KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – Gas prices in the state are following the national trend and continue to drop. Triple-A says the average price of a gallon of unleaded gas in Iowa is three-dollars, 21 cents, down about 14 cents compared to last week. That price is down 31 cents from one month ago. Davenport has the lowest average price of two-98 a gallon.
Triple-A says the price of oil has dropped on fears of an economic slowdown, and that has led to the drop in gas prices. The national average price of a gallon of gas is three-dollars, 54 cents, which is down 12 cents from last week.
(Casey, Iowa) – Two pickup trucks went up in smoke and flames Monday night in Casey, during an attempt to withdraw fuel from one of the vehicles. The Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office reports an individual was given consent by the owner of a 2011 GMC Yukon XL C1500 pickup, to take gasoline from that vehicle.
In the process, the vehicle caught fire. The flames spread to an adjacent 2018 Dodge RAM pickup.The incident took place in a parking lot near the Baker Street Apartments in the 900 block of Baker Street, at around 10:40-p.m.
Both vehicles were a total loss, with the damage estimated at $30,000 altogether. No one was injured, and no citations were issued. No names were released.
(Guthrie Center, Iowa) – Two separate accidents in Guthrie County claimed the life of a Dallas Center man, and resulted in serious injuries to a woman from Guthrie Center. According to the Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office, 74-year-old Dennis Adrian Tatman, of Dallas Center, died during an accident that occurred at around 11-a.m. today (Wednesday), east of Panora.
A witness told a sheriff’s deputy that she was traveling eastbound on Highway 44 behind a 2016 Ford F-250 Super Duty pickup that was pulling a large utility trailer. The pickup was being driven by Dennis Tatman. The woman said she saw his vehicle quickly swerve into the south ditch and come to rest. Panora EMS administered life saving measures before Tatman was transported from the scene by Life Flight to Mercy in downtown Des Moines, where he died.
The pickup sustained an estimated $15,000 damage, and was declared a total loss.
Authorities say at around 12:19-p.m., Tuesday, a 2001 Chevy Blazer driven by 36-year-old Gwen Ellen Nickel, of Guthrie Center, was traveling west on 310th Street, when the SUV went out of control at the crest of a hill. The report said the vehicle was traveling too fast for conditions.
The SUV entered the eastbound ditch and overturned, ejecting Nickel, who was not wearing a seat belt. She suffered suspected serious, incapacitating injuries, and was transported by Stuart EMS to Mercy Hospital.
The Blazer sustained $2,500 damage and was a total loss.
DES MOINES– Gov. Kim Reynolds today announced her appointment of Kathryn Austin as a district associate judge in Judicial Election District 2B.
Austin, of Eldora, Iowa, currently serves as an Assistant County Attorney in Marshall County. She received her undergraduate degree from Iowa State University and her law degree from the Michigan State University College of Law.
Austin fills a vacancy created by the retirement of District Associate Judge Kim Riley. Judicial Election District 2B includes Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Greene, Hamilton, Hardin, Humboldt, Marshall, Pocahontas, Sac, Story, Webster, and Wright counties.
(Radio Iowa) – After being closed nearly four years, the only remaining historic movie theater in Des Moines will reopen under new management in just over two weeks. The Varsity has undergone a five-million-dollar, top-to-bottom renovation, according to Ben Godar, executive director of the non-profit Des Moines Film, which now owns the venue.
“The building is more than 100 years old and so it’s a historic preservation project first and foremost,” Godar says. “We worked with the State Historic Preservation Office to identify what are those key, character-defining historic features and we had to absolutely work to preserve those features.” The main theater seats 240 people while a second, smaller auditorium has been added, with seating for just 38. Godar says they’ve maintained the movie house’s unique, original looks while bringing everything else into the 21st century.
“We made the building fully accessible,” Godar says. “We added an elevator, new restrooms, a more modernized ticketing experience, a new concession stand, classic movie snacks, the same Varsity popcorn everyone remembers and loves, but we also have added beer, wine and alcohol.” Both auditoriums have modern digital projectors, as well as new screens and top-flight sound systems. When the venue reopens next month, Godar says it will feature a mixture of classic movies like the 1952 musical “Singin’ in the Rain,” and “Elf” from 2003, alongside 2022 offerings including, “Decision to Leave” and “White Noise.”
