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Shelby County Sheriff’s report (4/6/21)

News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Shelby County Sheriff’s Office reports six recent arrests.  Last Saturday (4/3/21), Deputies arrested 49-year-old Mario Santay-Hernandez, of Schuyler NE, following a traffic stop along Highway 191 north of Portsmouth.  Upon further investigation, Santay-Hernandez taken into custody for operating while intoxicated 1st offense, and failure to have a valid driver’s license.  He was transported to the jail without incident and released a few hours later after posting a cash bond.

Last Friday (4/21), 24-year-old Bret Michael Schutles, of Carroll, was arrested following a traffic stop in Shelby County.  Schultes was taken into custody after further investigation and charged with operating while intoxicated 2nd offense, speeding violation, no insurance, and failure to display license plate.  He was transported to the jail without incident and released the following morning after posting bond.

Authorities say three people were arrested on separate charges, March 30th:

  • 38-year-old Cecil Leo Foster, of Shelby, was arrested following a traffic stop within Shelby City limits for window tint violation.   Upon further investigation, it was determined that Foster had a suspended license to operate a motor vehicle through the State of Iowa.   He was transported to the Shelby County Jail and was charged with driving under suspension, window tint violation and open container as a driver.  Foster was released a short time later after posting bond.
  • 22-year-old Justin Michael Couch, of Bennington NE, was arrested following  a traffic stop for speeding, along Highway 59.  Upon further investigation, Couch was also charged with operating while intoxicated 1st offense, supplying alcohol to minors, open container as driver, and speeding violation. He was transferred to the Shelby County jail and held until being released on his own recognizance the following morning.
  • And, 36-year-old Aubree Jasmine Cline, of Bellevue, IA, turned herself into authorities to the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, March 30th. She was wanted on an outstanding warrant for failure to appear for probation violation charge.  Cline was processed into the jail and held until her court appearance on Monday (4/5). She was released after a plea deal, with credit for time served.

On March 29th, 35-year-old Bryce William Messinger, of Harlan, was taken into custody after a traffic stop along Highway 59 in Shelby County.   Upon further investigation, Messinger was transported to the Shelby County Jail and charged with prohibited acts, possession of controlled substance (marijuana), possession of drug paraphernalia, and driving while license suspended.  He was released on his own recognizance on the local charge, but transferred to another county upon release for an active warrant for failure to pay child support.

RUSSELL E. BLOHM, 81, of Audubon (Svcs. 4/10/21)

Obituaries

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

RUSSELL E. BLOHM, 81, of Audubon, died Sunday, April 4th, at Myrtue Medical Center, in Harlan. Funeral services for RUSSELL BLOHM will be held 11-a.m. Saturday, April 10th, at the Harvest of Hope Church, in Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family present, is at the funeral home from 5-until 7-p.m. Friday, April 9th.

Burial is in the Maple Grove Cemetery in Audubon.

RUSSELL BLOHM is survived by:

His daughter – Angela Barclay, of Audubon

His son – Russell Blohm, II, of Chariton.

His brother – David (Debbie) Blohm, of Audubon.

2 grandchildren, his in-laws, other relatives and friends.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: Tue., April 6, 2021

Weather

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Today: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered showers & thunderstorms. High 78. S @ 10-20.

Tonight: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered shwrs & tstorms. Low 58. SE @ 10-15.

Tomorrow: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered shwrs & tstorms. High 66. NW @ 10-15.

Thursday: Mo. Cldy w/showers. High 56.

Friday: Mo. Cldy w/showers. High 56.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 83. Our Low was 59. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 67 and Low 50. The Record High on this date was 89 in 1972. The Record Low was 6, in 1982.

Faculty numbers declining at UI, ISU, UNI

News

April 6th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Faculty numbers at the three state universities are on the decline and the number of professors being considered for tenure is the lowest its been in five years. The board that governs the three public universities takes the final vote that grants tenure. Iowa State University officials are asking the Board of Regents to approve tenure for 59 faculty members. Tenure is recommended for 45 University of Iowa faculty members and University of Northern Iowa administrators recommend tenure for 17 faculty.

