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Adult retreat proposed for an area near Lyman in Cass County

News

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Cass County Board of Supervisors, Tuesday morning, received a presentation from Aaron Sindt, from Lyman, with regard to an economic development project for an area near Lyman, that would serve as an Adult-only Retreat with cabins. Currently, he has a building pad down and a pond on the property. Other ponds will be added.

After a party check’s-in, they will be given a code and given your options.

Sindt said the plan is to build six cabins around the ponds. The fully-furnished cabins will be around 800 square feet, each.

Your food will already be in the refrigerator, ready to go, along with instructions on how to cook it. Outside the cabins will be a high end grilling area with contact information for local cattle and hog producers if a guest really likes the quality of those locally-sourced products they’re grilling.

A natural spring will supply water to the cabins. He said he wants the retreat to be a place where anyone 21 and older can get away for a night and have a high-end experience where everything is included and you can go home the next day without any problems. Along with the cabins, he wants to build an event-center of sorts, for custom farm-to-table events, small class reunions, small family events, work building seminars, etc.

He hopes to have the Adult Retreat open by the Spring of 2023. Sindt said he looked into some grant opportunities to help with funding the project, but acknowledged it’s not easy to find anything for unincorporated cities. He wasn’t asking for funds when he spoke to the Board on Tuesday. Sindt just wanted to show them his plans and for them to keep him in mind for any
Supervisor Steve Green told Sindt that they do have a tax rebate program available for economic development projects in the unincorporated parts of the county.

Cyclones to play in 2022 Phil Knight Invitational

Sports

February 15th, 2022 by admin

AMES, Iowa – The Iowa State men’s basketball team will play in the 2022 Phil Knight Invitational November 24-25 and Nov. 27 in Portland, Oregon. Games will be played at the Moda Center, Veterans Memorial Coliseum and the Chiles Center as the men’s tournament is played alongside a four-team women’s tournament that will feature Iowa State, Michigan State, North Carolina and Oregon.

Along with the Cyclones, the PKI features a number of the nation’s elite men’s basketball programs. Iowa State’s bracket will also include Alabama, Michigan State, North Carolina, Oregon, Portland, UConn and Villanova.

The field has a combined 206 NCAA Tournament appearances, 43 Final Fours and 16 NCAA titles. Each team will play one game per day in the bracket-style format on Nov. 24, 25 and 27.

Brackets and the complete schedule of games will be announced this summer. Ticket information will be available soon. Fans can sign up for pre-sale access at https://rosequarter.com/hoops/.

Council Bluffs Man Sentenced for Child Pornography Offense

News

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA – The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa today (Tuesday), said a Council Bluffs man, 34-year-old Brian Allen Christensen, was sentenced Monday, February 14th to 10-years (120 months) in prison, for Receipt of Child Pornography. His sentence was handed-down in Council Bluffs U-S District Court. Christensen’s term of imprisonment will be followed by five years of supervised release. According to court documents Christensen was found guilty by a trial jury on September 21, 2021.

In 2018 the Nebraska State Patrol conducted an undercover operation and identified a computer in Council Bluffs that shared images and videos using the Peer-2-Peer program. Iowa Internet Crimes against Children took over the investigation and found evidence Christensen had regularly searched for child pornography as early as February 2013.

The Nebraska State Patrol, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, Internet Crimes Against Children section investigated the case, which was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Offices for the Southern District of Iowa.

CAM School Board approves personnel changes and SWCC Ed. Svcs. Contract

News

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Anita, Iowa) – The CAM School Board held their regular monthly meeting Monday evening, in Anita. Shared CAM-Nodaway Valley Superintendent Paul Croghan told KJAN News the Board acted on approving some changes in personnel.

Mr. Croghan said the Board discussed the FY 22/23 School Calendar & Budget for the benefit of new Board member, and recent board members to review the process.

The CAM School Board approved an Education Services Contract with SWCC (Southwestern Community College), with regard to a pilot program taking place across the State for a building operations pathway program.

The program takes place by Zoom Monday and Wednesdays from 8- to 9-a.m., with hands-on experience Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. That might include aerating the football field, check roof-top HVAC units, and learn how contractors adjust to different aspects of building operations. In other business, the Board approved a Budget Guarantee for 2022-23.

And they approved a lease agreement for a CAM storefront on Main street, in Anita.

The Board’s final order of business was discussion with regard to district facilities.

Backyard & Beyond 2-15-2022

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

February 15th, 2022 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits with retired pastor and author Nancy Jensen.

Play

Grassley bill seeks ways to identify school threats before they happen

News

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – On the fourth anniversary of the deadliest high school shooting in U-S history, Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley pushed for passage of his bipartisan bill called the EAGLES Act. Grassley, a Republican, says the bill would expand the role of the U-S Secret Service’s National Threat Assessment Center to identify and manage threats from teenagers before they result in more tragedies. Grassley says, “We would, by amending that assessment center, give it responsibility not only to do what the Secret Service already does there but to prevent school violence.”

Seventeen people were killed at a high school in Parkland, Florida, with 17 more injured. A 19-year-old former student was charged in the Valentine’s Day 2018 killings, which surpassed the Columbine High School massacre that killed 15, including the perpetrators, in Colorado in 1999. Under his bill, Grassley says trained professionals would be tasked with working to identify and manage threats at the high school level before they occur. “My bill would direct experts in child psychology to work closely with the Secret Service Threat Assessment Center to develop proven and evidence-based techniques to identify potential threats,” he says.

