WANTED TO TAKE HIS SPECIAL DAY AND MAKE IT ABOUT OTHERS WHO ARE RECOVERING FROM HURRICANE HELENE. RASHAD WILLIAMS HAS THE STORY OF A SMALL IDEA TURNING INTO A LARGE CONTRIBUTION. YOULL ONLY SEE IT HERE ON WYFF NEWS FOUR. ITS A FUN. THIS IS WHAT YOUD EXPECT OUT OF AN EIGHT YEAR OLD. SWINGS, TRAMPOLINE. TOYS. WERE GOING TO GO UP THE LADDER. YOU KNOW THE IMPORTANT THINGS IN LIFE FOR GRANT ACEVEDO. HES CELEBRATING HIS EIGHTH TRIP AROUND THE SUN AND THE GIFT HE ASKED HIS PARENTS FOR. WAS ANYTHING BUT TYPICAL FOR SOMEONE. HIS AGE. WERE WATCHING THE NEWS AND REALIZED WHAT DEVASTATION HAD HAPPENED AROUND OUR AREA AND IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA. TONIGHT, RESCUE AND RECOVERY OPERATIONS AND GRANT CAME UP WITH THE IDEA TO, INSTEAD OF GET BIRTHDAY PRESENTS FOR HIS BIRTHDAY. THIS YEAR TO DONATE FUNDS TO THE RED CROSS TO HELP PEOPLE TO KNOW THAT THOSE THINGS ARE GOING ON. IN HIS MIND AND IN HIS HEART. AND THATS THATS KIND OF PRICELESS THAT SOME PEOPLE OUT THERE NEEDED WATER, FOOD, BUT THEY DIDNT HAVE THAT RIGHT NOW. SO WITH THE HELP OF HIS MOM, BLAKELY GRANT STARTED A GO FUND ME. I TOLD MY FRIENDS AND MY NEIGHBORS, TURNING AN IDEA INTO REALITY. A LOT OF PEOPLE DONATED. APPARENTLY, GRANT HAS COME UP WITH ANOTHER GOOD IDEA. HE WANTS TO GIVE THE AMERICAN RED CROSS THE MONEY HIMSELF IN PERSON WITH ONE OF THOSE BIG CHECKS THAT REALLY CATCHES YOUR ATTENTION. LITTLE DOES HE KNOW, IVE MADE A PHONE CALL. WERE ABOUT TO MAKE THAT SURPRISE HAPPEN, RIGHT NOW. WE GOT HERE BEFORE THE ACEVEDO FAMILY. A LITTLE PHILANTHROPIST IN THE MAKING. SO IM SUPER EXCITED ABOUT THIS. AS APRIL DILLON WITH THE RED CROSS PUT THE FINISHING TOUCHES ON THIS BIRTHDAY SURPRISE. GREAT. COME ON IN. I HEAR ITS YOUR BIRTHDAY TODAY. EITHER A NICE POKER FACE OR A BIT OF SHOCK. LOOK AT THIS. THIS IS WHAT YOU COLLECTED FOR US. $2,130 ALL ON YOUR OWN. A MOMENT IN TIME. ONE. TWO. THREE. HAPPY BIRTHDAY. CAPTURING A
grants for women
Better water flow is on the way for hundreds of people in a small Walker County town.
Nearly two months since historic rain and flooding in the Naugatuck Valley region, federal and Conn. agencies continue to offer aid to flooding victims.
