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Deer hit pickup in Union County – you read that right

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – A pickup truck avoided hitting one deer Monday night in Union County, but three other deer ran into the truck. The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports 27-year-old Bryce Bisby, of Moline, IL, was traveling south on Cherry Street Road at around 9-p.m., when he saw a deer on the road. Bisby slowed down, but then three more deer came out of the west ditch and ran into the side of Bisby’s 2021 Chevy 2500 pickup, causing an estimated $7,000 damage. The vehicle had three distinct, separate dents, on its passenger side.

Bisby was uninjured during the mishap.

Kossuth County fatal crash

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Livermore, Iowa) – A single-vehicle rollover accident in northern Iowa has claimed the life of a man from Livermore. The Iowa State Patrol reports 19-year-old Desiman Stone, Jr. was driving a 2005 Pontiac Grand Prix northbound on Ohio Avenue in Humboldt County at around 7-p.m., Monday, when he ran a stop sign at the Humboldt/Kossuth County line. He continued north on 150th Avenue into Kossuth County before losing control on the gravel. As the car rolled several times, Stone was ejected and died at the scene. He was not wearing a seat belt.

The accident remains under investigation.

Iowa Dept. of Education awards funds for therapeutic classrooms

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Education, Monday, awarded over $2.3 million in therapeutic classroom grants to 10 Iowa school districts for the upcoming school year. Among the ten districts awarded this year are the:

  • Coon Rapids-Bayard
  • Council Bluffs
  • and Woodbine Community School Districts

The Iowa Department of Education said therapeutic classrooms are for learners whose “social-emotional or behavioral needs impact their ability to be successful in their current learning environment.” Iowa Department of Education Director Ann Lebo said “All students need support and resources that meet their individual needs. The therapeutic classroom grants help schools build upon their great work to promote the overall well-being of students. I commend this year’s awardees and their community partners for their plans to grow and strengthen a continuum of therapeutic supports so that every student has the support they need to succeed.”

The grant for these classrooms was created with a 2020 state law to increase mental health support for children and families. Grants will be distributed this fall for district implementation during the 2022-2023 school year.

More information on Therapeutic Classroom Incentive Grants can be found here.

Sioux City seeing increase in RSV cases

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) The Sioux City area is seeing an increase in R-S-V cases — the virus that is usually associated with infants and the elderly. Mercy One Doctor, Steven Joyce, says the most recent cases have been among older adults. “Really anybody can get R-S-V it’s just a matter of how susceptible you are. It is true that it’s more severe in the very young and the very old — and we are seeing an uptick in the older population and the reasons for that aren’t entirely clear, but we are seeing it and again, the severity of it can be worse especially in those who have emphysema, C-O-P-D, heart failure, and other complicated medical conditions,” Joyce says

He says people who get sick with R-S-V might think they have a cold, and some worry it could be COVID. “It mimics kind of a common cold but kind of a little bit worse. So it’s the runny nose congestion, cough. Infants will have more rapid breathing, things like that. They won’t feed as well, especially if they’re very young,” according to Joyce. “High spiking fevers and such isn’t as super common with R-S-V as it is maybe with influenza or even COVID-19.”

He says the only thing that can be done about R-S-V is to let it run its course. “There is no specific treatment for R-S-V. There are no antivirals that are effective there’s no antibiotics of course because as we’ve learned antibiotics do not kill viruses. Really we’re at supportive care so in those people who have a lot of secretions, trying to get those up and keep those secretions thin,” Joyce says.

The virus is spread by people coughing and sneezing and from surfaces. Doctor Joyce says frequent hand washing is a way to prevent it — and you should stay home if you are ill. He says it will usually run its course in seven to ten days.

Man arrested in Minnesota a suspect in attempted bank robbery in northern Iowa

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Authorities in northern Iowa and southern Minnesota have announced the arrest of a suspect in a string of break-ins and thefts over the past few weeks. Someone tried to steal an A-T-M from inside a bank in Ledyard early last Thursday. The Kossuth County Sheriff shared video of the suspect’s vehicle with law enforcement agencies in Palo Alto, Emmet and Winnebago Counties in Iowa and two counties in Minnesota where there had been recent reports of thefts.

Twenty-five-year-old Jacob Govern of Ledyard was arrested in Minnesota on a warrant out of Winnebago County and on a burglary charge in Marin County, Minnesota. Officials in the other four counties indicate more charges against Govern are pending. Govern had been arrested in early June and accused of stealing four vehicles in the Kossuth County area. State prison records indicate Govern has five previous felony convictions in Kossuth County over the past three years.

Linn County delays vote on solar project near Palo nuclear power plant

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – County officials are rescheduling votes on zoning changes that would allow construction of a large-scale solar farm around the decommissioned nuclear power plant near Palo. Charlie Nichols, Linn County’s planning and development director, told the crowd gathered for a public hearing last (Monday) night that the county had failed to provide proper notice of the hearing.

“I apologize to all of you who have showed up and put this on your calendars, but we will have to set up a new meeting schedule,” Nichols said, “and make sure we get everything properly published before that happens.” The Iowa Utilities Board has indicated it will provide permits for the solar project — if local officials approve zoning changes.

Linn County’s Planning and Zoning Commission approved those adjustments earlier this month. NextEra Energy has proposed a solar farm that would cover over 11-hundred acres and a battery storage facility near Palo.