Passing the legislation is vital, Grassley says, in the fight to protect schools and to promote safe and healthy learning environments. The measure would establish a Safe School Initiative to expand research on school violence and how to prevent it. Grassley says, “The EAGLES Act will equip schools with needed resources to identify troubled youth and give them the intervention and treatment that they need, hopefully long before an intervention is needed by law enforcement.”

The Parkland, Florida shootings took place at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where the school mascot is the eagle. Grassley named his bill after that mascot and says the measure has wide bipartisan support in the Senate while an identical bill was introduced in the House. Grassley says the bill is backed by more than 40 state attorneys general.

Emergency rules approved; Iowa schools may keep using paraeducators as substitute teachers

News

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A legislative committee has approved emergency rules that will let Iowa school districts continue to use paraeducators hired to work with individual students as substitute teachers in any classroom. The action was necessary as the governor’s public health emergency proclamation which had allowed paraeducators to be subs during the pandemic expires at midnight. The committee is also proposing legislation directing schools to make a good faith effort to find substitute teachers and ending the policy after this school year is over. Representative Megan Jones, a Republican from Sioux Rapids, is the bill’s sponsor. “We don’t want enterprising folks thinking that we should put less qualified people into a classroom and use a para because we can pay them $12 an hour,” Jones says.

Jones also blasted the Board of Educational Examiners for holding a meeting yesterday (Monday) at 7:30 a.m. to reveal its solution to the problem, as that limited the public’s ability to review the regulations that already have been approved 24 hours later. “This process has been very ugly,” Jones said. “…It makes me sick to think of eliminating all of this public notice.”
The executive director of the Board of Educational Examiners says state officials do not know how many paraeducators are employed in Iowa schools. The board’s emergency rule requires schools to ask for waivers when paraeducators are taken away from their main jobs to substitute teach in another classroom. Emily Piper, of the Iowa Association of School Boards, says that’s important “We do share concerns about this being a permanent soluation,” Piper says. “We don’t think this is the answer, long-term, to our sub shortages.”

Melissa Peterson, a lobbyist for the Iowa State Education Association, says there are paraeducator shortages as well.  “These are folks who provide services to some of our most needy and vulnerable students,” Peterson says. Senator Rob Hogg, a Democrat from Cedar Rapids, blasted the governor for letting her public health emergency expire and creating this dilemma in schools that required this scramble to ensure paraeducators can continue to be assigned to substitute teach tomorrow (Wednesday). “This is the failure of the governor’s office to put us in this position. That has to be said today,” Hogg says. “This was totally foreseeable that something like this would happen.”

Hogg’s wife is the media secretary at a Cedar Rapids school, but she’s also a former paraeducator and Hogg says she’s often been assigned to lead a classroom as a substitute teacher over the past two years.

Corning man gets his vehicle hung-up on a rock

News

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Union County report a man from Corning became impatient while waiting on a train, and decided to turn into a parking lot. Due to sun glare on his windshield, Lawrence W. Stedman didn’t see a large rock. His vehicle struck the rock and become “high centered” on the rock. There was no damage to the vehicle or rock. The accident happened at around 4-p.m.

Authorities say Monday evening, 38-year-old Alicia Ellen Lovell, of Creston, was driving a 2022 Toyota Camry southbound on Elm Street near Clark Street, in Creston, when according to Lovell, she fell asleep. When her car struck a curb, the woman over-corrected and accelerated into a stop light and power pole. There were no injuries or citations. Damage to the car was estimated at $7,500. The poles sustained an estimated $2,000 damage each.

DAVID GENE BEST, 72, of Brayton (Svcs. 2/20/22)

Obituaries

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

DAVID GENE BEST, 72, of Brayton, died Feb. 5th, at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, in Omaha. Funeral services for DAVID BEST will be held 1-p.m. Sunday, Feb. 20th, at the First United Presbyterian Church Church in Atlantic. Kessler Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home, with the family will meet with friends on Saturday, from 4-until 6-p.m., and a Masonic Service is held at 5:30-p.m.

Burial is in the Arlington Heights Cemetery in Audubon.

The family prefers donations in honor of Dave Best to the Brayton Community Club Playground or First United Presbyterian Church. Please send payments to Exira Exchange State Bank (Attn: Brayton Community Club Playground) at P.O. Box 65, Exira, IA 50076 or to First United Presbyterian Church at 616 Chestnut Street, Atlantic, IA 50022.

DAVID G. BEST is survived by:

His son -Jeremy (Chelsea) Best, of Council Bluffs.

His daughter – Jennifer (Craig) White, of Chicago, IL.

His brother – Steve (Lynda) Best, of Brayton.

His sister – Cheryl (Dave) Haedepohl, of Parnell, IA.

other relatives and many friends.

ROBERT L. EHLERT, 82, of Carroll (formerly of Audubon) – Private family graveside svcs.

Obituaries

February 15th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

ROBERT L. EHLERT, 82, of Carroll (formerly of Audubon), died Sunday, Feb. 13th, at St. Anthony Regional Hospital in Carroll. Private family graveside services will be held for ROBERT EHLERT at a later date in the Maple Grove Cemetery, in Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

ROBERT EHLERT is survived by:

His daughter – Sonia (Rob) Johansen, of Dallas Center.

His son (Craig (Ronna) Ehlert, of Carroll.

3 grandchildren, his sister-in-law, other relatives & friends.