
Businesses looking to stay afloat after multiple break-ins
Local businesses are keeping busy despite a recent group of break-ins in the Downtown area.
Continue ReadingLocal businesses are keeping busy despite a recent group of break-ins in the Downtown area.
Continue ReadingSJPD is encouraging the community to sign up for Buchanan County’s annual Citizen’s Law enforcement Academy.
Continue ReadingPolice are investigating after four downtown businesses were vandalized overnight on Sunday.
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Missouri Western students could see an all-new dentistry program offered in the coming years through a potential partnership with the UMKC School of Dentistry. UMKC leaders unveiled an expansion plan for a new School of Dentistry satellite program at Missouri Western State University this week, a partnership aimed at
Continue ReadingSt. Joseph residents will head to the polls on April 8 to vote for two school board members and to approve or deny a 60-cent property tax levy, known as Proposition 2, which covers the school district’s plans to move to a new two-high school model.
Continue ReadingNews-Press NOW’s Leah Rainwater (left) and SJSD School Board Candidate Cassandra Veale (right) talk about Veale’s interests in running for School Board.
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Friday night brings the chance to play a familiar game with an international twist.
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Missouri Western students could see an all-new dentistry program offered in the coming years through a potential partnership with the UMKC School of Dentistry. UMKC leaders unveiled an expansion plan for a new School of Dentistry satellite program at Missouri Western State University this week, a partnership aimed at
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Area residents will get the chance to enjoy the great outdoors, win prizes and offer a boost to conservation efforts by joining Missouri’s first-ever competitive birdwatching challenge this spring. From May 1 to May 15, birdwatchers and nature enthusiasts from young kids to adults can participate in the inaugural
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — The St. Joseph School Board discussed salary preparations for the upcoming school year and new Early Learning Center boundaries. Proposed salary schedules for the 2025-2026 school year where discussed before heading to the agenda to be approved or denied by the School Board on Monday, March 24. The schedules
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Students at Hillyard Technical Center to be offered hands-on, simulated flight experiences. In a new, strategic partnership, Hillyard Technical Center and FlyTech Pilot Academy will provide immersive, in-motion flight experiences through a full-motion fight simulator. This opportunity comes to students through the guidance of Hillyard’s faculty and FlyTech Certified Instructors. The integration of
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — It’s sights like a local playground full of excited kids that make each day on the job all the more special for Jeff Atkins, St. Joseph’s newly-appointed parks director and a longtime stalwart of the department. “To know that you had a part in putting that playground there, it
Continue ReadingA child sits with a dog in the 2023 Run/Walk for the Paws 5K.
Continue ReadingTwo men were seriously injured after a car crash Sunday morning. At 4:15 a.m. Sunday morning, a driver of a Ford F-150 crossed the center line of MO 46, colliding with a Dodge 1500. The Dodge traveled off the right side of the road and came to a stop off the north side of the road
Continue ReadingThe Apple Blossom 5K has added a new challenge to the long standing tradition that support Sisters of Solace and St. Joseph residents’ physical health.
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — It’s sights like a local playground full of excited kids that make each day on the job all the more special for Jeff Atkins, St. Joseph’s newly-appointed parks director and a longtime stalwart of the department. “To know that you had a part in putting that playground there, it
Continue ReadingST. JOSEPH, Mo. (News-Press NOW) — Thousands of local residents will see a wide-ranging community survey distributed in the coming weeks, a tool seen as critical to identify strengths and weaknesses with the city’s core services. The survey, which takes roughly 15 minutes to fill out, will be made available online and randomly mailed to
Continue ReadingThe Remington Nature Center, located at 1502 McArthur Dr., in St. Joseph, Missouri, closed on Wednesday, March 5, after losing power following a winter storm and high winds. Power was eventually restored after midnight on Friday, March 7.
Continue ReadingYoung kids are introduced to the importance of agriculture through book reading by the Buchanan County Farm Bureau Friday morning.
Continue ReadingA police siren is shown in a file photo.
Continue ReadingThe Missouri Department of Transportation has contracted Herzog Contracting Corp. to resurface a section of Missouri Route 116 from U.S. Route 169 to U.S. Route 59 near Rushville beginning Monday, March 10.
Continue ReadingMSHP shares total calls for hazardous winter weather conditions on the road.
Continue ReadingThe Missouri Sheriffs Association is emphasizing the needs for harsher sentencing laws in the state.
Continue ReadingA proposed expansion to Buchanan County’s juvenile justice center would include four times as many beds as what currently sits in the building.
Continue ReadingNews-Press Now’s Leah Rainwater (left) speaks to Melody Smith (right), the St. Joseph School District’s first female superintendent.
Continue ReadingIn honor of Black History Month, the Rolling Hills Library held the 6th annual African American Read-In Sunday afternoon to recognize and celebrate Black literature.
Public figures, pastors, reading enthusiasts and community members read poetry, children’s books, historical and contemporary pieces. It’s all part of the National African American Read-In’s efforts to encourage communities to read together and make literacy a significant part of Black History Month.
Tammy Linningham, pastor at Zion United Church of Christ in Kansas City, read an original poem inspired by American theologian James Cone.
“James cone has a book that, well, he has many, but that particular one … it struck me really strong at first,” Linningham said. “When I was asked to do the read, it’s like, ‘well, I’ll try, you know, form writing’ … this is the first time I’ve been here so it’s been very informative and just educational. So I love it.”
Rolling Hills Library has been hosting the event consistently for six years, even through the Covid-19 pandemic when the readings were virtual. Public Services Librarian Anali Mathies said the event is a way to highlight Black literature during Black History Month.
“It’s something that’s very important to us both as part of Black History Month and as a chance to participate in telling some stories as well,” she said.
The library plans to host the event again next year because, according to Mathies, “The library makes a place for everybody’s stories.”
“It’s so important for libraries to be places of access, of information, of inclusion, of being truly able to offer a variety of stories, whether we all agree with them or not,” she said. “It’s an important event for me because I think that our country is rich because of its diversity…if we can embrace that, celebrate that, be together in that pursuit, I think that can only make us better as a nation and individuals.”
To learn more about upcoming events at the rolling hills library, visit rhcl.org.
Continue ReadingThe annual chili cookoff offers more than just a chance to show off chili cooking skills, but also the opportunity to support a nonprofit.
Continue ReadingLinthicum couldn’t contain her excitement after being declared the champion of the Northwest Missouri Regional Spelling Bee.
Continue ReadingThe United Way of Greater St. Joseph is recruiting community members to help evaluate its partner agencies and decide how it invests campaign funds.
Continue ReadingThe Senior Citizen Tax Credit Program, which opened on Monday, March 3, allows taxpayers over 62-years-old to apply for credits that cap future real property tax increases. Since Monday, about 200 applications have been filled out.
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