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Iowa skywatchers are on stand-by for tonight’s Strawberry Supermoon

News

June 14th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – This is expected to be the hottest day of the year so far, with an Extreme Heat Warning posted for eastern Iowa, and Mother Nature should offer Iowans something of a post-heat treat tonight (Tuesday). Peter Geiger, editor of the Farmer’s Almanac, says June’s Strawberry Supermoon is set to appear in the night sky this evening.

“When it’s a supermoon, it’s maybe 13% bigger than a regular full moon,” Geiger says, “but what’s kind of interesting is that the full moons were named by Native American tribes way, way back maybe 300 years ago and it related to what was going on around them.” According to the Almanac, the name was given because June marks the beginning of summer in North America when the strawberries begin to bloom.

“Strawberry season tends to be very short and it tends to be during the month of June and early July,” Geiger says, “and so the Algonquin tribe is the one that named this particular moon the Strawberry Full Moon.” This will be the first of three “supermoons” to appear over the summer months.

(Thanks to the Minnesota News Network!)

State cross country meet schedule will rotate between classes

Sports

June 14th, 2022 by admin

(IHSAA) Feedback from the spring joint committee meeting featuring staff and board members of both the IHSAA and IGHSAU led to the approval of a rotating State Meet schedule starting in 2022. The adjustment is a result of both teacher and sport scheduling conflicts at both large and small schools. Each class will move one session each year along the two-day and four-session schedule.

State Qualifying Meets will also feature a small schedule adjustment: Girls’ races will start at 4 p.m. and boys’ races will begin at 4:40 p.m. beginning in the fall 2022 season.

Future State Meet Schedule

2022

Friday

  • AM: Class 1A
  • PM: Class 2A

Saturday

  • AM: Class 3A
  • PM: Class 4A

2023

Friday

  • AM: Class 4A
  • PM: Class 1A

Saturday

  • AM: Class 2A
  • PM: Class 3A

2024

Friday

  • AM: Class 3A
  • PM: Class 4A

Saturday

  • AM: Class 1A
  • PM: Class 2A

2025

Friday

  • AM: Class 2A
  • PM: Class 3A

Saturday

  • AM: Class 4A
  • PM: Class 1A

Boys postseason basketball assignments will be released later moving forward

Sports

June 14th, 2022 by admin

(IHSAA) The Board of Control approved recommendations out of the basketball advisory committee to eliminate the early release of substate and district pods and their associated coach seeding meetings starting in 2023. In their place, IHSAA staff will compile and release brackets for the lead-up rounds and the state tournament.

“We appreciate the advisory committee and leadership from the Iowa Basketball Coaches Association being proactive with this adjustment,” IHSAA assistant director and basketball administrator Todd Tharp said. “Pushing back the release dates will allow us to gather as much information as possible from regular season games and complete improved postseason assignments. We want to be responsive to our advisory committee and head coaches with their concerns regarding assignments and seeding meetings.”

Brackets for Class 2A and Class 1A would be slated for release during Week 32 (Feb. 6, 2023) of the NFHS calendar, and Class 4A and Class 3A during Week 33 (Feb. 13, 2023). Last season, district and substate assignments – prior to seeding meetings and brackets – were released starting Jan. 21.

State Team Dual Wrestling will be held at Xtream Arena in Coralville beginning in 2023

Sports

June 14th, 2022 by admin

(IHSAA) Following April’s announcement to move wrestling’s State Dual Team Tournament to the weekend previously occupied by Sectional tournaments, IHSAA staff sought statewide site visits and bids for event venues.

On Monday, the Board of Control approved a three-year agreement with Xtream Arena in Coralville to begin on Feb. 4, 2023 and coincide with the weekend currently slated for the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union’s inaugural wrestling tournament.

“We’re thrilled to take our State Dual Team Tournament to Xtream Arena, which will provide a world-class wrestling venue and event staff for our student-athletes,” IHSAA executive director Tom Keating said.

