(Harlan, Iowa) – Officials with Harlan Municipal Utilities, late Wednesday night, issued a Boil Order for all HMU customers in the City of Harlan. Residents in the city should boil all water before using for consumption until further notice. This includes the customers in the Cresthaven Addition. Water service may be intermittently interrupted during this time.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic City Council met in a regular, but brief meeting this (Wednesday) evening. Among the action items on their agenda was the First Reading of an Ordinance “Amending the Code of Ordinances of the City of Atlantic” by “Amending Provisions Pertaining to All-Terrain Vehicles and Snowmobiles.”
City Councilman Dana Halder….
As previously mentioned in our newscast, City Administrator John Lund said Iowa Senate File 2130 was developed in response to a 2020 survey, asking ATV and UTV riders what they would like to see changed in Iowa law, to better support riders of those vehicles. The survey results determined riders wanted to ride on more County and State roadways in all 99 counties, under a uniform State law. Cities were then left to create their own rules, but were not allowed to charge permitting fees.
Atlantic City Administrator John Lund makes his report to the City Council (11-20-24)
The City of Atlantic’s Community Protection Committee met last August to review the options for adopting an ordinance regarding the use of ATV’s and UTV’s on city streets, and has reviewed and recommended to the Council an amended ordinance, which includes:
A 1-year sunset for the ordinance, which will end after that year, if there are no issues.
A cut-off of 18-years (similar to what the City of Ankeny has).
ATV’s and UTV’s must have a working horn, headlamps and tail lamps, but will not require turn signals.
A subsection will be added to the ordinance, which disallows towing by ATV’s and UTV’s.
The ordinance exempts Park employees from being forbidden to operate the machines on City property.
It includes a section of the existing snowmobile ordinance and clarifies when police officers can issue citations addressing any related violations.
And, at the request of Atlantic Police Chief Devin Hogue, the amended ordinance states that ATV’s only be allowed for the purpose of snow removal during the snow season.
In other business, the Atlantic City Council approved a pay application to Hydro-Klean, LLC for the 2024 Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Project, and a related resolution accepting the work for the project and Ultra Violet CIPP (Cured In Place Pipe) Lining Project. City Administrator John Lund provided a preview of some of the issues affecting local governments such as Atlantic’s City Council, that the Iowa Legislature is expected to begin tackling, some of which may be more hurtful than helpful.
He said the Legislature has an interesting definition of leaner government.
Lund says there seems to be a big disconnect on what some community priorities are, with regard to the legislature.
He said we will also continue to see Senate File 295 – A bipartisan property tax reduction bill that some say would make Iowa’s fiscal situation worse fading in the next two-or-three years before it completely gone. It remains to be seen how that will impact state appropriation to provide partial “backfill” payments to the local governments whose revenue would be impacted by these reductions.
But on the plus side, Lund said, the “Say Yes to EMS” public measure passed in Cass County. Lund is getting ready for the legislature to convene, and how their actions will impact the City’s budget.
(Creston, Iowa) – Firefighters in Creston responded this (Wednesday) morning to a reported structure fire on Clover Avenue southwest of Creston, at 9:21-a.m. An investigation determined a pet had knocked over a space heater, which then caught the carpet on fire. The resident put the fire out with a garden hose, but when fire personnel used a thermal imager, they found hot spots in the wood underlayment beneath the carpet.
Creston firefighter uses a thermal imaging device to check for hot spots on a heater.
Firefighters ventilated the home and removed the damaged flooring. (Photos from the Creston FD Facebook page)
The CFD reminds residents and homeowners, that as colder weather sets in, you should please exercise caution when using space heaters.
Consumer Reports makes these recommendations:
Place the heater on a hard, level, and nonflammable surface. These appliances are intended to sit on the floor, not on a table.
Establish a 3-foot kid- and pet-free zone around the heater, and never put a space heater in a child’s room.
Keep the space heater at least 3 feet away from combustible materials, such as furniture, bedding, and curtains. A taller heater may need to be even farther away.
