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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Cass County Board of Supervisors held their annual organizational meeting today (Tuesday), and voted to retain Steve Baier as Board Chair for 2023 and Mark O’Brien as Vice-Chair. They also voted to hold their regular weekly meetings on Tuesday’s at 9-a.m. They removed a clause in their schedule, which had stated they would meet on the last business day of the month, instead of Tuesday. Therefore their meetings will take place every Tuesday, unless otherwise necessary to meet on another day of the week.
The meeting on Jan. 3rd was the first official session for Board Member Wendy Richter, who was elected in the November General Election, when she ran unopposed. The Board voted to set mileage reimbursement for County Employee Business travel at 50-cents per mile, with the exception of the Sheriff’s Civil Processor, which was set at the Federal rate of 65.5-cents per miles.
The Medical Examiner’s fee, was set in accordance with the Code of Iowa, at the current rate. The official county newspapers were retained the same as last year. The Board tabled action, for the second week in a row, on approving a five-year lease with the Cambridge Law Firm, for the upper story of the County-owned building at 707 Poplar Street. The decision to table was made because Supervisors O’Brien and Pettinger want to speak with the law firm’s owners or representatives…something they have not yet had a chance to do, because of the holidays.
The lower half of the building houses the Cass County Communications Center.
(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Montgomery County Board of Supervisors today (Tuesday) held their annual organizational meeting, with the election of officers. The Board voted to appoint Mike Olson as Board Chair, and Charla Schmid as Vice-Chair, for 2023. They also moved to appoint board members and alternates to numerous committees or boards. In other business, they voted to keep the schedule for their regular Board meetings the same in 2023 and in the past year, that being at 8:30-a.m. on Tuesday’s.
The Board also acted to approved the Montgomery County Employee’s Holiday Schedule for 2023, and designated the three, Official County Newspapers, which are unchanged from the past year.
The Board then adjourned the Organizational Meeting and opened their regular session, at 8:45-a.m. During the meeting, they acted on administrative resolutions. Elected officials administered the Oath of Office to their respective office deputies and assistants, and the Board approved a Hungry Canyons Alliance annual membership fee of $5,000. They’re next regular session will take place 8:30-a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023.
(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department today (Tuesday), said there were four arrests over the holiday weekend.
Friday night, 21-year-old Antoinette Clement, of Creston, was arrested at her residence on a charge of Domestic Abuse Assault/1st Offense. Clement was taken to the Union County Jail where she was released after seeing the Magistrate.
At around 2:26-a.m. Saturday, 53-year-old Catherine Ann Scadden, of Creston, was arrested at the Creston Union County Law Enforcement Center for OWI 2nd Offense. Scadden was taken to the Union County Jail where she was later released on $2000 cash or surety bond. And, at around 10:45-p.m., Saturday, 21-year-old Malachi Shon Elms, of Orient, was arrested in Creston for Public Intoxication and Disorderly Conduct-Fighting/Violent Behaviior. Elms was taken to the Union County Jail where he was released after seeing the Magistrate.
Monday night, 20-year-old Zoe Paulette Marie Parmenter, of Creston, was arrested at her residence for Harassment/3rd Degree. Parmenter was transported to the Union County Jail where she was released on $300 cash or surety bond.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The City Council in Atlantic has a short agenda for their 5:30-p.m. meeting Wednesday, at City Hall. Mostly, their business consists of action on administrative matters, such as:
In his report to the Council, City Administrator John Lund will discuss a Legislative Briefing, a FY 2024 Budget Update, and a January 18th Council Work Session and Budget Workshop, meeting. There will also be a report from Mayor Grace Garrett, and regular Council Committee reports, prior to a Public Forum.
(Shenandoah, Iowa) – Police in Shenandoah report three arrests to kick-off the New Year. On Sunday, at around 9:19-p.m., Officers with the Shenandoah P-D conducted a traffic stop in the 700 block of S. Center Street, on a vehicle with an expired registration tag. Upon further investigation, 31-year-old Cody Michael Allbee, of Shenandoah, was arrested for Possession of a controlled substance (Marijuana) – 2nd offense. He posted a $1,000 bond and was released, with additional charges pending.
Monday night, 22-year-old Andrew Douglas Holmes, of Shenandoah, was arrested on a Pottawattamie County warrant stemming from an original charge of Theft in the 2nd Degree. Holmes was also charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance (Marijuana) – 1st offense, and Poss. of Paraphernalia. He was unable to post a $6,300 bond, and was transported to the Page County Jail.
