Funeral services for Wayne County Deputy Sean Riley are scheduled to be held today at 11 in the FCHS gymnasium. Per Illinois State Police, the family has requested 14 News to be the only media allowed in the gym, and they will stream the service. The Wayne County Sheriff's Office has posted the processional route on its Facebook page. The route will begin at FCHS on King Street, turn left onto Fourth, turn left onto Court, turn left onto Third, turn right on Main, continue right on U.S. 45, and continue to Central Avenue in Cisne to Cisne Cemetery. Cisne officials have announced US 45 and Illinois 161 west of Cisne will be closed at noon tomorrow until the procession arrives at the cemetery, which is anticipated to be approximately 2:30 to 3. The closure will begin at 1900 North, next to Rutger's, and will continue south. Illinois 161 will open west of Blue Mound Road. People should make arrangements to leave early and find alternate routes; not all intersections will be staffed in areas between municipalities, but that does not mean access is allowed. Fairfield City Hall will be closed from 10:30 to 1 to allow city employees to attend services and show support by lining the route. FNB in Fairfield and Wayne City and FNB Financial locations will be closed today at noon through the duration of the procession. Normal hours will continue after the procession. The Department of Central Management Services has received notice from Governor J.B. Pritzker that all persons or entities covered by the Illinois Flag Display Act are to fly U.S. and state flags at half-staff from sunrise to sunset today in honor and remembrance of Deputy Riley. West Salem Grade School has announced $4,164 was raised last night for the family of Deputy Riley. 10 pies were auctioned during halftime of the West Salem basketball game against Geff, raising $2,695; another 30 donated pies were purchased in a cash-and-carry bake sale. Another auction is set for tonight between the JV and varsity boys basketball games at ECHS against FCHS. JV tip-off is at 6:15. The Albion City Council met last night. Mayor Wes Harris said the Illinois EPA sent a letter last month saying manganese levels in city water were too high, and the council will approach the City of Grayville to see if it has interest in building a joint water filtration plant near existing water lines by Grayville to remedy the issue. Mayor Harris says the EPA has tightened requirements on manganese levels, but the water is still safe to drink. The Egyptian Health Department announced 58 new cases of COVID-19 in White County from Wednesday (December 29) through Sunday, bringing its total to 3,428. Jefferson County added 144 cases since Friday (December 31), including 41 yesterday. The state Department of Public Health announced 89,195 new cases since Thursday afternoon and 177 additional deaths. Statewide totals sat at 2,238,743 cases and 27,998 deaths. The Southern Region had a seven-day positivity rate of 11.8 percent on December 31st, up from 11.5 percent on the 30th. Its seven-day average availability for ICU beds was at 10 percent. River stages as of early this morning: the Little Wabash east of Fairfield stands at 23.09 feet, above the 17 ft. flood stage. Meanwhile, the Skillet Fork at Wayne City has a reading of 8.96 feet (flood stage is 15 ft.). The Little Wabash below Clay City is at 19.93 feet (flood stage is 18 ft.). Bonpas Creek at Browns reads 13.84 feet, and the Little Wabash at Main Street in Carmi reads 24.73 feet. The Wabash River at Mt. Carmel sits at 19.60 feet. Today's crude oil price is $69.00, up $0.75 from yesterday. The February crude oil price is $76.34, up $0.14 from yesterday morning. "Morning Coffee" will feature Mark Turner and Derek Dunn. "Morning Coffee" is between 8-9 a.m. on 104.9 weekdays. To listen to a podcast of Morning Coffee and Community Connection, click on "About Us" on the top right of wfiwradio.com. Then, from the dropdown, make your choice of program.