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4 arrests in Creston over the holiday weekend

News

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department today (Tuesday), said there were four arrests over the holiday weekend.

Friday night, 21-year-old Antoinette Clement, of Creston, was arrested at her residence on a charge of Domestic Abuse Assault/1st Offense. Clement was taken to the Union County Jail where she was released after seeing the Magistrate.

At around 2:26-a.m. Saturday, 53-year-old Catherine Ann Scadden, of Creston, was arrested at the Creston Union County Law Enforcement Center for OWI 2nd Offense. Scadden was taken to the Union County Jail where she was later released on $2000 cash or surety bond. And, at around 10:45-p.m., Saturday, 21-year-old Malachi Shon Elms, of Orient, was arrested in Creston for Public Intoxication and Disorderly Conduct-Fighting/Violent Behaviior. Elms was taken to the Union County Jail where he was released after seeing the Magistrate.

Monday night, 20-year-old Zoe Paulette Marie Parmenter, of Creston, was arrested at her residence for Harassment/3rd Degree. Parmenter was transported to the Union County Jail where she was released on $300 cash or surety bond.

Heartbeat Today 1-3-2023

Ag/Outdoor, Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

January 3rd, 2023 by Jim Field

Jim Field visit with Kendra Meyer, Executive Secretary of the Iowa Specialty Crop Growers Association, about the Iowa Specialty Producers Conference February 22-23 in Ankeny.  Visit www.iowaspecialtyproducers.com/registernow.

Play

Local 24-Hour Rainfall Totals Reported at 7:00 am on Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

January 3rd, 2023 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  .78″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .96″
  • Massena  1.42″
  • Corning  1.74″
  • Audubon  .5″
  • Oakland  .72″
  • Guthrie Center  1.35″
  • Manning  .58″
  • Neola  .09″
  • Logan  .71″
  • Underwood  .58″
  • Carroll .25″
  • Red Oak  .74″
  • Clarinda  1″
  • Creston  .48″

Atlantic City Council to handle 2023 Administrative business & hear an update from the City Administrator

News

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The City Council in Atlantic has a short agenda for their 5:30-p.m. meeting Wednesday, at City Hall. Mostly, their business consists of action on administrative matters, such as:

  • An Order to Approve First Whitney Bank & Trust as the City’s Official Bank for the City Checking Account for 2023.
  • An Order to Approve the Atlantic News Telegraph as the City’s Official Newspaper for Legal Publications in 2023.
  • A Resolution (#01-23) “Amending the City of Atlantic Personnel Policy, by repealing and replacing Series 200 Code 203 “Drug Free Workplace,” with New Code numbered as the same.”  The language in the final line of the Resolution changes from “Failure to do so will result in immediate dismissal from your position,” to “…immediate termination of employment.”

In his report to the Council, City Administrator John Lund will discuss a Legislative Briefing, a FY 2024 Budget Update, and a January 18th Council Work Session and Budget Workshop, meeting. There will also be a report from Mayor Grace Garrett, and regular Council Committee reports, prior to a Public Forum.

RICHARD H. KLEIN, 80, of Earling (Mass of Christian Burial 1/5/23)

Obituaries

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

RICHARD H. KLEIN, 80, of Earling, died Sunday, January 1, 2023, at Myrtue Medical Center, in Harlan. A Mass of Christian Burial for RICHARD KLEIN will be held 11-a.m. Thursday, January 5th, at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, in Earling. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, in Earling, is on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2023, from 5-until 8-p.m., with a Wake Service at 7-p.m.

Burial is in the St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Earling.

RICHARD H. KLEIN is survived by:

His Wife – Julie Klein, of Earling.

His Sons – Jim (Diane) Klein, of Earling, and Todd (Jodi) Klein, of Omaha.

His Daughters – Jan (Leo) Schwery, of Earling; Tami (Scott) Tomsu, of Omaha, & Melissa Niles, of Omaha.

His Brothers – Donald (JoEllen) Klein, of Dunlap, and Charles (Marie) Klein, of Earling.

15 grandchildren, and 10 great-grandchildren. His sister-in-law: Maxine Klein, of Audubon.

