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JOHN LAWRENCE THRAEN, 85, of Earling (Mass of Christian Burial, 7/22/23)

Obituaries

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

JOHN LAWRENCE THRAEN, 85, of Earling, died Tuesday, July 18, 2023, at home. A Mass of Christian Burial for JOHN THRAEN will be held 10:30-a.m. Saturday, July 22nd, at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, in Earling. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church is on Friday, July 21st, from 4-until 8-p.m., with a Knights of Columbus Rosary at 7-p.m.

Burial is in the St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Earling.

The family suggests memorials be made in John’s memory to Concerned, Inc.

JOHN LAWRENCE THRAEN is survived by:

His wife – Judy Thraen, of Earling.

His daughter -Loretta (John) Kafer, of Troy, IL; Loraine (Ron) Riley, of Ankeny; Donna (Jeff) Schaben, of Defiance; Connie (Mike) Mumm, of Harlan and Deloris (Glenn) Young, of Estherville.

His sons – Dan Thraen, of Hiawatha; Gerry Thraen, of Earling.

His sisters – Mary Andersen, of La Vista, NE., and Myra (John) Buman, of Harlan.

16 grandchildren; and 4 great grandchildren.

ARLO MAX PETERSEN, 88, of Harlan (Svcs. 7/24/23)

Obituaries

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

ARLO MAX PETERSEN, 88, of Harlan, died Tuesday, July 18, 2023, at the Elm Crest Retirement Community. Funeral services for ARLO PETERSEN will be held 11-a.m. Monday, July 24, 2023, at the Pauley-Jones Funeral Home, in Harlan.

Visitation at the funeral home is on Sunday (7/23), from 4-until 7-p.m.

Burial is in the Jacksonville Cemetery in Jacksonville (IA).

ARLO MAX PETERSEN is survived by:

His son – Jeff (Laurie) Petersen, of Kimballton.

His daughter – Deb (Kevin) Rutherford, of Harlan.

His sister – Charlotte Andersen, of Harlan.

4 grandchildren, 3 great-grandchildren, many other relatives and friends.

NE man arrested for OWI in Red Oak

News

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – A man from Nebraska was arrested late Wednesday evening in Montgomery County. Red Oak Police say 66-year-old Kyle Mark Smith, of North Platte, NE, was arrested at around 9:15-p.m., for OWI/2nd offense. Smith was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

Correctional Release Center: Inmate Escape Notice (Victor, IA)

News

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Newton, Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Corrections reports inmate Jermichael Jim Wells, currently assigned to the Correctional Release Center in Newton, has absconded from his worksite in Victor, IA and has been placed on escape status. Wells’ sentence is for the following crimes: Theft 2nd Degree, Burglary 2nd Degree, Burglary 3rd Degree-Motor Vehicle, Dominion/Control of Firearm/Offensive Weapon by Felon, and Forgery.

Wells was last seen at his assigned workplace, Quantum Plastics, in Victor, IA (Iowa County) at approximately 5:00 p.m. Wednesday (July 19, 2023). 

Wells is a 25-year-old black male, height 5’11”, and weighs 157 pounds. He has tattoos on his back, chest, and right shoulder, as well as “Keashia” on the left arm,  “Polo” on his chest, “Keasai” on his face and “Loyalty” on his neck.  He was placed in the Correctional Release Center on September 9, 2022.

Jermichael Jim Wells

Law enforcement agencies across the state have been notified through Department of Public Safety and are working to locate and apprehend Wells.  Department of Corrections Fugitive Teams are also working to locate and apprehend Wells.

Persons with information on Wells’ whereabouts should contact local police. If citizens believe they have encountered the escapee, they should not try to apprehend him. They should leave the area and call police immediately.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Thursday, July 20, 2023

Weather

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Sunny, with a high near 81. North northwest wind 5 to 13 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph.

Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 59. North wind 5 to 9 mph.

Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, with a high near 80. Northwest wind 3 to 8 mph.

Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms before 10am, then a chance of showers between 10am and 1pm, then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Sunny, with a high near 84. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 87.

Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 83. The Low was 62. Last year on this date the High was 89 and the Low was 58. The Record High was 109 in 1934, and the Record Low was 44 in 1953. Sunrise is 6:02-a.m. Sunset is 8:49-p.m.

