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Heroes of 911 remembered

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Flags on state buildings are at half-staff today (Wednesday) to remember those who lost their lives in the September 11th terrorist attacks 23 years ago. Iowa Senator Joni Ernst, a Republican from Red Oak, issued a video statement reflecting on the attacks.

“September 11, 2001 tested our nation in ways we could never have imagined it. It also revealed the profound strength and resilience of the American spirit,” Ernst says. Ernst says every day Americans became heroes and first responders selflessly rushed in to help others on that day. “America stood united, unwavering in our resolve to never let fear dictate our future,” she says. Ernst says we have to continue to remember the way the country responded.

“Today, we reaffirm our commitment to never forget and always remember. We must regain our patriotism and be ever vigilant to safeguard the freedoms we too often take for granted,” Ernst says. Ernst is a retired combat veteran who served in the Iowa National Guard.

Governor Kim Reynolds also issued a statement, saying. “Nearly 3,000 Americans died in the national tragedy, including hundreds of first responders who ran in to save the victims of an evil, unspeakable attack on innocent people. I stand with every American on Patriot Day to honor and forever remember the thousands who senselessly lost their lives and their families who will always long for their loved ones. You will never be forgotten.”

Central Iowa fire department offers proactive health care effort

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Des Moines Fire Department is launching a program designed to cut the number of non-emergency calls while connecting frequent 9-1-1 users with long-term services. People can now get medical care at a downtown homeless shelter, while paramedics will visit public housing, homeless encampments, and people who often call 9-1-1. Assistant Fire Chief Percy Coleman says building trust will be key to the program’s success.

Coleman says, “Our goal is to get those individuals to a point where they’re independent and that they can take care of their own needs.” A city report says 82 individuals made up nearly 15-hundred of the fire department’s transports in 2022 alone. Through the department’s Mobile Integrated Healthcare program, the team will identify nearby long-term resources available to patients, and help set up things like doctor appointments, transportation, and ways to refill prescriptions. Coleman says the program is centered around fostering independence, along with trust.

“Our folks are able to get out there and meet with these folks,” he says. “They develop a positive, working relationship, and so it’s the communication piece. They’re able to articulate what their needs are and we’re able to plug folks right in.”

Coleman says the department began using the program in April but they’ve been building out its services before launching it to the public.

UPDATED: State legislators file court challenge to Summit pipeline permit

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Thirty-seven Republicans who serve in the state legislature are filing lawsuits in state and federal courts that challenge the Iowa Utilities Commission’s decision to grant Summit Carbon Solutions a permit for its proposed pipeline. Representative Charley Thomson of Charles City, an attorney, is a spokesman for the group. “I’m not sure we should call it a pipeline, actually,” Thomson says. “It’s better described as a tax credit harvesting mechanism because that’s the only real purpose it serves.”

Summit’s pipeline would qualify for billions in federal tax credits for capturing carbon and storing it permanently underground. Thomson says he’s happy for people to make money, but when state regulators approved the project, Thomson argues the property rights of Iowa landowners who object to the pipeline were violated. “That is going to dig up, against their will, the farmland of hundreds of Iowans, many of which are Century Farms, for no good reason. We were unable to get the Iowa Utilities Commission to focus on the question of a lack of public use here. If anything, if I may coin a word here, it’s ‘anti-useful’ because it puts people at risk,” Thomson says. “…It is taking away a right that we cherish in this country.”

Thomson is speaking at a news conference later this (Wednesday) afternoon next to the hospital in Charles City. “Where we will be standing would be in the ‘kill zone’ of the pipeline if a leak were to occur,” Thomson says. “According to the calculations that our people have done, a cloud about 18 feet tall would reach the Cedar River near the pipeline by the hospital if it were to rupture.”

Thomson says there’s a chance the group’s federal lawsuit might wind up in the U-S Supreme Court and lead to overturning a 2005 opinion on the use of eminent domain. The so-called Kelo decision OK’d the use of eminent domain to seize private property for economic development. “There’s been a lot of commentary ever since Kelo came out about its legal deficiencies, its constitutional deficiencies,” Thomson says. “We are hoping and thinking that the time is right to bring this to the U.S. Supreme Court eventually and get the Kelo dissent adopted as the law of the land.”

In his dissent, U-S Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas criticized the majority’s decision on eminent domain — saying it meant that while citizens are safe from the government in their homes, the homes themselves are not.