And, later that same night, Shenandoah Police were dispatched to the 200 block of University Avenue, for an unknown male who had entered an occupied residence. While Officers were enroute, the suspect fled on foot. He was located at the intersection of South Avenue and Center Street, after the reporting party providing a physical description of the suspect. 39-year-old David Llewllyn Warkentien, II, of Shenandoah, was arrested for Burglary in the 2nd Degree and Public Intoxication. He was unable to post a $10,300 bond, and was transported to the Page County Jail.
(Radio Iowa) – As soon as spring arrives, an eastern Iowa community will launch an ambitious home-building effort with plans to construct ten houses using 3-D printers. Charla Schafer, president of the Community Foundation of Greater Muscatine, says they’re eager to get started as the Mississippi River town needs more homes — and residents — but there simply aren’t enough contractors and supplies to make it happen. Schafer says the ten houses will be modest in size. “The first one we print will be probably around 1,300-square-foot on slab, with attached or detached garage, depending on the lot,” Schafer says. “As we get into infill lots within neighborhoods where maybe something’s been torn down, based on the sizing, we may need to go to a two-bedroom, but the intent for most part is to do three bedrooms.”
The foundation and both the exterior and interior walls can be 3-D printed. And once they get started, the ten houses should go up rapidly, especially when compared to traditional construction, which often takes a month. “3-D printing is much quicker to create the home. You can have a home printed in as short as 28 hours,” Schafer says. “We also know that the cost, right now, they’re looking could be about 15% less and they believe over time, they’ll be able to hold that down even a little bit more, which will allow homeowners to maybe get into a home a little quicker than they could in the past.”
That lower cost is key, she says, since real estate prices have been bounding the past several years. Schafer says 3-D printing is far more economical than the traditional route. “Typically, you can drive down labor to about three to four people on site to do the home printing, because the machine is printing it in just layers of cement as it goes around, so you have some cost there,” Schafer says. “And then you also have some savings by using a crete mix versus a typical construction stick build.” Another potential price cutter will be the ingredients the 3-D printers use, including a time-tested all-natural product that’s being grown on plots at Muscatine Community College. “They have the only hemp program in the state and hemp is the leading additive that’s being researched to add into the crete mix,” Schafer says. “They’ll be doing a research component alongside of this as well to see how hemp may fit in and what that does is, it makes it more environmentally friendly as you print.”
Due to the housing shortage, she says about 11-thousand people drive to Muscatine County to work daily, including a quarter of the school district’s teachers.
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Lottery plans to move to some more modern methods of payment for prizes in the new year. Lottery spokesperson, Mary Neubauer, says paper checks had been the standard. “It just became obvious pretty quickly that a check, which is the primary form of payment that you will receive, especially if you come to an Iowa Lottery office today, a check just isn’t used as much today, as it once was, ” Neubauer says. She says a working group in the organization studied the options and what Lottery customers want. “People are looking for options that have, first of all, greater speed, and second of all, more convenience,” she says.
Neubauer says cash payments won’t go away, but they do plan to start using prepaid debit cards that allow retailers or Lottery offices to load the prize money onto the card. “So if you go into a store, certainly cash would continue to be an option. But for example, if it’s a store, and it’s late at night, and the store doesn’t have a lot of cash on hand, a lot of times right now that store isn’t able to pay your prize,” Neubauer says.
Neubauer says retailers could pay prizes from 20 up to 600 dollars on the cards — while lottery offices could use the prepaid debit cards for prizes from 20 up to five-thousand dollars. They hope to start a pilot project with the debit cards in six months. The other change would allow prizes that have to be redeemed at Iowa Lottery offices to be made through what’s called an A-C-H payment that goes directly into a person’s bank account.
“So the person wouldn’t get a hardcopy check, they wouldn’t have to cash it, they wouldn’t have to, you know, drive somewhere, or do that electronically, the payment would just be made directly into their account,” Neubauer says. “It’s going to take a little bit more time to put that in place, we’re looking at that probably somewhere in the second half of calendar year 2023, or at the end of fiscal year 2023.”
The A-C-H prize payments could go up to five million dollars. Neubauer says they are only making a couple of changes because they have to be very careful about the security surrounding the prize money. “There are so many forms of payment available in the marketplace today, especially when it comes to you know, consumers just paying each other money or sending money to each other. But we have to make sure that the security procedures in place and that whatever payment option we would be looking at that it has staying power,” she says.
