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Regents approve projects for ISU, UNI

News

November 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Board of Regents recently approved an increase of 32 percent in the budget for the CY-Town development on the Iowa State University campus. I-S-U’s Heather Paris presented the details of the project. “Phase one and two combined would build extensive underground infrastructure, completely replace all parking services, and raise the project site so future development would be five feet above Ioway Creeks’ 100 year floodplain,” she says. The project covers 40 acres of land between the Iowa State Center and Jack Trice Stadium and includes thousands of parking spots. “These lots are heavily used by students and visitors to Iowa State University. The existing parking lots have multiple maintenance issues and need replacement,” Paris says.

The athletic department and private giving would fund the nine-point-two million dollar increase, bringing the total budget to nearly 38 million dollars. The University of Northern Iowa was given permission to tear down the West Gym, which has been the home of several sports teams since it was built. U-N-I vice president Michael Hager, says they’ve determined it is not cost effective to renovate the structure. “The West Gym has served the university since 1925 and has served us quite well. However, the building is clearly telling us that it is at the end of its life cycle,” Hager says. He says the east and west exterior walls are bowing and separating from the structure.

” One has an intriguing S curve that seems to get the urgent attention of architects and structural engineers when they come and look at it,” he says. “Inside one can see those walls separating by as much as two inches from the flooring system, which is well outside the established standards of wall movement.” The building was shored up and all services moved out of it after the bowing walls were discovered. He says they don’t know yet what might go into its place on campus. “For now the basement will be taken out, the utilities we patched, and then it’ll become a green space,” Hager says. “It’s a critical building location, we’d want to be cautious about what we put in in the future. It’s on a an axis with the campanile, and so it would remain a high value building location at some point.”

It will cost between one-point-three and one-point-five million dollars to demolished the building. The wresting program had taken up a majority of the space in the West Gym in the last several years, and a new wrestling practice facility is planned.

After Black Friday, shop Iowa’s small businesses on Saturday

News

November 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – While retailers nationwide are bracing for a shopping extravaganza on this Black Friday, locally-owned merchants across Iowa are hoping for a bigger boost tomorrow. Jayne Armstrong, director of the U.S. Small Business Administration’s Iowa District Office, says Small Business Saturday is a crucial day for the state’s consumers to “Be Loyal, Buy Local.” “It’s just a special day where we get to put the spotlight on small business and say we recognize how important you are,” Armstrong says. “We really want to encourage people to get out and support you this holiday season but really every day is Small Business Saturday.”

Armstrong says 97-percent of Iowa’s businesses are small businesses and embracing them improves the backbone of our state. Armstrong says, “If we really want to get out there and support our economy, we need to be supporting small businesses 24/7, 365 days of the year.”

If you’d like to support Iowa’s wealth of merchants who are outside of your immediate area, dozens of businesses are now offering their wares at shop iowa dot com, which Armstrong says makes it easy to patronize even more hometown heroes in -other- Iowa towns. “ShopIowa has become very popular,” Armstrong says. “A lot of retailers have really put themselves out there online through ShopIowa.com. With the excellent customer service and everything that they provide, we see a lot of people going through that to buy Iowa-made products.”

The website covers a wide array of goods, including artwork, furniture, food, toys, t-shirts, beauty care products, jewelry and more, all crafted in the Hawkeye State.

https://www.shopiowa.com/

Miller-Meeks leads hearing on psychedelic-assisted therapy for vets

News

November 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks says research is showing psychedelic drugs have the potential to be a mental health treatment option for veterans. Miller-Meeks, a Republican who represents Iowa’s first congressional district, is chair of the U-S House Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Health. She led a recent congressional hearing about psychedelics — drugs that cause hallucinations.

We are not advocating for the legalization or the casual use of psychedelics,” Miller-Meeks said. “What we are discussing is the clinically administered dosage of these substances, in combination with targeted therapy sessions in a clinical setting.”

The hearing focused on clinical trials being conducted in Veterans Administration hospitals and clinics — using psilocybin, also known as magic mushrooms, or M-D-M-A drugs like ecstasy as treatment for mental health conditions like post traumatic stress disorder. “Psychedelic-assisted therapy is a ground breaking clinical procedure that has the potential to transform the way we look at health care,” she said.

