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(Podcast) 7:06-a.m. KJAN News & funeral report, 1/22/2015

News, Podcasts

January 22nd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

With Ric Hanson.

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Medical condition causes accident in Montgomery County

News

January 22nd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A woman who suffered from an apparent medical condition lost control of the vehicle she was driving, causing an accident Wednesday afternoon about six-miles north of Villisca, in Montgomery County. Sheriff’s officials say 43-year old Nichole King, of Villisca, was traveling north on Highway 71 at around 4:20-p.m., when the 2012 Nissan Titan truck she was driving went off the road to the west and hit a highway road sign.

The pickup continued thru the intersection of 185th Street into the Sciola Cemetery, where it hit a couple of tombstones before striking the remains of the Sciola Church foundation. The truck came to rest with the driver’s side front tire hanging over the opening of the foundation.

Officials say King opened her door and fell 10-feet into the basement floor of the former church. King was treated at the scene by Villisca Fire and Rescue personnel before being transported to the Montgomery County Hospital for further treatment of non-life threatening injuries. The truck, registered to Jeffrey King, sustained $7,500 damage. No citations were issued. The accident remains under investigation.

Bluffs high school teacher faces sexual misconduct charges

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in Pottawattamie County say a Council Bluffs teacher faces charges in connection with alleged sexual misconduct with a student at Thomas Jefferson High School. The Daily NonPareil, citing a Council; Bluffs Police Dept. arrest affidavit, reports 29-year old Jeffrey Daugherty, of Council Bluffs, faces charges in connection to an alleged inappropriate relationship with a 15-year old female student.

Law enforcement officers arrested Daugherty on Jan. 8 on suspicion of sexual exploitation of a minor, third-degree sexual abuse and sexual abuse by a counselor, therapist or school employee. The Council Bluffs Community School District confirmed Daugherty teaches math at the high school and has been with the district since August of 2013. He is currently on paid administrative leave, following standard protocol when charges are levied against an employee.

District spokeswoman Diane Ostrowski said the relationship came to light when it was reported to a school employee, who then contacted authorities. The arrest affidavit shows the victim’s mother found out about the relationship after finding messages on her daughter’s phone. Sexual exploitation of a minor and third-degree sexual abuse are both Class C felonies that each carry a maximum 10-year prison sentence, while sexual abuse by a counselor, therapist or school employee is a Class D felony that carries a maximum five-year prison term.

Governor says other facilities would provide service with closing of Mt. Pleasant, Clarinda MHI’s

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Governor Terry Branstad says the state will look to other facilities to provide care if his proposal to close the state-run Mental Health Institutes in Clarinda and Mount Pleasant moves forward. The governor’s budget sent to legislators does not include any money to keep the institutions open past June 30.  “We had two mental health centers that were not accredited, we have no psychiatrist in Mt. Pleasant, the one in Clarinda is going to retire. So, we wanted to provide better services, and also we are going to work with the University of Iowa Hospitals. The governor says they want to use facilities that have the proper staffing to help patients.

“We think we can provide better services to people with mental health issues with making this transition and not continuing those facilities where they’re not accredited and where we don’t have psychiatrists,” according to Branstad. The idea is not favored by everyone, including Representative Dave Heaton, a Republican from Mount Pleasant. Heaton is chairman of the subcommittee that writes the budget for the Iowa Department of Human Services, the agency in charge of the Mental Health Institutes, and he’s arranged for the agency’s director to go to Mount Pleasant Saturday (January 24th) to explain the proposed closure to the community.

Five years ago a consulting firm hired by then-Governor Chet Culver recommended that the Mental Health Institutes in Clarinda and Mount Pleasant close, but Heaton and others worked to keep the institutions open. The Mental Health Institutes are routinely the treatment option of last resort for acute care of mentally ill patients. The governor’s budget indicates the state will save 15-and-a-half million dollars by closing the two facilities. The M-H-I at Clarinda opened in 1888 while the Mount Pleasant facility opened the year the Civil War broke out, in 1861.

(Radio Iowa)

State officials send out school start date guidelines

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Department of Education says school districts seeking permission to start classes earlier in the summer must prove that academic achievement is at risk. The Des Moines Register reported Wednesday the department sent the new guidelines to school districts. The guidelines say districts must show students would be affected in a “negative and significant manner” if classes start during the week of Sept. 1. Districts must provide research backing up the claim.

Last month, department Director Brad Buck told districts the state would stop granting automatic waivers to school districts seeking to start classes earlier in the summer. State law requires districts to start school no earlier than the calendar week including Sept. 1 but in the past, most have obtained waivers allowing them to begin classes earlier.

