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Lopez Foods buys idled Cherokee meat processing plant

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 23rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A new owner plans to reopen a meat processing facility in northwest Iowa. Oklahoma-based Lopez Foods — a family-owned business — bought the plant in Cherokee from Iowa Food Group, which closed the facility in April. Bill Anderson with Cherokee Area Economic Development says 40 people worked at Iowa Food Group before it closed.

“Our number one priority was taking care of those employees, taking care of that workforce and now with Lopez Foods moving into that facility we want to assist in helping them repopulate the facility with the workforce,” he says. Lopez Foods expects to reopen the plant in early spring. The plant was idle for four years before Iowa Food Group started it up again in January.

The plant dates back to 1965 when Wilson Foods opened it to slaughter beef and pork. Tyson Foods acquired it in 2001 and produced deli meats at the facility. “It had a long history of employing families throughtout our communities and other communities, quite frankly, outside of Cherokee County,” Anderson says.

About 400 people were working at the plant when Tyson closed it in 2014. Lopez Foods, the plant’s new owner, is a key supplier for restaurants and retailers, including McDonald’s and Walmart. The company’s plant in Oklahoma City produces frozen ground beef patties, partially cooked and fully-cooked sausage patties and sliced Canadian-style bacon.

(Reporting by Iowa Public Radio’s Katie Peikes; additional reporting by Radio Iowa’s O. Kay Henderson)

JAN ELAINE HUEGERICH, 62, of Exira (Mass of Christian Burial 10/25/19)

Obituaries

October 23rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

JAN ELAINE HUEGERICH, 62, of Exira, died Tuesday, Oct. 22nd, at the Exira Care Center. A Mass of Christian Burial for JAN HUEGERICH, will be held 10:30-a.m. Friday, Oct. 25th, at Holy Trinity Catholic Church, in Exira. Kessler Funeral Home in Exira has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home, where the family visitation is on Thursday, Oct. 24th, from 4-until 7-p.m., with a Rosary at 5-p.m.

Burial is in the Exira Cemetery.

JAN HUEGERICH is survived by:

Her husband – Mike Huegerich, of Exira.

Her daughters – Kelli (& her significant other, Lorenzo Keahey), of Ankney; Katie (Nich) West, of Whiting, and McKenna Wardrip, of Irwin.

Her brothers – Chris (Rowena) Wardrip, and Jay (Lesa) Wardrip, all of Kansas City, MO.

7 grandchildren, other relatives, her in-laws, and friends.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., Oct. 23rd 2019

News

October 23rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 1.m. CDT

STUART, Iowa (AP) — A man wounded in a shootout with officers that also wounded two deputies has been charged with two counts of attempted murder of a peace officer. The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation says in a news release Tuesday that 52-year-old Randall Comly fired a gun at Guthrie County Deputy Kent Gries and Stuart Police Officer Tyler DeFrancisco on Thursday inside an apartment. Neither were shot. However, two deputies posted outside the apartment, Steven Henry and Jim Mink, were both shot. Investigators say they may have been hit by gunfire from fellow officers returning Comly’s gunfire.
Both Mink and Henry were released from the hospital Saturday morning. Comly was also wounded in the confrontation. He has since been released from the hospital and is being held in jail.

CORALVILLE, Iowa (AP) — A nonprofit controlled by the former director of a popular annual Iowa bike ride is hosting a conference featuring the new competing event that he launched this month. The Iowa Festivals and Events Association, which lists former RAGBRAI director T.J. Juskiewicz as its president, is hosting its first conference in Coralville this week. Juskiewicz and his aides with a new event, Iowa’s Ride, are among the speakers.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Drake University has announced receipt of a $5 million donation that will support the school’s athletics and help fund programs to benefit rural communities. The university said in a news release Tuesday that Former DuPont Pioneer president and Drake University trustee Paul Schickler and his wife, Claudia, made the donation. Of the gift, $2 million will go to renovate the school’s Knapp Center, where the Bulldogs’ basketball games are held.

