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Animal rights groups demand action against Iowa fur farm

News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Federal inspectors have repeatedly ordered a southeast Iowa fur farm to improve the living conditions for ferrets, foxes, raccoons and skunks it sells to government laboratories and pet stores. U.S. Department of Agriculture inspection reports say animals lived in sweltering heat or maggot-infested filth, sometimes with decomposing corpses in their cages at Ruby Fur Farm, located 65 miles (105 kilometers) southeast of Des Moines.

Owner Randy Ruby declined to discuss the reports. But a spokeswoman at an animal business advocacy group says some of the inspectors’ claims were exaggerated and when there were problems Ruby addressed them. No enforcement action has been taken, but animal rights groups want the farm’s animal dealer license revoked and animals removed. A USDA spokesman has declined to say whether enforcement action is under consideration.

Coin man arrested on drug charges as officers investigate a possible burglary

News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Clarinda Police Officers investigating a reported, possible burglary in progress, arrested a man on drug charges this (Friday) morning. Police Chief Keith Brothers says 29-year old Nathan Andrew Wilcoxen, of Coin, was arrested at around 6:30-p.m. for possession of methamphetamine and possession of Oxycontin without a prescription, as well as possession of drug paraphernalia. Wilcoxson was arrested while officers were investigating in the 300 block of N. 13th Street. He was being held at the Page County Jail on $2,300 bail.

Police reports have been submitted to the offices of Page County Attorney Carl M. Sonksen for review regarding the filing of formal charges.

UI scientist finds out from media he’s lost key post with EPA

News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A University of Iowa scientist says he and others who’ve served as advisers to the U-S Environmental Protection Agency are finding out in news stories they’ve been removed or demoted. Many of the scientists come from academia and say they’re being replaced by scientists from industries regulated by the E-P-A. Professor Peter Thorne heads the U-I’s Department of Occupational and Environmental Health and says until recently, he chaired the E-P-A’s Science Advisory Board, the agency’s most prominent advising body. “I was term limited, but I was nominated to continue and I found out from the media that someone else had been asked to chair that going forward,” Thorne says. “So I have not gotten official word, but my name disappeared from the website this week, so that’s confirmation.”

Thorne says he’s worried changes at the E-P-A will limit the agency’s ability to protect public health and the environment. He says scientists from academic institutions serving as advisers are being “marginalized” by the agency’s new leadership. “The scientists are being replaced by industry scientists,” Thorne says, “people who have worked for industry, people who have worked for law firms that have sued the EPA.”

Thorne says scientists who get E-P-A funding for research are now blocked from serving as advisers to the agency. He made his comments on Iowa Public Radio’s program “River to River.”

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 11/10/2017

News, Podcasts

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 11/10/2017

News, Podcasts

November 10th, 2017 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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MidAmerican plans to spend $1B to update wind turbines

News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — MidAmerican Energy says it plans to spend $1 billion updating more than 700 older wind turbines across Iowa. The turbines will be retrofitted with newer, more efficient components, including longer blades, to extend their lifespans an estimated 20 years. The company says each upgraded turbine will annually net between 19 and 28 percent more energy.

The project is beginning with MidAmerican’s first three wind farms, built in 2004 in northern Iowa. Construction crews often work overnight, when winds die down. Work stops when the wind exceeds 20 mph.

Charity launches annual Red Kettle campaign in Iowa with tree-lighting

News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

One of the sounds of the Yuletide season will soon be heard in Iowa. The ringing of bells on street corners and outside of stores will mark the start of the Salvation Army’s annual fundraising campaign. Susan Eustice, spokeswoman for the charity’s Omaha-Council Bluffs chapter, says their tree-lighting celebration will be held tonight (Friday) and the tree itself is spectacular. “It is 75 feet tall, has 80,000 LED lights and 600 snowflakes,” Eustice says. “It’ll all light up as a signal that the Tree of Lights and the Red Kettle campaign will begin.”

