United Group Insurance

Mills County issues a partial release of mandatory evacuation order

News

March 19th, 2019 by Jim Field

The Mills County Board of Supervisors and Mills County Emergency Managment have issued a partial release of mandatory evacuation order. The partial release area includes the unincorporated areas from Mills County/Pottawattamie County line south to Allis Road between the West face of the Loess Hills to the East and Missouri River to the West.

Residents in the area outlined may return to their homes. Residents are asked to contact 712-527-9699 if they need volunteers to assist.

(Update) Suspect in Council Bluffs robbery is caught

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs say the suspect in a convenience store robbery that took place early this (Tuesday) morning, was apprehended without incident a little after 2-p.m. today (Tuesday). 28-year old Ryan Ross, of Bellevue, NE., was taken into custody at a residence in the 600 block of South 1st Street. Ross was arrested on a warrant for Robbery in the 3rd degree.

Earlier, authorities said Ross entered the Kwik Shop at 3632 Ave G at around 2:25-a.m., and demanded money from the cashier. After the clerk handed him an undetermined amount of cash, Ross fled the scene in his vehicle.

Robbery suspect Ryan Ross

Video surveillance was able to get the vehicles license plate information.

Flood warning issued for southwest corner of state due to rain today

Weather

March 19th, 2019 by Jim Field

The National Weather Service in Omaha has issued a

* Flood Warning for...
  Southern Montgomery County in southwestern Iowa...
  Mills County in southwestern Iowa...
  Fremont County in southwestern Iowa...
  Page County in southwestern Iowa...

* Until 1045 PM CDT Tuesday.

* At 1051 AM CDT, Doppler radar indicated rain across a large part
  of southeast Nebraska and this will also move into southwest Iowa.
  There is potential for one quarter to three quarters of an inch of
  rain today across the flood warning area. This is in addition to
  the river flooding. The water is falling on ground that is
  saturated in most areas.

Boil Order issued for Glenwood

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Mills County Emergency Management officials said today (Tuesday), that Glenwood Municipal Utilities (GMU) has issued a BOIL ORDER (effective 1:30-p.m. today) until further notice. The Order is in response to an electrical outage at the Glenwood Water Treatment Facility. GMU says it will be adding water to their system to assure ongoing availability for their customers. In the meantime, water meant for consumption should be boiled first, and then cooled.

The water is safe to use for bathing and household activities. Officials stress “Conservation of water is still required.” Drinking water is available at no cost, and can be picked up at  the Glenwood City Hall. Anyone with questions should contact GMU at 712-527-4868.

“It looked like an ocean,” governor says of flooding in Iowa

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Governor Kim Reynolds says “a perfect storm” of weather conditions in the region has caused the catastrophic flooding along the Missouri River corridor. “It has compromised every single levee from Council Bluffs all the way down to the Missouri border,” Reynolds says. Reynolds briefed statehouse reporters this (Tuesday) morning after touring flooded communities in northwest and southwest Iowa over the past two days. “Make no mistake,” Reynolds said. “They are and we are still in the fight.”

Reynolds flew over parts of the Missouri River corridor yesterday. “It’s hard to really describe the devastation that we witnessed,” Reynolds says. “It looked like an ocean and I mean I saw the top of grain bins. We saw buildings flooding. I mean, it’s just unbelievable and you know that’s people’s lives. Those are fifth-generation farms. Those are businesses, communities.” Reynolds has asked for the early release of federal funds to rebuild flood-damaged roads. She’s also talked with the U.S. Ag Secretary to discuss what options farmers may have if stored corn and soybeans have been flooded — as that grain is uninsured.

“All of our bins and elevators are full of grain. This is typically the time they start to move it, so tremendous loss there as well as livestock,” Reynolds says. Some livestock confinements have been flooded, so officials are discussing how to properly dispose of the animals. Reynolds has declared 41 of Iowa’s 99 counties disaster areas and she warns as Minnesota goes through the thaw cycle, other rivers — especially the Mississippi — are going to rise. “As we prepare ourselves for the spring thaw and the rains that are going to come, we need to just recognize that, you know, we’re just getting started,” Reynolds said. “We’re in this for the long haul.”

Reynolds says she has “no doubt” western Iowa areas that have been hard hit by flooding will be declared a FEDERAL disaster area. The governor’s emergency management director says the state has likely qualified for federal disaster assistance for damage to government-owned facilities, including roads and bridges. Assessments of damage to individual property owners can’t be made until the flood waters recede — and those assessments will determine if individual Iowans will get disaster assistance as well. “We want to see what we can do to expedite the funding to make sure we can get that in place and start to alleviate some of the concerns and questions that communities and farmers and Iowans have all across the state,” Reynolds said. State officials are providing some immediate paperwork relief to small businesses in the affected areas. Businesses are being given a 30-day extension to file sales, use and income tax withholding.

