712 Digital Group - top

KJAN News

KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa,  Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!

Fatal crash in Dallas County Saturday morning

News

November 14th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

One person died in a crash involving a car and a semi in Dallas County early this (Saturday) morning. The Iowa State Patrol says 28-year old Danny Lynn Dunton, of Van Meter, who was wearing his seat belt, died in the crash that happened at around 1:35-a.m. just off the Van Meter exit from Interstate 80 westbound.

Officials say Dunton had begun to exit the interstate, when the 2014 VW he was driving came into contact with a 2016 tractor-trailer that was parked on the shoulder of the exit ramp. Following the collision, the VW came to rest on its top in the ditch. The operator of the semi, 52-year old James Ronald Renshaw, of Council Bluffs, was not hurt.

The accident remains under investigation.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 11/14/2015

News, Podcasts

November 14th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The area’s top news at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

Play

Nebraska officials: Nearly 400 pounds of pot found in RV

News

November 14th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – Authorities say two men from California have been arrested after nearly 400 pounds of marijuana was found in a recreational vehicle in Omaha.
The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office says the men, from Fontana, California, were taken into custody early Friday after a traffic stop in the city’s south side.

Authorities say a deputy’s dog indicated the odor of drugs in the RV. Twelve large boxes containing nearly 400 pounds of packaged marijuana was later discovered in various areas of the vehicle. The Omaha World-Herald reports a third man in the vehicle fled during the traffic stop. Authorities have been unable to find him.

Iowa Ass’n of School Boards holds its 70th annual convention next week

News

November 14th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

About 12-hundred school board members and superintendents from across Iowa, including those from Atlantic, will be attending the Iowa Association of School Boards state convention next week. Luann Gvist is organizing the 70th annual meeting at the Iowa Events Center in Des Moines. Gvist says the three-day conference will feature several great keynote speakers. “One of the gentlemen is a school superintendent from Georgia who is doing a lot of innovative things in their public school district,” Gvist says. “Also, we’re excited to have one of our own teachers from Iowa who was the National Teacher of the Year in 2010, Sarah Brown-Wessling.”

Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds will be speaking at the convention on Thursday about the state of education in Iowa. A workshop on school finances will be very helpful, Gvist says, especially since the elections were just held a few weeks ago. “We’re welcoming a whole host of brand new school board members to our convention and we can provide them with in-depth learning on topics such as that and also board-superintendent relationships,” Gvist says, “and we also offer break-out sessions on a wide variety of topics.”

The convention runs next Wednesday through Friday. Learn more at the Iowa Association of School Boards website: www.ia-sb.org

(Radio Iowa)

Gas prices dropping slowly

News

November 14th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Gas prices dropped a few pennies a gallon in the last week. Iowa Department of Natural Resources fuels analyst Harold Hommes says he’s seen the drop in and around the state’s capital. “Most here in the metro are on that two-14 mark. The state average would be a little bit higher than that, but are also certainly points in Iowa regionally that are somewhat under that two-14 mark, so that’s a pretty good competitive price now for fuels,” Hommes says. The statewide average is two-dollars, 30 cents a gallon. Hommes says good supplies have push down the wholesale terminal price of gas and that’s led to a drop in the retail cost.

“We’ve got a dollar-30 rack or terminal price in most points throughout Iowa, 130, 131, so that makes it a falling market,” Hommes says. “We started off the week at about 148 at the rack, so we’ve taken 18 cents down. I look for retail to fall a little bit further yet.” There are 47-and-a-half cents of taxes added to the rack price of gasoline, so that would put the cost at around one-dollar, 47 cents a gallon, leaving retailers with some 80 cents in profit depending on the rack price. Sumer holidays can make gas prices go up with increased demand, but Hommes says the Thanksgiving holiday isn’t expected to see an increase.

“It can lend to some temporary boosts, but the last few years frankly I haven’t seen that,” Hommes says. Hommes doesn’t see any big moves up in gas prices through the rest of this year. “I think that we’re going to see pretty favorable prices similar to what we have right now for the next couple of weeks,” according to Hommes. “If anything I think we may even see modest retreating from current levels and probably are going to get a little closer to that two-dollar mark in the next week to ten days.” The average price of a gallon of unleaded gasoline one year ago this week was two-dollars, 93 cents.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa News Headlines: Sat., Nov. 14th 2015

News

November 14th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

SHELDAHL, Iowa (AP) — The central Iowa city of Sheldahl has issued a bottled water advisory after testing found concentrations of nitrate more than twice the maximum level considered safe. The Iowa Department of Natural Resources says officials issued the advisory Friday after the DNR found nitrate levels of just over 2 milligrams per liter of water. The sample was taken November 4th but a laboratory didn’t notify the DNR within 24 hours as required. The city is flushing its water system. The DNR is conducting additional tests. The water is considered safe for adults and children older than 6 months but can be dangerous for younger children.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A report from Agriculture’s Clean Water Alliance says half of the 45 monitoring sites on the Raccoon River in central Iowa are showing the highest average nitrate levels in 10 years of data collection. The Des Moines Register reports the data on the river, which is a source of drinking water for 500,000 central Iowa residents, was included in the agribusiness group’s Thursday report.

