712 Digital Group - top

Wind Turbine goes up in flames near Menlo

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

A massive fire destroyed a wind turbine and burned a large farm field in Adair County Tuesday morning. The fire burned so hot it destroyed the 22-story tall structure. It consumed the nacelle that holds the generator and one giant blade, which crashed to the ground in flames. The fire eventually spread to the cornfields below. That created a giant plume of smoke that spread north toward Interstate 80. The smoke was visible for miles.

Emergency crews from Adair and surrounding towns couldn’t do much but watch the fire. They had no equipment to reach the top of the wind turbine. Officials say it’s lucky that the field was freshly plowed, and that stopped the fire spreading too far. Adair County emergency manager Robert Kempf said it was fortunate the field had already been harvested, so  no crops were lost.

MidAmerican Energy says it doesn’t have a cause for the fire, but it is investigating.

Iowa DOT crews are ready for the first snowfall

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The calendar says we’re in the middle of autumn but it’s now wintertime, at least according to the Iowa Department of Transportation. Craig Bargfrede, the D-O-T’s winter operations administrator, says they’ve been planning for the cold weather driving season for months, and they are prepped for winter every year by October 15th, which was this past Sunday. “From a material standpoint, we’re sitting in a very good position statewide about at 104% of capacity, which is about 253,000 tons of salt stored in the garages all spread across the state,” Bargfrede says. “We have 101 garages across the state and a few offsite locations that the salt is stored in.” D-O-T staffers are staying in good practice and Bargfrede says they’re ready for that first snowfall.

“Training has been underway,” he says. “Each fall, we do hands-on training with the field staff. We have a driving simulator that our field staff take a two-hour course, kind of a refresher course, for the most part.” While October 15th may seem a bit early for winter conditions to set it, Bargfrede says the D-O-T never wants to be caught unprepared.

“Our staff start reporting winter road conditions on 511,” he says. “They start prepping, finalizing equipment prep, calibration on our equipment. There’s a litany of tasks that they have to do and complete and have ready to go around that October 15 timeframe.” The D-O-T is looking for more snowplow operators, especially if you’re C-D-L certified. Call your nearest D-O-T garage for more information, or visit Iowa D-O-T-dot-gov-slash-careers. (iowadot.gov/careers)

MidAmerican testing system to keep turbine red warning lights off most of the time

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Residents of four Iowa counties may notice there are no red lights now blinking in the night sky. MidAmerican energy spokesman Geoff Greenwood says the company is testing a new radar system where the lights on some 200 wind turbines in Adair, Audubon, Cass and Guthrie counties are only on when needed.”The lights are off all the time, unless our system detects an aircraft in the area within about three miles of the wind farm. And so this system, we expect will reduce nighttime lighting by at least 95 percent. So it’s going to be a dramatic drop in nighttime lighting,” Greenwood says.

He says the commercial jets that regularly fly over Iowa at high altitudes would not set off the system. Greenwood says warning lights have been on top of wind turbines since they started putting them up.”Anything that’s a few 100 feet up into the air, if the F-A-A requires warning lights so pilots know that there is an obstruction in the area,” he explains. “So as you drive in rural Iowa at night, you’ll notice all these red flashing lights.”

He says they just recently started testing the system for the Eclipse the Morning Light wind farms in the four counties.”Area residents would have noticed that the lights were off and probably wondered what’s going on here,” he says. “Well, that’s what’s going on is we’re testing this new system. And we expect that from here on out the lights should be off most of the time at these three wind farms during nighttime hours.” Greenwood says they are looking for input on the change from residents and pilots. “We know the F-A-A has signed off on this and believes it’s safe, we’re confident it’s safe. It will protect nighttime skies for pilots, make sure that they are safe, but it will also darken the nighttime skies. And that’s why we think that the communities where we’re testing this will really be happy with the way this turns out,” he says.

He says they will runs tests throughout the next year to see how everything works. “How weather may impact it, how things like ice may impact it. It just makes sure that it works as advertised,” Greenwood says. “And it’s something that we would like to look at for other Mid American wind farms.”

Greenwood says it may be a system they used with new wind farms and they could also look at a system for other wind farms as they take down components and replace them with new ones.

Villisca man arrested for OWI

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports a traffic stop at around 5-p.m. Tuesday in the 2300 block of Highway 71, resulted in the arrest of 64-year-old David Carroll, from Villisca. He was charged with OWI/1st offense with a .147 BAC. Carroll was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 cash bond.

