Lavon speaks with Chris Parks, Atlantic Optimist Club President, about an upcoming informational meeting and other things involved with Optimist Club.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (7.5MB)
Subscribe: RSS
Lavon speaks with Chris Parks, Atlantic Optimist Club President, about an upcoming informational meeting and other things involved with Optimist Club.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (7.5MB)
Subscribe: RSS
Two southwest Iowa teachers are the 2011 recipients of the Charles E. Lakin Outstanding Teacher Award.
This year’s recipients were announced in special ceremonies at their respective schools, Tuesday. The 2011 recipients are Kelly Sutherland, third grade teacher in the Treynor School District, and Rhonda Sheldon, a 6th-through 12th grade life sciences instructor in the Sidney School District. Each instructor will receive $10,000, while their school districts receive $2,500 each.
Named after a well-known philanthropist, the award goes out to teacher and counselors in 25 Iowa school districts within 40 miles of Emerson, Lakin’s hometown. Lakin created the award in 2008 as a way to give back to teachers, who were a big influence on his life. His mission is to reward teachers who entice students to come to school each day, and to emphasize the vital role of teachers in rural communities.
Teachers and counselors eligible must be employed full-time, with a minimum of three years experience in the same school. Previous winners are ineligible, and only one award per school year is available. Teachers from accredited private and public schools were eligible, but home schools were excluded. Teachers in large urban communities such as Council Bluffs and Lewis Central were also excluded from the award.
The Iowa Board of Social Work has taken action in the case of a Red Oak woman whose license was inactive, but sought to have it reactivated.
In documents posted today (Wednesday) on the board’s website, the Board on May 9th, agree to reactivate the social worker Ava Dorrance’s license, with the stipulation it be placed on indefinite probation for a minimum of three-years from the date her license is reinstated. Dorrance’s license to practice social work was issued in Iowa on November 21st, 1989, but it has been inactive since December 31st, 2006.
In the consent agreement, the Board says Dorrance holds a Clinical Social Worker license in the State of Illinois, but in December 2006, that State’s Department of Financial and Profession Regulation suspended her license for “engaging in unprofessional conduct by having a social relationship with a former patient.” her license was reinstated in Illinois, on May 7th, 2010, with the understanding the woman would be on indefinite probation for a minimum of three-years, that she was not to engage in solo practice as a clinical social worker, and that she must work in a multi-disciplinary setting, under the direct supervision of a licensed clinical social worker.
The consent agreement reached in Iowa last week imposes the same conditions as those enacted by the State of Illinois, and, among other things, orders Dorrance to continue weekly psychotherapy sessions, along with the continuation of her medications as prescribed by her physician.
The proposed agreement is subject to the approval of the full IBSW Board. If they fail to approve it, the terms will not be enforced.
A man and woman from Kentucky were arrested Tuesday afternoon in Pottawattamie County, on drug charges. Pott County Sheriff’s Department spokesman, Sgt. Dwayne Riche says 25-year old Meghan Pugh, of Lakeside Park, KY, and 26-year old Jeffrey Eisenmenger, of Erlanger, KY, were each charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance with the intent to deliver, Possession of drug Paraphernalia, and violation of the Drug Tax Stamp.
Sgt. Riche says the couple was arrested at around 1:45-p.m. after authorities received a call about a person who was apparently “doing drugs” at the Underwood I-80 truck stop. A truck driver observed Eisenmenger performing an illegal activity. After the Sheriff’s Department K-9 unit was dispatched to the scene, the dog alerted to the presence of narcotics. Eisenmenger told authorities there was heroin in the vehicle, but the substance has not yet been tested.
The couples’ car, a 2003 Mazda, also contained an undetermined amount of cash, 28-grams of an illegal substance, and drug paraphernalia. That included needles, aluminum foil, Q-tips, a spoon with foil wrapped around it, and cotton balls.
The couple was taken into custody, and their vehicle was towed. Pugh and Eisenmenger were brought to the Pottawattamie County Jail, where they were being held on $15,300 bond, each.
Officials with the Iowa Department for the blind say a program being held tomorrow (Thursday), in Atlantic, is designed to help visually impaired Iowans living in the Atlantic area, discover services and programs that will enable them to live more independently, keep or seek employment, and build confidence in living with vision loss. The informational seminar takes place from 10-a.m. until 2-p.m, at the Heritage House (1200 Brookridge Circle, in Atlantic).
The program is being hosted by the IDB, and will provide information on working in competitive employment, using assertive technology (such as screen-reading software and talking devices), accessing disability-related Social Security, and discovering tips and tools for maintaining independence in daily life.
Those attending the event will have a chance to meet with key staff from the Iowa Department for the Blind, and find out which services would be beneficial for their individual needs. The program is free, and open to the public.
Those with vision loss, and their friends and/or family are encouraged to attend, along with professionals who work with persons with vision loss, or, those employers looking to hire dedicated workers.
For more information, call Shoshanna Hebshi, at 515-281-1338, or log on to www.idbonline.org.
Atlantic Police reported Tuesday, the arrest on that day of 24-year old Justin Knutsen, of Atlantic. Knutsen was charged with Public Intoxication. The man brought to the Cass County Jail & held pending an appearance before the magistrate.
