Mayor Steve Myers has resigned as Mayor of Pacific and has accepted the position of City of Pacific Community Development Director. He will be paid $70,000 a year, once aldermen approve the agreement. Five-term former mayor Herb Adams, who has been serving as Ward Two alderman and acting president of the board of aldermen, will fill the position of mayor until the municipal election in April 2022. The city made the announcement August 6. Full story is on the city … Continue reading “Myers Resigns as Mayor / Adams Again Mayor Until April 2022”
City Abandons Rule to Give Fence Violators a Year to Comply / Aldermen Target One Property Owner
When neighbors Bobby Villery and Dawn Metzger were cited for identical fence violations in the Autumn of 2018, Villery was given 30 days to bring his fence into compliance while Metzger was given a year. Aldermen Herb Adams protested the different treatment of the two residents and asked the administration to come up with a solution. Mayor Steve Myers and City Administrator Steve Roth crafted a letter of apology to Villery, enclosed a check to reimburse him for the $37.00 … Continue reading “City Abandons Rule to Give Fence Violators a Year to Comply / Aldermen Target One Property Owner”
Saints Alive / 9 Hogan Siblings Named Aloysius
In the 1890 when Alice Hogan gave birth to the first of nine children, the odds were against her. Statistics showed that about one fourth of all babies died in their first year, and half of all children died before they reached the end of puberty. Hoping for better odds, Alice decided to appeal to the saints. She named her son George Aloysius, in honor of Saint Aloysius, an obscure eighteenth century saint that the Catholic Church had identified as … Continue reading “Saints Alive / 9 Hogan Siblings Named Aloysius”
Pacific Wants to Clean Up I-44 Exit and Entrance Ramps / Target Truckers As Biggest Litterbugs
Pacific official want to clean up the I-44 exit and entrance ramps. They say the entrances are the first spaces people see when they come into the city and they want to improve the city’s image. Specifically Pacific officials want to pick up litter, improve the landscaping and prohibit truckers from parking on the ramp overnight. They say truckers are biggest culprits, tossing uneaten food, food cartons and even human waste onto the side of the ramp. The city has … Continue reading “Pacific Wants to Clean Up I-44 Exit and Entrance Ramps / Target Truckers As Biggest Litterbugs”
Model A Rebuilder Has a Soft Spot for Henry Ford
Pacific resident Palmer Lawson is on a first name basis with the nation’s best known auto maker. The late Henry Ford is an icon of Americana – hands down one of the best known Americans of all generations, up there with Abraham Lincoln, Charles Lindberg, or John Wayne. Still when people refer to the creator of the Model T they give you the full name, “Henry Ford.” Hardly anyone would know who you were talking about if you simply said … Continue reading “Model A Rebuilder Has a Soft Spot for Henry Ford”
Dessert Lovers Are In for a Treat This Wednesday / Julie Jones Killer Coconut Cake at the Senior Center
If you love dessert, you need to pay attention to what is happening over at the Tri-County senior center. A group of cooks are vying for bragging rights in a dessert competition to provide the dessert that earns the greatest raves from the lunch crowd. In the past six weeks they’ve baked up gourmet pies, sheet cakes, fruit cobblers, fruit tarts, decadent chocolate chip cookies, and the Magnolia Restaurant, Manhattan’s creamy banana cream pudding – and delivered it to the … Continue reading “Dessert Lovers Are In for a Treat This Wednesday / Julie Jones Killer Coconut Cake at the Senior Center”
Historic Church Restoration Nears the Finish Line / Target Re-Opening Date is Thanksgiving Day
The four-year restoration project to rebuild a damaged Pacific icon is approaching the finish line. The Historic First Baptist Church restoration committee and church leaders continue to host fundraising activities and prepare to complete the restoration and turn the rebuilt church over to Pastor Robert Stevenson and the congregation by Thanksgiving Day. Four years after flood water washed through the historic frame church and education building, destroying the interior – for the fourth time in recent memory – plans to … Continue reading “Historic Church Restoration Nears the Finish Line / Target Re-Opening Date is Thanksgiving Day”
Contractor Who Excavated Pacific Hillside Without a Permit Goes to Prison For Defrauding Businesses In 24 States, Using the Mail
Chad Neal the man known in Pacific for doing things he should not have been doing has ended up in prison for activities that he perpetrated far beyond our borders. In 2017, Chad Neal, operating Orchid Development Company, promised to build a huge commercial development on Hogan Road, on the hillside north of West Osage and I-44. Neal spent 18 days – in clear view of City Hall and to the horror of observing Pacific citizens – knocking down trees … Continue reading “Contractor Who Excavated Pacific Hillside Without a Permit Goes to Prison For Defrauding Businesses In 24 States, Using the Mail”
Senior Center to Launch Movie this Friday / Showing True Grit Starring John Wayne
The Tri County Senior Center is launching a new community event – Movie Night. The first movie night is this Friday, July 30. Showtime is 6:00 p.m. The film to be shown is True Grit, starring John Wayne. Admission cost is $5. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. Popcorn, soda, and hot dogs will be available. Dave Fox, music DJ is organizing the Movie Night program as a new Senior Center fundraiser. If the public turns out for the movie, Fox … Continue reading “Senior Center to Launch Movie this Friday / Showing True Grit Starring John Wayne”
High Jumper Catherine Maguire Brought Olympic Fever to Pacific in 1928
The Olympic games in Japan seem to dominate the news and the world wide web, but Olympic fever got it start in our town in 1928 when Pacific High School high jumper Catherine Maguire was on the U.S. track and field team for the Olympic games in Amsterdam. It was the first Olympics that women were allowed to compete in track and field. Six years earlier the Amateur Athletic Union opened track and field events to women. Catherine and her … Continue reading “High Jumper Catherine Maguire Brought Olympic Fever to Pacific in 1928”