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Prescription pills taken during home burglary in Creston

News

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports a resident living in the 1100 block of S. Lincoln Street told authorities Monday, that sometime between 10-p.m. and Midnight, Sunday, someone entered his home and took several bottles of prescription pills and $380 in cash. The total loss was estimated at $580.

And, Monday morning, a resident of the 300 block of N. Walnut Street, in Creston, told police someone entered her vehicle while it was parked outside her home. Once inside the vehicle, someone took assorted loose change and cash. The loss was estimated at $175.

Both incidents remain under investigation.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 11/29/2016

News, Podcasts

November 29th, 2016 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: 11/29/16

Weather

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly Cloudy to Cloudy. High 48. W @ 15-30.

Tonight: P/Cldy to Cldy w/light rain-snow mix, late. Low 34. NW @ 10-20.

Tomorrow: Cldy w/light rain-snow mix. High 38.  NW @ 15-30.

Thursday: P/Cldy to Cldy. High 38.

Friday: P/Cldy. High near 40.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 53. The 24-hour was 31. Last year on this date, our High in Atlantic was 34 and the low was 29. The Record High in Atlantic on this date was 71 in 1998. The Record Low was -8 in 1891.

Family dispute in Red Oak leads to the arrest of a Louisiana man

News

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports a man from Louisiana was arrested just before 11-p.m. Monday, following an investigation into a family dispute in Red Oak.  Red Oak Police arrested 35-year old Michael Kirk Josephson, of New Orleans, LA., on charges that include Simple Assault and Simple Domestic Assault. Josephson was being held in the Montgomery County Jail without bond, pending an appearance before a magistrate.

Tornadoes damage some buildings in northeast Iowa

News, Weather

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

GRUNDY CENTER, Iowa (AP) – Authorities say tornadoes have damaged some buildings in northeast Iowa. Funnel clouds and tornadoes were reported Monday afternoon in Bremer, Butler, Grundy and Hardin counties, but no injuries were reported. Butler County emergency manager Mitch Nordmeyer says a tornado near Parkersburg pushed some buildings off their foundations.

National Weather Service meteorologist Craig Cogil says November tornadoes are unusual but not unprecedented in Iowa. Service data say 41 tornadoes have hit Iowa in November from 1980 through 2015. Nineteen tornadoes were reported in the state on Nov. 11 last year.

KJAN listening area weather forecast from the NWS: 11/29/16

Weather

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Early This Morning: Partly cloudy. Colder. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Today: Mostly sunny until late afternoon then becoming cloudy. High in the mid 40s. West wind 5 to 15 mph with gusts to around 25 mph.
Tonight: Cloudy. Low in the lower 30s. West wind 10 to 15 mph.
Wednesday: Cloudy. A slight chance of light snow in the morning, then a slight chance of light rain in the afternoon. Breezy. High in the upper 30s. West wind 15 to 20 mph with gusts to around 30 mph. Chance of precipitation 20 percent.
Wednesday Night: Cloudy. Low in the upper 20s. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph with gusts to around 25 mph.
Thursday: Mostly cloudy. High in the upper 30s. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday: Mostly cloudy. High in the mid 30s.

Pate seeks state funding for digital upgrade of voter registration rolls

News

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Secretary of State Paul Pate says computer systems for voter registrations in Iowa AND for registering new Iowa businesses are “running on fumes” and he’s seeking a cash infusion. “We are really depleting every single reserve fund we have,” Pate says. “That’s why I say we’re on the fumes level.”

Pate’s office works with county auditors to manage elections in Iowa. Federal “Help America Vote Act” money has been used up. Plus, Pate says his agency hasn’t gotten a state funding increase in eight years. “Elections, as it is right now, is running on fumes,” Pate says. “…When we run into ’18, that’s it. We will not be able to do several major components of elections without some additional funding.”

Seventy-one Iowa counties have voter registration information in a digital format. Pate and his staff say it would take about 600-thousand dollars to convert the paper records in the other 28 counties into “electronic poll books.” “It would help us with the integrity side because we would have the most current information in front of them, so that when a voter walks into a polling site, we would know if they were an eligible elector,” Pate says. “There would be no doubt in our mind. We’d be able to sit there and cross-reference it with all the lists we’ve worked so hard to put together.”

Pate says there’s been no upgrade to the computer software in his office for managing voter registration data since 2003, despite major changes in election law — like same-day voter registration. “We have kind of baling wire and duct tape here a little bit to try to make it fit,” Pate says.

