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City of Atlantic Personnel & Finance Committee to meet April 29th

News

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Members of the City of Atlantic’s Personnel and Finance Committee will meet 5:30-p.m. Wednesday, April 29th, during an in-person session, as opposed to via Zoom meeting. The meeting will take place in the Council Chambers, but attendance is limited to 10 people, and the six-foot separation policy will be adhered to. City Administrator John Lund says the City has acquired face masks available for those in attendance, if desired.

During the session, the Committee will hold an open discussion and take recommendations on, Human and Financial Resource changes resulting from Covid-19, along with any other business to come before them. Lund says “A lot has happened in the last 40 days. Things are rapidly changing in human resources and public finance. The City is staying on top of everything [it] can, but Council oversight of these two critical functions is essential [and] we need to have an opportunity for a question and answer period so the Council’s questions can be addressed directly and also make sure its priorities are being responded to by staff.”

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: 4/27/20

Weather

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Today: Becoming partly cloudy this morning. High 73. S-NW @ 10-15.

Tonight: P/Cldy to cloudy. Low 52. Winds variable at around 5mph.

Tomorrow: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered showers & thunderstorms. High 68. NW @ 10-20.

Wednesday: Mo. cldy. High 62.

Thursday: Mostly sunny. High 73.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 69. Our Low was 36. We received .05″ rain overnight Sunday into early Monday morning. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 55 and the Low was 35. The Record High on April 27th was 90 in 1989. The Record Low was 23 in 1950.

ROBERT “Bob” LANSDOWN, 69, of Atlantic (Visitation 4/30/20)

Obituaries

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

ROBERT “Bob” LANSDOWN, 69, of Atlantic, died Saturday, April 25th, at home. A visitation for BOB LANSDOWN will be held from 9-a.m. until 5-p.m. Thursday, April 30th, at the Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home, in Atlantic, with the family present from 3-until 5-p.m.  (CDC guidelines for COVID-19 will be adhered to, with only 10 people allowed at a time)

A private family burial will be held in the Atlantic Cemetery.

Memorials may be left to the family for later designation.

ROBERT “Bob” LANSDOWN is survived by:

His son – Chad (Stephanie) Lansdown, of Atlantic.

His daughter – Jamie (Ryan) Pelzer, of Malvern.

His sister – Robin (Billy) Matheny, of Warrensburg, MO.

2 grandchildren, his mother-in-law Beverly Bennett, of Atlantic, and his uncle, Jim (Helen) Zaloudek, of Council Bluffs.

ROSALIE “Rosie” MASTELLER, 87, of Atlantic (Visitation 4/29)

Obituaries

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

ROSALIE “ROSIE” MASTELLER, 87, of Atlantic, died Sunday, April 26th, at the Heritage House, in Atlantic. Visitation for ROSIE MASTELLER will be held from 5:30-until 7-p.m. Wed., April 29th, at the Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic, with her sons present (Social distancing will be observed, with no more than 10 people permitted in the building at any given time).

Online condolences may be left at www.rolandfuneralservice.com.

A Private, family graveside service will be held in the Atlantic Cemetery.

ROSALIE “ROSIE” MASTELLER is survived by:

Her sons – Mark, of Ames; Brian, of Wiota; Bruce (Coni), of Lindsay, NE; Steve (Andrea), of Clive, and Jeff (Kelli), of Burleson, TX.

12 grandchildren & 4 great-grandchildren.

Iowa State’s Knipfel signs with the Bengals

Sports

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — No Iowa State players were selected in the NFL Draft but several, including offensive lineman Josh Knipfel, signed free agent contracts. The native of Hampton signed with Cincinnati Bengals.

Knipfel says he watched the final day of the Draft on Saturday.

Fellow Cyclone and linebacker Marcel Spears Junior also signed with the Bengals.

Five GOP candidates in 4th congressional district speak at same forum Sunday

News

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Republicans competing in the fourth district congressional primary say it’s time to begin rolling back the restrictions on businesses and gatherings that have been imposed during the pandemic. Steve King of Kiron is the incumbent congressman facing four challengers in June. King says he’s been most concerned about limiting the freedom to assemble.

“But I saw the emergency we were in,” King says, “and I personally decided I’m not going to throw that wrench into the gears because there’s a national crisis at work and I don’t want to undercut the people that are leading on this.” State Senator Randy Feenstra of Hull says this is a difficult situation for policymakers like Governor Reynolds.

“It’s a tough time,” Feenstra says, “and she is balancing all that needs to be done when it comes to our rights, our economy, our safety.” Bret Richards, a businessman who was the mayor of Irwin, says it’s time to rethink the emergency powers given to governors.

