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Iowa News Headlines: Sunday, Aug. 4, 2019

News

August 4th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A state board has approved a measure expanding the number of medical conditions that can legally be treated by medical marijuana in Iowa. The Des Moines Register reports the Iowa Medical Cannabidiol Board voted Friday to allow those with chronic pain to have legal access to medical marijuana. The board denied allowing generalized anxiety disorder and opioid dependency as qualifying conditions.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former eastern Nebraska postmaster has been sentenced to probation for embezzling from the Fort Calhoun Post Office. Federal prosecutors say 54-year-old Steven Whitesel, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, was sentenced Friday in Omaha’s federal court to four years’ probation, 160 hours of community service and ordered to pay nearly $70,000 in restitution. Prosecutors say Whitesel submitted false mileage reimbursement requests to illegally collect nearly $70,000.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Swarms of mayflies have emerged from under water along the Missouri River and are caking drivers’ windshields. The Omaha World-Herald reports mayflies spend 99% of their lives in water, but they rise above when they become winged adults to take part in a mating swarm. They quickly die after that. Dominator Fuel in Rock Port, Missouri, sold out of windshield wiper fluid in light of the mayflies’ arrival. Urban entomologist Jody Green says mayfly hatches are a yearly event.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Hopes by small aviation museum in southwestern Iowa that a stamp in its possession was rare enough to parlay a potential fortune crashed Friday when experts told them it wasn’t real, and likely not even worth the paper it was glued upon. The Iowa Aviation Museum in Greenfield, Iowa, had what it thought was an “Inverted Jenny” stamp on display for some 20 years. After bringing it to Omaha, they learned it wasn’t authentic.

Farmland Leasing Meeting in Guthrie County Aug. 13

Ag/Outdoor

August 4th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Guthrie County Extension Office say a Farmland Leasing meeting will be held at the Guthrie County Extension Office on Tuesday, August 13th, beginning at 6:00 pm. Topics will include current cash rental rate and land values survey results, methods for determining fair rents for 2020, legal aspects of farmland leases, including strategies for writing and terminating a farm lease, tenant/landlord communications, and ISU Extension web-based and other resources. Workshops are 2 1/2 hours, with a 100-page leasing arrangements book provided, One per registrant/couple.

Registration is $20 per person or $30 per couple. A $5 late registration fee will be added after August 10th. To register contact the Guthrie County Extension Office at 641-747-2276.

Fiers extends win streak to 8 as A’s thump Cardinals, 8-3

Sports

August 4th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Mike Fiers isn’t the least bit surprised by his eight-game winning streak. He’s also not that impressed. Fiers took a shutout into the sixth inning to keep his unbeaten streak intact, and the Oakland Athletics beat the St. Louis Cardinals 8-3 on Saturday night. Pinch-hitter Chad Pinder delivered a three-run homer to keep the A’s unbeaten in three games against the Cardinals this season. Stephen Piscotty added two hits against his former team and made a leaping catch at the outfield wall to take away a hit from Matt Wieters in the fifth. Piscotty was activated off the injured list before the game. Fiers has gone at least five innings and allowed three runs or fewer in 18 consecutive starts, the longest such streak by an A’s pitcher since at least 1908.

Fiers (10-3) allowed one run and six hits over 5 2/3 innings in his first start against St. Louis since 2015. The right-hander walked one and struck out four. Fiers last lost on May 1. He pitched his second career no-hitter six days after that and has the second-longest active winning streak in the AL since then. He is 8-0 with a 2.26 ERA during his dominant run. Paul Goldschmidt singled and doubled to extend his hitting streak to 11 games for St. Louis. Earlier in the day, he was named NL player of the month for July.

The loss dropped the Cardinals a half-game behind the first-place Chicago Cubs in the NL Central.
ROSTER MOVES
St. Louis placed outfielder Tyler O’Neill on the 10-day injured list with a left wrist sprain. The move is retroactive to Thursday.
UP NEXT
Tanner Roark makes his A’s debut after being acquired at Wednesday’s trade deadline. Roark went 6-7 with a 4.24 ERA in 21 starts for Cincinnati. Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright (7-7, 4.47) makes his second start against Oakland this season. Wainwright took the loss on June 26 despite allowing just two runs in 6 2/3 innings.

