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Annual organizational meetings set for Boards of Supervisors in Adair & Cass Counties

News

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Board of Supervisors in Adair and Cass Counties will hold their annual organizational meetings Tuesday morning (Jan 3rd), in Greenfield and Atlantic, respectively. The meeting in Atlantic begins at 8:30-a.m., while the Greenfield meeting gets underway at 9-a.m.

Both Boards will take care of Administrative duties that include electing a Board Chair and Vice-Chair for 2017, setting their meeting schedule, approving the appointments of Deputies and/or their assistants; Adopting a Master Matrix livestock Resolution for submission to the Iowa DNR that makes recommendations to approve or deny construction permit applications for livestock facilities, and much more.

In Adair County, a Public Hearing will be held at 9:30-a.m. Tuesday, on a Fiscal Year 2017 Budget Amendment, followed by a Resolution approving the amendment as written. Bob Kempf, with the Adair/Guthrie County Emergency Management Agency, will present a 28-E agreement and change in Tax Draw, to the Board. And, County Engineer Nick Kauffman will present for signature, a Resolution for Empowerment of the Engineering, as well as a Resolution Designating the County Engineer. Kauffman is also serving as Interim County Engineer in Union County.

 

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 1/2/2017

News, Podcasts

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

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Atlantic & Griswold School Board members to attend Legislative Delegation meeting

News

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Members of the Atlantic and Griswold School District’s Boards of Education will meet Tuesday evening in Griswold Midde/High School Library. Available Board members from both schools will be meeting at 6-p.m. with southwest Iowa Representative Tom Moore and Senator Tom Shipley on legislative matters of importance to the districts and education in general.

The session is open for the public to attend. No action is expected, only discussion.

Rose Parade float and Iowans tout organ donation

News

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Thousands of Iowans celebrated the New Year in Pasadena, California last year as the Iowa Hawkeyes played in the Rose Bowl. There will be at least six Iowans there today (Monday) for the annual Rose Parade as part of the Choose Life float honoring organ donations. Iowa Organ Donor Network spokesman, Tony Hakes (like Lakes), says they want everyone to start the year out by thinking about being an organ donor.

“There’s an absolute shortage of organs nationwide and we really feel it’s a solvable problem,” Hakes says. “We encourage everyone to mark ‘yes’ on their driver’s license or register online, or just make their wishes know to their family, because 120-thousand people at any given time are on the wait list.”

Hakes says the organ donation float in the Rose Parade is a great way to bring attention to the issue. Hakes says some 800 million people watch the parade on T-V and one million are there in person, and he says it is a good way to let people know that organ donation “saves lives, it heals lives.”

The float in the parade will include a florograph with a likeness of Iowa organ donor Dyllan Lawson. Lawson had just completed his first year at the University of Iowa in pre-medicine when he was involved in a car accident on June 30th, 2011 that left him with severe head injuries. His organs were donated to four people. Cindy Newton will walk alongside the float which her daughter Carlie will ride on. Cindy donated part of her liver to Carlie, who was born with a disease that kept her liver from functioning.

The Iowa Donor Network has participated in the parade and float for many years. Hakes got to go last year and says all the Iowans there made it special. He says they knew they were going to the parade in the summer and having so many Iowa fans there made it a lot of fun.

For more information on signing up to be an organ donor, go to the Iowa Donor Network website. (http://www.iowadonornetwork.org/)

(Radio Iowa)

CLARA KEARNEY, 86, of Council Bluffs & formerly of Oakland (Svcs. 1/7/17)

Obituaries

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

CLARA KEARNEY, 86, of Council Bluffs (& formerly of Oakland) died Monday, Jan. 2nd, at Jennie Edmundson Hospital, in Council Bluffs. Funeral services for CLARA KEARNEY will be held 11-a.m. Saturday, Jan. 7th, at the Oakland Christian Church. Rieken-Vieth Funeral Home in Oakland has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family will be on Friday, January 6, 2017 from 5-7 PM at the Rieken Vieth Funeral Home in Oakland.

Interment will be in the Oaklawn Cemetery.

CLARA KEARNEY is survived by:

Her daughter – Ellen Terry, of Des Moines.

