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Bluffs Police need help in locating stolen trailer containing band equipment

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs are asking for your help in locating a pickup truck recently stolen out of Bellevue, Nebraska. Shortly after it was stolen, the vehicle was used in theft of a trailer containing Lewis Central’s band equipment. The stolen black 2004 Silverado with “Crow Lawn Care” on both doors and the stolen trailer have not been recovered.

If you have any information on the location of the truck, trailer or suspects please call Detective Coffey at 712-890-5134. Thank you.

Atlantic Chamber Ambassadors visit JJ Design

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce Ambassadors visited JJ Design, Thursday, June 3rd, 2021. The Ambassadors visited with the owner, Jamie Joyce, about their recent renovations and to get an update on the services that they offer. While at JJ Design, the Ambassadors were able to observe the new renovations such as new floors, countertops, and roof, completely renovating the store.

Ambassadors Left to Right: Steve Tjepkes, Jake Olsen, Lucas Mosier, Kathie Hockenberry, Scott Bennett, Dolly Bermann, Rachel Czaja, Jamie Joyce, Donnie Drennan, Andrea Lowary, Rich Perry, Allison Cooper, Kelsey Beschorner. Dr.Keith Leonard, Gene Sanny, Kennedy Freund, Nick Harris, Nedra Perry, Gabby Wahlert, Jim Kickland, Wes Anstey, Marcus Daugherty, Steve Andersen, Victoria Gibson.

JJ Design opened up shop in Atlantic in 1998, in Jamie’s garage. Jamie saw a market for designing and creating work he was already passionate about. He saw the opportunity to run his own business and took the plunge. Jamie has a small team that includes Gene Sanny, Allison Cooper, and Andrea Lowary. Together they work hard to give the community high quality products. JJ Design started out doing custom t-shirts. Later, they expanded into providing team uniforms to schools and club teams.

JJ Design also outfits businesses with corporate logo apparel, crew shirts and jackets. Creating signs is also a big part of JJ Design, and their most recent sign is out front of NISHNANET. JJ Design also specializes in complete logo design, brochures, menus, envelopes, and anything that you can imagine. In store, JJ Design has an assortment of Trojan gear, including t-shirts, masks, wind breakers, among many other items for purchase.

For more information about JJ Design call (712) 243-2925 or visit their Facebook Page.

Iowa Board of Corrections Approves Two New Wardens

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – The Iowa Board of Corrections voted today (Friday) in support of two new wardens to join the Iowa Department of Corrections. The Board approved the Department’s selection of Kristofer Karberg as the Warden of the Anamosa State Penitentiary, and Nicholas Lamb as the Warden of the Fort Dodge Correctional Facility. Both of these candidates were recommended to the Board by a department hiring committee.

Karberg comes to Iowa from the South Dakota Department of Corrections where he has served for over eight years; he currently serves as the Deputy Warden of the Mike Durfee State Prison in Springfield. Prior to joining the SDDOC, he worked for the State Department as Site Commander of Security at the US Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. In total, he brings more than 28 years of security operations experience to his new role in leading the ASP team.

Lamb comes to Iowa from the New Mexico Department of Corrections where he has served as the Deputy Warden of Administration since November of 2020. Prior to joining the NMDOC, he served in many positions throughout his 26-year-career in the Illinois Department of Corrections, where he most recently served as Assistant Warden of Operations at Stateville Correctional Center prior to his retirement from the IL DOC in 2020.

Commenting on the newly appointed wardens, Department Director Beth Skinner said the following: “I am extremely excited to have both Warden Karberg and Warden Lamb joining the Iowa DOC team. These individuals bring unique skillsets to their respective prisons where they will be leading teams of outstanding correctional staff. While both of these wardens bring different work experiences to their new roles, they both have proven to be effective leaders that understand the balance in providing reliable security while also ensuring effective treatment of those under our supervision is taking place, which is at the heart of our role as an agency.”

Urgent! Regional Water Rural Water Association officials enact mandatory water use restrictions

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Nicholas Gaul, General Manager of the Regional Water Rural Water Association, says  “Due to heightened customer usage while dry water table conditions persist, in order to protect public health, Regional Water is moving to Action Level Yellow of our water conservation plan.” Gaul says “All Regional Water customers in Shelby, Harrison, Audubon Counties, and in Pottawattamie County north or east of the City of Neola, are now on Mandatory Water Use Restrictions.” Gaul says “We must also ask for residents and businesses in the towns of Portsmouth, Earling, Panama, Elk Horn, Avoca, Brayton, Minden, and Exira to abide by these additional restrictions.”

