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Bill is an alert to pregnant women about the dangers of CMV

News

April 11th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A nurse and her husband sat quietly crying in an Iowa House balcony last week as a bill inspired by their daughter cleared its final legislative hurdle. Amanda Devereaux of Des Moines contracted a virus known by the initials C-M-V when she was pregnant. As a result, her 18-month-old daughter, Pippa, cannot walk, talk or feed herself and is undergoing physical therapy.

“She’s moderately affected actually,” Devereaux says. “There’s kind of a spectrum with CMV. There’s kids that are born with the virus and never have a single symptom. There’s kids that maybe have just one symptom and then there’s kids that are very severely impacted, all the way up to dying from the virus.” A bill that has cleared the Iowa House AND Senate unanimously would require hearing tests for newborns, since hearing loss is an indicator a baby may have contracted C-M-V in the womb.

In addition, the state will provide doctors with information to pass along to pregnant women about the dangers of C-M-V. It’s a common virus. By the age of five, about one-in-three kids have had it.  “If I had known when I was pregnant that I could catch something from my toddler that would harm my unborn children, I think I would have done things differently,” she says, “but I just had no idea.” Devereaux caught C-M-V from her toddler, who was in day care.

“I would kiss him on the lips. I would share drinks with him,” Devereaux says. “I didn’t really realize that I could actually do my second child so much harm just by doing things that families do.” And Devereaux hopes by telling her story — AND having this bill become law — more pregnant women with toddlers will take precautions to avoid catching C-M-V. “I’m a nurse,” Devereaux says. “I know a lot of things about staying healthy and I didn’t know about this.”

According to the National C-M-V Foundation, only nine percent of pregnant women know about the virus. Each year, about 40-thousand babies in the U.S. are infected with C-M-V before birth. Experts say women who’ve had the virus BEFORE they’re pregnant aren’t at risk of passing it along to their babies.

However, if a woman contracts it for the first time during the first trimester of a pregnancy, that’s when the brain and other major organs are developing. That’s when the virus can cause devastating abnormalities.

(Radio Iowa)

Harper has 4 hits, 3 RBIs as Nationals rout Cardinals 14-6

Sports

April 11th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON (AP) — Bryce Harper tied a career high with four hits and reached base in all six plate appearances as the Washington Nationals routed the St. Louis Cardinals 14-6 on Monday night. Harper drove in three runs during his first four-hit game since April 17, 2013.

Stephen Drew, Adam Eaton and Ryan Zimmerman each had three of Washington’s 19 hits, and the Nationals overcame four errors by breaking open the game in a seven-run eighth inning. Tanner Roark (2-0) allowed five runs — three earned — over five innings. The right-hander worked around three errors committed behind him.

Cardinals starter Adam Wainwright (0-2) gave up six runs and 11 hits over four-plus innings.

Other scores from around the diamonds on Monday:

National League

San Francisco 4, Arizona 1

Cincinnati 7, Pittsburgh 1

N.Y. Mets 4, Philadelphia 3

Chicago Cubs 3, L.A. Dodgers 2

San Diego 5, Colorado 3

American League

N.Y. Yankees 8, Tampa Bay 1

Detroit 2, Boston 1

Oakland 2, Kansas City 0

Seattle 6, Houston 0

Iowa early News Headlines: Tue., April 11th 2017

News

April 11th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Republican lawmakers say they want the state to foot the bill for a new family planning program that excludes funding for Planned Parenthood, a move that resulted from the state’s decision to forgo Medicaid funding in the upcoming budget. GOP lawmakers say they plan to use state money to fund the estimated $3 million program. The funding change was required after the loss of federal Medicaid dollars following approval of a bill requiring that no state funding go toward Planned Parenthood..

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa bill that would have eliminated public access to many 911 calls is dead this session. Caleb Hunter, a spokesman for the Iowa Senate’s Republican majority, confirmed Monday the legislation has been taken off the debate calendar. The bill would’ve declared that 911 calls involving injured victims are medical records and exempt from Iowa’s open records law. All calls regarding minors also would have been confidential.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A small-town Iowa newspaper editorial writer won the Pulitzer Prize on Monday for taking on powerful agricultural organizations after a water utility sued the paper’s home county and two others over farm pollution. Art Cullen, who owns the Storm Lake Times with his brother John, says his editorials were about government transparency.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A state senator is back at the Iowa Capitol after a brief illness that resulted in him being taken by ambulance to a Des Moines hospital. Sen. Rich Taylor, a Democrat from Mount Pleasant, says in a statement he was feeling “ill” Monday at the Capitol. He was taken to a hospital as a precaution. He was later back in the Senate for floor debate.

