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Bluffs man cited for Jan. 23rd crash and fire

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January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A man who allegedly crashed a pickup truck into a home in Council Bluffs and then fled on foot, was located earlier this week and cited for Failure to Maintain Control and Leaving the Scene of a Property Damage Accident. The Daily NonPareil says police identified the driver as 32-year old Brandon Carrera, of Council Bluffs.

Authorities say at around 2-a.m. on Jan. 23rd, Carrera was driving northbound on Harrison Street in a 2004 Chevy Silverado pickup truck, when he lost control and crashed into the porch of a home at 304 Harrison Street. The truck caught fire after the wreck, and police arrived on the scene to find it engulfed in flames. The fire also spread to the porch, though flames did not damage the house. Council Bluffs Fire Department crews were able to quickly extinguish the fire.

Damage to the porch – caused by the wreck and fire – was estimated at $15,000. No injuries were reported. Witnesses told police the driver of the pickup took-off on foot after the crash.

Bluffs woman suffers minor injuries in Thu. morning crash

News

January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A crash on Interstate 80 Thursday morning in Council Bluffs resulted in minor injuries to a woman, but she did not require transport to the hospital. According to a Bluffs Police report, 24-year old Taylor Wees, of Council Bluffs, was traveling west on I-80 near the southbound I-29 split, when traffic slowed in front of her. Wees was unable to slow down in-time and swerved to avoid hitting another vehicle, but in the process hit a guard rail.

Wees’ 2007 Mazda spun sideways before coming to rest across the westbound lanes of traffic. The wreck brought traffic to a dead stop for about 40-minutes, while the scene was investigated and cleaned-up. No citations were issued. Damage to the Wees’ car was estimated at $8,000. Damage to the guardrail was also estimated to be several thousand dollars.

Group issues report on school shooting incidents – including 1 at IWCC in Council Bluffs

News

January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A shooting last April at Iowa Western Community College was one of a 100 such incidents since the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in late 2012, according to a national advocacy group.
The Daily NonPareil says “Everytown for Gun Safety,” a group backed by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, released a report this week analyzing 100 cases where a firearm was discharged at a school or on a campus – as documented through press or law enforcement reports, excluding three instances of self-defense – since the Dec. 14, 2012, murders in Newtown, Conn.

One of those was a shooting on April 16th, 2014, at Iowa Western in Council Bluffs,  where a 19-year-old student was struck in the upper arm following what he described to police as a Craigslist deal gone wrong. According to police, the shooting took place near the Reiver Village dormitories when a student and his friend drove to meet someone to sell an item. Two men arrived and got into the back seat of the car, where one of them drew a gun and demanded their wallets. The student attempted to grab the gun, believing it was fake, causing a struggle for the gun. He was shot in the upper left arm and shoulder, and the two men fled and drove away. The victim, Dalton Crosser, was treated and released from an area hospital.

On May 5, Council Bluffs police arrested Richard L. Dawson, 19, of Omaha, in connection to the crime. Dawson was initially charged with attempted murder, first-degree robbery and willful injury causing serious injury. The Omaha man is currently in prison after pleading guilty.

The Everytown report also included a shooting at North High School in Des Moines on Jan. 31st, 2014, as well as a shooting at Algona High/Middle School on Nov. 1st, 2013, where a man died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. The final analysis in the report said “Regardless of the individuals involved in a shooting or the circumstances that gave rise to it, gunfire in our schools shatters the sense of security that these institutions are meant to foster. Everyone should agree that even one school shooting is one too many.”

A copy of the report can be found at everytown.org/article/schoolshootings.

More than a dozen people attend Shelby FF info. meeting

News

January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

An informational meeting for persons interested in becoming a volunteer firefighter for the City of Shelby drew about 15 potential candidates, Thursday night.  The meeting was held at the Shelby City Hall. The Daily NonPareil reports Greg Martin, a former firefighter with the department was one of those who signed-up. Martin, who served on the department for six-years, said he had to quit because of his regular job. He said the work firefighters do to save property…including his own at one point in time… is one reason he wanted to come back to the force.

Before the meeting, Mayor Pro Tem Bob Richmond said he hopes the department can be rebuilt soon. He said he had talked to several people who expressed an interest in serving. The city is recruiting volunteers to fill the department’s needs because the Shelby City Council fired all 12 firefighters Monday evening, and Fire Chief Eric Wendt resigned Wednesday morning. The firings were the result of a dispute between the council and department over funds the department raises.

Shelby City Attorney Clint Fichter said the fire department kept a separate bank account to hold monies generated by fundraisers – about $40,000. The matter is being litigated between the city and an attorney for the fire department.

Shelby is currently relying on the Minden and Avoca fire departments to provide fire protection and is purchasing ambulance services from Medivac in Harlan. The city won’t have to pay to receive help from Avoca and Minden because of a mutual aid agreement, although response times would inevitably be longer than for a Shelby fire department.

Ernst, Grassley vote for Keystone XL pipeline bill

News

January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Iowa’s two Republican senators have voted for legislation that would authorize construction fo the Keystone X-L pipeline. Senator Joni Ernst says she was a “proud co-sponsor” of the bill. “My colleagues and I promised our folks back home that we would govern in a responsible way and that’s what we are doing,” Ernst says. “We are moving legislation that the American people have asked for.” The pipeline, which would carry tar sands crude oil from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, would not extend through Iowa.

A court ruling earlier this month cleared the way for its passage through neighboring Nebraska. The U.S. State Department estimates 42-thousand people would be employed during the two-year construction phase.  “This will help us create new jobs, invest billions of dollars into our economy and also (build) new energy infrastructure,” Ernst says.