3 arrests to start off 2023 in Shenandoah

News

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Shenandoah, Iowa) – Police in Shenandoah report three arrests to kick-off the New Year. On Sunday, at around 9:19-p.m., Officers with the Shenandoah P-D conducted a traffic stop in the 700 block of S. Center Street, on a vehicle with an expired registration tag. Upon further investigation, 31-year-old Cody Michael Allbee, of Shenandoah, was arrested for Possession of a controlled substance (Marijuana) – 2nd offense. He posted a $1,000 bond and was released, with additional charges pending.

Monday night, 22-year-old Andrew Douglas Holmes, of Shenandoah, was arrested on a Pottawattamie County warrant stemming from an original charge of Theft in the 2nd Degree. Holmes was also charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance (Marijuana) – 1st offense, and Poss. of Paraphernalia. He was unable to post a $6,300 bond, and was transported to the Page County Jail.

And, later that same night, Shenandoah Police were dispatched to the 200 block of University Avenue, for an unknown male who had entered an occupied residence. While Officers were enroute, the suspect fled on foot. He was located at the intersection of South Avenue and Center Street, after the reporting party providing a physical description of the suspect. 39-year-old David Llewllyn Warkentien, II, of Shenandoah, was arrested for Burglary in the 2nd Degree and Public Intoxication. He was unable to post a $10,300 bond, and was transported to the Page County Jail.

Muscatine to launch 3-D house printing effort, pumping hemp into the mix

News

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – As soon as spring arrives, an eastern Iowa community will launch an ambitious home-building effort with plans to construct ten houses using 3-D printers. Charla Schafer, president of the Community Foundation of Greater Muscatine, says they’re eager to get started as the Mississippi River town needs more homes — and residents — but there simply aren’t enough contractors and supplies to make it happen. Schafer says the ten houses will be modest in size. “The first one we print will be probably around 1,300-square-foot on slab, with attached or detached garage, depending on the lot,” Schafer says. “As we get into infill lots within neighborhoods where maybe something’s been torn down, based on the sizing, we may need to go to a two-bedroom, but the intent for most part is to do three bedrooms.”

The foundation and both the exterior and interior walls can be 3-D printed. And once they get started, the ten houses should go up rapidly, especially when compared to traditional construction, which often takes a month. “3-D printing is much quicker to create the home. You can have a home printed in as short as 28 hours,” Schafer says. “We also know that the cost, right now, they’re looking could be about 15% less and they believe over time, they’ll be able to hold that down even a little bit more, which will allow homeowners to maybe get into a home a little quicker than they could in the past.”

That lower cost is key, she says, since real estate prices have been bounding the past several years. Schafer says 3-D printing is far more economical than the traditional route. “Typically, you can drive down labor to about three to four people on site to do the home printing, because the machine is printing it in just layers of cement as it goes around, so you have some cost there,” Schafer says. “And then you also have some savings by using a crete mix versus a typical construction stick build.” Another potential price cutter will be the ingredients the 3-D printers use, including a time-tested all-natural product that’s being grown on plots at Muscatine Community College. “They have the only hemp program in the state and hemp is the leading additive that’s being researched to add into the crete mix,” Schafer says. “They’ll be doing a research component alongside of this as well to see how hemp may fit in and what that does is, it makes it more environmentally friendly as you print.”

Due to the housing shortage, she says about 11-thousand people drive to Muscatine County to work daily, including a quarter of the school district’s teachers.

Iowa Lottery adding new payment option for prizes

News

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Lottery plans to move to some more modern methods of payment for prizes in the new year. Lottery spokesperson, Mary Neubauer, says paper checks had been the standard. “It just became obvious pretty quickly that a check, which is the primary form of payment that you will receive, especially if you come to an Iowa Lottery office today, a check just isn’t used as much today, as it once was, ” Neubauer says. She says a working group in the organization studied the options and what Lottery customers want. “People are looking for options that have, first of all, greater speed, and second of all, more convenience,” she says.

Neubauer says cash payments won’t go away, but they do plan to start using prepaid debit cards that allow retailers or Lottery offices to load the prize money onto the card.  “So if you go into a store, certainly cash would continue to be an option. But for example, if it’s a store, and it’s late at night, and the store doesn’t have a lot of cash on hand, a lot of times right now that store isn’t able to pay your prize,” Neubauer says.

Neubauer says retailers could pay prizes from 20 up to 600 dollars on the cards — while lottery offices could use the prepaid debit cards for prizes from 20 up to five-thousand dollars. They hope to start a pilot project with the debit cards in six months. The other change would allow prizes that have to be redeemed at Iowa Lottery offices to be made through what’s called an A-C-H payment that goes directly into a person’s bank account.

