January 27, 2012

The season of the eagle begins (AUDIO)

This weekend is the first organized opportunity for Missourians to get a close look at the national bird.       The conservation department sets up about a half-dozen Eagle Days each year. The first  Eagle Days of the winter will be at Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge at Mound City .in the northwest Missouri flood plain Saturday and Sunday.  .

Bald Eagles migrate south as lakes and streams freeze over to the north because they need open water for the fish they snag and eat or for water birds that die and become part of their diet.

Department ornithologist Brad Jacobs says it’s a unique experience.  He calls it “a spectacular wildlife event.”      

The observation platform at Squaw Creek is open from 9-4 on Saturday and Sunday.  Jacobs says watchers will see thousands of different kinds of birds and probably some eagles, maybe hundreds of them. He suggests watchers bring binoculars and dress in layers.  He says watching eagles in December next to a big body of water can be pretty cold.

Here’s a link for more information about this winter’s six Eagle Days:

http://mdc.mo.gov/newsroom/discover-nature-eagle-days

 Hear interview with Brad Jacobs 15:37 mp3

 

MO River management debate continues

A U.S. House Subcommittee meeting tomorrow will continue discussion of how the Missouri River should be managed.

For years, Levee and Drainage District Association Chairman Tom Waters has pushed for flood control to be a higher priority for the Corps of Engineers’ management of the Missouri. He says too much of its budget is focused elsewhere. “Since 1992, the Corps has spent $616 million on fish and birds. So, their budget is focused on fish and birds and not flood control, so there’s a real need to change that.”

Waters will testify before the subcommittee and urge them to shift more Corps funding to flood control, but also to ask lawmakers to appropriate more money to repair levees damaged in the 2011 flood.

Congressman Sam Graves will participate in the hearing. He says money for levee work can come from the Corps’ budget for habitat restoration, “…which is $73 million from Gavins Point down to the mouth of the Missouri, as opposed to the $6 million that is spent on levee maintenance. That’s 12 times more money on birds and fish than on levee maintenance. We want to transfer that money over at least this year; possibly next year, and use that as an offset.”

Graves hopes data from the 2011 flood will sway the argument toward increasing capacity in upstream reservoirs, but he is skeptical. “The fact of the matter is when you have years like we had this year, and we knew that snow melt was coming, there should be some adjustments made and there should be some consideration for people’s lives rather than two birds and a fish.”

The Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment hearing begins at 10:00 a.m. CST in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington D.C.

Hartzler says defense cuts are too drastic (AUDIO)

Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler

The Super Committee charged with coming up with a trillion dollars in budget recommendations has failed, and Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler says now defense spending is on the line.

She says President Obama has defended those cuts as necessary for balancing the budget, and that’s not the case. She calls him irresponsible as Commander in Cheif to let the funding take a hit. She says the percentage of the budget allocated to defense spending is already the lowest its been in years, and more cuts would cripple national security. But not everyone in Congress agrees. She says she’ll be working with others to find someplace else to cut, like mandatory spending programs.

She says she’ll be introducing legislation that reforms mandatory spending programs to save the country money that could be put into defense spending. Hartzler represents the areas that contain Fort Leonard Wood and Whiteman Airforce Base.

AUDIO Allison Blood reports. Mp3 [1:00]

SEC Quick Hits for 11/28

Gary Pinkel tweaks recruiting plans.

Kentucky #1 and Florida in Top 10 for men’s basketball polls.

Who will win the SEC Championship game?

Vols bump up their running back status with key commit.

Listen to LSU’s Morris Claiborne, Georgia’s Aaron Murray and more discuss the SEC Championship Game.

 

Jefferson City student calls Egyptian captivity ‘terrifying’ (AUDIO/VIDEO)

The Jefferson City man held by Egyptian authorities for less than a week is back home and talking about his experience.

Derrik Sweeney visits a Beduin camp in the Sanai. He hopes to continue studying abroad, including in the Middle East.

19-year-old Derrik Sweeney and two other college students were accused of throwing Molotov cocktails at security forces during protests in the capital city of Cairo. Authorities also said the trio were carrying a bag filled with bottles and rags for making more firebombs.

Sweeney says those accusations were all false, saying he, 19-year-old Gregory Porter of Pennsylvania and 21-year-old Luke Gates of Indiana were just observing the protests taking place near Tahrir Square. Since his return he has viewed a video released by Egyptian authorities that he says confirms his claim. In the video, Sweeney says he is visible in the video “standing there not doing anything. Not even shouting anything or talking.  We’re standing there on a street. We were hoping to witness the protests and witness the birth of a democracy and see people fighting for their rights, but we did not commit any violence of break any laws.”

See that video as part of an interview with Sweeney and his mother, Joy on CBS’s The Morning Show:

He says the three were treated harshly during their first night of captivity. “They threatened to force-feed us gasoline … they were pushing it up against our mouths and tilting it forward. And then after that, they hit us in the face and in the back of the neck a number of times and then they had us in a dark room on the ground in a fetal position with our heads toward the ground and our hands cuffed behind our back, and they told us, ‘Don’t move, don’t make a noise. If you move or speak we sill shoot you.’” He called that experience “terrifying.”

Sweeney does not believe it was police that were holding the three that night. “Whenever we asked people during investigations, they would actually try to ask us and try to ascertain who had us in the first evening when we were undergoing investigations … they could never really say who it was.” One group he did hear references to is described as a “sort of like a neighborhood watch, a council, sort of vigilantes basically that are unpaid but that are working with the government.”

He says the questions they were asked that night had little to do with the protests or accusations of firebombing. “They asked a lot about our backgrounds, our families and our previous work experiences; specifically whether or not we had any connections to defense or intelligence. It seemed as though … they believed we were spies.”

After that night, Sweeney says the three were treated with more civility until their release.  He thinks he was then being held by “more official, legitimate, formal police officers.”

He returned to Jefferson City Sunday where he celebrated a belated Thanksgiving holiday with his family. He observes, under the circumstances there was, “A lot of thanks to be given!”

AUDIO:  Hear Mike Lear’s interview with Derrick Sweeney – 22:13 min.