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(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 6/2/20

Podcasts, Sports

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.

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Creston Police report (6/2/20)

News

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Creston Police Department report 32-year old Jeffrey Drake, of Creston, was arrested Monday afternoon, for Violation of a Protection Order. Drake was released from the Union County Law Enforcement Center, on a Summons to Appear in court. And, a man residing in the 300 block of N. Maple Street, in Creston, reported to Police early this morning, that sometime around 2-a.m. today (Tuesday), the front door at his apartment building was damaged by an unknown person. The damage was estimated at $200.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 6/2/20

News, Podcasts

June 2nd, 2020 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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Iowa COVID-19 update (5:30-a.m., 6/2/20)

News

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The State of Iowa’s COVID-19 dashboard shows 18 more people have died from the virus since Monday’s report, for a total of 558 dead. To date: 163,681 Iowans have been tested for COVID-19; 19,935 tested Positive (an increase of 245); 11, 540 have recovered (up 268 from Monday; 143,311 have tested Negative (up 4,137 from Monday). Across the State: 327 Iowans are hospitalized with COVID-19 (2 less than Monday); 114 are in an ICU (down 9 from Monday); 12 (half as many as Monday) were admitted to hospitals over the past 24-hours; and 76 were on ventilators (up 3 from Monday).

The Region 4 Regional Medical Coordinator Center – covering hospitals in western/southwest Iowa – (RMCC) reports 11 Iowans are hospitalized, 7 are in an ICU, none were admitted over the past 24-hours, and 3 are on ventilators. Those numbers are all down from Monday’s stats.

Here are the latest county-by-county numbers for Cass & surrounding Counties (with the number recovered in parenthesis):

  • Cass: 12 (11)
  • Adair: 9 (5)
  • Adams: 7 (4)
  • Audubon: 12 (8)
  • Guthrie: 53 (30)
  • Montgomery: 8 (6)
  • Pottawattamie: 270 (166)
  • Shelby: 37 (31)

See other counties’ stats at  https://coronavirus.iowa.gov/pages/case-counts for a breakdown of cases & the number recovered. The number of Long Term Care (LTC) facility outbreaks is up two, to 41. Ten more people associated with those facilities have died, for a total of 265. The IDPH says 1,586 LTC patients/staff have tested positive, and 756 have recovered from COVID-19. Both of those numbers are up from Monday.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in two to three weeks. For some infected people, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, the virus can cause severe illness and death.

Reynolds says anti-racial profiling legislation to be priority in 2021

News

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Governor Kim Reynolds says Iowans are united in grief and anger over the death of a black man on a Minneapolis street — and she’s promising to seek systemic change, including steps to address racial profiling. “I want all Iowans to know that I hear you,” Reynolds says. “I hear your frustration and I am committed to listening and having a respectful dialogue about what we need to address the injustices that are felt by so many and that might mean having some very uncomfortable and eye-opening discussions.” Iowa-Nebraska N-double-A-C-P president Betty Andrews says this is a perfect time to peacefully protest — but the goal needs to be new policy. “We need to address this legacy that started with America’s greatest sin: racism, slavery and all of its babies that have come since,” Andrews says.

The governor says she’ll be working with Andrews and others to develop a final, anti-racial profiling plan to present to the 2021 legislature. President Trump held a conference call with governors yesterday (Monday) and told them they’re being too weak and need to dominate the protesters, or they’ll look like a bunch of jerks. Governor Reynolds says she was not on the call with Trump and was at the time talking with Iowa mayors, thanking them for facilitating peaceful protests and asking what they need from the state in the days ahead. “I think you all know right now words matter,” Reynolds said. “We have to really be thoughtful about how we move forward and that’s where I’m working. That’s where I’m focusing my energy on.”

Governor Reynolds says peaceful protesters have a right to take a stand against injustice and she will not tolerate the lawless rioters who are trying to hijack that message.

