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Bill calls for 1st-6th graders to get instruction on pregnancy development

News

January 31st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republicans on a subcommittee in the Iowa House have signed off on a bill that would require instruction about fetal development to start in first grade classes. The bill calls for students in first through sixth grades to be taught about human development in the womb and shown an animated video about what happens during a pregnancy. Amber Williams, a leader in the Polk County chapter of Moms for Liberty, says she got an abortion when she was 18 and would have benefited from this kind of instruction.

“Had I been shown the video ‘Meet Baby Olivia,’ which actually follows the science of the incredible journey of life beginning at conception, I would have chosen life,” she said. “This curriculum is needed and it will be impactful.” The bill refers to the “Meet Baby Olivia” video, which was produced by Live Action, a non-profit dedicated to ending abortion. Opponents of the bill say the video provides inaccurate medical information. Mazie Stilwell is public relations manager for Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa.

Representative Anne Osmundson (R-Volga) gestures as she speaks during House subcommittee hearing on Jan. 30, 2024. (RI photo)

“We think it’s dangerous,” Stilwell says, “and frankly this kind of propaganda has no place in our schools or schools of any kind.” Lawmakers in Kentucky have proposed the “Meet Baby Olivia” video be shown to students in sixth through 12th grades. A West Virginia bill would have the video shown to 8th and 10th graders.

Amber Alert cancelled Tues. night; Suspect arrested & faces kidnapping charge; Child is safe

News

January 31st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

PLYMOUTH COUNTY, Iowa  — After an Amber Alert and a standoff in Remsen, a man was charged with kidnapping in the first degree after allegedly kidnapping his biological son.

According to the Iowa Department of Public Safety (DPS), on Tuesday, Jan. 30, the Jefferson Police Department requested assistance with a kidnapping case. Brandon Duong, 34, allegedly took his seven-year-old biological son, Bryson Duong, from Greene Elementary School in Jefferson, Iowa. A court order from Dec. 2023 restricted Brandon Duong from having custody of his son.

The Amber Alert went out at 3:28 p.m. Then, at about 4:53 p.m., the DPS said, law enforcement found Brandon’s vehicle northeast of Remsen, Iowa in Plymouth County. Duong allegedly led officers on a high-speed chase, eventually crashing his vehicle. Duong allegedly left the vehicle on foot with Bryson and a rifle.

Several law enforcement agencies responded to the area, negotiated with Brandon, and eventually placed him under arrest, the DPS said. Bryson is currently in the care of the Department of Human Services.

Brandon Duong was charged with one count of Kidnapping in the First Degree and will be transferred to the Greene County Jail. The Jefferson Police Department and Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation will continue to investigate.

Trojans Basketball slip against Red Oak

Sports

January 30th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

The Atlantic Boys Basketball dropped a tightly contested game losing 64-56 loss at Red Oak on Tuesday night.  The Trojans managed to keep it within five throughout the entire first quarter but could never take the lead thanks to the sharp layups from Hunter Gilleland.  The Tigers then took advantage of the hot hands from Max Devries who dropped four triples in the second quarter and gave Red Oak a 7-point lead at half 33-26.  Atlantic then grabbed the lead to start the fourth quarter but lost it midway through after a few missed threes and accurate shooting from Red Oak on the charity stripe going 10-13 to secure the victory.

Reflecting on the game Head Coach Dalton Franken explained how effective Red Oak’s defensive strategy was.

Red Oak was led by Max Devries with 21 points and Brayden Sifford with 14.  Atlantic got 22 points from Colton Rasmussen in the loss.

The Tigers improve to 8-9 with the win and head to Missouri Valley on Thursday. Atlantic’s record is now 5-11 with the loss and continue their road trip to Perry on Thursday. As much as a loss stings, Coach Franken is determined to stay focused and plan for the next two games.

Tipoff against Perry is set for 6:00 p.m.

Iowa falters late at Indiana

Sports

January 30th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Indiana outscored Iowa 8-0 to finish the game in a 74-68 win in Bloomington. The Hawkeyes had roared back from a 17-point first half deficit to lead it late.

That’s Iowa coach Fran McCaffery. The Hawkeyes survived a bad start to make a run in the second half.

The Hoosiers outrebounded the Hawkeyes 45-32 and had several key offensive rebounds at crunch time. Benn Krikke and Owen Freeman combined for only five rebounds.

