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ELVILDA O’NEILL, 88, of Atlantic (9-8-2020)

Obituaries

September 3rd, 2020 by Jim Field

ELVILDA O’NEILL, 88, of Atlantic died Thursday, September 3rd at the Heritage House in Atlantic.  Mass of Christian Burial for ELVILDA O’NEILL will be held on Tuesday, September 8th at 11:00 am at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Avoca.  Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.

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Family will greet friends on Tuesday, September 8th from 9:00 am – 11:00 am at the church.

Burial in the Graceland Cemetery in Avoca.

ELVILDA O’NEILL is survived by:

Daughter:  Mary Kay (Paul Edwards) O’Neill of Chicago, IL.

Sons:  Joe (Deanna) O’Neill of Atlantic; Tom (Lisa Hunt) O’Neill of Hancock.

Sister:  Donna Wells of Dalhart, TX.

Sister-in-Law:  Betty Larsen of Harlan.

6 Grandchildren

7 Great-Grandchildren

Burn Ban for Cass County

Ag/Outdoor, News, Weather

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Cass County Emergency Management Coordinator Mike Kennon reports a ban on open burning will be in place for Cass County beginning today (Thursday), at 5:00 p.m. The ban prohibits open and controlled burning in Cass County, Iowa; including all incorporated city limits within the county. Kennon says the current drought conditions in combination with unharvested crops present an increased risk for the potential of rapid fire spread. Controlled fires can quickly become uncontrollable.

During these dry conditions, citizens are reminded to not throw out cigarettes from moving vehicles and to discontinue burning yard waste, piled tree debris, grass/agricultural ground and set-asides or other items during the ban. Small recreational patio or camp fires are permitted only if they are conducted in a fire place of brick, metal or heavy one-inch wire mesh. Any camp fire not in an outdoor fire place is prohibited.

Violation of a burn ban can subject a person to citation or arrest for reckless use of fire or disobeying a burn ban. The ban — which was approved by the State Fire Marshal – will remain in place until environmental conditions improve. Any questions regarding this burn ban should be directed to your local Fire Chief.

High School and Junior Fishing Team forming in Southwest Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, Sports

September 3rd, 2020 by admin

An Atlantic resident is spearheading a new opportunity for area youth that are interested in competitive fishing. Bob Harris is working on starting a High School and Junior Fishing Team.

A Zoom meeting is being held tonight (Thursday, September 3rd) at 8:00 p.m. to explain the program. If you have children interested in joining send your email address, child’s name and age to swifishingteam@gmail.com. A link to the Zoom call and a packet of information about the club will be sent back to you.

Find out more about the group on their Facebook page Southwest Iowa Fishing Team

Online petition drive asks Grinnell College to dump ‘Pioneers’ nickname

News, Sports

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A group of Grinnell College alumni has started a petition drive urging administrators to get rid of the school’s nickname for its athletic teams. Grinnell College doesn’t have a mascot, but its athletes are called “Pioneers.” John Aerni-Flessner is a 2001 graduate who was part of Grinnell’s track and field and cross country teams. “As an alumni of the college and a member of the (Grinnell College) athletic Hall of Fame, I got thinking about the name ‘Pioneers’ and realized that this was problematic because of the celebration of westward expansion and the dispossession of Native Americans that took place alongside that,” Aerni-Flessner says. “So I decided to call up a few friends and organize a petition.”

About 750 people have signed the petition since it was posted online a month ago. In addition to alumni, current Grinnell students and faculty have signed onto the petition. “It just came about through the conversations that people have been having around this country,” Aerni-Flessner says, “especially around the protests.” Paragraphs in the petition note Grinnell College has branded itself as a pioneering institution that was at the forefront of abolition and other social justice movements, but it argues the Pioneer nickname can easily be read as demeaning and a celebration of past historical wrongs.