The restrictions include:

1.)    No outdoor watering or irrigation of any kind between 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM.  No watering or irrigation of lawns whatsoever.  Watering of flowers, vegetable gardens, trees or shrubs less than four years old, and new seedlings is permitted once per week, with an application not to exceed one inch.
2.)    No car washing, except at commercial establishments that provide car washing as their only means of income.  For commercial car washes, hours of use must be restricted to 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM.
3.)    No water shall be used to fill private swimming pools, children’s wading pools, or similar articles.
4.)    No water shall be used to clean streets, driveways, sidewalks, etc.
5.)    For necessary agricultural and industrial water usages, such as the filling of spraying tanks, reduce the flow rate and fill over a longer period, including overnight, to reduce the instantaneous demand on our system.
6.)    Water flow may be reduced or terminated as needed to protect the system’s integrity, including to customers who are found to be not following rules.
7.)    Customers with large meters (1” and larger) will pay a higher rate during the June meter reading period, as the last “step rate” shall be suspended.
8.)    Customers of Regional Water who use more water in the June meter reading period than their winter average shall be charged an additional premium of ten cents per one thousand gallons over their winter average.  Customers who normally use three thousand gallons or less in the winter and still use only three thousand gallons or less in the June meter reading period will NOT be affected.

Backyard & Beyond 6-4-2021

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

June 4th, 2021 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits with Damon Clark of Zion Integrated Behavioral Services.

Play

State Historical Society of Iowa announces top awards for historic preservation

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – From an archaeological site in Woodbury County to a historic school in Davenport, 11 projects in seven communities were honored with Iowa’s highest awards for historic preservation during this year’s Preserve Iowa Summit. The annual conference is presented by the State Historic Preservation Office, which is part of the Iowa Department of Cultural Affairs. During the awards ceremony on Thursday, the State Historical Society of Iowa Board of Trustees awarded two projects in Des Moines and two in Davenport with a Preservation Project of Merit Award, which recognizes projects that exemplify the best practices of historic preservation, meet federal standards, and make use of state tax credits for historic preservation.

The historical society also honored successful efforts to stabilize a prehistoric site on the Little Sioux River near Anthon and to rehabilitate historic facades on the Winterset square. In addition, the nonprofit group Preservation Iowa presented its Preservation At Its Best Awards in five categories during the same ceremony. These annual awards honor properties and educational efforts that meet the highest standards of preservation practices. The awards in western Iowa are as follows:

State Historical Society of Iowa – Preservation Project of Merit Awards:

Certificate of Merit – Winterset Facade Rehabilitation Project, Madison County

This five-year project, completed in 2020, resulted in exterior improvements to 17 buildings in the Winterset Courthouse Historic District in Madison County.

Excellence in Archaeology and Historic Preservation Award Recipient: Dixon Site Riverbank Stabilization Project, Woodbury County
This award recognizes the best archaeology or preservation project at the local or state level.

This Dixon Site project, located on the Little Sioux River near Anthon, put an end to riverbank erosion at the site of a prehistoric Oneota village and successfully stabilized Iowa Highway 31. The award recognizes the project’s many contributors, including the Iowa Department of Transportation and eight Native American tribes, for their collaborative work in accordance with state and federal laws concerning historic preservation.

Preservation Iowa – Preservation at its Best Awards:

Best Community Effort Award Recipient: Hoff Family Arts and Culture Center/McCormick Harvesting Company Building, Council Bluffs

Pottawattamie Arts, Culture and Entertainment (PACE) spearheaded the transformation of this historic warehouse. The new center opened in spring 2020 and features a theater, culinary arts kitchen for food entrepreneurs, teaching kitchen, exhibit gallery, dance studios, artist studios, classrooms and more.

Cass County Fair adds tractor, truck modified pullers & more

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Updated) The Cass County Fair Association has released the line-up for evening events set to take place during the 2021 Cass County Fair, in Atlantic. Fair Board President Curtis Bierbaum says among the FREE activities, is the tractor and truck pull beginning at 6-p.m. on Saturday, July 31st.

