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Cass County Supervisors continue discussion on ATV/UTV use on County roads

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Board of Supervisors, this (Wednesday) morning, held the second of three scheduled public hearings on an Ordinance pertaining to the operation of All-terrain and Utility-terrain vehicles on county roads and trails. And, the Board approved a tweaked version of the Ordinance, based on discussion held during the first reading held January 24th, and those held today. They agreed to strike from the current version of the proposed ordinance, “If so equipped.” with regard to safety equipment, and wrote to include headlight, taillight, and a rear-view mirror. They also removed a part pertaining to a requirement for safety flags. Left unchanged for now, is the requirement ATV’s and UTV’s be operated by 16-to 18-year olds, only with the proper certification. The use of turn signals for ATV’s was not included in the ordinance, despite lengthy discussion about the added safety feature.

And, the Board removed a 35-mile per hour speed limit for ATV’s and UTV’s, and instead will allow them to operate at or below the posted limit, and depending on what the machine operator considers to be reasonable and prudent on county roads. Hours of legal operation would remain one-hour before sunrise, and one-hour after sunset. The Ordinance will have one final reading following a public hearing on Feb. 7th. During today’s (Wednesday’s) meeting, rural Cass County resident John McCurdy, spoke in opposition of allowing ATV’s and UTV’s on designated county roads because of past issues associated with safety and reckless use of the machines. The issue of safety alone, is his greatest concern.

Board Chair Gaylord Schelling said he had contacted Crawford and Carroll County officials. Both he said, have no problem with the way their ordinances are written, which are similar to what Cass County proposes. The only difference is, that in Crawford County, UTV’s are allowed within the city limits of Dow City. And, their ordinance stipulates the operator be 18 or older.

In other business, the Supervisors approved a request to act as a fiscal agent (necessary for the pass through of funds), for Friends of the Outdoor Classroom project (The County Conservation building), in order to finish the floor and other portions of the structure. Judy Kennedy, who is on the Outdoor Classroom Board, said the urgency to approve the application by Feb. 1st, is due to an IRS snafu. Somehow the IRS kicked them out of their 501-c3 classification. And while that mistake was rectified, it’ll take 4-to 6-weeks for it to be corrected. For now, though they can’t get a grant without the county acting as a flow-through agency for the funds, and the application is submitted by the deadline.

The non-profit Friends organization has been instrumental in making what was a shelter, into a fully functional enclosed structure, the furnishing of heat, a kitchenette, and a cement floor, which was installed last year. Kennedy said they need to epoxy the floor now, to make it easier to clean manageable. The $5,038 grant amount requested would cover the cost of the epoxy. A grant from Massena Telephone Company is also being used for the Outdoor Classroom building.

The building has been used for many purposes, and will be used for the American Pointing Labrador Association (APLA) dog trials, in May.

2 arrested in Union County Tuesday evening

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports two people were arrested on warrants at the Union County Law Enforcement Center, Tuesday evening. 28-year old Tyler Michael Linderman, of Creston, was arrested a Union County warrant for theft 1st degree. Linderman was later released from the Union County Jail on $10,000 bond. And, 30-year old Melissa Ann Woollums, of Arispe, was arrested on a Union County warrant for controlled substance violation. Woollums was being held without bond for Union County in the Ringgold County Jail, until seen by a Judge.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 1/31/2018

News, Podcasts

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 1/31/2018

News, Podcasts

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

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Afton man arrested on Union County Theft warrant

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Creston Police Department report the arrest Tuesday evening, of 52-year old Gary Lee McDougal, of Afton. McDougal was taken into custody on a Union County warrant for Theft in the 3rd Degree. He was being held in the Union County Jail on a $2,000 cash bond or surety.

(7-a.m. News)

Call center closure eliminates 180 jobs in Sergeant Bluff

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

SERGEANT BLUFF, Iowa (AP) — A Cincinnati-based company is closing a call center in Sergeant Bluff, eliminating about 180 jobs. The Sioux City Journal reports employees of Convergys were notified Tuesday the call center would close in April. The company’s decision means Sergeant Bluff will lose its largest employer. Spokeswoman Brooke Beiting called it a business decision that is “something that is helping us serve our customers.” The company encouraged employees who have lost their jobs to seek positions where they could work from their homes or at other Convergys sites.

