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Police say Cedar Rapids shooting victim died in hospital

News

February 25th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Police say they’re investigating the shooting of a 20-year-old man in Cedar Rapids as a homicide. Police spokesman Greg Buelow says in a news release that Tenacious Harris died Sunday morning at a Cedar Rapids hospital. Harris was found wounded Tuesday evening in a vehicle near Franklin Middle School. No arrests have been reported.

15 inches of snow in Buffalo Center, stranded motorists, blizzard conditions….

News, Weather

February 25th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa/KJAN weather date) — A blizzard and treacherous travel conditions struck much of the state this weekend. Snow plows were pulled from areas of northern Iowa Saturday night. The Iowa D-O-T closed Interstate-35 from the Ames exit all the way to the Minnesota border on Sunday morning. Rescue crews struggled to reach stranded motorists. Wright County Emergency Management director Jim Lester says road crews in his county will set out this (Monday) morning after the winds subside. “It’s going to be a chore for them,” he said. “Several of the roads are (drifted) completely shut.”

Hamilton County engineer Nikki Stinn said snow plows went out at noon Sunday to help clear paths to rescue motorists, but the plows were pulled off the roads after all rescues were completed. “It’s just too much (blowing snow), too unsafe to be out there trying to clear roads,” she said.

Buffalo Center seems to have had the most snow from this weekend’s storm — 15 inches. The National Weather Service announced early Sunday morning this is the snowiest February on record at the Des Moines Airport. There’s been more than 24 inches — that’s two feet — of snow in the capital city. Here in Atlantic, we’ve received 30.3 inches of snow since the beginning of the month. At Eppley Airport in Omaha, there’s been more than 44 inches of snow since December 1st. That shatters a record set during the winter of 2003 and 2004. If Omaha gets another two-tenths of snow this week, it will set the all-time snowiest February record as well.

Skyscan forecast for Atlantic & the area: Monday, 2/25/2019

Weather

February 25th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy. High 18. N @ 10-15.

Tonight: P/Cldy. Low 0. NE @ 5.

Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy w/flurries. High 20. E @ 10.

Wednesday: Mo. Cldy w/flurries. High 22.

Thursday: P/Cldy. High 25.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 19. Our Low this morning, -9. Last year on this date our High was 42 and the Low was 22. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 70 in 1995. The Record Low was -12 in 2014.

Another non-injury accident reported in Montgomery County

News

February 25th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Montgomery County said late Sunday, that another, non-injury accident occurred that day. At around 3:20-p.m., a 2005 GMC Sierra driven by Tobias H. Luna, of Omaha, was traveling east on Highway 34, when the vehicle hit a patch of ice on the road near the intersection with A Avenue. The pickup went out of control and entered the north ditch, where it came to rest on the driver’s side. Tobias was cited for failure to have a valid driver’s license.

Girls State Basketball Schedule/Scorebard- Day 1- 02/25/2019

Sports

February 25th, 2019 by admin

Class 5A Quarterfinals

#1 Johnston 66, #8 Urbandale 57
#5 West Des Moines Valley 66, #4 Iowa City High 59 (OT)
#7 Dowling Catholic 75, #2 Waukee 70 (3OT)
#3 Southeast Polk 59, #6 Ankeny Centennial 56 (OT)

Class 3A Quarterfinals

#1 North Polk 59, #8 Estherville-Lincoln Central 47
#5 Waukon 48, #4 Crestwood 37
#3 Des Moines Christian 49, #6 Roland-Story 41

Boys Substate Basketball Schedule Monday 02/25/2019

Sports

February 25th, 2019 by admin

CLASS 1A Substate Finals

Substate 7 Final @ Adel: Ankeny Christian Academy vs. St. Albert 6:00pm
Substate 8 Final @ Carroll: Exira-EHK vs. Sioux Central PPD to Tuesday at 7:00pm -ON KJAN

CLASS 2A Substate Finals

Substate 8 Final @ LeMars: OA-BCIG vs. Rock Valley 7:00pm

Class 3A Substate Finals

Substate 8 Final @ Atlantic: Denison-Schleswig vs. Winterset 7:00pm

Class 4A Substate Semifinals

Substate 1: Lewis Central at Sioux City, East 7:00pm
Substate 1: Council Bluffs, Abraham Lincoln at Sioux City, West 7:00pm

Spring Training Baseball scores – Sunday, 2/24/19

Sports

February 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Sunday’s Games

(Scores through 4:30-p.m.)

Boston 8, Minnesota 5

N.Y. Yankees 8, Tampa Bay 5

Baltimore 9, Toronto 8

Philadelphia 10, Detroit 6

Pittsburgh 10, Miami 6

Houston (ss) 5, Atlanta 2

Washington 12, St. Louis 2

Houston 10, N.Y. Mets 1

2 non-injury accidents in Montgomery County, Sunday

News

February 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Snow-packed roads caused trouble all over southwest Iowa, Saturday and Sunday. The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, Sunday, said two, non-injury accidents occurred. At around 11:15-a.m. Sunday, a 2002 Dodge pickup pulling a horse trailer, was traveling northbound on Highway 71, when due to the snow and ice on the road, the vehicle went out of control. The pickup and trailer skidded across the highway and entered the west ditch, causing the pickup and trailer to jackknife. The driver of the vehicle, 84-year old Melvin D. Zimmerman, of Ochelata, OK., was not hurt. Damage from the accident amounted to $4,500. No citations were issued.

