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Schildberg Rec Area flood damage not as bad as feared

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March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Recent flood damage to the Schildberg Recreation Area was not as bad as feared. Interim Atlantic Parks and Recreation Department Director Bryant Rasmussen told the Parks and Rec Board Monday evening, that “We went out there today expecting the worst, and it wasn’t quite as bad as what we were originally thinking.”

Rasmussen said some fencing was knocked down by flowing ice and water at the Schildberg Dog Park, and will have to be replaced. About one-third of the chain-link fencing was destroyed and some poles bend over. The damage is estimated at $10,000 to $12,000. Officials will see if a grant is available to help reimburse the costs for replacement fencing, dependent upon a State of Iowa Disaster Declaration for Cass County.

Parks Board 3-18-19

He said also, “The docks are separated. The small dock over by the Rotary Shelter is free-floating, so we’ll have to fish that one back out. The big dock is up on the shoreline. The cement pillars that were holding it in place have been ripped-out, so we will have to go out and assess what we will have to do with that one.”

Fortunately, he said “All of our trails are intact. All the rip-rap held up, so it’s just going to [involve] routine cleaning after the flooding.” He did say that a portion of a walking trail off of Iowa Avenue had part of the soil sediment ripped out on the back side, which will have to be replaced, but the trail is still there. The trail up to the new bridge is fine, just a little muddy right now. The Atlantic Little League Park also survived without any major damage.

Rasmussen said the park will be opened-up as soon as possible, once all the inspections are complete. Parks Advisor Roger Herring said the best part was there there was no structural damage to the levies around the Schildberg Parks lakes. On a related note, the Schildberg Park Campground Area is tentatively expected to open April 1st, weather permitting.

In other business, the Parks Board approved a Memorandum of Understanding with the Nishna Valley YMCA, for Sunnyside Swimming Pool Director Chelsie Huddleson. The agreement calls for an increase in pay for Huddleson, who has served as Pool Director for the past two-or-three years. Her pay was frozen last year, due to budget reasons. Rasmussen says she “Runs a tight ship, and is good for the pool and making sure things get done properly.”

He said also, the Sunnyside Ice Rink is closed due to the warm conditions, and the roads to the Park are still closed, but the park gates remain open. The roads to the park will re-open, Rasmussen said, when the long-term forecast shows no chance of snow. The Atlantic Parks Board will next meet during a special session at Noon on April 1st, to review and act on bids for the Schildberg Shelter House.

Mills County Sheriff’s report (3/18/19)

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports five arrests over the past few days: on Saturday, 27-year old Walker James Langel, of Glenwood, was arrested for OWI/3rd offense, Felony Eluding, Failure to Obey a Traffic Control Device, Open Container, and unsafe backing on a highway. His bond was set at $10,300. Also arrested Saturday, was 36-year old Joylynna Anne Tronson, of Glenwood, for OWI/1st offense. Bond was set at $1,000.

Three people were arrested on separate charges, Friday: 28-year old Tyler Milton Study, of Thurman, was arrested for Driving Under Suspension and Motorcycle/Moped license violations. Bond was set at $300; Jerrell Nakeed Pringle was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance [PCS] ($1,000 bond); and, 46-year old Ronald Marquez Roulhac, of Miami Gardens, FL., was arrested for PCS, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia; Failure to Provide proof of liability; Fraudulent use of registration, and improper rear lamps (Bond $1,300).

Iowa West Foundation Awards $6.4 Million in Grant and Initiative Funding

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Council Bluffs, IA) The Iowa West Foundation Board of Directors recently approved $6.4 million in grants and initiatives funding to 35 nonprofit organizations and government entities in southwest Iowa and eastern Nebraska. 2019 Cycle 1 Grants and Initiatives (*denotes Multi-Year Funding Grantee) include:

