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Atlantic School Board approves sale of $7.66-m bonds

News

July 13th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic School Board Tuesday, adopted a resolution directing the sale of 7.66-million dollars in school infrastructure, sales, services and use tax bonds, series 2012.

Hutchinson-Shockey-Erley & Company of Chicago, IL, was the winning bidder for the marketing of the bonds.

HSE had the lowest interest rate of 3.74%, which was about one-half percent lower than what was expected when the district began to look at financing earlier this Spring. Piper Jaffrey’s Travis Squires said that will save the district about $500,000 in interest. The bonds will be used to finance construction and renovation at the Atlantic Middle School.

Squires said there were four bidders for the bonds. In addition to the Illinois firm, the other three were located in Minnesota, Wisconsin and New York. All of the bids were received electronically, through a parity on-line bidding system, which is common practice these days.

Squires had some good news for the board Tuesday night. He said during past month, the company finalized the rating cull for the Standard and Poor’s rating agency. He says the Atlantic Community School District received an “A-plus” bond rating, which, he says, is “very good.”

He says that’s based essentially on the fact the district’s enrollment is fairly stable, and because it has sufficient bond coverage on the existing debt. Squires says the district has almost double the amount of revenues needed to make the bond payments.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 13th

Trading Post

July 13th, 2011 by Jim Field

FOR SALE: Maytag matching Washer & Dryer.  Almond color. Good condition.  Asking $275.  712-243-2037

FOR SALE: A painted turtle.  I’m not sure of the age or the sex.  I bought it a month ago for $50 and it’s just not the right pet for us.  It’s a great pet otherwise.   If you have a farm pond or a big aquarium that would be great.  I’m asking $25 for it. It will make a great pet for you.  Call me at 641-745-5692 and my name is Ashley.  Thanks for looking!!!

FOR SALE:2-solid oak entertainment centers.  1 fits 50″ flat screen has shelves on either side, cupboards on bottom with shelves down center for dvd players, receivers, etc.  Asking $200 OBO.  2nd is for 35″ tv, has shelves and drawers underneath and above.  Asking $100 OBO.  Phone 712-249-1027 in Anita.

FOR SALE: 5000 BTU air conditioner $75 obo; potter’s wheel $50-100 obo. 243-4094

FOR SALE: 24 canning jars $4. Includes 1 quart, 1 1/2 pint, 1 pint. 243-3134

FREE: Misc. items at 612 W 6th St. (1 block from Family Table, Atlantic) Triple garage full of stuff.

GARAGE SALE: July 15th 8 am – ?? & 16th starting 7 am – ??. 1505 Lincoln Dr, Atlantic. Has everything: clothes, tv, bedroom set, toys, decorations. Will be held indoors.

WANTED: Space for about 10 people inside preferred, any type of floor have air mattress for RAGBRAI riders. Ages from mid 40’s-50’s – well mannered group. 641-420-1794 ask for Lon.

Wednesday Softball Schedule

Sports

July 13th, 2011 by Jim Field

Class 1-A Regional Finals (Start Times 7:00 p.m.)

At Carroll: Earlham vs. Newell-Fonda

At Denison: Treynor vs. Hinton

At Norwalk: Van Meter vs. Martensdale-St. Marys

 

Class 2-A Regional Finals (Start Times 7:00 p.m.)

At Atlantic: Logan-Magnolia vs. Nodaway Valley

At Battle Creek: Missouri Valley vs. Alta/Aurelia

 

Class 3-A Regional Finals (Start Times 7:00 p.m.)

