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Since July 16th, over 535 Iowans have texted 988 to chat with a counselor

News

August 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The 9-8-8 National Suicide Prevention Lifeline launched in the middle of July and the volume of calls and texts from Iowans seeking assistance has grown significantly. Peggy Huppert is executive director of the Iowa chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness. “We thought it would take some time to build to a higher level. They were saying within six months or maybe a year we would expect to see a much higher volume of calls and texts,” Huppert says, “but it’s like this is just literally right off the bat.”

Two Iowa providers that had been handling calls and texts to a suicide prevention hotline began getting 9-8-8 contacts when the national number launched July 16th. Since then, the text service reports more than 535 Iowans have chatted via text with a counselor. According to the contractor handling phone calls, 56 of the people who dialed 9-8-8 from Iowa in July were at high risk of suicide.

“That is what we suspected is we would start getting calls that previously would have gone to 911 of someone in imminent danger or who has taken the pills or taken an action to end their life and then calls this number,” Huppert says. Huppert says 9-1-1 operators are trained to dispatch emergency personnel, while the staff on the 9-8-8 system are trained to provide counseling and assess what services the person may need.

“They are estimating 80-90% of calls and texts that come in, they’re going to be able to handle either on the phone or through texting and they’re not even going to have to send out mobile crisis response,” Huppert says. “That’s huge.” In the month of July, 9-8-8 counselors who received calls referred 325 Iowans to other mental health providers.

“The 988 counselors stay on with the caller or the texter until the situation is resolved,” Huppert says. “They stay on as long as is necessary and, in some cases, that might be hours.” Huppert says Iowa was better positioned than other states for the national launch of 9-8-8 service because CommUnity Crisis Services in Iowa City and Foundation 2 Crisis Services in Cedar Rapids had been handling suicide prevention hotline texts and phone calls.

Iowa-based Heartland Express poised have eighth-largest US trucking fleet

News

August 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An eastern Iowa trucking company has announced a 525 MILLION dollar transaction that will make it the nation’s eighth largest trucking fleet. Heartland Express is based in North Liberty. Contract Freighters Incorporated — or C-F-I — is based in Joplin, Missouri. Heartland Express is acquiring C-F-I’s logistics unit in Mexico as well as C-F-I’s truckload unit. C-F-I has facilities in Missouri, Michigan, Arkansas, Texas, Florida and Mexico. The addition of those six locations will give Heartland Express ownership of 30 terminals in the U.S. and Mexico.

After the acquisition is complete, Heartland will have 55-hundred semi tractors and nearly 18-thousand trailers in its fleet. However, C-F-I vehicles and terminals will continue to operate under the C-F-I brand and executive management.

Heartland Express began in 1955 as a hauler of Whirlpool washing machines. According to a news release from the company, adding C-F-I to its roster of companies means Heartland Express will have total assets of nearly two BILLION dollars and generate an estimated one-point-three BILLION dollars in annual revenue.

Iowa native discusses issues in Ukraine with Russian invasion

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Maurice, Iowa, native who has lived in Ukraine for more than 15 years, is back in the area to connect with her family and her mission supporters. Miranda Heytsi and her husband and their church in Tyachiv ministered to refugees fleeing the country when the Russian invasion started six months ago. “Hundreds of people kept passing through our community trying to escape in to go into different countries. Many came in and left because they just needed places to spend a couple of nights maybe get a meal or they went to the borders and had problems and they had to come back.

They needed a place to stay.” So we had many, many people,” she says. Now they work with refugees who stayed there. “Finding places for them to sleep, finding mattresses, finding bedding. We don’t have any places to rent in our town,” she says. “So pretty much even stores we had old stores we made them into places to live — put carpet down, mattresses on the floor. Then again it was in the winter, so we’ve got the whole issue of heating and water and food, clothing, hygiene, everything, everything that’s needed for life.” The church with 30 adult members is providing for some 200 refugees in their care.

Miranda Heytsi

“It was chaotic. It was like calling everybody that we can think of drive around town looking for any place we could think of for refugees. And you have to remember it’s not just us looking for refugees, a whole town looking for a place,” according to Heytsi. “So we’re overpacked. We were ten thousand people in our town and there were like four-thousand refugees with no additional infrastructure and then no preparation. Bam. So everybody had people living with them.”

Miranda Heytsi attended school in Sioux Center and Orange City and first traveled to Ukraine in 1999 while a college student. Miranda married her husband Vasya in 2006 and has lived in that country ever since.

