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Juveniles arrested for Criminal Mischief at the Red Oak High School

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March 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Red Oak Police report two juveniles were arrested at around 2-p.m. Wednesday, for Criminal Mischief in the 4th Degree. Authorities say several ceiling tiles in the High School boys restroom were destroyed and taken down from the ceiling. Officials said “The two juveniles had no right or privilege to destroy the property,” that was valued at about $450. The youth were cited into juvenile court and released to the custody of their parents.

Murder charge filed in Des Moines man’s break-in slaying

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March 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Prosecutors have filed a murder charge against a man suspected of breaking into a suburban Des Moines home and stabbing a resident. Court records say 19-year-old Magai Anai-Kur, of Des Moines, also is charged with burglary, robbery and theft. The murder charge approved by a Polk County district judge Tuesday replaced a charge of attempted murder that was filed before 77-year-old Robert Howe died in January. Police say he was stabbed on Sept. 3 when Anai-Kur broke into Howe’s Urbandale home and then stole Howe’s minivan.

Atlantic School Board discusses school calendar – tweaks possible before adopting on April 11th

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March 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District’s Board of Education discussed but took no action on, the 2018-19 School Calendar. The discussion was held during the Board’s regular monthly meeting, Wednesday evening, at the High School. Superintendent Steve Barber said a committee was formed and two calendars were provided to staff in each of the District’s buildings, for feedback. Barber said there were some challenges, given that the first allowable start date is Aug. 23rd, 2018, the final day for school using the current calendar would be the Friday before Memorial Day. 20 instructional hours were missed on the current calendar to date, due the weather, with total being 1,073. This year, the district will add the 25th as a student day, and other small tweaks to the calendar to meet the requirement. Any additional weather delays will result in the make-up of additional instructional hours.The 2018-19 School Calendar would be different from 2017-18, in that First Semester will have students in school on Dec. 21st. Last year, they did not have school on the Friday before break.

The committee thought having Martin Luther King as a professional development day, was too close to the extended break. They agreed President’s Day would be a better time for Professional Development. The committee calendar discussion also included moving spring conferences to later in the school year, or make sure the P/T Conference is the only activity on two evenings. District staff were split 50-50 with regard to changing the week-long break to an extended break around the time of Easter. By doing that, officials say they were able to increase the number of instructional hours in the schedule to create more flexibility with the hours.

School Board member Kristy Pellett said she was asked recently, “What communication happened with the pre-schools in town, in terms of having the calendars coincide somewhat concurrently with their calendars. Board President Alison Bruckner said the preschools “They just usually tie to our calendar. The biggest impact that they usually do, is conferences. Superintendent Barber acknowledged he had not reached out to the YMCA or Little Lambs. He said “I didn’t have a conversation with either of those.” Pellett said the concerns were related more to what was going on this year, with schedules not being aligned, that causes transportation issues and so on. Steve Barber said he will take the suggestions back to the committee and see if there are any tweaks that can be made. He and Pellett both admitted, there’s no way to make everyone happy. Pellett said it would be nice to have consistency year-to-year, when possible. A Public Hearing on the 2018-19 School Calendar will be held during the Board’s regular meeting on April 11th.

In other business, the Board approved Resolutions pertaining to: the 2018-19 Budget Guarantee, in the amount of $217,766; A PPEL (Physical Plant and Equipment Levy) in the amount of $152,452, or .33-cents per thousand dollars assessed valuation, and, a 2018-19 Fund Transfer of $8,000, from General to Activity, for Protective Equipment.

House panel to consider banning abortions after sixth week of pregnancy

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March 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A proposed ban on abortions after the sixth week of pregnancy is scheduled for debate in a House committee today (Thursday). The abortion ban has been attached to another bill that would make it illegal in Iowa to sell or donate fetal tissue from abortions for use in medical research. Representative Shannon Lundgren, a Republican from Peosta, is guiding these merged measures through the House. “This was not a bait and switch,” Lundgren said. “The senate sent us a bill over for us to debate. We just chose to add it on to this bill.”

