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Iowa ag secretary asks Biden administration to back Hypoxia Task Force

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s Secretary of Agriculture is co-chair of what’s called the Hypoxia Task Force, which works to reduce the size of the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico through cutting nutrient runoff in the Mississippi River basin. Mike Naig says the group, which represents 12 states in the region, recently sent a letter requesting support from President Biden and his administration.

“The federal government can help us with some resources and some regulatory relief, too,” Naig says. “The letter that we sent to the Biden administration, as they come in and set up shop and get their policies underway, that they remember and we encourage them to focus on and be a good partner to the Hypoxia Task Force.” Naig says Iowa launched its nutrient reduction management strategies in 2013 as a way to reduce the size of the hypoxia zone, which covers 21-hundred square miles of the gulf.

“You’ve got states all across the Mississippi River Basin that are implementing their nutrient reduction strategies,” Naig says. “That’s what we want to see, states being proactive, doing what makes sense in their state, working with all of their partners. We want to continue to see that great progress all across the region.” Hypoxia is a lack of oxygen and in the gulf, it means plants die and marine life either dies or moves away. Naig says Iowa farmers are using techniques that are having a beneficial effect on the environment and in battling problems like hypoxia.

“We continue to focus on implementing conservation practices like no-till, reduced tillage, cover crops, building wetlands,” Naig says. “Those are some of the practices that we know, the science tells us those things work. If we see that change on the land, we know we’ll see an improvement in water quality.” The group’s action plan has a near-term target of reducing nutrient loading to the Gulf of Mexico from the basin by 20-percent by 2025.

Webster City man sentenced to federal prison for child porn

News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — Federal prosecutors for Iowa say a Webster City man has been sentenced to more than 14 years in federal prison for receiving and distributing child pornography. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Iowa says in a news release that 56-year-old Kevin Eugene Dill was sentenced Feb. 26 to 169 months. There is no parole in the federal system.

Dill pleaded guilty in October to single counts of distribution of child pornography and receipt of child pornography. As part of his plea, Dill admitted that between March 2012 and June 2020, he knowingly received thousands of images and videos of child pornography.

2021 Rolling Valley Boys All-Conference Basketball Honors

Sports

March 5th, 2021 by admin

First Team

Layne Pryor, Woodbine*
Sage Evans, West Harrison*
Gavin Reineke, Boyer Valley
Connor McKee, CAM
Colby Rich, CAM
Gabe Obert, Coon Rapids-Bayard
Koelson Evans, West Harrison
Zach Schimmer, Ar-We-Va
*Unanimous Choice

Second Team

Mason King, West Harrison
Dylan Hoefer, Woodbine
Jaiden TenEyck, Boyer Valley
Tyler Petersen, Exira-EHK
Easton Nelson, Exira-EHK
Tanner Oswald, Coon Rapids-Bayard
Will Ragaller, Ar-We-Va
Brigham Daniel, Glidden-Ralston.

PIKE fraternity at UI under investigation for hosting alcohol party

News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – University of Iowa officials are investigating the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity for alleged alcohol and hazing violations. The Cedar Rapids Gazette reports the fraternity is accused of holding in-person social events that included alcohol inside the chapter’s house in Iowa City. A letter from the University of Iowa’s Dean of Student Accountability says officials also have been notified that activities with new fraternity members allegedly posed a risk to their health and safety.

The Gazette reports the University of Iowa investigated another fraternity for an alleged hazing incident. However, officials ultimately determined the activity — which was recorded on video — was not an initiation or required for fraternity membership.

Atlantic Snow Sculpture Contest winners announced

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Atlantic Parks and Recreation Department Director Bryant Rasmussen, Friday, announced the winners of the Park and Rec Snow Sculpture Contest. Rasmussen said they had an amazingly close race.

Winning Sculpture by Acacia Macias

The first place winner, with 36 votes, was Acacia Macias, with her huge bear. Acacia won $25 in Atlantic Chamber Bucks. Helping to create the Snow Bear, was Kycas, Serenity and Lily Macias, and Zoey, Auten, Ian and William Cosgrove.

Patrick Garland’s “Snow Train.”

Ryan Kenneth Means’ “Snow Shark”

Second place, with 33 votes, went to Patrick Garland, who created a Train snow sculpture, that looked like it could have been ridden. And, with 32 votes, a Shark sculpture by Ryan Kenneth Means, took third place. The contest began February first and concluded Feb. 28th.

Votes were tabulated virtually Thursday night, by members of the public.

 

Audubon County Sheriff’s report (3/5/21)

News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Audubon County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest on February 27th, of 30-year-old Joel Musfeldt, for OWI/2nd offense. The charges stem from a traffic stop in the area of 130th and Jay Avenue. The Audubon man later released on his own recognizance, and is expected to appear before the Magistrate, at a later date.
And, as reported by Atlantic Police, Friday, an Atlantic man, 40-year David Thomas, was arrested Wednesday, March 3rd, for Extortion and Theft 2nd. The charges stem from an incident that began on February 26, 2021 in the 1400 block of 300th St.  Thomas was released on his own recognizance and will appear before the Magistrate at a later date.