“Our bread and butter is going to be what I think people would traditionally call ‘arthouse,’ American independent film, international film, new releases,” Godar says, “but we’ll also be showing classic films, film series, and we’ve got some other kind of interesting series in the works already.” The structure, located right next to the Drake University campus, has an unusual history that dates back well over a century.
“The building was built in 1917. It was actually kind of a spec industrial building that was briefly automotive sales and service and then it was actually the Coca-Cola Bottling plant from 1920 to 1938,” Godar says. “It was in 1938 that the building went through a significant remodel and became the Varsity Theater, and so it’s been the Varsity Theatre since 1938.” One of the first things movie goers will notice is the original 1938 terrazzo flooring has been uncovered and refurbished to a gleaming shine. Opening day is Thursday, December 15th.
(Radio Iowa) – Many people are reviewing their retirement plan contributions as we approach the end of the year. I-R-S spokesman, Christopher Miller, says a recent update allows you to put away more toward retirement. “The amount that individuals can contribute to their 401-K plans and most other workplace retirement plans has increased for 2023 to 22-thousand-500 dollars, and that’s up from 20-thousand-500 dollars for 2022,” miller says. He says there’s also a change for individual retirement accounts or I-R-A’s.
“The limit on the annual contribution to an I-R-A increased to 65-hundred dollars for 2023 — and that’s up from six-thousand dollars in 2022,” he says. Miller says it’s important to review your plan to be sure you are putting enough money away. “This is a good time to know well what am I going to put into my I-R-A, what am I going to put into my 401-K plan at work,” Miller says.
Miller says if you make the adjustment heading into the new year, you will be able to take advantage of the increased limits for the full year.
(Radio Iowa) -Carroll’s police chief says his department’s initial investigation indicates a man who was critically wounded early this (Wednesday) morning was shot in self-defense. Carroll Police Chief Brad Burke says residents in an apartment building started calling 9-1-1 around 1 a.m. “The first one that came in was that a subject was up at Fairview Apartments…banging on doors, trying to get into apartments,” Burke says. “The second call came in within just seconds of that one and he said that someone tried to kill him, there was a gun was involved and that he was currently hiding in a different apartment in a different building.”
The man who was shot has life-threatening head wounds according to the police chief. “He was conscious, alert and breathing when our officers arrived and then when the ambulance took him to the hospital,” Burke says.
The man has been flown to a hospital in Iowa City for treatment. Two agents from the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation have been conducting interviews with witnesses. Burke says it appears the injured man was shot with his own gun during a struggle.
(Logan, Iowa) – The Harrison County Emergency Management Agency, today (Wednesday), said the City of Logan has lifted the boil order that was previously in place for resident affected by the water main break on November 28, 2022. Residents may resume using the tap water for drinking, cooking and other, normal purposes.
(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds is among 21 Republican governors who’re asking congress to repeal the COVID vaccine mandate for America’s soldiers. Governor Reynolds, in a written statement, said the Biden Administration’s vaccine mandate for the military creates a national security risk. Reynolds said it affects national guard units at the state level as well and restricts governors’ ability to respond to natural disasters and other emergencies. About eight-thousand active-duty soldiers who’ve refused to get a COVID shot have been discharged. A Pentagon official told a Washington, D.C. radio station in September that about nine-thousand National Guard soldiers around the country who haven’t been vaccinated may be discharged this year.
As of today (Nov. 30), 93 percent of Iowa National Guard soldiers have complied with COVID-19 vaccination requirements according to a spokeswoman for the Guard. Neighboring governors from Missouri, Nebraska and South Dakota are among the Republicans who’ve joined Iowa’s governor in sending a letter to congressional leaders asking for the COVID vaccine mandate for the military to be eliminated.
(Radio Iowa) – A former state employee admits she manipulated her husband’s timesheets to inflate his pay by tens of thousands of dollars. Renae Rapp was an administrative assistant at the state unit in Cherokee where sexually violent predators are committed once their prison terms have expired. Her husband, Adam Rapp, was working as a part-time security specialist at the unit. Renae Rapp has pleaded guilty to second degree theft, a class D felony. She will not serve time in prison.
She’s been ordered to pay the state more than 57-thousand dollars in restitution. That’s equal to the amount of excess pay she got for her husband by recording he’d worked more hours than he had over an 18-month period. She must also serve two years of probation and reimburse the state for court costs and attorney’s fees.