Payton Sandfort led Iowa with 26 points. The Hawkeyes are 4-6 in the Big Ten and host Ohio State Friday night.

Amber Alert issued in Iowa Tue. afternoon

News

January 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

UPDATE: SUSPECT ARRESTED A LITTLE AFTER 8-P.M. IN PLYMOUTH COUNTY, EAST OF REMSEN, FOLLOWING A STAND-OFF WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT THAT LASTED FOR ABOUT 3-HOURS.
Authorities in Iowa have issued an AMBER ALERT. Jefferson Police Department is requesting the community’s assistance in locating an abducted juvenile. 7-year-old Bryson Duong, 3’ 8”, black hair, brown eyes was last seen wearing a black coat, black snow pants, hat and glasses.
Bryson was taken by Brandon Duong, 34 year old Asian male, 5’10”, 135lbs, black hair, brown eyes. Suspect and child are believed to be traveling in a Black Toyota Tocoma, Iowa plates DFV202.
Call Jefferson Police Department at (515)386-2136 with any information.

Senator ties traffic camera ban with hands-free smart phone use while driving

News

January 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A state senator who’s tried for years to ban traffic cameras is pairing a proposed ban with a plan to crack down on motorists who use their smart phones while driving. Republican Senator Brad Zaun of Urbandale began the effort in 2011 after a camera ticketed his vehicle speeding in Cedar Rapids, but it was his son behind the wheel at the time.

“I believe fundamentally that they’re against our constitution,” Zaun says. “It doesn’t matter who’s driving the car, whoever the car’s registered (to), the ticket goes in the mail.” Zaun held a subcommittee hearing this (Tuesday) morning. Relatives of three Iowans who’ve been killed by a driver distracted by a smart phone pleaded with Zaun to just advance the requirement that drivers’ smart phones be in hands-free mode on the road.

Peter Bengston told senators his daughter Ellen was riding her bicycle near Charles City in 2020 when she was struck and killed by a driver who was opening an app on his cell phone.  “She did nothing wrong, but the driver confessed and walked free because of the current (law) out there,” Benston said. “This is an issue of public highway safety and we ask that you have a clean hands-free-while-driving bill made public and prevent other families from going through the loss my family is going through right now.”

Veronica Young, of Altoona, on right, holds a photo of her son as she speaks at Senate subcommittee hearing on Jan. 30, 2024. (RI photo)

Veronica Young of held a photo of her 22 year old son Derrius who was killed near Sumner on February 5th of last year by a driver who ran a stop sign.  “Hands free is such a big deal and could save so much heartache,” she said. “My son was important. My son meant the world to a whole lot of people other than just family and he had a bright future that was taken away for absolutely no reason.”

Kristi Castenson of Harcourt held up a photo of her husband and their family. Dave Cartenson and his 85-year-old mother were killed in 2015 by a driver using a smart phone. The driver, who was convicted, was sentenced to probation in the first case of distracted driving prosecuted in Iowa.  “We need to do something as citizens to protect the people in Iowa and everywhere because we’re losing way too many people or people are being injured,” she said. “It affects the rest of their life.”

State troopers and. police officers from Cedar Rapids, Davenport, Des Moines, Dubuque and Fayette urged Senator Zaun to drop his proposal to ban traffic cameras in Iowa after July 1st of 2025. Fayette Police Chief Ben Davis says he doesn’t have the staff that many metro areas have and traffic cameras are important in his town. “We were one of the first agencies in the state to start a rural traffic program,” Davis said. “Since then we’ve been able to reduce traffic incidences to nearly zero in four years. It helps protect our town and it’s a force multiplier. Technology for law enforcement is always a force multiplier.”

Last year the Iowa Senate did pass a bill to require that drivers only use a smart phone in hands-free mode, but it stalled in the House.

UI professor suggests ‘brainwriting’ is much more effective than brainstorming

News

January 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Brainstorming sessions are used in all levels of the corporate world, but a University of Iowa professor of management and entrepreneurship suggests those sessions don’t work, and he has a better idea. Professor Eean Crawford, in the U-I’s Tippie College of Business, says brainstorming with a group often isn’t productive because it forces our brains to do at least four things at once, and that overloads us.