Residents, businesses, and city leaders in this northwestern Missouri town of more than 1,000 still have no firm date on when theyll be able to safely drink tap water without boiling it.The citys water customers including schools, businesses, and homes have been under a boil order from the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for nearly two months due to high turbidity levels.Turbidity is a measure of water clarity. State leaders declared Maysvilles water turbidity too high after an inspection in August.City leaders have tried to fix the problem, believing they had a solution for about a week until the turbidity levels climbed again.We just need help, Maysville resident Angy Dowell told KMBC 9 Investigates on Wednesday. I mean, seriously. It has just gone on way too long.Dowell is one of 465 water customers asking city officials for answers since the boil order went into effect on Aug. 28.She wants more frequent information and updates from city officials, home bottled water deliveries, and a way to receive credits on her account until the issue is resolved. City officials have said credits on bills are hard to implement due to U.S. Department of Agriculture funding the city has in place for its water supply system.What should we be doing as a community? Dowell said. If I need to hold your hand and walk you down the line, I dont know enough about the water system or what the remedy is to fix it.KMBC 9 Investigates asked Maysville water and wastewater manager Michele Allwood about a completion date. She couldnt predict one.Allwood has worked with the Maysville City Council, administrator, and mayor to find solutions.City East Ward Alderman Clint Sollars said all city leaders should be held accountable until a fix is in place.We’re doing our best to fix it, and it ultimately falls back on us to tap into every resource we can to have it fixed as soon as we can, Sollars said.Allwood has brought in multiple resources to the citys aging water plant, including Missouri American Water, the Missouri Rural Water Association, and utility services to clean the water plants clear well.Turbidity levels are acceptable after water comes out of filters at the plant, Allwood said.However, turbidity levels are still too high when water encounters chlorine at the clear well underneath the plant, she said.Allwood noted that there may be high levels of manganese or iron in the water coming from Willowbrook Lake that react with the chlorine at the citys clear well.She is open to anyone who can help find solutions.If they have an idea, call me and give me the idea, because I’ve tried to reach out to everybody, Allwood said. We are trying, and people are coming in, and we do have people that are working with us to try to improve this situation.Allwood also encouraged Maysville water customers to call City Hall to speak with city leaders about next steps.Scott Honig, environmental section chief for the Missouri Department of Natural Resources in the Kansas City region, said the boil order will remain in effect until turbidity levels drop in Maysville.Honig said MoDNR officials have worked with Maysville to find solutions and provide resources. He added that the department has elevated the situation to MoDNRs enforcement group to ensure Maysville is following prescribed guidelines and schedules for a fix.We’ll be in contact with them every week to see where they’re at and what’s going on, Honig said.He also noted that the department has funding available, including grants and loans, for small rural water supplies in need of assistance.The city is hoping for a more permanent water supply, connecting to a supply line from St. Joseph to Cameron by next year. However, the issue is currently tied up in the courts.If you have a tip about this situation, KMBC 9 Investigates needs to know. Email investigates@kmbc.com.
ECKERMAN IN FOR LAURA. WE HAVE TEAM COVERAGE TONIGHT. WE BEGIN AT BETTY RAYS IN THE RIVER MARKET, WHERE KMBC NINE S KRISTA TATCHELL SPOKE WITH THE OWNER ABOUT HIS FRUSTRATION AT THE LACK OF POLICE PRESENCE AND BROKE THE WINDOW. CAME IN, WENT BEHIND THE COUNTER, WALKED DOWN TO THE BACK OF OUR KITCHEN AREA AND HE NOTICED THAT THERE WAS A SAFE DOWN WHERE WE HAD IT. ITS NEVER NORMAL TO WAKE UP AND KNOW THAT SOMEBODY HAS BROKEN INTO YOUR SHOP. THIS ROCK THROWN THROUGH A DOOR SUNDAY MORNING AND BETTY RAYS ICE CREAM STAFF SCOOPS UP THE PIECES YET AGAIN. YOU TAKE IT PERSONALLY. BETTY RAYS IN THE RIVER MARKET HAS BEEN UNKINDLY HIT TWICE. WITHIN THREE WEEKS, THE CROOK GOT THE SAFE WITH THREE GRAND IN IT. THIS IS WHAT I NEEDED. OWNER MATT SHATTO SAYS CUSTOMER FOOT TRAFFIC IS GREAT, BUT HE SAYS HE WANTS MORE BADGES BY BUILDINGS. I NEED MORE PATROL IN THE RIVER MARKET AREA. SHATTO SAYS MAYOR QUINTON LUCAS IS BACK TO BUSINESS PLAN, WHICH GIVES FINANCIAL AID TO BUSINESS OWNERS. HIT BY CRIME IS A BAND-AID, NOT A SOLUTION. SO ITS BACK TO BUSINESS TODAY WITH UNCERTAINTY FOR TOMORROW. THE FRUSTRATING PART IS NOT KNOWING WHAT TOMORROW BRINGS. SHATTO SAYS HE HOPES TO HAVE A ONE ON ONE SIT DOWN MEETING WITH MAYOR QUINTON LUCAS IN THE COMING WEEKS TO DISCUSS HOW TO PREVENT CRIME IN THIS NEIGHBORHOOD. KRISTA TATCHELL, KMBC NINE NEWS. NO ARRESTS HAVE BEEN MADE, BUT MAYOR LUCAS ISSUED A STATEMENT ABOUT THE BREAK-IN, CALLING SMALL BUSINESS THE HEARTBEAT OF OUR CITY. HE SAYS HELL BE WORKING WITH THE STATE APPOINTED POLICE BOARD TO FIND WAYS T
The city of Toledo is offering help for businesses that lose customers because of construction.
