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Becker and Plagman earn Cass County Fair Royalty Honors

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 29th, 2021 by admin

From left to right: Prince and Mr. Congeniality Garrett Reynolds, King Craig Alan Becker, Queen Emily Plagman, Princess Caroline Pellett

The 2021 Cass County Fair got into full swing on Thursday night with the King and Queen contest held in front of the community garden at the fairgrounds. Emily Plagman was crowned 2021 Cass County Fair Queen and Craig Alan Becker was crowned King. The candidates went through a round of judging prior to fair with a meal and interviews. Then on Thursday night they were introduced to the crowd, asked about their involvement and future plans, and asked a surprise question written by their peers.

A total of 3 King candidates and 9 Queen candidates participated. Mr. Congeniality was awarded to Garrett Reynolds and he was also named Prince. Miss Congeniality was awarded to Taylor McCreedy. Princess went to Caroline Pellett.

King Craig Becker is a member of the Benton Franklin 4H club and Atlantic FFA. He is the son of John and Abby Becker. Queen Emily Plagman is also a member of the Benton Franklin 4H club and the CAM FFA. She is the daughter of Mike and Kristi Plagman.

The Little Miss and Mister contest was held just prior to the King and Queen contest. Youngsters 5-8 years old can enter the contest and winners are chosen by a drawing. The 2021 Little Miss went to Adalyn Hanson and Little Mister went to Ethan Retallic.

2021 Little Mister Ethan Retallic and 2021 Little Miss Adalyn Hanson with 2019 Prince Mitchell Williamson, 2019 King Nathan Behrends, and 2019 Queen Haley Becker

Reports say former IVH Commandant got extra pay

News

July 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A special audit of the Iowa Veteran’s Home says former commandant Timon Oujiri was relieved of his duties in early May due after receiving more than 100-thousand dollars in improper pay. The report, released by State Auditor Rob Sand, shows the discrepancies that came to light when Department of Administrative Services employees reviewed the payroll of various agencies for accuracy back in April, in preparation to transfer to a new payroll system.

Payroll costs from July of 2019 through May of this year showed the number of improper payments and payroll costs at I-V-H. The report also includes suggestions to strengthen some of the internal controls at I-V-H, including a review of payroll journals by someone not associated with the payroll process.

The report has been sent to the Iowa DCI, the Marshall and Polk counties Attorney’s Office, and the Attorney General’s office. Governor Kim Reynolds appointed Marine Corps retired Major Mathew Peterson as the new I-V-H Commandant earlier this week.

Heat Advisory Pushes Back Cass County Fair Events Tonight

News

July 29th, 2021 by Jim Field

Due to the heat advisory today, the Cass County Fair events tonight will be pushed back one hour.  The Little Miss & Little Mister contest, the Queen & King Contest and the Senior Recognition program will begin at 8:00 pm Thursday at the Garden on the fairgrounds in Atlantic.

Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Report

News

July 29th, 2021 by admin

The Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office released details Wednesday on six arrests within the past week.

On Tuesday, July 27th Deputies arrested 28-year-old Victoria Elizabeth Marquez on a warrant for Possession of a Controlled Substance (Methamphetamine) 1st Offense and Carrying a Weapon.

Also on July 27th 58-year-old Jeffrey Michael Merrill was arrested following a traffic stop near Highway 92 and Greenview Road. Merrill was charged with OWI First Offense and Open Container.

On July 26th 27-year-old Kyler Jay O’Brien was arrested following a traffic stop on Highway 92. O’Brien was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance (Methamphetamine) 1st Offense, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, Driving While Barred, and Operating a Non-Registered Vehicle.

On July 25th 33-year-old Wesley Adam Keene was arrested for Operating While Intoxicated First Offense and being a Fugitive from Justice.

On July 24th 25-year-old Anthony Tyler Lee Robison was arrested and charged with Criminal Mischief 4th Degree. That same day 31-year-old Paige Krystle Bjorklund was arrested following a traffic stop on Nash Boulevard. She was charged with OWI 2nd Offense and Possession of a Controlled Substance (Methamphetamine) 1st Offense.

Glenwood Police report two recent arrests

News

July 29th, 2021 by admin

The Glenwood Police Department reports a couple of recent arrests.