State Baseball Tournament: Championship games from Sat., 8/3/19

Sports

August 4th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The State Baseball Tournament wrapped-up Saturday at Principal Park, in Des Moines, with the Championships in Classes 1A thru 4A.

CLASS 1A: The top-seeded Newman Catholic Knights, backed by a high-powered offense and stellar pitching, defeated the second-seeded Alburnett Pirates 11-1 in six innings to win the Class 1A state championship Saturday at Principal Park. It was the Knights’ third consecutive state championship. Newman finishes the season at 38-3 with its eighth 1A state championship in program history. Alburnett ends its season at 34-6. It was its first state championship game and its second state tournament appearance ever.

CLASS 2A: Anthony Potthoff and the second-seeded Van Meter Bulldogs shut out the top-seeded North Lynn Lynx 6-0 to win the Class 2A state championship Saturday at Principal Park. It’s the second state title for the Bulldogs, who also won the 1A title in 2003. North Linn averaged 9.6 runs coming into the game, and hadn’t been blanked all season. The Van Meter Bulldogs finish the season with a record of 34-3. The North Lynn Lynx fall short in their quest for the first state title in school history, and finish the season at 40-6.

CLASS 3A: The top-seeded Cedar Rapids Xavier Saints defeated the third-seeded Central DeWitt Sabers 8-1 to win the Class 3A state championship Saturday at Principal Park. The Saints added to the state title they won in 2006. Senior Bryson Bastian had a complete game with 11 strikeouts for the win, his ninth of the year. The Xavier Saints finished the season with a record of 41-2. The Central DeWitt Sabers’ quest for their first state title in school history fell short, as they finish the season 38-4.

CLASS 4A: The sixth-seeded and defending 4A champions Urbandale J-Hawks remained on top, knocking off the top-seeded Johnston Dragons 8-2 to win the Class 4A state championship before a big crowd Saturday night at Principal Park. Last year, Urbandale defeated the 6-7-8 seeds to win the 4A title. This year, the J-Hawks defeated the 3-2-1 seeds — in that order — to repeat. The Urbandale J-Hawks finish the season at 31-14, with their fourth Class 4A state title. The Johnston Dragons end the season at 36-6.

Iowa includes chronic pain as condition for legal marijuana

News

August 3rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A state board has approved a measure that expands the number of medical conditions that can legally be treated by medical marijuana in Iowa, but rejected several other conditions.

The Des Moines Register reports that the Iowa Medical Cannabidiol Board voted Friday to allow those with chronic pain to have legal access to medical marijuana. The condition joins others already allowed, including seizures, Crohn’s disease, AIDS, Lou Gehrig’s disease and Parkinson’s disease.

But the board denied allowing generalized anxiety disorder and opioid dependency as qualifying conditions. The board also voted to delay a decision on allowing post-traumatic stress disorder to be a qualifying condition until its November meeting.

Friday’s meeting was the first since Gov. Kim Reynolds vetoed an expansion of Iowa’s medical marijuana program in May.

Board reinstates Iowa worker who texted lewd photo to vendor

News

August 3rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A board has ordered the reinstatement of an Iowa employee who was fired in 2017 after sending sexual text messages, including a photo of a penis, to a saleswoman for a state vendor.

The decision puts taxpayers on the hook for nearly two years of back pay and benefits for Nicholas Carnes, a power plant engineer at the Glenwood Resource Center, an institution for the disabled in southwest Iowa.

The cost hasn’t been calculated but could top $100,000, given that Carnes earned $60,000 in his final year of state employment.

In its July 19 decision, the Public Employment Relations Board agreed with an administrative law judge that Carnes’ misconduct did not warrant termination but a 10-day suspension instead.