Republican lawmakers this year proposed and advanced bills to end the tenure systems at the state universities. While those proposals failed to clear last week’s procedural deadline, key Republicans say rather a ban on tenure, next year they may propose limitations or new guidelines for tenure.

The number of overall faculty at the University of Northern Iowa has dropped eight percent in the past year. At the University of Iowa and Iowa State University, faculty positions dropped three percent.

Nodaway Valley Girls Invitational 04/15/2021

Sports

April 5th, 2021 by admin

1
Audubon
117.00
2
Nodaway Valley
111.00
3
CAM
73.00
4
Martensdale-St. Mary’s
63.00
5
Interstate-35
55.00
6
Kuemper
48.00
7
Treynor
45.00
7
West Central Valley
45.00
9
East Union
25.00
10
Exira-EHK
7.00

Audubon got wins from Hannah Thygesen (800M), Grace Slater (3000M), Kodie Sporrer (400M Hurdles), and 4x400M Relay, Sprint Medley, and Distance Medley. Maddax DeVault of Nodaway Valley won the 200M and 400M. The Wolverines also got a win from Maddie Fry in the Long Jump and they won the 4x100M Relay. CAM’s Jade Jackson won the 100M Hurdles and the High Jump. Molly Ventiecher picked up a title in the Shot Put as well for the Cougars.

Full results HERE.

Glenwood Boys Ram Relays 04/05/2021

Sports

April 5th, 2021 by admin

Team Scores

  1. Glenwood 171
  2. Clarinda 132
  3. Atlantic 118
  4. Red Oak 70
  5. CB Thomas Jefferson 38
  6. CB Abraham Lincoln 31
  7. Creston 26

Silas Bales won the 100M and 200M to get Glenwood started hot and the Rams coasted their way to the team title. Atlantic got a win from Craig Alan Becker in the 800M, Colin Mullenix won the 400M Hurdles and Drew Engler won the 3,200M Run.

Full results HERE.

Spring Sports Scoreboard 04/05/2021

Sports

April 5th, 2021 by admin

BOYS TENNIS

Glenwood 5, Clarinda 4

GIRLS GOLF

Boyer Valley 212, Coon Rapids-Bayard 215, CAM 227, Woodbine 249, Glidden-Ralston 297. Medalist: Alexia Miller, Boyer Valley (48)

Griswold NTS, Nodaway Valley NTS. Medalist: Jenna Reynolds, Griswold (54)

Logan-Magolia 232, Tri-Center 242. Medalist: Kali Collins, Logan-Magnolia (52)

BOYS GOLF

ACGC 180, Pleasantville 193, Madrid 232, West Central Valley 276. Medalist: Grant Caltrider, WCV (39), Runner-Up: Gunnar Larsen, ACGC (39).

Boyer Valley 175, Exira-EHK 197, Coon Rapids-Bayard 198, CAM 206, Woodbine 212, Glidden-Ralston 230. Medalist: Tyler Petersen, Exira-EHK (41)

Clarinda 176, Glenwood 183. Medalist: Xander Pullen, Clarinda (40)

Nodaway Valley 227, Griswold 233. Medalist: Caleb Oakleaf, Griswold (48)

Tri-Center 193, Fremont-Mills 196, Logan-Magnolia 196. Medalist: Jacob Fetter, Logan-Magnolia (43)

GIRLS SOCCER

Atlantic 4, Kuemper Catholic 1. (Jada Jensen 2 goals for Atlantic.)
Bondurant-Farrar 10, Carroll 0
Glenwood 3, Sioux City West 2 (OT)
Lewis Central 10, Denison-Schleswig 0
St. Albert 8, Creston 1
Treynor 7, Tri-Center 3
Underwood 4, Missouri Valley 1

BOYS SOCCER

Bondurant-Farrar 9, Carroll 0
St. Albert 5, Creston 2
Treynor 7, Tri-Center 0
Underwood 5, Missouri Valley 1

Ed Department social justice training postponed by bill in Legislature

News

April 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A spokesperson for the Iowa Department of Education says a social justice and equity conference for educators has been postponed in response to a bill in the Iowa Legislature. The House bill bans so-called “divisive concepts” in government diversity training and school curriculum — including teaching that the U-S and the state of Iowa are “fundamentally or systemically racist or sexist.” A retired education department official, Tom Rendon, was supposed to give a presentation at the conference.

