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State Auditor Rob Sand statement on DOE report

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, IA – State Auditor Rob Sand today released a report on the Iowa Department of Education that shows the cost of administering the Educational Savings Account (ESA) program will more than double by fiscal year 2027 because of an amendment to the original contract.

“Just three months after signing the contract to administer the ESA program, the Department of Education agreed to amend it for no good reason.  And in doing so, the Department violated its own policies and procedures,” said Sand.  “Most Iowans believe a deal is a deal and can recognize a bait and switch when they see one.”

The amendment allows Odyssey, the company chosen in April 2023 to administer the ESA program for the state of Iowa, to collect an additional 25 cents for every $100 in qualified educational expenses processed on its platform.

“Conservative estimates show that alone could cost Iowa taxpayers an additional $2.3 million by 2027,” said Sand.  “But we won’t know exactly how much more Iowans will pay for these administrative fees until we know how many students are enrolled in the program.”

Odyssey, which claimed in its contract proposal to have an office in the State Capitol, will also collect 5 cents per ESA transaction, a $100,000 annual “Standalone System Fee” not included in its contract proposal, and be reimbursed for payment processing fees.

“The State Capitol is the peoples’ building and this is their money,” said Sand.  “I want to thank the Auditor’s Office staff for their diligence and hard work, and for shining a light on how Iowans tax dollars are spent.”

In a second finding, the report also noted the improper use of more than $840,000 from the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.  The use of the funds is limited to programs for school leaders but was inappropriately allocated to paraeducator programs.

Council Bluffs Man Sentenced to 10 Years in Federal Prison for Drug Trafficking Charge

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa – A Council Bluffs man was sentenced July 16, 2024 to 120 months in federal prison for distribution of methamphetamine. According to public court documents, Lawaun Maurice Webster, 44 distributed approximately 70 grams of methamphetamine to another person from his residence in Council Bluffs, Iowa. During a search warrant at the residence, law enforcement recovered a loaded firearm near where other drugs and drug paraphernalia were found.

After completing his term of imprisonment, Webster will be required to serve five years of supervised release. There is no parole in the federal system.

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. This case was investigated by Southwest Iowa Narcotics Task Force, Division of Narcotics Enforcement, and Council Bluffs Police Department.

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. For more information about Project Safe Neighborhoods, please visit Justice.gov/PSN.

Cyclists rolling through Greenfield can donate to tornado relief

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The southwest Iowa town of Greenfield is welcoming thousands of RAGBRAI riders as the near-halfway point on today’s 82-mile leg of the bike ride between Atlantic and Winterset. Greenfield was hit by a powerful tornado in May that killed five people and wiped out dozens of homes.

Local health care worker Bailey McLaughlin is a RAGBRAI volunteer and she notes as cyclists explore Greenfield, the tornado’s path is still very evident. “It mainly hit residential areas but the hospital that I work at, Adair County Health System, did sustain some damages,” she says. “It’s mostly internal so you’ll see that they don’t look that bad on the outside, but on the inside, lots of damages.”

McLaughlin is encouraging cyclists on the week-long ride to make a donation to help the town recover. “We are getting a lot of support from RAGBRAI, especially today, but we still continue our efforts on our website which is ACHSiowa.org,” McLaughlin says. “You can go and click on our link up there and then that goes straight to tornado relief as well.”

Photo of tornado damage in Greenfield by Melissa Ehrman Johnson

On that website, you’ll find a link to the Go Fund Me page that has a $250,000 goal.

In addition to the five people killed, 35 people were injured by the twister, which the National Weather Service classified as an EF-4 with top winds of 185-miles an hour.

Grassley: Secret Service boss quitting is just the start of what’s needed

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says the attempted assassination of former President Trump cast major doubt on Secret Service policies and procedures.

“Obviously everything that I’ve heard, either the non-answers or what we know for a fact, it wasn’t handled as properly as it should have been,” Grassley said this morning.

