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Iowa’s COVID-19 deaths top 9,000; Positive test numbers & hospitalizations continue to decline

News

February 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The latest COVID-19 information released Wednesday by the Iowa Department of Public Health, indicates the state’s death total has surpassed 9,000 since the start of the pandemic. IDPH reported 9,085 total deaths Wednesday, up 137 since last Wednesday. The health department reports 4,814 positive COVID-19 tests in the last seven days, down from 7,375 one week ago.

U.S. Health and Human Services data show 345 patients hospitalized with the virus in Iowa, down from 446 last week. That’s the lowest that number has been since mid-August 2021. The federal health department is reporting 38 COVID-19 patients in intensive care units in Iowa.

Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show 1,892,672 Iowans have completed a vaccine series, or 61% of the state. The CDC reports 987,974 Iowans have received a booster shot.

Regents review free speech survey

News

February 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A survey that was one of a series of recommendations aimed at strengthening efforts to protect free speech rights at the three state universities after lawsuits at all three schools was reviewed by the Board of Regents Wednesday. Regents Chief Academic Officer, Rachel Boon, says the survey found 74 percent of students were comfortable expressing their opinions on campus. “Most students do agree that they’re comfortable expressing their opinions more in campus settings than in our off-campus settings. This was an interesting finding — in fact — in classrooms is where the greatest number of them agreed they feel comfortable,” she says. The survey found 90 percent of students felt they were open to listening to different views and thought only 59 percent of other students were that open.

“We like to see ourselves in our best possible light — I’m sure present company included in that. I would note that the students judged their peers a lot more harshly than the employees were judging how students’ openness was to hearing different views,” Boon says. The survey was completed by just ten percent of the students — with the numbers split fairly evenly between the University of Northern Iowa, University of Iowa and Iowa State University.

“We had over seven-thousand student respondents and that was a big enough number that we can work with it. If you think statistically speaking, seven-thousand is a big enough number that we can feel pretty good about the results we have,” Boon says. Thirty-eight percent of the faculty and staff returned the survey. The survey was done before the free speech training on campus. Boon says these numbers right now give basic results and don’t tell the complete story.

“We can seldom answer the question of why people answer the way they do. So we see how they answered — but we don’t know exactly what was going on that made them say that,” she explains. Boon says they need to do some more analysis of the survey information to get a better idea of what is happening.

Two ISU students arrested on terrorism charges over social media threats

News

February 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Two Iowa State University freshmen face charges in connection with social media posts warning people to avoid campus buildings. Eighteen-year-old Abdullateef Malallah, and 19-year-old Ty Jerman, both of Ames, were later arrested and have since been charged making terroristic threats in the case. University officials say there is no known connection between the two students and the posts were made separately. While there is no indication that either student planned to enact violence against the campus community, university officials say actions of such nature are treated as a serious crime.

Monday evening, ISU police received a report about an anonymous Yik Yak post, which referenced Carver Hall, an academic building on campus. The post contained a warning advising people not to come to Carver at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday. A second anonymous post was reported a few hours later with a warning to avoid Parks Library. ISU police, with assistance from the FBI and the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, worked overnight Monday to identify and monitor the individuals responsible for the posts.

Based on information gathered during the initial hours of the investigation, police determined it was not necessary to close the university and worked with building administrators to implement safety measures as a precaution, the university said in a press release.

Public Intox. arrest in Red Oak

News

February 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak, Thursday morning, arrested a man for Public Intoxication. Authorities say 26-year-old Daniel John Platt, of Red Oak, was arrested at around 12:42-a.m. in the 1200 block of Senate Avenue. Platt was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 bond.

Pompeo, Ernst, Grassley discuss Ukraine situation

News

February 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says Russian President Vladimir Putin has been testing the west and whether the U.S. would defend important American interests in Ukraine.  “I love the Ukrainian people,” Pompeo says. “I’m confident they will fight. What they need is support from their friends and allies and we can most certainly do that.”

Pompeo is in Iowa for events in three cities. He spoke with Radio Iowa early last (Wednesday) night, just before reports began to indicate the situation on the ground in Ukraine was growing more dire. Pompeo criticized the Biden Administration for letting a bad man roll around Europe and he also suggested former President Trump’s recent description of Putin as “savvy” and “genius” was being misinterpreted. “We should respect Vladimir Putin’s capabilities and his cunningness,” Pompeo said. “We should recognize he is evil and has malign intent for the west and we should work every day to protect freedom loving people. I wish, I only wish the Biden Administration had done that.”

Pompeo says Putin’s aggression is primarily a European challenge and Europe must show it can defend itself. “President Trump and I made clear to NATO they needed to do more. They needed to actually spent money to defend their own countries in ways that they weren’t,” Pompeo told Radio Iowa. “If there was ever a signal moment for them to all step up and say: ‘I’m going to actually make my 2% promise for spending…2% of GDP, I’m actually going to build out my army and my Navy, I’m going to make my helicopters fly’ — this is the moment for NATO to come together.”

