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Council Bluffs woman arrested Thursday morning (11/14) in Red Oak

News

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – A traffic stop a little after 1-a.m. today (Thursday) in Red Oak, resulted in the arrest of a woman from Pottawattamie County. The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports the traffic stop was conducted at around 1:10-a.m. near Broadway and Linden Streets, in Red Oak. Upon further investigation, Deputies arrested 55-year-old Kathleen Louise Brown, of Council Bluffs, for Driving Under Suspension.

Brown was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on bond amounting to $491.25.

Bird Feeder and Nature Journaling Workshops

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Massena, Iowa) –  The Cass County Conservation Board is holding a Bird Feeder Workshop. The workshop will be held at Outdoor Educational Classroom in Massena, this Saturday November 23rd at 10-a.m. The program is FREE, and all ages are welcome to attend. Children must be accompanied by an adult. Learn all about feeding the birds also make and take a bird feeder.

The Cass County Conservation Board is also hold a Nature Journaling Workshop on Nov. 23rd, beginning at 1-p.m. That program is FREE and will be held at the Outdoor Educational Classroom, in Massena. Learn all about nature journaling and techniques. Participants will make and take a journal home with them.

Please pre-register by November 15th for one or both programs, by calling 712-769-2372 or email lkanning@casscoia.us .

Donation leads to second-grade students across Iowa to receive ‘Just Like Caitlin’ book

News

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

WAUKEE, Iowa [KCCI] — In a display of generosity, second graders at Sugar Creek Elementary in Waukee received a special gift Wednesday — a Caitlin Clark picture book.

KCCI reports the initiative, part of a statewide effort, aims to inspire young readers through the story of the famous basketball player. The books were donated by Dickson and Luann Jensen, with Dickson being one of Caitlin’s former coaches during her time with the All Iowa Attack. Altogether, 50,000 books were distributed across the state of Iowa and the Greater Indianapolis Area.

The students, who are already familiar with Caitlin’s journey, were thrilled to receive the books. Caitlin’s story illustrates her inspiring journey from playing basketball in her driveway to the WNBA, encouraging youngsters to dream big and work hard. Second-grade teacher, Christina Smith, reflected on the impact of the book, stating that Caitlin’s local roots make her aspirations feel attainable, motivating students to pursue their own dreams.

More than just about achieving greatness, the book emphasizes the importance of passion, resilience, and sportsmanship. Students say teaches a valuable lesson: “If you win or lose, it doesn’t matter because you can always keep trying and keep practicing,” said second-grader Urban Palmer.

Written by Jensen’s daughter, Ali Obermeier, the book can be found online at JustLikeCaitlin.com.

Dallas County Supervisors certify Dem. Trone-Garriott re-elected in Senate District 14

News

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

ADEL, Iowa — The Dallas County Board of Supervisors certified election results on Wednesday, confirming Democrat Sarah Trone Garriott’s re-election in State Senate District 14 by a narrow margin of 24 votes. KCCI says Dallas County Auditor Julia Helm presented the board with election results from every precinct. The board verified the votes by reviewing a tally book from each polling location. The county’s official report confirmed Trone Garriott’s victory over Republican Mark Hanson.

Hanson told KCCI he believes a recount could change the results, though he has not yet decided whether to request one. Helm explained that if a recount is requested, it would be conducted by a three-person board, including one representative from each campaign and a neutral member.

Helm emphasized the importance of the county’s canvass of votes in ensuring public confidence in the election process.

Hanson stated he wants to discuss with his team and family before deciding on a recount. He has until Monday at 5 p.m. to make his decision.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the KJAN listening area: Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024

Weather

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly sunny-to-sunny. High near 51. Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph becoming light and variable this afternoon.
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 32.
Tomorrow: Sunny, with a high near 57. S/SE winds 5 to 15 mph, with gusts to near 20 mph.
Tom. Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 39.
Saturday: Mostly sunny & windy, with a high near 58.
Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 54.
Monday: Showers developing, mainly after noon. High near 53.

Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 47. Our Low this morning was 35. We received 1.44″ of rain Wednesday, at KJAN, for a total of 1.52″.  Last year on this date, the High was 69 and the Low was 29. The Record High in Atlantic on Nov.14th was 72 in 1897, 1964, & 1990. The Record Low was -5 in 1940. Sunrise: 7:07. Sunset: 5:01.

Iowa women beat Toledo 94-57

Sports

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Hawkeye women raced out to a 28-10 lead at the end of one and beat Toledo 94-57 in Iowa City. Hannah Stuelke  led the way with 17 points while Lucy Olsen and Taylor McCabe each had 14. Hawkeye coach Jan Jensen has been happy with the defense in a 3-0 start but the schedule gets much tougher beginning with Sunday’s game at Drake.

Jensen says better defense was important given all the production they lost from last season.

Jensen says Drake will test their defense with their ability to spread the court and shoot threes.

More Iowa farmers support gestation crate ban

Ag/Outdoor

November 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service report) – When Brent Hershey entered the hog business, he was told that every pork producer in America uses gestation crates on their farm. Gestation crates are metal enclosures, typically seven feet long and two feet wide, where a pregnant female pig, a sow, is kept during her pregnancy. The stalls are so small that sows typically cannot sit or lie down for four months — the entirety of their pregnancy while in the stall. And these gestation crates, long a fixture in industrial pork production, are at the center of a fierce debate between industry groups and the hog farmers who say they don’t want to go back to using them.

Florida was the first state to ban gestation crates in 2002. At the time, Hershey thought Floridians had no idea what they were doing — that they didn’t “understand good production.” Twenty years and a California ballot initiative later, Hershey would be tearing all the gestation crates out of his 1,000-head Pennsylvania sow farm and his 2,000 head Delaware sow operation.

The new laws got Hershey rethinking the crates. “We thought, look at the life that we are asking the animal to live,” he says. “They’re going to be safe, but they can’t walk, they can’t turn around. At the same time, we started going to see some barns that animals were free in. We looked at that and thought, wow, that really looks more natural.”

A commercial sow with her litter in a farrowing crate on a pork farm in the Cayman Islands on Grand Cayman.

California’s Proposition 12 and Question 3 in Massachusetts are state ballot measures that banned the sale of pork born to gestation crate-sows. These laws also offer protections to egg-laying hens and veal calves. Organizations like the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) and the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) have long called for Prop 12 to be overturned, and in 2023, their case against the California Department of Food and Agriculture Secretary traveled from the Ninth Circuit to the Supreme Court of the United States. The highest court eventually upheld the constitutionality of Prop 12, but the two industry groups did not drop their opposition. Instead, they shifted focus to Congress.

The public position of the Farm Bureau and the National Pork Producers Council on gestation crates has never wavered — both groups insist pork farmers do not want the ban — yet Hershey and other farmers say differently. “As soon as the Supreme Court announced this decision, within weeks, we tore all our gestation crates out,” Hershey said at a briefing for the U.S. House of Representatives. “Now we’re on [the California] standard, and we’re doing better. It’s very ironic.”

Not long after the decision, Kansas Senator Roger Marshall introduced the “Ending Agricultural Trade Suppression (EATS) Act” to the Senate, which would prohibit “against interference by state and local governments with production of items in other states.” In effect, this bill would overturn Prop 12. And in the May 2024 version of the Farm Bill, House lawmakers included language similar to the EATS Act that would “ensure that producers of covered livestock are not subject to a patchwork of State laws restricting access to a national market.”

Farmers like Hershey are concerned that the language, if passed, could destroy the more humane pork market that has been created, nationwide and internationally, for farmers looking to serve the California market. California is the 5th largest economy in the world, and the state gobbles up close to 15 percent of the country’s entire pork consumption.

Yet the Farm Bureau and the Pork Council continue to deliver a national campaign that all pork farmers are in favor of the EATS Act and that Prop 12 is killing their farms. “It’s not true at all,” Hershey tells Sentient. “They’re saying that they represent us all, but they do not represent us at all.”

Calling “Baloney” on the Farm Bureau

In a statement released after the Supreme Court upheld Prop 12, Farm Bureau President Zippy Duvall wrote, “This law has the potential to devastate small family farms across the nation through unnecessary and expensive renovations, and every family will ultimately pay for the law through higher food prices.”

