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Other Golf Scores 05/04/2023

Sports

May 5th, 2023 by admin

GIRLS GOLF

Harlan 201, Denison-Schleswig 208
Medalist: Ella Freund, Harlan & Tanna Petersen, Denison-Schleswig (48)

IKM-Manning 207, Missouri Valley 251
Medalist: Kylie Powers, IKM-Manning (44)
Runner-up: Henley Arbaugh, Missouri Valley (47

Mount Ayr 229, Lenox NTS
Medalist: Mallory Weehler, Mount Ayr (55)
Runner-Up: Linsie Barnes, Mount Ayr (57)

BOYS GOLF

Missouri Valley 153, IKM-Manning 201
Medalist: Jackson Tennis, Missouri Valley (35)
Runner-up: Evan White, Missouri Valley (35)

Mount Ayr 167, Lenox NTS
Medalist: Tanner Streit, Mount Ayr (36)
Runner-up: Jaxson Greene, Mount Ayr (42)

Other High School Track Scoreboard 05/04/2023

Sports

May 5th, 2023 by admin

Mount Ayr Raiderette Relays
Mount Ayr won the Class A Division and Sidney went 6th. Lenox won the Class B Division in front of Bedford in 2nd. Orient-Macksburg went 7th.
Full results: MtAyrRaideretteRelays2023

Jim Yunek Meet at South Central Calhoun
IKM-Manning went 3rd in the girls team race with 103.5 points. They won the 4x800M Relay.
Full results: JImYunekMeet2023

Missouri River Conference Meet @ Bishop Heelan
CB Abraham Lincoln won the Sprint Medley and Jayden Kneifl won the High Jump. Payton Schermerhorn won the Shot Put and Maddie Kneifl won the Discus Lightning postponed the rest of the meet following the 110M Hurdles.

High School Tennis Scoreboard 05/04/2023

Sports

May 5th, 2023 by admin

GIRLS TENNIS

CB Abraham Lincoln 9, Glenwood 0
CB Thomas Jefferson 9, Omaha South 0
Clarinda 9, Audubon 0
Shenandoah 6, Denison-Schleswig 3

BOYS TENNIS

Audubon 7, Clarinda 2
Kuemper Catholic 6, Denison-Schleswig 3
Lewis Central 6, Shenandoah 3

High School Soccer Scoreboard 05/04/2023

Sports

May 4th, 2023 by admin

GIRLS SOCCER

Denison-Schleswig 3, Carroll 0
Kuemper Catholic 10, Greene County 0
Tri-Center 3, Logan-Magnolia 2

BOYS SOCCER

Carroll 1, Harlan 0
Denison-Schleswig 1, Sergeant Bluff-Luton 0
Lewis Central 2, Glenwood 1 -2OT/PK’s
Tri-Center 4, Logan-Magnolia 0

Atlantic girls 2nd, boys 5th at Hawkeye Ten Conference Track and Field Meet

Sports

May 4th, 2023 by admin

Hawkeye Ten Conference Track and Field Meet
05/04/2023 @ Red Oak

Girls Team Scores

  1. Glenwood 133
  2. Atlantic 127
  3. Clarinda 80
  4. Lewis Central 75
  5. St. Albert 72
  6. Denison-Schleswig 64
  7. Harlan 61.5
  8. Shenandoah 40
  9. Kuemper Catholic 38
  10. Creston 26
  11. Red Oak 23.5

Atlantic got a win from Ava Rush in the 400 (59.33) and 800M (2:20.89). Morgan Botos and Chloe Mullenix went 1-2 in the 400M Hurdles. Botos ran 1:07.75 to win it. The Trojans also won the Sprint Medley (Nicole Middents, Morgan Botos, Chloe Mullenix, Ava Rush 1:53.13). The Trojans also went 2nd in the 4x100M Relay (Hailey Huffman, Lila Wiederstein, Nicole Middents, Jayci Reed 51.54) and 4x400M Relay (Nicole Middents, Morgan Botos, Mariah Huffman, Chloe Mullenix 4:11.30). Jayci Reed was 3rd in the 100M Hurdles (16.69).

Boys Team Scores

  1. Lewis Central 134
  2. Glenwood 107.5
  3. Clarinda 104
  4. Harlan 85
  5. Altantic 69
  6. Shenandoah 56
  7. Denison-Schleswig 47
  8. Kuemper Catholic 42
  9. Red Oak 38.5
  10. St. Albert 36
  11. Crsston 22

Atlantic won the 4x400M Relay (Tanner O’Brien, Bennett Whetstone, Caden Andersen, Carter Pellett 3:32.53).  The Trojans also went 2nd in the 4x800M Relay (Caden Andersen, Bennett Whetstone, Tanner O’Brien, Alex Sonntag). Jackson McLaren was 2nd in the 110M Hurdles (15.85). Jayden Proehl went 3rd (5-10) and Colton Rasmussen 4th in the High Jump (5-10). Jadyn Cox was 4th in the 400M Hurdles (58.25).