(Here’s the list of legislators who’ve signed onto the lawsuit: Senator Kevin Alons, Senator Rocky De Witt, Senator Lynn Evans, Senator Jesse Green, Senator Dennis Guth, Senator Mark Lofgren, Senator David Rowley, Senator Sandy Salmon, Senator Jason Schultz, Senator Jeff Taylor, Senator Cherielynn Westrich, Representative Eddie Andrews, Representative Brooke Boden, Representative Steven Bradley, Representative Ken Carlson, Representative Mark Cisneros, Representative Zach Dieken, Representative Dean Fisher, Representative Dan Gehlbach, Representative Thomas Gerhold, Representative Cindy Golding, Representative Helena Hayes, Representative Bob Henderson, Representative Steven Holt, Representative Heather Hora, Representative Thomas Jeneary, Representative Bobby Kaufman, Representative Joshua Meggers, Representative Anne Osmundson, Representative Bradley Sherman, Representative Jeff Shipley, Representative Luana Stoltenberg, Representative Henry Stone, Representative Mark Thompson, Representative Charles Thomson, Representative Skyler Wheeler, and Representative Derek Wulf.)

Child Passenger Safety Week is September 15-21, 2024

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

[Kansas City, MO] — Every year, the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) Region 7, which includes Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska, partners with local communities to hold Child Passenger Safety Week, which runs this year from September 15-21. The annual safety week ends with National Seat Check Saturday (September 21), a day for parents and caregivers to receive free instruction on how to correctly install and use the right car seats for their children. There are many locations throughout the region that will be offering free car seat inspections by certified Child Passenger Safety Technicians. Find out if an event or technician is available in your community by visiting www.nhtsa.gov/CarSeatInspection. Technicians will check car seats, let caregivers know if their children are in the right seats for their ages and sizes, and show them how to install the right seats correctly.

“Unfortunately, many parents are overconfident about their car seats,” said Regional Administrator Susan DeCourcy. “They think they are protecting their kids, but statistically, nearly half of car seats are either the wrong seat for the child’s age and size, or the seats are installed incorrectly. That puts children at risk.”

According to NHTSA, motor vehicle crashes are a leading cause of death for children. Every day in 2022, an average of three children 13 and younger were killed in crashes, and another 429 were injured. “We know parents love their kids,” added DeCourcy, “so they’ll do everything in their power to protect them. An easy way to do that is to double-check their car seats — it’s worth making sure.”

In 2022, almost half (49%) of the children killed while riding in light pickup trucks were unrestrained, followed by SUVs (38%), passenger cars (34%), and vans (12%). NHTSA wants caregivers to know that it’s never safe to ride unbuckled in a passenger vehicle — no matter how short the trip or how big the vehicle. Bigger vehicles don’t protect child passengers, but properly used car seats, booster seats, and seat belts do.

When it comes to child passengers, there is a correctly sized seat for every age and developmental stage — from infants to teens. Whether it’s a rear-facing car seat, a forward-facing car seat installed with a tether, a booster seat, or a seat belt, a certified Child Passenger Safety Technician can put parents’ minds at ease by discussing correct car seat selection and showing them how to correctly install that seat in their vehicle. Children should stay in each seat and position until they outgrow those limits, and it’s important for all children under 13 to ride in the back seat. NHTSA

If the allotted times on Saturday don’t work for your schedule, but you’d still like to have your car seats checked, find out if a technician is available in your community by visiting this helpful website from NHTSA. You can even filter your search results by Spanish-speaking technicians, virtual appointments, and Child Passenger Safety Week events. NHTSA.gov also has free resources available to caregivers. Learn about the different car seat types, read NHTSA’s research-based recommendations, and find and compare car seats.

It’s also important for caregivers to register their car seats with the manufacturer so they can be notified in the event of a recall. Download NHTSA’s SaferCar app, which allows users to save their vehicle, car seat, and tire info in a virtual garage. If any of the saved equipment is included in a safety recall, the app will send a notification.

For more information on child car seat safety, as well as how to find other car seat check events, go to www.nhtsa.gov/therightseat.

Fatal motorcycle crash in NW Iowa Wed. morning

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Spencer, Iowa) – A collision at around 8:45-a.m. today (Wednesday) in northwest Iowa, claimed the life of a man from Clay County. The Iowa State Patrol reports a 2006 Harley Davidson motorcycle operated by 54-year-old Douglas Wayne Nielsen, of Everly, ran into the rear of a 2013 Chrysler Town and Country Van, causing Nielsen to be thrown from cycle. Nielsen was then struck by a pickup truck.