The Salvation Army is putting out an urgent call for help. “We are in serious need of volunteer bell ringers in Omaha and Council Bluffs,” Eustice says. “To volunteer, it’s easy. Go online to RegisterToRing.com or call our volunteer office at 402-898-6000 and sign up.” Chapters across Iowa are seeking volunteers and that same website can be used. In Omaha-Council Bluffs, hundreds of helpers are needed to station themselves beside the red kettles. “We have over 130 sites and we have seven weeks, and that’s six days a week, to ring that bell,” Eustice says. “We need families, we need business groups, church groups to come out, adopt a kettle for a day or two and help us reach our goal.”

The tree-lighting event starts at 6-p.m. at 90th and Dodge Street in Omaha. There will be food, live entertainment, Santa and his reindeer. The kettles will remain out through December 23rd.

(Radio Iowa)

USDA boosts its guess for Iowa corn production

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The U.S.D.A. has increased its corn production outlook for Iowa and the nation. The National Agricultural Statistics Service – Crop Production report released Thursday shows Iowa corn production is now forecast at 2.54 billion bushels. Yields are expected to average 197 bushels per acre, up 6 bushels per acre from the October forecast. If the predictions hold, this would be Iowa’s second highest yield and production on record behind last year. Nationally, the average corn yield is forecast at just over 175 bushels per acre, which would be a new all-time high.

Iowa’s soybean production is forecast at 557 million bushels, with a yield of 56 bushels per acre. Both of those predictions are unchanged from last month’s forecast.

(Radio Iowa)

Area residents appointed to various Iowa Boards & Commissions

News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

(DES MOINES) – Gov. Kim Reynolds announced appointments to Iowa’s boards and commissions, Thursday. The appointees are unpaid and are subject to Senate confirmation. In the KJAN listening area, the following persons were appointed to their respective Board or Commission:

Workforce Development Board: Becky Jacobsen, Denison; Richard Moon, Sioux City.

School Budget Review Committee: Martha Bruckner, Council Bluffs.

Board of Nursing: Sue Putnam, Griswold.

Iowa ‘agriculturalist’ nominated to Farm Credit board

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A western Iowa businessman and farmer has been nominated to serve on the three-member federal board that oversees the Farm Credit Administration. Glen Smith of Atlantic testified before the U.S. Senate Ag Committee Thursday. “I’m truly humbled by the honor of this nomination, but also quite sobered by the huge responsibility, if confirmed, of having a role of ensuring that American agriculture continues to have a source for reliable, secure credit,” Smith said, “which happens to the be mission of Farm Credit.”

Smith founded Smith Land Service Company in 1982. The firm manages farms and is a farm brokerage. He and his family also raise corn and soybeans on about two-thousand acres.  “As an active farmer, ag businessman and even dating back to my ag finance days at Iowa State University, I’ve understood the important role of the Farm Credit Administration in setting policy, examining and regulating our nation’s largest long-term agricultural lender, the Farm Credit System,” Smith says. “…The health of American agriculture is critically dependent upon a healthy, viable Farm Credit System. Credit is truly the lifeblood of agriculture.”

Glen R. Smith

Smith told senators he has a “keen sense” of “boom and bust” cycles since he lived through the soaring ag economy of the 1970s, followed by the Farm Crisis of the 1980s. “We can’t afford to lose a generation of agriculturalists like we did in the ’80s,” Smith said. “…I’ve always considered myself to be an optimist. As a farmer you take on the weather, you take on pests, you take on the markets and you have to be an optimist to survive. However, I do have to confess that I am very concerned about the current agricultural outlook.”

Smith says the Farm Credit System can play a key role in supporting young farmers who are most vulnerable to financial fluctuations. “Land is typically the dominant asset on a farmer’s balance sheet,” Smith says. “In the Midwest alone, we’ve seen a 15-20 percent erosion in land values over the last several years…I believe we’re a long ways away from crisis management as experienced in the ’80s, however, out of love for this wonderful industry, I would be a strong advocate for caution in the Farm Credit System.”

If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, as expected, Smith will move to Washington because the position is a full-time job. The Farm Credit System currently is managing more than a quarter of a TRILLION dollars in loans. Fewer than one percent of those loans are 90 days past due or in default.

(Radio Iowa)