712 Digital Group - top

12 states get behind Utah’s lawsuit to take over millions of acres of federally-controlled land

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Salt Lake City, UT) – A handful of states, including Iowa, are throwing their support behind Utah’s lawsuit that questions whether the Bureau of Land Management can hold onto nearly 18.5 million acres of public land within the state’s borders. Filed with the U.S. Supreme Court in August, Utah’s lawsuit argues that the BLM can’t indefinitely hold onto land without giving it a designation, like a national monument, national forest or wilderness area. Those 18.5 million acres are what the state calls “unappropriated land” — they’re still leased for grazing, recreation and mineral extraction, but have no designation. Now, 12 states and a few state legislatures are supporting Utah’s effort, signing amicus briefs with the nation’s high court.

An amicus brief, also called a “friend of the court” brief, is filed by organizations or individuals who are not named in the lawsuit, but have an interest in the case or would like to support a particular side. In total, 11 briefs have been filed with the Supreme Court by various groups, states and politicians, all of them supporting Utah’s effort. The Iowa Capital Dispatch says the states filing briefs include Iowa, which spearheaded a brief signed by attorneys general from Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota and Texas.

The brief spearheaded by Idaho Attorney General Raul Labrador argues the federal government’s control of unappropriated land curtails state sovereignty. In the filing, attorneys argue that the state’s inability to control that land causes a host of problems. There’s a different criminal code; the land cannot be taxed by the state and results in tax hikes; the state cannot exercise eminent domain; and the state can’t generate revenue from grazing fees, mineral leases or timber sales, the brief claims.

The brief led by Iowa and signed by eight other attorneys general focuses more on whether the Supreme Court should take up the case, and less on the merits of Utah’s lawsuit. Utah is invoking original jurisdiction, which allows states to petition directly to the Supreme Court rather than starting in a lower court and then going through the appeals process. To invoke original jurisdiction, the issue needs to be between a state and the federal government. Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird said in a news release,  “States have a right to sue the federal government, and the citizens of those States have the right to have their interests heard in court.” Bird says she is “Calling on the Supreme Court to let Utah make its case for control over its own lands.”

Most of the cases considered by the high court are appeals — in Iowa’s brief, attorneys ask the justices to consider Utah’s complaint. “Few issues are as fundamentally important to a State as control of its land,” the brief reads. “The Amici States respectfully ask this Court to take this case out of respect for the sovereign dignity inherent in a State’s dispute against the United States.”

Atlantic Rotary to serve lunch to Veterans on Nov. 12th

News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic Rotary Club invites all those who have served in the military, to the Rotary’s annual “Military Appreciation Lunch.” The event takes place on November 12th, from 11:45-a.m. until 1-p.m., at the Cass County Community Center (805 W 10th St, Atlantic). Reservations are requested. Please call Dolly Bergmann at 712-249-9275 to reserve your spot.

The Atlantic Rotary Club says “We look forward to honoring those who have served our country!”

IWCC bond measure on the Nov. 5th ballot in eight area counties

News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Southwest Iowa) – Voters heading to the polls on November 5th in eight KJAN listening area counties, will find a Public Measure on their ballots for a $55-million Iowa Western Community College General Obligation, Bond Referendum. Iowa Western President Dr. Dan Kinney explains how the funds (if voters approve), will be used.

The space he mentioned may have welding in it during the morning, HVAC in the afternoon. Kinney says they can work with high school students, non-traditional/non-credit adult learners in late evening or afternoon, and they can work with business and industry when they need training/up-skilled learning for their workforce.

Kinney says 16-years or so ago, a majority (70%) of Iowa Western’s students were majoring in arts & sciences, 30% were there for a Career and Technical Education. Today, he says, it’s about a 50-50 mix.

He says with regard to the IWCC Atlantic campus, they tried this past Summer to set-up a welding program, but it just wasn’t feasible because of facility limitations and it would have resulted in an unacceptable learning environment.

He says they building – which started as a grocery store and was modified into a learning environment – needs to be modified again.

Kinney said the bond itself will have zero impact on the tax levy rate.

He says the college can do what it needs to do, without an impact on the tax base. Dr. Kinney says the college is in a good financial position because of increasing enrollment, and the bond is just a way of continuing to grow their centers as technology continues to change.

Individual assistance from FEMA for disasters tops $68M in Iowa this year

News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Federal Emergency Management Agency has approved about 68-million dollars in individual assistance for more than 69-hundred Iowa households that were impacted by severe weather this year, including deadly tornadoes and flooding. FEMA spokeswoman Sharon Karr says in all, 29 of Iowa’s 99 counties received a federal disaster declaration. “Unfortunately, Iowa was subjected to three major disasters this year, and it was terrifying for all of them,” Karr says. “Flooding, of course, was the largest and most frequent disaster.” The deadline for storm victims to apply for Iowa’s final presidential disaster declaration ended last week. Even though Iowans can no longer apply for individual assistance, Karr says FEMA will still have a presence in the state.

“We will not rest until Iowa is taken care of,” she says. “There may be people that come and go, but there is still a good, sound core number of people here to make sure that Iowa is taken care of and everything that is expected to be done for them is done.” Karr says FEMA is focused on ensuring storm victims have a safe place to stay this winter, which includes using manufactured homes.

She says three long-term disaster recovery centers in Council Bluffs, Spencer, and Rock Valley are available to help residents in person, or they can still reach out to FEMA by phone, online, or through a phone app.