The grit and goals of RAGBRAI’s Dream Team

News

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Next week’s RAGBRAI — the Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa — will be the 26th outing for the Dream Team organization. This year’s group of central Iowa teenagers, referred to the program by a school counselor, started doing indoor spin classes the first week of March. They moved to bicycling outdoors in April. This is the third year Scott Matter has been one of the Dream Team’s adult mentors.

“We had many rides in April when it was very cold and windy — those are very challenging,” Matter said, with a laugh. “…For our youth and our mentors, you really have to dedicated to doing this and to accomplishing your goal.” The 35 teens on this year’s Dream Team will ride every mile of RAGBRAI alongside their 30 or so mentors. Matter has had a front row seat, so to speak, to watch the grit of these kids — and their five month transformation.

“A lot of the youth that come to us maybe haven’t been dealt the best situation in life. For several of them, this might be the first time they’ve had a parental figure that’s actually helped them set a goal and accomplish a big thing in life,” Matter said. “Some of our youth go from not knowing how to ride a bike to being some of the safest cyclists on RAGBRAI. It is a pretty amazing thing.” The age range for Dream Team members is between the ages of 12 and 18. Teenagers who complete the ride can return the next year for the training and for RAGBRAI — until they reach adulthood.

“The return rate from our youth is about 85%, which I think is one of the best endorsements of our program,” Matter says. About 700 teenagers have been Dream Team members over the past quarter century and a few of the mentors have been around for most of that 25 year run. Bike World in Des Moines provides brand new bikes for the teenagers. “And then every member gets to keep their bike after they complete RAGBRAI at the end of July,” Matter says. Meals and lodging for the teenagers on the Dream Team will be provided at no cost during RAGBRAI, as a group of five to 10 adults work as support staff for the bicyclists during RAGBRAI’s seven day run.

Matter gets emotional talking about some of the accomplishments of kids who’ve completed the program. “It’s an incredible organization that allows our kids, our youth to dream big, to be successful and develop kind of a roadmap for setting and accomplishing big goals in their life,” Matter says. Matter cites the experience of one young man who Matter thought might drop out of the program three years ago, but has just graduated from high school and is going to Iowa State University this fall to major in chemistry.

Legislative panel reviews sinkhole situation in Marion County

News

July 20th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The panel of lawmakers that reviews state regulations is asking questions about the problems Marion County faces due to a large sinkhole and the committee may propose new rules for mineral mines. The sinkhole opened up in mid-April, south of Knoxville, partly in the ditch of a county road. In May, officials determined the cause. An abandoned part of a limestone mine 200 feet below ground had collapsed. Kelly Meyers, a lobbyist for Marion County, testified at a recent meeting of the legislature’s Administrative Rules Review Committee.

“We have this huge sinkhole and the county road is closed because it’s adjacent to the sinkhole,” Meyers says, “and it’s basically not getting addressed sufficiently or quickly enough.” The operator of the limestone quarry has accepted responsibility, but Meyers says there are no state standards for how it should be fixed. “What we would like to see is you all having that regulatory authority to make sure that whatever reclamation is done — and I would expect it would be done at the expense of the quarry — that it be done appropriately,” Meyers says.

Senator Mike Klimish of Spillville says the state’s Mines and Minerals Bureau has no oversight. “Ultimately, if they backed up and started just pouring dirt into the sink hole, you’d have no way to stop them from doing that,” Klimesh said, “to fix the sink hole.” Klimesh and other legislators may sponsor a bill to establish sinkhole remediation standards AND address deficiencies in the underground mapping of mineral mines in Iowa.

It took weeks to confirm what caused the sinkhole because maps of the mine weren’t readily available. Vince Sitzmann is chief of the State of Iowa’s Mines and Minerals Bureau. “Right away when this happened, had we had that map in hand, we could have gone and said: ‘Yeah, you absolutely have mined this area,’ because the quarry themselves didn’t think they’d mined that area and the map indicated that yes, they did mine it,” he said. “Now, should the quarry have had that map? Absolutely, but it just wasn’t available. They’ve gone under some new ownership.”

Sitzmann says the Iowa Geological Survey is responsible for collecting maps for underground mining. “They had previously been part of the Department of Natural Resources,” Sitzmann says. “That was in 2014 and they moved over the University of Iowa and I think they were understanding the mine maps were no longer under their purview and were part of the DNR, which turns out was not the case, and so there was a little bit of misunderstanding and, I think, misfortune on this particular site.”