TUESDAY, APRIL 11th

Trading Post

April 11th, 2017 by Jim Field

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(Update) U. Iowa student, 18, has died after being found unresponsive

News

April 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The University of Iowa says an 18-year-old student died in a residence hall after a caller to police reported he was unresponsive and intoxicated on Saturday night. In a statement Monday, UI officials said that witnesses saw student Sean Wu of Cedar Rapids suddenly tense up “as if he was having a seizure and collapsed.”

UI police officers arrived at Daum Residence Hall at about 10:47 p.m. Saturday, three minutes after a caller reported that Wu had been drinking earlier in the evening. Wu was transported to the hospital, where he later died.

A university statement says that “losing a fellow student and member of our university family is difficult” and that students are encouraged to reach out if they need help.

Bill to keep many 911 calls secret has been blocked in Iowa

News

April 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa bill that would have eliminated public access to many 911 calls is dead this session. Caleb Hunter, a spokesman for the Iowa Senate’s Republican majority, confirmed Monday the legislation has been taken off the debate calendar.

The bill would’ve declared that 911 calls involving injured victims are medical records and exempt from Iowa’s open records law. All calls regarding minors also would have been confidential.

The legislation was introduced in response to the release of 911 calls to The Associated Press that exposed a string of gun accidents in Iowa. While the bill was approved unanimously in the Iowa House, opposition mounted after the AP reported on it.

Hunter says some Republicans had concerns about the bill’s impact on body cameras, since the measure included language regarding video.

BRYAN RUTHERFORD, 58, of Atlantic (Celebration of Life Potluck 4/30/17)

Obituaries

April 10th, 2017 by Jim Field

BRYAN RUTHERFORD, 58, of Atlantic died April 9th at his home in Atlantic. A Celebration of Life Potluck for BRYAN RUTHERFORD will be held at Noon Sunday, April 30th, at the Cass County Community Center in Atlantic (*Location change from Sunnyside Park).  Roland Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Online condolences may be left at www.RolandFuneralService.com

BRYAN RUTHERFORD is survived by:

His sons: Blue (Lisa) Rutherford, of Omaha, and Page (Courtney) Rutherford, of Coralville.

His mother: Ellen Rutherford, of Atlantic.

His brother: Paul (Lori) Rutherford, of Atlantic.

His sister: Tammie (Craig) Shellberg, of Oakland.

8 Grandchildren

Editor in small Iowa town wins editorial writing Pulitzer

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A small-town Iowa newspaper editorial writer has won the Pulitzer Prize for taking on powerful agricultural organizations after a water utility sued the paper’s home county and two others over farm pollution. Art Cullen, who owns the Storm Lake Times with his brother John, says his editorials were about government transparency.

The counties sued by the Des Moines Water Works secretly received money from agricultural groups to fight the lawsuit and the 3,000-circulation twice-weekly newspaper pushed in its reporting to lift the veil of secrecy on who was paying to fight the lawsuit.

The 59-year-old Cullen says he feels vindicated the information was released and he’s proud of the Pulitzer, which recognized him for “tenacious reporting, impressive expertise and engaging writing that successfully challenged powerful corporate agricultural interests in Iowa.”

Audubon man arrested on Probation Violation warrant in Emmet County

News

April 10th, 2017 by Jim Field

An Audubon man wanted since 2012 for Violation of Probation was arrested in Emmet County on Saturday, April 8th.  The Audubon County Sheriff’s Office arrested 29-year-old Randy Travis Kurth on the outstanding warrant.

Kurth plead guilty in 2011 to 2 counts of Carrying Weapons, Reckless Use of Fire, Harassment 1st Degree, and Theft 4th Degree. Charges were filed in 2012 after Kurth allegedly violated the terms of his probation.

Kurth was located in Emmet County on Saturday and transported to the Audubon County Jail and held on $6,000 bond. He is scheduled to appear in district court on Monday, April 24th at 1:30pm.

Iowa may absorb $3M cost of cutting Planned Parenthood funds

News

April 10th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Republicans may order the state to foot the bill for a new family planning program that excludes funding for Planned Parenthood. Key GOP lawmakers confirmed Monday they plan to use state money to fund the estimated $3 million program, which requires Iowa to forfeit millions in federal Medicaid dollars.

Such a move would tap the Iowa Department of Human Services to pay for the program amid separate budget cuts, raising criticism from Democrats that the GOP plan is short-sighted. The move — first reported by the Bleeding Heartland blog — would stray from Gov. Terry Branstad’s original suggestion to use separate federal grant money to pay for the program that purposely excludes health clinics that provide abortions.

Republicans say despite budget cuts, defunding abortion-providing clinics remains a top priority.