“I call baloney on that,” says Iowa hog farmer Ron Mardesen, who has been raising hogs in Iowa since the 1980s. Mardesen is a farmer with Niman Ranch, a network of farmers who produce meat that is hormone-free, cage-free and compliant with Prop 12.

Mardesen sees a lack of representation for independent farmers. “We’ve lost 90 percent of independent hog farmers in the last 35, 40 years. The National Pork Producers just sit and bobble their head every time everybody wants to get bigger and wants to get more consolidated.”

In a recent advertisement campaign backing the EATS Act, the Pork Producers Council highlights “Cindy,” a fictional character who runs a barbeque food truck that sources from Perkins Family Pig Farm. Cindy’s operation shutters due to rising pork prices, and the farm does too.

A note with the video reads: “This scenario could soon become a reality across America.” The video stresses that Prop 12 especially hurts smaller farmers: “A farm that would have been transferred to future generations deteriorates into ruin or is sold to a big company,” the narrator says. “Proposition 12 has burdened every link in the food supply chain, from the farmer to the business owner.”

Yet Missouri sow farmer Hank Wurtz says he has no idea where this is coming from. All of the farms he knows are converting to Prop 12. If a sow farm is closing, it is not because of Prop 12, Wurtz adds.

“I know for a fact that there are many [gestational] crate farms in this country right now that are considering shutting down,” he says. “They’re not able to be viable anymore, but that’s not caused by California. That’s caused by 20,000 sow operations going up all over the Midwest. It is the rest of the industry’s large-scale operations that are making the small family farms irrelevant.”

According to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, since 1990, “the number of farms with hogs has declined by more than 70 percent as individual enterprises have grown larger.” Meanwhile, the number of hogs continues to grow in the U.S., primarily in concentrated animal feeding operations that typically house anywhere from 750 to tens of thousands of hogs per building.

Rising input costs and stagnant pig prices are causing smaller, independent farmers to turn to alternative strategies to stay afloat.

A New Type of Sow Farm

When Prop 12 was passed in 2019, Wurtz saw an opportunity in a niche market. According to Wurtz’s research, sow farmers have been getting approximately the same price — around $42 — for piglets throughout the past ten years. With Prop 12, Wurtz saw an opportunity to make his farm more economically viable.

“We love farming, but we need to be able to make money and support our families,” he says. “When Prop 12 came along and they’re offering around $50 a pig, that’s a game changer.”

Wurtz says he has invested $12 million into building a brand-new Prop 12 sow barn to replace his gestation crate operation in Northwest Missouri.

“It wouldn’t have been feasible in 2019 to go build a $12 million farm based on just the animal humane aspect of it. We wouldn’t have been able to bankroll it. It had to pay around 30 percent more because it cost 30 percent more to make it Prop 12,” he says.

When the law was challenged by the Supreme Court, Wurtz felt abandoned by the NPPC, and envisioned a future where small, family farms like his would no longer be able to exist.

“We were actually shaking in our boots at that time,” he says. “We’d be no longer financially viable.”

Wurtz did not get into the Prop 12 business for animal welfare — he’s sure to clarify that. But the increased quality of life for his sows has been an unanticipated benefit.

“We didn’t feel like we were abusing our animals all those years. But in hindsight, now looking at the farm that we have in Missouri here, I get the point,” he tells Sentient. “If you grow up a certain way, you just think crates are normal.”

Wurtz says he knows a lot of farmers who do not want to speak out in support of Prop 12 because they do not want to be associated with animal rights activists.

“But the fact of the matter is, Prop 12 is one of the best things, economically, that’s happened to us in a very long time,” he says. “That’s good for American farmers. We need to make a living somehow. If Californians want to pay more for it, we welcome that.”

The Farm Bill as a Legislative Vehicle

The last farm bill to pass through the U.S. Congress was in December 2018. It expired in Sept. 2023, got a one-year extension, and then expired again at the end of September 2024. The EATS Act is included in the House Republicans’ version of the 2024 farm bill draft.

