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UI dedicates new Veterans Plaza on Friday with seven granite monuments

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) -In advance of Veterans Day on Saturday, the University of Iowa will hold a ceremony on Friday afternoon to dedicate a new area of campus to remember those who served our country in uniform. Bill Nelson, executive director of the Iowa Memorial Union, says the 2 P-M service to officially open the new Veterans Plaza will include comments by several dignitaries, including U-I President Barbara Wilson and the head of the U-I’s new student-veteran support program.

“We’ll be presenting and raising the flag for the first time,” Nelson says. “That will be presented and raised by our students with the University of Iowa Veterans Association. There’ll be a playing of the National Anthem. The flag will fly and wave in perpetuity and it will be managed by our UIVA program and it will be illuminated, again, in perpetuity.” The plaza is located near the banks of the Iowa River and is flanked by trees and a green space.

Veterans Plaza (UI photo)

“The plaza is directly north of the Iowa Memorial Union. There are seven granite monuments, one monument for each branch of the armed services and then the seventh monument is a descriptor of the plaza,” Nelson says, “and there are four benches that create a backdrop.” Those six branches are: Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard and Space Force. Nelson says this new plaza will be used for decades to come to remember and honor veterans among the U-I’s faculty, staff, students, and alumni.

“It certainly will be featured during our Memorial Day program, some of our Veterans Day activities,” Nelson says. “We have a well-established Hawkeye Distinguished Veterans Awards program which is, frankly, this evening and we will tie that program in.” The location for the new plaza was special and deliberate.

“The Iowa Memorial Union was built in 1924, built for and dedicated at that time to our World War One veterans,” Nelson says, “and so it’s completely fitting that this space be adjacent to our building.” An unnamed donor is making the project possible with a final price tag between 80- and 90-thousand dollars.

Red Oak man arrested on a felony warrant for MV Theft

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak, today (Thursday), arrested a man wanted on a warrant for Motor Vehicle Theft, a Class-C Felony. Authorities say 33-year-old Kiley Brian Caron, of Red Oak, was arrested at around 10-a.m. in the 300 block of E. Valley Street. He was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $5,000 bond.

Atlantic Therapeutic Classroom update

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Atlantic Special Education Instructor Jill Miller, Wednesday, updated the School Board on the status of the Therapeutic Classroom. She mentioned she currently has 10 students with significantly varied special needs.

She said all-in-all, “It is a lot to manage and keep track of.” Miller said she spoke with the other SPED (Special Education) Teachers in grades K-through 4, to see what their needs were, especially for Level 2 students in particular. Those students, she said, need a Level 2 Program that would better meet their needs and their ability level.

Miller said while they can shuffle some of the Level 1 and Level 2 teachers to serve Level 2 students, they are currently short to Para-educators, and another teacher committed to Level 2, “Would be beneficial.”

Following her report, the School Board received an update on the Atlantic School District’s Special Education Program (SPED) teachers Melanie Fell, Mary McBride and Oran Perkins.

Cong. Feenstra pushes for passage of Farm Bill before 2024 arrives

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congressman Randy Feenstra says he remains hopeful Congress will act on a new Farm Bill before the end of the year. Feenstra and some colleagues sent a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson, urging action on the measure, what could end up being the first trillion-dollar Farm Bill. Feenstra also spoke with Pennsylvania Congressman G-T Thompson, chair of the House Ag Committee, regarding the need to act. Feenstra says the bill’s critical components are hanging in the balance.”We’ve got to open new export markets,” Feenstra says. “We’ve got to strengthen crop insurance, we’ve got to fight against animal disease. These are some big things. Ban China from buying our farmland. This farm bill’s critical. We’ve got to get it passed. So, we’re trying to figure out any way that we can try to get it done in late December yet, but it sounds like it may dip into January. So, we might have to do a two-month C.R. on this.”

A C-R is a continuing resolution, or a stopgap measure that extends the deadline. Feenstra, a Republican from Hull, says the flap over the House Speaker’s position delayed work on the Farm Bill and other important issues. “All of a sudden, we did no work for three weeks,” Feenstra says. “We didn’t pass any budget bills. So, that’s taken the forefront right now, is doing all the budget appropriation bills, to try and create a budget that was due September 30th that we haven’t got to yet. That’s all the floor time, that’s all we’re doing is debating right now–which is unfortunate.”

Feenstra says a one-year extension of the 2018 Farm Bill — which expired in late September — would be harmful to Iowa farmers and to certain programs. “Our farmers need certainty,” he says. “They need certainty in the programs. These programs have all lapsed since September 30th. I’m just fearful if we go another year with some of the old programs, that’s going to be a problem. I really think about what’s happening with fighting against an animal disease. We cannot have African swine fever get into your hog production.”

Last week, Iowa Congressman Zach Nunn expressed confidence the House would avoid a one-year extension of the old farm bill.

Director of Iowa’s police academy calls conditions, training ‘unacceptable’

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The head of Iowa’s law enforcement training academy says its facilities, processes and training are “unacceptable” and a group of state lawmakers plans to recommend more funding. Brady Carney became director of the Iowa Law Enforcement Academy in March. On Wednesday, Carney told a statehouse committee there’s a crisis in the recruitment of law enforcement officers, and the state’s training resources have been inadequate.  “Ultimately, when it comes down to brass tacks,” Carney says, “about what is your training product, what is ILEA doing for new hires, and what is it creating and supplying for training content across the state of Iowa — unacceptable.”

