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High School Golf Scoreboard 04/04/2023

Sports

April 4th, 2023 by admin

GIRLS GOLF

CB AL Invitational
Sergeant Bluff-Luton 219, Underwood 220, Bishop Heelan (223), Glenwood (226), and Lewis Central 229.
Medalist: Alyssa Schorg, Bishop Heelan, 47

Carroll 210, Kuemper Catholic 215
Medalist: Addy Beiter, Kuemper Catholic 41
Runner-Up: Olivia Boes, Carroll, 50

Clarinda 206, Shenandoah 209
Medalist: Taylor Rasmussen, Clarinda, 44
Runner-Up: Molli Finn, Shenandoah, 50

Missouri Valley NTS, AHSTW NTS
Medalist: Henley Arbaugh, Missouri Valley, 66
Runner-Up: Ava Hilts, Missouri Valley, 66

Sidney 188, Red Oak 240, Griswold NTS
Medalist: Avery Dowling, Sidney, 41
Runner-Up: Joanna Reynolds, Griswold, 44

Treynor 229, Audubon 245
Medalist: Brooklyn Currin, Treynor, 42
Runner-Up: Kali Irlmeier, Audubon, 47

BOYS GOLF

Atlantic 160, Kuemper Catholic 161
Medalist: Roth Den Beste, Atlantic, 36
Runner-Up: Maverick Schwabe, Kuemper Catholic, 37
Atlantic Scores: Tristan Hayes  40, Hudson McLaren 41, Cruz Weaver  43, Sam Brosam  43, Roth Den Beste  36, Trevan Hansen  46

Clarinda 166, Shenandoah 183
Medalist: Brevin Osten, Clarinda, 40
Runner-Up: Jade Spangler, Shenandoah, 41

Harlan 180, Denison-Schleswig 182
Medalist: Jace Gubbels, Harlan, 39
Runner-Up: Jonas Reynolds, Harlan, 42

Missouri Valley 180, AHSTW 200
Medalist: Jackson Tennis, Missouri Valley, 42
Runner-Up: Kaden Jorgensen, AHSTW, 44

Sidney 192, Red Oak 202, Griswold 217
Medalist: Hayden Thompson, Sidney, 41
Runner-Up: Kamron Brownlee, Griswold, 45

Treynor 166, Audubon 187
Medalist: Ethan Konz, Treynor, 37
Runner-Up: Luke Mathews, Treynor and Evan Alt, Audubon 42’s

High School Tennis Scoreboard 04/04/2023

Sports

April 4th, 2023 by admin

GIRLS TENNIS 

Clarinda 9, Shenandoah 0
Sioux City East 9, Glenwood 0
St. Albert 5, CB Abraham Lincoln 4

BOYS TENNIS

CB Abraham Lincoln 6, St. Albert 3
Shenandoah 5, Clarinda 1 (Ended after singles due to rain)
Denison-Schleswig 9, Storm Lake 0

High School Soccer Scoreboard 04/04/2023

Sports

April 4th, 2023 by admin

GIRLS SOCCER

Atlantic 5, Missouri Valley 3 (A: Jada Jensen 3 goals. Edria Brummer 8 saves.)
Bishop Heelan 1, CB Abraham Lincoln 1 (OT)
Le Mars 3, CB Thomas Jefferson 2
Lewis Central def. Kuemper Catholic
Logan-Magnolia 2, East Sac County 1
Treynor 3, Tri-Center 2 OT

BOYS SOCCER

Bishop Heelan 6, CB Abraham Lincoln 1
East Sac County 9, Logan-Magnolia 0
Le Mars 4, CB Thomas Jefferson 2
Lewis Central 7, Kuemper Catholic 0
Treynor 5, Tri-Center 0

Glenwood girls pick up win at Sergeant Bluff-Luton Warrior Relays 04/04/2023

Sports

April 4th, 2023 by admin

Sergeant Bluff-Luton Warrior Relays
04/04/2023

Girls Team Scores

  1. Glenwood 188
  2. Hinton 98
  3. CB Abraham Lincoln 84
  4. Le Mars 78
  5. Sergeant Bluff-Luton 57
  6. Bishop Heelan 54
  7. OABCIG 30

Glenwood got wins from Madelyn Berglund in the 3000M and 1500M, Allison Koontz in the 100M, Carlie Clemmer in the 100M Hurdles, Danika Arnold in the 200M, and Breckyn Petersen in the 400M. Glenwood also picked up wins in the 4x100M Relay, 4x200M Relay, Distance Medley, 4x400M Relay, and Sprint Medley.

