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(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 10/22/18

News, Podcasts

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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North-central Iowa hospital to stop delivering babies

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

IOWA FALLS, Iowa (AP) — A hospital in north-central Iowa says it’s going to stop delivering babies. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reports that Hansen Family Hospital in Iowa Falls announced last week that the doctor who performs most of the deliveries is leaving the hospital, so the deliveries will stop Nov. 23rd. The hospital says prenatal care will be provided by Iowa Falls providers, but late pregnancy appointments and deliveries will occur at partnership hospitals in neighboring communities, such as Mason City.

Hospital CEO Doug Morse says it’s difficult to find doctors willing to deliver babies in a rural setting with its attendance malpractice risk and call burdens. He says his hospital is one of eight rural Iowa hospitals stopping deliveries this year.

City of Atlantic Personnel & Finance Committee mtg this evening

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The City of Atlantic’s Personnel and Finance Committee is set to meet 5:30-p.m., today, in the Council’s Chambers at City Hall. On their agenda is consideration of:

  • Options with regard to a dilapidated property at 301 Maple St.
  • A Service Line proposal with Megan Roberts Agency.
  • The Parks and Rec Board recommendation for Park Facility Reservation Fees.
  • A Temporary Full-time position with the Street Dept.
  • and, Consideration of Compensation and Benefits for the FY 2020 Budget and Union Negotiations.

2 arrests, 1 incident in Creston

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(7-a.m. News) — Creston Police say two men were arrested over the past few days, on separate charges. At around 1:50-a.m. Friday, 28-year old David Downey, of Afton, was arrested in Creston for OWI/2nd offense. Downey was later released from the Union County Jail on a $2,000 bond. And, 21-year old Tyler Ray, of Creston, was arrested at around 11-a.m. Saturday, on a Union County warrant for Failure to Appear on an original, Driving While Barred, charge. Ray was being held in the Union County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

Early Wednesday morning, a Creston resident reported to Police that sometime overnight Tuesday into early Wednesday morning, someone removed or his the driver’s side mirror on this vehicle, while it was parked outside the residence in the 200 block of E. Mills Street. Damage from the incident amounted to about $150.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 10/22/2018

News, Podcasts

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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Bernie Sanders voiced support for 4th District congressional candidate JD Scholten this past weekend

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders campaigned this weekend with fourth district congressional candidate J.D. Scholten, with stops in Ames and Fort Dodge on Sunday. “This, in fact, is the most important midterm election in the history of the United States of America,” Sanders said in Ames. Over the past 15 months, Scholten has raised more than twice as much as the incumbent he’s running against — Republican Congressman Steve King. “You are going to un-elect one of the most reactionary members of the congress and elect J.D. Scholten,” Sanders said, to cheers. A crowd of nearly 800 gathered in the Iowa State University Memorial Union for the campaign rally. On Saturday evening, about 700 were in a Morningside College auditorium in Sioux City, which is Scholten’s hometown.

“If you build the right campaign and get out there to the people and earn it, they will vote for you and if you build something special, Senator Bernie Sanders will come,” Scholten said, drawing cheers. Sanders, as you may recall, nearly tied Hillary Clinton in the 2016 Iowa Caucuses and his speeches this weekend touched on familiar themes, like raising the minimum wage and having Medicare for All. “The ideas that we advocated are now not considered fringe ideas or radical ideas, they are ideas supported in many cases by the vast majority of the American people,” Sanders said, to cheers in Sioux City. “Thank you, Iowa.” Iowa’s fourth congressional district has a 70-thousand voter registration advantage for Republicans, but Sanders suggested intense interest among younger voters could spur record levels of voter turn-out.

“It is all together possible that at one or two o’clock in the morning on the night of November 6th we’re going to be looking at a House of Representatives where one party or the other party will have control by one or two votes,” Sanders said. “One of those votes could be the fourth district of Iowa.” Deidre DeJear, the Iowa Democratic Party’s candidate for secretary of state, joined Sanders and Scholten at Sunday’s rally in Ames. Sanders said the two Democrats — both of whom are decades younger than the 77-year-old Vermont senator — have a new vision about

where our country can go. Congressman King tweeted about Sanders this weekend, suggesting Sanders’ vision was akin to socialism in Venezuela and the former Soviet Union.

