakefield for wins.  A rain delay cut his outing short.

The Royals finish interleague play 8-10 and avoid the sweep by the Pirates.  David DeJesus hit his sixth home run of the season and got two more runs when Mark Teahen doubled in a run and DeJesus picked up his second RBI of the day on a fielder’s choice.  Not only was Greinke good on the mound again, he also doubled. 

Governor Nixon considering special session for bond package

Governor Nixon indicates there is a possibility, right now only a possibility, that he could call the legislature into special session to consider a bond package to pay for capital improvements.

A proposal to dovetail into the retirement of $600 million in capital improvement bonds issued in 1982 passed the House this past session, but failed to clear the Senate.

Governor Nixon has written the legislature about the possibility of sending a new, $700 million bonding package to voters. Nixon says he has been talking with lawmakers about the issue. He says his sense is that the proposal has been well received. The timing is important. Interest rates are low, which would allow the state to issue more bonds at less cost. The federal economic stimulus package provides incentives for states to issue bonds.

"Couple that with the fact that we’re retiring the third state building fund bonds," Nixon says, "And that I have committed, as I committed in that letter, that we find the resources such that we wouldn’t cut state services and that we would be able to fund this without affecting Missouri’s Triple A bond rating."

The bond proposal has been pushed by Rep. Chris Kelly, a Democrat from Columbia, who says the timing couldn’t be better. The legislature has appropriated between $39 and $46 million each year to pay off the current bond package. Kelly envisions using that same funding to pay off the new bond package in 20 years, though the resolution he sponsored during the legislative session actually gave the state 25 years go pay it off.

Kelly says the state should act to take advantage of the federal incentive, which could pick up as much as 35% of the interest the state would pay on the bonds. Also, the economic recession has thrown people out of work and crippled state revenue.

"That’s why I’m so enthusiastic about the bond issue, because the bond issue is a way to get people to work in Missouri, right now," says Kelly.

Nixon recently announced that he has vetoed $105 million from next year’s state budget. $82.2 million in capital improvement projects were felled by the governor’s veto pen. A drastic drop in state revenue has also forced the governor to withhold $265 million in capital improvement projects. A bonding proposal could pick up the slack, though Kelly originally proposed the bonding package as a way to pay only for college capital improvement projects at both four-year and two-year colleges. He said at the time the bonds would make up for the failure of the Lewis and Clark Initiative to pay for college capital improvements. The sale of assets from the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MoHELA) has fallen far short of projections, causing many of the capital projects in the initiative to be delayed or scrapped.

The $600 million bond package was approved second administration of Governor Bond. Voters approved the package. The state issued the bonds in 1983 and 1984. If the legislature would approve the new proposal, it also would have to go to a vote of the people, likely in a special election.

The governor will only say he’s considering a special session on the bond issue. No commitment has been made yet. 

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (1:15 MP3)