The Champion Seed Western and Lucas Oil Pro Pulling League Series pullers will be making a lot of noise as their machines work to pull a sliding load on their way to the finish line, or at least as far as they can go. The event will include:
– 85 Limited Pro Stock Tractors
– Limited Pro Stock Diesel Trucks
– Pro Farm Tractors
– Pro Street Diesel Trucks
– Super Modified 2WD Trucks

Bierbaum says the adult Team Golf Cart Races Sunday night should be a blast to watch.

He says everything is set to go, and they’re crossing their fingers nothing like COVID interferes with your enjoyment of the Fair.

One northwest Iowa based trucking company buying another

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Heyl Truck Lines is buying Holiday Express, a trucking company based in Estherville. Heyl Truck Lines is based in Akron. Its president, Bruce Koele, says both companies are family-owned. “We felt our companies matched very well with a lot of the same philosophies,” he says. “Heyl has several terminals in Florida, Texas and also northwest Iowa as well as Okotoks, Alberta, Canada.” The Holiday Express terminal in Estherville will be rebranded as a Heyl terminal.

“Our intentions are to create additional jobs,” he says. “…We’re currently looking for mechanics and technicians and to build the infrastructure and build their shop and become an even more significant player in the Estherville area.” Holiday Express, founded in 1969, has specialized in operating refrigerated trucks that carry food to 48 states. Heyl Truck Lines was founded in 1949 and currently has a fleet of over 400 trucks. Heyl also focuses on temperature controlled commodities, but it ships dry goods as well. Heyl’s purchase of Holiday Express will be final on June 14th.

Iowa COVID-19 update for 6/4/21: 4 additional deaths; 97 additional positive cases; Hospital admissions up

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Public Health, Friday morning, reported 97 additional positive COVID-19 tests came back from the labs, for a total of 402,268, and four additional deaths over the previous 24 hours, including one each in Mills and Pottawattamie Counties, where the totals are now 24 and 172 respectively. The statewide death toll for the pandemic is 6,065. Deaths at Iowa’s Long-Term Care facilities stand at 2,368.

Iowa’s 14-day positivity rate is down to 2.1%, while the 7-day positivity rate is up slightly, to 1.8%. State health officials say 91 people are hospitalized with COVID-19; 17 patients are in an ICU; Seven additional COVID patients were admitted to a hospital, for a total of 20 admissions, and seven patients are on ventilators, which is four less than reported Thursday. In RMCC Region 4 (hospitals in western & southwest Iowa), the data is unchanged: two patients hospitalized with COVID or symptoms of the virus. There are no COVID patients in an ICU, there were also no new admissions, and no one is on a ventilator, in Region 4.

There are remain three long-term care facilities reporting active COVID-19 outbreaks, with a total of 20 positive cases among residents and staff at those LTC’s, and one person who has recovered. Two of the facilities are in northern and northeast Iowa, the other is in southeast Iowa.

In the immediate KJAN listening area, here are the current number positive cases by County (since the beginning of the pandemic) and the total number of deaths (Since the beginning of the pandemic) in each county to date:
Cass, 1,476 cases; 54 deaths
Adair, 993; 32
Adams, 353; 4
Audubon, 541; 10
Guthrie, 1,312; 32
Harrison County, 1,932; 73
Madison County, 1,786; 19
Mills County, 1,795; 24
Montgomery, 1,115; 38
Pottawattamie County, 12,323;172
Shelby County, 1,371; 37
Union County, 1,377; 34

Cyclist killed by SUV in Davenport, 3rd fatal bike crash in QCs in a month

News

June 4th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – For the third time in a month, a bicyclist in the Quad Cities has been killed by an S-U-V. Davenport police say a bicyclist was hit and killed by a hit-and-run SUV that ran a red light on Thursday afternoon. Police later caught the driver, 33-year-old Bobby Hunt of Davenport. He faces a list of charges, including homicide by reckless driving, in the death of 40-year-old cyclist Alex Marietta of Geneseo, Illinois.

During May, a 13-year-old boy on a bicycle was hit and killed by a Moline, Illinois, police SUV that was responding to a call, while a 60-year-old man on a bike was also fatally struck and killed by an SUV in Rock Island County.