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Unidentified man bottle fed a Des Moines NICU baby that was not his

News

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa/KCCI) – A total stranger walked into the Neo-Natal Intensive Care Unit at MercyOne medical center in Des Moines and bottle-fed a baby that wasn’t his. KCCI reports Des Moines Police are trying to identify the man seen on surveillance footage while he was in the hospital. The station says according to police, the man slipped by a nurse, bottle-fed a baby in the NICU and then left the hospital. Des Moines police say the unidentified man was trespassing, but what they don’t know is why the man did this.

Thomas Slater, a lawyer in West Des Moines who deals with medical malpractice cases says the hospital has a duty of care to the baby in the NICU. He said an unidentified person claiming to be a parent should not have been allowed in. Slater adds that the baby being fed and other babies in the NICU were put in danger when the man entered the unit.

MercyOne sent KCCI a statement that read:
“MercyOne takes the safety and security of our patients and families very seriously. The incident that took place last month is extremely troubling. We are actively cooperating with the Des Moines Police Department on this ongoing investigation and have conducted an internal investigation into the matter, which prompted several changes to our policies and protocols to expand our security and prevent this from occurring in the future.

Des Moines Police say they want to find the man and figure out what his motive was. Authorities say MercyOne is cooperating with their investigation.

Bird watchers: Iowa’s bald eagle numbers may soon start to dwindle

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowans are spotting vast numbers of bald eagles this winter, but time’s running out to admire the big birds. More than 400 eagles were counted recently along one mile of the Iowa River in Johnson County, but D-N-R wildlife biologist Stephanie Shepherd says nesting season is almost here, and that means it’ll be much harder to find eagles. “They can begin as early as February and sort of the peak of them initiating nesting is in March, so they’re actually going to be breaking up here pretty soon, probably in the next three weeks or so to start getting back to their nest sites and initiating that nesting cycle,” Shepherd says. “I think we’re probably going to see numbers dwindling a little bit over the next few weeks.”

While many of the eagles we’re seeing are migrating here from states like Wisconsin and Minnesota, Shepherd says Iowa has many hundreds of resident eagles. “We probably have at least 500 active nests in the state but of course they’re not as gathered together or congregated around open water sites,” Shepherd says. “There’s still a lot of eagles here, it’s just they’re spread out across the countryside, hanging out in their nest and being busy and not congregated around open water.”

The Mississippi River has traditionally hosted Iowa’s highest eagle numbers — both resident and wintering — but in recent years, the Iowa and Des Moines rivers have hosted even more.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: Wed., Jan. 26, 2022

Weather

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy. High 29. SW winds @ 10-20 w/gusts to near 30 possible. Wind Chill values as low as -15.
Tonight: P/Cldy. Low 20. SW @ 10.
Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy. High 32. NW @ 10-20.
Friday: P/Cldy. High 24.
Saturday: P/Cldy. High 37.

Tuesday’s High in Atlantic was 19. Our Low this morning, -9. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 20 and the Low was 6. The Record High on this date was 67 in 2002. The Record Low was -24 in 1963.

Iowa’s Fran McCaffery on injured recruit Josh Dix

Sports

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Iowa basketball coach Fran McCaffery expects Hawkeye recruit Josh Dix will be able to join the team in the fall. The Council Bluffs Abraham Lincoln standout suffered a broken leg in a game at LeMars last week and underwent surgery.

McCaffery is confident Dix will have no trouble bouncing back from the injury.

B1G record falls as No. 23 Iowa women win at Penn State

Sports

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The 23rd ranked Iowa Hawkeye women open the third quarter with a 16-3 run and raced away to a 107-79 win at Penn State. McKenna Warnock had a career high 25 and Caitlin Clark set a Big ten single game record with 17 assists.

That’s Iowa coach Lisa Bluder. The Hawkeyes broke the game open after leading 52-47 at halftime.

Iowa improves to 7-1 in the Big Ten.

No. 13 Iowa State women host Kansas Wednesday night

Sports

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The 13th ranked Iowa State women return home Wednesday night to take on Kansas. The Cyclones are 5-2 in the Big 12 after back-to-back lopsided losses to Texas and Baylor.

That’s ISU coach Bill Fennelly. Three of the next four games are at home.