On Wednesday officers arrested 36-year-old Robyn Salmons of Glenwood on a Mills County Warrant for Failure to Appear on a Violation of Probation Charge. Bond was set at $50,000 cash only.

Early Thursday Glenwood Police arrested 19-year-old Dominick Maddocks-Miles of Glenwood for Driving While Revoked. He was booked in to the Mills County Jail on $1,000 cash or surety bond.

2021 Cass County Fair Schedule for Thursday, 7/29/21

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

A full day of activities will be experienced during 2021 Cass County Fair, on this Thursday. Events include:

  • 7:30-a.m.: Swine weigh-in
  • 8-a.m.: Rabbit check-in
  • 10-a.m.: Poultry check-in
  • 10:30-a.m.: Meat Goat weigh-in and Dairy Check-in
  • 3-p.m.: Sheep weigh-in
  • 4:30-p.m.: Horse check-in
  • 5-p.m.: 4-H/FFA Exhibits Open/Food Sale
  • 7-p.m.: Little Miss & Little Mister contest
  • 7:30-p.m: King & Queen contest
  • 8-p.m.: Senior Recognition.

Some of the events set to take place tomorrow (Friday), include: a Dog Show; Clover Kids animal show; Share-the-Fun/Style Show; Mutton Busting, and the Bull ride. See the complete schedule HERE.

Atlantic Middle School will not be occupied in the foreseeable future

News

July 28th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Students and staff of the Atlantic Middle School will be “Unable to occupy [the building] for the foreseeable future,” according to Atlantic School District Superintendent Steve Barber, while mitigation strategies related to a fire that occurred Tuesday, are under way.  That was the consensus among mitigation inspectors following a fire that caused an estimated $875,000 damage to the roof that was under repair, and water damage to a good portion of the building. The price mentioned was the bid for Phase I mitigation from FirstOnSite Property Restoration, which the School Board approved during the emergency session. Phase I includes the removal of the water and deodorization of the structure. The District’s deductible is $5,000.

The School Board held an Emergency Meeting 8-p.m. Wednesday, to act on bids for the mitigation of fire-related damages. They heard from EMC Insurance Corporate Loss Specialist Scott Signor, who said he and Precision Roofing were on site Wednesday and walked the roof lines of the building, especially what they called “The area of origin.” He said they are developing what are being called “Temp repairs.”

Signor said something has to be built around the area of origin, and that “An area of subrogation may be possible as far as why the loss started.” He said several companies must first be put on notice and complete an inspection by several entities. The structure would have to be constructed over and above the affected area and then temporary repairs conducted over the entire area where it had burned. That while section was in the process of being replaced when the fire broke out. The temporary repairs would at least limit any future interior migration from rain that is expected in the next few days, and get the rain moving in the direction of the drains.

Signor said mitigation is just the first phase, and has nothing to do with repairs, the price of which will be significant. Signor said there were only four-to six rooms that were without apparent damage from the fire, smoke and water. Those rooms are located he said, in the southwest corner of the Middle School. “All other rooms are affected either substantially or less substantially,” according to Signor.

Barber and Middle School Principal Josh Rasmussen will organize a Google Document that will be a schedule of when personal items remaining in the building may be retrieved. If those items are damaged or destroyed, they will have to be identified by their owner and a general price provided, as allowed by the insurance policy. Signor echoed the sentiments of Mr. Barber, and the District’s local insurance agent Kip Harris, in saying that the quick response from Atlantic and other area fire departments, and the fact there was a thick concrete roof underneath the lining, saved the building from much more severe damage. He said firefighters “Did an outstanding job.”

Harlan Police report, 7/28/21

News

July 28th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Harlan Police Department reports five arrests:

A total of three people were arrested on July 20th. 42-year-old Lisa Marie Briggs, of Harlan, was arrested on two active Shelby County warrants. She was transported to the Shelby County Jail. A man and a woman from Harlan were arrested following a call for service. Authorities say 34-year-old Roseann Dawn Randall, was transported to the Shelby County Jail where she was charged with domestic abuse assault. And, 38-year-old Keith Andre Smith, was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with obstruction of emergency communication and child endangerment.

On July 21st, 49-year-old Alan Lloyd Hill, of Harlan, was arrested following a traffic stop. Hill was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia, and prohibited acts.

And, on Tuesday, July 27th, 54-year-old Vernon George Cady, of Sac City, was arrested following a traffic stop in Harlan. Cady was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with driving while revoked.