A local church is making an impact by starting the first Celebrate Recovery program in South Monroe.
AND THE 80S. WELL, VANDALISM IS A BIG ISSUE IN ALBUQUERQUE AND BUSINESSES ARE SUFFERING, BUT THE CITY SAYS IT MAY HAVE A SOLUTION. JULIAN PETTUS SPOKE WITH LOCAL BUSINESSES ABOUT HOW THE CITY IS GETTING INVOLVED. THATS RIGHT GUYS. SO ITS CALLED THE WINDOW TO OPPORTUNITIES. GRANT. A WINDOW TO OPPORTUNITY. SPECIFICALLY, THE GOAL OF IT IS TO HELP LOCAL BUSINESSES THAT HAVE BEEN AFFECTED BY VANDALISM, EVEN IF IT IS TO HELP WITH SOMETHING AS SIMPLE AS A BROKEN WINDOW. I FIRST MOVED TO THIS NEIGHBORHOOD. I BUILT THIS BUILDING ABOUT 20 YEARS, 25 YEARS AGO, AND IT WAS A GREAT LOCATION. ITS A GOOD LOCATION, BUT IN THOSE TWO DECADES, ROBERT GORMAN SAYS HES BEEN A VICTIM OF VANDALISM TIME AND TIME AGAIN. IVE HAD THIS WINDOW OVER HERE BROKEN, THAT WINDOW OVER THERE BROKEN, HE SAYS. THERE HAVE BEEN MULTIPLE INCIDENTS OF PEOPLE SLEEPING ON HIS PROPERTY AND BREAKING WINDOWS, AND UNFORTUNATE TREND. MANY ALBUQUERQUE BUSINESSES ARE EXPERIENCING. IM FRIENDS WITH MANY SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS ACROSS THE CITY, AND DOESNT MATTER WHAT NECK OF THE WOODS WERE IN, WHAT PART OF THE CITY YOURE IN, THIS STUFF IS HAPPENING NOW. THE CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE IS STEPPING IN TO HELP WITH THE WINDOW TO OPPORTUNITY GRANT A REIMBURSEMENT INITIATIVE TO EASE THE FINANCIAL BURDEN. VANDALISM HAS ON BUSINESS OWNERS. WE HAVE ALL KINDS OF ISSUES THAT COME UP, AND YOU WANT TO KNOW THAT THE CITY IS AWARE AND AND RESPONDING, AND THIS IS ONE PROGRAM WHERE THEY ARE DOING THAT. THE CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE SAYS 34 BUSINESSES HAVE APPLIED FOR THE GRANT, AND SO FAR THEY HAVE BEEN ABLE TO GIVE OUT MORE THAN $12,000 TO REPAIR DAMAGES. ALTHOUGH PEOPLE LIKE GORMAN APPRECIATE THE ACTION BEING TAKEN, HE BELIEVES MORE CAN BE DONE TO PREVENT THESE CRIMES FROM HAPPENING. BE BETTER IF WE COULD AVOID THE PROBLEM ALTOGETHER AND OBVIOUSLY THERE ARE SOME BUSINESSES THAT NEED THE ASSISTANCE MORE THAN OTHERS, RIGHT NOW, THERE IS STILL $100,000 IN ASSISTANCE FOR BUSINESSES THAT ARE LOOKING TO GET SOME HELP. IN ALBUQUERQUE, JULIAN PARRAS, BACK TO YOU. THREE BUSINESSES WIL
Crest Ridge High School needs your help. The school is in the running for a multi-million dollar grant from T-Mobile to redo its outdated football field and facilities.The field was lovingly created by farmers in the community in 1982. Its used up to six nights a week by the entire community, but it desperately needs space and safety upgrades.Crest Ridge quarterback Wesley Taylor and cheerleader Elaina Wilhite showed some of the issues to KMBC on Thursday.There is a three-foot difference between the sideline and the middle of the field. The cinder track, compact stands, press box, and weight room are in need of significant upgrades, too.If