$300,000 Dug Hill Road construction project
$300,000 Dug Hill Road construction project By Nolan Crane | February 23, 2021 at 3:17 PM CST - Updated March 7 at 3:28 PM
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - Attention drivers in Madison County. A dangerous road in your area will soon see some safety upgrades.
$300,000 will be spent to improve Dug Hill Road. There’s currently no shoulder and there’s also no guard rails.
It’s a popular road, but it’s also a very dangerous road.
“We will restripe the area and put reflectors in the area and try to help with visibility because majority of the crashes that occur there, are where drivers have left the elevated surfaces of the road. We want to address that problem,” said Madison County Commissioner Craig Hill.
IOWA CAPITAL DISPATCH
ap photo
A legislative proposal would mandate that most fuel sales at Iowa pumps contain ethanol and biodiesel.
What Gov. Kim Reynolds saw as a chance to expand Iowa’s nation-leading biofuels industry has turned into a high-octane political fight among some of the most powerful interest groups in the state.
Reynolds is proposing to require ethanol and biodiesel at all convenience stores and other retailer fuel outlets. Her plan would allow just one pump per site for no-biofuel gas. And it would revamp tax credits to favor higher blends of ethanol, made of corn, and biodiesel, made of soybeans.
Despite statewide issues, area LTC vaccinations smooth cdispatch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cdispatch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Farmer and rancher delegates to the American Farm Bureau Federation’s 102nd Annual Convention today adopted policies to guide the organization’s work in 2021. Key topics ranged from farm diversity to farm labor and dairy policy…
Farm Bureau Establishes 2021 Policies
Tuesday Jan 19th, 2021 Farmer and rancher delegates to the American Farm Bureau Federation’s 102nd Annual Convention today adopted policies to guide the organization’s work in 2021. Key topics ranged from farm diversity to farm labor and dairy policy to livestock marketing. For the first time in AFBF history, delegates met and voted virtually due to COVID-19.
“Our Farm Bureau delegates showed that no challenge, not even a pandemic, will keep them from working to improve the lives of America’s farmers and ranchers,” said AFBF President Zippy Duvall. “Their work not only sets policy for 2021, it will also serve as a guide for AFBF as we prepare to work with a new president and a new Congress to ensure we continue to lead the world in producing healthy and safe food, fiber and fuel.”