And, an accident at around 2:10-p.m. Sunday, occurred on northbound Highway 71, when a 2002 Chevy K2500 pickup driven by 20-year old Samuel E. Barkley, of Cumberland, slowed for a vehicle turning off Highway 71 onto High Street, in Montgomery County. After the vehicle turned, Barkley began to accelerate, but lost traction. His pickup went out of control and entered the east ditch, where it rolled over and came to rest on its top. No injuries were reported. The truck is owned by Robert Barkley, of Cumberland. The sheriff’s report did not list a dollar amount of damage to the vehicle. No citations were issued.

Snow, wind combines to make travel hard in Nebraska, Iowa

News

February 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Travel remained difficult in eastern Nebraska and much of Iowa after a strong winter storm moved across the area. Iowa officials closed Interstate 35 between Ames, Iowa, and the Minnesota border on Sunday because of blowing and drifting snow. The storm dropped several inches of snow on central Iowa, but parts of northwest Iowa received as much as 16 inches of snow. In Nebraska, Interstate 80 re-opened after several hours. The road had been closed Sunday between Grand Island and Gretna because of weather conditions and several crashes. Much of eastern Nebraska received between 6 and 10 inches of snow in the storm.

Forecasters warn that even though the snow has stopped falling in Iowa and Nebraska strong winds could still cause blizzard conditions. Many churches canceled their Sunday services because of conditions.

Iowa lawmakers push ahead on abortion bills despite rulings

News

February 24th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Undeterred by multiple court rulings that have turned back efforts to limit abortion in the past year, some conservative Iowa lawmakers are moving forward with the ultimate in abortion control measures, a bill that would declare life begins at conception. It would place Iowa once again at the head of the pack of states attempting to ban all abortions and makes clear that abortion-rights opponents are committed to such a course regardless of the likelihood of future court defeats. “Let me be very clear to everyone in this room,” said Republican Sen. Jake Chapman, a staunch anti-abortion lawmaker who led a subcommittee Thursday that moved the bill banning abortions to a full Senate committee. “We’re not going to stop. We will continue to fight for life.”

The bill declares a person is an individual living human being from the moment of conception until natural death. It affords such a person all rights and protections accorded in state and federal constitutions.
Democratic Sen. Janet Petersen called the bill “another extreme and dangerous bill harmful to the health of women around our state.” She said she’s concerned it has no exceptions for rape, incest or for child sexual abuse. She said the language could be used to control certain types of birth control, could make it difficult for women to get some types of treatment for cancer that might endanger a fetus and force women to undergo a criminal investigation if they have a miscarriage or stillbirth. “To have government intervene and potentially investigate what has gone horribly wrong with a woman’s body, it just disgusts me,” she said.

The bill isn’t the only abortion measure moving forward in the Republican-majority Legislature with support from Gov. Kim Reynolds. More than half of the Iowa Senate signed on to a constitutional amendment that declares there’s no right to an abortion in the Iowa Constitution. The bill, which has no Democratic signers, is aimed at weakening the state court system’s power to review abortion restrictions. It was introduced in January just days after an Iowa judge overturned what would have been the nation’s broadest abortion limit — a bill that banned abortions at the detection of a fetal heartbeat, which can occur as early as six weeks into a pregnancy.

The judge concluded the Iowa Supreme Court affirmed in a June 2018 ruling that women have a fundamental right to an abortion under the Iowa Constitution and the heartbeat law violated that precedent. In that ruling last year, the court struck down another of the legislature’s attempts at limiting abortion by forcing women to wait 72 hours before getting the procedure. The court concluded women have a fundamental state constitutional right to control their own bodies and health care decisions, including abortion. The proposed constitutional amendment moved out of a Senate subcommittee on Feb. 6 and must pass this legislative session and another before it goes to a statewide vote.

Two other abortion-related bills also are eligible for committee consideration after passing subcommittees last week. One would elevate the prison sentence to life for anyone convicted of intentionally terminating a human pregnancy, taking an action they reasonably should have known would terminate the pregnancy, or terminating a pregnancy in the commission of a felony. It also increases penalties if a drunken driver causes termination of a pregnancy. Another would deny federal funds administered by the state for sex education programs conducted by any organization that performs abortions or regularly refers people to an entity that performs abortions.

Iowa also is among at least four states where Republican lawmakers are trying to lessen the role of attorneys on state judicial nominating panels, and although legislative leaders deny their effort is related to abortion or gay marriage rulings, critics say it’s a way to stack the courts with more conservative judges. Legislative leaders say it’s about giving Iowans more control of judge selection through their elected representatives. Instead of attorneys choosing half of the members of the judicial selection commission, legislative leaders in the House and Senate would make the picks. Reynolds has insisted it isn’t related to abortion and isn’t politically motivated. However, at a state Capitol rally Thursday she made it clear she believes the courts are wrong to strike down the abortion laws.