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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
The Glenwood Police Department reports two arrests over the weekend.
On Saturday, September 24th Officers arrested 34-year-old Seth Peters for Driving Under Suspension. Peters was taken to the Mills County Jail and held on $300 bond.
On Sunday, September 25th Glenwood Police arrested 42-year-old Brian Johnson of Plattsmouth, NE for Controlled Substance Violation, Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd Offense, and Failure to Affix a Drug Tax Stamp. Johnson was booked into the Mills County Jail on $32,000 bond.
The Creston Police Department reports three arrests over the past weekend.
On Friday, September 23rd at 3:42 p.m. Creston Police arrested 43-year-old Brady Gale Richert of Creston at his residence. Richert was charged on 2 Union County Warrants for Failure to Appear on Violation of Probation. Original charges were Operating Under the Influence 2nd Offense. Richert was transported to the Union County Jail and held on $4,000 cash only bond.
Also on September 23rd at 5:37 p.m. Officers arrested 36-year-old Michael Dale Sheldahl at his home on a charge of Domestic Abuse Assault, Strangulation. Sheldahl was taken to the Union County Jail and later posted $2,000 bond.
On Saturday, September 24th at 9:58 p.m. Creston Police arrested 41-year-old Robert Gene Shimer of Creston on a charge of Public Intoxication 1st Offense. Shimer was taken to the Union County Jail and later posted $300 bond.
Sioux City’s “Camp High Hopes” is celebrating its 10th anniversary. Sarah Morgan is the camp’s executive director.
Archery and canoeing are among the activities for campers. The facility opened in the fall of 2012. Morgan says there’s been a lot of growth since then and new programs are being added this fall and next spring.
A crowd gathered at the facility Sunday for a celebration that featured games, a fire truck — and two birthday cakes. Morgan says there were smiles all around.
The Camp High Hopes property covers 90 acres and includes a lake and a lodge. Fundraising for the camp began in 2004 and it opened eight years later. Campers come from Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota.
With six weeks remaining in the 2022 campaign, Iowa Republicans have about a four-and-a-half percent statewide voter registration edge over Democrats. Jeff Link is a consultant who’s worked for a number of Democrats, including Fred Hubbell, the party’s nominee for governor in 2018.
Iowa G-O-P chairman Jeff Kaufmann says a big turning point was in 2020, right after the Iowa DEMOCRATIC Party’s presidential Caucuses.
For years, independents were the largest voting block in Iowa. During the last midterm election, back in 2018 — 36 percent of all active registered voters were independents. Link says having independents shrink from being the largest to the smallest block of voters in Iowa is significant.
Kaufmann says he intends for the G-O-P to keep its foot on the pedal and seek out new voters.
As of September 1st, there were a TOTAL of over one-point-eight MILLION active registered voters in Iowa.
Iowa State University researchers are part of a multi-state effort to map out where a rare type of bumble bee lives and to figure out what sorts of habitat it prefers. I-S-U grad student Erika Ibarra-Garibay says they’re assembling clues about the genetic diversity and overall health of what’s known as the rusty patched bumble bee.
Teams from I-S-U surveyed 50 sites across Iowa twice in recent months and they only found the rusty patched bumble bee at four locations — in Ames, Brushy Creek State Recreation Area near Fort Dodge, and two locations near Dubuque and Yellow River State Forest.
Another I-S-U grad student and team member, Kelsey Shepherd, says the findings could help wildlife managers and land stewards reverse the decline of bee populations and support other pollinators more broadly.
The I-S-U teams are also collecting data on the threatened American bumble bee. Once widespread across the eastern U.S. and Upper Midwest, the number of rusty patched bumble bees has plummeted nearly 90% since the 1990s.
While the rusty patched bumble bees were only found at four of the 50 Iowa sites, they were abundant in a few of those sites. Team leaders say that suggests there are survivor populations out there and it’s not too late for conservation action in Iowa.
The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports an accident between a pickup and a stationary tractor on Sunday evening. At approximately 8:52 p.m. a 2007 Dodge RAM 1500 pickup was traveling South on Green Valley Road and came upon an unoccupied tractor along side of the road.
