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Keeping Iowans of All Ages Active and Healthy Through the Iowa Senior Games

News, Sports

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Photo from the 2023 Iowa Senior Games

Photo from the 2023 Iowa Senior Games

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa (March 5, 2024) – We all know staying physically active is important for our health and wellness, but as we age, it seems to become more and more difficult and gets put on the backburner. The Iowa Senior Games, a pillar of the Iowa Sports Foundation and a member of the National Senior Games Association, understands this need and encourages older adults in Iowa to continue playing and competing in sports to stay active.

Each summer, the Iowa Senior Games are hosted in the Greater Des Moines area. This year, the Games will be held June 5-9, and registration for events is currently open on the Iowa Senior Games website. Athletes will come together from all over the state, and even neighboring states, to compete in the Games. This Olympic-style event is specifically for men and women who are at least 50 years old. Events range from Pickleball to Track and Field to Horseshoes to Golf, and participants compete against peers in their age bracket. The top three competitors in every event for every age bracket are awarded medals. On even numbered years, the top 3 Iowans in each event for every age bracket qualify for the National Senior Games, held every two years.

The next National Senior Games event will be held in Greater Des Moines in 2025. To get ready for that event and to spread awareness of the Senior Games movement across the nation, a Senior Games Community Day is being held at the MidAmerican Energy Company RecPlex in West Des Moines during National Senior Games week in March. Community members of all ages are invited to come to this free event on Wednesday, March 20 from 3-5pm to sample different sports and learn about opportunities for adults 50+ to get involved in the Senior Games. There will be a Pickleball exhibition match between Des Moines Mayor Connie Boesen and Iowa Senior Games athletes, opportunities to try different sports, and more. This event is hosted by the National Senior Games Association, Iowa Senior Games, Catch Des Moines and Discover Ames. Learn more and RSVP at bit.ly/NSGWeek-DSM.

Through initiatives like the Senior Games Community Day, the Iowa Senior Games aims to not only prepare for the national stage next year, but also to inspire individuals of all ages to embrace the spirit of competition and camaraderie. Mark your calendars for Wednesday, March 20 from 3-5pm for a celebration of active living. Together, let’s champion wellness, community, and the joy of sports for generations to come.

Hawkeyes Wrap Up Day 1 of NCAA Zone Diving Championships

Sports

March 11th, 2024 by admin

HOUSTON, Texas – University of Iowa Swimming and Diving opened the NCAA Zone Diving Championships on Monday afternoon at the University of Houston Campus Recreation & Wellness Center.

The first day of competition featured the women’s one-meter dive. Sarah Ballard led the Hawkeyes with a 22nd-place finish, earning 260 points. Makayla Hughbanks and Geneva Pauly tied for 23rd with 259.65 points. Simone Beinlich scored 230.20 points and placed 39th.

The Hawkeyes resume action at the NCAA Zone Diving Championships on Tuesday. Ballard, Beinlich and Hughbanks will compete in the three-meter dive beginning at 11:45 a.m. (CT) at the UH Campus Recreation & Wellness Center.

Hawkeyes To Face Georgia in Athens

Sports

March 11th, 2024 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa – The University of Iowa baseball team travels to Athens, Georgia, on Tuesday for a midweek matchup with the Georgia Bulldogs at 4:00 p.m. (CT). The Hawkeyes enter the contest with a 7-8 record, and the Bulldogs come into the contest with a 16-1 record. As a team, Georgia is hitting .336 and its pitching staff has a 3.73 ERA. They are led by Charlie Condon with a .565 batting average, and Condon and Slate Alford lead the team with 25 RBIs. Overall, the Hawkeyes are hitting .285. as a team, while averaging 8.2 runs per game. The Iowa pitching staff has a 6.01 ERA. Sam Petersen leads the team with a .379 batting average. Kyle Huckstord leads the team with 20 RBIs followed by Raider Tello with 17. Huckstorf has 5 home runs and Petersen has 11 stolen bases. Elliot Cadieux-Lanoue will get the start for the Hawkeyes, he has a 3-0 record and a 5.68 ERA in five appearances. Christian Mracna will start for the Bulldogs. He has a 1-0 record in four appearances with a 2.13 ERA. Tuesday’s game will be available on SEC Network+ and the Hawkeye Radio Network.

Obermueller Named Big Ten Pitcher of the Week

Sports

March 11th, 2024 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa – Sophomore LHP Cade Obermueller has been named the Big Ten Pitcher of the Week, it was announced Tuesday. The honor is the first Big Ten weekly honor of his career.

The Iowa City, Iowa, native took a no-hitter into the sixth inning against Jacksonville State on Saturday night. Obermueller ending up pitching a career-high 5.2 innings and struck out nine, also a career-high. The lefty allowed just two hits in the win.

This season, Obermueller has held opposing hitters to a .146 batting average and has 17 strikeouts in 13.0 innings of work.

The Hawkeyes return to action on Tuesday as they are set to face the Georgia Bulldogs at 4 p.m. CT in Athens, Georgia.

Debate over capping temporary nurse rates for Iowa nursing homes

News

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Agencies that provide temporary staff for Iowa long-term care facilities are calling on lawmakers to table a plan to limit how much they charge. A bill that’s cleared the Iowa House would cap charges for so-called traveling nurses at 150 percent of the statewide average wage for nurses who working in nursing homes. Bob Livonius is on the board of directors for Grapetree Medical Staffing agency in Milford. He says temp agencies will stop doing business with Iowa nursing homes if there’s a cap on what they can charge, just like what’s happened in the only two states that currently cap pay for traveling nurses working in nursing homes.

