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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – Volunteers will be laying wreaths on hundreds of veterans’ graves in cemeteries across Iowa this Saturday as part of the national event called Wreaths Across America. Luanne Jackson, Hamilton County’s Veteran Affairs director, is coordinating efforts in her area. “It’s a national wreath day of laying wreaths and honoring those who have given their lives during service or since they served,” Jackson says, “so it’s honoring all our veterans.” Organizers say it’s an event which aims to help ensure the people who served our country will never be forgotten.
Jackson says they began last year with the South Marion Cemetery in Stratford and have added several more area graveyards this year. “We started with Lawn Hill and Presbyterian Church in Kamrar,” Jackson says. “We have added to that the Community Church of Kamrar Cemetery and Liberty Center Cemetery.” Among the other Iowa communities taking part on Saturday, volunteers in Urbandale will place more than 100 wreaths on veterans’ graves at McDivitt Grove Cemetery.
Volunteers will also lay wreaths at the Iowa Veterans Cemetery in Adel, at the Iowa Veterans Home and Cemetery in Marshalltown, and in Iowa Falls. The Iowa cemeteries join more than 3,100 nationwide in the project.
More info. at wreathsacrossamerica.org
(Radio Iowa) – Former University of Iowa president Willard “Sandy” Boyd has died at the age of 95. Boyd was a St. Paul, Minnesota native who practiced law for two years in Minneapolis before joining the U-I law faculty in 1954. He moved up the university ladder — becoming the Iowa City school’s 15th president in 1969. He left to become president of the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago in 1981 — returned to the U-I as a law professor in 1996 and served as interim president in 2002-03 before formally retiring 2015.
Boyd’s 12-year presidency saw a large increase in enrollment and major changes in the campus footprint that included the building of Carver-Hawkeye Arena, and success in getting the Board of Regents approval for a 500-thousand-dollar upgrade of the University Hospitals building.
Boyd is survived by his wife, Susan Kuehn Boyd; their three children, Elizabeth “Betsy” Boyd of Iowa City, Willard Lee “Bill” Boyd III of Des Moines, and Thomas Boyd of St. Paul; and seven grandchildren.
(Radio Iowa) – The Linn County Board of Supervisors will hold its second of three considerations today (Wednesday) on an ordinance changing setback requirements for new hazardous material pipelines. The ordinance sets out a formula for how close a new pipeline could be built near a place of public assembly or dwelling, and would impact Wolf Carbon Solution’s 280-mile pipeline project. Jessica Wiskus has been organizing residents against the pipeline. She opposes the ordinance for what she calls “loopholes” in its language.
“I understand that they want to get something done and I think that that’s admirable but I think that we need to take a look at the fine print and make sure that we really are getting something done,” she says. The ordinance will allow landowners to wave their right to setbacks. It also reduces requirements if the pipeline operator addresses why this reduction is necessary in their petition to the Iowa Utilities Board.
(reporting by Zachary Smith, Iowa Public Radio)
(Radio Iowa) – The state legislative director for a union that represents transportation workers says the contract being imposed on the nation’s rail workers sets a troubling precedent. Chris Smith of Tama is a local leader in the SMART-T-D Union, which rejected the tentative agreement in November. “We’re not happy that congress intervened in a system that’s set up to work without their intervention,” Smith says. “We feel that the railroads did not have to fairly negotiate contracts because they had the leverage of congress forcing us back to work.”
At President Biden’s request, congress voted to avert a strike and force rail workers to accept the terms of a tentative agreement on wages and benefits. Members of seven different unions rallied at the Iowa Capitol yesterday (Tuesday) to voice their objections. Ross Grooters is chairman of the Iowa State Legislative Board for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen.
“Our issues have not changed and we’re going to continue working to get the kind of workplace we need as workers,” Grooters says. Grooters says there seems to have been a collective sigh of relief in the country that a railroad strike was averted, but he says the issues that are causing supply chain disruptions haven’t been resolved.
“We’re going to continue to have problems with the freight rail system, Grooter says, “and so we’re trying to keep that at the forefront of people’s minds.” Grooters says trains aren’t properly staffed. Freight railroads have pared staff dramatically since 2015 to reduce costs and increase profits. According to the Associated Press, more than 22 percent of the jobs at Union Pacific, C-F-X and Norfolk Southern have been eliminated in the past five years.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The City of Atlantic’s Board of Adjustment will meet 5:30-p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15th, in the Council’s Chambers at City Hall. City Administrator John Lund says “The agenda is set up to facilitate a very orderly and structured meeting that is fair to the applicant, abutting & opposite property owners, and the general public.
The Chair of the Board will have the right to limit individual comments to a set length of time, or limit the time in which the public hearing portion of the meeting will end. Those rules will need to be established prior to the opening of the public hearing. It is the Board’s decision, but given the level of interest and ensuring all are heard, a 2-minute limit per speaker may be appropriate. A general time cutoff of the public hearing is the Board’s call.