It’s voting time! Lots of details about absentee ballots, voter registration, curfews

News

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The majority of votes for today’s (Tuesday’s) Primary Election have already been cast by absentee ballot — and there’s been a huge shift in party affiliation. For the first time in years, independent or “no party” voters are no longer the largest voting block in the state. Independents have dropped to third behind Democrats and Republicans. Secretary of State Paul Pate is the state’s commissioner of elections. “I’m sure a lot of people will be analyzing this one to figure it all out, but it was pretty even,” Pate says. “Republicans increased by about 36,000 and the Democrats increased by about 31,000 of new registered voters.”

In the fourth congressional district, where Congressman Steve King faces a primary challenge, more than 12-thousand residents joined the ranks of Republicans in order to vote in the primary. In the third congressional district, Democrats gained nine-thousand and Republicans 85-hundred.

Pate mailed an absentee ballot request form to every registered voter in the state, to reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19 at Primary Day polling places. Pate advises voters to check with their county auditor or go online to voterready.iowa.gov to confirm their polling place, as many counties have consolidated sites. Pate says many auditors were able to put polling sites in schools. “Partly because they’re closed. You know, there are no classes and they were accessible,” Pate says. “They have more options and flexibility for social distancing, also parking is available and it’s handicapped acceptable, so it’s kind of the gold standard. It’s got everything you would want in a perfect polling location.”

The polls are open from 7 a.m. until 9 p.m. That’s the curfew time in Polk County, Scott County and Council Bluffs. Pate’s office has advised county officials that traveling home after voting is not a violation of curfews. By Monday morning, 77 percent of the absentee ballots requested had been received by county auditors. That’s nearly 376-thousand ballots — and more are expected to be delivered today (Tuesday) as some voters waited until Monday to mail their ballot in. “Definitely a record breaker,” Pate says.

Iowans who got an absentee ballot but failed to fill it out and mail it on time have two options. They can fill it out and drop it off at their county auditor’s office before 9 p.m. OR they can take the unused ballot to their voting precinct, hand it over to a poll worker, and get a new ballot to vote at the precinct.

Legislature’s top Democrats call for action on social justice issues

News

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The two top Democrats in the Iowa legislature are calling on Republicans who control the debate agenda to take action on criminal justice reform when the 2020 legislative session resumes Wednesday. Senate Democratic Leader Janet Petersen of Des Moines says that includes Republican Governor Kim Reynolds’ long-term push to automatically grant voting rights to felons who’ve served their time. “The events that unfolded over the weekend show that Iowans want to advance equality and racial justice in our state,” Petersen says, “and while Senate Democrats plan to come back into session to balance a budget and deal with COVID recovery, I also believe the time is now for us to address racial injustices.”

Petersen says she’d like to see action on a bill aimed at curbing racial profiling by police. A bill that stalled in the legislature in 2018 would have created a state community policing advisory board and collected data from state and local law enforcement stops. House Democratic Leader Todd Prichard of Charles City says as a former prosecutor, says law enforcement is most successful when they collaborate rather than confront the communities they’re policing. “We do a lot of things right, but we have an opportunity to improve and maybe be a nation leader in community policing,” Prichard says.

Reducing sentences for marijuana possession and non-violent drug crimes should also be considered, Prichard says.  “We’ve had a lot of talk, but not enough action,” Prichard says. “The numbers kind of bear out that we haven’t acted enough if you look at some of the disparities in the numbers.” Although less than four percent of Iowa’s population is black, nearly 25-and-a-half percent of the inmates in state prisons are black.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: 6/2/2020

Weather

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly sunny, hot & breezy. High 92. SW @ 15-25

Tonight: Partly cloudy w/scattered showers & thunderstorms (some may bring large hail & winds gusting up to 60 mph). Low 68.

Tomorrow: Scattered shwrs & tstrms early; Becoming P/cldy. High 84. NE @ 5-10.

Thursday: P/Cldy w/isolated shwrs & tstrms. High 86.

Friday: Scattered shwrs & tstrms in the morning; Becoming P/cldy. High 84.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 89. Our Low this morning, 68. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 77 and the Low was 52. The Record High here on June 2nd was 100 in 1934. The Record Low was 36 in 1907.

