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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
Des Moines, Iowa – Officials with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa, Thursday, said 22-year-old Brett Michael Dobberke, of Des Moines, was sentenced to 16 years in prison for discharging a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime and possessing marijuana with the intent to distribute it.
According to court documents and the facts detailed at the sentencing hearing, on November 7, 2021, Dobberke set up a drug deal, via Snapchat, with an individual unknown to him. Dobberke arrived at the drug deal with a loaded gun. The customer who arrived to buy drugs from Dobberke was a 15-year-old boy. During the drug deal, Dobberke and the 15-year-old boy exchanged gunfire, and Dobberke shot and killed the minor victim. Following the shooting, Dobberke did not call for help or render aid to the victim and instead left the scene.
After Dobberke killed the minor victim, he did two more drug deals that same night. He also hid the shell casing from the discharged round that killed the victim. When police officers located Dobberke, he had another loaded gun in his vehicle. The gun Dobberke used to shoot and kill the victim was located at his residence.
U.S. Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa; and the Des Moines Police Department made the announcement. The Des Moines Police Department investigated the case. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mikaela J. Shotwell and Kristin M. Herrera prosecuted the case, with assistance from Victim Witness Specialists Charlotte Kovacs and Katie Blanchard.
This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN) is the centerpiece of the Department of Justice’s violent crime reduction efforts. PSN is an evidence-based program proven to be effective at reducing violent crime. Through PSN, a broad spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions to address them. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses enforcement efforts on the most violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry programs for lasting reductions in crime.
(Radio Iowa) – From Sioux City to the Quad Cities, Iowa hospitals are reporting surges in children being brought to emergency rooms with cases of respiratory syncytial virus, or R-S-V. Dr. Amy Groen, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Blank Children’s Hospital in Des Moines, says daily patient volume is about double what it normally is for this time of the year.
“We’re seeing more and more kids affected. We’re seeing more and more visits secondary to it,” Groen says. “And, frankly, we’ve run out of hospital beds on most days for the patients that need to be admitted from RSV.” Groen says R-S-V is more dangerous for young children because their airways are smaller and cannot handle swelling from the virus the way older children and adults can. She recommends parents consider keeping their young children away from others as much as possible.
“I know the holidays are coming up and you want to see family, but RSV in really young infants can be a serious thing,” Groen says. “So really reconsider your holiday plans and your gathering plans just so your infant doesn’t get ill.” A report from the state hygienic lab says during the first week of November, there were 810 cases of R-S-V reported statewide, a jump from 568 the week before.
In Cedar Rapids, Linn County Public Health, Mercy Medical Center and UnityPoint Health – St. Luke’s all report significant increases in R-S-V cases in recent weeks. Blank Children’s Hospital reports the number of kids arriving each day in the E-R is around 120, double the average.
(reporting by Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio)
ATLANTIC, IOWA – As part of the National Rural Health Day celebration today, Cass Health announced it has been recognized with two 2022 Performance Leadership Awards for excellence in both Quality and Patient Outcomes. Compiled by The Chartis Center for Rural Health, the Performance Leadership Awards honor top quartile performance (75th percentile or above). Among all the nation’s rural hospitals, Cass Health ranked above the 95th percentile in both Quality and Outcomes.
“Cass Health has achieved this award every year since 2017 because we’re incredibly blessed to have a talented, hardworking team here. These awards are so meaningful to us because they validate that the care we provide is of the highest quality, which leads to the best possible outcomes for our patients,” noted Brett Altman, CEO.
The Performance Leadership Awards are based on the results of the Chartis Rural Hospital Performance INDEX™, the industry’s most comprehensive and objective assessment of rural hospital performance. INDEX data is trusted and relied upon by rural hospitals, health systems with rural footprints, hospital associations and state offices of rural health across the country to measure and monitor performance across several areas impacting hospital operations and finance.
“Although the last two years have placed unprecedented pressure on the rural health safety net, the dedication to serving the community that we’re so accustomed to seeing from rural hospitals across the country hasn’t wavered,” said Michael Topchik, National Leader, The Chartis Center for Rural Health. “Let us celebrate the power of rural on National Rural Health Day and honor the facilities working tirelessly to provide access to high quality healthcare services to their communities.”
(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds has been elected chair of the Republican Governors Association. Reynolds says Republican governors and candidates must show voters an alternative to the chaos and dysfunction in the federal government. “Tell them what you’re going to do. Follow through,” Reynolds says. “And how about we respect the people that we serve.”