The accident happened as the motorcycle and van were traveling east on 350th Street in Clay County. Nielsen died at the scene. No other injuries were reported. The Patrol was assisted by the Clay County Sheriff’s Officer, Fostoria Fire Dept., and Spencer Fire/Ambulance.

Indictment lists 7 Iowa credit unions as victims in money laundering scheme

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A federal grand jury has returned an indictment accusing 18 people from five states, including Iowa, with bank fraud and money laundering. Court documents list seven Iowa credit unions as victims of the nationwide scheme. The defendants are accused of depositing at least 10 MILLION dollars worth of stolen business checks. Prosecutors say they registered sham businesses with state and federal agencies that were identical or similar to the names of the legitimate business, then deposited the checks in accounts under those alternative business names. According to the U-S Attorney based in Des Moines, the group was able to withdraw at least two MILLION dollars from those fraudulent accounts. At least a dozen businesses in the U-S and Canada and 14 banks and credit unions were victims.

The names of the defendants are listed in court documents, but their addresses are not listed, so it’s unclear which defendants are from Iowa. The credit unions named include:

  • Ascentra Credit Union
  • Collins Community Credit Union
  • Financial Plus Credit Union
  • Greater Iowa Credit Union
  • GreenState Credit Union, and
  • Veridian Credit Union.

Bottled Water Advisory in effect for the City of Shelby

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Shelby, Iowa) – The Shelby County Emergency Management Agency says “Due to the continuation of the discolored water, the City of Shelby is under a bottled water advisory until sample results become available. Tap Water can be used for bathing and other uses, but bottled water should be used for drinking, food prep, and similar uses. Bottled water will be provided to the Citizens of Shelby at the west side of the FireHall today after 10 am, 2 cases per family.”

Residents of Shelby have been dealing with pink-colored water caused by high levels of manganese since Sept. 7th. The water has also been brown at times, according to some residents.

Shelby’s water supervisor, Chad Gordon, told KETV in Omaha, the discolored water began appearing when two of the town’s four water pumps didn’t re-engage. He said the water flow was cut in half, but the chemicals treating the water weren’t. On Sept. 8, the City said on social media, that an excess of potassium permanganate accounts for the unusual color, but the water has been tested and is safe to drink.

In February, the water in Shelby was undrinkable due to high levels of manganese.

Iowan Whitson picked to command space station mission next spring

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa-born astronaut Peggy Whitson is scheduled to command another two-week mission to the International Space Station next year. At 64 years old, Whitson is considered America’s most experienced astronaut. The Beaconsfield native flew on three NASA long-duration space flights and the Axiom 2 Mission in May of last year. She’s spent a total of 675 days in space, more than any other U-S astronaut or woman astronaut in the world.

Peggy Whitson (Axiom photo)

The next Axiom mission, AX-4, will use a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and a Dragon spacecraft, launching from Florida. Whitson’s commanding an international crew of four, with the other three astronauts hailing from India, Poland and Hungary. Axiom says the mission will emphasize scientific research, technology demonstrations, and the commercialization of space.

Axiom has not released a specific date for the launch, only saying it’ll be in the spring of 2025.

Nebraska group sends appliances to Sioux City flood victims

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Norfolk, Nebraska organization delivered 15 sets of washers and dryers to Sioux City Tuesday for families who lost those appliances in the flooding. The Community Action Agency of Siouxland is coordinating recovery efforts and Katie Logan is part of the agency’s long-term recovery group. “We have been working for the past couple months to help all victims of the flood figure out what their unmet needs are and get them connected to the resources,” she says. “We are very fortunate that Orphan Grain Train reached out to us right away when the flood hit our area.” She says they told the Orphan Grain Train they had several families that needed washer and dryers and they quickly responded.

Logan says they are still taking requests for items to help flood victims. “Our long term recovery group will be banded together for as long as it takes us to get everybody taken care of. I urge any family that still has an unmet need in our county to please call us at the Community Action Agency of Siouxland and we will get them hooked up with whatever they might need,” she says. Logan says other requests have come in for refrigerators, freezers, lawn mowers, drywall and insulation from flood victims.

Woodbury County residents can contact the Community Action Agency of Siouxland to seek help.

Cass County Supervisors to attend Economic Development & Community Planning meeting on Thursday

News

September 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Cass County Auditor Kathy Somers reports the Cass County Board of Supervisors will attend an Economic Development and Community Planning meeting, Thursday morning. The meeting takes place at the Whitney Building (222 Chestnut Street), beginning at 10-a.m.

Somers says there may be a quorum of the Board present, but no deliberations among the Board members, or action, will be taken.