Aerni-Flessner says the petitioners are not suggesting an alternative to Pioneers, but he suggests Grinnell College administrators could launch a democratic process on campus to come up with a new nickname. “That’s something for the college to weigh in on. I don’t live in Grinnell and am not directly connected with the college at the moment and most of the alumni are not as well,” Aerni-Flessner says. “The college can convene a committee, you know, do what they want with that. We’re happy to support those efforts, but we don’t have a proposal for a substitute name.”

Aerni-Flessner co-authored a book about the history of the Midwest Athletic Conference when he was a Grinnell student.

Shenandoah woman makes plea deal in murder case

News

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Shenandoah woman facing two murder charges has taken a plea deal and avoided going to trial. Online court records indicate 45-year-old April Montello-Roberts was facing two first-degree murder charges, plus burglary, robbery, and attempted murder charges in connection to a crime spree last August in Council Bluffs that left two men dead. The plea agreement will see Montello-Roberts sentenced to 50 years in prison with at least 30 years served. Pottawattamie County Attorney Matt Wilber says this was going to be very first jury trial since the COVID pandemic shutdown. “We had to rent a ballroom at the Mid-America Center to do jury selection. The plan was to bring in 150 prospective jurors and try to get a jury picked in this case. That was really where we were in that process of trying to just figure out the logistics,” Wilbur says.

Montello-Roberts (File photo)

Wilber says he had been in communication with Montello-Roberts’ attorney and they were eventually able to settle on a deal. “We had offered her a deal months ago: 50 years with a minimum of 35 — they came back and said how about half that, 25 with a minimum of 17-and-a-half and we said no,” according to Wilber. “The judge brought up to us that we were about to bring 150 people in, probably at least one-third of whom are elderly, into this case. He asked if there was any room where we could get this settled where we don’t have to put those civilians at risk. We really started sitting down and talking in earnest.”

Montello-Roberts is accused of going on a crime spree last August with 28-year-old Troy Petersen of Essex and they were accused of killing two men in a series of robberies over several days. Their crime spree ended in a standoff with police where Petersen was shot to death. Wilber says the plea deal was based on the Montello-Roberts’ age at her earliest possible release date. “In that case where they’re really not disputing whether she was guilty or not, you’re sort of fighting over what amount of time should she serve,” Wilber explains. “We looked at a case where we figured that at 79, the chances that she got out of prison alive were probably not great. At 74, they’re probably still not great, honestly. But, she at least has some hope and I think that’s what — for her — inclined her to accept what we offered.”

Wilber says the families of the two men killed said they would accept the plea deal. “It’s a tough call always,” Wilber says. “I have to take into account what the particular defendant did, what the victims’ families want, criminal records that we’re looking at, what are we doing to the criminal justice system by taking a case to trial. We’ve got all of those factors that we have to look at.”

Online court records show the new charges include two counts of assault while participating in a felony, plus the original robbery, burglary, and attempted murder of a peace office charges. Police say Petersen was the person who fired the shots that killed the individuals, but that Montello-Roberts was a participant in the event. Montello-Roberts was scheduled to go to trial on September 14th — but will now be sentenced on September 8th.

Fired state health spokeswoman sues State of Iowa, Governor Reynolds

News

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The spokeswoman for the Iowa Department of Public Health who was fired in July — during the coronavirus pandemic — is now suing the state and the governor. Polly Carver-Kimm, a former journalist, says she was forced out because she tried to provide information about COVID-19 to the media and thus, to the public. Tom Duff, the West Des Moines lawyer representing Carver-Kimm, says the suit has multiple sections. Duff says, “It alleges a violation of the state whistleblower law and alleges that the stripping or removing of Polly’s duties and the stifling of information by the Reynolds administration amounts to mismanagement, abuse of authority, and in the midst of an ongoing state pandemic, a danger to public health and safety.”

Carver-Kimm has also filed claims with the State Appeal Board against the State of Iowa, Governor Kim Reynolds, and Reynolds’ communications director Pat Garrett. Those claims allege she was illegally terminated because of her persistent efforts to comply with Iowa’s Open Records law, that her firing violates public policy, and violates her free speech rights under the Iowa Constitution.  “During my nearly 13 years at the Iowa Department of Public Health, I never had a negative job review and I was never removed from a project,” Carver-Kimm says. “That all changed just days after the governor’s office became involved. From that point on, I was systematically cut out of the COVID-19 response, beginning with being removed from being able to respond to media requests.”

