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Some Iowa farmers back crop buffer law to protect water

Ag/Outdoor

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Iowa’s farmer-dominated conservation districts are calling for a state ban on planting crops within 30 feet of streams to improve water quality, but the state’s top agricultural official opposes the idea. The Gazette reports that the Conservation Districts of Iowa isn’t the first group to push for a buffer law, but it’s the first time a group made up mainly of farmers and retired farmers has advocated for something more stringent than voluntary action.

Dennis Carney, the group’s president, says he sees a growing realization that current policies aren’t achieving the desired results. Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig says he opposes a buffer strip requirement because more regulation runs counter to his agency’s philosophy. He questions whether the conservation district reflects the views of most Iowa farmers.

Heartbeat Today 11-22-2019

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

November 22nd, 2019 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Exira/EHK digital media students Sarah Marshall, Jacob Rattenborg and Jacob Snyder about their experiences in the new class and the debut broadcast on the Spartan Media Channel on kjan.com Monday night.

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Iowa sees another above normal Water Year

Weather

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The latest update from the state finds the amount of precipitation in the “Water Year” for the state is well above normal. The D-N-R’s Tim Hall says the Water Year runs from Iowa from October of last year to the end of September this year. He says it’s defined that way because after September, there’s no moisture that benefits the current growing season. The current water year saw a little more than 42-and-a-half inches of precipitation. “We are about seven inches above average,” Hall says, “if you go back and you look at 24 months — the water years of 2018 and 2019 together — we’re pushing 20 inches above normal for those two year. So, it’s been a very, very wet couple of years.”

The ground is full of water right now, and that can be a positive.”Generally in the fall going into the winter, having a wet soil profile is good — because it benefits us in the spring when the vegetation wants to get kicked off,” according to Hall. But he says if the ground stays saturated and we have a wet spring the wet soil profile can become a bad thing. “There’s sort of some early precautionary flags being raised that we could find ourselves in a flood situation in the spring, depending on what happens in the winter,” Hall says.

Hall says it’s a waiting game that depends on how much snow we get — and how much remains in the spring when it starts to melt. “As we sit here today it could be a good thing — it could be a bad thing. It depends on what happens over the next three or four months,” Hall says.  Wet ground delayed planting this last spring and that led to a delayed harvest for this year’s crop. This was the seventh wettest and 45th warmest Water Year among 147 years of Iowa records. The back-to-back water years of 2018 and 2019 was the third wettest combined two years on record.

Gov. Reynolds orders flags at half-staff to honor fallen WWII Marine

News

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES– Gov. Kim Reynolds has ordered all flags in Iowa to fly at half-staff from now until sunset today (Friday, November 22nd), to honor fallen Marine Corps Reserve Private Channing R. Whitaker.  Whitaker, from Granger, was killed in action on November 22, 1943. Pvt. Whitaker was a member of Company A, 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, Fleet Marine Force (FMF), which landed against stiff Japanese resistance on the small island of Betio in the Tarawa Atoll of the Gilbert Islands, in an attempt to secure the island. Whitaker’s remains were accounted for on May 29, 2019.

Pvt. Whitaker will be buried with full military honors during a Memorial Service 2-p.m. today, in the Glendale Cemetery, in Des Moines. Flags will be at half-staff on the State Capitol Building and on flag displays in the Capitol Complex. Flags will also be half-staff on all public buildings, grounds and facilities throughout the state. Individuals, businesses, schools, municipalities, counties and other government subdivisions are encouraged to fly the flag at half-staff for the same length of time as a sign of respect.

Creston Police report (11/22)

News

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Updated) — Police in Creston report 45-year old Jason Schlapia, of Creston, was cited Thursday evening, for attempted Theft. He was cited at the Dollar General Store at around 6:30-p.m., and then released. 26-year old Hannah Marie Jackson, of Afton, was arrested Thursday morning at the Greater Regional Medical Center, in Creston. She was taken into custody for Theft in the 4th Degree, and later released on $100 bond. 32-year old Shaune William Tindle, of Creston, was arrested late Thursday morning at the Union County Courthouse. Tindle was taken into custody on a Ringgold County warrant and transported to the Ringgold County Jail, where his cash-only bond was set at $5,000.