The announcement came seven months after Convergys announced it would add about 250 jobs at its Sergeant Bluff location. Sergeant Bluff Mayor Jon Winkel responded to the closure by saying, “Well, I guess we’ll have to get busy and find somebody else for that building.”

Montgomery County Sheriff’s report, 1/31/18

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest at around 4:30-a.m. today (Wednesday), of 32-year old Sarah Beth Ewing, of Elliott. Ewing was taken into custody following a traffic stop at the intersection of Highway 48 and 100th Street. She was charged with Driving While Barred, and brought to the Montgomery County Jail, where her bond was set at $2,000.

Reynolds keeping donations from firm that did pro-Saudi work

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Gov. Kim Reynolds is keeping campaign donations tied to a Des Moines firm that profited from a controversial lobbying blitz funded by Saudi Arabia. Reynolds in November returned a $100 contribution from executive branch appointees Kim and Connie Schmett, saying she disagreed with their side work as foreign agents who collected $100,000 opposing a law allowing victims of the 2001 terrorist attacks to sue Saudi Arabia. But her campaign kept several larger donations linked to the LS2Group, which received $76,500 from the same Saudi-funded work as the Schmetts.

LS2Group executive Chuck Larson Jr., who worked as a foreign agent, hosted a Reynolds fundraiser last summer. He and other LS2 employees gave thousands to Reynolds and LS2Group’s political arm gave $250. Campaign spokesman Pat Garrett says LS2Group is a private business while the Schmetts are state officials. An ethics board fined Connie Schmett $250 last week for disclosure violations.

Top administrator is out at Iowa Secretary of State’s office

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate is confirming the recent and abrupt departure of his chief of staff. The secretary of state’s office tells The Associated Press that Mark Snell’s employment ended Jan. 3. The AP had asked about Snell’s departure three weeks earlier but spokesman Kevin Hall didn’t provide information until Tuesday. Hall says Snell was an at-will employee, which means he could be fired for any reason. He said no documents exist that would explain the reason for Snell’s departure, and Snell didn’t submit a resignation letter.

Snell had a $132,000-annual salary and had served as the top administrator since Pate took office in 2015. Pate, a Republican, is gearing up to run for re-election this year.

Steve King says Trump’s immigration offer ‘falls far short’

News

January 31st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

President Trump outlined what he called “vital reform” of the nation’s immigration laws during his “State of the Union” speech last (Tuesday) night, but Republican Congressman Steve King is skeptical. “The president said he wants to solve this immigration once and for all,” King says, “but I think even his proposal falls far short.”

King says he doubts there’s enough G-O-P support in the House for a key component of Trump’s plan. King is opposed to citizenship for the one-point-eight million people who’d qualify for the DACA program because they were brought into the country illegally when they were children. “Amnesty is something that just sacrifices the rule of law and he said also a path to citizenship over 12 years for them,” King says. “I was watching the crowd, as I do, and it’s most instructive. The Republicans didn’t seem very enthusiastic about a path to citizenship.”

And King says it didn’t appear to him Democrats were that enthusiastic about Trump’s offer either. King predicts the “trade” Trump is offering for DACA recipients won’t secure enough Democratic votes for the entire package to make up for lost G-O-P votes.  “I think that he’s not thought this through,” King says, “or he’s got a different equation and it works different than mine does.”

King says he wants a wall along the southern border and tougher enforcement of current immigration laws, plus King would vote to end so-called “chain migration,” something that IS part of the president’s plan. Other members of Iowa’s congressional delegation are signalling they’re open to an immigration bill that would offer some sort of legal status to the so-called “Dreamers” who arrived illegally in the U.S. when they were children. Senator Joni Ernst says Trump’s proposals are a “starting point.” “He has given congress direction, but that is not the final word,” Ernst says.

Congressman David Young, a Republican from Van Meter, says finding something that can pass muster in both the Senate and House won’t be easy. “But I think it is a priority by both sides of the aisle to make sure that there’s not just a deal in the end for the deal’s sake, but there’s actually a real solution to this issue,” Young says. And Young predicts any successful deal will have to include all the components or “pillars” to immigration reform that Trump outlined in his speech last (Tuesday) night.

(Radio Iowa)