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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Sidney, Iowa) – The Holiday “Step Wave” will across Iowa is underway through November 28th. The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office says a STEP grant will help buy a camera system for one of their patrol vehicles. The camera system that is in the current vehicles are at getting to the end of their support. Watch Guard has discontinued the body cameras that the S/O uses, and they will discontinue the car cameras in 2024. Support for the system Fremont County uses will eventually stop. The cost is about five-thousand dollars for the car system and installation per vehicle.
During the Wave the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office will be doing several projects with the Iowa State Patrol in the county, including a seatbelt enforcement. Chief Deputy Sheriff Tim Bothwell says “Many times, when we are doing seatbelt enforcement, we hear that wearing one should be “my choice”.
“Not wearing one,” he says, “can have many immediate side effects, death, or disability. Trauma to the family and friends to the loss of a loved one. Along with financial loss and the stability of the household.”
November 17, 2023 (DES MOINES, IA) – The Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA) Board, today (Friday), approved an award for a manufacturer in Independence, which will assist in the creation of 229 jobs and result in nearly $15 million in new capital investment for the state. The board also approved innovation funding in support of two startups located in Cedar Rapids and Des Moines. In addition, IEDA approved assistance from Iowa’s State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) Innovation Fund for a startup in Des Moines.
The newly formed Independence Foods LLC will manufacture a wide range of food products. The company plans to purchase an existing pet food facility in Independence and make upgrades to accommodate production capabilities and requirements. The project represents a capital investment of $14.8 million and is expected to create 229 jobs incented at a qualifying wage of $25.90 per hour. The board awarded $1.5 million in direct financial assistance through the High Quality Jobs (HQJ) program.
Cedar Rapids’ FES Solutions, LLC developed a market-ready fire extinguisher stand for construction companies. Drawing on years of expertise in the construction industry, the start-up company identified the need for a consistent product that was typically made with leftover project materials. The prototype has the potential to offer a more durable and lighter weight solution. The company was awarded a $50,000 Proof of Commercial Relevance (POCR) loan for IP development and evaluation, market analysis, proof of concept work, and market planning and entry activities.
Another start-up company, Ten5, Inc., based in Des Moines, created a communications platform for the trucking industry to improve driver safety and fleet productivity and lower driver and dispatcher turnover rates. The platform uses a driver voice application that allows the driver to communicate hands-free using voice input only. It also allows dispatchers and managers to prioritize driver messaging, which reduces the number of driving delays and distractions. The company was awarded a $50,000 POCR loan for product refinement, key personnel, and market planning and entry activities.
Award recommendations for those funds are made by the Technology Commercialization Committee to the IEDA Board for approval.
Hummingbirds, based in Des Moines, is an SaaS-enabled marketplace that helps brands find and work with local people to drive awareness and sales. Customers can create a campaign inside the software and their content creators (called “hummingbirds”) express interest in the campaign. Customers select interested hummingbirds and provide a complimentary perk to experience their brand and share about it on social media. The company was awarded a $250,000 an SSBCI Innovation Acceleration Launch Fund loan, for key personnel.
The SSBCI program’s Innovation Fund increases assistance available through Iowa’s innovation continuum to support entrepreneurs through concept, launch and expansion. Award recommendations for these funds are made by the SSBCI Review Committee to the IEDA director for approval. The committee met on November 14, 2023, to review eligible applications.
(Adair/Guthrie Center, Iowa) – The Adair-Casey and Guthrie Center Community School District Boards of Education held separate, regular monthly meetings this past week. The Adair-Casey Board met Monday evening, in Adair. Shared Superintendent Josh Rasmussen told KJAN News their discussion items included an Early Retirement Police, Enrollment numbers, and the Little Smiles Daycare center, in Adair.
With regard to Early Retirement, Rasmussen said the A-C Board looked at some early numbers, and when it was offered last. The last discussion item was Enrollment.
In their consent agenda, the Board on approving Special Education Contracts, and other matters.
Superintendent Josh Rasmussen said the Guthrie Center School Board held their Organizational meeting Wednesday evening, in Guthrie Center.
The Guthrie Center Board, he said, also discussed the Early Retirement Policy, which they will also be on their agenda next month.
He said they’re really looking forward to the Thanksgiving Break (Nov. 22 through the 27th).
(Radio Iowa) – The Board of Regents has voted to adopt ten recommendations proposed by the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion study group. One of the recommendations is that the three state universities cut D-E-I programs that aren’t necessary for research contracts or accreditation. Study group member David Barker says another asks the three universities to explore strategies for advancing diversity of intellectual perspectives among job applicants. “Simply asking the universities to think about their hiring practices in a way that might bring in an area of diversity that may have been neglected in the past and that’s diversity of philosophical perspective,” Barker says. “And, you know, we’ll see what universities do with that and what ideas they come up with.” Regent Abby Crow says that seems to contradict cutting other D-E-I initiatives.
