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3 arrested on drug charges in Mills County

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office today (Tuesday), released a report on arrests that took place over the past week, including three people who were taken into custody on drug charges. On March 10th, 18-year old Amberdawn Skye Tarr, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance. On March 11th, 21-year old Jonathan James Hahn, of Glenwood, was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance, Possession of Contraband and Selling/giving/supplying alcohol to a person under the legal age. And, on Monday,19-year old Juan Diego Guillen, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

Others arrested include: 18-year old Montana Thomas Garbez, of Council Bluffs, on a warrant for Domestic Abuse Assault; 38-year old Wendy Lynn Meadows, of Glenwood, on a warrant out of Pottawattamie County, for Probation Violation; 32-year old Nicholas John Horgdal, of Henderson, for Driving While Barred.

Sen. Grassley reacts to report showing ACA repeal will mean millions more uninsured

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he puts little faith in a new report from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office that bodes ill for the Republican replacement for Obamacare. The report says 14-million fewer Americans will have health care by next year under the replacement plan, with 24-million fewer covered in a decade versus staying with the current law. “It shouldn’t surprise anybody that when the Congressional Budget Office makes forecasts looking ten years into the future, they’re going to be wrong,” Grassley says.

The C-B-O doesn’t have a sterling record when trying to look a decade ahead, he says, especially with regards to health care. Grassley notes, 29-million people are still uninsured under Obamacare and the C-B-O predicted far more would be covered by this point in time. “In 2009 and ’10, when the Congressional Budget Office estimated what Obamacare would cost, it came in at about, for a ten-year figure, of $980-billion I believe,” Grassley says. “It’s come out hundreds of billions of dollars more.”

Under the Affordable Care Act, people who don’t have health insurance face stiff fines on their taxes, but Grassley says the Republican replacement wouldn’t contain that feature, so it’s natural the number of uninsured people would go up. Grassley says the A-C-A is deeply flawed and must be rewritten, though he says it’s still uncertain exactly how that will be accomplished. “The insurance companies are saying that it’s on a death spiral and even if Hillary Clinton had been elected president, there’d have to be big changes made in this program,” Grassley says. “That’s what we’ve been promising the people and I think we have to deliver on it.”

When a report comes out from the C-B-O, Grassley says it’s typically treated like it came from God, so this report may force House leaders to go back to the drawing board with their replacement plan. Tom Price, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, says the C-B-O report is “just not believable.”

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 3/14/2017

News, Podcasts

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

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Sioux City school board urges support immigrant children

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) – The Sioux City school board is urging Congress to support immigrant students. The Sioux City Journal reports that the board voted Monday for a resolution that urged members of the U.S. House and Senate to adopt the Bridge Act. The measure would continue protections granted to young people under the program called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which is aimed at helping young people who arrived in this country as children.

The Bridge Act would grant provisional protected-presence status and impose restrictions on the sharing of information for immigration enforcement. Last month the Des Moines school board decided the district will act as a sanctuary for students who entered the country without legal permission and will require that immigration inquiries go through the superintendent’s office and the district’s attorney.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 3/14/2017

News, Podcasts

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

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Navigation season on the Missouri River to open April 1st

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Western Iowans who are looking forward to boating season should be able to get out onto the Missouri River in a few weeks. The U-S Army Corps of Engineers is preparing the basin’s reservoirs for run-off season. Joel Knofczynski, a hydraulic engineer in the Corps’ Omaha office, says almost all of the flood pool is available behind the six, mainstem dams. “On December 18th, the reservoir system storage reached 56.1-million acre feet, which is at the base of the annual flood control zone,” he says. “This means that all the stored 2016 flood waters have been evacuated from the system.”

Knofczynski says they will soon start releasing water from Gavins Point Dam for the downstream navigation season. “Releases from Gavins Point are currently 17,000 cubic feet per second,” he says. “Releases will be stepped up beginning at or around March 19th to provide flow support for the 2017 navigation season. The navigation season will open on April 1st at the mouth near St. Louis.”

Knofczynski says the Corps is anticipating a full, eight-month navigation season on the Missouri. “Flows for this level of service are designed to provide a nine-foot-deep navigation channel with Gavins Point releases expected to range from the upper 20,000 to the lower 30,000 cubic feet per second this summer, depending on downstream conditions” he says. “Those releases will be reduced in response to downstream flooding, if necessary.”