“[The EATS Act] was introduced with the strategy of them trying to attach it to the farm bill,” says Farm Action Fund Senior Director of Programs Christian Lovell at an EATS Act event held at George Washington Law School. “I don’t think anybody thinks that a bill like that would be considered as a standalone item.”

The EATS Act is unprecedented in that the broad language of the bill could have larger ramifications to states’ rights than just what kind of food can be sold. According to a report by the Harvard Animal Law & Policy Program, certain terms in the bill, like “agricultural products” are “defined so broadly as to potentially include vaccines, vitamins, and even narcotics.” The Act could even threaten the labeling of meat, including where it comes from.

At the G.W. Law event, Lovell emphasized that consumers care about where their food comes from and how it was raised, and the EATS Act could obstruct that information.

“The corporations that control our food system, it’s almost like they want to hang a veil over that,” he says. “They don’t want the consumer to see anything until it gets to the grocery store shelves, and that’s because those corporations have rigged a food system that is extractive to rural communities like the ones I grew up in and now live in.”

For Mardesen, the fact that the EATS Act was just slipped into the farm bill makes the prospect of its passage more likely.

“I have not seen this as a hill that many people are willing to die on. The thing that scares me, and it really worries me, is that, look, if we get into this 11th hour wheeling and dealing, and you’ve got somebody who says, ‘Okay, I’ll do this. If you do this,’ I don’t know how pivotal this is [for legislators] at this point,” he says.

The saddest part for Mardesen is the impact this could have on farmers like Wurtz, who have shifted their entire operation for Prop 12.

“So many guys have already made the commitment, already made the investment, already made the transition to gestation-crate-free systems in order to reap the benefits from the higher markets, and that stool is going to be kicked right out from underneath them,” he says. “And that’s a lot of good, hard working pork producers that we need.”

That includes hog farmers like Hershey, who came to question what he once believed to be a necessary part of his work: “If, hypothetically, that model was the cheapest way to produce pork, putting pigs in cages that can’t turn around and can’t walk for four months at a time, if that’s legitimate, then you gotta ask the question, ‘yes, but is that okay?’”

Nina Elkadi wrote this article for Sentient.

Atlantic School Board elects new officers & changes monthly meeting times;Superintendent & SRO agreements

News

November 13th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic School Board held their annual organizational meeting this (Wednesday) evening, during which they elected Laura McLean as President, and Josh McLaren as Vice-President for 2024-2025. McLean succeeds Kristy Pellet as President, while McLaren replaced McLean as Board V-P.

They also voted to re-appoint Lisa Jones (Director of Finance) as Board Secretary/Treasurer for the same time frame. The Board set the 2nd and 4th Wednesday’s of each month as the days for their regular and work session, respectively. The meetings will begin at 6:30-pm., which is an hour later than previously established. The regular sessions will take place in the Atlantic High School Media Center, while the Work Sessions will be held at the Achievement Center.

In her report to the Board, Superintendent Dr. Beth Johnsen said the Atlantic School District has received grants to implement a Robotics Program. Assistant HS Principal/Activities Director Andy Mitchell, and Director of Student Services, Stacey Schmidt, are the program sponsors.

The program will held after school and on some weekends, once it’s ready to go and students are signed-up.

Atlantic School Board mtg., 11-13-24

The Board approved a contract with Interim Superintendent Beth Johnsen, making her full-time for FY 2024-25. Johnsen’s two-year contract as Interim Superintendent was set to expire at the end of the current school year. Board President Laura McLean…

The Board previously abandoned the idea of hiring a headhunter firm to conduct a search for qualified superintendent candidates and related interviews, because they are confident in Dr. Johnsen’s leadership, based on her interactions and performance over the nearly past two-years.

The Board also approved an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) with the City of Atlantic, for a School Resource Officer position. That person’s salary will be split 75/25-percent, with the district picking-up 75% of the cost. The City of Atlantic began advertising for the SRO position on Thursday (11/14).