Secret Service director Kimberly Cheatle resigned today, saying she takes full responsibility for the security lapse.

Grassley has posted messages on social media calling it a monumental security failure and he’s called on the Inspector General reviewing security measures at Trump’s rally in Pennsylvania to provide regular updates to the public.

Iowa home sales down 17% in June

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The latest report from the Iowa Association of Realtors shows home sales are down in Iowa, while the number of homes on the market is rising. The president of the Iowa Association of Realtors says the strong storms that hit the state in late spring and early summer likely dampened the market — and the group’s news release says sales took a slide in June.

There were 17 percent fewer homes sold last month compared to June of last year. There’s been a huge year-to-year jump of nearly 32 percent in the number of homes on the market. The Realtors say the slight decrease in interest rates and more available homes could spur late summer home sales.

The 75th Cass County (IA) Fair starts Thursday

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The 75th Cass County Fair gets underway this Thursday, July 25th, in Atlantic. The Fair runs through July 30th, and concludes with the Livestock Auction at 8-a.m. Tuesday. In between now and then, there are lots of 4-H/FFA shows, inflatable carnival and many other activities for the whole family to enjoy. The Cass County Fair is always FREE: No entry fee, no charge to park, and no charge to view the exhibits and entertainment. There’s also great Fair food at the 4-H and FFA Foodstands, along with the Chuckwagon, each of which have a variety of delicious hot, and refreshingly cold, food and drinks to choose from.

Highlights include: The Little Miss & Mister, King & Queen Contests, on Thursday, as well as Senior Recognition and a Youth Dance; Mechanical Bull riding and a Bull Ride/Rodeo on Friday, as well as Mutton Busting; Saturday’s entertainment includes Youth Water Fights, and a Tractor Pull; There’s a Pedal Tractor Pull on Sunday, as well as a County Fair Church Service, 75th Fair Grounds Celebration Cake Special, Cow/Calf and Feeder Calf shows, and a Horse Fun Show.

Next Monday at the Cass County Fair, there’s a Beef Show at 8-a.m., Best of Iowa at 9-a.m., Rotary Watermelon Feed, Dairy Cattle Show, Building Awards, the Parade of Champions & Bucket of Junk Fundraising Auction, along with the Grand Champion Beef Selection.

See the full schedule HERE.

(Update) Iowa’s six week abortion ban goes into effect Monday

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa law banning most abortions in Iowa will go into effect Monday at 8 a.m. A district court judge has filed the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction that has blocked the law for over a year. Last July, Governor Reynolds signed the law that forbids abortions in Iowa after fetal activity can be detected, which happens around the sixth week of a pregnancy. Attorneys for Planned Parenthood and the Emma Goldman Clinic in Iowa City immediately sued. A Polk County District Court judge issued the temporary order that kept the law from going into effect.

On June 28th of this year, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled the law was constitutional, but court procedures required the district court to take the final step to have the law go into effect.

Governor Reynolds signed a similar law in 2018, but the state’s highest court — with a different set of justices than are on the court today — ruled Iowa women had a right to an abortion under the Iowa Constitution. Since then, Reynolds has appointed the four Iowa Supreme Court justices who agreed Iowa’s six week abortion ban is constitutional.

Mills County Sheriff’s report, 7/23/24

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports four arrests occurred over the weekend.

On Saturday: 28-year-old Christian Andrew Guerra was arrested for Possession Controlled Substance (Bond: $1,000), and, 30-year-old Carlos Alberto Carcamo Mencia was arrested for OWI/2nd offense (Bond $2,000). Both are from Fremont, NE. They were arrested at a location on Bunge Avenue a little after 5-a.m., Saturday.

And, two people were arrested on drug charges Sunday evening, in Mills County: 29-year-old Devyn Mae Benack and 29-year-old Llewellyn Sidney Harmonson, Jr., both of Sanborn, IA, were charged with Possession of Controlled Substance and a Drug Tax Stamp Violation. Their bonds were set at $5,000 each. Their arrests took place at around 6-p.m. Sunday, on Hilman Road.