Backyard & Beyond 3-5-2021

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

March 5th, 2021 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen talks about caffeine.

Play

Iowa COVID-19 update, 3/5/21: 13 additional deaths; 564 additional cases

News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Public Heath at 10-a.m., Friday, reported an additional 564 positive COVID-19 test results returned from the lab, for a pandemic total of 366,055. There were also 13 additional deaths reported, for a total of 5,549, including one additional death in Harrison County, where the total is now 70.

The number of Long-Term Care facility COVID-19 Outbreaks are down to 11. Hospitalization data show 176 Iowans are hospitalized with COVID, compared to 184 in the previous report. COVID patients in an ICU are unchanged, at 39. There were 35 patients admitted to hospitals over the 24-hour reporting period (compared to 30 previously), and nine patients remain on a ventilator.

Hospitals in Western & Southwest Iowa report: 15 people are hospitalized for COVID; seven are in an ICU, four patients with COVID symptoms were admitted over the past 24-hours, and one person remained on a ventilator. More than 200,000 Iowans are now fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Health department data shows 768,426 vaccine doses have been administered in Iowa, with 208,429 individuals completing inoculation. The new Johnson & Johnson vaccine, also known as the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine, were made available in Iowa this week, the state is not reporting those numbers so far.

Iowa’s 14-day positivity rate is 4.0%, while the seven-day rate is 3.8%.

In the KJAN listening area, here are the current number positive cases by County; The # of new cases since yesterday {+} – if any; and the total number of deaths in each county to date:

  • Cass, 1,358 cases; {+2}; 51 deaths
  • Adair, 925; {+4}; 29
  • Adams, 325 {+0}; 4
  • Audubon, 492 {+2}; 9
  • Guthrie, 1,170 {+3}; 28
  • Harrison County, 1,800; {+4}; 69
  • Madison County, 1,556; {+4}; 18
  • Mills County, 1,633; {+1}; 20
  • Montgomery, 1,043; {+0}; 36
  • Pottawattamie County, 10,824; {+21}; 146
  • Shelby County, 1,225; {+2}; 33
  • Union County,  1,268; {+5}; 31

Reporter faces trial in case seen as attack on press rights

News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa journalist faces trial on charges stemming from her coverage of a protest against racial injustice. Prosecutors have pursued the misdemeanor case against Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri despite international condemnation from free press advocates who say she was just doing her job. Sahouri was pepper sprayed and arrested by a Des Moines police officer while reporting on a clash between protesters and police outside a shopping mall.

Police officers are shown arresting Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri after a Black Lives Matter protest she was covering on May 31, 2020, in Des Moines, Iowa, was dispersed by tear gas. Sahouri is set to stand trial on Monday, March 8, 2021, on misdemeanor charges, a case that prosecutors have pursued despite international condemnation from advocates for press freedom. (Photo courtesy Katie Akin via AP)

The two-day trial at Drake University will highlight an aggressive legal response by Iowa authorities against those who organized and attended protests that erupted last summer and occasionally turned violent. Sahouri and her former boyfriend are charged with failure to disperse and interference with official acts.

 

Two of Governor Reynolds’ legislative priorities falter

News

March 5th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Key elements of the governor’s 2021 agenda have failed to clear the legislature’s first deadline for policy bills. House Republicans did not have enough votes for state scholarships to cover private school expenses for students in 34 under-performing schools. Governor Kim Reynolds’ plan to make it easier to form charter schools, though, is eligible for House debate. Representative Skyler Wheeler, a Republican from Orange City, says it would let a school district or a group of people found a state-funded charter school. “Charter schools gives parents and students another option. Students have different needs and wants and different educational settings fit different students,” Wheeler says. “This bill simply provides the extra option to give our children a world class education and we all want that.”

Democrats like Representative Mary Mascher, of Iowa City oppose the plan. “I’d feel differently about this if our schools were failing, but quite frankly they aren’t,” Mascher said. “They’re doing a heck of a job.” G-O-P lawmakers also failed to act on part of the governor’s criminal justice agenda that called for steps to combat racial profiling in law enforcement. Representative Jarad Klein, a Republican from Keota, says the House G-O-P’s bill was drafted after consulting with police. “This is not the governor’s bill. This is our bill. This is the Public Safety Committee in the House’s bill that is meant to support law enforcement. I don’t know. There might be one thing that overlaps between in the governor’s bill and what we’re doing,” Klein says. “I went to the folks that deal with this day in and day out, asking what we could do to help.”

The Iowa Legislative Black Caucus is calling on the governor to veto any bill on policing that does not include anti-racial profiling language. Representative Ras (like “Ross”) Smith, a Democrat from Waterloo, notes a SENATE committee has voted to deny state funds to cities that reduce police and sheriffs’ department budgets. “By excluding the anti-racial profiling language, by defunding local cities that seek to modernize public safety, including brain health professionals, I think our governor has shown they have no real intent to have equity and justice for all people,” Smith says.

However, the bill penalizing Iowa cities that might “defund the police” did NOT clear a House committee this week, meaning that proposal is unlikely to become state law.