“In addition to the amenities Xtream Arena can provide, scheduling it alongside the new girls’ tournament will benefit our participating schools, officials, and spectators. We trust the team at Think Iowa City and Iowa City Area Sports Commission will help us grow the dual team tournament as part of an outstanding weekend of Iowa high school wrestling.”

Xtream Arena opened in 2020 in Coralville’s Iowa River Landing, just off of Interstate 80. The venue can seat just over 5,000 spectators and is attached to the GreenState Family Fieldhouse, which will allow for warm-up and team space during the tournament.

Iowa’s governor launches $100 million school safety plan

News

June 14th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa/UPDATED) –  Governor Kim Reynolds is directing 100 million dollars in federal pandemic relief to school safety measures.  “Across the country, there’s a sense of
urgency just with the acts of violence that we see taking place every single day,” Reynolds says. The state is buying software to monitor school threats online and will provide an app, website and phone number that lets people anonymously report concerns. And 50-thousand dollars will be distributed for each school building in the state, to cover security measures. Nine people are being hired for a School Safety Bureau being established in the Iowa Department of Public Safety.

“Every family should be able to confidently send their children to school knowing that they will be safe,” Reynold says, “and as the governor of Iowa and a grandmother of school-aged children, I want to assure parents that your childrens’ safety at school is just as important to me.” Reynolds had asked legislators to create an Iowa School Safety Bureau a few years ago and she’s now using federal funds to set it up. Every public school district and private school in Iowa will be offered an emergency radio for every school building, to communicate directly with law enforcement if there’s a security threat. Public Safety Commissioner Stephan Bayens says the goal is to identify concerning behaviors early.

“Unfortunately we live in a time when we can no longer simply assume that our sheltered havens of schools will remain safe,” Bayens says. “Rather, we must be intentional about providing concrete training, tools and assistance so that every school, regardless of its size, can provide the environment needed to feed these hungry minds.” Bayens says his agency will provide active shooter training to anyone who requests it. “The governor’s School Safety Bureau will facilitate training, free of charge, to law enforcement, first responder, schools, houses of worship and civilians,” Bayans says. And 50-thousand dollars will be distributed for each school building in the state, to cover security measures.

None of the 100 million dollars in spending announced today (Tuesday) will be directed to mental health programs. The governor says school safety, though, requires addressing the mental health needs of students and state spending on the mental health system will increase by nearly three-and-a- half million dollars over the next 12 months.  “The debate on guns will continue,” Reynolds said, “but until we consider the lethal weapon in these events is the person who picks up the gun and turns it against another, we risk overlooking other solutions that directly address the cause.” Reynolds cites a recent survey which found 24 percent of Iowa 11th graders had thought about killing themselves in the past year. University of Minnesota research indicates many teenage mass shooters had contemplated suicide and ultimately redirected their self-loathing into hatred of others.

Cass County Board of Supervisors News – 6/14/22

News

June 14th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Cass County Board of Supervisors, Tuesday morning, heard a request from Dave Highfill, with the Atlantic Hawks Remote Control (R/C) Club, with regard to ARPA Funding.

(He explained they need the funds to purchase a mower to mow about three-acres south of Atlantic, where they meet weekly and also teach people how to fly r/c aircraft.)

Dave Highfill (2nd row of pews& on the left) makes ARPA request for the Atlantic Hawks R/C Club

It was thought the funds could come from the General Fund for “Outdoor recreation,” but the Board was of the consensus that the request did not fall under the AARP criteria Supervisor Steve Green…

Supervisor Mark O’Brien also pointed out the current round of ARPA Funds the County received, are already spoken for.

The request was tabled for the time being. In other news, the Supervisors approved by a vote of 3-to 2, a contract for the upcoming Fiscal Year, with Wellness Coordinator Brigham Hoege. The vote included a $1,000 increase in the County’s share, for a total of $7,000. The position is a 28E between four organizations; Cass County, ISU Extension, Cass Health and the YMCA. This will be the third year for the Wellness Coordinator’s position.