“I don’t think we can pick and choose which aspects of diversity that we want to encourage more at the universities. I think that if want these hiring practices to be broadly universal equal, I don’t understand how uplifting one and reducing others is fair,” Crow says. Crow offered and amendment that would change the language to simply issue a reminder to universities on hiring practices. Regent Barker did not favor the amendment.
“Some of the feedback that we got from the universities when we asked about increasing philosophical diversity was that they didn’t know how to do that,” he says. “And so that’s kind of why this is worded the way it is that we’d like them to explore possibilities for how to do that. Now, their answer might be that they can’t. But we’d like them to explore possible methods for doing that.” Crow’s amendment to change the language failed. The D-E-I study was part of a requirement by the Iowa Legislature. Barker isn’t sure if the recommendations will be the end of the issue.
“I have no idea whether the legislature will, you know add to this, will take additional action on D-E-I,” Barker says. “We, we looked at this ourselves and decided what recommendations we wanted and the legislature might decide to move to not deal with the issue anymore or they might decide to do more.”
The recommendations were approved at the Board of Regents’ meeting Thursday. The schools are expected to submit their plans for implementing these changes in the spring.
(Omaha, NE) – Today’s scammers want gift cards as payment, leaving those unaware of this tactic vulnerable to schemes designed to commit fraud. Better Business Bureau (BBB) research shows fraud reports to BBB Scam Tracker involving gift cards as a form of payment spiked in the first three quarters of 2023, up 50% from the same period the year prior. Scammers have doubled down on gift cards as a method to steal money from consumers – especially online shoppers – leading retailers to implement new fraud prevention solutions in response.
A new BBB study update, “Growth of gift card scams causes retailers to innovate solutions,” examines patterns of reports, dives deep into court documents, reviews financial losses, and highlights interviews with affected consumers. The goal is to educate everyone on the tactics scammers use with gift cards.
Key findings:
Key statistics reported to BBB and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) since 2020 about gift card payment scams:
Richard in Tempe, Arizona, reported to Scam Tracker he received a call from someone claiming to be from Amazon. There was a suspicious charge on his account, they said, and it looked like possible identity theft. The person claiming to be from Amazon offered to connect him with someone from the government. He was asked to withdraw $10,000 and convert it to gift cards. He sent several hundred dollars before realizing everyone involved were scammers.
A Nebraska couple, eager to secure a rental car for their Florida vacation, mistakenly dialed what they believed to be Enterprise after a Google search. Falling for an apparent deal with American Express that allowed them to use pre-paid cards for rental savings, the couple sent $400 to scammers posing as Enterprise agents. When the scammers claimed the cards were invalid and demanded an extra $400, the couple grew suspicious. Realizing the deception, Sue and Darwin promptly contacted the legitimate Enterprise hotline, where a representative confirmed they had been scammed.
A Nebraska woman’s quest for a furry companion turned into a heartbreaking ordeal as she encountered not one, but two scams while searching for a puppy. In both instances, the scammers requested payments in gift cards, a red flag that the woman unfortunately failed to recognize. On the second occasion, Jill visited the specified, local address. To her dismay, upon arriving at the location, a woman informed her that she had fallen victim to a scam.
BBB tips to spot a gift card scam
Follow advice and report suspected scams to BBB Scam Tracker and the Federal Trade Commission.
(Glenwood, Iowa) – The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports a man from Bellevue, Nebraska, was arrested Thursday morning at the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office. 52-year-old Brent Edward Johnson was taken into custody on a Mills County warrant for Failure to Appear (FTA) on a Criminal Mischief in the 3rd Degree, charge. Johnson’s bond was set at $2,000.
Des Moines, IA – State Auditor Rob Sand today (Friday) urged organizations and individuals to take steps to increase measures to safeguard their systems against cyber-attacks. In a news release, Sand said “Individuals, businesses, schools, and government entities are all susceptible to cybercrimes. It’s important for everyone to increase cybersecurity measures because a deficiency in one system can give criminals access to mounds of data that can result in cybercrimes like identity theft.”
The most common cybercrimes include Business Email Compromise (BEC), identity theft, ransomware, and spoofing and phishing scams. On average, the FBI received 2,300 cybercrime complaints per day in 2021, resulting in $6.9 billion in losses to victims. Iowa ranks 21st in the country in the number of cybercrime victims per state, losing a total of $33.8 million dollars to cybercrimes. According to Sand, “BEC attacks were reported to the Auditor’s Office by state and local governments, as well as schools.” He said he was the target of a BEC scheme last year, but, “Thanks to some vigilant state workers, the scam was squashed.”