Corps officials have said -no- spring flooding is anticipated. Also, there will -not- be a spring “pulse” for endangered species habitat this year and run-off is expected to be about 115-percent of normal.

(Radio Iowa)

Ag Secretary says poultry producers are on lookout for bird flu

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

While the thoughts of most Iowans are on the good things that spring brings, poultry producers are on the lookout for potential problems with bird flu. Cases of the two types of avian influenza have been found in Tennessee and Wisconsin, and Iowa Agriculture Secretary Bill Northey says it’s another reminder to be alert. Iowa took a massive hit from the bird flu two years ago when millions of chickens and turkeys had to be destroyed.

“Our producers have invested large amounts of effort and dollars into biosecurity trying to keep the disease away from their farms. From truck washes to limited access onto the farms, to lots of ways to try and keep the disease out,” Northey says. “So that was done from sometimes before the last outbreak, to immediately after the last outbreak.”

He says the news of the case that is highly contagious in Tennessee probably led to some uneasiness in Iowans. “I’m sure everybody is checking their biosecurity plans again. There is no guarantee to prevent a disease from being able to be exposed. And it’s obviously in the Mississippi flyway now in some wild birds — whether it’s a few or a lot, nobody knows. Everybody’s concerned while they continue the plans they have had in place,” Northey says.

Northey says there’s no reason for consumers to be concerned. “It’s important to remind everybody that food safety is not a concern. Go ahead and eat your eggs and eat your turkey meat and chicken meat, that’s not a concern. Producers are concerned about the health of their birds and they are doing everything that they can to keep their birds healthy,” according to Northey.

Thousands of chickens were destroyed at the Tennessee farm after the “highly pathogenic” variety of the disease was found there. Another bird flu outbreak was reported at a Wisconsin turkey farm but it was not the highly-pathogenic variety.

(Radio Iowa)

Corning man arrested Monday night for Driving While Suspended

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office says a traffic stop late Monday night resulted in the arrest of a Corning man. 40-year old Michael Alexander was taken into custody at around 9:47-p.m. for Driving While License Suspended. His bond was set at $300.

Semi and van collide in Montgomery County Monday morning

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office says no injuries were reported after a semi and a van collided on the northwest edge of Red Oak, Monday morning. Authorities say a 2010 Kenworth semi owned by Schildberg Construction, of Greenfield, and driven by 52-year old Monte Standley, of Greenfield, was stopped at the intersection of Highways 34 and 48 and in the process of making a left turn, when the back end of a piece of equipment the rig was hauling struck the side of a stopped 2014 Ford panel van, owned and driven by 49-year old Russell Cera, of Omaha. The accident happened at around 10:42-a.m.

Damage to the semi was estimated at $250, while the van sustained $3,500 damage.

Legislative hearing on Iowa DHS handling of child welfare cases

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

An administrator with the Iowa Department of Human Services went before a legislative panel Monday to defend her agency’s handling of child abuse and neglect allegations. Wendy Rickman is head of Iowa’s Division of Adult, Child and Family Services. “Our system is functional. It is beyond functional,” Rickman said. “We have outcomes that I would put up against any state.”

According to Rickman, her division receives about 50,000 calls a year of alleged reports of child neglect and abuse. She says 52-percent of those reports are assessed. The hearing follows the death of 16-year-old Natalie Finn of West Des Moines last October. The West Des Moines teen died of starvation and State Senator Matt McCoy, a Democrat from Des Moines, has questioned if a lack of DHS social workers allowed the alleged abuse of Finn to go uninvestigated.

“The social workers are telling us that ‘we should be protecting kids, we’re not because we’re overworked. Our staff load is too high. We’ve doubled our overtime in the last year,'” McCoy said. “So my question is: Are we leaving vulnerable children out to fend for themselves when we don’t have adequate staffing?”

Rickman said, while she doesn’t dispute that more social workers would be beneficial, she believes Iowa’s child welfare system is NOT failing. McCoy and other lawmakers have asked the DHS for data on staffing numbers, overtime hours, and caseloads. Finn’s parents are facing numerous charges in connection with the death of their daughter and alleged neglect of their other children.

(Radio Iowa/Reporting by Iowa Public Radio’s Sarah Boden)