The Board also passed a Resolution allowing $29,500 in ARPA funds to be used for the Cass County Drone Team, for the purposes previously mentioned. And, they passed a Resolution distributing ARPA funds to the Cass County Fire Departments, with the exception of Anita, which has already received a share of funds. The remaining Fire Departments in the County will receive $25,000 per year for the next three-years, effective July 1st, as requested by the respective Fire Chiefs.

They passed a Resolution setting a Standard Agreement for the disbursement of ARPA Funds, to ensure uniformity and fulfillment of requests follows government rules, especially with regard to fire departments and other such entities. The Supervisors approved continuing with the Zoom meetings, and included the possibility of a phone attendance system like Adair County has. Regardless, the Board agreed they want a way to identify persons who use the dial-in and Zoom system, instead of just being identified as a “guest.”

The Board officially approved the hiring of two people for the Treasurer’s Office, but denied a request to suspend the abatement of taxes (amounting to $495) through a petition Treasurer Tracey J. Marshall had received. Their contention was the petition should have come directly to the Board first, according to Iowa Code. The Board had discussed having General Relief Coordinator Deb Schuler provide the necessary funds to get the petitioner caught-up, but she informed them the law does not allow her to use General Relief funds for the purposes of taxes and the like.

Iowa volleyball team releases complete 2022 schedule

Sports

June 14th, 2022 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The University of Iowa volleyball team released its complete 2022 schedule, which includes 13 home games at Xtream Arena in Coralville. 

The schedule includes 30 contests, 10 nonconference and 20 conference. Iowa opens the season against Gonzaga, Florida International (Aug. 26) and Oklahoma (Aug. 27) in the Oklahoma Invitational in Norman, Oklahoma, before traveling to Boulder, Colorado, to face Washington (Sep. 3) and Colorado (Sept. 4) in the Pac-12/Big Ten Challenge. The Hawkeyes will compete against Wright State, Iowa State (Sep. 9) and Drake (Sep. 10) in the Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series Tournament. 

Iowa’s home opener will be Friday, Sept. 16, versus South Dakota State in the Hawkeye Invitational. The Hawkeyes will also host North Florida (Sept. 16) and Northern Iowa (Sept. 17) that weekend. 

The Hawkeyes will face opponents from the West Coast Conference, Sun Belt, Big 12, PAC-12, Horizon, Missouri Valley, Summit, and Atlantic Sun in nonconference action. 

Iowa will challenge 10 teams that qualified for the 2021 NCAA Tournament (Illinois, Iowa State, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, Washington, and Wisconsin). 

Iowa will battle Illinois, Michigan, Michigan State, Northwestern, Penn State and Wisconsin once, while taking on Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio State, Purdue and Rutgers both home and away. 

The Hawkeyes’ Big Ten home opener falls on Friday, Sept. 23 against the Buckeyes, while their home finale will be on Wednesday, Nov. 23 versus the Wolverines. 

Jim Barnes enters his first season as head coach of the Hawkeyes. Iowa returns eight letterwinners, while adding two freshmen and seven transfers to the roster.

Iowa, Clemson to meet at Emerald Coast Classic

Sports

June 14th, 2022 by admin

NICEVILLE, Florida — Game matchups for the eighth annual Emerald Coast Classic, which include the University of Iowa, were announced by Global Sports on Tuesday.

Iowa will face Clemson in a semifinal round game at 6 p.m. (CT) on Friday, Nov. 25, while TCU will play Cal at 8:30 p.m. (CT). The third-place game will be played at 3 p.m. (CT) on Saturday Nov. 26, with the championship game scheduled for a 6 p.m. (CT) tip off on that Saturday. All games will be held at Raider Arena on the campus of Northwest Florida State College. Television information will be released later this summer.

Iowa captured the 2022 Big Ten Conference Tournament championship, tied for fourth in the conference standings and won 26 overall games, the second most wins in a season in program history. Fran McCaffery has coached Iowa to 20-plus wins eight of the last 10 seasons, including four straight years. The Hawkeyes have competed in the last three NCAA Tournaments and have been ranked in the final Associated Press Poll each of the last three years: No. 16 in 2020, No. 8 in 2021 and No. 25 in 2022.