CB Abraham Lincoln’s Abby LaSale won the 400M Hurdles.

Boys Team Scores

  1. Le Mars 136
  2. Sergeant Bluff-Luton 129
  3. OABCIG 114
  4. Bishop Heelan 92
  5. Hinton 87
  6. CB Abraham Lincoln 23

Full results here: sbl warrior relays results 040423

Former Boone County Deputy charged in the death of a K-9

News

April 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Boone County, Iowa – The Iowa Department of Public Safety, Tuesday (April 4, 2023), said 50-year-old Dallas Wingate, a former Boone County Sheriff’s Deputy and K-9 handler, was charged with the death of K-9 deputy Bear. Wingate, who turned himself in at the Story County Jail, has been charged with one count of Injury or Interference of a Police Dog Service, a class D felony.

On September 2, 2022, the Boone County Sheriff’s Office requested DCI investigate after Bear was found dead inside Wingate’s K-9-equipped police vehicle. The investigation showed that Wingate placed Bear inside his enclosed vehicle on the evening of September 1. Nearly twenty-two hours later, Wingate opened the vehicle for the first time.

The Story County Attorney’s Office will prosecute this case.
Note: A criminal charge is merely an accusation and a defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Photo courtesy of Story County Sheriff’s Office

Atlantic girls soccer hopes to raise the bar with wealth of returnees

Sports

April 4th, 2023 by admin

The Atlantic girls soccer team brings back ten of it’s eleven starters from last season and they hope that experience can help them reach even higher this season. The Trojans are coming off an 11-7 campaign last year and head coach Dan Vargason said they hope to build on that.

The Trojans have some good strength on both sides of the field with Edria Brummer an All-Conference returner at goalie and Jada Jensen leading the offensive attack as the school’s all-time leading goal scorer. Coach Vargason said the difference for this team achieving their goal of competing for the Hawkeye Ten title will come down to effort.

The team has been able to work back into their formations fairly quickly with their returning experience but Coach Vargason said they just need to start to get some more movement and use their athleticism to their advantage.

The Trojans are off to a 1-1 start to the season and are at it again tonight against Missouri Valley.

BREAKING: Reynolds signs her state government ‘realignment’ bill into law

News

April 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds has signed a bill into law that will consolidate 37 state agencies into just 16 departments and eliminate dozens of unfilled positions in state government.  “Not only will Iowans receive better service with alignment, they’ll get it at a lower cost,” Reynolds said. The governor paid a consultant nearly a million dollars to draft the reorganization plan.

“Iowa had significantly more cabinet departments than neighboring states and best practices, services were spread unpredictably across state government, really causing just unnecessary friction for Iowans,” Reynolds says. “What we also saw was just fractured organizational structure that was preventing capable, hardworking public servants from really reaching their full potential.”

The non-partisan Legislative Services Agency projects the plan will eliminate about 200 full time positions in state government that aren’t filled today and save about 12-and-a-half million dollars a year. The governor’s staff estimates the state will save about 215 million dollars over four years. Reynolds says efficiency is the main goal, making state government agencies, programs and licensing easier to navigate.

“If we save anything and streamline services and have a single mom or single dad trying to get services not have to go through 14 different doors to try to get an answer, then that’s a win for me,” Reynolds told reporters. The governor expects most if not all the changes to be in place when the next state fiscal year begins July 1st.

“I’m not saying there won’t be bumps. I mean this is a huge undertaking, but we’re going to do it right,” Reynolds says. “…If we need to slow down any of the alignments…we’ll do that.” The 16 state agency directors and Republican lawmakers gathered in the governor’s office at the statehouse for the bill signing ceremony on Tuesday afternoon.