  • *American Midwest Ballet – General Operating Funding, $125,000
  • *Boys and Girls Club of the Midlands – General Operating Funding for Council Bluffs Club, $85,000
  • Carson Volunteer Fire Department – Personal Protective Equipment, $10,000
  • City of Council Bluffs – Furthering Interconnections, Revitalization, Streetscapes, Transportation, and Aesthetics for a Vibrant Economy, $500,000
  • City of Council Bluffs – Loessfest 2019; River’s Edge activation, $250,000.
  • Council Bluffs Soccer Club – Iowa West Sports Plex, $768,809.50
  • *Durham Museum – General Operating Funding, $25,000, Exterior Restoration Initiative $50,000.
  • *FAMILY Inc. – General Operating Funding, $120,000.
  • *Green Hills AEA -Preschool funding, $1,100,000.
  • Hancock Volunteer Fire Department – Gear and Equipment, $10,000.
  • *Heartland Family Service – General Operating Funding supporting Iowa Family Works, substance abuse services, and homeless services, $330,000.
  • *Immigrant Legal Center – General Operating Funding supporting immigration legal services in southwest Iowa, $65,000.
  • Iowa Legal Aid – Community Stabilization Project, $15,000.
  • Iowa West Foundation Initiatives – Downtown Cultural Trail, $50,000; Riverfront Revitalization, $500,000.
  • *Iowa Western Community College Foundation – General Operating Funding for the Performing Arts Center, $30,000.
  • *Joslyn Art Museum – General Operating Funding supporting Joslyn’s Kent Bellows Mentoring Program, $25,000.
  • *Lauritzen Gardens – General Operating Funding, $12,500; Railroad Days, $25,000.
  • *Lutheran Family Services – General Operating Funding to support child abuse prevention and sexual abuse treatment in Council Bluffs, $50,000.
  • Manning Betterment Foundation – Playground Safe Surfacing Update, $3,000.
  • *Micah House – General Operating Funding supporting homeless families, $90,000.
  • Neola Betterment Corporation – Senior Housing, $200,000.
  • New Visions Homeless Services – General Operating Funding, $100,000.
  • Omaha Bridges Out of Poverty, Council Bluffs Poverty Alleviation Initiative $100,000.
  • *Omaha Children’s Museum – General Operating Funding supporting field trips, outreach visits and low-cost memberships for families in southwest Iowa, $45,000.
  • Omaha Community Foundation – Pottawattamie Gives! Incentives, $29,000.
  • Omaha Development Foundation – Entrepreneurial Development for southwest Iowa, $100,000.
  • *Omaha Symphony Association – General Operating Funding supporting Adventures in Music for southwest Iowa students, $25,000.
  • *Opera Omaha – General Operating Funding, $25,000.
  • Pheasants Forever, Inc. – Strengthening Quality of Life and Rural Economies through Growing Outdoor Recreation Opportunities, $44,759.60.
  • *Pottawattamie Arts, Culture & Entertainment (PACE) – Harvester II Arts & Culture District, $2,000,000.
  • Pottawattamie County Board of Supervisors – 2019 CITIES Program, $93,765; Art on the Frontier Trails (ArtFITS), $20,000.
  • SHARE Omaha – General Operating Funding for Pottawattamie County launch, $50,000.
  • The 712 Initiative – General Operating Funding/Placemaking Consortium, $500,000.
  • *The Rose Theater – General Operating Funding for School Field Trip Program for southwest Iowa students, $25,000.
  • Treynor Volunteer Fire Department – Ambulance Cot, $10,000.
  • Underwood Volunteer Fire Department – Thermal Imaging Camera, $8,650.
  • United Way of the Midlands – Community Care Fund, $255,500.

The Iowa West Foundation is one of the largest private foundations in the Midwest. It has distributed more than $484 million to nonprofits and governmental agencies through southwest Iowa and eastern Nebraska since the inception of its grant program. Funding for the grants comes from investment earnings and the Iowa West Racing Association, which receives contractual fees from casino operators, Ameristar and Harrah’s.

Homes flood as Missouri River overtops, breaches levees

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Hundreds of homes flooded in several Midwestern states after rivers breached at least a dozen levees following heavy rain and snowmelt in the region, authorities said Monday while warning that the flooding was expected to linger.

About 200 miles of levees were compromised — either breached or overtopped — in four states, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said. Even in places where the water level peaked in those states — Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas — the current was fast and the water so high that damage continued to pile up. The flooding was blamed for at least three deaths.

“The levees are busted and we aren’t even into the wet season when the rivers run high,” said Tom Bullock, the emergency management director for Missouri’s Holt County.

He said many homes in a mostly rural area of Holt County were inundated with 6 to 7 feet (1.8 to 2.1 meters) of water from the swollen Missouri River. He noted that local farmers are only a month away from planting corn and soybeans.

“The water isn’t going to be gone, and the levees aren’t going to be fixed this year,” said Bullock, whose own home was now on an island surrounded by floodwater.

One couple was rescued by helicopter after water from three breached levees swept across 40,000 acres (62.5 square miles), he said. Another nine breaches were confirmed in Nebraska and Iowa counties south of the Platte River, the Corps said.

