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FRIDAY, JUNE 9th

Trading Post

June 9th, 2017 by Jim Field

FOR SALE: 2005 Ford Taurus SE, 3.0, 6 cylinder, 4 speed automatic, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, & mirrors, A/C, rear window defroster, spoiler, AM/FM stereo with CD player, clean cloth seats, interval wipers, new tires, new battery, one owner, never smoked in, no rust. Clean title. It has 199,000 miles. This is a good dependable car that runs good and gets good gas mileage. 417-876-7108 is a local phone number. SOLD!

FOR SALE:  locally raised locker beef in quarters, halves or whole.  Call 712-249-7139.

Votto leads Reds to 5-2 win, 4-game sweep of Cardinals

Sports

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

CINCINNATI (AP) — Joey Votto had a two-run homer among his four hits, Adam Duvall had three hits off Mike Leake and the Reds beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-2 on Thursday to complete a four-game sweep.

The Reds hadn’t swept the Cardinals in four games since 2003 in Cincinnati, during the first season at Great American Ball Park. St. Louis has lost seven in a row overall for the first time since 2013.

Scott Feldman (5-4) limited the Cardinals’ slumping lineup to four singles in seven shutout innings. Matt Carpenter hit a two-run homer in the eighth off Austin Brice. Raisel Iglesias got his 12th save.

The Reds traded Leake (5-5) to the Giants for Duvall in 2015, and the right-hander signed with the Cardinals after that season. Leake has yet to beat his former team, going 0-4 in seven starts with a 4.79 ERA.

 

Low expectations greet Hawkeye summer workouts

Sports

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Football team is flying under the radar this summer as the Hawkeyes get ready for a new season. Some of the preview magazines are picking the Hawkeyes to finish fourth in the Big Ten West and much of the doubt surrounds an offense that needs a new quarterback and a thin receiving corps. Junior defensive end Parker Hesse says the low expectations don’t bother them.

As the new players show up for summer workouts Hesse says the focus is on fundamentals and developing team leaders.

Iowa’s hopes on offense hinge on an a veteran offensive line that won the Joe Moore Award as the nation’s top line last season. Senior tack Ike Boettger.

There is not much of an off season anymore for college football players. Senior linebacker Josey Jewell spent some time away between the end of final exams and the start of summer workouts.

The Hawkeyes open next season at home on September 2 against Wyoming.

(Learfield Sports/Radio Iowa)

Ironing out the kinks in the new Iowa law on medical marijuana

News

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A handful of Iowans with chronic epilepsy are waiting for the state to grant their request for a card that shields them from state prosecution if they are caught using cannabis oil to try to reduce their seizures. The 2014 law that had granted state registration cards to chronic epileptics was repealed last month when Governor Branstad approved a NEW medical marijuana law.

Sarah Reisetter, deputy director of the Iowa Department of Public Health, says “At this point in time, we don’t have a way to approve applications for patient and primary caregiver cards that we’re getting, even for patients with intracible epilepsy.”

That’s Today (Thursday), the State Board of Healh voted to ask a legislative committee to approve EMERGENCY rules for issuing the medical cannabis registration cards.

Because of the NEW state law allowing Iowans to use cannabis oil as treatment for more than a dozen conditions, the board’s PROPOSED rules call for issuing cards for patients who have diagnosed with a terminal illness like cancer or debilitating conditions like M-S, Parkinson’s and A-L-S as well as chronic epilepsy.

The legislature’s Administrative Rules Review Committee will consider the issue at its meeting next Tuesday.

(Radio Iowa)

Report: Despite sales tax break, Iowa is still losing manufacturing jobs

News

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

An Iowa research group says the number of manufacturing jobs continues to fall in the state, even after a new sales tax break was given to manufacturers, likely costing the state tens of millions of dollars. Mike Owen, executive director of the Iowa Policy Project, says backers of the tax break cited a common policy idea that lowering taxes leads to more jobs, but that’s not what’s happening.

“What we can clearly see is that from the first nine months, that certainly hasn’t produced — with the sales tax break,” Owen says, “and it’s costing us more money than we expected, so it’s kind of a double hit.”

The tax break allows more exemptions for manufacturers when they’re purchasing supplies. The report says it could cost the state 80-million dollars more than the original projection. Owen says mixing politics with economic analysis may have led to overly-optimistic revenue projections.