Full results HERE

Southwest Valley Co-Ed Meet 05/04/2023

Sports

May 4th, 2023 by admin

Southwest Valley Co-Ed Meet
05/04/2023

Girls Team Scores

  1. Fremont-Mills 139
  2. Nodaway Valley 102
  3. Stanton 70
  4. Griswold 67
  5. Southwest Valley 54
  6. East Mills 46
  7. CAM 38
  8. Sidney 28
  9. AHSTW 25
  10. Essex 23

Nodaway Valley got wins from Emma Lundy in the 200M (26.91) and Jazz Christensen in the 3000M (13:16.11). The Wolverines also won the 4x100M Relay (Maddie Weston, Abby Engles, Emma Lundy, Annika Nelson 51.10), 4x200M Relay (Abby Engles, Emma Lundy, Maddie Weston, Annika Nelson 1:50.00). They also went 2nd in the 4x800M Relay (Kylie Nelson, Megan McCall, Taylor Day, Jazz Christensen 12:16.94) and Sprint Medley (Grace Britten, Maddie Weston, Abby Engles, Emma Lundy 1:54.72).

Southwest Valley’s Emma Cooper won the 100M and Mackenzie Richards won the Shot Put.

CAM’s Emma Follmann was 2nd in the High Jump (4-08).

Griswold’s MaKenna Askeland was 2nd in the Discus (96-03).

Boys Team Scores

  1. Lenox 102
  2. I-35 96.50
  3. AHSTW 77
  4. East Mills 70
  5. Central Decatur 68
  6. Bedford 47
  7. East Union 46
  8. Nodaway Valley 44
  9. Wayne 43
  10. Southwest Valley 29.50
  11. CAM 25
  12. Fremont-Mills 22
  13. Mount Ayr 20
  14. Sidney 19
  15. Griswold 15
  16. Stanton 14

AHSTW’s Luke Sternberg won the 200M (23.39) and Caleb Hatch won the 400M (54.80).

Nodaway Valley’s Doug Berg won the 3200M (10:31.78) and was 2nd in the 1600M (4:53.01).

Southwest Valley’s Marshall Knapp won the High Jump (6-03).

CAM’s Gavin Clayton was 2nd in the 800M (2:10.92) and Corbin Peach was 2nd in the Discus (136-08).

Full results: SWV Coed Results 2023

Glidden-Ralston girls, CAM boys win Rolling Valley Conference Golf Meet

Sports

May 4th, 2023 by admin

Rolling Valley Conference Golf Meet
05/04/2023 @ Carroll Municipal Golf Course (Par 72)

Girls Team Scores

  1. Glidden-Ralston 440
  2. Boyer Valley 444
  3. CAM NTS
  4. Coon Rapids-Bayard NTS
  5. Exira-EHK NTS
  6. Woodbine NTS

Girls Individual Top Ten

  1. Addy Boell, Glidden-Ralston, 88
  2. Reeese Snyder, CAM, 99
  3. Shay Burmeister, Exira-EHK, 99
  4. Elizabeth Lloyd, Glidden-Ralston, 106
  5. Amelia Garrett, Glidden-Ralston, 107
  6. Reese Miller, Boyer Valley, 107
  7. Hayley Follmann, Boyer Valley,109
  8. Kylie Kepford, Boyer Valley, 111
  9. Abby Tibken, CAM, 114
  10. Zoey Soma, Boyer Valley, 117

Boys Team Scores

  1. CAM 324
  2. Coon Rapids-Bayard 341
  3. Boyer Valley 348
  4. Woodine 385
  5. Exira-EHK 395
  6. Glidden-Ralston 415

Boys Individual Top Ten

  1. Chase Jahde, CAM, 71
  2. Seth Hensley, CAM, 78
  3. Trey Petersen, Exira-EHK, 80
  4. Jacob Estrada, Coon Rapids-Bayrd, 84
  5. Ben Nichols, Boyer Valley, 84
  6. Toby Benninger, Coon Rapids-Bayard, 84
  7. Max Shirbroun, Coon Rapids-Bayard, 85
  8. Michael Davis, Boyer Valley, 87
  9. Evan TenEyck, Boyer Valley, 87
  10. Bradyn Bohnsack, CAM, 87

Full results: BOYS GIRLS

2023 legislature adopts many of the governor’s proposals

News

May 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds says the 2023 legislative session has set Iowa on a new path, starting with what she calls transformational education reform. At the end of this month, low income parents of private school students can start applying for 76-hundred dollars in state money to cover tuition and other costs. House Speaker Pat Grassley says Reynolds and Republican candidates for the House promised action on this and other education-related issues.