Pate made the pitch for more money to Governor Terry Branstad Monday afternoon. Branstad says the state budget will be “tight,” but he’d like to find a way to get these updates done before the 2018 General Election. “That’s a way we could ensure the people of Iowa that we’re doing all we can to protect the integrity of the process, avoid fraudulent activities and people maybe voting twice or people that are ineligible voting or making sure that people that are eligible are not denied the opportunity to vote,” Branstad says.

In addition, Pate’s office took in paperwork to register 20-thousand new Iowa businesses this past year. Pate says the computer system that manages THOSE registrations is ancient. “I’m not exaggerating, but I’m telling you come May 31, our vendors will no longer be servicing us,” Pate says. “Our systems are far too old and the parts for our systems…have not really been touched since I was secretary of state 20 years ago and what we’re faced with is…we will have to go to eBay to get parts.”

Pate says he has no more options left and doesn’t have “a rabbit to pull out of a hat” to fix these digital dilemmas without a state budget boost.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa State Patrol: 118 crashes, 5 deaths, 29 OWI arrests over holiday weekend

News

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

More motorists were on the state’s roadways over the long Thanksgiving holiday weekend than possibly any time in history. Iowa State Patrol Sergeant Nate Ludwig  says there were several factors that led to congestion on Iowa’s roads, led by people headed home to see family. “Considering that gas prices are down, the weather we had, and the home football games going on in Ames and Iowa City, we expected this to be one of the busier travel holidays ever in Iowa history,” Ludwig said.

The patrol covered over a-hundred crashes and made more than two dozen OWI arrests. “There was a total of 118 crashes during the four-day period,” Ludwig said. “Twenty-nine were arrested for operating while intoxicated.”

Five people were killed in those crashes. There have now been 359 traffic fatalities in Iowa this year. That is an increase of 72 deaths over 2015, with a little over a month to go in 2016.

(Radio Iowa)

Area Boys/Girls basketball scores from Monday, 11/28/16

Sports

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

BOYS BASKETBALL

Bedford 74, Essex 34

CAM, Anita 52, A-H-S-T-W, Avoca 43

Clarke, Osceola 71, Mount Ayr 35

East Mills 63, Diagonal 31

Logan-Magnolia 46, Westwood, Sloan 45

Southwest Valley 66, Griswold 27

Tri-Center, Neola 63, Charter Oak-Ute 41

GIRLS BASKETBALL

CAM, Anita 52, A-H-S-T-W, Avoca 43

Creston 58, Winterset 50

Essex 57, Bedford 21

Griswold 52, Southwest Valley 42

Logan-Magnolia 61, Westwood, Sloan 56

Mount Ayr 66, Clarke, Osceola 40

Pella Christian 53, ADM, Adel 39

Shenandoah 58, Underwood 51

Treynor 68, Harlan 43

Iowa early News Headlines: Tue., 11/29/16

News

November 29th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

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

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The head of Iowa’s agriculture department is once again asking state leaders for financial help to prepare for potential animal diseases like bird flu. Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey says his request Monday for $500,000 would be used to train livestock farmers to increase biosecurity efforts when responding to outbreaks involving foreign diseases like bird flu, which hit the state in 2015. The request mirrors Northey’s unsuccessful request one year ago to combat the same issue.

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — Crews have completed the first phase of a project to move freshwater mussels as part of the construction of a new bridge across the Mississippi River linking Iowa and Illinois. The Quad-City Times reports that the first phase began in August and was completed in early November. Officials say about 140,600 mussels were moved, including 886 that are federally protected. The second phase of the project will take place before demolition of the existing span.

MARION, Iowa (AP) — Linn County officials will spend $7.2 million to buy 485 acres of land and expand a park. KCRG-TV reports the Linn County Board of Supervisors on Monday announced the purchase of the land, which will expand the nearly 700 acre Squaw Creek Park, near Marion. The county will finance the purchase with money from a local options sales tax designated for conservation projects. The county also will tap money from bonds, budget reserves and the future sale of other land.

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — Police have identified two people killed early Saturday when their car slid across a freeway in Cedar Rapids and slammed into a patrol car. Cedar Rapids police Monday identified those killed as 21-year-old Martrell Demetrius Watson and 22-year-old Kaitlyn Marie Hall-Stougard, both of Cedar Rapids. Police say the crash happened when Watson lost control of a car on Interstate 380 and it crashed into a Cedar Rapids patrol car. Two Cedar Rapids officers were treated for minor injuries.