“A benevolent governor’s great now,” Richards says, “but what about a Chet Culver or someone else in the future?” Former Woodbury County Supervisor Jeremy Taylor says he’s concerned about restrictions on religious liberty in other states.

“We have to be very careful lest we go the way of the socialist left,” Taylor says. Steven Reeder, a real estate broker from Arnolds Park, says this situation shows why it’s important to elect people who follow the constitution. The five congressional candidates participated in an online forum Sunday evening that was hosted by Crawford County Republicans and broadcast by K-D-S-N Radio.

Council Bluffs man injured in Pott. County motorcycle accident, Sunday

News

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The operator of a motorcycle was transported by Crescent Rescue to the UNMC in Omaha, Sunday evening, after the cycle left I-29 northbound at Exit 61-A, and for reasons unknown, went out of control. The Iowa State Patrol reports 50-year old Billy Hannan, of Council Bluffs, who was not wearing a helmet, suffered critical injuries.

The accident happened at around 6:50-p.m.

Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, April 27 2020

News

April 27th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:33 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa’s three major public universities are planning to resume in-person classes in the fall, but they are still working out the details of what that will look like during the coronavirus outbreak. Iowa Board of Regents President Mike Richards said the schools will follow state and federal guidelines to protect health as they develop plans for thousands of students to return to the campuses of the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and Northern Iowa University. The number of coronavirus cases continues to rise in the state. Health officials said Saturday the number of confirmed cases in Iowa had increased by 648, to 5,092, though the actual number of sick is thought to be much higher because of many people haven’t been tested.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa firefighter whose family has been devastated by the coronavirus says he wants people to know how easily the virus can spread. Twenty-nine-year-old Omar Martinez said Friday that his mother first tested positive for the virus on April 3. Then his 22-year-old sister Evelyn, who is the mother of a toddler, contracted the virus and has been in the hospital since April 10. On April 15, Omar says his 58-year-old father, Jose Gabriel Martinez, was hospitalized. He died on Tuesday. The family shares a home in West Liberty, Iowa, where they settled after immigrating from Mexico in the 1990s. Omar Martinez says, “I don’t wish this upon anybody.”

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The medical director at a state-run institution for people with intellectual disabilities has resigned amid questions about the care residents received at the Glenwood Resource Center in southwest Iowa. The Des Moines Register reports that documents from the Iowa Department of Human Services show that Dr. Mohammamd Rehman resigned Friday from the Glenwood facility. The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating allegations that the former Glenwood superintendent was planning to conduct human sexual arousal experiments and had begun questionable hydration therapy on patients. The department also is looking into a death rate that concerned employees.

CHARLES CITY, Iowa (AP) — One person is dead after fire broke out at a home in northeastern Iowa. The Charles City Fire Department said the blaze was reported about 2:20 a.m. Saturday. Arriving firefighters found heavy smoke and determined the fire was confined to the kitchen area. The victim was found during a search of the home. Fire officials say the victim was alone in the home. An investigation determined that the fire was likely caused by cooking materials overheating.

Teen dead, adult injured in NW Iowa crash, Sunday morning

News

April 26th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A semi that failed to yield at a four-way stop in northwest Iowa, struck pickup truck late Sunday morning, killing a teenage passenger in the semi. The Iowa State Patrol says the accident happened in Moville at around 10:15-a.m., at the intersection of U-S Highway 20 and Iowa Highway 140.

A 2015 International semi driven by 37-year old Leuchann A. Johnson, of Williamsburg, VA, was traveling west on Highway 20 when it collided with a northbound 2000 Ford Ranger, driven by 62-year old Roger J. Clark, of Moville. Following the collision, the semi came to rest on its side, in the median.

15-year old Leuchann Johnson, Jr., of Williamsburg, VA. died from his injuries at the scene. Clark was transported to the hospital by Moville Ambulance.

Neither of the accident victims were wearing a seat belt. The Patrol was assisted at the scene by the Woodbury County Sheriff’s Office, Moville Fire Department & Ambulance, and the Lawton Fire Dept/Ambulance.

Top doctor resigns from troubled Iowa center for disabled

News

April 26th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The medical director at a state-run institution for people with intellectual disabilities has resigned amid questions about the care residents received at the Glenwood Resource Center in southwest Iowa. The Des Moines Register reports that documents from the Iowa Department of Human Services show that Dr. Mohammamd Rehman resigned Friday from the Glenwood facility.

The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating allegations that the former Glenwood superintendent was planning to conduct human sexual arousal experiments and had begun questionable hydration therapy on patients. The department also is looking into a death rate that concerned employees.