BEC and Email Account Compromise (EAC) are sophisticated scams that are carried out when legitimate email accounts are compromised. The compromised account is then used to send fraudulent emails soliciting funds that are directed to illicit accounts. Combined losses in 2021 totaled $2.4 billion.
Measures to protect organizations from cybercrime include:
The Auditor’s Office is partnering with the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners for International Fraud Awareness Week in an effort to draw attention to the latest forms of fraud and measures to prevent fraud. To report the misuse of public funds or resources, email info@aos.iowa.gov or call 515-281-5834. Additional information on fraud prevention can be found on the Auditor of State website, Facebook, and X, formerly known as Twitter.
GRIMES, Iowa – Nov. 17, 2023 – If you travel on Interstate 80 near Altoona, you need to be aware of an upcoming construction project next week that may slow down your trip.
Starting on Monday night, Nov. 20, from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m., weather permitting, construction crews will work on resurfacing the bridge decks on I-80 over Fourmile Creek near Altoona. This will require alternating lane closures on the westbound lanes of I-80. On Tuesday night, Nov. 21, from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m., crews will work on resurfacing the bridge decks on the eastbound lanes of I-80 which will require alternating lane closures. You will follow a marked detour route for ramp closures affected by this construction project.
The latest traveler information is available anytime through the 511 system. Visit 511ia.org; call 511 (within Iowa) or 800-288-1047 (nationwide).
(Radio Iowa) – Dozens of Iowa pastors and worship leaders are endorsing Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for president today (Friday). Darran Whiting, pastor of Liberty Baptist Church in Cedar Rapids, is one of the people signing on to the DeSantis campaign’s Faith and Freedom Coalition. Whiting says it’s time to make his choice public. “I appreciate the stand that Governor DeSantis has taken, especially on life,” Whiting says. “Not that there aren’t other good candidates, but at this point I think Governor DeSantis is the right man at the right time.” Former President Donald Trump’s criticism of DeSantis for signing a Florida law to ban most abortions after the sixth week of a pregnancy was a defining moment for Whiting.
“I am pro-life. I don’t think it’s a terrible mistake to protect life at six weeks,” Whiting says, “and I think it’s a terrible mistake for former President Trump to say that.” And, if Trump winds up being the Republican Party’s 2024 presidential nominee, he will not get Whiting’s vote. “I cannot vote for somebody who tried to overthrow the government,” Whiting says. “I appreciate the Supreme Court justices that he put into place.
“I appreciate some of his policies, but I absolutely, positively cannot endorse his rhetoric, his divisiveness, his lack of constitutional knowledge…We can’t afford at this point having a president who could be a felon running this country.”
Whiting says he thought and prayed about this decision and will be proud to Caucus for DeSantis in January. “Just his unwavering stance on life and social issues and his ability to articulate that position is essentially what led me to him,” Whiting says. Nearly 80 percent of likely Iowa Caucus-goers in the recent Des Moines Register “Iowa Poll” said a candidate’s stand on abortion restrictions is either “important” or “extremely important.”
The head of the Iowa Coalition of Pro-Life Leaders endorsed DeSantis in September, as did two Iowa attorneys who’ve represented the State of Iowa against legal challenges of a six week abortion ban.
(Des Moines, Iowa) – Auditor of State Rob Sand, today (Friday), released an audit report on Guthrie County.
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS:
The County’s revenues totaled $19,612,679 for the year ended June 30, 2022, a 2.8% increase over the prior year. Expenses for County operations for the year ended June 30, 2022, totaled $14,213,357, a 10.0% decrease from the prior year. The increase in the revenues is due primarily to an increase in property tax revenue and the significant decrease in the expenses is due primarily to a decrease in rock and sand inventory purchased in fiscal year 2022.
AUDIT FINDINGS:
Sand reported seven findings related to the receipt and expenditure of taxpayer funds. They are found on pages 92 through 98 of this report. The findings address issues such as lack of segregation of duties, material amounts of accounts payable, prepaid expenses and infrastructure and capital asset additions not properly recorded in the County’s financial statements. Sand provided the County with recommendations to address each of these findings.
Five of the seven findings discussed above are repeated from the prior year. The County Board of Supervisors and elected officials have a fiduciary responsibility to provide oversight of the County’s operations and financial transactions. Oversight is typically defined as the “watchful and responsible care” a governing body exercises in its fiduciary capacity.
A copy of the audit report is available for review on the Auditor of State’s website at Audit Reports – Auditor of State.