712 Digital Group - top

Tips for keeping your car running in bitter cold

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — With temperatures dropping to record lows — experts are urging people to take the necessary precautions to avoid disaster with their cars. Affordable Auto Recyclers service manager Kelly Asquith tells K-C-R-G- T-V that one thing to keep track of is that you have the right kind of anti-freeze. “It needs to be down to negative 34 degrees Fahrenheit, actual temperature not wind chill temperature,” Asquith says.

Asquith says the fluid should also be swapped at least every three years and always be full. Asquith said this week they’ll probably see a lot of people with cars that just won’t start. “We see a lot of batteries fail, alternators can sometimes fail which is the unit that charges the battery and keeps it maintained,” he explains.

To avoid battery issues, avoid short trips that don’t give the car time to recharge the battery. The batter faces a heavier load when it is this cold outside.

Bluffs woman arrested on two counts of Child Endangerment

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs have arrested a woman for Child Endangerment after she left her children unattended in a vehicle for a lengthy period of time.

Stephany Moses

Authorities say 25-year old Stephany C. Moses, of Council Bluffs, was placed under arrest for two counts of Child Endangerment. Her children, ages two and four, were not injured. They were placed into protective custody, and the Dept. of Human Services was contacted.

At around 10:40-a.m. Tuesday, Officers were asked to conduct a welfare check on the children, who were in a car in a parking lot at 3271 Market Place Drive. The children had been located by a concerned citizen who then provided them shelter in her vehicle until police arrived.

The investigation revealed the two small children had been left unattended in the vehicle for approximately 45 minutes before a concerned citizen located them. The vehicle the children had been left in was not running, unlocked and the window was partially down. The children were only wearing light clothing. The outside air temperature at the time of the incident was 5 degrees with a -14 to -15 degree wind chill.

Their mother, Stephany Moses, was located by police after she came out of the Boot Barn Store.

Extreme cold stops mail delivery in some states

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

You may have heard that “neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night …” will prevent mail carriers from completing their appointed rounds. But the unofficial motto of the U.S. Postal Service apparently doesn’t include the cold. Wednesday, the federal service says it will not deliver mail in all or parts of five Midwest states because of a dangerous Arctic air blast.

The postal service says delivery and other services will be suspended in Minnesota, western Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska and western Illinois. The suspension also includes picking up mail from businesses and collection boxes, and picking up packages from residences and business.day.

Atlantic man arrested on drug charges

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s Deputies in Cass County, last Friday, arrested 27-year old Mark Allen Fredericksen, of Atlantic, on a felony charge of Possession with Intent to Deliver/Meth; Possession of Marijuana/3rd or Subsequent offense; and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Fredericksen was taken to the Cass County Jail where he remains held on $10,000 bond.

On Saturday, 42-year old Jason Aaron Watson, of Atlantic, was arrested on a charge of OWI/1st Offense. Watson was taken to the Cass County Jail and released later that day on his own recognizance.

And on Sunday, Cass County Sheriff’s Deputies arrested 39-year old Stephen Keith Zeibig, of Griswold, on a Pottawattamie County warrant. Zeibig was held at the Cass County Jail and later released to Pottawattamie County authorities.

Alliant Energy service cut-off scam in Cass County

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Sheriff’s Office reports that have received a report of a scam call. Someone claiming to be from Alliant Energy is making calls to Alliant customers demanding payment immediately, or their services will be stopped within minutes. Alliant Energy has verified this is definitely a scam! If you receive a call like this, hang up and ignore it!

Woman gets 10 years for letting baby son starve to death

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

KEOSAUQUA, Iowa (AP) — A southeast Iowa woman has been given 10 years in prison for letting her 2-month-old son starve to death. Van Buren County District Court records say 25-year-old Angel Poole, of Birmingham, was sentenced Friday. She’d pleaded guilty to child endangerment resulting in serious injury. Prosecutors had lowered the charge in exchange.

Authorities say medics were sent to Poole’s Birmingham apartment on July 7, 2016, after she called 911 to report her son, Judah Wessels, was having trouble breathing. The baby was pronounced dead at a hospital about an hour later.

Authorities say he weighed a little over 5 pounds at death. An autopsy showed he died of starvation and dehydration.

