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Small town gets new fire station paid off, thanks to generous RAGBRAI riders

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August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – It’s been more than a month since thousands of bicyclists on RAGBRAI pedaled through the northwestern Iowa town of Lytton, but the benefits are still rolling in. Scott Matter, who helped organize Lytton’s events during the annual ride, says about 30-thousand dollars was raised that one day, money that will be split between helping to offset the cost of a new fire station and another local project. “One that people really rallied around is helping pay for a new community sign or digital sign,” Matter says. “With Lytton not having its own newspaper anymore, it’s a great way to let people know about what’s happening in town, whether it be a Legion meeting, a church supper, somebody’s anniversary or whatever. We don’t really have that and that’s something people are hoping we can contribute to.”

Lytton Mayor Jeff Ellerbrock says a member of the fire department’s board of trustees approached him shortly after the cyclists went through town on July 26th. “He came in all smiles and said, ‘Guess what? The fire station’s paid for,'” Ellerbrock says, laughing. “It just floored me. It was fantastic. I was just thrilled.”  Lytton RAGBRAI collected more than 15-thousand dollars earmarked for the fire station. Ellerbrock says one of the cyclists who stopped there during the ride remembered the town’s fund drive when he got home. “The fella’s name is Aaron Thompson and he lives in Chesapeake, Virginia,” Ellerbrock says. “He’s retired Navy, he was a SEAL for 30 years. He heard that we got the fire station out of debt and he still wanted to donate so he sent us $2,000 for Emanuel St. John’s Church in Lytton.”

In addition to the money raised by local organizations, another 54-thousand dollars has come in for local organizations. Matter says it took the entire community, and then some, pulling together to make it happen. More than 300 volunteers were in Lytton during RAGBRAI, a town with a population of only around 275. People from across Iowa and as far away as Florida came in to help out.

Pott. County man arrested on indecent contact warrant

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

A man from Pottawattamie County was arrested Monday in Mills County, for OWI/3rd offense, and on a warrant for two counts of Indecent Contact with a Child. The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports 46-year-old Craig Raymond Janssen, of Council Bluffs, was taken into custody at around 2:15-p.m. His bond was set at $9,000.

SUV hits apartment building in Creston Tues. morning

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August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – An apartment building in Creston sustained about $10,000 damage Tuesday morning, after it was struck by a white SUV. Creston Police say a witness reported the vehicle ran over a grassy area next to an apartment building east of the T-intersection of Laurel and S. Sumner Street. The vehicle continued until striking the side of an apartment at 1001 Sumner. When The incident occurred at around 8:20-a.m. When Police arrived, the vehicle was not on the scene, and they did not see it while enroute. The driver was not immediately known.

The wall of the building that was hit had a visible brick indentation, enough so that the vehicle broke through into the inside of an apartment. No injuries were reported. Due to the damage, the tenants door was jammed shut, and required the services of the Creston Fire Department to pry it open.

Two-vehicle accident in Guthrie County, Tuesday

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

A collision this (Tuesday) morning in Guthrie County caused a total of $6,500 damage, but there were no injuries. According to the Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office, a 2012 Ford Focus driven by 15-year-old Tage Jordan Monahan, of Bayard, was stopped at the stop sign for 200th Street and Highway 4 at around 7:30-a.m.  A 2019 Chevy Traverse driven by 27-year-old Jacey Lyn Tuel, also of Bayard, was southbound on Highway 4.

Monahan took off from the intersection, and failed to yield to the SUV, striking it on the passenger side.

Audubon School Board passes Bond Resolution

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Audubon, Iowa) – The Audubon School Board held a special meeting Monday evening, and along with it, a public hearing on the Proposed Issuance of approximately $3.4-million in school infrastructure sales, services and use, tax revenue and refunding bond. Superintendent Eric Trager explains…

Trager says this time around, they hope they have the necessary authority to proceed with the process.

The monies are sales tax dollars they are able to bond against because the sales tax is pretty much guaranteed through 2052, and not an increase in your taxes.

He said asking for money again from the taxpayers was not an option the Board wanted to consider. The Board passed the Resolution supporting the issuance of the bonds. Eric Trager said also, the school year is off to a good start, they’re happy to see the kids in the building and having things get back to normal as possible. He said “We’re off and running, so that’s a good thing.”

Kay Henderson, dean of the Iowa Capitol press corps, takes over September 17 

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

JOHNSTON, Iowa (August 31, 2021) – Kay Henderson, the dean of the Iowa Capitol press corps and long-time guest panelist on Iowa Press, will be the next host and moderator of the Iowa PBS public affairs program. Henderson replaces David Yepsen, who retires from the Iowa Press desk on September 10, 2021. Her first formal broadcast as host will be Friday, September 17.  “Kay is already a member of the Iowa PBS family,” said Molly Phillips, executive director and general manager of the statewide public television network. “She has capably subbed as host and has been a regular second chair at the Iowa Press desk. She’s participated in countless campaign debates over the last three decades. We couldn’t ask for a stronger, more esteemed and experienced journalist to continue the Iowa Press legacy.”