Senator Nate Boulton of Des Moines says this is a stunning case and, luckily, no one was injured or killed.  “But you can clearly see where a tragedy could happen and we really have to get serious about this,” Boulton said. The state Mines and Minerals Bureau got the initial call in April about the sinkhole, did some drilling in the area and quickly concluded the sinkhole was not connected to a coal mine.

“Essentially, that kind of ends our responsibility there,” Sitzmann said. “We paid for the borings, but we do not have the authority to go in there and reclaim a subsidence like that unless it’s coal related.” When an underground mine can no longer support the material above it and collapses, it’s called a subsidence. There is FEDERAL money available for remediation of sinkholes connected to collapsed coal mines, but NOT when an underground limestone mine is involved.

Atlantic Mayor warns Code Enforcement officials are checking properties for violations

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Atlantic Mayor Grace Garrett, Wednesday, informed the public that the City’s Code Enforcement personnel are out and about, checking for property violations (such as overgrown grass, trash accumulation, snow removal, etc.). “So just be aware, if you have a business or a home, please comply with the ordinances that are on the books,” she said, because they are out in force, and they are working on Code Enforcement, and we will be enforcing codes.”

The Mayor said “Last year we increased the fees because we were using City equipment [and] City personnel, to abate properties, and that takes a lot of time and money and wear of our equipment, as a city. So the rates were increased.” She encourages everyone, from land-lords or a property owner or business owner, “to make sure that you’re complying and keeping up your properties, or we will be coming in to abate it, and you will be receiving a bill in the mail.”

City Clerk Barb Barrick said “Once you get the bill, if you don’t pay it within 30 days, it will be assessed to your taxes.” The Mayor said it is less expensive to do the work yourself, than to have the City clean-up your property.

Atlantic to engage in a new first aid pilot project this fall

News

July 19th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Grace Garrett, the Mayor of Atlantic, announced during this (Wednesday) evening’s City Council meeting, that she and Cass County Emergency Management Coordinator Mike Kennon, and Lieutenant Governor Adam Gregg, met last week to discuss a grant the County has received from the Iowa United First Aid Pilot Project.

The Mayor said “The project is a first aid response within our community. We will be recruit volunteers soon, so if you are retired or currently active as a medical personnel, retired veteran or active medic, or would like to be trained as a first aid responder, we would love to hear from you.”

The project is a combined effort between the City of Atlantic and Cass County to provide first aid to the entire 565 square miles of Cass County. Garrett said the project and program has its roots in Israel. “It will be a technology-based response.” The two entities chose a tech company once the grant was received, that will work with the Cass County 911 Communications Center.

The alerts will be telephone-based, with the volunteer trained first responders closest to the scene of the emergency, receiving notification of the alert. They will attend to the emergency until EMS or Fire Department personnel arrive on the scene. The volunteers will be trained by the local Public Health Department, and they will receive all the necessary equipment, such as an AED (automatic external defibrillator).

“The volunteer will actually have a vest, backpack and an AED. They will be trained [in the use of] and all the supplies will be given to them as a volunteer, so that there will be no expense incurred by the volunteer for their needed supplies,” the Mayor said. She asked if anyone is interested, to please contact Mike Kennon at 243-1500, or Mayor Garrett at 243-4810.

The hope is to roll out the program this September once all the volunteers are trained.

Jay Higgins To Attend B1G Media Day

Sports

July 19th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

University of Iowa Moon Family Head Football Coach Kirk Ferentz announced on Wednesday that linebacker Jay Higgins will be representing Iowa Football at Big Ten Media Day. Higgins will attend in place of Noah Shannon due to Shannon’s involvement in the NCAA investigation into sports gambling. Below is a statement from Noah Shannon:

Being selected to represent the Iowa Hawkeye football team at Big Ten Media Day is a tremendous honor and privilege. I am grateful for the opportunity. However, given the circumstances I told Coach Ferentz it would best for him to select another player. Since the NCAA review is not yet complete, I don’t feel it is right for me to represent the team. 

“Noah’s decision to share this information and suggest that another player take his place is reflective of his character,” said Ferentz. “Noah is a committed and dedicated teammate, and this is a fine example of him always wanting to put the team first.”

Higgins, a native of Indianapolis, enters his fourth year in the Hawkeye football program. He totaled 39 tackles (20 solo) last year playing behind consensus All-American Jack Campbell. Higgins was awarded the team’s Hayden Fry Award (special teams), which is presented to those who show exemplary leadership and dedication, and the Next Man In Award (defense) following the 2022 season. He has played in 31 games over his first three seasons.