Gov. Reynolds, Iowa congressional delegation urge USDA to adjust disaster programs, improve assistance to farmers

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES— Governor Kim Reynolds, together with Iowa’s entire congressional delegation, today sent a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack, urging him and the department to “utilize their existing statutory authorities to adjust their disaster programs to provide farmers, ranchers, and producers with the flexibility they need after a natural disaster to recover and rebuild.”

The letter comes after the state has endured three natural disasters in as many months, including two destructive tornado events and devastating floods in northwest Iowa, severely impacting rural areas and numerous farms.

The letter highlights the differences in flexibility between programs provided by the USDA and those offered by the federal Small Business Administration (SBA). Particularly, it calls out the USDA’s programs for not providing assistance for farmers commensurate with the SBA’s programs for small businesses.

The letter reads in part:

“The Small Business Administration’s (SBA) disaster assistance programs offer vital, flexible support in difficult times to small businesses. We understand that these programs are limited to non-agricultural small businesses, with USDA providing access to complementary programs, such as the Emergency Loan Program, that are intended and specifically designed to assist agricultural producers like farmers and ranchers. While USDA and SBA coordinate to ensure these programs effectively reach rural small businesses, we continue to hear from disaster victims that the terms available to borrowers within the USDA programs are less favorable compared to those at SBA, which offer a greater amount of flexibility with interest, balance, and payment terms. Similar to our request today, the SBA provided much of this flexibility in 2022 and 2023 by utilizing administrative authorities.

 

“As Iowans begin to recover from the many disasters that have impacted them, the historical and continued lack of fairness in what rural communities are offered by USDA is having a meaningful and substantial impact. Consideration should be given to these communities, which are integral to feeding America and the world, by granting them the same or similar terms through USDA as those that are provided to less rural areas through SBA. USDA can do this through its existing statutory authorities, which provide it with the ability to make all loans repayable at such times as the Secretary may determine, and broad authority to set interest rates at a level prescribed by the Secretary, but not in excess of 8 percent per annum. We encourage you to utilize these existing authorities to defer payment on disaster loans for a full year and reduce interest rates to zero during that deferment. This would provide much-needed parity to farmers as they rebuild their agricultural operations.”

The letter is signed by Governor Reynolds along with Senators Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst, Congressmen Randy Feenstra and Zach Nunn, and Congresswomen Ashley Hinson and Mariannette Miller-Meeks.

 

The letter can be read in its entirety on the governor’s website.

Guthrie County Supervisor’s meeting recap

News

July 23rd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Guthrie Center, Iowa) – The Guthrie County Board of Supervisors met this (Tuesday) morning in Guthrie Center. The Board, by a vote of 4-to-1, accepted the Payroll reports from July 23, 2024. Supervisor Mike Dickson said he thought there were too many overtime hours. He said “I don’t think we need that much.” He said also, “There’s one department that has it all.” Vice Chair Maggie Armstrong …

It was noted that the Board used to get explanations for why there was overtime for the next payroll period, but that has been lacking in recent times.

In other business, the Guthrie County Supervisors agreed to move forward with EMS discussions, including getting a better grip on what the actual 9-1-1 calls as opposed to calls for transport. Guthrie County Health Services Director Jotham Arber said the service providers send their information to the State, but the data itself is not broken down into emergent transfers, transports to hospitals, etc. The Board wants to know what money from the proposed levy for EMS as an essential service will be used for, with regard to how each entity uses their funds.

Guthrie County BOS mtg., 7/23/24

The process of making EMS an essential service would mean citizens of Guthrie County would pay a 75-cent levy per $1,000/assessed valuation. The language for the measure that will be on the ballot in November was introduced last week, for the first time.

There’s still some tweaking to be done before the final description of how the levy will be used is printed on the ballot for voters to approve. The measure needs 60% voter approval in order to be passed.