CORALVILLE, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa inmate accused of trying to kill another inmate has been sentenced to additional time in prison. The Globe Gazette reports 22-year-old Michael Swanson was sentenced this month to 25 years in prison following a guilty plea of attempted murder. A criminal complaint says Swanson slashed an inmate in the neck at the Iowa Medical and Classification Center in Coralville in November 2014. The victim required stiches for several cuts. Swanson was serving two life sentences at the time for the 2010 shooting deaths of 47-year-old Vicky Bowman-Hall and 61-year-old Sheila Myers. The women were working at separate convenience stores at the time of their deaths.

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — Students from 18 high schools in the Quad-Cities area have collected enough food for nearly 548,000 meals. Officials at a final rally at the River Bend Foodbank in Davenport Thursday said students participating in the Student Hunger Drive gathered more than 657,000 pounds of food over the past six weeks — about 4,000 more pounds than last year. The food bank serves 22 counties in eastern Iowa and western Illinois.

Federal Court Sentences California Man to 80 Months for Counterfeit Credit Card Scheme

News

November 13th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The U-S Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa said Friday, that on November 13th, 2015, 49-year old Stephen Thomas, of Los Angeles, California, was sentenced by Chief District Judge John A. Jarvey to 80 months in prison for his role in leading a sophisticated counterfeit credit and debit card scheme in Iowa. Thomas was also ordered to pay restitution, to serve 3 years of supervised release following the period of imprisonment, and to pay a $300 special assessment to the Crime Victims Fund. Thomas previously pleaded guilty to the charges of conspiracy, access device fraud, and false statements to a federal official.

The investigation of this matter began as a result of a suspicious package that was delivered to a hotel in Des Moines. Law enforcement determined that the package contained counterfeit debit and credit cards that had been mailed from California to Thomas and others. Thomas and three co-defendants—50-year old Ronald Barre, Jr., 39-year old Nakika Carter, and 58-year old Richard Foust—left California together to execute the scheme across the Midwest.

The group used counterfeit debit and credit cards to withdraw money from casinos in Minnesota and Iowa, and to purchase items at retailers. The counterfeit cards contained legitimate debit and credit card information encoded onto the strips of the back of the cards, but were embossed with the names of the defendants.Thomas traveled with a California driver’s license in another person’s name, and provided a false name, date of birth, and social security number to law enforcement. At the time of his arrest, Thomas had an active arrest warrant for having escaped from federal custody.

Thomas’s co-defendants were previously sentenced for their roles in the scheme. Foust received 24 months imprisonment; Carter received 20 months’ imprisonment; and Barre received 32 months’ imprisonment. All co-defendants are jointly and severally liable for restitution.

The investigation was conducted by the United States Postal Inspection Service, the United States Secret Service, the Des Moines Police Department, the Bloomington, Minnesota, Police Department, and the Iowa Department of Public Safety Division of Criminal Investigation. The case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.

Inmate listed as escaped from Council Bluffs work facility

News

November 13th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Iowa prison officials say a 30-year-old inmate who didn’t return from his job has been listed as escaped from the state’s Council Bluffs work release facility. Authorities say Matthew Ashby didn’t return to the facility on Friday. He was transferred there on Sept. 15th.

Since June 2010, Ashby has been serving a 20-year sentence out of Cass County for willful injury and child endangerment with serious injury.

Summit addresses concerns over heroin epidemic in Iowa

News

November 13th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Police, prosecutors,and medical professionals gathered in Iowa City this week for a summit on the growing problem of heroin addiction in Iowa. They heard how overuse of prescription painkillers leads addicts to turn to heroin — which is cheaper and easier to get — and how heroin use now rivals the methamphetamine epidemic. Doctor Anthony Miller with Veterans Hospital in Iowa City says the heroin problem has its roots in the 1990’s when views on managing pain shifted in American medicine. He says providers began to think that under-treating pain was wrong, and that pain killers known as Opioids are safe.