Key Republicans are skeptical of the bill Senate Democrats passed this week which specifically targets a Nebraska doctor’s plan to open a late-term abortion clinic in Council Bluffs. Governor Branstad favors an outright ban on all abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy. “I would hope that, eventually, the Senate will understand that we need to do more than just deal with just the situation in Council Bluffs,” Branstad says.
Legislators in Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Idaho and Indiana recently have passed new laws which ban abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy unless the mother’s life is at risk because of her pregnancy. Branstad favors that route.
“It would be a tragedy for Iowa to become the late term abortion capitol of the Midwest and we should, I think, pattern what we do after what they did in Nebraska,” Branstad says. “It was effective there and that’s why I’m hopeful, in the end, the senate will see that.”
Nebraska was the first state to pass a late-term abortion ban and it took effect last October. House Speaker Kraig Paulsen of Hiawatha, the top Republican in the Iowa House, says he’ll review the alternative proposal the Senate passed Tuesday. “But if all it does is formalize the procedure for doing late-term abortions, I am confident that House Republicans aren’t going to have any interest in that,” Paulsen says.
The bill Senate Democrats passed would set up a state permit process for anyone planning to open a “free standing” clinic where late-term abortions would be performed, with the stipulation that such a clinic be in “close proximity” to a hospital unit for premature babies. There is no such hospital unit in Council Bluffs, but there are neonatal units at hospitals in Cedar Rapids, Davenport, Des Moines and Iowa City.
(O.Kay Henderson/Radio Iowa)
A Public Hearing will be held Wednesday evening in Atlantic, on a proposed Development Agreement between the City and Boulders Inn and Suites. The meeting takes place during a regularly scheduled meeting of the Atlantic City Council, and will be followed by action on approval of a resolution authorizing Tax Increment payments and certain Tax Increment Revenues toward the payment of the agreement, as well as a resolution setting the date for a public hearing on a proposed internal advance and loan to fund the $125,000 incentive grant, to be funded from the City’s Economic Development Fund.
City Administrator Doug Harris says the City has dropped its original offer of an additional $100,000 in tax rebates for the Boulders project, because the City will incur added interest and legal costs which would cause the City to exceed the original offering.
Boulders has informed the City through its attorney, that they want the agreement to include the $100,000 in tax rebates. Their attorney is expected to submit a counter-proposal for the Finance Committee’s consideration, and committee will forward its recommendation to the Council.
In other business, the Atlantic City Council Wednesday, will hold a public hearing on an amendment to the Fiscal Year 2011 Budget, followed by a resolution approving the amendment. The amendment simply grants the City the legal authority to spend public funds not previously anticipated under the original budget.
The Council will also act on approving the second and likely third, and final reading of an ordinance amending the wastewater fee schedule, as previously announced. The scheduled increase is necessary to help pay for the new $15-million wastewater treatment plant, which is under construction.
The meeting begins at 5:30-p.m., in the Atlantic City Hall.
A bag of human remains has been found in a Dow City warehouse. According to the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) and the Crawford County Sheriff’s office, the bag of human bones was found in an unoccupied warehouse in Dow City on Monday, May 16th.
The discovery was made by a group of people who were working to clean out the warehouse, which was scheduled for demolition by the city. A medical examiner tested the bones, and concluded they are human remains. The state medical examiner’s office in Des Moines is now conducting tests to analyze the remains and determine a potential age and identification of the person.
The Crawford county sheriff’s office and the Iowa DCI continue to investigate when the remains were taken to the warehouse, and who might have knowledge of where they came from.
Officials said Tuesday they believe there is no threat to people in Dow City or Crawford County.
Grant, Ia. –The Grant United Methodist Church will hold its annual Memorial Day Dinner from 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. on Monday, May 30 with a free-will offering. The menu includes: sloppy joe or ham sandwich, baked beans, assorted salads, pies and desserts, and coffee, tea or lemonade. All money raised by the dinner supports the Grant United Methodist Women and their work for mission projects and the Grant church.
In addition to the dinner, students in Time to Create, the church’s after-school program, will have a fundraising sale of homemade snack mix in decorative tins. Proceeds will benefit the program and its mission projects.
The Grant United Methodist Church, founded in 1855, is a multigenerational church focusing on concern for its neighbors and providing a center of worship for all ages. Worship services are celebrated at 9:30 a.m. each Sunday.
GCP sponsors music jam and quilt auction….
Following the church dinner from 1-4 p.m., Grant Community Preservationists (GCP) will sponsor a country-bluegrass jam session in the Grant City Park. Jim and Kathy Wymore of New Market will host the jam session, and interested musicians can sign up at the event. Everyone is welcome to attend.
In addition at about 2:30 p.m., Steve Bergren will auction a full size Circle of Stars quilt on a brocaded white ground. The stars are pieced in patterns of blue and green with snail-patterned quilting. The quilt was made locally and donated by GCP member Jacky Adams.
A concession stand will also be open, serving coffee, iced tea and desserts. Attendees should bring lawn chairs; a porty-potty will be on site. In case of rain, the event will be held at the Grant United Methodist Church. Proceeds from this event will benefit GCP and its work on the Grant Masonic Lodge and Grant Park.
The Grant Community Preservationists was formed to help maintain Grant and its unique historic character. Designated in October 2003, the Grant Commercial Historic District is on the National Register of Historic Places.