She says the only explanation she ever received was that she was “not a team player” and that her actions were causing friction with the governor’s staff. “At the time of my termination, I was told the department was restructuring,” Carver-Kimm says. “At the time of my firing, there were five people doing the job I used to do by myself. That’s not restructuring, that’s a systematic and deliberate effort to thwart open communication.” During a video news conference this (Thursday) morning, Carver-Kimm was asked by a reporter if she thought the public has all the information it needs regarding the pandemic. “I do believe very strongly in the Iowa Department of Public Health and that it has the public’s best interests,” Carver-Kimm says. “The governor’s office chose to use the information that it was presented in the way that would best serve the governor’s agenda and needs.”

Carver-Kimm is married to Radio Iowa sports director Todd Kimm. She was a long-time reporter and morning talk show host at a Des Moines radio station before she was hired at public health in 2007.

Semi pulling wind turbine fan overturns in Union County

News

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A semi pulling a trailer loaded with a wind turbine fan overturned Wednesday afternoon, in Union County. The Sheriff’s Office reports 65-year old Douglas Gary Goldetsky, of Atkins, AR., was driving a 2020 Kenworth. When he turned south onto Joshua Avenue, a steerman in a separate vehicle advised that for some reason, the steerman lost connection with the rear axle, and advised Goldetsky to stop. Before he could do so, however, the rear wheels went into the east ditch, which in-turn, pulled the trailer and tractor into the ditch. Once in the ditch, the entire unit tipped over. The accident happened at around 1-p.m.

The driver complained if pain, but did not require immediate treatment or transport to the hospital. The Kenworth sustained $15,000 damage. A property fence sustained about $500 damage during the incident.

DARRIN LEE COOK, 57, of Bennington, NE, formerly of Atlantic (9-8-2020)

Obituaries

September 3rd, 2020 by Jim Field

DARRIN LEE COOK, 57, of Bennington, NE, formerly of Atlantic died Monday, August 31st in Omaha, NE. Funeral services for DARRIN LEE COOK will be held 10-a.m. Tuesday, September 8th at Roeder Mortuary in Omaha (2727 N 108th St.); [The Funeral Service can be viewed on Tuesday Go to Roeder Mortuary 108th Chapel Facebook Page and like. About 10 minutes before service the video will go live].

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Visitation will be held on Monday, September 7th from 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm at the funeral home.

Memorials to Cosmo I 80 Omaha, NE.

Interment will be held at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Omaha.

Test Iowa sites to close for Labor Day

News

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – All Test Iowa sites, including clinic sites, will be closed on Monday, Sept. 7th, for the Labor Day holiday. According to Gov. Kim Reynolds’ Office, sites will reopen for testing according to their regular schedules beginning on Tuesday, Sept. 8th.

Individuals who want to be tested for COVID-19 at any site must first complete the online assessment at testiowa.com. They will then be directed to schedule an appointment.   Locations and hours of operation for all test sites can be found at testiowa.com or coronavirus.iowa.gov.

Drought conditions continue to worsen and expand in Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

September 3rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The latest version of the U-S Drought Monitor shows an expanding area of EXTREME Drought in western and west central Iowa. The conditions mean pastures are dry; producers sell cattle; crops are tested for toxins; and crops may have pest infestation. In addition, seasonal allergies are worse; farmers are stressed about high feed prices, trees drop leaves; acorns are underdeveloped, and warm water leads to fish kills; streambeds are low to dry. Parts of northwest, central and southwest Iowa are categorized as being in a SEVERE drought, while other parts of the State are in a Moderate drought, or are Abnormally dry. No part of the State has escaped the drought conditions.

Unfortunately, little rain is forecast for the next five days at least, that will have any sort of impact on the drought conditions.

For more information, see the Drought Monitor web page at https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?IA