“What concerned me was that the work we do here in education-and equity, I think is an important part of it, especially in early childhood-is being hindered even before this House File 802 becomes law,” according to Rendon. Simpson College assistant professor, Katrina Cummings was also supposed to speak at the equity conference.  “If teachers aren’t prepared to be responsive to diversity, to differences, because there’s a lack of training, or limited scope of training, I think that could have a great impact on teacher competence, as well as the experience of their students,” Cummings says.

The bill passed out of the House without any Democratic support and was sent to the Senate. Republican Representative Steven Holt of Denison said during debate he believes that teaching or applying a certain characteristic to a certain group of people based on color is the very definition of racism. Holt said, “the way I was raised, that’s un-American.”

Representative Henry Stone, a Republican from Forest City, is an Asian American who told his colleagues he’s been called every racial slur you could imagine, but Stone said he does not believe there is “systemic racism” in the United States or in Iowa. The Education Department says they’re rescheduling the conference for this fall.

Bill would equalize benefits for parents of newborns & adoptive parents

News

April 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A bill that seeks to equalize workplace benefits for adoptive and biological parents as cleared the House unanimously, but awaits a Senate vote. If the House bill becomes law, Iowa businesses that give parents time off after the birth of a biological child would have to give the same benefit to parents who adopt a child under the age of seven. Representative Brian Lohse of Bondurant and his three siblings were adopted.

“I think it’s very important that we tell parents of adopted children that they are the same in every way and should be treated the same in every way as those who have biological children,” Lohse says “In my mind, there’s no difference between an adopted child and a biological child.”

More than 11-hundred adoptions have been finalized in Iowa over the past 12 months. Representative Bob Kressig (KRESS-ig) of Cedar Falls says more than half of those adopted children were above the age of six.  “The transition of being a foster child and going through the adoption process, which I haven’t experienced, but I’m sure it can be kind of traumatic for the family and for the child,” Kressig says.

While Kressig would like to see time off and other workplace benefits for parents who adopt of child up to the age of 18 be equal to those for the parents of a newborn, he supported the bill when it passed the House. The legislation cleared a Senate committee in mid-February, but has not yet been passed by the full Senate.

As Iowa’s obesity rates rise, dietary supplements may help get us back on track

News

April 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Many Iowans don’t eat right and the latest surveys show the state’s adult obesity rate is among the nation’s worst at 36-percent, while Iowa’s childhood obesity rate is about 15-percent. John Troup, a vice president at the Consumer Healthcare Products Association, says daily dietary supplements — things like vitamins, minerals and fish oils — could help Iowans meet our nutritional needs.

“We have to continue to look for nutrient-dense foods, primarily fruits and vegetables, and if we can’t get those, then it’s important to consider appropriate dietary supplementation,” Troup says. “They can help fill the gaps and provide a transition into a healthier diet and help us make sure we’re meeting the nutrient requirements set by the USDA.”

While it’s recommended we get five servings a day of both fruits and vegetables, most of us don’t even get three. With so many types of supplements on the shelves, Troup says it’s important to pick the right ones. “People should look for a brand they recognize and then buy it from a source they can trust or that they have regular visits to,” Troup says. “Make sure that you look at the label for any quality designations and go online and research what they have on their own websites.”

During the past year of the pandemic, some Iowans have been able to buckle down and focus on their personal health and wellness. For many of us, that means adding a dietary supplement to the daily health regimen. “They support the underlying systems that keep us healthy,” he says, “and those underlying systems play an important role in being able to fight things like infections and to make sure our metabolic processes are working as optimally as they can.”

Surveys find nearly seven in ten Americans use dietary supplements at least once a week. Learn more about supplements at KnowYourOTCs.org.