“They’ll simply abandon the work that’s being done here in Iowa…they’re just not going to make any money on it,” he says. “That’s what’s happened in Minnesota. That’s what’s happened in Massachusetts.” Others warn the move would lead to staffing shortages in nursing homes. Greg Opseth is chief operating officer for Hiland Medical Staffing in Gowrie.

“We are an integral part to the matrix that sustains health care deliver in rural Iowa,” Opseth said. “We have and provide crucial support in times of staffing shortages and fluctuations in patient volume.”A lobbyist for the Iowa Nurses Association says nurses feel singled out, since there are other traveling medical professionals, like doctors, who aren’t included in the proposed pay limitation.

Brent Willett, president and C-E-O of the Iowa Health Care Association, says if the cap were implemented on traveling nurses, Iowa long-term care facilities would be able to redirect an estimated 22 million dollars on full-time staff. “Our health care system desperately needs more direct care workers and we need to pay them more,” Willett said. The proposed cap is advancing in a bill that cleared a senate subcommittee today (Monday).

Senator Jason Schulte, a Republican from Schleswig, says some temp agencies appear to be pocketing a lot of money and, while that’s capitalism, a lot of tax dollars are being spent on nursing home care through the Medicaid program and he’s not ruling out some sort of limits on what temp agencies can charge. “The stress in the long term care industry is very real,” Schultz says. “I think everyone understands that.”

A senate committee will review the proposal later this week.

Man’s body found on an eastern Iowa sandbar

News

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

[Update 3/18/24] – The Black Hawk County Sheriff’s Office identified the victim as 23-year-old Daniel Van Brocklin, of Raymond.

A canoer spending the night at a campsite along the Cedar River in Black Hawk County died after likely tripping and falling into a bonfire, the Black Hawk County Sheriff’s Office reports, according to KCRG.

Deputies were called on Sunday to a sandbar of the Cedar River between Gilbertville and La Porte City for a report of a body found there.

Investigators determined the man was canoeing alone on the Cedar River and had made a campsite, including a bonfire, on a sandbar to sleep overnight. Investigators said the man likely tripped and fell into the bonfire and caught fire.

The name of the person has not been released at this time. An autopsy is expected to be conducted by the Iowa State Medical Examiner.

The time change may boost risk of heart attacks, strokes, car crashes

News

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowans may be grouchier than usual this week, as they’re not getting enough sleep due to the time change, but there’s also a greater health risk from springing forward an hour. Dr. Denise Sorrentino, a cardiologist with the Iowa Heart Center in Ames, says it’s only 60 minutes, but that can be enough to cause serious troubles.

“We see the big rise in atrial fibrillation rates, heart attack, stroke, and even motor vehicle accidents,” she says, “often related to inadequate sleep and just bad decision making while driving the vehicle for that first seven to ten days.” Some of us adjust to the shift in time more quickly than others. Sorrentino says our bodies get used to going to bed and getting up at a certain time, and it’s a jolt to our system to move it.

“That 60 minutes can change what we call the circadian rhythm, which is the rhythm at which our blood pressure and heart rate change in the early morning hours to help wake us up,” Sorrentino says. “And people can have difficulties with sleep, blood pressure can become elevated, and a lot of people can also feel very groggy, have poor decision making and jetlag.” One thing that can help us to adjust is to start shifting our bedtime for a week or so before the time change, though that doesn’t do us any good right now.

Radio Iowa (photo)

“Usually, it’s a week for adults to adjust,” she says, “and to really make an effort to be out in sunlight, if available, while the day is ongoing to help that body’s circadian rhythm adjust for this hour change.” The best remedy at this juncture is to simply try and get more rest, and if your schedule permits, a power nap here and there.

Red Oak woman arrested on Harassment charge

News

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak report 53-year-old Tracy Lynne Hill, of Red Oak, was arrested Monday afternoon, for Harassment 3rd Degree. Authorities say the charge stems from an incident that took place Sunday, March 10th, in the 700 block of N. 3rd Street, with regard to animal nuisance codes, which officials said “should be handled by proper authorities.”

Hill was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $300 bond.

Mills County Sheriff’s report, 3/11/24

News

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Mills County report three arrests:

On Sunday, at around 3:18-p.m., Deputies arrested  Jacob Emilio Valverde, of Omaha, on Highway 34 in Mills County. Valverde was taken into custody under authority of an out-of-state warrant. Bond was set at $2,000.

Last Saturday, 42-year-old Raymond Jimenez, of Omaha, was arrested at around 5-a.m. on I-29, for Eluding (25 mph or more) over the speed limit. His bond was set at $5,000.

And, at around 4:20-p.m. Friday, Mills County Deputies arrested 43-year-old Renne Lynn Adams, of Hastings (IA), for Driving Under Suspension. Adams was taken into custody and the Mills County Sheriff’s Office.

The Sheriff’s Office says also, a woman from Malvern reported on March 7th, an incident of Burglary. And, representatives with JG Highland Properties, LLC, of Colorado Spring, CO. reported an incident of Trespass/1st Degree, Sunday afternoon in Malvern.

Tyson Foods pork plant in Perry, Iowa closing

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 11th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

A pork plant and major employer in central Iowa is closing. KCCI reports the Tyson Foods plant in Perry will close permanently.

“After careful consideration, we have made the difficult decision to permanently close our Perry, Iowa pork facility. We understand the impact of this decision on our team members and the local community. Taking care of our team members is our top priority and we encourage them to apply for other open roles within the company. We are also working closely with state and local officials to provide additional resources to those who are impacted,” a spokesperson said in a statement. “While this decision was not easy, it emphasizes our focus to optimize the efficiency of our operations to best serve our customers. Iowa remains a key state for Tyson Foods, with employment of more than 9,000 team members across our other Iowa facilities.”

The Tyson plant is Perry’s largest employer, with around 1,200 workers, according to Perry Economic Development.