In late February, Republicans and the lone independent in the state senate approved a bill that would make it a crime for doctors to perform an abortion after the sixth week of a pregnancy. The plan to be considered in a House committee today does not include criminal charges for doctors. Leah Vanden Bosch was among those who testified yesterday (Wednesday) during a hearing on the new abortion ban.  “Do not let us go back to back-alley abortions, because that is exactly where this bill will take us,” Vanden Bosch said. “I would have done absolutely anything to terminate my pregnancy.”

Tamara Scott, state director for Concerned Women for America and a lobbyist for the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition, spoke in favor of a six-week abortion ban. “This is about the physical health and well-being of our fellow Iowans in the womb who don’t deserve to be discriminated against,” Scott said.

Iowa’s current law — enacted last year — bans abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy.

(Radio Iowa)

Bill would cut property tax bills for Iowa telecos by $30 million

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March 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Republicans on a state senate committee have advanced a plan that would save Iowa-based telecommunications companies nearly 30 million dollars in property taxes each year. The plan changes the way land lines, telephone poles and other property owned by cable and phone companies is taxed. Republican Senator Randy Feenstra of Hull says the current, centralized system for property tax assessments is “archaic.” “When you have a lot of telecommunications companies that don’t have any physical presence in our state and they don’t pay any taxes and yet you have small, telecommunications companies that are in our communities and they pay significant (property) tax,” Feenstra says, “we’ve just got to figure out some parity.”

Democrats like Senator Herman Quirmbach of Ames say now is not the time to reduce the amount of property taxes cities and counties may collect. “I mean, our local governments are already struggling,” Quirmbach said, “and I think it’s really unfair to them.”

The Iowa Association of Counties and the Iowa League of Cities are registered as undecided on the bill, however. Supporting the bill are CenturyLink, the state’s rural telephone cooperatives, the city-run telecommunications utilities and the Iowa Association of Business and Industry.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, 3/15/18

News

March 15th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller says he’s concerned about a report showing Latinos seeking home loans in Iowa City were far more likely to be denied than whites. Miller says the findings by Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting seem consistent with an earlier University of Iowa study that documented home loan denial rates for Latinos. He says his office will look into the issue.

OSKALOOSA, Iowa (AP) — Police in southeastern Iowa have announced an arrest in the stabbing death of a college basketball player in Oskaloosa. Officials said Wednesday at a news conference that 23-year-old Luke Ryan VanHemert, of Oskaloosa, has been arrested in the May 1 fatal stabbing of 22-year-old Marquis Todd. VanHemert has been charged with second-degree murder and is being held in the Mahaska County Jail on $500,000 cash bail.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa House has shot down an effort to ban automated traffic enforcement cameras in the state, effectively ending the effort this session. The Republican-controlled chamber voted 55-43 Wednesday against a proposal that would have banned cameras designed to catch cars speeding or running red lights.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa House Republicans are advancing a legislative effort to ban most abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected by adding the measure to a separate bill. A Republican-led panel agreed Wednesday to approve legislation that would ban the sale of fetal tissue. The heartbeat provision, which would ban abortions as early as 6 weeks of pregnancy, was tacked on during the meeting. The bill heads to the House Human Resources Committee, which is expected to take up the measure Thursday.

Oskaloosa man arrested in stabbing death of William Penn University basketball player

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March 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

OSKALOOSA, Iowa (AP) — Police in southeastern Iowa have announced an arrest in the stabbing death of a college basketball player in Oskaloosa. Officials said Wednesday at a news conference that 23-year-old Luke Ryan VanHemert, of Oskaloosa, was arrested for the May 1st fatal stabbing of 22-year-old Marquis Todd.

VanHemert has been charged with second-degree murder and is being held in the Mahaska County Jail on $500,000 cash bail.