Twenty-eight states currently have a Republican governor, but Democrats defeated G-O-P candidates in three of those states last week. There are three governors races in 2023 and Reynolds, as the Republican Governors Association chair, will now be leading fundraising and other efforts to support G-O-P candidates for governor in Kentucky, Louisiana and Mississippi. “I think we need to continue to focus on the economy,” Reynolds says. “We need to continue to focus on getting results in kitchen table issues that families are dealing with in every one of our states.”
Reynolds made her remarks this week at the Republican Governors Association meeting in Florida. Sara Craig Gongol, who has served as Reynolds’ chief of staff for nearly four years, is leaving to take over as executive director of the Republican Governors Association in January. Craig Gongol was a consultant on Governor Reynolds’ 2018 campaign and she’s worked for a number of state and federal candidates in Iowa and elsewhere.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s unemployment rate inched up slightly in October to two-point-nine percent. Iowa Workforce Development spokesperson, Jesse Dougherty (Door-uh-tee), says there are positive signs despite the increase. “In large part what we’re seeing is more Iowans are entering the labor force. We had, I think over 22-hundred entering the labor force, and the overall participation rate held steady at 67-point-seven. So it did go up — but we did see some positive indicators there,” Dougherty says. “And also I’ll mention to you on the employer front, we had employers report 45-hundred jobs created, and that’s the seventh straight month that we’ve seen that.”
He says the labor participation rate is one of the strengths of Iowa’s economy. “Iowa has typically had a higher labor force participation rate than the country and last month, the national labor force participation rate actually declined. But Iowa’s held steady, so that’s important for us,” he says. “We were near 68, 69, 70 percent pre-pandemic.” He says the growth in jobs hit a key mark. “With October’s growth we saw Iowa’s employment level actually surpass the level in March 2020. So in other words — we’ve now replaced all of the 169-thousand jobs lost during the pandemic. Plus, we’re at about 900 above that,” Dougherty says. “So that’s an encouraging sign. Certainly, there are still those that have not returned to the workforce. And that’s been our key focus.”
Dougherty says inflation and other factors still create some headwinds for employers — but he says it’s encouraging to see some strong indicators. “What I mean by that is, leisure and hospitality had another good month they had at a 22-hundred jobs. And actually, that brings leisure and hospitality to the highest level that all time that we’ve seen in Iowa, the sector is currently employing over 147-thousand Iowans,” he says. “That gain was led by accommodations and food services, but we also saw gains and arts, entertainment, recreation, some of that we expect to happen seasonally, but it’s also been a higher number than it’s ever been before.”
He says other areas are also showing positive signs. “Manufacturing, health care and social assistance, retail, and financial activities and construction. All those sectors have gains this past month. And so that, to us, is definitely a positive trend. Certainly, we’re still looking at, you know, ways that we can continue to grow that,” Dougherty says. He says the economy continues to be positive for workers looking for a job, or looking to move up.
(Radio Iowa) – The sale of 73 acres of farmland near Sheldon appears have set the record price for Iowa agland. Mark Zomer of Zomer Company Realty and Auction of Rock Valley handled the sale last Friday. “We had several bidders for the farm and all of them were local farmers,” he says. “The farm sold for $30,000 per acre. I believe that might be a new record for the state of Iowa for agland only.”
A month ago, 53 acres of Plymouth County farm ground between Marcus and Remsen sold for over 26-thousand dollars an acre. Zomer says the parcel he sold in Sioux County on Friday is highly-rated cropland. “An older gentlemen once told me if you could order a farm and have it perfect, this farm would be as perfect as you could get. It had just a little bit of slope to it, so the drainage was excellent and it had very good soil types to it,” Zomer says. “It was what we call an inside parcel of land, so it was land with road on only one side, so it was virtually all tillable except for the road and ditch.”
Zomer says the buyer is adding the 73 acres to a family operation. There’s only so much farm ground for sale and, according to Zomer, that makes the land market very strong. “I think, long term, people believe land’s a good investment,” Zomer says. “…I realize there can be ups and downs in the land market, but overall…I think people understand that the long-term dividends of owning a farm — receiving rent every year or crop income every year…over the 40 to 50 year history — I think land is proven to be a good investment.” The land that sold for 30-thousand dollars an acre last Friday is located between Sheldon and Boyden.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Thanksgiving is typically the time those at the table loosening their belts to take-in all the goodies, but when it comes to spending, the City of Atlantic is going to be tightening its financial belt. That’s the message City Administrator John Lund essentially conveyed to the Council during their meeting, Wednesday. Lund gave the Council a copy of the Property Tax Report he also gave the City’s Department Heads.