At Dallas Center: Harlan vs. Dallas Center-Grimes

At Winterset: Creston vs. Winterset

Tuesday District Baseball Scores

Sports

July 13th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Class 2-A District Semi-Finals

  • St. Albert 11, Shenandoah 5
  • Logan-Magnolia 10, Tri-Center 4
  • Mount Ayr 12, Clarinda 6
  • Van Meter 13, West Central Valley 1 (6 inn.)
  • West Monona 9 OA-BCIG 1
  • Kuemper Catholic vs. Audubon – postponed to Wednesday

Class 1-A District Quarter-Finals

  • CAM 3, Guthrie Center 2 (8 inn)
  • Exira/EHK 3, A-H-S-T 1
  • Walnut 5, Riverside 0
  • Coon Rapids-Bayard 5, Ar-We-Va 1
  • East Mills 4, Fremont-Mills 2
  • Essex 11, Stanton 10
  • Lenox 6, Villisca 5
  • Nishnabotna 5, Sidney 3
  • Orient-Macksburg 3, Murray 0
  • West Harrison vs. Woodbine – postponed to Wednesday

Regular Season

  • Dallas Center-Grimes 9, Atlantic 1 (AHS 18-10)
  • Lewis Central 4, Denison-Schleswig 0
  • Bishop Heelan Catholic 5-2, Abraham Lincoln 4-6
  • Carlisle 12, Winterset 2
  • Chariton 11, Creston 2
  • Sioux City North 10-13, Thomas Jefferson 0-4

Arrest made in connection with vandalism to popular bike destination

News

July 13th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

High Trestle trail

Spener Michael Sisco

Authorities have arrested a man in connection with the vandalism of a popular new tourist attraction in central Iowa. People have been stealing the expensive L-E-D lights installed on the High Trestle Trail Bridge near Madrid. Sergeant Kenny Kendall, with the Boone County Sheriff’s office, says tips from the public this week led them to 22-year-old Spencer Sisco of Boone.

Sisco admitted taking four of the lights. He’s facing charges of theft and criminal mischief. Kendall says Sisco hasn’t been the only one swiping the lights.
“They cost $420 a piece…I guess it was just kind of a novel thing for him to try and do. We’ve got about 15 of those lights now missing,” Kendall said. Other lights on the bridge have been damaged.

“It’s just one of those things – you have something nice and people don’t respect it,” Kendall said. The High Trestle Bridge opened in late April. It’s a 13 story high, half-mile long structure that spans the Des Moines River. The bridge is part of a $15 million bike trail that runs from Ankeny to Woodward and passes through Slater, Sheldahl and Madrid. Kendall says plans are being made to increase security on the bridge.

“Our office does regularly patrol the area and we’re working with the Boone County Conservation Board in an effort to get some security cameras installed,” Kendall said. “But, unfortunately there again, we have to make sure the cameras aren’t in such a place as they can be vandalized.” The entire 25 mile long bike trail, including the bridge, follows a former railroad line once owned by Union Pacific.

(Pat Curtis/Radio Iowa)

FEMA awards funding for tornado safe rooms in Iowa

News

July 13th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Three school districts in Iowa are set to receive federal funding for safe rooms in the event of a tornado.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency says it has approved nearly $3.3 million in funding for projects in Creston, Lenox and West Des Moines over the past three months.

The safe rooms will be designed to withstand winds of 250 miles per hour. They typically shelter an entire building’s population and are often used as gyms, cafeterias and libraries on a daily basis.

5 injured in Montgomery County rollover

News

July 13th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Five people were injured during a single-vehicle rollover accident Tuesday night, southeast of Red Oak. The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office says the driver of a 2008 Ford Fusion, 16-year old Eligah Cole Ryan Newkirk, of Nodaway, and four passengers in the vehicle, were transported to the Montgomery County Hospital for treatment and observation of non-life threatening injuries.

Officials say the car was traveling southbound on J Avenue and approaching the intersection with 230th Street, when a deer appeared on the road. Newkirk told authorities when he swerved to miss the animal, he lost control of the vehicle, which entered the southeast ditch at the intersection, and rolled over before coming to rest on its top.

The accident happened at around 10:10-p.m., Tuesday. The car, registered to 73-year old Goldie Ann Adams, of Red Oak, was a total loss.

