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Vehicle break-ins under investigation

News

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in Montgomery County are investigating numerous incidents of the theft. Officials with the Red Oak Police Department say a little more than half a dozen complaints have been received from residents of the community, with regard to vehicles being broken into, and items stolen from inside those vehicles.

One of the residents reported on Wednesday, that two  of her vehicles had been broken into. While that incident was under investigation, six other residents filed complaints about vehicle thefts. Authorities say they later received a call from a resident near Griswold who observed a black and gray plastic box on the Nishnabotna Bridge north of Red Oak on Highway 48.  Several items in the box were found to have been taken from one of the burglarized vehicles in Red Oak. Those items are being examined to see if they can reveal any evidence of who may have committed the crime.

Anyone with information into these thefts is urged to call Red Oak Police at 712-623-6500 or The Montgomery County Crimestoppers at 800-432-1001.

(Podcast) Skyscan Forecast: Thu., Jan. 10th 2013

Podcasts, Weather

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

The (podcast) Freese-Notis forecast for Atlantic, and the KJAN listening area, and weather data for Atlantic….

Play

Bluffs Boil Advisory could expire at Noon today (Thursday)

News

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

A Boil Advisory for the City Council Bluffs will run until at least Noon today (Thursday), according to a Water Works official. The advisory was put into effect for Council Bluffs and a handful of communities which are served by its water system, early Wednesday morning, following break in a 24-inch water main on the City’s east side. Water Works Director Doug Drummey told the Council Bluffs Daily NonPareil, that water samples taken from the system will be checked at the plant’s laboratory for any dangerous pathogens or disease-carrying organisms.

The water main break created a huge hole, which officials estimated was about 50 feet wide. Drummey said anywhere from 2 to 3 million gallons of water poured out of the system in the hour immediately following the incident. He told the newspaper it was the biggest main break he has seen in his career.

And, while the incident happened on the City’s east side, at 9th Street and Avenue E., residents throughout the west end of the city lost water pressure. Crews were able to isolate the pipe by 4 a.m. and water service was returned to normal pressure by late in the day Wednesday. However, because of the drop in water pressure, Drummey said it was possible that pathogens or disease-carrying organisms could have seeped into the water system. Because of this possibility, the city has advised residents to not drink water or use it during food preparation.

If using water for either purpose, it needs to be boiled first. Let it come to a full boil and remain that way for at least one-minute before cooling (if used as drinking water or brushing your teeth). Health officials say that because it s flu season, people should continue to wash their hands and dry them completely. If you are unable to pre-boil hand wash water, wash hands as usual with soap and warm water for 20 seconds, dry hands, and follow with use of a hand sanitizer.

Restaurants and convenience stores in Council Bluffs that use city water for cooking or for coffee, pop and ice machines have been told not to use the water in their operations. Once the boiling advisory is lifted, equipment will need to be cleaned. The city website, at councilbluffs-ia.gov, has instructions for cleaning commercial ice makers to tips for commercial establishments after the ban is lifted. The city has left it up to individual restaurants to make the decision about remaining open. Anyone with questions about the water advisory is asked to call (712) 328-4672.

ETHEL HEUCKENDORF, 96, of Greenfield (Svcs. 1/14/13)

Obituaries

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

ETHEL HEUCKENDORF, 96, of Greenfield, died Wed., Jan. 9th, at the Northcrest Living Center in Council Bluffs. Funeral services for ETHEL HEUCKENDORF will be held 11-a.m. Mon., Jan. 14th, at the United Methodist Church in Greenfield. Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.

Visitation at the funeral home will be held on Sunday (1/13), from 1 to 4 p.m.   And, the family will greet friends on Monday one hour prior to services at the church. Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

Memorials may be directed to the Ethel Heuckendorf memorial fund to be established by the family.

Burial will be in the Greenfield Cemetery.

ETHEL HEUCKENDORF is survived by:

Her daughters – Lois Mensing and husband Al of Council Bluffs, and Vivienne Wyllie and husband Carl of Omaha.