Pompeo spoke at an event last (Wednesday) night hosted by a brand new group called the Bastion Institute. Iowa Senator Joni Ernst spoke, too, and warned instability in Europe has ripple effects in the United States. “Our NATO friends are asking us to step up. Does that mean sending troops in? No, it doesn’t,” Ernst says. “But what it does mean is providing more lethal aid to the Ukrainian people, using some of those sanctions against Vladimir Putin and specifically against him and all of the primary banks within Russia.”

Ernst had been calling for the Biden Administration to impose pre-emptive sanctions against Russia and she says the financial restraints Biden has announced thus far don’t go far enough. Ernst and Pompeo will speak tonight (Thursday) at a G-O-P fundraiser in Fort Dodge and another one on Friday in Davenport. Senator Chuck Grassley says the U.S. needs to draw a line in the sand with sanctions against Russia.

Grassley faults the Biden Administration for not revealing earlier what steps the U.S. would take. “If you wanted to go back to what should have been done already, I’d say these sanctions maybe shouldn’t have been put on before they invaded,” Grassley says, “but they ought to have known what they were, so it would have retarded their efforts.”

Grassley made his comments Wednesday in Atlantic, hours Russia began attacking Ukraine.

Family of slain Anamosa prison officer call for legislative action

News

February 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The family of the correctional officer murdered nearly a year ago by two Anamosa prison inmates is urging legislators to give prison employees more workplace rights and more on the job protection. Robert McFarland’s widow, Sara McFarland, spoke at a news conference in Anamosa. “No other spouse, no other family can get this call,” McFarland said, “the call that I did.”

Cathie McFarland says her son paid the ultimate price for doing his job and the employees still working in the prison system need a lot of help. “I want the people who work in there to be safe,” she said. “I want them to go home to their families.”

One bill introduced in the Iowa House has been named the Robert McFarland Act. Another is named in honor of Lorena Schulte, the prison nurse who was murdered, and staffer Lorrie Matthes, who was taken hostage. The bills require the state to provide health care benefits to the spouse and children of prison staff killed on the job and to provide up to 30 days of paid leave if a staffer witnesses a traumatic event at work.

The bills also call for employees in the Iowa Department of Corrections to have the same collective bargaining rights as public safety workers, like state troopers. Robert McFarland’s brother, Dave, says the family made a promise to do what they can to make change. “How many more officers must die or be assaulted? What will it take for people to realize this is not a Republican thing, this is not a Democratic thing?” he asked. “This is an us thing.”

The bills would increase the penalty for assaulting a prison employee to a class D felony and would increase funding for contraband screening inside prison walls. Due to last week’s deadline for action on policy bills, these proposals would have to be tacked onto other legislation in order to be voted upon this year.

Axne pays a visit to Atlantic

News

February 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) (Updated 2/24) – Iowa Third-District Democrat Congresswoman Cindy Axne (D) held a Town Hall meeting in Atlantic, Wednesday evening at the Atlantic Public Library. She discussed issues she’s worked on, and continues to try and hash out with her fellow Congressmen and Senators. Like Republican Senator Charles Grassley, who spoke earlier in the day Wednesday, in Atlantic, Axne focused on the Infrastructure Bill and the money that’s coming to Iowa for: Highway Aid; Bridge Repairs; Public Transportation; Broadband service; Cybersecurity and more.

Rep. Cindy Axne (2/23/22) Ric Hanson photo

That breaks down into: $3.4-billion to address Iowa’s 403 miles of highway that are in poor condition; $432-million for repairs and revitalization of more than 4,500 bridges; $305-million to address the 40% of transit vehicles that are beyond their expected lifespan.

Axne said “It’s been a heck of a whirlwind” of activity in Congress over the past year to keep towns alive while COVID was still making its presence known. She said “I spent most of last year working on bills that would literally just ensure that Atlantic, southwest Iowa, Iowa and this great country of ours can stay afloat, and prosper.” She added, “We made it through…with more money in people’s pockets, more health care opportunities for people to get vaccinated…”

Axne spoke about the benefits to Iowans of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARPA). During the Q&A from those who attended the Town Hall. One of the questions from a person whose brother is a severe diabetic and has trouble getting his medical equipment.  Axne said every year since she’s been in office, she and others have tried to find ways to lower the cost of prescription drugs, but “We are stopped at every turn,” according to the Congresswoman. “The Senate isn’t moving anything that we need to move.”

The best she and her colleagues can do right now, though, she says is to start with the most expensive and most used drugs, and getting those costs reduced. She spoke also about the Surprise Medical Billing Act, which was written into law and protects people covered under group and individual health plans from receiving surprise medical bills when they receive most emergency services, non-emergency services from out-of-network providers at in-network facilities, and services from out-of-network air ambulance service providers.

She’s also currently working on a bill that helps provide greater access to funding from the U-S Department of Justice for small police departments (with less than 200 employees).