Democratic leaders in the House and Senate say the plan dilutes the legislature’s authority and is a “power grab” by the governor. And House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst says the bill was authored by out of state consultants without real input from Iowans.

Big participation numbers for Atlantic tennis in 2023

Sports

April 4th, 2023 by admin

The Atlantic tennis teams have some big participation numbers for 2023. Atlantic head coach Mike McDermott said 33 girls are out for the team this season and 20 are out for the boys team. Coach McDermott said it’s great to have that kind of interest but it has been a challenge in practice to get effective work in for everyone. He said they try to start from fundamentals and build up.

The girls team has some good returning experience with Rio Johnson leading the way.

The boys also have a few returning starters from last season to lead the way.

Coach McDermott said early on in the season they try to focus on fundamentals and then as quickly as they can work in strategy since the season is a short one. He said some key things they want to see in competition early is consistency and keeping the ball in play.

The Trojans have just gotten their season rolling and will next up take on Creston Thursday night. Listen to the full interview with Coach McDermott below.

Play

Study details Iowa’s healthiest (and least healthy) counties

News

April 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A new report says northwest Iowa’s Sioux County is the healthiest county in the state, while Montgomery County, in the southwest, ranks last. The County Health Rankings and Roadmaps report rates counties’ health outcomes nationwide based on a range of factors. Michael Stevenson, with the University of Wisconsin’s Population Health Institute — which produces the report, says Iowa’s top-ranked counties all have the same things in common.

Stevenson says, “They often have access to good civic infrastructure, so higher access to broadband, better access to parks and rec facilities, and they also tend to have higher rates of civic participation, so things like voter turnout.” Stevenson says Iowa’s overall voter turnout is higher than the national average, but there’s a lot of variation in rates at the county level.

“Iowa voter turnout varied from 60.8% to 90.2%, depending on where you live,” he says, “and our data showed that there’s a strong connection between that turnout data and the infrastructure that we have in place to facilitate participation.”

The report lists Iowa’s top five healthiest counties as: Sioux, Winneshiek, Dallas, Mitchell and Hancock, while the bottom-ranked five are: Pottawattamie, Lee, Clarke, Appanoose and last, Montgomery.

countyhealthrankings.org

(reporting by Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio)

Public hearing held on proposed new financial checks for Iowa Medicaid, SNAP

News

April 4th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Members of the public have debated a proposal to require more frequent income checks and a new asset test for Iowans receiving food stamps or health care coverage through Medicaid. Andres Reyes, the senior pastor of the First Baptist Church, spoke in favor of the bill during a public hearing at the Iowa Capitol.

“I believe that all people are made in the image of God and so all people have value, but that value is only realized by working for what they have,” Reyes said. “One of the greatest problems in America today is depression. The number one reason is because people do not work as hard as other generations. The only way to cure the problem is to hold others accountable for working for what they have. This bill does just that.”

Valerie Petersen, associate executive director of the Foodbank of Siouxland in Sioux City, said these changes will push vulnerable Iowans farther into poverty. “These are grandparents that are now choosing between medication and food. They’re hardworking laborers that are laid off during the winter. They’re single moms that work multiple jobs and then have to make the choice between feeding themselves and their children,” she said. “They’re kids that have no say in or ability to contribute to their family’s finances.”

Darla Chappell of St. Donatus — a small town near the Illinois border, said she used to work in a bank and saw people getting government assistance from more than one state. “Please vote yes on this bill to ensure our money goes where needed and not into the pockets of liars, cheaters and frauds,” she said.

Carlyn Crowe of the Iowa Developmental Disabilities Council said many Iowans with disabilities will lose Medicaid coverage because of the asset test for the entire household. “Should parents of a daughter who can’t walk have to sell their second car so their daughter can get a wheelchair or her sibling’s savings account be limited because she’s on Medicaid?” Crowe asked.

The bill passed the Senate two weeks ago with the support of all 34 Republicans and opposition from all 16 Democrats. It cleared a House Committee last week and is eligible for debate in the full House.