Don’t use a heater in a workshop or garage near flammable paints, gas cans, or matches.
Turn it off when you leave the room or go to bed.
Unplug the heater when it’s not in use by pulling the plug straight from the outlet. Check the cord for damage periodically, and don’t use the heater if the cord is frayed or worn.
Don’t plug another electrical device or an extension cord into the same outlet as a heater because that can cause overheating.
Install working smoke alarms on every level of your home and in every bedroom, and test them monthly.
Iowa center Logan Jones says there is no lack of motivation as the Hawkeyes get ready for Saturday’s game at Maryland. The Hawkeyes are 6-4 and have been off since a November eighth loss at UCLA.
Jones says the Hawks will be ready no matter who starts at quarterback. Brendan Sullivan is out with an injured ankle, Cade McNamara has been cleared and Jackson Stratton is also a possibility.
Running back Kaleb Johnson says the Hawkeyes are excited for the final two games of the regular season.
Johnson says if Jackson Stratton gets the start at quarterback he will be ready.
Tight end Luke Lachey says for the tight ends nothing changes depending upon who the quarterback is.
After missing a couple of games due to injury Lachey feels he is returning to game shape.
Maryland coach Mike Locksley wants to celebrate Senior Day with a win over Iowa. After a 3-1 start the Terrapins have dropped five of their last six heading into Saturday’s game against the Hawkeyes.
Locksley says Kirk Ferentz has built a winning program at Iowa with a consistent style of play.
Locksley says the key for the Terrapin defense will be slowing down Hawkeye running back Kaleb Johnson. The Hawkeyes are 4-0 in Big Ten play when Johnson goes over 100 yards of rushing.
(Radio Iowa) – Pella Police arrested a male Middle School student this morning after he assaulted multiple students. Police Chief Shane McSheehy held a news conference to explain what happened. “Initial investigation determined that a 14-year-old student at elemental school used a knife to assault multiple students who were in the cafeteria at the time,” he says.
Pella Superintendent Greg Ebeling says a long kitchen bread knife was used in the attack that happened around 7:41 before school started and the teen was quickly arrested. The superintendent says less than 20 students were there at the time and two female students sustained minor injuries but did not need to go to the hospital. The chief says they don’t know what the motivation was for the attack.
We are speaking with the juvenile with his parents present, and we don’t have any additional information as of yet, “McSheehy says. He says this student had another issue earlier this year. “The student was charged with assault back in February by the Pella Police Department. It was an assault charge causing bodily injury. That’s about all I can release on the charge,” he says. That assault was on a school counselor. McSheehy says they have good video from the school on today’s (Wednesday) attacks that they are reviewing.
“I can tell you that the suspect did not just walk in and commence activity. It appears that he had been sitting there at least for some time,” he says. “We are working again to figure out what the timeline is and to learn more about the suspect’s path of travel.”
The Pella Middle School was locked down for a time, but later reopened.
(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa nonprofit that offers social services to youth statewide will open an addiction treatment facility near Ames next month. Youth and Shelter Services, known as Y-S-S, will run a residential treatment program, as well as crisis stabilization and recovery services. Ember Recovery Campus will feature trails, retreat-style cottages and outdoor recreation areas at its countryside location. C-E-O Andrew Allen hopes the surrounding nature will provide mental health benefits for residents.
“As you sit here, you feel connected to nature,” Allen says. “You feel disconnected from the cacophony of the busyness of town and this is a place where kids and families will come to heal.” Overlooking a prairie in Cambridge, the campus spans more than 50 acres and has 70 beds for adolescents and young adults. The center’s current residency programs in Ames operate out of old houses. Allen says he sees the new center as a trailblazing facility in the state.
“If you are an adult, a young adult, and need treatment, you have to go to a treatment center that serves 60-year-olds,” he says, “and so finally, we’ve got age-appropriate treatment for young adults in Iowa.”
Y-S-S has branches across the state including in Des Moines, Marshalltown, Mason City and Boone. The new campus will be a 20-minute drive from the group’s headquarters in Ames.