This year will mark the second appearance for the Hawkeyes in the Emerald Coast Classic. Iowa previously competed in the 2016 tournament versus Virginia and Memphis.

Returning starting forwards Hunter Tyson and PJ Hall will key the fortunes for Clemson, which won five of its last six games to close out the 2021-22 campaign. Brad Brownell is the winningest coach in Clemson history, earning 218 victories in 12 years while guiding the Tigers to the 2021 NCAA Tournament, 2018 Sweet 16, 2011 NCAA Tournament and three NIT appearances.

The Horned Frogs’ second NCAA Tournament bid under coach Jamie Dixon was their fourth postseason appearance in the five seasons that postseason was held, the best in program history. TCU has all five starters returning from its 2021-22 team which finished 21-13, its fourth 20-win season in six years under Dixon with a program-record five wins over AP Top 25 teams. TCU surged late with consecutive victories over top-10 opponents in Texas Tech and Kansas to secure a NCAA Tournament berth.

Mark Fox will enter his fourth season as the head men’s basketball coach at Cal and has averaged nearly 19 wins each year in his 17-year coaching career. In previous stops at Nevada and Georgia, Fox has guided teams to five appearances in the NCAA Tournament. Cal boasts 28 postseason appearances, including 19 NCAA Tournament appearances.

On campus first-round games start Nov. 17 with TCU hosting Louisiana Monroe. Cal hosts Southern on Nov. 18 and Omaha travels to Iowa and Loyola Maryland visits Clemson on Nov. 21.  

Tickets will go on sale later this summer. For more tournament information visit emeraldcoastclassic.com.

Rain and hail causes some crop replanting

Ag/Outdoor

June 14th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Some Iowa farmers had to replant following rain and hail last week. The U-S-D-A report shows the corn planting was completed by the end of the week and just three percent of the beans remain to be planted. There were some reports however of pockets of heavy rain and isolated severe hail that led to farmers replanting some damaged crops. Ninety-five percent of the corn has emerged and the report says 86 percent of the corn crop is rated good to excellent condition. Eighty-four percent of soybeans have emerged — with 82 percent of the beans rated good to excellent.

Grassley and Ernst not ready to commit on gun control bill

News

June 14th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says he’s waiting for details before saying whether he’ll support or oppose a bipartisan group’s response to recent mass shootings. Grassley says he’s “encouraged” by the progress on the subject so far in Washington. Grassley says, “What I’ve seen going on here in the last couple of weeks in the Congress, with the work of a bipartisan group that the leaders have put together in an effort to make schools safer, make it more easy to keep guns away from people that shouldn’t have them.” Rallies in six Iowa cities last weekend called on Grassley and Iowa’s other Republican Senator, Joni Ernst, to back gun restrictions.

Ten Republicans and ten Democrats announced Sunday they’d agreed on a package that includes making criminal records of juveniles available for background checks when a prospective gun buyer is under the age of 21. “I’m going to have to wait for the statutory language before I would take a position on it, but I’m encouraged by what they’re trying to put together,” Grassley says, “and I think that that’s a good thing and I’m glad to hear from Iowans who want to do it.” Grassley says he’s looking for two basic principles which he says are musts in the legislation. “One, to protect the constitutional rights that come from the Second Amendment,” Grassley says, “and make sure that anybody that’s deprived of those constitutional rights, that there’s a due process in place to protect their constitutional rights.”

Senator Joni Ernst is also withholding judgment on the package until she reads the text of the legislation. “The devil will be in the details…and making sure that they’re getting to the root causes of the issue of gun violence…and not infringing on the rights of law-abiding citizens,” Ernst says. The Des Moines City Council is urging both Grassley and Ernst to support the bill when it comes up for a vote in the Senate. Iowa’s capital city has the state’s highest murder rate. Nine people have been victim of homicide in Des Moines so far this year. Seven of those cases were fatal shootings.