you’re in the middle of the field and you’re trying to throw an out to the sideline, youve got to take in the hill, Taylor said about the hump in the middle of the field.The rocks are not ideal to cheer on at all, Wilhite said about the track. Currently, we’re not able to hold track meets here, or anything really, just football games.Crest Ridge has become one of 16 finalist schools across the country for a multi-million dollar upgrade from T-Mobile to its football field and facilities. On Thursday, the school received a $25,000 gift from T-Mobile for becoming a finalist, in addition to smaller previous grants from the company.To get something like this would just be huge for our community, said Katie Woolsey, a teacher and coach at Crest Ridge High School, whos helped organize the contest effort. It’s great because we have great pride and great support, but financially sometimes we don’t get the support in the big towns, so we have to do contests like this.Its a contest to help this small community football field see the entire game.We’re due, Taylor said. Were due.I think that it would uplift the community a lot and help the school tremendously, said Wilhite.It’s very easy to vote to help the school.Click here to like the schools video on Instagram.The more likes they get, the higher their chances of winning.
THIS TIME OF YEAR, WE TEND TO SEE A LOT OF VISITORS IN OUR REGION. AND IT’S NO WONDER… SINCE WE’RE SURROUNDED BY NATURAL BEAUTY. BUT A LOT OF WHAT MAKES VERMONT SO UNIQUE… MIGHT NOT BE HERE TODAY… IF IT WEREN’T FOR THE FOLKS WHO ARE DETERMINED TO PROTECT OUR MOUNTAINS, FORESTS, AND WATERWAYS. I SPOKE WITH A FEW OF THEM… ABOUT WHAT INSPIRES THEIR STEWARDSHIP… IN TODAY’S THIS IS OUR HOME. LOOKING UP AT THE ICONIC PEAK OF CAMEL’S HUMP… YOU’LL KNOW YOU’VE MADE IT TO DUXBURY VERMONT. VERMONT’S THIRD-TALLEST MOUNTAIN… IS PRACTICALLY IN SHERRY WINNIE’S BACKYARD. FOR SHERRY, IT’S FOR SHERRY, IT’S THE PERFECT PLACE… TO EMBRACE THE OUTDOORS. AND IT INSPIRED HER TO START THE BUSINESS SHE RUNS OUT OF HER HOME TODAY. MAKING ORGANIC TRAIL BARS, FRESH FROM HER KITCHEN. LOCALLY AND ETHICALLY SOURCED.
A complaint to the Missouri State Auditor has opened up a review of the St. Louis Development Corporations North St. Louis Small Business & Non-Profit Grant Program.
So youve been awarded a federal Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) or Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) grant to support your R&D efforts; what now? Join experts Candi Avery and Jen Keller of Clark Nuber, a venerable accounting and consulting firm, for essential insights into navigating the complexities of grant management. Youll learn about practical strategies for compliance with government regulations, necessary tools to optimize your grant, how to identify and avoid pitfalls, and tips for steering your project toward success.