The decision said Carnes had been an otherwise excellent employee for 13 years and that his inappropriate texts began one minute after his shift ended, not during the work day as investigators had alleged.

Ex-Fort Calhoun postmaster (Council Bluffs man) gets probation for false expenses

News

August 3rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A former eastern Nebraska postmaster has been sentenced to probation for embezzling from the Fort Calhoun Post Office. Federal prosecutors say 54-year-old Steven Whitesel, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, was sentenced Friday in Omaha’s federal court to four years’ probation and 160 hours of community service. He also was ordered to pay nearly $70,000 in restitution and a $5,000 fine.

Whitesel was convicted of misappropriation of postal funds. Prosecutors say Whitesel submitted false mileage reimbursement requests to illegally collect nearly $70,000.

The case was investigated by the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General.

Swarms of mayflies, frogs emerge along Missouri River

News

August 3rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Swarms of mayflies have emerged from under water along the Missouri River and are caking windshields on stretches of road between Omaha and Kansas City, forcing drivers to pull over and clean up the mess. Mayflies spend 99% of their lives in water, but they rise when they become winged adults to take part in a mating swarm, the Omaha World-Herald reported . They quickly die after that. But the few days they spend mating are a nuisance.

“They are atrocious. They are horrid,” said Pam Frana, a membership specialist for the Nebraska City Tourism and Commerce Department. “Flooding brought those and stirred them up.” The mayflies are piling on windshields so much that Dominator Fuel in Rock Port, Missouri, sold out of windshield wiper fluid. Other gas stations report they’ve gone through twice the usual amount.

“The windshields are completely covered,” said Chandra McCarty, a cashier at Dominator. Mayflies may be an irritant to humans, but they’re a good source of food for fish and reptiles. The insects are drawn to light and have attracted frogs looking for a late-night feast. At the Rockport gas station, they’ve been seeing 30 to 40 a night. They sit in front of the doors, lured by the bugs. “They try to come up and come in,” McCarty said.

But there is a light at the end of the tunnel. “It used to be so bad people couldn’t see when they were driving,” said Andrew Wagner, who works in Hamburg, Iowa. “It’s getting a lot better since the flooding is going down.”

Urban entomologist Jody Green, an educator with the Lancaster County Extension Service, said mayfly hatches are actually a yearly event. “As an entomologist, I would relish seeing them, but I am sure it might even gross me out, too, if I couldn’t help but step and squish them,” Green said.

ISU president talks about enrollment decline

News

August 3rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — All three of the state universities are expecting fewer students this fall. During discussion of next year’s budgets for Iowa State, U-N-I and the University of Iowa — I-S-U president Wendy Wintersteen said the enrollment decline is a two-part issue. “I think last year, we were surprised by the large decline in international students, and we’re going to continue to be concerned by that,” Wintersteen says.

She says the decline in other students isn’t as surprising when you look at overall demographic issues. “I learned recently that during the Great Recession, there just weren’t that many babies born,” according to Winterstein. “So, we saw a decline in the birth rate and that’s clearly going to have an impact on higher education all across the nation.”

Fewer students means tuition revenue for each school. Iowa State University says student tuition supports seventy-percent of it’s general budget. At the University of Iowa it’s sixty-four-percent from student tuition. U-N-I reports that student tuition supports only forty-two-percent of the Cedar Falls school’s budget.

IA Dept. of Revenue questions Assessor’s home appraisal

News

August 3rd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Revenue has asked a district court to enforce an order to reappraise the value of a county assessor’s home after it dropped shortly after she took office. According to KCCI in Des Moines, the state ordered Guthrie County to hire independent appraisers to investigate after the value of Guthrie County Assessor Nikki Carrick’s home dropped $20 per square foot lower than the value of her neighbors’ homes.

The decrease caught the attention of Iowa Department of Revenue Director Kraig Paulsen. Appraisals by the independent contractors were due July 31. The ordered appraisal was not made in time, so the Department of Revenue made the court request.