Her son – Donald (Rita) Kearney, of Council Bluffs

7 grandchildren, 9 great grandchildren, her sister-in-law Lois Bailey, many other relatives and friends.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 1/2/2017

Podcasts, Sports

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast w/Ric Hanson.

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Tips on keeping that resolution to exercise

Sports

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Thousands of Iowans are likely headed to a gym today in hopes of keeping a New Year’s resolution to exercise and lose weight. Studies suggest around 80-percent of those people will fail or quit exercising by March. Alison Phillips, an assistant professor of psychology at ISU, has studied the behaviors of people who’ve been able to develop and maintain exercise as a habit. She suggests newcomers to exercise should choose an activity they might come to enjoy — even if that’s not the case at first.

“Know that, with practice, you will come to like it more. That’s the good news, but it’s not going to be easy to develop the habit,” Phillips says.

Alison Phillips – Photo by Christopher Gannon

“The benefit of habit is once you have it, that is what’s easy to maintain. It’s still going to be tough at first, but choose something you find relatively enjoyable and know that the more you stick with it initially, the more you’re going to come to like it.”

Some people may never come to “enjoy” exercise, but Phillips suggests there are byproducts they might appreciate. “Stress reduction is a form of enjoyment, at least the way I’m speaking about it. So, you might not love your exercise, but if you feel better – less stress – while you’re doing it, that counts,” Phillips says.

Phillips’ study involved monitoring the activity levels for people just starting to work out along with those who had been exercising regularly for at least three months. The results were published in the journal Sport, Exercise and Performance Psychology.

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 1/2/2017

News, Podcasts

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The area’s top news at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

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Skyscan forecast & weather data for Atlantic: 1/2/17

Weather

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Today: Cloudy w/light rain or drizzle. High near 40. E @ 10-15.

Tonight: Cldy w/light drizzle, light rain or flurries. Low 22. N @ 10-20.

Tomorrow: Cldy & windy w/light snow or flurries. High 26. NW @ 15-30.

Wednesday: P/Cldy. High 18

Thursday: P/Cldy to Cldy. High 16.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 37. Our 24-Hour Low (ending at 7-a.m. today) was 19. Last year on this date, our High in Atlantic was 30 and the low was 7. The Record High in Atlantic on this date was 59 in 1939. The Record Low was -19 in 1912, 2001 & 2010.

Vilsack leaving farm country tips for 2018 Farm Bill

Ag/Outdoor

January 2nd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Out-going U.S. Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack has some suggestions for farmers and others who will lobby congress about items in the NEXT Farm Bill. “We faced a very difficult challenge with the recent Farm Bill because the conversation started something like this: ‘We’ve got to save $23 billion,'” Vilsack says. “That was the first thing out of the box. The powers that be decided that saving money was the most important aspect of the Farm Bill.”

Vilsack says, as a result, corn and soybean farmers from the Midwest were “pitted against” southern farmers who raise cotton and produce sugar as the 2014 Farm Bill was written. Vilsack is urging groups in the farm sector to be more vocal advocates of federal crop insurance subsidies and other U-S-D-A programs that provide grants for rural development. Key members of congress say negotiations on the 2018 Farm Bill could begin later THIS month.

“So it’s going to be incredibly important for us to start the conversation with: ‘What is the need in rural America?’ because rural America is an important place. It’s where we get our food. It impacts our water. It’s our feed stock for our energy sources. It’s where we recreate. It’s our military families and, oh yeah, it gives everybody else in the country the ability to do something other than farming because we’re tremendously productive,” Vilsack says. “It’s an important place. It deserves to have a conversation, first and foremost, as to what the need is.”

Vilsack, the former Iowa governor, has been the nation’s top ag official for the past eight years. In 1889, Grover Cleveland was the first president to include an agriculture secretary in his cabinet. There have been 30 ag secretaries since then, five of whom came from Iowa. “Tama Jim” Wilson served three presidents, from 1898 to 1913. Edwin Meredith, founder of the Des Moines-based Meredith publishing company, served a year in President Wilson’s cabinet. Henry C. Wallace and his son, Henry A. Wallace, also did stints as the country’s agriculture secretary during the last century.

(Radio Iowa)