“We’ve been in the majority now for over 10 years,” Grassley says. “We try to make commitments and follow through with those things that we tell Iowans that we’re going to do.” Another new law will ban classroom discussion of sexual orientation and gender identity in elementary grades. Parents are to be notified if their child asks to be known by a different name or pronoun at school. And books with passages or graphic art about sex will be removed from school libraries. Representative Sharon Steckman, a Democrat from Mason City who’s a retired teacher, says educators are worried.

“I haven’t talked to one teacher that’s excited about any of it,” Steckman says. “They feel like they’re under a magnifying glass and not able to do their job.” The 2023 legislative session concluded shortly after 12:30 Thursday afternoon — a day after a property tax reform measure passed the House and Senate with just a single “no” vote. Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver says the bill is historic.

“It’s putting in place things legislators have looked at for decades…but a perform storm of a focus of the legislature, a desire of Iowans to see this assessment issue fixed led to some of the best policy that we’ve been able to put forward on property taxes that I believe will truly have an impact at the local level for decades to come.” Democrats say they’re thrilled property owners will see relief, but they’ll be monitoring implementation to make sure cities and counties aren’t forced to cut essential services. Another bill that won final legislative approval this week eases some current restrictions on the jobs and hours teenagers may work. Governor Reynolds plans to sign it into law.

“I think it’s wonderful if kids want to try to earn some money while they’re in high school, maybe save for college because we continue to see the cost go up or maybe get a registered apprenticeship program,” Reynolds says. “They start that opportunity in a business and maybe go on not only to be employed there, but to stay in a rural community and raise a family and support our schools.” Democrats in the legislature opposed the bill and argued relying on teenagers to fill jobs isn’t the way to address the state’s workforce crisis. The governor says she’s not hearing concerns.

“I can’t even really understand all the hoopla about it. It doesn’t seem like very much common sense and I hear that when I travel around the state,” Reynolds says. “People are perplexed, I mean literally perplexed at why we would care if kids want to work or not. It’s not a mandate.” Reynolds says the bill will expand opportunities for young Iowans looking for experience in the workforce.

CAROL ANN [De Vore] FLETCHER, 72, of Shenandoah (Celebration of Life 5/8/23)

Obituaries

May 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

CAROL ANN [De Vore] FLETCHER, 72, of Shenandoah, died Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at home. A Celebration of Life Memorial Service for CAROL FLETCHER will be held 11:00 a.m., Monday, May 8, 2023 at the First United Methodist Church in Shenandoah. Wabash Memorial Chapel in Shenandoah has the arrangements

Visitation with the family will be held 4:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m., Sunday, May 7, 2023 at the Wabash Memorial Chapel.

Following the memorial service and luncheon the burial of cremains will be held at the Victoria Township Cemetery near Massena.

Memorials may be directed to the Shenandoah Elks Wrestling, People for Paws or the Shenandoah Public Library. Services entrusted to Wabash Memorial Chapel in Shenandoah, Iowa.

Governor signs bill estimated to reduce property taxes by $100 million

News

May 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds has approved the property tax changes that cleared the legislature this week. “Legislation as complex and important as local property taxes only happen when policymakers are willing to dig into the weeds and get the details right,” Reynolds says. “This bill’s near unanimous passage through both chambers of the legislature is a testament to their long hours of work on behalf of the people of Iowa.”

The new law requires cities and counties to lower property tax collections based on a new formula that kicks in next year. It’s designed to limit property tax revenue growth after this spring’s assessments showed farmland and home values skyrocketing — which could lead to higher property tax bills in September of 2024. The plan includes more generous property tax benefits for veterans and elderly Iowans.

“All tolled, this bill will deliver $100 million in savings,” Reynolds said, “the most significant property tax reform in state history.” Reynolds signed the bill into law Thursday afternoon, shortly after the 2023 legislative session concluded. Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver says lawmakers are listening to property owners.

“This spring they were shocked, appalled and concerned with the drastic assessment increases to their property and extremely concerned about what it would mean for their property taxes,” Whitver says. “We promised on the opening day of this session that we would address this issue and today we keep that promise.” Senator Dan Dawson, a Republican from Council Bluffs, led development of the bill.

“The historic building blocks being put into place here will start the long-term process of rebuilding our property tax system,” Dawson says. “Ultimately we are asking local governments to do what we have been doing at the state level: fund your priorities, but pass along some of this excess assessment valuation back to the taxpayers.” House Speaker Pat Grassley says the bill provides certainty as well as relief to property owners.

“This bill shows, as well as everything else that we’ve been able to accomplish…the ability for the governor’s office, the House and Senate to identify problems that Iowans have brought to us,” Grassley says, “and be able to take true action that provides true levels of reform.” Every Republican present and all but one Democrat in the legislature supported the bill. Senate Minority Leader Zach Wahls says Democrats are thrilled middle class families are getting relief and will listen to local officials who are worried about how to implement the changes.

House Minority Leader Jennifer Konfrst says Democrats want to make sure seniors and veterans don’t get smaller property tax bills, but wind up losing local services they depend upon.