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Atlantic’s Cox commits to wrestle at Ellsworth Community College

Sports

March 14th, 2017 by admin

Atlantic/CAM Senior wrestler Carter Cox announced this past week that he will continue his wrestling career at Ellsworth Community College in Iowa Falls and he signed his letter of intent on Tuesday at the Atlantic High School with family and coaching staff present.

Cox made his decision after a visit on Tuesday of last week. Carter said his decision came down to NIACC and Ellsworth and he felt Ellsworth was the right fit for him.

The Ellsworth Panthers are coming off a 5th place team finish in the NJCAA National Tournament.  Carter credited Atlantic/CAM Head Coach Tim Duff with steering him in the right direction throughout his career. Cox has set lofty goals for himself at the next level.

Ellsworth Head Coach Cole Spree said his staff appreciated the success Carter had during his career but were also impressed with him as a person and how he is grown through high school. Coach Spree said it will be up to Carter how much success he has at the next level.

Cox was a four-time state qualifier for Atlantic. He was a state runner-up in 2016 and finished in 5th place this year.  He finished his Trojan career with 157 wins.

12 Iowa deer test positive for chronic wasting disease from 2016-17 hunting seasons

Ag/Outdoor

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has closed the book on its 2016 chronic wasting disease monitoring effort that collected 4,879 tissue samples from wild deer with 12 samples testing positive for the disease. Test results are pending on deer from a handful of counties and on 86 deer tissue samples from the Clayton County special deer collection effort that ended on March 5.

The disease first appearing in the wild deer herd in 2013 and each year since, the DNR has placed extra emphasis to find the extent to which disease is in the area, and to help slow the spread by removing additional adult deer from the local population.

Chronic wasting disease is caused by a misshapen protein, takes 18-36 months to show clinical signs and is always fatal. Epizoic hemorrhagic disease is spread by a biting midge, is often worse during drought years and can occur throughout Iowa.

The Iowa DNR has a goal to collect around 5,000 deer samples from across the state each year, with an emphasis in and near areas where disease has been confirmed. For the 14 counties near areas where CWD has been confirmed, quotas range from 50 samples to 500. The remaining counties have a quota of 15 samples each.

The CWD focus areas include the northeast quarter of Pottawattamie County. The disease has been found in southeastern Nebraska near the Missouri River which will begin a new focus area with a quota of 750 samples along Iowa’s western border from Fremont to Woodbury County.

There are some things hunters can do to help with the surveillance. First, remove any mineral blocks and feeders that unnaturally concentrates deer and increases the chance of spreading any disease. They can also provide tissue samples to the DNR for testing and report any sick or emaciated deer to the DNR.

Iowa West Foundation Awards nearly $6.5 Million in Grant and Initiative Funding

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

(Council Bluffs, IA) The Iowa West Foundation Board of Directors recently approved nearly $6.5 million in grants and initiatives funding to 22 nonprofit organizations and government entities in southwest Iowa and eastern Nebraska. For the second year, the Foundation awarded $1.8 million in multi-year funding to seven nonprofit organizations in Pottawattamie County. The multi-year funding program is designed to provide essential general operating funds over a three-year period to organizations who fulfill the most critical roles in Pottawattamie County. The organizations include Boys and Girls Club of the Midlands, FAMILY, Inc., Green Hills AEA, Heartland Family Service, Justice For Our Neighbors, Lutheran Family Services and the MICAH House.

Pottawattamie Arts, Culture & Entertainment (PACE), a nonprofit dedicated to strengthening, developing and promoting art, cultural, and historical institutions and activities in Council Bluffs and Pottawattamie County, received an installment of $1.2 million in funding as part of the Foundation’s $7 million commitment to the initiative, for the proposed renovation of the historic Harvester II building in downtown Council Bluffs into an arts and culture center. PACE Executive Director Judy Davis said construction is expected to start early next year.

Also in the Foundation’s “placemaking” focus area, The Nature Conservancy received $400,000 to acquire more than 500 acres of the Loess Hills Natural Area near Council Bluffs, while the City of Council Bluffs received $175,000 for Loessfest 2017. The recently announced lineup for the Memorial Day weekend events can be found at http://loessfest.com/.

In addition to placemaking quality of life grants, the Foundation also awarded a placemaking infrastructure grant to the Pottawattamie County Board of Supervisors for the CITIES program. Collectively, the communities of Macedonia, Minden, Treynor and Walnut received $921,525 for projects including façade upgrades, streetscape enhancements and water main and well construction.

The Foundation also awarded nearly $30,000 to three Pottawattamie County fire departments as part of its ongoing commitment to rural southwest Iowa communities. The Lewis Township and Hancock Volunteer Fire Department received $10,000 and Carson Volunteer Fire Department received $9,852, all for equipment upgrades.

The Letter of Inquiry period for the Cycle 2 grant application process opened on March 1 and will close March 15. Applications are due April 17, due to the 15th falling on a weekend. Grant application and initiative decisions will be made in June. Please see the Grantmaking section of the Iowa West Foundation website for more information (http://www.iowawestfoundation.org/ )

The Iowa West Foundation is one of the largest private foundations in the Midwest. It has distributed more than $400 million to nonprofits and governmental agencies through southwest Iowa and eastern Nebraska since the inception of its grant program. Funding for the grants comes from investment earnings and the Iowa West Racing Association, which receives contractual fees from casino operators, Ameristar and Harrah’s.

Alliant to seek rate hike of more than 10 percent, exec says

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) – An executive says Alliant Energy subsidiary Interstate Power & Light Co. will file next month for a rate increase that would raise the average residential customer’s bill by more than 10 percent.