Her son – Richard Heuckendorf and wife Linda, of Duncan, OK.

8 grandchildren, 23 great grandchildren, 8 great great grandchildren

Her sister-in-law, Lucille Vorrath of Greenfield, other relatives and friends.

McLemore leads No. 6 Kansas past Iowa State in OT

Sports

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Freshman Ben McLemore had a career-high 33 points, including a tying 3-pointer with a second left in regulation, and No. 6 Kansas rallied to beat Iowa State 97-89 in overtime Wednesday night. McLemore was 10 of 12 from the field and perfect on six 3-pointers for the Jayhawks (13-1, 1-0 Big 12), who scored the first nine points of overtime to wrap up their 12th straight win.

Iowa State (10-4, 0-1) poured in 14 3-pointers, and had forged a 79-76 lead with 8.4 seconds left in regulation. But the Jayhawks’ Elijah Johnson found McLemore on the wing, and he banked in a 3-pointer from well beyond the arc with a single tick on the clock to force overtime. McLemore added another 3-pointer to open the extra 5 minutes, and Travis Releford and Jeff Withey made five consecutive free throws to help put the game away.

No. 1 Baylor women 67-39 over No. 25 Iowa State

Sports

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

WACO, Texas (AP) — Brittney Griner scored the game’s first five points and finished with 23 as Baylor led throughout in its first game since taking back the No. 1 spot, defeating 25th-ranked Iowa State 67-39 on Wednesday night. Griner already had 11 points as Baylor (13-1, 3-0 Big 12) jumped out to a 16-3 lead in just over 8 minutes. The Lady Bears set a Big 12 record with their 25th consecutive conference victory, breaking a tie with Oklahoma (24 in a row from March 2005-January 2007). Baylor has won 48 games in a row overall at home, the longest active winning streak.

Nikki Moody had 11 points for Iowa State (11-2, 2-1), which had won its first two Big 12 games for the first time in eight seasons, had 15 of its 24 turnovers by halftime.

Evansville holds on to beat Northern Iowa 62-59

Sports

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) — Colt Ryan scored 21 points, including two free throws with 18 seconds left that proved to be the game-winning points, as Evansville hung on Wednesday night for a 62-59 win over Northern Iowa. Ryan’s foul shots put the Purple Aces (10-6, 3-1 Missouri Valley) ahead 60-57 before UNI’s Anthony James’ layup made it a one-point game. Ned Cox made two more free throws with 10 seconds left, and James missed a tying 3-pointer to end the game in Cedar Falls.

Evansville led by as many as 14 in the second half but saw the Panthers (8-8, 1-3) take their only lead since the opening minutes, 57-55, on James’ jumper with 53 seconds left. Lewis Jones then put Evansville back in front with a three-point play. James led UNI with 19 points. Seth Tuttle, last week’s MVC player of the week after scoring 43 points in two games, was held to nine Wednesday.

Iowa early News Headlines: Thu., Jan. 10th 2013

News

January 10th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A legislative committee is looking into a proposed new rule that establishes a process for removing voters from registration rolls if they can’t prove citizenship. Iowa Secretary of State Matt Schultz is pushing the rule saying it’s needed because he believes people who are not U.S. citizens are registering to vote in Iowa. The American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa, Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement and other civil rights groups oppose the rule saying it intimidates minority voters especially Latino immigrants.

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — A Wisconsin-based printing company plans to close its facility in northeast Iowa. Quad Graphics of Sussex, Wisconsin announced yesterday it will close its printing plant in Dubuque. The move will impact 215 jobs at the plant, though it’s unclear if the jobs will be offered somewhere else.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A former University of Iowa student accused of sexually assaulting a woman who was showing him an apartment now faces new charges in a separate incident. Twenty-two-year-old Peng Tang is accused of stealing a laptop and multiple bras and underwear from his former residence in March. He faces second-degree theft and third-degree burglary.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Freshman Ben McLemore had a career-high 33 points, and Number 6 Kansas rallied to beat Iowa State 97-89 in overtime last night. The Cyclones poured on fourteen 3-pointers, and had forged a 79-76 lead with 8.4 seconds left in regulation before losing in Lawrence.