Henderson first appeared on Iowa Press in October of 1987. For the past 20 years, she has been the national political director for Learfield news networks in Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota and Wisconsin. She has served two terms as president of the National Association of State Radio Networks’ news directors group. Henderson was hired by Learfield in 1987 as a statehouse reporter for Radio Iowa, a statewide news and sports network serving more than 70 commercial radio stations. She’s been that network’s news director since 1994 and will remain in that role alongside her new weekly assignment at Iowa PBS. “It’s an honor to be invited to take on this new role,” Henderson said. “Watching Iowa Press hosts Dean Borg and David Yepsen guide the program over the past 34 years has given me a glimpse of the responsibilities ahead. I’m humbled by the opportunity and excited about the task of helping Iowa Press move into its fifth decade of service to our viewers.”

O, Kay Henderson

Henderson received the Iowa Broadcast News Association’s 2002 Jack Shelley Award, an annual recognition of “outstanding contribution to the cause of professional journalism.” The list of Shelley Award recipients includes the late Dean Borg, who retired as Iowa Press host in 2016, and the late Dan Miller, the long-time Iowa PBS general manager who was an Iowa Press producer early in his 37-year career with the network. “After three decades of Iowa public affairs coverage on radio and on Iowa Press, Kay Henderson is the backbone of political journalism in this state,” said Andrew Batt, Iowa Press senior producer. “Our viewers have found Kay to be a trusted source for news and information throughout annual legislative sessions and nearly 20 election cycles.”

Henderson’s first salaried job in journalism was a three-month summertime stint as managing editor of the Lenox Time Table, the weekly newspaper in her southwest Iowa hometown. In addition to her work in Iowa broadcasting, Henderson has appeared on the PBS NewsHour, NBC’s “Meet the Press” and ABC’s “This Week” as well CNN, Fox News and MSNBC.

Since its inaugural broadcast in 1971, Iowa Press has engaged the best local journalists to interview experts, political and other newsworthy figures while exploring issues of state and national interest. Each week, Iowa Press invites newsmakers, policy makers and elected officials to join capitol reporters in a weekly discussion. The program airs Friday evenings and Sundays at noon on Iowa PBS. It is rebroadcast Saturday mornings on Iowa PBS WORLD.3. Past episodes of Iowa Press are available online at iowapbs.org.

Program support for Iowa Press is provided by Associated General Contractors of Iowa and Iowa Bankers Association.

Four people shot, two dead, in separate incidents last night in Des Moines

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Police say four people were shot — two of them fatally — in two separate incidents in Des Moines last (Monday) night. Police were called about 6 PM to the banks of the Des Moines River where the body of a 43-year-old Des Moines man was found, shot to death. Investigators say it was a homicide.

About two hours later, three people were shot on the capitol city’s east side and one of them died, a 40-year-old man from Des Moines. Two other men, ages 27 and 32, sustained non-life threatening gunshot injuries. No names were released in either case and there’s no word on any arrests. These are Des Moines’ 5th and 6th homicides of the year.

Grassley questions VA secretary on quality of care in veterans homes

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is questioning the head of the U-S Department of Veterans Affairs about reports of inconsistent inspection practices and a lack of quality controls at veterans homes nationwide.  “It’s not directed just to any specific instances,” Grassley says. “It’s kind of an accumulation of a lot of concerns we’ve had.”

Those concerns include the pandemic and reports that show more than 14-hundred residents and staff of V-A homes nationwide have died of COVID-19. The V-A spends about one-billion dollars a year on state-run homes for veterans. The homes are only required to do one annual safety inspection. “Since there’s a lot of tax dollars goes into this,” Grassley says, “we have a responsibility to make those tax dollars keep our promises to our veterans.”

Grassley, a Republican, says it appears the standard of care at many state veterans homes “falls well short” of those required by other government-supported nursing homes. He says, “Americans deserve answers and our veterans deserve better.” “The lack of oversight by the VA seems to be a problem that’s not being carried out the way it should be,” Grassley says. “This is a letter to get answers to some specific questions.”

A POLITICO report says nearly 14-hundred V-A residents and 40 staff have died from COVID-19 in 110 state veterans homes. In the worst case, 110 deaths were reported at a 126-bed veterans home in New York. It’s unclear how many veterans, if any, have died from COVID at the Iowa Veterans Home. This summer, it was reported that two residents of the home in Marshalltown who were housed in the COVID unit had died. I-V-H officials said both veterans had “significantly compromised health conditions” and thus, they weren’t listed as COVID deaths.

Work release escape of Devin Dewayne Smith

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Waterloo, Iowa) – Officials with the Iowa Department of Corrections, Tuesday, said 30-year-old Devin Dewayne Smith, who was convicted of Robbery 2nd and other charges in Black Hawk County, failed to report to the Waterloo work release facility Monday night, as required. Smith is a black male, 6-feet 2 inches tall. He height 6’2″, and weighs 167 pounds. Smith was admitted to the work release facility on May 26, 2021.

Persons with information on Smith’s whereabouts should contact their local police.

Devin Smith (IA DOC photo)

Cass County Auditor’s Office on register to vote mailing

News

August 31st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa – The Cass County Auditor’s Office reports that in the last several days, a mailing as been sent out by a group not associated with the Auditor’s Office. The mailing asks you to register to vote, and it has the Cass County Auditor’s Office as the mailing address. Officials say the problem with this mailing, is that they apparently sent it to everyone whether they were registered already or not.
The Auditor’s Office says “You are more than welcome to fill out this form and mail it into us if you feel there maybe an issue with your voter registration, OR you can ignore it and dispose it. Please don’t assume that you are not registered to vote if you receive one of these mailings.” The Auditor’s Office says they “have yet to find anyone NOT registered,” and if you have any question, please call them at (712)-243-4570.