Miller-Meeks, an eye doctor, is a 24 year Army veteran. “As a physician who practices traditional medicine, I never thought I would enter congress to then be advocating for emerging, breakthrough therapy,” Miller-Meeks said, “but I think the science is leading the way.”

Miller-Meeks says if the F-D-A approves the use of psychedelics, the Veterans Administration should move quickly to make appointments for veterans who would benefit from the therapy. “For many veterans, this treatment is life saving, but more work needs to be done,” Miller-Meeks said. “It is a sad reality that 17 veterans a day will lose their lives to suicide. One life lost to suicide is one life too many and our fight must continue.”

Miller-Meeks describes psychedelic-assisted therapy as a long process. “A licensed clinician carefully examines a veteran prior to administering a dose…A veteran must go through two or three sessions, during which intense psychotherapy is overseen by a licensed medial professional assisting the veteran throughout the experience. These sessions last about eight hours, the full duration of the drug’s effects,” Miller-Meeks says. “…Based on the most recent clinical trials, patients experienced positive therapeutic responses, resulting in a reduction of their symptoms if not remission altogether.”

V-A officials say there is still much to be learned and understood about the benefits of psychedelic compounds. Advocates say traditional medications for moderate to severe P-T-S-D have significant side effects, prompting some people to quit treatment.

Gov. Reynolds Extends Disaster Proclamation for Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in Sioux County

Ag/Outdoor, News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – Today (Thursday), Gov. Kim Reynolds announced the signing of a disaster proclamation for Sioux County, Iowa effective immediately through December 23, 2023. The USDA has confirmed a positive case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in commercial layer chickens. 

This proclamation allows state resources from Iowa Homeland Security, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship, and other agencies to assist with tracking and monitoring, rapid detection, containment, disposal, and disinfection. The proclamation also waives regulatory provisions related to commercial vehicles responding to affected sites. 

The recent HPAI detections in birds do not present an immediate public health concern, and it remains safe to eat poultry products. If producers suspect signs of HPAI in their flocks, they should contact their veterinarian immediately. 

Black Friday sales are important break-even point for many Iowa merchants

News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Tomorrow’s Black Friday shopping extravaganza, followed by Small Business Saturday, marks a vital kickoff to the holiday shopping season, which a University of Iowa College of Business professor says could be make-or-break time for countless Iowa merchants.

Professor Peggy Stover, who directs the UI’s Marketing Institute, says some businesses may have a so-so 11 months and they rely on this weekend’s events to kickstart consumers for December to meet their margins and stay afloat.

“They’re very important, especially for the small retailers in Iowa, since so many of them are competing against your big box retailers,” Stover says, “and then you have, of course, the online retailers who have managed to carve out a significant market share of the holiday shopping.”

Not too many years ago, a majority of stores opened on Thanksgiving Day to beat the Black Friday deals, but there was a backlash that returned the holiday’s focus to family, reserving Friday for the shop-’til-you-drop enthusiasts. Now, very few retailers are open on Thanksgiving, and even many grocery stores will be closed.

“I think it’s both a great PR move by retailers, but it also comes on the heels of consumers just really realizing that the unsung heroes during the holiday season are the retail workers,” Stover says. “They oftentimes are not able to enjoy the holiday season, much like the rest of us, because they have to work.”

Many factors may impact the shopping season ahead, including high interest rates, inflation, record credit card debt, and the restart of student loan payments. Stover also says there’s a demographic change and a shift in mindsets coming, for which retailers will need to brace.

“You have Gen Z and then the younger Millennials, who they would prefer to pay for an experience versus goods or a product,” Stover says. “Another thing to take into account is that Gen Xers are starting to retire, so now you’re losing a consumer base that could have had more disposable income.”

One regional economist predicts holiday sales may rise three to four percent, but when inflation is factored in, retailers may only see a boost of between zero and one-percent compared to last year.

