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2024 Arkansas ballot to include vote on stopping planned Pope County casino [Video]

2024 General Election Voter Guide | How To Register | Ballot Issue 1 (Lottery Scholarships | Ballot Issue 2 (Casino Licensing) | Ballot Issue 3 (Medical Marijuana)In November 2024, Arkansans could vote on Issue 2, which would repeal the Pope County casino license and require local elections. Follow this link to read the ballot issue in full.The issue’s placement on the ballot is being challenged in court.If it stays on the ballot and is approved by voters, Issue 2 would stop a planned casino in Pope County near Russellville.In order for another casino to ever open in Arkansas, Issue 2 would require voter approval in a future statewide election and then additional voter approval in the specific county where the casino would be located.Arguments in favorIn 2018, 54% of Arkansas voters approved an amendment that allowed four casinos to be built in the state.According to the Arkansas secretary of state’s office, back then, 60% of voters in Pope County voted against the casino measure.”Issue 2 is based upon a really, a very, very simple premise that local voters, the people within the communities that are potentially affected by casino projects, those are the people who should have the final say on whether the casino project goes forward or not, and it really is that simple,” Hans Stiritz, with Local Voters in Charge, said.The organization Local Voters in Charge is behind the ballot initiative.According to financial filings with the Arkansas Ethics Commission, the Choctaw Nation is behind Local Voters in Charge, with donations totaling more than $5.6 million to the organization trying to stop the fourth casino from opening in Arkansas.”There are folks that want to say that this is just about Pope County, but really, it is a much bigger issue than just Pope County,” Striritz said.Other groups in Arkansas oppose legalized gambling. The Arkansas Problem Gambling Council has seen a 22% increase in calls for help this year, according to KATV, the ABC affiliate in Little Rock.Arguments against”Ironically, a yes is a no vote, and a no is a yes vote,” Pope County Judge Ben Cross said. “Myself and six mayors in Pope County are all going to vote no to this because this is some of the greatest economic development in our generation for Pope County and for the surrounding communities of the River Valley. If you took the word casino out of the equation and said any other industry is going to come into your community and produce a thousand new jobs and invest over $300 million initially that’s just on the front end people would be standing in line for the ribbon cutting.”Cross says many opinions have changed since Pope County voters were against the measure in 2018.”The local voters spoke. 12 out of 13 justices of the peace on the Pope County Quorum Court have voted in favor of a casino resort in Pope County,” Cross said. “That means a new jail for Pope County. That means a new health department for Pope County. That means a new 911 system for Pope County.”According to the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration, in fiscal year 2024, the three existing casinos in Hot Springs, Pine Bluff and West Memphis contributed $107 million in tax revenue to the state. Out of that amount, the local counties and cities where the casinos are located received nearly $30 million.”It is about another casino operator who didn’t get the license in Pope County, who now wants to make sure that nobody gets any of those dollars and that those dollars stay in Oklahoma,” said Natalie Ghidotti with Investing in Arkansas. The organization opposes Issue 2 and is largely funded by the Cherokee Nation, which received the coveted and heavily contested casino license.”Here’s the truth it sounds good. They’re saying it’s local control. It’s anything but local control, in our opinion, because you have the Choctaw Nation funding that entire campaign,” Ghidotti said.

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Home Based Business

Influencer couple denies leaving kids alone on cruise [Video]

For most people, dinner on a cruise ship is a time to relax.But when influencer couple Abby and Matt Howard decided to kick back with a dinner deux, they ended up kicking up a storm.Related video above: Preparing to drop your child off at day care for first time? Here’s some expert adviceThe Arizona couple, who have 5.3 million followers on TikTok, as well as 1.3 million and 677,000 Instagram followers individually, have had to furiously deny that they left their children alone on a cruise ship while enjoying their couples dinner.Abby Howard posted over the weekend on Instagram that on a seven-day cruise, the couple had taken their kids ages 1 and 2 to dinner for the first five nights, but it became apparent that they werent enjoying it and therefore we werent either.So then we switched our dinner time to after their bedtime and FaceTimed the monitors while we ate, she wrote. Many followers interpreted her post as saying that they left the kids unattended in the cabin in order to go to dinner. When Abby Howard deleted the post after a few hours, the suspicion only increased.The couple have now posted a new video in which they deny the children were left alone. They say they were traveling with Abby Howards extended family, including her grandmother.We had someone with our children at all times on this boat, said Matt Howard, calling peoples suspicions completely untrue.We love our children more than anything in the entire world, he said.Abby Howard admitted in the video that she could see why the phrasing of her initial post caused people to believe the kids had been left alone. She said she deleted it because of the confusion.Abby Howard said their two children sleep in blackout tents even at home. Each tent has a space to fit a monitor, which the couple use even when in the room with them.Matt Howard previously shared an Instagram video of his cabin, in which he said the couple was sleeping in separate rooms, each with one child.Were always concerned about them, said Abby Howard in the video addressing the controversy, adding that they tag team at family dinners so that one parent is physically with the children while the other checks the monitors.The couple thanked their family for helping watch the children during the cruise and also thanked the public.Thank you so much to those of you that were concerned about the safety and well-being of our children, said Abby Howard.We have not, would not, will not ever leave our children unattended; we would never ever want to put them in harms way in any way. Its not known which cruise line the couple were traveling with, although Matt Thiemann, a cruise specialist travel agent and CEO of Everbliss Vacations, said he believes they were on Royal Caribbeans Navigator of the Seas, which has a maximum capacity of 4,000 travelers, based on their posts.Cruise ship child careMany cruise lines offer child care options.Royal Caribbean offers group child care programs as well as group-sitting for 3- to 11-year-olds from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. MSC Cruises has a kids club for tots until 9 p.m., with parents able to drop off their kids until 7 p.m., while Holland America Line states in its conditions that children must not be left alone anywhere on the ship.Leaving a child in a locked room may seem relatively safe, but Thiemann advises against it.It is generally not safe for a child under 8 to be left alone at home, and a cruise ship cabin is no different, he said. Parents might think it is a safe, locked space, and while there are very strict procedures for accessing a cabin, there are cabin stewards, maintenance personnel and crew who can access the cabin. If it has a balcony, there is greater risk of an accident or even becoming locked out on the balcony.Toddlers can be inquisitive, fall out of bed onto the hard floor or choke on something. There are just too many unexpected things that could happen when children are left alone in a cruise cabin or hotel room.