Joel Schmidt is a vice president for Alliant, and he told the Dubuque Telegraph Herald that the proposed base rate increase would be the first sought since 2010 and wouldn’t take full effect until early next year. Higher rates also will be sought for commercial customers.

He says the filing to the Iowa Utilities Board is scheduled for April 3. Schmidt says Alliant is seeking the increase primarily to modernize and maintain its grid and provide money for investments in clean energy. Alliant serves 83 Iowa counties.

3 arrested on drug charges in Mills County

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Mills County Sheriff’s Office today (Tuesday), released a report on arrests that took place over the past week, including three people who were taken into custody on drug charges. On March 10th, 18-year old Amberdawn Skye Tarr, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance. On March 11th, 21-year old Jonathan James Hahn, of Glenwood, was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance, Possession of Contraband and Selling/giving/supplying alcohol to a person under the legal age. And, on Monday,19-year old Juan Diego Guillen, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

Others arrested include: 18-year old Montana Thomas Garbez, of Council Bluffs, on a warrant for Domestic Abuse Assault; 38-year old Wendy Lynn Meadows, of Glenwood, on a warrant out of Pottawattamie County, for Probation Violation; 32-year old Nicholas John Horgdal, of Henderson, for Driving While Barred.

TUESDAY, MARCH 14th

Trading Post

March 14th, 2017 by admin

FOR SALE: Quilts. Various sizes and designs. 712-249-5352.

FOR SALE: 1991 Chevy 250 extended cab pickup with no motor. Could be used for parts, side panels, back box, seats, everything usable. Call 712-269-9384.

FOR SALE: 1) Wood-grain dining table, leaves, and 4 roller chairs. 2) Rust color swivel rocker. 3) Antique children’s tricycle. 4) Singer sewing machine- head only. Model #2732. Call 712-243-3613 in Atlantic.

FREE: 1) Two baby beds. One small, infant to 1-year. One full-size with drop side. 2) Double bed frame with bookcase headboard. 712-243-3613 in Atlantic.

FOR SALE: 2007 8 ft. Aluma trailer with 13” mag wheels. Great for hauling your golf cart! Little used. $950 or best offer. Call 712-249-3976.  SOLD!

FOR SALE: Women’s Columbia Titanium black/white jacket, new, ($125), asking $40. Several men’s long sleeve shirts, size med and large, some worn only once, asking $5. Several women’s long sleeve button up shirts, size sm (some western), asking $5-10. (like new), some worn only once. Clean/pet free/smoke free, Oak medicine cabinet with trifold mirror $35, Miche demi base bag and 4 shells, new, (Check out swap). Petite Miche bag with 3 shells, new. 712-789-0479

FOR SALE: Sofa, like new condition, pet free/smoke free (changing décor) Paid $800+ and just over a year old, asking $500. 712-789-0479

FREE: 2 year old cat named Peekaboo, orange with white face and paws. 712-249-6622.

 

Backyard and Beyond 03-14-2017

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

March 14th, 2017 by admin

Lavon Eblen speaks with Dawn Marnin and Carrie Schmidt with Cass County Health Systems about a fundraiser gala for 3D mammography at CCHS.

Play

Sen. Grassley reacts to report showing ACA repeal will mean millions more uninsured

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he puts little faith in a new report from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office that bodes ill for the Republican replacement for Obamacare. The report says 14-million fewer Americans will have health care by next year under the replacement plan, with 24-million fewer covered in a decade versus staying with the current law. “It shouldn’t surprise anybody that when the Congressional Budget Office makes forecasts looking ten years into the future, they’re going to be wrong,” Grassley says.

The C-B-O doesn’t have a sterling record when trying to look a decade ahead, he says, especially with regards to health care. Grassley notes, 29-million people are still uninsured under Obamacare and the C-B-O predicted far more would be covered by this point in time. “In 2009 and ’10, when the Congressional Budget Office estimated what Obamacare would cost, it came in at about, for a ten-year figure, of $980-billion I believe,” Grassley says. “It’s come out hundreds of billions of dollars more.”

Under the Affordable Care Act, people who don’t have health insurance face stiff fines on their taxes, but Grassley says the Republican replacement wouldn’t contain that feature, so it’s natural the number of uninsured people would go up. Grassley says the A-C-A is deeply flawed and must be rewritten, though he says it’s still uncertain exactly how that will be accomplished. “The insurance companies are saying that it’s on a death spiral and even if Hillary Clinton had been elected president, there’d have to be big changes made in this program,” Grassley says. “That’s what we’ve been promising the people and I think we have to deliver on it.”

When a report comes out from the C-B-O, Grassley says it’s typically treated like it came from God, so this report may force House leaders to go back to the drawing board with their replacement plan. Tom Price, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, says the C-B-O report is “just not believable.”

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 3/14/2017

News, Podcasts

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

Play

Sioux City school board urges support immigrant children

News

March 14th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) – The Sioux City school board is urging Congress to support immigrant students. The Sioux City Journal reports that the board voted Monday for a resolution that urged members of the U.S. House and Senate to adopt the Bridge Act. The measure would continue protections granted to young people under the program called Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which is aimed at helping young people who arrived in this country as children.

The Bridge Act would grant provisional protected-presence status and impose restrictions on the sharing of information for immigration enforcement. Last month the Des Moines school board decided the district will act as a sanctuary for students who entered the country without legal permission and will require that immigration inquiries go through the superintendent’s office and the district’s attorney.