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Backyard & Beyond 2-28-2020

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

February 28th, 2020 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits with Dave Chase and Carrie Schmitt about the Cass County Hospital Foundation Gala.

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Class 1A and 2A Substate Final Schedule Saturday 02/29/2020

Sports

February 28th, 2020 by admin

Class 1A

Substate 5 @ Knoxville: Nodaway Valley vs. Montezuma 7:00 p.m.
Substate 7 @ Creston: Martensdale-St. Marys vs. Mount Ayr 7:00 p.m.
Substate 8 @ MVAOCOU: St. Albert vs. St. Mary’s, Remsen 7:00 p.m.

Class 2A

Substate 8 @ CB Abraham Lincoln: Treynor vs. Panorama 7:00 p.m.

Teacher accused of secret nude recordings pleads not guilty

News

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — An April 6 trial start has been scheduled for a Davenport high school science teacher accused of secretly recording nude videos of two females who’d stayed at his Bettendorf home. Court records say Clinton Van Fossen pleaded not guilty Thursday to five counts of invasion of privacy and to other crimes. He’s on leave from his job at Davenport West High School. The records say the allegations stem from actions committed between Dec. 26 and Jan. 4. The records say Bettendorf officers searched Van Fossen’s home on Jan. 7 and seized spy cameras. Van Fossen denied any knowledge of the cameras.

Randolph woman arrested on drug charges in Mills County

News

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A woman from Fremont County was arrested Thursday evening on drug charges, in Mills County. 32-year old Alysse Marie Heywood, of Randolph, was taken into custody at around 6:25-p.m. following a traffic stop at Noyes Avenue and Highway 275. She was transported to the Mills County Jail and held on $7,300 bond for Possession of a Controlled Substance, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, and Possession of Contraband.

Class 4A Substate Semfinal Schedule 02/28/2020

Sports

February 28th, 2020 by admin

Boys Class 4A Substate Semifinals are on tap today. There are just a couple of match-ups from our area.

Class 4A Substate 8

Urbandale @ CB Abraham Lincoln 7:00 p.m.

Lewis Central @ Dowling Catholic 7:00 p.m.

T-Bone trail receiving TIF funds from Audubon County

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Audubon County Board of Supervisors this week, approved $200,000 in future TIF (Tax Increment Financing) funds to be used for T-Bone Trail maintenance and resurfacing. Their action on Tuesday, allows the Audubon County Conservation Board to obtain matching funds.

Officials say while the trail in Audubon County is currently in good shape, the funds will help keep it from falling into disrepair. The 21-mile long T-Bone Trail mostly parallels Highway 71, and extends from the City of Audubon south into Cass County.

Latest predictions show spring flood risk still above normal

News, Weather

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The risk of spring flooding along the Missouri River in western Iowa remains above normal, according to the National Weather Service’s second spring flood outlook, released Thursday. The next few weeks look generally dry. Mike Gillisipie, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, says snow has been melting at a steady, ideal rate, and that could continue. Gillispie says, “The longer we can keep this up, the less chance there is of that real significant flooding, barring any real big, heavy future precipitation.”

Very wet soil and the large volume of water flowing down the Missouri are the two things contributing to the above-normal flood risk along the river. If the snow continues to melt steadily rather than rapidly, Gillispie says it would be better for the Missouri River and its tributaries, kind of like turning a sink on and off.  “If you turn it up, if you have a real rapid snowmelt, all that water comes off at once,” he says. “If you have temperatures getting up into the 40s during the day, dropping back below freezing at night, it’s like turning the faucet on just a little bit and then shutting it off.”

The Missouri River from below Sioux City to Omaha has an increased chance of getting to flood stage this spring. Northwest Iowa tributaries, including the Big and Little Sioux Rivers, are expected to rise to major flood levels. The National Weather Service will release a third spring flood outlook on March 12th.

(Reporting by Katie Peikes, Iowa Public Radio)

Family to thief: Give us back our dad’s cremated remains

News

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DIKE, Iowa (Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier) — Family members have sent a message to whoever burglarized a rural home in eastern Iowa: Give us back the box holding the cremated remains of our father. The box was stolen Feb. 14 or 15 from the rural Dike home of Daniel Evanson. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reports that he was 65 when he died Feb. 6. His sister asked in a public Facebook post that the box be returned to his farm. The box was decorated with a farm scene that showed a tractor and a barn.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 2/28/20

News, Podcasts

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

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

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2020 may not rival 2019 for flooding, but ‘severe’ conditions are very possible

News, Weather

February 28th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The year 2019 stands out for record precipitation and record flooding across Iowa and much of the region, according to Doug Kluck, the Central Region climate services director at the National Weather Service in Kansas City. Kluck says, “Across the Midwest and, to some degree, the Missouri River basin, the Midwest (states) have never seen a wetter year, in fact, they’ve never seen a wetter year — by far.”

Parts of Iowa saw more rainfall last year than ever before, as well as flooding that surpassed all previous recorded high water marks. The wet soil meant many Iowa farmers faced extreme difficulty with spring planting as well as the fall harvest. While there are predictions of a repeat in 2020, Kluck says he does NOT expect to see that mix of weather conditions again. “Just off the cuff, I would say the likelihood of that happening again is very, very low, to get close to that record or exceed it, for sure,” Kluck says. “But even if it is above normal, which is a whole bunch of other years, by the way, we’re going to have severe problems.”

He says the patterns that are developing show we’re clearly moving toward more precipitation and storm events. “The trend overall has been to be, on an annual basis, wetter than what we’ve had in the past, that’s the trend,” Kluck says. “It doesn’t mean we can’t go into drought, but the trend line is definitely on a pretty upward slope. It’s pretty obvious from the data that we collect.”

The first flood outlooks for the region released earlier this month predict major flooding is likely in most of the region’s river basins, including the Mississippi and Missouri.