There are also items in the bill to provide “De-escalation training” for officers, to give communities a chance to overcome issues police have to address, like mental health and domestic issues. The bill includes support for body cameras and more.

 

Fatal crash in Carroll County

News

February 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Dedham, Iowa) – A collision Tuesday morning between a pickup and a van in Carroll County, left one person dead and another injured. The Iowa State Patrol, on Wednesday, said a 2010 Ford F-150 pickup driven by 58-year-old Rae Jean Lepird, of Carroll, was traveling east on Highway 141 south of Dedham and west of Olympic Avenue, when the vehicle went out of control on the icy roadway.

The pickup crossed the center line of the highway and struck the driver’s side door of a westbound 2018 Dodge Caravan driven by 32-year-old Ashley Dawn Kesselring, of Coon Rapids. The crash happened at around 8:50-a.m.

Kesselring, who was wearing a seat belt, died at the scene from her injuries.  Lepird, who was also wearing her seat belt,  suffered non-life threatening injuries and was transported by Carroll County Ambulance to St. Anthony Regional Hospital, in Carroll.

The accident remains under investigation.

ISU research: Hot weather leads to hot tempers, crime, violence

News, Weather

February 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A new book from researchers at Iowa State University asserts that hotter weather brought on by climate change can make people more aggressive. Lead author Andreas Miles-Novelo, an I-S-U psychology graduate student, says decades of studies demonstrate how hotter temperatures alter the way people around the globe think and interact with each other. “We have lots of data that shows the hotter parts of the year, hotter years, hotter days of the year, hotter times, you find more reports of violent crime,” Miles-Novelo says, “so I suspect that will hold true. Whether or not it will be noticeable on any sort of level yet here in the United States, I’m not sure.”

In the book “Climate Change and Human Behavior,” the authors show how hotter weather and more frequent and severe weather events can influence individuals and groups, escalating political unrest, civil war and other forms of violence. The research finds people who are uncomfortably hot perceive others as behaving aggressively, which raises the odds of a hostile confrontation. Police officers are sworn to uphold the law but they’re still human and may be swayed by steamy weather.  “There’s a really great study that I talk about in the book where they put cops in different training simulators and in one of the training simulators, they bumped up the temperature in the room,” Miles-Novelo says, ” and they found that the cops were more likely to shoot an innocent suspect than in the condition where the room was more of a comfortable temperature.”

It’s asserted that climate change brings more extreme and frequent droughts, wildfires, floods and hurricanes, and people everywhere will be at higher risk to fall victim to crime, hunger and poverty. Still, he says it appears too much hot weather can actually chill heated aggression levels. “For average temperatures, that’s going to be when it’s lowest,” Miles-Novelo says. “When it starts to get uncomfortably hot, then you start to see those aggressions tick up, but then there’s a certain point where it gets too hot, where you have to conserve so much energy and so many resources because of the threat of overheating that you’re not actually likely to go out and do something because you need to stay somewhere.”

The opposite is also true, he says, as aggression levels rise when it gets uncomfortably cold, but once it gets exceptionally frigid, the focus is on finding shelter. With hot weather and a worsening drought in the forecast, all is not lost. Miles-Novelo says proactively addressing challenges now could help to stave off some of the long-term troubles they predict for the future.

Woodbury County Deputy cleared in fatal shooting

News

February 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Woodbury County attorney has cleared the deputy involved in the January 12th shooting that claimed the life of a man in Sergeant Bluff. Attorney Patrick Jennings says Deputy Eric Fay was justified when he fired his gun at Michael Meredith — who came at the deputy and hit him with a tire iron. “Fearing for his life and safety, deputy Eric Fay did discharge his firearm. He discharged his firearm twice — striking Michael Meridith once — and in doing so was able to end the threat,” Jennings says.

Fay along with deputy Devin Groenhagen and Sergeant Bluff officer Jereme Muller had responded to a disturbance at a trailer where a man and woman were shouting. Groenhagen had backed away and fired his taser while Fay fired his gun. (Here is sound from the bodycam video of the shooting)

Jennings says an autopsy showed Meredith died from a single shot to the chest. The taser strike did not contribute to his death. Jennings ruled based on evidence from an investigation by the Iowa D-C-I and body camera footage from the three officers that Fay was justified in using deadly force to defend himself. Woodbury County Sheriff Todd Sheehan says an internal investigation of the shooting found no department policies were violated. “Deputies Eric Fay and Devin Groenhagen were forced into a life and death situation and had approximately four seconds or less once confronted with the attack. No law enforcement officer wants to be forced to take the actions that were taken that evening — but I thank God there are men and women willing to place themselves in harm’s way, willing to keep our citizens safe,” Sheehan says.

Sheehan says Fay has 12 years of law enforcement experience. “Deputy Fay is still on paid administrative leave as he continues to process and deal with the emotional effects this incident has had both on him and his family,” according to toe Sheehan. “We will continue to support him, and we will welcome him back to full duty as soon as he is ready.”