Indian Hills Community College expanding cybersecurity training

News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Indian Hills Community College in Ottumwa is using a half a million dollar federal grant to expand its cybersecurity training. Andy Alderson is an associate professor of cybersecurity and systems administration at the college. “We hope to be able to put more students through the program and get more students to actually graduate into the technical field,” he says.

The college already offers an associate degree in cybersecurity and systems administration. Alderson says the program is being restructured, so students could earn an associates degree in I-T fundamentals within nine months. “Part of the grant is to help us develop a second learning track after they complete the nine months,” Alderson says. “They’ll have a choice of either going to the systems administrator track or the cybersecurity track.”

The cybersecurity curriculum will be wide ranging. “We’re going to cover things like cyber law and ethics, digital forensics, server configurations and hardening — making those harder to infiltrate,” Alderson says, “how data transmits from place to place and being able to identify that and finding anomalies in it.”

Alderson is helping to plan so-called “Capture the Flag” events at area high schools, giving students a chance to compete to solve computer security puzzles and — hopefully — get them interested in pursuing a degree. “Give a little insight into what it means to be a cybersecurity professional, trying to mitigate some of these malicious attacks,” Alderson says.

Government reports indicate there were 700-thousand unfilled cybersecurity jobs in the United States this summer — and there will be a 20 percent increase in the number of cybersecurity jobs within two years.

Red Oak woman arrested on a Theft charge Thursday morning

News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Red Oak Police Department reports a woman was arrested this (Thursday) morning, on a Theft charge. 39-year-old Jodie Michele Vanhouten, of Red Oak, was arrested for Theft in the 4th Degree. She was taken into custody in the 1500 block of N. 8th Street at around 9:30-a.m.  Authorities say her arrest concluded an investigation of theft coming from the self-checkout lane of Hy-Vee.

Vanhouten was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $1,000 bond.

Davenport reaches settlement with city administrator

News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Davenport City Administrator Corrin Spiegel will be on paid administrative leave until she resigns her position on January 2nd. The city announced it is paying Spiegel a lump sum of one-point-six million dollars. The city released its separation agreement, which says one million dollars of the payout is for emotional pain and suffering related to the actions of former Alderman Derek Cornette and other “unnamed former elected officials.”

Cornette was removed from office by the city council in September for allegedly harassing female staff members and showing up to council meetings intoxicated.

The city says in a statement that the amount of compensation given to Spiegel is small when compared to what it might cost for a lengthy lawsuit.

Winnebago Tribe sees progress in having NW Iowa land returned after 50+ years

News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – U.S. senators from Iowa and Nebraska are backing federal legislation that would return land in northwest Iowa to the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. In 1970, the federal government took 16-hundred acres from the tribe using the power of eminent domain.

The plan was to use the ground along the Missouri River in Woodbury and Monona counties for a recreation area, but it was never built. “Land is very important to us. We are stewards of the land. That’s something that we always try to take care of our Mother Earth,” according to Garan Coons, communications director for the Winnebago Tribe. Coons says they won a legal fight in the ’70s to get the land back, but it required an act of Congress to complete the process.

Tribal officials have been making a direct appeal to lawmakers in Washington, D.C., to push for passage of the legislation. Coons says, “They’re just knocking on doors out there and trying to kind of tell him how important this is and what it means for the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska.”

A bill co-sponsored by Iowa Senators Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst, along with the two senators from Nebraska, would return the land to the tribe. “A long time coming and I’m just glad in my lifetime, we get to see it,” Coons says, “and we’re one step closer to getting that land back for the Winnebago Tribe.” Coons says so far, there are no plans to develop the land, which is currently overseen by the Iowa DNR.

In a Radio Iowa interview, Senator Grassley said last week the bill is “non-controversial” and he expects it to pass.

Gas prices fall six cents

News

November 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Triple-A says Iowa gas prices fell again last week. The price of regular unleaded gas was down six cents a gallon with an average price of two dollars, 97 cents across Iowa. That gas price is down 43 cents from last year. The national average was 33 cents higher than Iowa, after falling five cents.

Diesel prices were also down — dropping seven cents to a statewide average of four-dollars, 17 cents. That’s down 83 cents from last year.