SIBLEY, Iowa (AP) — Attorneys for a child who was sexually assaulted by a teacher at an Iowa school have announced a $650,000 settlement paid by four school districts. Spirit Lake attorney John Sandy says the settlement was agreed to by the school boards of Sibley-Ocheyedan, Sioux City, Akron Westfield, and Mediapolis community schools. The lawsuit stemmed from the case of Kyle Ewinger, who was convicted earlier this year of sexually abusing student at Sibley-Ocheyedan.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Board members of an insurance program for Iowa’s municipal governments are rethinking their long-standing practice of holding public meetings at resorts in other states. Directors of the Iowa Communities Assurance Pool have faced criticism since The Associated Press reported last month that they have long held meetings once a year at getaway destinations in Florida and Michigan.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 10/23/19

Sports

October 23rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Packers and Chiefs met more than 50 years ago in the first Super Bowl, pitting the best from the NFL against the best from the AFL. Fourteen players who took the field that day at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum would land in the Hall of Fame, including quarterbacks Bart Starr and Len Dawson. The Packers triumphed 35-10 in a game that was a far cry from the event the Super Bowl would become in more recent years.

AMES, Iowa (AP) — No. 23 Iowa State will take a three-game winning streak into Saturday’s home game against Oklahoma State. The Cyclones are 5-2 so far this season and struggled early. Coach Matt Campbell says it took a while for his young players in skill positions to get settled. Now that they have, Iowa State is rolling.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Nowhere did Wisconsin’s stunning loss at Illinois reverberate more than in Iowa City. The upset gave the 20th-ranked Hawkeyes new life in the Big Ten West. In recent weeks, Iowa hasn’t looked like a team that is ready to seize such an opportunity. Iowa plays at Northwestern this weekend.

Riverside sweeps past Exira-EHK

Sports

October 22nd, 2019 by admin

The Riverside Bulldogs picked up a Class 1A Region 2 playoff win on Tuesday night at home over the Exira-EHK Spartans 3-0. The Bulldogs jumped out early in the first two sets and came on strong in the third to earn the sweep 25-12, 25-17, 25-16.

The Bulldogs used early runs in the first two sets to grab control. In the third the Spartans had the early edge. The Bulldogs use a 9-0 at the end of the set to secure the victory. Bulldogs Head Coach Michaela Schwartzkopf said her team played comfortable early in the match.

Kenna Ford had 31 assists for the Bulldogs and Jadyn Achenbach led the offense with 14 kills. The third set rally was no surprise to Schwartzkopf because she said the team has played from behind most of the season.

The Bulldogs improved to 24-12 with the win and will now host the CAM Cougars in the Regional Quarterfinals on Monday. We’ll have that match on KJAN. The Spartans end their season with a record of 6-23.

Class 1A and 2A Playoff Volleyball Scoreboard 10/22/2019

Sports

October 22nd, 2019 by admin

Class 1A Region 2

(3-0) Woodbine 25-25-28, Heartland Christian 15-14-26
(3-0) West Harrison 25-25-25, Whiting 18-15-18
(3-2) Boyer Valley 25-20-24-25-15, Ar-We-Va 17-25-26-9-7
(3-1) Coon Rapids-Bayard 25-26-24-25, Paton-Churdan 19-24-26-22
(3-0) Glidden-Ralston 25-25-25, Audubon 13-16-13
(3-0) Riverside 25-25-25, Exira-EHK 12-17-16
(3-0) CAM 30-25-25, Orient-Macksburg 28-20-14

*We’ll have Riverside hosting CAM in Regional Quarterfinal on Monday night at 7:00pm on KJAN.

Class 1A Region 3

(3-0) Bedford 25-25-25, Essex 18-12-20
(3-0) Lenox 25-25-25, Diagonal 10-15-9
(3-0) Lamoni 27-25-25, Central Decatur 25-20-22
(3-2) East Mills 26-22-24-25-15, Fremont-Mills 24-25-26-20-5
(3-0) East Union 25-25-25, Mormon Trail 7-10-14
(3-0) Southwest Valley 25-25-25, Murray 22-12-19
(3-0) Stanton 25-25-25, Griswold 8-22-14

Class 2A Region 3

(3-0) West Monona 25-25-25, Missouri Valley 22-14-13

Class 2A Region 4

(3-1) AHSTW 22-25-25-25, Tri-Center 25-23-20-14

Class 2A Region 5

(3-2) West Central Valley 25-21-24-25-15, Panorama 16-25-26-14-5

Man accused in police shootout charged with attempted murder

News

October 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

STUART, Iowa (AP) — A man wounded in an Iowa shootout with officers that also wounded two deputies has been charged with two counts of attempted murder of a peace officer.
The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation says in a news release Tuesday that 52-year-old Randall Comly fired a gun at Guthrie County Deputy Kent Gries and Stuart police officer Tyler DeFrancisco on Thursday inside an apartment. Neither were shot.