Sports Headlines: 6/2/20

Sports

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

UNDATED (AP) — FIFA is calling for flexibility in allowing players to make gestures of support of American protesters during soccer matches. Organizers have been told to apply “common sense” and consider not sanctioning players over in-game expressions of solidarity. Players have used games in Germany and Britain to reveal messages demanding justice for George Floyd, the Minnesota man who died after a Minneapolis police officer kneeled on his neck.

UNDATED (AP) — Tiger Woods is speaking out for the first time since George Floyd’s death, saying his heart goes out to Floyd, his family and everyone who is hurting right now. The 44-year-old golfer broke his silence with a statement on his Twitter account. Woods says police crossed the line. His comment came a day after former NBA star and current Charlotte Hornets owner Michael Jordan made his first public remarks on Floyd and the killings of black people at the hands of police.

UNDATED (AP) — Baseball owners and players appear too far apart on compensation on a proposal to resume the sport in the coronavirus pandemic. Players favor a 114-game regular season and full prorated salaries, leaving each player with approximately 70% of what he had been slated to earn. That proposal was made Sunday, five days after Major League Baseball’s plan for an 82-game season with additional pay cuts that would leave each player taking in 23-47% of his original pay.

UNDATED (AP) — Former Auburn football coach Pat Dye has died at the age of 80. Dye took over a troubled program in 1981 and turned it into a Southeastern Conference power. The Lee County coroner says Dye died Monday at a hospice care facility in Auburn from complications of kidney and liver failure. His son, Pat Dye Jr., had told ESPN.com recently that the former coach had been hospitalized in Atlanta for kidney-related issues. He also said his father had tested positive for the coronavirus but had been asymptomatic. In 12 years at Auburn, Dye posted a 99-39-4 record. He also coached at Wyoming and East Carolina.

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) —The Arizona Cardinals have signed tight end Dylan Cantrell to a one-year deal. The 6-foot-3, 240-pound Cantrell is switching positions to tight end after being selected as a receiver by the Los Angeles Chargers in the sixth round of the 2018 draft. He played in college at Texas Tech under current Cardinals coach Kliff Kingsbury, who is now in his second season in Arizona.

Iowa early News Headlines: 6/2/2020

News

June 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

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

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa primary voters are deciding Tuesday whether Republicans will stick with conservative lightning rod Steve King in the state’s conservative northwest after a series of setbacks for the congressman known for incendiary remarks about immigrants and white supremacy. Stripped of his committee assignments and national Republican campaign backing, King faces five challengers including one backed by the GOP establishment. Meanwhile, Des Moines businesswoman Theresa Greenfield soaking up attention and money in the four way Democratic primary to challenge Republican Sen. Joni Ernst, whose approval has slipped in the last year.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Des Moines police are investigating the death of a man on the city’s south side as a homicide. Police were call about 5:40 p.m. Monday to a home to investigate a report of a suicide. The officers who arrived found the body of an adult man but police say the death didn’t appear to be a suicide. Detectives were investigating the death as a homicide. Police say it’s the 12th homicide in Des Moines this year.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Relatives of a 22-year-old woman say she was shot and killed while leaving a protest against police brutality outside a Walmart store in Davenport. Italia Marie Kelly was one of two people fatally shot overnight as civil unrest roiled the city. Kelly’s aunt says she joined a protest late Sunday over the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Police say they are investigating the circumstances surrounding Kelly’s death. No arrests have been made. Police say dozens of people gathered at a mall late Sunday then fanned out across Davenport, firing guns and damaging businesses. One officer was wounded in a shooting.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Four relatively unknown Iowa Democrats are competing in a primary Tuesday to take on Republican Sen. Joni Ernst. The endeavor was once viewed as a long shot. But Ernst’s slip in approval and the rallying of Iowa and national Democrats behind one of the four has the race receiving a second look. For now, Ernst still is in a strong position heading into the fall. But as Democrats are increasingly bullish about their prospects in places such as Arizona and Colorado, the Iowa race is getting renewed attention as a potential battleground that could help the party regain the Senate majority.