712 Digital Group - top

KJAN News

KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa,  Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 4/15/2017

News, Podcasts

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

NE man faces charges in Sat. morning Council Bluffs crash

News

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A man from Nebraska faces possible charges following a single-vehicle accident this (Saturday) morning, in Council Bluffs. Authorities say at around 3:18-a.m., Council Bluffs Police and Fire Department responded to the area of I-80 and I-29 for a single vehicle crash during which the vehicle had left the road.

The vehicle, a black 2006 Chevy Impala, had been driven by a 26-year old man from LaVista, NE.,  south bound on I-29 and was merging onto westbound I-80, when the car went out of control and went off the north side of the roadway. The driver – whose name was being withheld pending notification of family – was transported by rescue squad to the hospital with what are believed to be non-life threatening injuries. Operator Control of the Vehicle and Alcohol are believed to be the primary contributing factors in the crash.

The ramp from I-29 South to I-80 West had to be shut down for approximately 1 hour.

100+mph pursuit in Fremont County Fri. night

News

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A traffic stop that began in Fremont County late Friday night, resulted in a high-speed pursuit and the arrest by authorities in Missouri, of a Kansas man. Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports the Fremont County K9 unit tried to stop a 2010 Toyota Corolla at around 10:30-p.m., when the driver, 37-year old Dilip Kumar Agniotri, of Overland Park, KS, began an effort to elude the deputy.

The Corolla reached speeds of up to 100 miles per hour as deputies pursued it into Missouri, where they were able to bring the car to a stop around the 115 mile marker of Interstate 29. Fremont County Deputies were assisted in the pursuit by Officers with the Rockport (MO.) Police Department, Missouri State Patrol, and Atchinson County (MO.) Sheriff’s Office.

Agniotri was cited for the Iowa traffic violations before being turned over to Atchinson County authorities.

Woman from Audubon County arrested for felony child endangerment

News

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Audubon County report a woman faces two felony charges of child endangerment, following an investigation into an incident that allegedly took place last Sunday. 50-year-old Samantha Kay Bailey, of Gray, was arrested on Friday (April 14th). During the alleged incident in Gray last Sunday (April 9th), children in her care ended-up being flown to a hospital. Additional information about the incident was not released.

Bailey was being held in the Audubon County Jail on $10,000 bond, pending an appearance before the county magistrate. The incident remained under investigation, with additional charges possible.

New state law forbids ‘project labor agreements’ on gov’t-financed construction

News

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A new state law will prevent state and local governments from striking “project labor agreements” with union workers on construction projects. Supporters of these agreements say they ensure workers are paid a fair wage and the construction is completed on time and within the budget. Opponents, like Governor Terry Branstad, say NON-union contractors lose out on big projects that are financed with government dollars.

“Publicly-funded construction projects create jobs for workers here in Iowa and it’s important to make sure that all qualified workers have the opportunity to bid on these projects,” Branstad says. Project labor agreements have been used on some of the state’s biggest government construction projects, like the Iowa Events Center in downtown Des Moines. But in 2011 when Branstad returned as Iowa’s governor, he issued an executive order that banned project labor agreements on state-financed construction.

The bill Branstad signed into law this week ensures the ban applies not only to projects that are financed with state tax dollars, but construction paid for with tax dollars collected by cities, counties and school districts.

“Project labor agreements infringe on Iowans’ right to work by denying small businesses, contractors, women- and minority-owned companies the opportunity to competitively bid on these important projects,” Branstad says. “PLAs increase the cost of public projects by preventing competitive bidding on projects and leave Iowa taxpayers to foot the bill for these increased expenses.”

A host of organizations that represent businesses and contractors lobbied for this new law. Unions opposed it, as did the Iowa State Association of Counties and the Iowa League of Cities. Democrats say the new law is part of the G-O-P’s anti-union agenda. Republicans say 85 percent of the construction workers in Iowa do not belong to a union and this new law will help their employers secure government contracts.

(Radio Iowa)

Senator Ernst cosponsors bill providing tax credit to caregivers

News

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Iowa Senator Joni Ernst is one of the sponsors of a bipartisan bill that would provide a tax credit for those who take care of aging parents, grandparents or other family members.

“It’s time that we recognize the essential role these caregivers play in supporting aging relatives or family members with a long-term illnesses and disabilities,” Ernst says. Ernst is sponsoring the Credit for Caring Act along with fellow Senators Michael Bennet, a Democrat from Colorado, Kelly Ayotte, a Republican from New Hampshire, and Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat from Massachusetts.

“This legislation will provide up to a three-thousand dollar non-refundable tax credit to working family caregivers for qualified expenses,” Ernst explains. She says the tax credit helps alleviate some of the out of pocket financial expenses that caregivers often take on, all while balancing full or part-time employment.

“The credit would be available to those working family caregivers who have incurred expenses of more than two-thousand dollars while caring for a family member who has been certified to be in need of long-term care,” Ernst says. “In particular, this credit would help cover the costs associate with caring for a family member — such as home modifications to accommodate special needs, medication management, respite care, and more.”