Arctic air round two underway

Weather

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The National Weather Service says the second push of Arctic air is well under way with northwest winds once again pushing 20 to 25 mph along with gusts to 35 mph or more. As a result, temperatures had generally already reached their daytime highs across the state and will slowly fall the rest of the day. As of late this morning, temperatures ranged from the balmy upper single digits above zero across southern Iowa to chilly around -10 degrees across far northern and northwest Iowa.

Once most of the rest of the state dips below zero this evening, widespread temperatures above zero will not be seen until mid to late Thursday morning. In the meantime, numerous daily record lows and minimum max temperatures look to be set tomorrow and Thursday morning. Lows will range from around 30 below zero across the north and northeast to the teens below zero across the south and west. Throw in some winds, and wind chills will range from around 40 below to 60 below zero at its worst overnight and Wednesday morning.

The most dangerous conditions will be across northern and northeast sections of Iowa, though no place will be immune from the dangerous conditions Wednesday. Morning lows will range from around 30 below in the north and northeast to the teens below zero down and over to the Missouri and Nebraska borders.  Highs will not be too much better with nearly all of the state topping out below zero, ranging from around 20 below zero in the northeast to near zero in the southwest. Dangerous temperatures will continue into Thursday with lows once again ranging from around 30 below in the northeast to the single digits below zero in the southwest.

Ideally, one should stay inside and out of the cold. Though for anyone that must go outside, multiple warm layers and covering ones face will be a necessity. This kind of cold is life-threatening if the right precautions are not taken.

Authorities say Iowa man died in snowmobile accident

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

LIME SPRINGS, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a 28-year-old man died after a snowmobiling accident in northeast Iowa. The Howard County Sheriff’s Office says the accident occurred about 1:40 a.m. Friday on a trail that runs on a side of a road about 2 miles (3 kilometers) northwest of Lime Springs. The office says in a news release that Ross Wilson was riding alone when his machine rolled over him. He was found later by other snowmobile riders.
Deputies say he was pronounced dead at the scene. He lived in Cresco. The accident is being investigated.

AHSTW’s Tuma commits to Northwestern College football

Sports

January 29th, 2019 by admin

AHSTW’s Brayton Tuma announced late Monday that he will continue his academic and football career at Northwestern College in Orange City. Tuma was a strong contributor to a Vikings squad that finished as Class A Runners-Up this season.

Tuma finished his senior season at wide receiver with 30 catches for 589 yards and 6 touchdowns. On the defensive side of the ball Tuma had 46.5 tackles and four interceptions as a defensive back.

Tuma chose Northwestern over a number of other recent offers from area schools such as Grand View, Upper Iowa, and Peru State.

Grassley hopes we’ve ‘learned a lesson’ and can avoid another shutdown

News

January 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Many federal workers and others are highly concerned we’ll face another government shutdown when the current extension expires on February 15th. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, a Republican, says he’s hopeful “we’ve learned a lesson” and that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, can reach a compromise with President Trump to solve the standoff. “I would hope Pelosi would now negotiate and not just say ‘no’ as she has in the past,” Grassley says. “I think the president has shown more flexibility than I thought he would show.”

A possible fix has emerged, what’s being called an automatic continuing resolution, which Grassley says could “end government shutdowns forever.” “Pretty simple,” Grassley says. “You get up to September 30th, all the appropriation bills aren’t passed, you don’t shut down the government, you just continue to spend money at the level you did the last fiscal year until the appropriation bills get passed.” The amendment is being offered by Senator Rob Portman, a Republican from Ohio, and Grassley remains optimistic it will gain bipartisan traction and pass.  “Government is supposed to be a service for the American people and you can’t serve the American people when you aren’t operating,” Grassley says. “So, all this common sense now tells me we should never have a government shutdown again.”

Governing is often about the art of compromise, Grassley says, and that’s the only way to get out of this situation.  “There ought to be a bipartisan agreement where you can get border security at some level of expenditure by cutting the difference between the two points of view, usually between two-billion and six-billion,” Grassley says. “Split it at three or three-and-a-half.” Most of the 800-thousand federal workers who were furloughed or forced to work without pay were able to return to work yesterday (Monday). The 35-day partial federal government shutdown began on December 22nd and was the longest in U-S history.