MILDRED “MILLIE” SAUNDERS, 56, of Des Moines (Formerly of Manning) died Friday, December 27th at home in Des Moines. Funeral Services for MILLIE SAUNDERS are pending at the Ohde Funeral Home in Manning.
MILDRED “MILLIE” SAUNDERS, 56, of Des Moines (Formerly of Manning) died Friday, December 27th at home in Des Moines. Funeral Services for MILLIE SAUNDERS are pending at the Ohde Funeral Home in Manning.
Today: Sunny, with a high near 53. South southwest wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph.
Tonight: A slight chance of snow showers and freezing drizzle before midnight, then a chance of flurries and freezing drizzle between midnight and 3am, then scattered flurries after 3am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 6. Wind chill values as low as -10. Windy, with a south southwest wind 10 to 15 mph becoming north northwest 20 to 25 mph in the evening. Winds could gust as high as 35 mph.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy, then gradually becoming sunny and cold, with a temperature falling to around 3 by 9am. Wind chill values as low as -20. Windy, with a north northwest wind 15 to 25 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around -3. Wind chill values as low as -15. North northwest wind 10 to 15 mph becoming light and variable.
Monday: Partly sunny, with a high near 14. South southwest wind 5 to 15 mph.
Tuesday: A 20 percent chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 15.
New Year’s Day: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 16.
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One person was killed and another injured during a head-on collision Friday afternoon, in Union County. The Iowa State Patrol reports 22-year old Samantha Neely, of Creston, died from injuries she suffered in a collision between her car and a pickup driven by 24-year old Brittany Marshall, of Clearfield. The accident happened just before 3-p.m. Friday on Highway 34, about 2-miles north of Kent, or about a mile east of the Adams/Union County line.
Officials say Marshall was driving a 2007 Dodge Ram pickup westbound on Highway 34, when she reached into the back seat.The truck crossed the center line of the road and hit an eastbound 2001 Pontiac Grand Prix driven by Neely. Following the collision, the pickup came to rest in the south ditch, while the car stopped on the shoulder of the road. Both women were wearing their seat belts.
Marshall suffered serious injuries and was transported by Union County Rescue to the hospital in Creston. Neely died at the scene. A passenger in the pickup was not injured.
The period of “extended” unemployment benefits for nearly four-thousand Iowans will soon end. The budget deal passed earlier this month by congress does not continue the program into 2014. Iowa Workforce Development spokeswoman Kerry Koonce says the extension began almost five years ago. “This has been the longest period in time that congress has ever authorized extended unemployment compensation for those individuals who’ve exhausted their regular benefits during a time of economic downturn,” Koonce says. “There wasn’t even this large of a number of extensions during the ’80s farm crisis.”
State officials have notified the 3,952 Iowans who are currently eligible for “Emergency Unemployment Compensation” that this is the last week they can file claims. Their final unemployment check will come next week. “At one point in time in Iowa, individuals could have been eligible for up to 73 weeks of benefits,” Koonce says. “Keep in mind that regular benefits are for 26 weeks, so that’s a pretty lengthy time period added on.”
According to federal officials, almost 229-thousand Iowans got extended unemployment benefits at some point between January of 2008 and September of this year. Nationally, about one-point-three million Americans who’ve qualified for extended unemployment benefits will be cut off at the turn of the year. The benefit averages about three-hundred dollars per week. The Obama Administration has asked congress to renew the program, saying those benefits are a “critical lifeline for struggling Americans.”
A bill pending in the senate would continue the extended unemployment benefits for three more months. Republicans in congress have said there’d have to be cuts elsewhere in the federal budget if the program were to continue.
(Radio Iowa)
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Thousands of volunteer Iowa firefighters and emergency responders can claim a new $50 credit on their income taxes. The Iowa Department of Revenue says volunteer firefighters and EMS personnel qualify for the credit starting in the 2013 tax year. Those tax filings are due in April. Firefighters are eligible as long as they are active members of a department, and meet minimum training standards established by the state.
EMS workers are eligible if they are trained, certified and have a certificate from the Iowa Department of Public Health. The Legislative Services Agency says that up to 21,000 workers will be able to claim all or a portion of the credit, reducing state revenue by about $900,000 annually.
Gov. Terry Branstad signed the tax credit into law in 2012.
Lavon Eblen talks about Clutter Cleaning.
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WANTED: Upright freezer atleast 5 cubic feet, good condition. FOR SALE: Lasko power fan, 42″ tall, oscilates. 243-3396
FOR SALE: Car Audio System that includes two 1500 Watt Amps and two 12″ woofers together in a heavy duty box. Like new. $200. Call 712-304-4998.
WANTED: Looking for US coins 1964 and older Dimes Quarters Halves and silver dollars.Also wanted large deer antlers(just the sheds not complete racks) 402-369-2333.
WANTED: 1 bale of alfalfa grass hay delivered. 783-4416
The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest on Thursday of a Glenwood woman. 29-year old Shanna Marie Black was taken into custody at around 8:30-a.m. in Cass County, NE., on a warrant for Probation Violation. Black was being held in the Mills County Jail on $50,000 bond.
And, no injuries were reported following an accident Thursday, in Mills County. Authorities say a 2013 Hyundai driven by Justin Jones, of Essex, was traveling west on Highway 34. As the vehicle approached the intersection with Kidd Road, it collided with a 2009 Chevy driven by Kimberly Frederick, of Glenwood. Officials say Frederick failed to yield as she was crossing Highway 34.
LAWTON, Iowa (AP) – A fire damaged the home of a firefighter while he was helping other volunteers put out a field blaze in northwest Iowa. The Sioux City Journal says the fire at the Lawton home of Stacey and Cody Meyers was reported about 3 p.m. Thursday. Their children and pets escaped, and no injuries have been reported. The Red Cross helped the family find a place to stay Thursday night.
The fire cause is being investigated. The grass fire fought by Cody Meyers and others members of the Lawton Fire Department was reported a little after 2 p.m. Thursday It blackened about 30 acres of grassland and a picked cornfield.
A private effort is underway to try and save a 125-foot water tower in Stanton, painted to look like a Swedish coffeepot. Since 1971, a 50,000-gallon water tower in the town of Stanton has featured a giant handle, spout and knob. A sign on the edge of town says, “home of the world’s largest coffeepot.”
Last month, the Des Moines Register reports a $1.2 million revamp of the town’s central water system will cease use of the tower. At minimum, an estimated $250,000 would be needed to safely preserve the tower as an empty landmark. Maintenance issues include no cover on the spout to protect it from rain and moisture. Repainting the structure would require costly sandblasting. There are also out-of-date ladders on the side of the tower.
Kate Peterson Sloop is spear-heading a fundraising effort to save the structure that has been bringing tourists to Stanton for decades. To date, only $100 has been raised toward the $250,000 goal of restoring the tower for the City. Organizers will be accepting donations for almost the next year and a half at a dedicated page on youcaring.com. (www.youcaring.com/other/save-the-world-s-largest-coffee-pot/109697)
Donations can also be mailed to:
Save Our Coffee Pot Fund
C/O Great Western Bank
PO Box 9
Stanton, IA 51573