Owen says, “At the same time, we’re seeing lower revenues in the sales tax, we’re also seeing jobs continue to decline in the manufacturing sector.” Governor Kim Reynolds is now weighing options to deal with the additional revenue shortfall.

(Radio Iowa w/Thanks to Katarina Sostaric, Iowa Public Radio)

Tuition increase approved for Iowa’s state supported universities

News

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Board of Regents today (on Thursday) approved another tuition increase for resident undergraduate students who will attend Iowa, Iowa State, and UNI. The vote was unanimous. The tuition increase for the upcoming fall semester amounts to five-percent, or $358, more than last fall.

The board had approved a two-percent tuition hike back in December, but decided to boost it another three-percent after the Legislature cut state support to the Regents institutions by nearly 21-million dollars for the current budget year and 9.6-million dollars in 2018.

(Radio Iowa)

Powerball prize now 10th largest after months without winner

News

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — After more than two months without a winner, the Powerball jackpot has grown to $435 million. The jackpot for Saturday night’s drawing would tie for the nation’s 10th largest lottery prize. No one has matched all the balls drawn in the Powerball game since April 1, when a player in Arizona won $60 million.

Powerball drawings are held at 10:59 p.m. Eastern Time on Saturdays and Wednesdays. To win the jackpot, players must match six numbers drawn from a drum. There are five white balls drawn from a drum with 69 balls and one red ball drawn from a drum with 26 balls.

The chance of winning the jackpot is one in 292.2 million. Powerball is played in 44 states, plus Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

CHARLES R. WINCHELL, 84, of Atlantic (Svcs. Private)

Obituaries

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

CHARLES R. WINCHELL, 84, of Atlantic, died Wed., June 7th, at Bergan Mercy Hospital in Omaha. Private/Family Memorial Graveside Services for CHARLES WINCHELL will be held at a later date in the Cambria Cemetery in Cambria, IA.Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

State of Iowa ‘on the brink of not being able to pay our bills on time’

News

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The state treasurer is “raising the red flag” about state government finances. Michael Fitzgerald says the state had to dip into cash reserves to pay all its bills in April. “We have a serious issue here,” Fitzgerald says. “Our financial condition has deteriorated tremendously.”

April is a significant month in the state’s fiscal year. The state must make its monthly payment to public schools and another 325-million or so to health care providers who treat Medicaid patients. In addition, April is the month the state is writing tax refund checks before all the state income taxes owed to the state are paid. “We just squeeked by,” Fitzgerald says. “We came dangerously close to not being able to pay our bills on time.”

Fitzgerald, a Democrat who has been state treasurer since 1979, is asking Republican Governor Kim Reynolds to give her blessing to some “cash flow” borrowing. The state treasurer has the authority to sell short-term bonds to investors to raise money to cover cash flow problems. “Our surplus has been wiped out,” Fitzgerald says. “Our reserve funds are being eaten into and the trend continues to slide.”

Fitzgerald says the state has engaged in cash flow borrowing “many times” in the past. He suggests issuing short-term state bonds in September. “We’re on the brink of not being able to pay our bills on time,” Fitzgerald says. “…I’m raising the red flag.”

Governor Reynolds plans to meet with Republican legislative leaders soon to discuss the state’s troubling finances. The latest report from the non-partisan Legislative Services Agency indicates that over the last 11 months, state tax collections were 100-million dollars below expectations. Reynolds says the numbers “fluctuate daily,” but she isn’t ruling out calling legislators back to Des Moines for a “special session” to enact a plan that ensures the state budget doesn’t slide into a deficit.

(Radio Iowa)

Officials: Chemicals likely cause of sick oak trees in Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 8th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Nearly 1,000 Iowa residents have contacted a state agency about sickly oak tree leaves, and officials say the problem was likely caused by farm chemicals and made worse by weather fluctuations.

Iowa Department of Natural Resources district forester Mark Vitosh tells The Des Moines Register that little can be done to stop the deterioration of the oak leaves besides stopping the use of herbicides. The condition, called leaf tatters, causes leaves to appear as if they’ve been eaten down to the veins.

Department forest health program leader Tivon Feeley says there have been more oak tatters this year because the leaves emerged at the same time chemicals were at peak ambient levels. U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service officials say Iowa makes more reports about sickly oak trees than other Midwest states.