Neubauer says the large jackpots from lotto games would still be paid out by wire transfer, as that is the safest method.
(Radio Iowa) – Some Iowa Christmas tree growers are concerned damage done by the drought could limit their supply in the next few years. Country Pines Farm owner, Justin Pritts, says last year’s lack of snow led to a loss of 100 fully grown Christmas trees at his operation in Marcus — and he also lost around one third of the saplings this year to drought. “My big concern is going to be six or seven years down the road, if these little ones don’t start taking off or we lose more over the wintertime, I mean, we’re going to be in trouble down the road,” Pitts says.
Pritts says it takes around seven years for his trees to mature. He says the farm may have to rely more on getting trees from places like Michigan and Wisconsin where drought isn’t as pervasive. Robin Miller operates T&S Christmas Tree Farm near Hawarden in northwest Iowa. She says they usually lose around 25 percent of trees planted — but the drought pushed that number is up to 90 percent. ” I’ve been losing trees, I would say, it’s been all of three years. So that puts me at, you know, four years from now, I’m not going to have any of those trees. And there’s really no way to make up that time,” Miller says.
Miller says she’s especially worried about the supply of fir trees, which have taken the biggest hit. She fears she won’t be able to stock that popular tree type in the furture following the drought losses.
(reporting by Kendall Crawford, Iowa Public Radio)
(Radio Iowa) – Iowans are being warned to look over their credit card statements during these first days of the new year as there may be charges for unwanted subscription services. Consumer protection advocate Michael Domke says many people agree to sample services for an introductory fee and don’t realize they’re being charged every month — or that the price went up. “You may have signed up for online streaming service two or three years ago when it was a good deal,” Domke says, “and it’s auto-renewing and you’re not even recognizing that that fee has increased annually.”
The fine print can sometimes be tricky, and Domke says you also might have signed up for a subscription without even realizing it. “Even myself, I’ve fallen victim to that, thinking I was just signing up to explore something and next thing I know, there’s a monthly fee on the credit card,” he says. With so much click-bait on social media outlets, Domke says it’s very easy to get duped into paying — or overpaying — for an app or service these days. “I think people would be surprised how many times they may sign up for that free trial, and either forget to cancel it or went past the trial,” he says, “or started paying for something they didn’t realize they were gonna get into.”
Domke says to go through your credit card and bank statements, line by line, to make sure you’re not paying for something you don’t use or don’t want.
(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Sheriff’s Office, Monday, released a report on arrests.
On Dec. 31st, 52-year-old Michelle Marie Waldhauser, of Orient, was arrested for Domestic Abuse Assault, and Going Armed with Intent. She was being held in the Adair County Jail on a $5,000 (Cash or Surety) Bond; And, 20-year-old Oscar Manuel Ramirez Betancourt, of Thornton, CO, was arrested at around 1:50-a.m., Saturday, for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. He was subsequently released from the scene with a citation.
Last Friday (Dec. 30), 64-year-old Dianna Marie Ricketts, of Perry, was arrested in Adel on a felony warrant. She was later released on $2,000 (Cash or surety) bond.
There were two arrests on Dec. 29th, in Adair County: 33-year-old Kenny Joe Cunningham, of Greenfield, was arrested at the Adair County Sheriff’s Office, for Failure to Appear. He remains held without bond in the Adair County Jail; and, 35-year-old Kimberly Marie Baumann-Worth, of Atlantic, was arrested on I-80 near mile marker 83, for OWI/3rd offense, driving while license denied or revoked, assault on a law officer or others – without injury, and interference with official acts. She remains in the Adair County Jail on a $5,000 (c/s) bond.
The Adair County Sheriff’s Office reports 47-year-old Justin Lynn Brock, of Des Moines, was arrested by Police in Stuart, for Theft in the 1st Degree, and False information for citation. His bond was set at $10,000 (c/s). And, on Dec. 26th, 45-year-old Ismael Prieto Hipolito, of Des Moines, was arrested on the I-80 EB on-ramp near Menlo, for OWI/3rd Offense, and Stop/Stand/Park Prohibited. He was released on a $5,000 bond (c/s) later that same day.
Additional details concerning the aforementioned arrests was not available.
“It should be noted a criminal charge is merely an accusation the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.”