(Radio Iowa) – President-elect Donald Trump has announced he’s chosen an Iowan — Matt Whitaker — to be U.S. Ambassador to NATO. Whitaker was the acting U-S Attorney General for three months during Trump’s first term in office. During a September fundraiser for Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Whitaker talked about his tenure in the Justice Department, where he had served as chief of staff before his stint as acting attorney general.
“What I learned is that you have to lead. You have to lead from the front and you have to be willing to take unpopular positions. I think the biggest challenge we have in Washington, D.C. is…we have way too many people that want to be somebody instead of do something,” Whitaker said. “…If I was succssful at all at the Department of Justice in the Trump Administration, it was because I was unafraid of what would came next. I knew I was never going to work at a big law firm. I knew that I may never work and be able to feed my family…We had a country to save and a mission.”
Whitaker campaigned extensively for Trump’s reelection. This is what he told the crowd in Iowa City in early September. “This is the election that is going to not just set the next four years, but really it’s going to set decades of American history,” Whitaker said.
Trump says Whitaker is a strong warrior and loyal patriot who will ensure U-S interests are advanced and defended. Whitaker’s nomination to be NATO Ambassador is subject to a confirmation vote in the U-S Senate. Whitaker has won Senate confirmation before. He served as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Iowa during President George W. Bush’s second term. Whitaker has run for statewide office twice. He was the Republican Party’s nominee for state treasurer in 2002 and he ran for the U-S Senate in 2014.
Whitaker, who grew up in Ankeny, played football for the Iowa Hawkeyes and credits that experience for his success as an adult. “When I came on the national scene suddenly and unexpectedly as acting attorney general, I was an overnight sensation 10 years in the making because no one ever saw when I was doing Newsmax hits in 2014 and 2015 and 2016,” Whitaker said. “And all the radio and all of the practice and so much of what you learn from sports is you’ve got to practice and you’ve got to get better and you’ve got to constantly improve.”
Whitaker earned a communications degree and an M-B-A and a law degree from the University of Iowa in 1995.
ROBERT “Bob” HANSEN, 78, of Papillion, NE (a former Atlantic resident), died Tuesday, November 19, 2024, at Bellevue Medical Center in Papillion, NE. A visitation with the family of BOB HANSEN present, will be held December 7th, 2024, from 2-until 4-p.m., at the Schmidt Family Funeral Home in Atlantic.
A private family burial will be held on Monday, December 9, 2024, at the Elk Horn Lutheran Cemetery in Elk Horn, IA
Memorials can be made to either the Atlantic Park & Rec Department or to the Danish Museum in Elk Horn, IA and can be left or mailed to the funeral home at PO Box 523 – Atlantic, IA.
Condolences can be sent online at: schmidtfamilyfh.com.
(Radio Iowa) – Judges on a federal appeals court in Omaha have quizzed an attorney representing two Iowa counties AND the attorney for Summit Carbon Solutions, which is asking the court to nullify pipeline zoning ordinances. An attorney for Shelby and Story Counties argued federal law gives the U-S Transportation Secretary jurisdiction over safety standards — but he said states and counties have jurisdiction over the location and routing guidelines for hazardous liquid pipelines. One judge asked about references to safety in Shelby County’s ordinance. The attorney replied that a safety standard is different from a safety concern.
The attorney for the pipeline company argued setback zones around homes, hospitals and schools in Shelby and Story County are clearly safety standards. Summit’s attorney also noted the ordinances were filed a year after the company applied for a state construction permit. He said if the federal appeals court upholds the ordinances, counties will be able to keep changing the rules for the pipeline route.
As for Story County’s rewritten ordinance — saying it was for the protection of economic development — Summit’s attorney said it’s implausible to argue there could be economic development activity in the 13-hundred feet around a farmhouse in rural Story County. When a judge on the panel suggested farming is economic development, Summit’s attorney said you can farm over the top of the buried pipeline.