And, Thursday night, 23-year old Keegan Wayne Williams, of Creston, was arrested at the Greater Regional Medical Center, in Creston, for Theft in the 5th Degree. His bond was set at $300.

Axne to hold “Connect with your Congresswoman” event Saturday, in Atlantic

News

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Iowa 3rd District Congresswoman Cindy Axne will be in Cass County this Saturday, November 23rd.  Axne will hold a “Connect with your Congresswoman” event in the Media Center at the Atlantic High School (1201 E 14th Street), from 4-until 4:45-p.m. The event is open to the public.

Congresswoman Axne also has stops planned for Saturday in:

Union County – A tour of the ASPIRE Before & After school/Learing Center/Thrift Store/Food Pantry (211 Grace St. in Afton/Union County Fairgrounds) from 9:15-until 10-a.m.

Ringgold County – 10:30-to 11:15-a.m. at Jamie’s Coffee Mill & Deli (118 W. Adams St., Mt. Ayr)

Taylor County – Noon until 12:45-p.m. at Hedgies’ Books, Toys and More (414 Main St., Bedford)

Adams County – From 2:15-p.m. until 3-p.m., for a Freedom Creek Conservation tour (15566 Sycamore Ave., in Prescott)

Adair County – 6-to 6:45-p.m. at the Olive Branch Restaurant in Greenfield ( 108 E. Iowa St.)

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 11/22/19

Podcasts, Sports

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 11/22/19

News, Podcasts

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

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UI researchers use high-tech cameras to study how children learn words

News

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — University of Iowa researchers are partnering with schools in Cedar Rapids and Iowa City to study how children learn words and form a vocabulary. Bob McMurray, a U-I professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, says the effort is called the Growing Words Project, and it uses sophisticated infrared cameras that carefully track a child’s eye movements. “We know that if you show a child a word or if you say a word to them, it takes about a half-second or more for them to figure out what you mean,” McMurray says. “What are they doing in that half-second? Growing Words is investigating that using eye-tracking where we can trace out, every four milliseconds, what a child is thinking as they listen to or read words.”

Starting in January, the program will be testing about 300 elementary school children in Cedar Rapids and another hundred in Iowa City. The child will place his or her chin in a harness in front of a computer screen rigged with cameras. “They might hear a word like ‘wizard’ or maybe they read it, and on the screen, they see several pictures, things like a wizard, a window, a lizard, and maybe something that’s completely unrelated like table,” McMurray says. “All they have to do is click on the wizard, but they have to find it first and that means they have to start looking around. What we do is we ask, what are they looking at and when?”

Between 12 and 16-percent of Iowa children have some type of learning or reading disorder. “Part of their problem might be that they know the words, they know the letters, but they can’t use that information fast enough to understand a whole sentence or to read a whole sentence or to read a book,” McMurray says. “What we want to do is try to understand how those children — but also how their typically-developing peers — manage to do this so quickly and how they get better at it.”

The program will study about 400 children a year over the next four years using a $2.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. More volunteers are needed in Iowa City and Cedar Rapids at all reading levels in grades one through three. Contact McMurray through the website: https://growingwords.lab.uiowa.edu/

Des Moines airport to offer nonstop flights to Miami

News

November 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Airline passengers will soon have the option to take a non-stop flight from Des Moines to Miami. The Des Moines Register reports that American Airlines will offer the summer seasonal service starting June 3. Flights will leave Des Moines on Saturdays and Sundays, and return flights are scheduled for Fridays and Saturdays. It will be the first direct flight from the Des Moines International Airport to Miami International Airport.

Airport communications director Kayla Kovarna says more than 52,000 passengers already travel to the Miami airport from Des Moines each year. The route will help passengers connect with tropical destinations in Jamaica. Tickets are scheduled to go on sale Nov. 25.