However, two deputies posted outside the apartment, Steven Henry and Jim Mink, were both shot. Investigators say they may have been hit by gunfire from fellow officers returning Comly’s gunfire. The shooting occurred in Stuart. Both Mink and Henry were released from the hospital Saturday morning. Comly was also wounded in the confrontation. He has since been released from the hospital and is being held in jail.

Lawmakers plan to introduce bill to provide pay to college athletes

News, Sports

October 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(KCRG-TV via Radio Iowa) — State representatives Joe Mitchell, a Republican from Mt. Pleasant and Democrat Ras Smith of Waterloo, plan to introduce a bill in the legislative in January that would allow college athletes to be paid. California’s governor has signed the first bill to do this, which would take effect in 2023. Former Iowa Hawkeye wide receiver Marvin McNutt, told K-C-R-G T-V-9 he supports this type of bill.

“The N-C-A-A makes a whole lot of money off of college athletes, and at this point in the day and age, they’ve got to turn some things around,” McNutt says. That could change for future Hawkeyes and for college athletes around the state. Representatives Mitchell told K-C-R-G T-V-9 the bill is still in the early stages.

“This is saying that if somebody’s going to use your name and your face and what you do on the field as advertising or promoting a brand, that you can get paid for that,” Mitchell says. The N-C-A-A which governs most college athletics, has said it is against such a measure, arguing that players receive other benefits like scholarships. Mitchell says it’s a free market issue.

“Specific individuals that bring a ton of value to the school and a lot of revenue to the school, they should be able to make money off their own names,” Mitchell says. “And it’s regardless of whether you’re in football or tennis or golf. They all have the same ability to do that.” Mitchell and Smith will look to add more co-sponsors to the bill before it moves to the subcommittee stage, but Mitchell hopes to at least get the conversation started. Until then, he believes Iowa schools will be at a disadvantage if more states pass similar laws.

McNutt thinks schools could even go a step further and set up a pension-type system for former players. The Hawkeyes’ all-time leader in career receiving yards and receiving touchdowns, says he wishes a law like this one was in place when he was at Iowa, believing he would’ve been one of the players to benefit from it. McNutt says athletes love school, but need to be compensated for what they do on the field.

“When they look at how much work these athletes are putting in on a weekly basis, they’ll be like, O-K, there’s some things we need to change,” McNutt says. The Iowa Board of Regents communications director said the board doesn’t have any comment on this proposal right now and is waiting until the bill is filed to see what exactly the proposal says.

Drake announces $5M gift for athletics, rural initiatives

News, Sports

October 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Drake University has announced receipt of a $5 million donation that will support the school’s athletics and help fund programs to benefit rural communities. The university said in a news release Tuesday that former DuPont Pioneer president and Drake University trustee Paul Schickler and his wife, Claudia, made the donation.

Of the gift, $2 million will go to renovate the school’s Knapp Center, where the Bulldogs’ basketball games are held, and $1 million will go to the men’s basketball program. The other $2 million will go to “social, economic, development and conservation challenges facing rural America,” the news release says.

Drake’s Agricultural Law Center will head that effort. Details of the rural communities initiative will be announced at a later date.

Conference tied to Iowa bike official features his new ride

News

October 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CORALVILLE, Iowa (AP) — A nonprofit controlled by the former director of a popular annual Iowa bike ride is hosting a conference that features the rival event that he launched this month. T.J. Juskiewicz was director of the ride known as RAGBRAI until he and his staff resigned from the Des Moines Register, which has operated and marketed the ride since the 1970s. They immediately launched Iowa’s Ride and scheduled it for the same week and format as RAGBRAI. The move has divided cyclists and is threatening the future of a cherished state tradition.

Business filings show Juskiewicz and his wife last year formed the Iowa Festivals and Events Association. That group, which lists Juskiewicz as president, is hosting its first conference Tuesday and Wednesday in Coralville for more than 100 festival planners. Iowa’s Ride is among the featured vendors.

Juskiewicz and his Iowa’s Ride staff are among the speakers at the conference, which he calls a great “networking opportunity.” He says the nonprofit hopes to break even on the conference and is temporarily sponsoring Iowa’s Ride until a foundation is set up.