Lund said “It sounds like they’re (The legislature) gonna do more things related to property taxes this year,”and he urged the Council not to wait for their action to happen.
He says “No one likes paying property taxes, but what pays for fire, police, the libraries? Property taxes.
One way to reduce the property tax burden, is through growth: adding more businesses and residents. Lund says the push to establishing more housing units this year in Atlantic is a step in the right direction, but it isn’t easy to accomplish.
It remains to be seen what the Iowa Legislature will do to the property tax system, but it’s clear City Managers in the area are concerned enough to ask their leaders to lobby the legislature not to make any drastic changes, in light of the current economy.
Here is more information on the property tax and how it relates to a city’s financial situation. These documents were prepared by Erin Mullenix, Research Director for the Iowa League of Cities, and made possible courtesy Atlantic City Clerk, Barb Barrick:
no_reply@cityofatlantic.com_20221117_110829-2
no_reply@cityofatlantic.com_20221117_104531
no_reply@cityofatlantic.com_20221117_110855
(Radio Iowa) – Iowans who smoke cigarettes are being encouraged to quit — just for today (Thursday). As part of the American Cancer Society’s Great American Smokeout, it’s hoped if smokers can kick the habit for one day, they can make the change permanent. Studies show the average smoker has to try seven times before they quit smoking for good. State health officials say about 17-percent of Iowa adults smoke and 10-percent of high school students.
Anti-smoking advocates are calling for Iowa lawmakers to raise taxes on cigarettes in January. The taxes are now a dollar-36 per pack in Iowa. That’s 45-cents below the national average and four dollars below New York’s taxes. For free help stopping smoking, call the Quitline at 800-QUIT-NOW.
(Creston, Iowa) – Police in Creston arrested a man for Failure to Appear in court. 21-year-old Andrew George Mills, of Creston, was arrested at around 10:30-p.m. Wednesday, at his home. He was transported to the Union County Jail and held on a $2,000 cash or surety bond.
(Radio Iowa) – The cost of the items used to prepare a typical Thanksgiving dinner for ten people is up again this year in the annual survey by the American Farm Bureau. A-F-B economist, Roger Cryan, says they pick 12 items for the survey. “The average in the U-S cost 64-dollars, five cents — which was up about 20 percent from last year. And that was last year was up 14 percent from the year before, so that’s a 36 percent increase in two years,” Cryan says. Cryan says the increased cost will be a burden for many, but farmers have done a good job of providing. “I think it’s worth pointing out that even with these increases, this market basket still works out to about six and a half dollars per person for what is essentially a Thanksgiving feast,” he says.
Cryan says general price inflation is part of the reason for the increase. “Inflation has been running at a rate of about seven to nine percent this fall, year over year. That’s about a third of the increase in the food basket and inflation is a serious issue that’s that we’ve been attempting to address general price inflation. It robs consumers and farmers of their buying power,” according to Cryan. He says increased production costs, supply chain issues, and other factors also contributed to the increase. The cost of the 16-pound turkey was up 21 percent from last year to around 29 dollars. Cryan says that’s an average, and you may be able to find some cheaper birds as we get closer to the holiday.
“Since we’ve done the survey, the number of stores that are featuring turkeys in their circulars at discounted prices,” Cryan says. “Those discounts will probably grow. Even though it’s been it’s been a tighter market. And even though there’s been some challenges in the turkey supply chain production is only down about two percent this year at this point compared to last year.” Cryan says the amount farmers make has not increased despite the retail price increase for the products. “The U-S-D-A has put out numbers on a regular basis that show pretty consistently for the last several years that farmers receive about eight percent of the retail price of food purchased for consumption at home,” he says.
Among some of the other items in the survey: the 14-ounce bag of cube stuffing mix is up 69 percent from last year, and frozen pie crusts and whipping cream are up 26 percent. A pound of frozen peas is up 23 percent, dinner rolls are up 22 percent. The can of pumpkin pie mix is up 18 percent, and the gallon of whole milk is up 16 percent. The 12-ounce bag of fresh cranberries went against the trend — as it was down about 14 percent.