JACQUELINE MYSHOCK, 80, of Atlantic (svcs 7-16-11)

Obituaries

July 12th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

JACQUELINE MYSHOCK, 80, of Atlantic, died Tue., July 12th, at the Cass County Hospice Center in Atlantic. Memorial services for JACQUELINE MYSHOCK will be held 2:00-p.m. Sat., July 16th, at Zion Lutheran Church in Atlantic, with burial in the Atlantic Cemetery Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Jacqueline Myshock is survived by

Her daughter – Michelle (Matt) Flanders, of Atlantic.

Her brothers – Rick & Bruce Powers.

1 grandchild, 4 step-grandchildren

5 step great-grandchildren

CARRIE RENEE JENSEN, 93, of Audubon (svcs 7-16-11)

Obituaries

July 12th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

CARRIE RENEE JENSEN, 93, of Audubon, died Mon., July 11th, at the Friendship Home in Audubon. Funeral services for CARRIE JENSEN will be held 2:30-p.m. Sat., July 16th, at the Ebenezer Lutheran Church west of Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Visitation is open at the funeral home. Burial will be in the Ebenezer Lutheran Cemetery.

CARRIE RENEE JENSEN is survived by:

Her sister – Ruby (Harry) Rasmussen, of Audubon.

Other relatives, and friends.

Atlantic Board of Ed approves SRO agreement & k-9 search

News

July 12th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District’s Board of Education, Tuesday night, approved a Memorandum of Understanding with the district’s School Resource Officer (SRO), Corey Larsen. Larsen is a K-9 Deputy with the Cass County Sheriff’s Office, and this upcoming school year will be his third as SRO.  The only change to his contract was with regard to language that recognizes the reorganized CAM Community School District. The prior agreement had indicated C & M and Anita were separate entities.

During his report to the board, Larsen asked for and received permission to conduct an unannounced search of students’ lockers and other school areas in the high school and Middle School with his K-9 partner Maylo, and one or two other K-9 units. Larsen requested the search because he says, there were some problems this past year with drugs in the high school. He says High School Principal Heather McKay has agreed to the search sometime within the first two-weeks of school.

McKay says the faculty has requested the district take a similar course of action over the past five- or six-years because of the proliferation of drugs and other, illegal activities. Larsen says while a search is conducted, the school is typically on a “lockdown” status. The kids will remain in their classrooms and their book bags left in the hallways during the search. The k-9 unit will search various parts of the school, including the teacher’s lounge, at the administration’s discretion. Larsen said the search can also include the bathrooms, because that’s where a lot of the drug dealing takes place.  A search of vehicles in the parking lot would be conducted separately, and on a different day.

McKay says an attorney she’s spoken with has suggested the district practice a “lockdown” situation, regardless of the scenario, because it familiarizes both the students and faculty on how they should react, and what to expect.  Deputy Larsen says the search typically takes about an hour. McKay says the last time a full search was conducted by a k-9 unit was about 12-years ago, during the 1999-2000 school year.

Larsen says there is a protocol that is followed, if contraband is found by the dogs. He says school officials will search the students’ book bag and the student, not the K-9 officer. That’s because of a Supreme Court decision.  If someone is found to have drugs or other contraband in their possession or on their person, a citation may be issued to the student, or, they may be placed under arrest. The contraband will be seized, and the parents notified.

The student and their belongings will be brought into the Principal’s Office and searched by school officials. That too, is because of an incident in the Harlan Community School District, whereby a Reserve Officer assisted with the search of a student. The judge threw the case out, because that officer was involved in the search.

Larsen reported to the board also, that he will continue to work on  student truancy issues. He says he’s visited two-or three-homes this past year multiple times, because a student missed school.  He says for the upcoming school year, if he has to visit a home more than twice, the parents and student will go to court, rather than receive a citiation for each offense. He says also an anonymous tip line he instituted when he first became the SRO, has resulted in 20 Minor in Possession citations. Larsen says students simply call or text their tip to either himself, or Sheriff Darby McLaren. They typically provide  the names of the persons involved in parties, and information on adults involved, or who may be drinking and driving.