“So the person wouldn’t get a hardcopy check, they wouldn’t have to cash it, they wouldn’t have to, you know, drive somewhere, or do that electronically, the payment would just be made directly into their account,” Neubauer says. “It’s going to take a little bit more time to put that in place, we’re looking at that probably somewhere in the second half of calendar year 2023, or at the end of fiscal year 2023.”

The A-C-H prize payments could go up to five million dollars. Neubauer says they are only making a couple of changes because they have to be very careful about the security surrounding the prize money. “There are so many forms of payment available in the marketplace today, especially when it comes to you know, consumers just paying each other money or sending money to each other. But we have to make sure that the security procedures in place and that whatever payment option we would be looking at that it has staying power,” she says.

Neubauer says the large jackpots from lotto games would still be paid out by wire transfer, as that is the safest method.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2023

Weather

January 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Cloudy w/rain or drizzle becoming mixed w/light freezing drizzle/light snow later this afternoon. High near 38. SE-NW @ 10-20 mph.
Tonight: Cloudy w/mixed light rain/freezing drizzle/light snow becoming all snow (.5”). Low 24. NW @ 10-20.
Tomorrow: Cldy w/rain/light snow or flurries (.5”). High 28. NW @ 15-25 mph.
Thursday: Partly cloudy. High 31.
Friday: P/Cloudy. High near 40.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 38. Our Low was 33. Our 24-hour Rainfall (7-a.m. Monday to 7-a.m. today), was .78″.  Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 35 and the Low was 7. The Record High on this date was 52 in 1933. The Record Low was -30 in 2010.

Bowl game round-up 1/2/2023

Sports

January 2nd, 2023 by admin

Reliaquest Bowl
Tampa, FL
Mississippi State 19, Illinois 10

Mississippi State won their first game since the unexpected death of head coach Mike Leach, coming back from an early deficit to do so. The Bulldogs, wearing a pirate flag on their helmets in honor of Coach Leach, took their first lead in the game with 4 seconds left on a 27-yard field goal from Massimo Biscardi. The Illini tried a wild series of laterals on the final play but the ball was picked off by the Bulldogs and returned for the games final points. Will Rogers threw for 261 yards and a touchdown with two interceptions for the struggling Bulldog offense. But the Dogs defense held Illinois to just 215 yards and had 7 sacks in the game.

Citrus Bowl
Orlando, FL
LSU 63, Purdue 7

The Tigers steamrolled the Boilermakers to finish off a 10-win season in Brian Kelly’s first year at the helm. Tigers quarterback Jayden Daniels had 139 yards passing and a score to go along with 67 yards rushing and he even caught a 5-yard touchdown pass from wideout Malik Nabers. Freshman Garrett Nussmeier also saw time at quarterback and threw for 173 yards and two touchdowns of his own. The margin of victory for the Tigers tied the largest in college football bowl history.

Cotton Bowl
Arlington, TX
Tulane 46, USC 45

The Tulane Green Wave roared back in the final four minutes to knock off No. 10 USC 46-45. Michael Pratt led two big late scoring drives to give the Green Wave their big win. Pratt led a two play drive in 23 seconds that cut the lead to 8. Then USC mishandled the kickoff and had to start at their own 1 yard line and the Green Wave forced a safety in two plays to get within 6. Pratt then led a 12-play, 66 yard drive capped by a 6-yard touchdown pass to Alex Bauman that was initially ruled an incompletion. After review the call was overturned to a touchdown and the ensuing extra point gave the Green Wave the win. Tyjae Spears was a monster on the ground for Tulane with 208 yards and 4 touchdowns on the day. The Green Wave finish the year at 12-2. USC fell to 11-3.

Rose Bowl
Pasadena, CA
Penn State 35, Utah 21

Penn State won just their second rose bowl in program history, using a strong second half to take down the Utes. Sean Clifford was 16-22 for 279 yards and a pair of touchdwons for the Nittany Lions. Utah quarterback Cam Rising left the game in the third quarter with a knee injury and backup Bryson Barnes struggled the rest of the way. Penn State running back Nicholas Singleton had two rushing touchdowns, including an 87-yard scamper to break a 14-all tie midway through the third.