No. 23 Iowa State visits Oklahoma State Wednesday night

Sports

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger wants to see his team become the aggressor once again when the 23rd ranked Cyclones visit Oklahoma State Wednesday night. The Cyclones are 2-5 in the Big 12 after a 59-44 loss at home to TCU.

Otzelberger says it was a sense of urgency that helped the Cyclones race out to a 12-0 start.

ISU made only three of 26 from three point range against TCU.

Otzelberger says the Cyclones need to work for better shots.

The Cowboys are 3-4 in the Big 12.

Drake visits Illinois State Wednesday night

Sports

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Drake takes a 5-2 Missouri Valley record on the road Wednesday night to play Illinois State. The Bulldogs beat the Redbirds 86-75 in Des Moines back on January 12th.

That’s Drake coach Darian DeVries. Illinois State may be without second leading scorer Sy Chatman. The junior forward suffered a knee injury in a loss at Evansville.

The Bulldogs will be in search of their fourth road victory in the Valley.

UNI men visit Evansville Wednesday night

Sports

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The Northern Iowa men will try to halt a two game losing skid with a Wednesday night visit to Evansville. The Panthers won the first meeting 83-61 in Cedar Falls back on January second but coach Ben Jacobson calls this a different challenge.

Evansville is coming of a win at home over Illinois State.

UNI is 5-3 in the Missouri Valley and 9-9 overall.

Governor’s revised bid to expand E15 sales to be debated in House committee today

Ag/Outdoor

January 26th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The governor’s revised plan to boost sales of E-15 has been approved by a House subcommittee. The Iowa Renewable Fuels Standard Governor Kim Reynolds presented last year stalled in the legislature. Reynolds says her new proposal is designed to expand consumer access to gasoline that contains more ethanol and to diesel that has a higher percentage of a soybean-based additive.

“Under the bill, any newly-installed or upgraded fuel infrastructure must be E85 or B20 compatible and all retailers with compatible infrastructure must offer E15 by 2026,” Reynolds says. Reynolds reviewed her NEW plan at Tuesday’s Iowa Renewable Fuels Summit in Des Moines and urged the industry to lobby Iowa lawmakers.

“Let’s together remind them how important it is that we finally send a message that DC can’t ignore,” Reynolds says. “America’s energy is growing right here in Iowa’s fields.” The plan includes grant money to install new fuel systems. Sara Allen, a lobbyist for the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association, spoke at a statehouse hearing on the bill.

“We think it gives consumers the ability to purchase E15 more freely across the state,” she said, “because that’s not happening right now.” The bill sets up a waiver process for stations with equipment that’s incompatible with fuel that has higher blends of ethanol. Casey’s General Stores, which has 535 stores in Iowa, opposes the bill as it’s currently written. Tom Cope, the company’s lobbyist, says there’s no guarantee a station would get a waiver — and the grants cover a fraction of what it costs to upgrade underground fuel systems.

“We’re really, really concerned that it could have a negative impact on stores that are, especially, located in small town Iowa,” Cope says. Marc Beltrame is a lobbyist for Fuel Iowa, which represents the retailers that sell fuel. He says the industry is willing to do its part to help ethanol and biodiesel producers, but the bill as written penalizes a lot of small stores which are primarily in rural Iowa.

“We’ve worked very hard to come to yes,” Beltrame said. “There’s still some sticky points.” Kevin Kuhl, a lobbyist for the Iowa Farm Bureau, says his organization supports the bill because Iowa still lags other states in sales of ethanol and biodiesel. “We’ve states have implemented policies that promote the sale and consumption of biofuels,” Kuhle says. Fewer than one out of four Iowa gas stations sell E-15 and the bill seeks to push beyond that blend. Starting in 2023, any new fuel systems installed at Iowa gas stations would have to compatible with E-85.

Drew Klein is state director for Americans for Prosperity, a group that opposed the governor’s Iowa Renewable Fuels Standard in 2021 and opposes this 2022 rewrite. “This is, inevitably, going to impose new costs on small businesses in Iowa,” Klein says. The bill was introduced in the House Monday and a three-member subcommittee signed off on it Tuesday. The bill is now scheduled for debate in the full House Ways and Means Committee late this (Wednesday) afternoon.