The pickup, driven by 41-year-old Cody Allen Schaffer of Creston, attempted to swerve to miss the tractor but ended up side swiping the tractor and spun out and came to rest in the east ditch. No injuries were reported.
The owner of the tractor later showed up and said the tractor was broke down and had a flat tire. The tractor was then towed from the scene. The pickup sustained approximately $8,000 damage and the tractor sustained approximately $2,000 damage.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – One person was taken into custody early Sunday morning in Atlantic, after allegedly stealing a pickup truck and crashing into a home at 1612 Oak Street. According to the Police Department, 28-year-old Nicholas Renner of Atlantic, faces charges that include OWI/1st Offense and Theft in the 2nd Degree.
Authorities report that at 2:18 a.m. Sunday, Cass County Communications dispatched the Atlantic Police Department to a motor vehicle accident at 1612 Oak Street. When officers arrived, they found a 2005 Chevrolet Silverado had struck the residence. An investigation determined Renner allegedly took the pickup from the 1400 block of Linn Street, prior to the accident.
Damage to the home was estimated at $50,000. The pickup sustained approximately $10,000 damage. Additional information was not available. Anyone with information about the incident should call 712-243-3512.
(Authorities note the charges are an allegation, and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law)
(Red Oak, Iowa) – An incident Thursday in a Red Oak High School classroom resulted in a teacher being placed on administrative leave. Red Oak Superintendent Ron Lorenz issued a statement to Red Oak Junior/Senior High School students, saying a teacher lost her composure during a Foods and Nutrition class. Rebecca Stanbrough reportedly made “inappropriate comments,” to students in the class.
Superintendent Lorenz said “While we cannot comment specifically on any confidential personnel matters, we wanted to let you know that Mrs. Stanbrough is currently on administrative leave, and the District is looking into this matter in accordance with applicable laws, and Board Policies.”
Additional information regarding the incident – which was apparently caught on video, according to some social media posts -was not released.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The public is invited to observe a work session for the Atlantic Parks and Recreation Department, Monday afternoon, with regard to planning for a long-desired Splash Pad. The meeting takes place in the City Council’s Chambers inside the Atlantic City Hall, beginning at 5:15-p.m., Monday (Sept. 26). A quorum of the Parks Board and City Council members may be present, but no voting will take place. The prospect of having a Splash Pad has been discussed in many community forums and other sessions in one form or another, for more than 10-years. Parks Board Chair Jolene Smith tells KJAN the Parks Board decided this year to do what is necessary to make the project come to fruition.
An online survey is still available for you to help determine what types of other aquatic equipment, or, “toys” might be offered, along with a splash pad.
The Atlantic Chamber’s on-line survey remains open until 5-p.m., Monday. If you don’t have access to the internet, you’re welcome to come to the meeting and offer your input. Jolene Smith says a splash pad will be a nice addition to Sunnyside Park, located between the baseball diamonds and the Sunnyside Pool itself. She says a splash pad is just one of the plans the Parks Board wants to make a reality in the Park/Pool area.
Atlantic Mayor Grace Garrett says the community and towns around it, are ready for the project to happen, and the project will help to make Atlantic a “Destination for families to come to.”
Jolene Smith says once they glean from the surveys what people want to see most in a splash pad, the Parks Board will send that information out to the four different companies who pitched their designs to the Board, and give them 10-days to submit a cost estimate. That will be followed by a Parks Board meeting to decide which plan they wish to move forward “full force” with.
The Mayor encourages everyone to come to City Hall Monday evening to listen to the discussion, and offer input.
[update: authorities say the missing juvenile was located] – Thank you.
Police in Council Bluffs are asking for the public’s help in locating an 11-year-old boy who went missing Friday night. Officers were dispatched at around 11:13-p.m. to 136 East Graham Avenue, in Council Bluffs, with regard to a missing juvenile. Officers were informed that Jameson Borden, of Council Bluffs, had left the residence in an unknown direction when his parents left to go to the store. Jameson was last seen wearing a green and gray Under Armour hooded sweatshirt, black shorts and gray shoes.
If you see him, please contact the Council Bluffs Police Department at 712-328-4716 or 712-328-4761 or call 911.