A-A-R-P supports the bill and says there are an estimated 317-thousand family caregivers in Iowa who provide an estimated unpaid care worth more than three-point-eight (3.8) billion dollars annually to their adult loved ones. Ernst says the credit would also phase out at higher income levels to ensure appropriate taxpayer protections are in place.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa early News Headlines: Saturday, 4/15/17

News

April 15th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Supreme Court says the state had no legal responsibility to safeguard a 95-year-old woman who was raped by a violent sex offender placed in her nursing home after being released from state custody. The court ruling Friday upholds a lower court’s decision to dismiss the state from a lawsuit filed by the women’s children.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The former No. 2 administrator for University of Iowa athletics will square off against the school in a trial that centers on her claim that she suffered discrimination as a gay female who fought bias in college sports. The trial in a lawsuit brought by Jane Meyer, Iowa’s former senior associate athletic director, begins Monday. It i expected to litigate whether Athletic Director Gary Barta’s personnel decisions were necessary judgment calls or tainted by discrimination.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Police in central Iowa say they’ve made an arrest in a shooting this week that killed one Des Moines man and left another injured. Police said Friday that 26-year-old Larry Deandre Ratliff Jr., of Des Moines, has been charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder, robbery and a weapons count in connection with the Tuesday shooting in the Beaverdale neighborhood. Police say 36-year-old Antonio Quinn died from his wounds; another man was injured.

STRATFORD, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a central Iowa medical helicopter was forced to make an emergency landing after hitting a bird. The Fort Dodge Messenger reports that the UnityPoint Health-Trinity Regional Medical Center air ambulance landed early Thursday morning in Hamilton County farm field. No one was hurt. Officials say the collision broke out the helicopter’s windshield.

Study shows Iowa lost 800+ tech industry jobs in 2016

News

April 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A study finds Iowa saw a slight drop in technology industry employment last year. Steven Ostrowski, spokesman for the Computing Technology Industry Association or CompTIA, says Iowa’s tech industry workforce fell by more than 800 jobs or almost two-percent during 2016, putting the state near the middle of the national pack.

“Iowa ranks 32nd. They have just over 45,000 tech industry workers across the state,” Ostrowski says. “Their average wage is $77,600. That’s 38th across the United States.” That tech salary figure is about 75-percent higher than the average private sector worker in Iowa, who earns about 44-thousand-400 dollars.

“A third category we’ve ranked the states in this year is innovation,” Ostrowski says. That’s a combination of patents issued to companies within the state, the number of new tech startups and the number of new tech businesses that have been established over the course of the calendar year, and in that ranking, Iowa comes in 37th.”

CompTIA’s 18th annual CyberStates report finds more than 42-hundred tech businesses located in Iowa. Among the leading tech occupations in the state are: application software developers (7,380), computer systems analysts (5,300) and computer user support specialists (3,870). He notes, virtually every industry in the state is utilizing technology and those numbers are growing.

“It’s not necessarily just working for a technology company,” Ostrowski says. “In Iowa, there are over 62,000 workers who have technology jobs working in other industries. That could be agriculture. That could be finance, education, government, health care. It’s a pretty healthy workforce with technology as part of their credentials.”

Iowa ranks 14th in the nation in terms of gender diversity in the tech workforce. The study says 77-percent of Iowa’s tech workers are male, 23-percent female. That’s slightly better than the national average of 78-percent male and 22-percent female.

(Radio Iowa)

Court’s chief says cuts will be handled, presence in all 99 counties to be maintained

News

April 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A small group of Republican legislators have given initial approval to next year’s spending plan for the state’s court system, prisons and public safety operations. It’s about three million dollars LEANER than the current year’s budget for those agencies. Iowa Supreme Court Chief Justice Mark Cady had asked for a budget boost for the courts, but is getting what GOP lawmakers call a “status quo” spending plan. Cady acknowledges with state tax revenues falling below expectations, the cuts to the courts could have been deep.

“We’re prepared to go forward and continue to do the best work that we can,” Cady told reporters after meeting privately with House leaders Wednesday afternoon. “We’re just appreciative that the legislature listened to us in some respects.” Legislators are in the final stages of drafting an OVERALL spending outline for the state fiscal year that begins July 1st and some of the plans that emerged this week will cut other agencies far more — like a proposed 10 percent cut in the Department of Public Health’s next budget.

As chief justice of the Iowa Supreme Court, Cady is the top executive in the judicial branch of state government. Cady says he and his top aides will try to implement these cuts with the fewest “disruptions” to court services. “We just don’t know specifically what that is, but we’ll look at everything,” Cady says. During recent rounds of budget reductions, Cady ordered workers in the court system to take unpaid furloughs and courthouses were closed on Fridays. That may happen again.

“We look at problems as opportunities and we’ll look to make sure there aren’t things we can do in ways that might be able to save money,” Cady says. But Cady says the court system “will still maintain a presence in all 99 counties.” “That’s important to us, but…just as have this year, we operated on a shortfall and did it successfully and we’re confident we’ll be able to do it again,” Cady says. Legislators are NOT at work today in Des Moines. They will return Monday, with the hope of concluding the work of the 2017 legislative session sometime NEXT WEEK.

(Radio Iowa)

Supreme Court says you can’t be charged for breaking a rule that wasn’t supposed to be a rule

News

April 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Supreme Court rules a Johnson County man can’t be charged for falsely answering an unauthorized question on a request for a gun permit. James Downey filled out the application for a gun permit in Johnson County in January of 2015. He provided his name, birthdate, sex, phone number, address, driver’s license number, place of birth, and country of citizenship on the front side of the form. Downey turned the form over to find 10 questions with yes or no answers. He answered “no” to whether he had ever been convicted of a felony.

The Johnson County Sheriff’s Department did a background check and charged him with making a false statement when they found he had a felony third offense O-W-I conviction. The Iowa Supreme Court ruled the 10 questions were not authorized by the legislature to be on the form and an unauthorized question on weapons permit application cannot be the basis for a crime. The ruling says if it were — someone could be asked the color of their car — and then be charged if they gave the wrong color.

(Radio Iowa)