Cass County Supervisors approve 1st reading of Amended Zoning Ordinance

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 9th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

After more than 75-minutes worth of discussion about an amendment to the County’s Zoning Ordinance that would change the Zoning Districts’ Permitted Principal Uses, the Cass County Board of Supervisors Wednesday approved the first vote on the matter. However, their approval came with the caveat that the Cass County Attorney review the wording as it stands, and comment on whether the words “Light Industrial” needs to be added to one sentence in the amendment. The question also remains, whether those two words will cause a conflict between the County, and Fagen, Incorporated, which has already purchased the former Amaizing Energy Ethanol site, and looks to use the property for renewable energy production.

Last Fall, Kathy Schowalter with PlanScape Partners, presented to the Board a proposal from Ron Fagen, CEO of Granite Falls, Minnesota-based Fagen, Incorporated, which pertained to the possible creation of a 25-million gallon Cellulosic ethanol plant on the Amaizing Energy site. During Wednesday’s meeting, Schowalter said while they had hoped a cellulosic ethanol plant would be operating on the site, that is by no means a certainty.

She said Fagen doesn’t have a buyer lined up for the site he purchased just yet, so it could become almost anything ag related, including a seed corn processor. But it would not become a CAFO – Confined Animal Feeding Operation. She said they simply don’t know what will “Come down the pike.”

Cass County Engineer Charles Marker expressed his concern that two words apparently left out of the amended ordinance may leave a loop hole for heavy industrial operations to locate in a Light Industrial Zone, not just at the Amaizing Energy site, but anywhere in the County. He said he ordinance as worded does not specifically say a site will be used for “Light Industry.” Instead, it says “Industry which uses renewable energy,” which he says, becomes an “Administrative problem.” That means any industry, heavy or not, which uses renewable energy as a means of production, could apply under article 17 of the ordinance.

Zoning Administrator Rich Hansen said the Zoning Commission, which forwarded its recommendation to the Supervisors for their approval, would have no problem with a slight re-wording to the amendment, prior to next week’s second hearing and vote by the Supervisors. But Supervisor Chuck Rieken questioned whether the Board has the right to delete or add language to an amendment without making sure the legalities are taken care of. That means consulting with County Attorney Dan Feistner.

The Board then approved the Zoning Commission’s initial recommendation, with the stipulation legal counsel provide input for the next hearing.

Atlantic City Council approves Personnel Policy resolution amendment

News

January 9th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic City Council, Wednesday evening, approved an amendment to the City’s Personnel Policy. City Administrator Doug Harris explained one part of the amendment pertains to how close the city’s police officers must live with regard to their response time. The current requirement calls for officers to live within five-miles of the City limits, but after consulting with Police Chief Steve Green, and looking at other, legal requirements, it was determined the officers may live within a 25-minute response time.

The second change to the Personnel Policy, pertained to the parity between Union and Non-Union contracts, with regard to Personal Holiday time. The current contract allows non-union employees two-personal holidays per year. The proposal called for that to increase to three days per year, which would make the total number of holidays 11. That matches what Union personnel employed by the City, receive. The amendment was approved unanimously.

In other business, City Administrator Doug Harris said the Airport Commission has submitted their Capital Improvement Program (CIP) to the State of Iowa. He says if approved, the local share for the projects, the total cost of which is $2.62-million, the local share would end up being $875, 953. And, if it’s approved by the State, the Commission would have to request the Council consider a bond issue to finance some of the improvements, which by the way, were not included in the CIP Harris presented to the Council last month.

He said also, renovations on the Atlantic City Hall will begin next week, with the lobby area. Eventually, work will proceed into the Council Chambers, which will result in one of the regular council meetings in February having to take place at another location.