The U.S. House has already passed its version of the bill and Republican leaders in the House have yet to decide whether to pass the slightly different Senate version of the bill or create a conference committee of House and Senate members to hammer out a final draft. The legislation will set up the first official clash with the new Republican-led congress, as President Obama has promised to veto the bill.

Senator Chuck Grassley says the pipeline is “a privately funded, shovel ready infrastructure project that would support a lot of good-paying jobs.” Grassley suggests President Obama is “stuck between the unions that want these jobs and the environmentalists who don’t want any more use of fossil fuels.”

(Radio Iowa)

DHS administrator grilled over proposed closure of MHIs in Clarinda, Mt Pleasant

News

January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A panel of legislators grilled the state official who was dispatched to defend Governor Branstad’s proposal to close the state-run Mental Health Institutes in Clarinda and Mount Pleasant. Rick Shults, the director of mental health and disability services for the Iowa Department of Human Services, testified before a budget subcommittee on Thursday. “We clearly are having difficulty in recruiting staff,” Shults says. “…The wards are outdated and they’re poorly configured. When I go to those facilities it causes me concern. There are nooks and crannies and they’re not as expansive and there are just some challenges there and there are high costs associated with these facilities.”

Representative Dave Heaton, a Republican from Mount Pleasant, counters the costs for caring for patients with acute mental illness are higher at the Cherokee and Independence Mental Health Institutes which will remain open. “I mean, it’s flying in the face of a lot of things here, Rick…you know?” Heaton said during the 90-minute question-and-answer session with Shults. “I just can’t quite understand,” Heaton says there aren’t enough “psych beds” in private facilities in southern Iowa and closing the two state-run facilities makes things worse.
“Iowa is ranked fourth-worst in the country as far as our mental health services are concerned. We’re at the bottom,” Heaton said, pounding his fist on the table. “…It’s a mess.” Senator Joe Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, says he doubts the agency’s claim that many patients who’re now being served in the state’s Mental Health Institutes can easily find care from private providers. “You’re painting this rosy picture about how we’re going to have all these crisis services at the same time we’re ripping money out of the system,” Bolkcom says. “It’s to meet the bean counters’ numbers in the basement, the Department of Management. They’ve got to cut money out of this budget to pay for this historic property tax cut.”

Other legislators say they’re fielding complaints from county sheriffs who are often responsible for transporting patients to the Mental Health Institutes. Representative John Forbes, a Democrat from Urbandale, says it will be a 500-mile round trip for some departments. “What’s the human cost to the families of these patients who are now going to be instead of 20-30 miles away, 250 miles away?” Forbes asked. “These patients need their families close by to help them get through these very difficult times in their lives.”

Shults, the D-H-S administrator, counters that many hospitals around the state provide in-patient treatment for severe mental illness, plus he says the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics and Broadlawns Hospital in Des Moines will be able to take some patients who would have been sent to the state-run facilities. The D-H-S expects to shift the elderly sex offenders who’re in 24-hour nursing care in Clarinda to private nursing homes.

A court ruling is expected in late February on whether Governor Branstad had the authority to close the Iowa Juvenile Home in Toledo last year. If that ruling goes against Branstad, legislators say that will dramatically alter the discussion about closing the Mental Health Institutes.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa early News Headlines: Fri., Jan. 30th 2015

News

January 30th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company has plans to move 175 jobs out of Des Moines to its Ohio headquarters. Company spokesman Eric Hardgrove tells the Register the company’s home mortgage operations will be relocated to headquarters in Columbus, Ohio by mid-2016. Nationwide employs more than 4,000 people in Des Moines.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A Senate panel has advanced a bill that would let school districts in Iowa decide whether to start classes earlier in August. Members of an education subcommittee voted yesterday in favor of advancing the bill, which would remove authority from the state education department to issue waivers that allow school districts to start early. The department recently released new guidelines for the waivers, which in the past were issued automatically.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Members of a House panel have rejected a bill that would have expanded the ability of children to use a crossbow to hunt deer in Iowa. The natural resources subcommittee tabled the bill yesterday. Bill sponsor Representative Matt Windschitl, a Missouri Valley Republican, says he will work with interested parties to reword the bill for a future session.

NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA Development League has suspended Iowa Energy forward Jarnell Stokes for three games and teammate Kalin Lucas for two games for fighting on the bench Tuesday night. The league announced the suspensions Thursday.

Villisca Burglary

News

January 29th, 2015 by admin

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a burglary of the United Farmers Mercantile Cooperative Elevator in Villisca that took place during the night time hours of Wednesday thru the morning hours of Thursday. Unknown perpetrators gained entry into the building and removed an undetermined amount of cash. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Montgomery County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-434-1001.

Villisca Accident

News

January 29th, 2015 by admin

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department investigated a single vehicle property damage accident late Thursday morning. A blue Chevrolet Impala owned and operated by Ashley Colwell of Corning was traveling west on 8th Street from 7th Avenue when she was attempting to adjust her seat belt. Colwell’s vehicle went of the road to the north and went across a driveway striking a trash dumpster owned by Brown Sanitation of Villisca.

Damage is estimated at 15-hundred dollars to the car and 150-dollars to the dumpster. No citations were issued.

Creston Accident

News

January 29th, 2015 by admin

No injuries were reported in a two vehicle accident in Creston Wednesday afternoon on Highway 34. Melinda Gist of Macksburg was traveling south and attempted to cross Highway 34 from a city street and Judy Damewood of Corning was traveling west on Highway 34.

Gist did not see the Damewood vehicle and started to cross the highway and broadsided the Damewood vehicle in th back passenger side. Total damage estimated at 26-hundred dollars.