Floodwaters create time-consuming detours

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Floodwaters are washing away roads, making some communities unreachable and forcing drivers to make time-consuming detours in parts of the Midwest. Flooding has closed more than 100 roads in Missouri. And 70 miles of Interstate 29 is closed from St. Joseph to the Iowa border, complicating efforts to access the Cooper Nuclear Station along the Missouri River in Nebraska.

This satellite image provided by DigitalGlobe shows from top, Pacific Junction, Iowa on Aug. 10, 2018 before flooding and Pacific Junction during flooding on March 18, 2019. (DigitalGlobe, a Maxar company, via AP) – CLICK on the image to enlarge.

Some plant workers travel from Atchison County, Missouri, where a levee breach grew larger overnight. The county’s emergency management says so many roads are closed in the region that residents are traveling more than 100 miles out of their way to get to the plant. The flooding is due to melting snow and heavy rains that hit the region last week.

Atlantic Police report (3/19/19)

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Police Department reports three arrests took place, Monday. 39-year old Melissa Wheeler, of Atlantic, was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance/Meth. 51-year old Michael Clason, of Marne, was arrested for Public Intoxication, and, 52-year old Sharon Aupperle, of Adair, was arrested by Atlantic Police on a Cass County warrant charging her with two counts of Tampering with a Witness or Juror.

All three subjects were booked into the Cass County Jail.

Grassley says Corps’ actions are “ridiculous” in not anticipating flooding

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Leaders of water-inundated towns in southwest Iowa are blaming the U-S Army Corps of Engineers for blundering decisions that may have contributed to the region’s widespread flooding. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he “absolutely” will call for an inquiry into the Corps’ actions, like ordering the town of Hamburg to remove reinforcements from a levee which protected the town in the 2011 floods. “When a town was trying to help themselves and then have to take protection down and then get flooded like they have now, where it’s probably worse than it was in 2011,” Grassley says, “we have to have a complete review of the manual that governs all that.”

The Corps is also being criticized for having radically boosted releases recently from Gavins Point Dam upriver on the Missouri River and for now vowing to cut back the flow when the damage is already done. Critics say it’s far too little, too late. “Now that this flooding is taking place, to have the Corps say that some of the dams, that they’re going to shut down releases right now as the flooding is happening, not being on top of it ahead of time, trying to anticipate things,” Grassley says. “It’s ridiculous.”

Defenders of the Corps’ actions say it was the perfect storm of conditions that brought the unstoppable flooding, with frozen soil, a deep snowpack that melted quickly, and heavy rain showers. Grassley disagrees and says the Corps’ should have known better. “Anticipating weather ahead of time, they just didn’t take that into consideration,” Grassley says. “The tremendous rain and storms they recently had in Nebraska is a perfect example of being out in front of it instead of always being behind the curve.”

Grassley says the Corps’ river management priority list includes several elements, like maintaining water levels for commercial and recreational boating, when he says the number-one concern should be flood prevention.

Update: V.P. Mike Pence head to the Midwest today to view flood damage

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Vice President Mike Pence is headed to the Midwest to view flood damage as farmers raise concerns that busted levees won’t be fixed before the traditional spring flood season. Pence is scheduled to visit Omaha, Nebraska, late Tuesday afternoon. Hundreds of homes are damaged, and tens of thousands of acres are inundated with water. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says rivers breached at least a dozen levees in Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri. Flooding is expected through the week as high water levels flow down the Missouri River.

Corps official Jud Kneuvean says levees usually take six months to repair. That means most likely won’t be fixed by mid-May, the start of the most flood-prone part of the year. The Nebraska Farm Bureau says farm and ranch losses could reach $1 billion in Nebraska alone.

Local firearms dealer seeks to help flood victims

News

March 19th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Updated) — A firearms dealer in Cass County looks to help out the flood victims of southwest Iowa, by collecting flood relief items. Brice McCunn, with McCunn Specialty Firearms in Massena, said on his social media page, that “It’s hard to sit back and watch what’s happening in southwestern Iowa and Nebraska right now with all the flooding. In Massena and the surrounding area we have been very fortunate in the last week compared to many. Families are losing everything they have, businesses are a total loss and lives are being lost.”

He told KJAN News a relief coordinator in Hamburg informed him of what’s need most. She asked for paper products [paper towels/plates], hygiene products, and bottled water. McCunn said cleaning products are going to be needed for the recovery effort, as well. Items such as bleach, rubber gloves and other gloves to handle wet and damaged property. The Hamburg Elementary School is the site where all donations from various area efforts will be assembled and dispersed to those in need. Brice said they would bring a trailer full of those supplies to the Hamburg collection point next Monday, March 25th.

Monetary donations are welcome also, but Brice said what they really need are the supplies. He said hey will be taking donations through at least Sunday at McCunn Specialty Firearms. They’re located east of Massena near the intersection of Highways 148 and 92. You may drop-off your donations at the store from 9-a.m. Until 6-p.m. each day, through Sunday. If you have any questions, call Brice McCunn at 712-779-0694.