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RUSSELL PETER BYRIEL, 82, of Madrid (5-25-2022)

Obituaries

May 24th, 2022 by Jim Field

RUSSELL PETER BYRIEL, 82, of Madrid died Sunday, May 15, 2022 at his home.  Burial services for RUSSELL PETER BYRIEL will be held on Wednesday, May 25, 2022 at 1:00 pm at Maple Grove Cemetery in Audubon with fellowship to follow at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church.

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RUSSELL PETER BYRIEL is survived by:

Wife:   Winifred

Children:  LaRayne (Bob) Beetler of Kelley, Russell E. (Sandy) Byriel of Ankeny and Jon (Leah) Byriel of Madrid.

Brother:  Glenn Byriel of Boone

7 Grandchildren

 

Heartbeat Today 5-24-2022

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

May 24th, 2022 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Lisa Steen Riggs about this weekend’s TivoliFest celebration in Elk Horn.  Tivoli

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Creston Police report, 5/24/22

News

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Officials with the Creston Police Department report 26-year-old Ashley Kay Heston, of Clearfield, was arrested Monday night at Greater Regional Health, in Creston. Heston was charged with Driving While Barred. She was transported to the Union County Jail and later transferred to the Adams County Jail, where her cash/surety bond was set at $2,000.

Authorities said also, a woman residing in the 100 block of W. Ringgold Street in Creston, reported to Police Monday night, that someone had entered her vehicle parked outside her residence. An envelope of receipt was reported missing. There was no immediate dollar loss estimate available.

Iowa’s Keegan Murray on NBA Draft preparations

Sports

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Former Iowa All American Keegan Murray says he will be working out for and meeting with several teams leading up to next month’s NBA Draft. Murray took part in the draft combine which wrapped up Sunday in Chicago and is considered a possible top five pick.

Murray feels there is still a lot of room for growth in his game.

Murray feels he will be good enough defensively to adapt to the next level.

Murray says he has already met with more than a half dozen of the teams.

The draft is June 23rd.

Former Cyclone Uwazurike works at DE for Denver

Sports

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Former Iowa State standout Eyioma Uwazurike is working at defensive end in Denver. The Broncos selected the All Big 12 defensive lineman in the fourth round of the NFL Draft.

Uwazurike says the key right now is to get up to speed with how the Broncos play defense.

Uwazurike played both inside and on the edge at ISU and rarely came off the field. He feels that prepared him for the NFL.

Not only did his game develop at Iowa State but so did his work in the classroom. Uwazurike went from a struggling student to an All Big 12 academic selection.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley, Tuesday 5/24/22

Weather

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy w/scattered light rain. High near 60. E/NE @ 10-20.

Tonight: Cloudy w/rain & some thundershowers. Low 50. NE @ 10-15.

Tomorrow: Cloudy w/light rain. High 56. N/NE @ 10-20.

Thursday: A chance of showers early. Mo. Cloudy. High 64.

Friday: P/Cldy. High 76.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 64. Our Low was 48. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 83 and the Low was 67. The Record High on this date was 101 in 1939. The Record Low was 33 in 1924.

Red Oak man arrested on Missouri warrants Tues. morning

News

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – A traffic stop by Red Oak Police today (Tuesday) at around 1:36-a.m., resulted in the arrest of a man on warrants out of Missouri. Red Oak Police took 45-year-old Jason Richard Berendes, of Red Oak, into custody at Highway 48 and 222nd Street, on warrants out of Dallas County, MO., for: Domestic Assault-2nd degree/2nd offense-domestic assault-2nd degree/3rd offense; harassment – 1st degree/4th offense-4th degree-1st of 2nd offense/5th offense-domestic assault-4th degree-1st or 2nd offense.

Berendes was being held in the Montgomery County Jail while awaiting extradition to Missouri.

Legislature sends governor bill that blocks Cedar Rapids casino plan

News

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Ninety-five legislators have voted to put the brakes on a proposed casino in Cedar Rapids and the proposal is headed to Governor Kim Reynolds for her signature. The bill would create an immediate moratorium, to prevent the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission from considering any casino license applications over the next two years. Linn County voters approved a gambling referendum in November. Representative Kirsten Running-Marquardt of Cedar Rapids says that means her community is being singled out.