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Home Based Business

Man arrested in connection with sexual assault of 13-year-old girl [Video]

SCHOOL. ERIKA. YOURE RIGHT. SHE WAS WALKING HOME FROM SCHOOL YESTERDAY AFTERNOON RIGHT ALONG THIS STREET. THIS IS WEST ELM STREET HERE IN BROCKTON. IT IS A PRETTY BUSY STREET HERE IN TOWN. NOW, POLICE HAVE BEEN CANVASING THIS NEIGHBORHOOD TODAY, TALKING WITH PEOPLE TRYING TO FIND THE SUSPECT. POLICE SAY THIS CRIME WAS REPORTED TO THEM TODAY. NOW THEY SAY THAT MAN GRABBED THE 13 YEAR OLD WHILE SHE WAS WALKING HOME FROM WEST MIDDLE SCHOOL. THIS WAS YESTERDAY AROUND 3:45. INVESTIGATORS SAY SHE WAS SEXUALLY ASSAULTED BEFORE SHE WAS ABLE TO BREAK FREE FROM HIS GRIP AND RUN AWAY. ONE WOULD THINK THAT IT SHOULDNT BE SCARY, BUT AS A PARENT, AS A STUDENT, ITS OBVIOUSLY A SCARY THING. SO LIKE THE SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT SAID, STUDENTS REMAIN VIGILANT. PARENTS REMAIN VIGILANT AND JUST MAKE SURE YOU KNOW YOUR SURROUNDINGS. NOW, POLICE BELIEVE THE ATTACKER IN THIS CASE IS IN HIS 20S, WITH TWO MISSING FRONT TEETH. THEY SAY HE WAS WEARING A BLACK SHIRT WITH MULTICOLORED LEADED LETTERING AND THEY SAY HE WAS ON A BLUE BIKE WITH WHITE

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Home Based Business

Josh Heupel returns to OU after helping build Sooners, community [Video]

Former University of Oklahoma quarterback and offensive coordinator Josh Heupel will be back in Norman this weekend, but this time, he’ll be on the opposing sideline. Heupel led the Sooners to a national title in 2000 and later became the offensive coordinator under Bob Stoops. Now, he’s in his third season as the University of Tennessee’s head coach and returns to Norman with the No. 6 team in the nation and a high-powered offense. While he’s coaching against OU on Saturday, one thing fans remember that helped him stand out was how he gave back to Oklahoma. One of his mentors spoke with KOCO 5 about what he did that those in the community will never forget. “That was just a reflection of Josh and his heart. He always wanted to give back,” said Mike Whitson, the former team chaplain at OU. Whitson says the love for Heupel started during the quarterback’s first season in Norman in 1999. “Even though he was from South Dakota, they adopted him as an Oklahoman right off,” he said. While he quickly became a fan favorite on the field, Heupel was focused on more than just the game. “Josh was an exception just because of the time he would commit to something,” Whitson said. Heupel spent his time off reading to children at local elementary schools. And when the holidays rolled around most students went home, Heupel stepped up to help others. “Just wanted to do something with some kids at Thanksgiving. Became aware of some needs, and so kind of on his own he raised some money and got some of the families of those kids a Thanksgiving meal,” Whitson said. After that 1999 season, Whitson said Heupel wanted to do more.”What we are asking is that people who come to the game bring a canned food item,” Heupel said in 2000. “We’re going to deliver Thanksgiving baskets the week of Thanksgiving, the week of Oklahoma State, and we want to just reach out to the kids and bless them and their families.” Whitson told KOCO 5 that it was an idea Heupel pitched to Stoops and Sooner fans listened by filling a semitrailer full of canned goods. “We were able to provide Thanksgiving for over 100 families in Norman that year,” Whitson said. It was the beginning of an annual tradition that went on to last more than a decade in Norman. While Heupel graduated and stuck around on the sidelines, he turned the tradition into a nonprofit The #14 Foundation. “We would provide Christmas for kids elementary aged and their families,” Whitson said. “I bet by the time we finished, there were probably close to, across the state, around 1,000 kids that benefitted from the Christmas gifts.” The foundation was supported across campus, and even today the Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma says they remember the impact the nonprofit had on the state. “He was supportive of raising money to help families and children who need food assistance. They raised a number of dollars for us to help provide food baskets for families during the holiday time,” said Cathy Nestlen, with the Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma. “It does help when someone of a higher stature who has a little bit of celebrity in them talks about your organization in a positive light and wants to help and promote your work.” While the #14 Foundation left with Heupel in 2014, those in Oklahoma remember the man he is a man of faith and grit. “He’s no doubt continued that spirit giving back in Tennessee,” Whitson said. “He’s passionate about coaching and football because he wants to see people achieve and gain that success that’s part of our goals.” As Heupel returns to Norman, he might not read books with children or fill semis full of canned foods, but he’ll stand on the field where he brought a program back and set the standard for years to come. “I know the people of Oklahoma are going to embrace him,” Whitson said. “Oklahoma can be very proud of him even though he’s going to be on the other sideline. They can be proud to know they’re a huge part of who he is. “