Carney says the academy lacks proper training facilities. State Representative Steven Holt, a Republican from Denison, co-chairs the study committee. Holt says he went through law enforcement training in another state, and he was shocked to hear about some of the problems with Iowa’s police academy.  Holt says, “It is very clear that we are not properly funding the ILEA and the things that they need to do to train, to have the most professional training possible and to do it as efficiently as possible.”

Carney says the curriculum is being updated, as it was up to two decades old in some cases. He says the academy council worked through a major decertification backlog that meant some police officers continued to work when they should’ve been suspended.

Atlantic CSD Food Service Director asks for parents/guardians to make an effort to pay food account balances

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Atlantic Community School District Food Service Director Natalie Ritter provided the School Board with an annual update, Wednesday evening. In her report, Ritter said they are still participating in the Local Food for School (LFS) grant.

Ritter said produce for the food program is from FarmTable Procurement and Delivery, in Harlan. There is about $3,000 in grant funds left to use for produce.

Natalie said they ordered and installed new equipment in the kitchen, which she said makes life “easier for [her] staff.”

Ritter reminded the School Board that the District’s Thanksgiving Feast is over the noon hour on Thursday, November 16th. They expect to serve 12-to 13-hundred students that day and around 200 guests. She says it takes the Food Service staff about 5-to 6-days to prepare for the meal. Anyone is welcome to come and help serve the traditional Thanksgiving meal.

She reminded the Board and parents about the Free and Reduced lunch applications and the negative lunch account balances.

Ritter says she “Totally understand the hardship that it takes to pay for lunch accounts and how to make ends meet, so I try to make payment plans that work for everybody. I do not want to add more stress or worries to any families than what we have to,” but she said “We are a business, and just like a business, we can’t operate [ on a negative balance].”

She says all she asks for, “really, is an effort” to make payments per month that are affordable, and they will work with you to make it as painless as possible.

Democrat Lanon Baccam running in Iowa’s third congressional district

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A former Iowa National Guardsman from Des Moines is seeking next year’s Democratic nomination in Iowa’s third congressional district, for the chance to challenge Republican Congressman Zach Nunn of Bondurant. Democrat Lanon Baccam was born and raised in Mount Pleasant. His parents came to Iowa from Laos. Baccam got his parent’s permission to join the Iowa National Guard at the age of 17 and, in 2004, he did a tour of duty in Afghanistan.

Baccam worked for former Governor Tom Vilsack at the U-S-D-A. Vilsack, a former mayor of Mount Pleasant, and his wife, Christie, who is a native of Mount Pleasant, endorsed Baccam this (Thursday) morning. Baccam says our politics is more divided than ever and Baccam says Congressman Nunn is part of the problem. Nunn will be seeking a second term in the U-S House next November.

Nunn defeated Democratic Congresswoman Cindy Axne last year by less than one percent.

Student-run ‘Ag 450’ farm celebrates 80th anniversary on ISU campus

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa State University’s student-run farm, known as Ag 450, is marking eight decades in operation. Skyler Rinker, an I-S-U ag ed professor, says students get to learn about the day-to-day work required to run a farm, everything from the financial side to feeding livestock to fine-tuning combines. Rinker says the farm was founded in 1943 and still runs on the premise of taking the science and putting it into practice.

Ag 450 focuses on farm management and operations, and many facets of production agriculture, with soybeans, corn and hogs. The farm was started on the Ames campus with 187 acres, while it’s grown to more than 600 acres today, with 80 to 100 students enrolling in the course every year.

Adams County shooting investigation results in an arrest

News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Corning, Iowa) – Officials with the Adams County Sheriff’s Office report an investigation into a shooting that took place Oct. 31st (2023) has resulted in an arrest. 37-year-old Lisa Marie Inman was charged with Tampering with evidence, three-counts of Child Endangerment, and Conspiracy to Commit a Forcible Felony. Inman was booked into the Adams County Jail and later released on an $18,000 cash or surety bond (w/10% acceptable).

*”Any potential criminal charges identified above are merely allegations, and any defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.”*

Iowa trapping season underway

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 9th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The trapping season is in its first full week across Iowa. D-N-R Furbearer Biologist, Vince Evelsizer, says there are a couple of positives for those venturing out. “A lot of the furbearer populations are doing well, they’re stable to slightly increasing,”Evelsizer says. “The weather is another story, it’s quite good to here, so though the weather’s good to be outdoors doing some trapping.” The drought could have an impact depending on the type of animal you are pursuing. “For those that trap water for things like beavers and muskrats and mink, things like that, otters, some of their favorite places may have low water levels or even be dry,” he says. “We have gotten some timely rains this fall so that has helped.”

The season was extended from the end of January through the month of February this year. Evelsizer says you aren’t going to make a lot of money from trapping right now, but you still get enjoyment out of the process. “The fur market is not very strong right now. So it’s a really good time to take your focus off of worrying about what fur prices are and have fun with it,” Evelsizer says. “Take a beginner out, whether that’s a kid or an older person that wants to try it out. It’s a good time to do that. It’s also a good time to try different methods for you know, some species that you maybe haven’t tried for in the past.”

He says raccoons have been one of the popular animals for trappers in Iowa. “Lately beavers are getting attention to and then it can vary from region to region — but otters and bobcats are still pretty popular,” he says. “And then in the northwest and parts of north- central Iowa, muskrat trapping on the marshes is still somewhat popular, if there’s water this year in the marshes.”

The D-N-R saw 15-thousand-300 furharvester licenses purchased in 2022 and Evelsizer says that number has been fairly stable over the past seven years. The Iowa Trapper’s Association and the D-N-R are offering a ‘learn to furharvest’ workshop for beginners this fall on November 18th in St. Charles.