Todd was a student and basketball player at William Penn University in Oskaloosa. Investigators say officers found Todd with stab wounds after being called for a report of a fight. Police have said there was as minor vehicle accident that happened about a half-hour earlier that led to the stabbing

Bluffs man sentenced following firearms conviction

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March 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A Council Bluffs man was sentenced Wednesday in U-S District Court to a term of imprisonment, followed by three-years of supervised release, for being a felon in possession of a firearm. 33-year old Jesus Everardo Medina is required to serve 37 months (slightly more than 3-years) in prison on the charge.

An investigation into his activities began when Council Bluffs Police responded to a gunshot being heard in the 1400 block of Avenue B shortly after midnight on June 5, 2017. Upon arriving in the area, officers located nine millimeter shell casings and were told by a witness that the party responsible, Jesus Medina, had left the area in a gold colored two door car. The vehicle was located by law enforcement a short distance from the 1400 block of Avenue B, with Medina in the back seat.

A nine millimeter Jennings semi-automatic handgun was found in the seat pocket in front of Medina. Medina was convicted of a felony offense in 2009 making it unlawful for him to possess a firearm.

The investigation was conducted by the Council Bluffs Police Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.

Pott. County man sentenced to prison for Felon in Possession of a firearm

News

March 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa said Wednesday, that a Pottawattamie County man was sentenced March 13th to prison, for being a Felon in Possession of a Firearm. 35-year-old Sean Cullen, of Council Bluffs, will be required to serve 2 years in prison and three years of Supervised Release at the conclusion of his imprisonment.

On September 23rd, 2017, Cullen was admitted into the emergency room at Jennie Edmondson hospital in Council Bluffs, for treatment of a gunshot wound to his leg. He claimed someone had shot him. After an investigation it was determined that Cullen shot himself with a firearm during a domestic dispute. Cullen then threw the loaded handgun into a neighbor’s yard before driving himself to the hospital for treatment.

Officers observed a trail of blood on the outside of the residence that led to the fence of the property. The neighbor located the gun and reported it to Council Bluffs Police Department the next day. The firearm was determined to be a six shot, .22 caliber revolver, with one spent round in the cylinder. Cullen was convicted in 2007 of a felony for theft.

The investigation was conducted by the Council Bluffs Police Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.

House votes to regulate, NOT ban traffic cameras

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March 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A bid to ban traffic enforcement cameras fell eight votes short in the Iowa House. Instead, the House has overwhelmingly voted to establish new state regulations for the devices used to ticket vehicles caught running red lights or speeding. Representative Wes Breckenridge, a Newton policeman, says the cameras can be a safety tool when used appropriately.

“You take a stop light or stop sign. If I’ve had 12 accidents in the last six months at that location, I can tell you if I was the chief of police, I would want to put a stop light camera there.” Representative Bobby Kaufmann, of Wilton, is among those who object to the cameras. He argues they’re primarily used to generate tax revenue for local governments.

“If traffic cameras are the best thing since sliced bread, puppies and world peace, why doesn’t every town have ’em?” Kaufmann asked. Other critics like Representative Jake Highfill of Urbandale say Iowans feel “ripped off” by traffic camera tickets. “If the cities need more revenue, they should raise their taxes and stop abusing this,” Highfill said. Representative Ashley Hinson of Cedar Rapids says the bill would set up a new petition process for those hoping to get a camera taken down, plus there’d be new requirements for keeping the cameras properly adjusted.

“Let’s face it — Iowans speed. They run red lights,” Hinson said. “…This is a law enforcement tool to hold people accountable and there are sensible regulations and due process built in.” Representative Ras Smith of Waterloo says the bill also calls for a “rigorous structure” that would govern where traffic cameras may be used.

“We’ll use data as evidence in areas where we think traffic cameras are applicable,” Smith said. “…I think this is thoughtful. I think it’s well-planned-out and I think it’s great for the people of Iowa.” Earlier this year, the Iowa Senate voted to ban traffic cameras. However, just a year ago, the Senate voted to keep the cameras, but establish new regulations. With all those variations, it’s unclear how or even whether the issue may be resolved this year.

(Radio Iowa)