Osage man charged with murdering woman whose head was found in a northern Iowa park

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A 23-year-old man from Osage is under arrest, charged with decapitating a Mason City women who went missing last year. Twenty-nine-year-old Angela Bradbury of Mason City was last seen in April of 2021. Three months later, a teenager found a human skull on a stick in a park in Mitchell County. In February of this year, Bradbury’s family reported her missing. They provided D-N-A samples and dental records which confirmed the skull was Bradbury’s.

Nathan James Gilmore

Nathan James Gilmore of Osage has been charged with Bradbury’s murder. Court records indicate investigators found a drawing of a satanic goat’s head in Gilmore’s living room. There were numbers on the drawing that coincide with the date Bradbury disappeared as well as the G-P-S coordinates of the park where her skull and other remains were found.

Updated list of candidates for the Cass County (IA) 2022 General Election

News

August 22nd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Cass County Deputy Auditor Doreen South has updated the current list of Candidates for 2022 General Election (*advances from the primary election held in June)

District 2 Supervisor– Mark O’Brien (Incumbent)*

District 3 Supervisor– Wendy Richter*

Treasurer-Tracey J Marshall (Incumbent)*

Recorder-Mary Ward (Incumbent)*

Attorney-Vanessa Strazdas (Incumbent)*

Auditor- Kathy Somers (filed papers after being elected by the Cass County Republican Party)

The following have filed nomination papers for Non-Partisan Offices:

Ag Extension- Chad Becker (Incumbent)

Ag Extension

Ag Extension

Ag Extension

Ag Extension

Soil & Water-Gregory D Zellmer (Incumbent)

Soil & Water

Edna Twp Trustee- Kevin A Stender

Edna Twp Trustee- Pat Erickson

Edna Twp Clerk-Travis Erickson

Union Twp Trustee-Richard Hoffman

Union Twp Trustee-Clarke Gerlock

Union Twp Clerk- Cheryl Christensen

Hospital Trustee-Joanne Lorence (Incumbent)

Hospital Trustee-Mike Klocke (Incumbent)

Hospital Trustee- Roger Herring (Incumbent) – Filed nomination papers 8/22/22

Hospital Trustee

As college classes start, students should get mental health issues addressed ASAP

News

August 22nd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – About one in three college students surveyed say they’ve been diagnosed with a mental health condition, including anxiety, depression or both. Dr. Kristin Avery, of the MercyOne Clear Lake Pediatric and Adolescent Care Clinic, says college students should have their conditions addressed right away, especially freshmen who are away from home for the first time.

“It’s good to recognize symptoms of being anxious or being depressed after moving,” Avery says, “and noticing if those things start to affect your relationships with other people, or it’s affecting your sleep or your grades, and if you are noticing that is happening, to — sooner rather than later — get in to see a therapist or a doctor at student health to talk about if there’s anything different that needs to be done.” Avery says even small steps can help you out in big ways.

“I think learning about what works for you to relax,” she says, “so, coming up with some relaxation techniques, learning how much sleep you need in order to be kind of your best self is important as well.” Avery says schools are trying to do a better job of helping to address the mental health of students.

“There’s just more knowledge about all of that, and it’s more talked about now which is great for people who feel left alone in that and can advocate for themselves,” she says, “but it is a hard topic for people that I think just making sure that your taking good care of yourself is very important.”

Avery says students should look up their school’s mental health resources in advance, and remember they can also call the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline anytime by dialing 9-8-8.

Blue Ribbon Foundation announces plans to renovate livestock buildings on fairgrounds

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 22nd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa State Fair Blue Ribbon Foundation has announced plans to spend millions of dollars to renovate the livestock barns on the fairgrounds. Foundation executive director, Peter Cownie, says the cattle, horse, sheep, and swine barns will each get an update. “The structures themselves are historic, you know, nearly a century old in some cases. Those will stay the same, but we need to renovate and restore the barns,” he says. “They are all unique, they all have different issues that have occurred over time,” Cownie says the barns have a constant flow of visitors and exhibitors through them during the fair’s run.

“You know, that’s where the 4-H and F-F-A youth show their livestock. They compete in the livestock competitions. The Iowa State Fair is the climax of their summer, and of all the competitions from the county fairs, and that is really the backbone of the Iowa State Fair youth in agriculture and what they do on these barns,” Cownie says. “And so to be able to renovate and restore them is really quite exciting for us.” The renovations are expected to cost around 25 million dollars.

The Blue Ribbon Foundation fundraising effort has already received 12 million dollars from the state’s “Rebuild Iowa Infrastructure Fund,” along with five million dollars from the Richard O. Jacobson Foundation, and Jeff & Deb Hansen of Iowa Select Farms have committed two million dollars for the Swine barn portion of the renovation. Cownie says they will have more details on the renovation schedule when they meet in October. “It’ll take us a few years to do it — but we’re gonna get started in time for next year’s fair to have some improvements done,” according to Cownie. ” We’re going to make the specific decisions this fall on which ones go first and what order it will be. But we will have progress made by next year’s fair, no doubt.”

Cownie says the work on the Iowa State Fairgrounds is like anyone has with their house — there’s always something that needs to be worked on to keep it up. “What we strive to do is we want to maintain our heritage, we want to maintain our traditions. We love the fact that these buildings are historic, in our state,” he says. “We want those to remain historic, and we want them to remain upgraded so that people have the same memories that, so that the kids have the same memories as their parents and grandparents did.”

For more information on the Iowa State Fair Blue Ribbon Foundation visit www.BlueRibbonFoundation.org.