“One, you’re trying to come up with ideas, so you’re trying to think about them,” Crawford says. “Two, you are trying to listen to other people’s ideas. Three, while you’re doing that, you’re trying to remember the ideas you came up with. And then four, simultaneously, you’re trying to evaluate the ideas that people are suggesting.” Brainstorming sessions may simply lead to meetings that go nowhere or, even worse, bad decisions. Instead, he suggests “brainwriting” sessions that start with a simple problem statement.

“Each of you individually sit down and write as many ideas as you can, quietly,” Crawford says. “Then having written them, you don’t have to remember them anymore, so you’ve relieved your brain from doing that. Then, you gather together and share those ideas. You just take turns going round robin around the group, and each person just reads off their ideas, and at this point, no one evaluates them, you’re just listening.” After all the ideas are vocalized, everyone can discuss the pros and cons and pursue a solution with a fresher perspective. Crawford says it’s a more effective way to get the creative juices flowing.

Prof. Eean Crawford (UI photo)

“I was just this past weekend at a mini-conference and we had brain writing sessions, and it was awesome!” he says. “One of them started with not after the problem statement coming up with your best ideas, the facilitator suggested for the next five minutes, I want you to come up with as many bad ideas as you can, like generate the worst possible ideas to solve this problem. And in the 30 minutes that followed, when we shared those ideas, it was hilarious.” By injecting humor and laughter, the positivity was evident, he says, and that led to another session of writing out -good- ideas, during which there were more ideas and of higher quality. While it may sound like a no-brainer, Crawford notes common sense isn’t often put into common practice.

“I don’t know why brainstorming persists in most organizations, other than it’s kind of the default,” Crawford says. “People don’t put a lot of thought into structuring a session where you need to generate ideas. They just kind of get in a room and say, ‘Okay, what ideas do you have?'” The idea of brainwriting isn’t new, Crawford says, as it was first suggested in print in the late 1960s. He says studies find, brainwriting sessions can increase productivity and idea quality by 20-percent over traditional brainstorming.

Iowa native who’s been national League of Women Voters since 2020 has died

News

January 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Dr. Deborah Turner, a Mason City native and the national president of the League of Women Voters, died Sunday from complications after a pulmonary embolism. Turner was born in Mason City in 1950 and graduated from Mason City High School in 1969. After graduating from medical school at the University of Iowa in 1978, she became the first black doctor certified by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the specialty of gynecologic oncology in 1985.

Iowa native Dr. Deborah Turner was elected national president of the League of Women voters in June of 2020 and reelected in 2022. (League of Women Voters photo)

Turner practiced medicine for 35 years and worked at hospitals in Mason City, Davenport and Des Moines. She also taught medical residents in programs at the University of Iowa, University of Nebraska and the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Turner first joined the League of Women Voters of Metro Des Moines in 2010 and later served as president until 2015. Turner was elected president of the national organization in June 2020 and was re-elected to the same position in June 2022.

Missing Winterset man seen traveling south

News

January 30th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Winterset, Iowa) – Officials with the Winterset Police Department today (Tuesday), updated information concerning a man who was reported missing since January 18th. Authorities say while the search for 25-year-old Joshua Aaron Graham-Caskey continues, they have “been able to confirm through law enforcement license plate readers, financial transactions, and business surveillance cameras, the Graham-Caskey has been traveling south through Missouri, Oklahoma, and Arkansas.” His last known location was Mena, Arkansas, on January 19th (2024).

Authorities say “Efforts to locate Mr. Graham-Caskey through phone records, phone GPS pings, Sirius Satellite Radio, Ford Motor Company GPS, purchase history (beyond 1/19/24), and law enforcement license plate readers (beyond 1/18/24) have been unsuccessful thus far.”

The most recent photos of Mr. Graham-Caskey and his 2004 Ford Taurus (Iowa license plate KNZ 677) are shown below.

 

Officials reiterated that “This investigation is not a criminal investigation, and is purely to ensure the safety of Mr. Graham-Caskey.”

Joshua Caskey

If anyone has information about Joshua’s location, please contact the Winterset Police Department at 515-462-1423

Drake men host Valparaiso Wednesday night

Sports

January 30th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

The Drake men take an 8-2 record into Wednesday night’s game at home against Valparaiso. The Bulldogs won the first meeting 83-65 on the road back in late November. Under first year coach Roger Powell the Beacons are 2-8 in the Valley and 6-15 overall.

That’s Drake coach Darian DeVries who says this a much more experienced Valpo team than the one they played in November.