Man rescued after being trapped in southeast Iowa grain bin

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A man escaped catastrophe when he was rescued from a grain bin Monday morning in Appanoose County.

The Appanoose County Sheriff’s Office says it received a call at 10:39 a.m. with reports of a man trapped in a grain bin in rural Moravia. The Moravia Fire Department arrived at the scene and extracted a 58-year-old male from the grain bin that was half full.

The man, who has not been identified, was airlifted to a hospital in Des Moines where he is reportedly in stable condition.

Packed Manchester meeting over proposed Navigator carbon pipeline

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The proposed Iowa route for a Texas company’s carbon pipeline has changed and more than 200 people packed a public hearing in Manchester to express their opinions on the project. The Navigator pipeline would ship liquefied carbon dioxide from ethanol plants to storage in Illinois. Elizabeth Burns-Thompson, a vice president for Navigator, says the route was adjusted once Archer-Daniels-Midland decided to pursue its own carbon pipeline.

A dozen POET ethanol plants in Iowa would be connected to the the Navigator pipeline route. Dubuque County Supervisor Ann McDonough says the company has given zero safety information to emergency services in the area.

A man who spoke at the hearing in Manchester said the proposed route would come within a quarter mile of his house and he’s concerned about ruptures.

In 2020, a carbon pipeline rupture in Mississippi prompted the evacuation of a small town, as liquified carbon dioxide can cause nausea, headaches, mental confusion and respiratory issues. Several speakers urged the audience to send written objections to the Iowa Utilities Board, which will review Navigator’s requests to seize property from landowners unwilling to sign voluntary easements for the pipeline. Iowa-based Summit Carbon Solutions is the third company seeking landowner agreements for a pipeline.

Produce in the Park August 25: Iowa Peaches and Food Trucks Serving Thai and Italian Food

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

ATLANTIC, IA – Produce in the Park is delighted to offer customers local peaches this week. Market Manager Brigham Hoege says vendor Brun Ko Farm will be selling the Iowa-grown peaches in the downtown City Park, and the market’s guest chef will be handing out samples of peach salsa. Peach salsa is good with chips, but also pairs well with pork (also sold at the park).

This week’s food trucks are Pim’s Thai and Pomodoro Fresh Italian. Pomodoro offers a plain butter noodle option for kids, and will offer that popular dish in adult-sized portions thanks to Produce in the Park customer feedback.

Emily Paulsen of Brun Ko Farm with Iowa peaches

The Atlantic Lions Club will be at the park this week with free putt-putt golf and bags games, and Atlantic Parks and Recreation will set up checkers and chess, in addition to a variety of yard games. Produce in the Park continues to welcome new vendors to the park throughout the season. Within the last few weeks, a vendor selling sourdough bread and produce has joined the market, along with a vendor selling hand-embroidered dishtowels and t-shirts. Check out these new vendors at the park on August 25.

Produce in the Park is a farmers market and community gathering held Thursday evening from 4:30-6:30 PM in the Atlantic City Park through October 13.

Produce in the Park August 25 DETAILS…
Time: 4:30-6:30 PM
Location: Atlantic City Park (10 W. 7th St. Atlantic, IA 50022)
Live Music: Sarah Selders
Food Trucks: Pomodoro Italian and Pim’s Thai
Activities: Putt-putt with Atlantic Lions Club, Yard games and board games with Atlantic Parks and Recreation
Fresh local produce: Peaches, tomatoes, zucchini, cucumbers, onions, eggplant, garlic, and more!
Guest Chef: Peach Salsa
Fresh Produce: Tomatoes, zucchini, cucumbers, onions, garlic,
Meats: Beef, pork, lamb, chicken
Staples: Honey, farm-fresh eggs, granola
Treats: Kringle, pastries, fresh-squeezed lemonade, popcorn
Crafts and More: Jewelry, candles and melts, bath salts, art prints, plants
Free drawing for farm-fresh eggs (sponsored by the Cass County Local Food Policy Council)

Payment methods accepted: All vendors accept cash. Many accept credit cards, Venmo, and Farmers Market Nutrition Program (FMNP) Senior and WIC checks. All qualifying food vendors accept SNAP/EBT (also known as food stamps). All fresh produce vendors both accept and distribute Double Up Food Bucks (coupons given for SNAP/EBT purchases of fresh produce).