In nearby Atchison County, Missouri, about 130 people were urged to leave their homes as water levels rose and strained levees, three of which had already been overtopped by water. Missouri State Highway Patrol crews were on standby to rescue anyone who insisted on staying despite the danger.

“The next four to five days are going to be pretty rough,” said Rhonda Wiley, Atchison County’s emergency management and 911 director.

The Missouri River already crested upstream of Omaha, Nebraska, though hundreds of people remained out of their homes and water continued to pour through busted levees. Flooding was so bad around Fremont, Nebraska, that just one lane of U.S. 30 was uncovered outside the city of 26,000. State law enforcement limited traffic on that road to pre-approved trucks carrying gas, food, water and other essential supplies.

“There are no easy fixes to any of this,” said Fremont City Administrator Brian Newton. “We need Mother Nature to decrease the height of the river.”

In southwest Iowa, the Missouri River reached a level in Fremont County that was 2 feet (0.6 meter) above a record set in 2011. The county’s emergency management director, Mike Crecelius, said Monday that more water was flooding into low-lying parts of Hamburg, where a wall of sand-filled barriers was breached when one failed.

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, touring flood-ravaged areas of the state for the second straight day, warned that flooding will worsen along the Mississippi River as snow melts to the north.

The National Weather Service said the river was expected to crest Thursday in St. Joseph, Missouri, at its third-highest level on record. Military C-130 planes were evacuated last week from nearby Rosecrans Air National Guard base.

In North Dakota, Fargo was preparing for potentially major flooding along the Red River — the same river that ravaged the city a decade ago.

The city declared an emergency and Mayor Tim Mahoney asked residents to help fill 1 million sandbags. That was in response to the National Weather Service warning that snowmelt poses a big risk in Fargo, which now stands a 90 percent chance of major flooding. Sandbag-filling operations begin March 26.

In Illinois, weather service readings showed major flooding along the Pecatonica River at Shirland and Freeport, and the Rock River in the Rockford area and Moline.

Freeport City Manager Lowell Crow said officials there expected the Pecatonica River “to possibly rise to a record level or at least to a level we haven’t seen in 50 years.”

The flooding started after a massive late-winter storm hit the Midwest last week. Among the victims was 80-year-old Betty Hamernik, whose body was recovered Saturday by divers after earlier rescue efforts failed because of the dangerous conditions, the Omaha World-Herald reported.

The Missouri Department of Transportation reported about 100 flood-related road closures, including a stretch of Interstate 29.

Jud Kneuvean, the emergency manger with the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers’ Kansas City district, blamed a combination of higher temperature, rainfall and snowmelt “converging all at the same time.”

No significant flooding was expected east of Kansas City, though Kneuvean said the Corps was watching weather forecasts closely.

“When you have a high river and have any forecast of rain on it, it can change the scenario very quickly,” Kneuvean said.

Corning woman arrested on Adams County warrant

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Page County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest on Saturday, of 40-year old Joleen Mary Most, from Corning. She was arrested at a residence in Shenandoah, on an Adams County Warrant for Harassment 3rd degree and 3 counts of Violation of no contact / protective order – contempt. Most was transported to Villisca where she was transferred to an Adams County Deputy, as there was no bond on the warrant.

Atlantic Police report three arrests on Friday

News

March 18th, 2019 by admin

The Atlantic Police Department reports three arrests from this past Friday, March 15th.

Officers arrested 27-year-old Mark Fredericksen of Atlantic for Simulated Public Intoxication, Possession of Contraband in a Correctional Institution, and Unlawful Possession of Prescription Drug. He was taken to the Cass County Jail and booked in.

Atlantic Police also arrested 23-year-old Selena Herrera of Atlantic for Operating While Under the Influence 1st Offense. She was taken to the Cass County Jail and booked in.

Also on Friday Atlantic Police arrested 26-year-old Cody Mudd of Atlantic on a Montgomery County Warrant for Failure to Appear. He was taken to the Cass County Jail and later released into the custody of Montgomery County.

US Supreme Court denies hearing Ron Paul 2012 aides’ appeal

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear an appeal of the felony convictions of three top staffers on Ron Paul’s 2012 presidential campaign. Campaign chairman Jesse Benton, campaign manager John Tate and deputy campaign manager Dimitri Kesari were convicted in 2016 of causing false records and campaign expenditure reports to be filed to the Federal Election Commission. Prosecutors say they tried to hide $73,000 in payments to former Iowa Sen. Kent Sorenson for his endorsement of Paul.