Reynolds says she may send troopers back to Texas for border duty

News

July 28th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds says undocumented immigrants and illegal drugs are infiltrating Iowa and she may send state troopers back to Texas to provide border security in the future. “As the federal government effectively ignores its constitutional duty to secure our border, states must act and Iowa has,” she says. The state will spend about 300-thousand dollars on the two-week mission 28 state troopers just completed in Texas earlier this month. “It is an investment that I believe was well spent in helping really secure the southern border, the humanitarian efforts that were put in place,” Reynolds says. “I felt that it was the right thing to do.”

Dozens of troopers have been assigned to duty at next month’s Iowa State Fair as well as this week along the route of the Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa. Reynolds says she’ll re-evaluate in late August and may send state troopers back to the southern border. Reynolds says Iowa and other states like Nebraska and Florida have had to step up because the Biden Administration’s policies have made the border a magnet for illegal migrants, drug smugglers and human traffickers. “And it’s vulnerable migrants and law abiding citizens who are paying the price,” Reynolds says.

Reynolds held a news conference at the Iowa Department of Public Safety late this (Wednesday) morning. The patrolman who headed the mission to Texas outlined the ways in which Iowa officers assisted Texas Rangers and federal agents. Captain Mark Miller says some of the Iowa officers assisted in human trafficking investigations and traffic stops. A female trooper at a border gate noticed a migrant in the crowd was going into labor and summoned an ambulance. “A lot of these people have been on a long journey, so once they got their feet in our country, we wanted to make sure that they had water, they had food if they needed it and they had medical care,” Miller said.

Salaries account for about a third of the roughly 300-thousand dollar budget for this mission, with the rest spent on things like food, hotels and overtime pay. Miller says no State Patrol vehicles went south. Instead, troopers did overnight shifts with Texas officers. “It gave them that ability that if a high risk situation did develop, they could actually react to it,” Miller says, “instead of just standing by and waiting for more back up to get there.”

While Texas officers dealt with a driver, Miller says the Iowa troopers were able to interview others in the vehicle and determine if human trafficking was an issue. In one instance, Miller says a trooper found a woman hidden in a pick-up who was in critical condition due to dehydration. The leaders of the Iowa Democratic Party’s Latinx Caucus issued a statement after today’s (Wednesday’s) news conference, saying they’re grateful for the professionalism these troopers showed at the southern border, but they accused the governor of stoking fear against immigrants with her rhetoric. The group’s co-chairs say it is absurd for Reynolds to suggest, as she did late last week, that people seeking asylum are causing the spread of the Delta variant of Covid-19.

Cause of Atlantic Middle School Fire undetermined

News

July 28th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The cause of a fire that damaged part of the Atlantic Middle School, Tuesday afternoon, remains undetermined. That was the word from Atlantic Fire Chief Tom Cappel, during a press conference at the Atlantic Fire Station, Wednesday. Cappel said the continued training area fire departments have received prevented a bad situation from getting worse.

The blaze broke out on the roof of the Atlantic Middle School building at around 12:37-p.m. Cappel said the flames were as high as 20-feet on top of the building, along with thick black smoke.

Atlantic School District Superintendent Steve Barber (left), & Fire Chief Tom Cappel (right)

Crews attacked the fire from the ground, shooting water from the hoses to the roof, while a ladder truck was being set-up.

The fire was contained within about an hour. Atlantic School District Superintendent Steve Barber said a dollar amount of the damage has not yet been tabulated. He said first and foremost, he was glad no one got hurt.

Barber said the damage was primarily from water used to fight the flames.

Insurance adjusters and other who are assessing the damage were on the scene Tuesday and today (Wednesday). As soon as they have a figure from mitigation companies, the Atlantic School Board will hold an emergency meeting to accept a “Not to exceed” number, and get the clean-up started.

Many have wondered how soon teachers, staff and others in the district can get back into the building. Mr. Barber said that’s undetermined right now because there is so much yet to do and much taking place behind the scenes.

Firefighters from Atlantic, Lewis, Marne and Griswold were on the scene, along with Cass EMS, Atlantic Police, the Cass County Sheriff’s Office, Cass County Emergency Management, and the Cass County Drone. Volunteers brought numerous bottles of cold water to help personnel deal with the heat and humidity.