3 vehicle accident in Creston – No injuries

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Creston Police say no injuries were reported following a three-vehicle accident Friday afternoon. Officials say a 2005 Toyota Camry driven by 68-year old Earl Ritter, of Omaha, was in the right eastbound lane of Highway 34, and a 2002 Buick Century driven by 96-year old John May, of Mount Ayr, was in the left westbound lane. A 2013 Chevy Silverado pickup driven by 58-year old Robbie Jo Tanner, of Greenfield, was stopped at the red light at the intersection of Laurel Street and Highway 34. An unknown vehicle in the left eastbound lane of Highway 34 waiting to turn north onto Sumner Street created a blind spot for John May.

May began to turn south onto Laurel Street and did not see Ritter’s oncoming Toyota.  Ritter did not have time to stop. His vehicle broadsided the Buick, which was spun into the northbound lane of Laurel Street before striking Tanner’s pickup head-on. The accident happened at around 12:30-p.m. Police said May was at fault for Failure to Yield upon making a left turn, but no citations were issued. Damage from the collisions amounted to $4,500.

Emergency dispatcher coaches man helping wife deliver baby

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

MUSCATINE, Iowa (AP) — A grateful mother is thanking an emergency services dispatcher in eastern Iowa for calmly guiding her husband as he helped her deliver their baby daughter. Twenty-seven-year-old Kala Walker gave birth to little Kalee last week at home with her 29-year-old husband, Lee Walker, assisting. Kala Walker says Ben Sharpe at Muscatine County Joint Communications knew what to say to her husband and “knew how to walk him through it, which was wonderful.”

The Walkers had been sent home from Trinity Hospital earlier because she was dilating, but not long after they arrived Kala Walker began having contractions. Lee Walker called 911 for help, and after five minutes on the phone with Sharpe, the little girl arrived. Paramedics soon were on the scene to cut the umbilical cord and take mom and baby to the hospital.

MedPharm says pot stores will be open and inviting

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The company that’s the first to produce medical marijuana in Iowa will also run two of the dispensaries which sell the products. MedPharm Iowa’s Stephen Wilson oversees the dispensary program and says the dispensaries are very modern looking. “If you walk in, it’s very much like a Verizon store if you will — it’s a very open, inviting environment so that patients feel comfortable. Because a lot of times, these patients have very debilitating conditions that take a mental and physical toll on themselves,” Wilson explains.

Other companies will run facilities in Council Bluffs, Davenport and Waterloo. Wilson is not sure how those dispensaries will look. “I have not seen the dispensaries themselves, however I can imagine they’re going to have a similar type of atmosphere — very inviting. It’s pretty typical as far was what you see in cannabis dispensaries across the nation,” Wilson says. He says the MedPharm facilities will have a high level of security. “We want our patients to feel comfortable,” Wilson says, “a lot of people coming in recognize the fact that they are purchasing medical cannabis products. They want to feel secure in that they know that their privacy is going to be taken very seriously. And that’s one of the things, we have several safeguards built in.”

He says they will cover all aspects of security involving prescription medications. “We have a state of the art security system in place to prevent diversion, theft, release of private health information, things like that,” Wilson explained. Wilson says when patients come in they will meet with an expert and an I-pad right in front of them. He says the give the patients a degree of freedom to learn about the products and as well as other information the patient consultant deems necessary. Wilson says they hope to have an open house at their dispensaries in November. He made his comments during a news conference to unveil the company’s products.

With mounting death toll, teen drivers urged to follow rules, avoid distractions

News

October 22nd, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — This is Teen Driver Safety Week and Iowa leaders suggest parents have a conversation with their teens about the rules of the road. Genie Clemens, youth coordinator for the Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau, says 22 Iowans under the age of 20 were killed in crashes last year. “Any life lost in a motor vehicle crash is too many,” Clemens says, “so we’re doing everything we can to help teens and other drivers to remember to drive safely and always wear their seat belts, obey the laws and obviously, not drive distracted.”

In 2016, there were nearly 23-hundred people killed in crashes involving a teen driver nationwide, and 814 of those killed were the teen drivers. Clemens says alcohol and drugs often play a factor in teen crashes and the odds are worse if a teen driver has one or more teen passengers. “In 2016, nearly one out of every five teen drivers was involved in a fatality crash,” Clemens says. “They actually had been drinking. That’s a sad statistic and we need to do everything we can to prevent our teens from using alcohol and drugs.”

The radio, the cell phone and passengers can all create potentially-deadly distractions for teen drivers, and Clemens warns them to pay attention to the task at hand — driving. “In 2016, among teen drivers involved in fatal crashes, 10% were reported as distracted at the time of the crash,” Clemens says. “We know that our teens are definitely always connected to their phones, but when they’re driving, they should be putting those phones down and focusing strictly on their driving.”

A Triple-A study found that when a teen driver has only teen passengers in their vehicle, the fatality rate for all people involved in a crash increased 51 percent.