They argue that they broke no laws when they concealed the payments through a third-party campaign vendor. They have served their sentences but sought to clear their names of felony convictions. The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis upheld the convictions in May 2018. The Supreme Court on Monday denied their request to hear the case with no comment.

Barriers in place to protect Cedar Rapids neighborhoods

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Barriers have been emplaced to protect some Cedar Rapids neighborhoods from floodwaters. The National Weather Service says the Cedar River is expected to crest later Monday at 18.5 feet. That’s nearly 3 feet into what the service says is major flood stage but nearly 13 feet below the 2008 record of 31.1 feet. The sand-filled barriers are arrayed along the west side of the river. Storm drains and manholes have been plugged in the neighborhoods. Any flooding isn’t expected to reach houses and businesses.

RAGBRAI – Day 2 route announced

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

click on the image to enlarge

The second leg of RAGBRAI was announced this (Monday) morning. Officials with the Des Moines Register report after an overnight stay in Atlantic on Sunday July 21st, thousands of bicyclists will head out Monday, July 22nd on their way to Winterset. Along the way, their trek will take them on White Pole Road to Wiota, Anita, Adair, Casey, Menlo, Stuart, Dexter and Earlham, before they take an overnight break in Winterset.

The complete route from Atlantic to Winterset will travel 68.1 miles and have 2,044 feet of climb.  As mentioned, a good chunk of the route will travel along the historic White Pole Road Scenic Byway, chock full of historical locations and interesting sites.  RAGBRAI will celebrate 100 Years of the American Legion and their outstanding contributions through service to the community, state and nation.  Monday’s route stops through seven communities with active American Legion Posts from Atlantic to Winterset.

RAGBRAI 17 (The Register’s Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa), is dedicated to one of the ride’s founders and Des Moines Register columnist, Donald Kaul, who died last July from prostate cancer.  For more info. on RAGBRAI: https://ragbrai.com/ragbrai-xlvii-route-monday-july-22-atlantic-to-winterset/?fbclid=IwAR1yctFV5Lc2orOMa50tKzRcZtA43k5u51S9MS8_-tqKpfY2jDI2uN-fZKc

 

Glenwood, Pacific Junction, Hamburg residents urged to conserve water following impacts from flooding

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The major flooding events in southwestern Iowa are impacting some water plants and wells, surrounding them by floodwaters or inundating them.

  • Glenwood and Pacific Junction: The Glenwood Municipal Utility (GMU) water plant and wells are completely surrounded by floodwaters. Customers are being asked to only use water as necessary.  Please delay use of washing machines, dish washers, and other uses so that the system can maintain treatment. Mills County EMA was notified by MidAmerican Energy that power to the Glenwood Municipal Water Treatment Facility near Pacific Junction, would be de-energized due to quickly encroaching floodwater. MidAmerican Energy has determined that the flood waters are an imminent threat to their electrical infrastructure as well as the treatment facility. Officials with Glenwood Municipal Utilities have requested that, until further notice, all water use within their service area be restricted to indoor use only. It is recommended that residents cut water use by a minimum of fifty percent (50%). Residents should also postpone laundry and dishwashing, refrain from watering lawns, washing cars, and performing other high-volume water activities.
    Glenwood Municipal Utilities has advised that their current water storage facilities contain enough water to serve its customers for approximately two (2) days with unrestricted use. Water conservation by customers will help to extend this period and reduce potential shortages and further restrictions. Based upon current conditions, Mills County Emergency Management Agency, Glenwood Municipal Utilities, and MidAmerican Energy do not have an estimated duration for the restrictions.
  • These restrictions affect the following areas: City of Glenwood; Pony Creek area; Lake Ohana area. If you have questions or concerns regarding water usage, please contact Glenwood Municipal Utilities at 712-527-4868. The City of Pacific Junction also receives water supply from GMU and users there are also urged to also conserve water. Parts of Pacific Junction are currently inundated by floodwaters.
  • Hamburg: Additionally, the City of Hamburg has lost its water treatment plant due to flooding. Power was shut off to the water treatment plant around 5:00 p.m. yesterday and water began inundating the plant sometime this morning. Emergency management staff are providing bottled water to residents. The local hospital in Hamburg has been disconnected from the water treatment plant and is utilizing other sources.

All customers are being asked to only use water as necessary.  Please delay use of washing machines, dish washers, and other uses so that the system can maintain treatment.