3 arrested in Creston over the weekend

News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Police in Creston arrested three people on separate charges over the weekend. Late Saturday morning, 29-year-old Shyanne Renee Bird, of Creston, was arrested for Driving Suspended. Bird was cited at the scene and released on a promise to appear in court. A little before 1-a.m. Sunday, Creston Police arrested 21-year-old Brayton Alexander Clausen, of Corning, for Carrying a Weapon While intoxicated, and OWI/1st offense. Clausen was taken to the Union County Jail and later posted a $2,000 bond before being released.

At around 2:30-a.m., Sunday, 34-year-old Walter Ivan Malacara, of Creston, was arrested for OWI/2nd offense. He was later released after posting a $2,000 bond.

Can a caterpillar really predict whether Iowa will have a mild winter?

Ag/Outdoor, News, Weather

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An expert at Iowa State University’s Insect Zoo says there may actually be some science behind the folklore about how the thickness of a Woollybear caterpillar’s stripes can help predict the severity of the winter ahead. Ginny Mitchell, the insect zoo’s education program coordinator, says a fellow entomologist in New York studied the fuzzy creatures in the 1940s. “He sampled all of the woolly caterpillars in the area for nine years, and during that time, there was actually some correlation between the markings on the woolly caterpillar and the winter,” Mitchell says, “but that study had a very small sample size, so people do not consider it scientifically factual.”

The black-and-brown caterpillars are prevalent in Iowa right now as they’re looking for safe places to spend the winter. As the story goes, Mitchell says the thickness of the caterpillar’s center stripe is key in weather forecasting. “The rusty, kind of orange color, if that band is really big, that means we’re going to have a mild winter,” Mitchell says. “If the black parts of the woolly caterpillar are very large, it’s going to be a more severe winter. If there is more hair on the woolly caterpillar, then that means that it’s going to be a more severe winter.”

There are also theories that if the caterpillar is crawling south when you find it, it’s trying to flee the looming northern cold, and the reverse, if it’s heading north, a mild winter is ahead. At least two communities — Vermilion, Ohio and Banner Elk, North Carolina — have fall festivals devoted to the alleged prognosticating abilities of the woolly bear caterpillar. One remarkable fact, Mitchell says these fuzzy critters hibernate during the wintertime and their bodies contain a sort of natural antifreeze. “Say you’re out raking leaves or moving some brush and you find one, it will kind of look like it’s dead. It’ll be curled up like a ‘C’ and it won’t be moving very much,” Mitchell says, “but if you take it inside and you warm it up, then it’ll start to move.”

There are reports of woolly bear caterpillars surviving temperatures as low as 90-degrees below zero, even spending an entire winter frozen in an ice cube, to emerge just fine in the spring. Once temperatures warm up for the season, it will create a cocoon and emerge a few weeks later as an Alexandra or Isabella tiger moth.

Perry’s Tyson Plant could reopen thanks to a prospective buyer

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

PERRY, Iowa (KCCI) – A company is in negotiations with Tyson Foods to purchase the pork plant according to Perry City officials, KCCI reported. The negotiations were discussed during a meeting earlier this week by Mayor Kirk Cavanaugh. As of now, not much is known about the potential sale.

Perry City leaders have not said who the potential buyer is.

Before the pork plant shut down at the end of June, Tyson Foods was Perry’s largest employer. Over 1,000 people lost their jobs when the plant shut down.

Central Iowa student wins girls teen chess championship

News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

A central Iowa sixth-grade student has won the Girls Under 13 division in the Pan American Youth Chess Championship held earlier this month, in Paraguay. 11-year-old Irene Fei, of Gilbert, also earned the distinction of becoming the youngest Woman International Chess Federation Master in the Americas.

Irene’s parents introduced her to chess in kindergarten, and she developed her talent in an after-school chess club. At just 9 years old, she claimed a first-place world championship chess title in Panama City.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the KJAN listening area: Monday, Oct. 28, 2024

Weather

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly sunny & windy, High near 76. Winds S @ 15-to around 30 mph.
Tonight: Partly cloudy & breezy. Low around 64. S @ 15-30 mph.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny & windy. High near 81. S @ 20-45 mph.
Tom. Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after midnight. Low 57. S @ 20-40 mph.
Wednesday: Showers & possibly a thunderstorm. Windy. High near 70.
Wed.y Night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm. Low around 33.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 51.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 69. The Low was 41. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 36 and the Low was 29. The Record High for Oct. 28th in Atlantic was 83 in 1922. The Record Low was 2 in 1925. Sunrise today: 7:46; Sunset: 6:20.

Preview of Iowa’s first congressional district race

News

October 28th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – This year’s race in Iowa’s first congressional district is a rematch between Democrat Christina Bohannan, a University of Iowa law professor, and Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks, an eye doctor who’s seeking a third term.

Christina Bohannan has made abortion a central issue and has focused on the “Life at Conception Act” Mariannette Miller-Meeks co-sponsored in congress. “She has now tried to back track from that, saying she supports exceptions and things,” Bohannan said. “It’s election time, so she’s trying to moderate that position.” Last week, Miller-Meeks said she does not expect federal legislation on abortion any time soon. “How do we work in a bipartisan manner to pass something that is good for women and good for our nation instead of continuing to have this as a political football?”

Miller-Meeks asked. Miller-Meeks has focused on immigration. She says the border has been out of control because President Biden undid Trump-era policies. “My opponent didn’t mention the border until it because a liability for her and her party,” Miller-Meeks said. Bohannan criticizes Miller-Meek and other Republicans for failing to pass a bipartisan plan to boost border security. “When it comes down to it, they don’t want to do anything about it because they want to keep playing politics with this issue,” Bohannan said.

On October 1st, about 37 percent of registered voters in the first congressional district were Republicans and 32 percent were Democrats.