The Council chamber can contain a total of 59 people, that is the fire limit.” Lund says “We will have seats for around 55, allowing for overflow individuals to come in and address the Board. We will be doing what we can to work with the press to broadcast the meeting to those that wish to hear it live, but prefer to stay at home. We will be opening the doors to the public at 5:10 P.M. there will be reserved seating for the Board, City staff, New Life Church, the owners of the building, the abutting & opposite property owners, the press, elected officials.”
Lund added “I expect around 20 seats or so will be available to the general public, which will be offered on a first-come-first-serve basis. I have faith in Atlantic that even if things become heated, the public will all keep things civilized, it is the Iowa way. That said, officers will be present if needed to help keep things in order. We will require sign-in sheets to help facilitate speaking and ensure correct spelling of names in the minutes.”
The agenda is as follows:
(Fontanelle, Iowa) – Citizens in Fontanelle went to the polls, Tuesday (Dec. 13), to determine which of five candidates would fill three vacancy seats on the City Council, in a Special Election. Auditor Mandy Berg reports the candidates with the most votes were:
Candidates Lane A. Ellis and Jeffrey Ivan Thompson, received 33 and 26 votes, respectively. James Campbell received zero votes.
There were also nine write-in votes cast. The results are unofficial until the Board of Supervisors canvasses them on December 20, 2022. The write-in results could also potentially change the outcome. Those results will not be available until later today (Wednesday).
DES MOINES — Today (Tuesday), Governor Kim Reynolds issued a directive to the Iowa Department of Management’s Office of the Chief Information Officer to ban TikTok on all state-owned devices and prohibit state agencies from subscribing to or owning a TikTok account.
“It is clear that TikTok represents a national security risk to our country and I refuse to subject the citizens of Iowa to that risk,” said Gov. Reynolds. “They trust us with their personal and confidential information and we will take every step possible to protect it, including from the Chinese government. The safety of Iowans is my number one priority and that includes their cybersecurity.”
Governor Reynolds’ directive joins several other governors across the United States that have also banned the use of TikTok on any state-owned devices due to security concerns with the Chinese-owned social media platform.
The Governor’s directive goes into effect immediately.
(Radio Iowa) – Anyone who’s ever entertained a cat with a laser pointer will understand the premise behind the latest research at Iowa State University involving lasers and young chickens. I-S-U animal science professor Liz Bobeck found a way to motivate chickens to move around using specially-designed lasers. They project a red dot onto the floor of the pens to stimulate the birds’ predatory instincts, encouraging them to be more active.
“It gives them something else to do in their day-to-day tasks,” Bobeck says. “It gives them a choice to have an option to play, which I think is something that is kind of neat. From a performance and welfare benefit, they are up and moving. They are able to grow faster, better, stronger bones. They have better feed conversion.” That’s especially important because as the chickens approach market weight, they often become more sedentary, but the lasers keep them hopping.
“Our initial work was for four minutes, four times a day,” Bobeck says, “and we move the lasers in kind of a random pattern so the birds feel like they’re chasing something that would be moving at the speed of a bug or an insect that they might like to chase anyway.” An initial concern was that if the birds exercised more, they’d lose weight, but Bobeck says they’re finding the opposite, that the broilers saw improved weight gain and bone density.
“When the birds get up and play with the laser, they actually go to the feeder and to the water, so they spend more time eating and drinking and walking, and then actually growing,” Bobeck says, “and this is translating to really cool benefits as far as meat quality goes.” Laser pointers always carry warnings about how dangerous it can be to gaze into the high-intensity light, but Bobeck says none of the test chickens have wound up visually impaired.
“We haven’t found yet that the birds can figure out where the lasers are coming from since they’re moving,” Bobeck says. “But we also have not seen any issues with birds looking into the laser and becoming blind, and it’s also the safest wavelength for humans. So, our goal is to also not harm any person that will be working in the barn.” I-S-U is working with a livestock lighting company to eventually take this concept to market.
(Council Bluffs, Iowa) – A woman from Nebraska was arrested following a report of an attempted bank robbery today (Tuesday), in Council Bluffs. According to Bluffs Police, Officers were called at around 12:03-p.m. to the First National Bank at 2421 West Broadway, for a possible robbery in progress.
While enroute officers received information that a female suspect had pulled into the business drive thru lane outside of the bank and passed a note to the teller demanding cash. As officers arrived on scene the suspect attempted to leave the area. She was stopped and taken into custody as she drove onto West Broadway.
After being interviewed, the suspect, 51-year-old Lisa M. Stenberg, of Omaha, was transported to Pottawattamie County Corrections and charged with Robbery 2nd and Theft 2nd. No weapons were found and there were no injuries reported during this incident.