“This is incredibly unfair,” Running-Marquardt says. “People have been navigating and working with the Gaming Commission and then all of a sudden we see a moratorium pop up.” Representative Shannon Lundgren of Peosta says a moratorium on new state casino licenses is a good idea amid all the gambling activity happening in surrounding states. “It gives us an opportunity to look at what’s happening in our competitive states and then make a decision from there if we want to expand the land based casinos in the state,” Lundgren says.

Lundgren says legislators have a responsibility to ensure new casinos don’t siphon customers away from existing casinos — and she suggests lawmakers may set new limits on gambling regulators’ authority in the future. “I think this moratorium just allows us to step back and take a breather and see how we want to move forward — if we want to make any changes in how and why the commission would act going forward,” Lundgren says.

Representative Steve Hansen of Sioux City says as casino construction starts in Nebraska, a moratorium on new casinos in Iowa is short sighted. “The western Iowa casinos from Sioux City down to Council Bluffs, we will be impacted by Nebraska gambling, as will the whole state of Iowa,” Hansen says, “and I think we are going to end up wanting to increase licenses elsewhere in the state of Iowa to pick up that revenue that we’re going to lose.”

Senators considered and approved the moratorium for the first time Monday morning and the House approved it a few hours later. The bill that includes the moratorium on new casino licenses also would let Iowa casinos simulcast out-of-state horse races like the Kentucky Derby and take bets. An earlier version of the bill would have allowed Iowans to bet on video game competitions, but references to E-sports were removed from the bill.

Lawmaker exits Iowa House floor, says he’s leaving for basic training for US Coast Guard Auxiliary

News

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A western Iowa legislator cast his final vote in the Iowa House, then announced late last (Monday) night that he was leaving for basic training for the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. Jon Jacobsen of Council Bluffs says members of the group are unpaid volunteers. “An enormous amount during my youth was involved in endurance swimming and aquatics lifesaving BSA activities. I was a preverbal fish who was always happiest on water,” Jacobsen says.

Jacobsen, who is 62, says for the past eight months he’s been getting fit and losing weight in order to qualify for basic training. He’s joining about 21-thousand other Americans who are volunteers in the Coast Guard Auxilary. Jacobsen says it will give him a new perspective on protecting Iowa’s waterways and flood prevention.

“Instead of serving my constituents in the House, I will be serving them on the Missouri and the Nishnabotna,” Jacobsen said. Jacobsen is not seeking reelection to the House, but is considering a run for the state senate in 2024. Jacobsen is an attorney and a trust officer in a bank.

Legislators approve $5.5 million budget increase for UI, ISU, UNI

News

May 24th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Legislators will return to the state capitol today (Tuesday) to put the finishing touches on state spending plans for the budgeting year that begins July 1st. Republicans who hold majorities in the House and Senate have agreed to provide Iowa’s 15 area community colleges with six-and-a-half million dollars more for the next academic year. Republican Senator Chris Cournoyer of LeClaire says the three state universities will get a five-and-a-half million dollar boost.

“Which brings them up to $575 million in this budget,” Cournoyer says. And Cournoyer says that’s not a trivial amount. Democrats like Representative Cindy Winckler of Davenport say tuition at the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa will have to go up, as state support of the universities today is less than it was in 2009.”It is unfortunate that we have such a backward view of our role in funding education in this state,” Winckler said.

Senator Herman Quirmbach, a Democrat from Ames, says the state universities are being starved. “To continue to bleed resources out of these universities is going to cause long term damage to this state,” Quirmbach says, “long beyond any of us in our tenure here in the Senate.” Representative David Kerr, a Republican from Morning Sun, says he fought with Senators to get as much as he could for scholarships for students planning to be teachers or mental health professionals, but wasn’t able to get as much as he had hoped in his final year as a legislator.

“What do I know? I’m just going to go home, turn the TV on and say: ‘What they heck did they do again?'” Kerr said. “…Why can’t certain things be done together?” As Radio Iowa reported on Monday, the governor’s plan to provide state scholarships to students in private k-through-12 schools has been tabled.