Iowa House panel OKs school spending increase

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Lawmakers in the Republican-majority Iowa House have granted committee-level approval to a small funding increase for schools, but leaders in the Democratic-controlled Senate say they want to provide more dollars. The House education committee Wednesday approved an increase in schools funding for the upcoming academic year. The legislation is based on Gov. Terry Branstad’s budget proposal. It would provide an increase of about $35 million in general support for K-12 public schools.

In all, Branstad’s budget provides about $100 million in new schools funding, much of that earmarked for specific programs. Rep. Ron Jorgensen, a Sioux City Republican who chairs the House education committee, said this was what the state could afford.

But Sen. Herman Quirmbach, a Democrat from Ames who chairs the Senate education committee, called the proposal “inadequate.”

Atlantic City Council approves site plans for condo project

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic City Council, Wednesday approved the site plans for development of the Southern Heights View Condominiums at 1700 East 22nd Street.  The site plan had previously been approved by the Planning Commission and Personnel and Finance Committee, who also approved for recommendation to the full Council, a Tax Increment Financing (TIF) proposal.

Local developer Don Sonntag has asked the City for a $360,000 TIF to help the project move forward. He expects it to be complete in three-years or so. The project includes 28 condo units, with some available for rent. Sonntag estimated it would add $3.4-to 4-million in valuation to the City’s tax roll. (Southern View Site Plans Color)

In action related to Wednesday’s site plan approval, the Atlantic City Council set Feb. 4th at the date for a Public Hearing on the conveyance of the Lot A of the Southern Heights Subdivision, Second Addition.

In other business, the Council passed a resolution committing $190-thousand in matching funds for as part of an internal loan for the Atlantic Airport Corporate Hangar project.  The funds will serve to fill a grant requirement for the estimated $422,700 cost of the project, which includes the demolition of the existing block hangar, asbestos mitigation, completion of a $345,000, 75-by-85 foot hangar and engineering services. The Airport Commission has already secured $150,000 in the form of an Iowa DOT General Aviation Infrastructure grant, plus they have $32,700 in cash on-hand. That leaves them with a shortfall of $240,000.

The Commission has proposed to lease the completed hangar to two prospective clients for a period of eight years, with the option to renew, plus $25,000 down, each. The clients would pay $1,000 each per month to have their corporate jets stored, which would generate $192,000 over the life of the lease. The Commission would repay the City $2,000 per month for a term not to exceed 8-years, from the proceeds of the hangar lease.

Reynolds gets life in prison w/out parole

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

An Oakland man convicted in the April 2014 shooting death of 64-year-old Patricia Kinkade-Dorsey has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. KETV in Omaha reports the sentences was handed down Wednesday afternoon in Pottawattamie County District Court.

Late last year, a jury of three men and nine women found Reynolds guilty of first-degree murder after just three-hours of deliberations. Reynolds shot Kinkade-Dorsey following an evening of drinking with family and friends.

Reynolds reportedly stared emotionless at a corner of the room as members of the victim’s family read impact statements in court.

2 arrested on drug charges last week in Cass County

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Two people were arrested on drug charges last week, in Cass County. The Sheriff’s Office said Wednesday (Today), 23-year old Nicholas Dean Anderson, of Atlantic, was arrested Jan. 15th on charges of Possession of a Controlled Substance and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Anderson was taken to the Cass County Jail where he was released the following day on $1,000 bond.

And on January 13th deputies arrested 33-year old Jacob Allen Cochran, of Red Oak, and 26-year old Jodi Lynn Brookshire, of Atlantic. Cochran was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Brookshire was charged with Driving While Barred. Both were taken to the Cass County Jail where they were released the following day on their own recognizances.

That same day, deputies in Cass County arrested 35-year old Joshua James Mullen, of Atlantic, on a District Court warrant for Violation of Probation. Mullen was taken to the Cass County Jail where he remains held on $20,000 bond. And on January 14th, 41-year old Jeremy Eugene Jameson, of Anita, turned himself in to the Cass County Sheriff’s Office on a Pottawattamie County warrant. He was  transferred to Pottawattamie County authorities later that day.

Pope removes Iowa priest accused of abusing minor years ago

News

January 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Pope Francis has defrocked an Iowa priest who was accused of abusing a minor years ago. Howard Fitzgerald, who worked at parishes in central and western Iowa over the last 35 years, received notice of the pope’s decision Monday. Fitzgerald had been placed on indefinite leave in June from his most recent position serving at two Indianola parishes and Simpson College.

A Des Moines Archdiocese review committee found credible evidence that Fitzgerald sexually abused a minor in a “decades-old incident.”  At the victim’s request, church officials have not released information about when and where the abuse occurred.

Bishop Richard Pates wrote in a memo to employees that he’s informed Fitzgerald that the pope “had personally granted dispensations in his case from the obligations of the priesthood and sacred celibacy.”