Collage collection "Was It Ever Real?" by Meikel Church debuts March 3 stuttgartdailyleader.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from stuttgartdailyleader.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Ninnescah Electric works to keep power affordable for 4,124-meters pratttribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pratttribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Tuesday, April 27, 2021 City officials named as defendants in a lawsuit centered around the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission have responded to the complaint, asking that the suit be dismissed. Eureka Springs attorney Tim Parker filed the suit on March 10 in Carroll County Circuit Court on behalf of Greg Moon, CAPC finance director Rick Bright, group sales coordinator Karen Pryor, former interim executive director Gina Rambo and former special events coordinator Tracy Johnson. Defendants in the lawsuit are Eureka Springs mayor Butch Berry; his administrative assistant Kim Stryker; CAPC commissioners Patrick Burnett, Jeff Carter, James DeVito, Melissa Greene, Harry Meyer and Carol Wright; and two insurance companies that provide policies to the city. The suit names the city officials as defendants in both individual and official capacities.
Thursday, April 22, 2021 City officials named as defendants in a lawsuit centered around the Eureka Springs City Advertising and Promotion Commission have responded to the complaint, asking that the suit be dismissed. Eureka Springs attorney Tim Parker filed the suit on March 10 in Carroll County Circuit Court on behalf of Greg Moon, CAPC finance director Rick Bright, group sales coordinator Karen Pryor, former interim executive director Gina Rambo and former special events coordinator Tracy Johnson. Defendants in the lawsuit are Eureka Springs mayor Butch Berry; his administrative assistant Kim Stryker; CAPC commissioners Patrick Burnett, Jeff Carter, James DeVito, Melissa Greene, Harry Meyer and Carol Wright; and two insurance companies that provide policies to the city. The suit names the city officials as defendants in both individual and official capacities.
Heartland Rural Electric Cooperative is leading the way and joining with 11 other Kansas rural electric cooperatives to invest in 20 Megawatts of solar power to be built across the state, and power 80,000 homes across rural Kansas. Heartland’s portion of the project consists of two solar arrays of 1 Megawatt (MW) each. Preliminary work has already begun on the two tracts of land purchased by Heartland for the project. Groundbreaking was held on Tuesday, December 8. Construction should be completed by June of 2021. One Heartland 1-MW array will be located in Crawford County, just west of Girard near Greenbush along Highway 47. The second Heartland 1-MW solar array will be built in Neosho County between Erie and Chanute along 160