In other business, the approved a bid of $18,444 from Rigid Edge for the replacement of the district’s greenhouse roof, bids from two contractors for snow removal, with each taking care of separate district facilities, but they tabled action on purchase of a lawn mower at this time. In the consent agenda, the Board approved the following resignation, and recommendations to hire (Josh McLaren abstained):

Resignation:

  • Derek Knisely, Boys Assistant HS Soccer Coach

Recommendation to Hire

  • Daniel JohnMark, Chuukese translator
  • Shawn Page, Substitute Bus Driver
  • Nick Roberts, High School Evening Custodian
  • Clint Roland, Archery Coach
  • Rob Kirchner, Assistant Archery Coach
  • Katy Christianson, HS Girls Basketball Volunteer Coach
  • Tisha Mendenhall, Junior High Basketball Cheer Advisor
  • Aliyah Jordan, HS Wrestling Cheer Advisor
  • Kaiden Hatley, Junior High Wrestling Cheer Advisor
  • Lillian Cox, HS Assistant Girls Wrestling Coach
  • Bryce Casey, Junior High Girls Wrestling Coach
  • Julie Phippen, Junior High Girls Assistant Wrestling Coach
  • Al Sorensen, Brenden Casey, Easton O’Brien, Volunteer Coaches for Boys HS Wrestling
  • Josh McLaren, Darby McLaren, Volunteer Coaches for Boys HS Basketball.

Ernst Loses Bid For Senate Leadership Spot

News

November 13th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A report by The Hill, Wednesday, said Iowa Senator Joni Ernst lost out on her bid to become the Republican Senate Conference Chair. The third highest leadership position is being filled instead by Senator Tom Cotton, of Arkansas. It was the only contested race for a GOP leadership position outside of the Senate leadership race.

Iowa’s junior senator was not picked by the president-elect to become the next U.S. Secretary of Defense, either. On Tuesday, Donald Trump announced that Pete Hegseth– an Army National Guard veteran and author — was his nominee for U.S. Secretary of Defense.

Ernst never publicly confirmed interest in becoming cabinet secretary but has said previously that she could be interested in serving in the Trump administration. Hegseth has previously questioned the role of women in the military. Ernst is a decorated combat veteran and retired as lieutenant colonel in the Army National Guard after two decades of service.

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he supported Ernst instead of Cotton. He said that during Republicans’ private gathering to elect leaders, he nominated Ernst for the leadership position and praised the skills that she demonstrated in the senate and during her military career.

New robotics course at SE Iowa school preps students for future tech careers

News

November 13th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – For the first time this fall, students at Oskaloosa High School are being offered a robotics course, where they’re learning all about 3-D printing and electronics, while also soaking in important lessons about teamwork and leadership. Teacher Cory Sheeley says the 14 students who are taking the premiere class are very enthusiastic about the topic and they’re growing in ways they probably didn’t expect.

“Students are communicating every day,” Sheeley says. “They show up to class and they do what’s called a scrum, and they’re all standing for five minutes and they’re having a conversation about what they’re going to do today, what they did yesterday, they’re assigning tasks to each person, and they’re trying to basically accomplish building a robot.”

While this is the first year for the class, students at Osky High have been competing for at least 15 years in what’s known as the FIRST Tech Challenge or F-T-C, a competitive robotics program that encourages inter-team collaboration across multiple schools. In the latest version of the contest, they’re building robots with claws that are designed to grab blocks.

Sheeley says, “The goal is to basically pick these blocks up — for this year’s game — and either put them in the low basket, which is four points, high basket is eight points, hang them on the high rung, which would be 10 points, low rung is six points.” Four competing robots will be in the ring, simultaneously grabbing blocks in a two-and-a-half minute duel, with an “end game” where the robots have to park or hook themselves in a certain area.

Photo courtesy Oskaloosa High School

During part of the contest, the robots will have to be controlled by two students, and at other times, autonomously grab the blocks without any human help. Sheeley says the students are focused on what could be their future careers, diving into hands-on engineering, problem-solving and team-building.

“You can see students getting better and better at that each day,” Sheeley says. “They’re constantly communicating with each other about who needs to do what, if somebody’s slacking, ‘Hey, I need you to do this.’ They’re managing each other, and I think that that’s a pretty good skill for the workforce.”

Sheeley, who also teaches courses including calculus, coding and statistics, says he’s thrilled to see robotics moving from an after-school club to a full in-school class.