Produce in the Park August 2022 farmers markets are sponsored by the Atlantic Community Promotion Commission, Cass County Tourism, Cass Health, First Whitney Bank and Trust, the Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce, and Deter Motor Co.
For updates on Produce in the Park, follow Produce in the Park on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ProduceInThePark) or Instagram (www.instagram.com/produceintheparkatlanticia/), or visit the Produce in the Park website to sign up
for the e-newsletter at www.produceintheparkatlanticiowa.com.

For information on vending at the park, contact Market Manager Brigham Hoegh at produceintheparkatlanticiowa@gmail.com or 712-249-5870.

Annual Wings Fly-In/Drive-In and Hall of Fame Induction on August 27th

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Iowa Aviation Museum’s 29th Annual Wings Fly-In/Drive-In and the Hall of Fame Induction for 2022, will be held Saturday, August 27th, at the museum in Greenfield. A pancake breakfast will be served by the Fontanelle Lions Club from 7:30 to 10 am. Cost of the breakfast, which includes admission to the museum, is $8 for adults and children under 5 are free. PIC eat free.

Immediately following the breakfast, Connie Rex Younger and Nicholas A. Turner will be inducted into the Iowa Aviation Hall of Fame. More information on the men and the Hall of Fame can be found on www.flyingmuseum.com or on the Iowa Aviation Museum Facebook page.

For questions, contact 641-343-7184 or email aviation@iowatelecom.net.

ISU scientist use robot for 3-D study of corn leaf angles

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa State University researchers have developed a way to take 3-D pictures with a robot to study the leaf angles of corn plants. Professor Lie Tang says the leaf angles play an important role in how the plant captures sunlight, but it’s hard for a photographer to get pictures with thousands of plants growing together. “Some of them they can grow more than ten foot tall. And you want to capture the angles from bottom to the top in a very tight space,” Tang says. Tang is a professor of agricultural and biosystems engineering and says they developed a system with multiple tiers of cameras that are customized to work together.

“We could have binocular vision or stereo vision, just like our human beings who have two eyes. So we can perceive the world in three dimensional space. It’s the same kind of principle, we even have two cameras through something we call the matching between two cameras,” he says. Tang says the cameras on the robot they call “Phenobot Three,” gives them color plus depth to help determine the leaf angles.  There’s a quite a breakthrough piece, to be able to exactly detect the different angles in a very complex imaging situation,” Tang says.

Lie Tang (ISU photo)

Tang says they use A-I or artificial intelligence and deep learning to sort through the data to measure the angles accurately. “So we are training our computer algorithms to understand the different angles to be able to recognize different angles through training. So that has proven to be very successful,” according to Tang. There are various corn hybrids with an upright leaf angle, to assist in the photosynthetic process and improve crop yields, but the I-S-U researchers say the genetics that control this trait are relatively unknown.

It’s hoped the advanced photo system will help them learn more. The research is supported by a two-point-five million-dollar National Science Foundation grant.

CDC estimates 84.5% of Iowa kids likely had COVID

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Centers for Disease Control estimates the vast majority of Iowa kids have had COVID. The C-D-C analyzed samples from children between the ages of six months and 17 years who had blood drawn at commercial labs for non-COVID tests in May and June. The C-D-C estimates 84-and-a-half percent of Iowa children had COVID or were recovering from an infection in late spring. Having had COVID indicates a person likely has antibodies against the virus that prevent reinfection. A U-C-L-A study of mild cases of COVID has found antibodies against COVID drop after about three months and disappear after a year. The Mayo Clinic’s website shows the number of daily cases of COVID in Iowa has been dropping since the end of July.

The C-D-C estimates just under 80 percent of U.S. children had COVID or were recovering from an infection this spring. An earlier estimate from the agency indicated that by the end of April about 60 percent of ADULTS either had an active case of COVID or had recovered from one recently.

Charges filed in May 29 Missouri River boating fatality

News

August 23rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa DNR News) – LOGAN, Iowa – The Harrison County Attorney’s Office, Monday (Aug. 22nd) charged a Fremont, Nebraska man, 22-year-old Garret Vanderheiden, with involuntary manslaughter, a class D felony, and boating while intoxicated – first offense, a serious misdemeanor. The charges stem from a boating incident that occurred May 29th, and that resulted in the death of 20-year-old Emma Olsen, from of Omaha.

Vanderheiden is accused of being the operator of a 30-foot red and white Scarab that sank in the Missouri River, near Mondamin, Iowa. The charges are the result of an extensive investigation by Iowa conservation officers.

Note: A criminal charge is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.