“And between the years of 1997 and 2007 the amount of Opioids prescribed in the United States quadrupled,” Millers says. Their use in Iowa tripled and the addiction to Opioids soared. Now addicts who started on pain pills are injecting heroin to satisfy the craving. Heroin deaths which we used to be associated with a sordid ghetto life are happening to the boy and girl next door. Andy Brown of Davenport was prescribed Percocet for pain after surgery when he was 14. He died of heroin overdose at the age of 33. His mother, Kim Brown showed pictures of her son during the summit and says he overdosed three times in all.

“The third time he overdosed he died,” Brown says. ” The person he was with didn’t call for help.” Brown now advocates for easier access to a medicine that works as an antidote for an overdose that would otherwise be deadly. That’s one of several strategies experts examined to minimize the damage from heroin use, while law enforcement struggles to keep it off the streets. Federal Drug Enforcement Agent Matt Bradford says big heroin busts are going down in Chicago and that is a key here.

“Chicago is your main source city that supplies Iowa. So, Chicago is important,” according to Bradford. He says the drug comes primarily from a cartel in Mexico. Now officials have launched the Eastern Iowa Heroin Initiative to address prevention, treatment and enforcement in Linn, Johnson, Blackhawk and Dubuque Counties. Jerrry Blomgren with the Johnson County Narcotics Task Force attended the summit with several of his undercover cops.

“A lot of them do undercover buys of drugs. Heroin has been a big problem for all of us,” Blomgren says. A spokesman for the Iowa Department of Public Health says there are more methodone clinics to treat the addicted in eastern Iowa because of the heroin problem there. He says there are clinics in Council Bluffs and Sioux City in western Iowa and that doesn’t leave a lot of options when patients there are coming for daily dosing.

While heroin has grabbed the attention of Iowans the relatively older problem of painkiller addiction persists. Experts say student athletes should be educated about pain meds. They say employers should be aware of the potential for their employees to be over-prescribed pain meds following workplace injuries. Keynote speaker Sam Quinones, author of “Dreamland: The True Tale of America’s Opiate Epidemic,” says pharmaceutical companies should be paying for the unused drug collection efforts underway in some Iowa towns. He says heroin use has exploded because it hasn’t been acknowledged like meth. “People have been mortified to talk about their kid — who died in a McDonald’s bathroom with a needle in his arm,” Quinones says.

Kim Brown knows that frustration firsthand. “Because when my son died in 2011, I didn’t have anywhere to go….nobody would talk to me,” Brown explains. Brown now heads up a group for parents who’ve lost children to drug overdose. She’ll be back will at the capitol next year pushing for a law to let families have the antidote that stops a heroin overdose. She says that might have saved her son’s life.

Health officials say for the 13-year period beginning in 2000, Iowans dying from prescription medication overdoses increased twenty-fold. Heroin overdose deaths experienced the same alarming rate of increase, jumping from one to 20 deaths per year.

(Radio Iowa)

SmartAsset ranks two Iowa counties among tops in nation for low personal debt

News

November 13th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

An on-line financial company has released a study evaluating which counties in the country have the lowest per capita personal debt — and a couple of Iowa counties are cited. SmartAsset ranks the residents of Wright County, Iowa, as having the fourth smallest personal debt load of a county in the country. According to the analysis, residents in the Wright County area spend, on average, about 41 percent of their income on a mortgage, another eight percent on credit card debt and seven-and-a-half percent of their income on a vehicle loan.

Clay County ranks second in the state — and 14th nationally — for lowest per capita personal debt load. O’Brien, Des Moines, Allamakee, Buena Vista, Henry, Kossuth, Jackson and Floyd Counties were all ranked in the top 10 — in Iowa — for low personal debt.

In the immediate KJAN listening area:

  • Cass County ranks 24th lowest in the State for personal debt load. Residents spend, on average 7.9% of their income on credit card debt, 12.1% on a vehicle loan, and 80.2% on a mortgage. The average income per capita is $25,448.
  • In Guthrie County, which ranked 27th, residents spend about 9.5% of their income for credit card debt, 11.6% for vehicle loans, and 66% for a mortgage.
  • And in Pottawattamie County, which ranks 54th, and where the per capita income is $25,847, residents spend 9.1% of that for credit card debt, 12.9% for vehicle loans, and 94.3% of their income for a mortgage.

SmartAsset didn’t have enough data to list for Audubon, Adair, Adams, Montgomery and Shelby Counties. Information is available for Harrison, Mills and Page Counties in southwest Iowa. See the link under this same story on the News page at kjan.com, for information about other Iowa counties.

Go to https://smartasset.com/personal-loans/personal-loan-rates#iowa to see the SmartAsset analysis and data for many other Iowa counties.

(Radio Iowa/KJAN)