3 Red Oak High School juveniles arrested following a fight

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak say three juvenile females were arrested Tuesday afternoon, following an incident that occurred as classes were dismissing for the day at the Red Oak High School. Authorities report Police were notified about a fight that happened at the High School. After a brief investigation, a 15-year-old female was arrested for Assault and Disorderly Conduct. another 15-year-old female and a 17-year-old was arrested for Disorderly Conduct.

All the teens were cited into Juvenile Court and released to their parents.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Wed., Oct. 18, 2023

Weather

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: A slight chance of showers between 9am and noon. Mostly cloudy during the morning, then sunny during the afternoon, with a high near 66. Breezy, with a southwest wind 10 to 18 mph becoming west northwest in the morning. Winds could gust as high as 24 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Tonight: A slight chance of showers between 8pm and midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 47. West northwest wind 11 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, with a high near 64. Northwest wind around 14 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 70. Breezy.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 45.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 67. Breezy.

Tuesday’s High in Atlantic was 70. The low was 31. Last year on this date, the high in Atlantic was 43 and the low was 13. The record high for Oct. 18th in Atlantic was 86 in 2003. The record low was 13 in 2022. Sunrise is at 7:35. Sunset is at 6:35.

Ramaswamy says students shouldn’t be blacklisted for dumb statements about Israel

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy says some college student groups have made atrocious statements in support of Hamas terrorists who attacked Israel this month, but the answer isn’t to blacklist students.  “They’re students. Sometimes they do silly things. They do dumb things,” Ramaswamy says. “That’s part of what maturation in college is all about.” Ramaswamy says companies have a right to decide not to hire those students, but Ramaswamy says, as a free speech advocate, he believes it would be more productive to have a conversation with those students.

“I think the right answer to bad speech, especially on a college campus, isn’t suppressing that. it’s more speech,” Ramaswamy says. “It’s actually showing why those ideas are wrong.” Ramaswamy, a critic of cancel culture, has spent more time campaigning in Iowa than his primary Republican rivals. One of his leading proposals is a proposed constitutional amendment to raise the voting age to 25 — with exceptions for young adults who enter the military, work as a first responder or take the test immigrants take to become citizens.

Ramaswamy says if that policy had been in force in 2003 — when he turned 18 — he may have become “far more engaged” in politics. Ramaswamy, who is 38, told the Wall Street Journal he has cast ballots in two presidential elections — voting for a libertarian in 2004 and voting forTrump in 2020. “Keep in mind that when the voting age was lowered to 18, it was in the context of the draft for the Vietnam War and so that made immense sense at that time,” Ramaswamy says. “Today, we don’t have a draft, but I do think that we have also lost our sense of civic duty.”

Ramaswamy says his proposed constitutional amendment would make citizenship mean something. Ramaswamy calls Donald Trump the best president of the 21st century, but he suggests it’s time for the G-O-P to choose a younger nominee in 2024. “How are we going to reunite this country and take our ‘America First’ agenda even further? And I think it’s going to take a member of the different generation to do it,” Ramaswamy says. “…I’m young. I have fresh legs. I can reach that next generation and I am reaching that next generation more so than any other candidate in this race.”

Ramaswamy, a former hedge fund analyst, is the founder of companies focused on the development of prescription drugs. Ramaswamy has so far used about 15 million dollars of his own money on his campaign. After the first two televised debates, Ramaswamy saw an increase in donations of less than 200 dollars from individuals. He got two-point-eight MILLION dollars in campaign contributions from that group of donors in the last fundraising quarter.

Site where former Ottumwa hospital once stood may become residential property

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The 10 acre site in Ottumwa where a hospital was demolished in 2019 is under new ownership. St. Joseph’s Hospital in Ottumwa closed in 2015. The Des Moines-based firm called Blackbird Investments acquired the property the same year and announced plans to build housing on the site. After the hospital’s demolition, the lot remained vacant.

According to the leader of a non-profit involved in negotiations, the new owner also plans to convert the site into residential property. The vacant lot has been purchased for an undisclosed price by LifePoint Health. It’s the parent company of Ottumwa Regional Health Center, the 217-bed hospital in Ottumwa.

Fatal stabbing under investigation in Ottumwa

News

October 18th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Ottumwa police are investigating a fatal stabbing that happened Monday night. Police were called shortly before 11 p-m on the report of a stabbing and officers found a man outside the home. The man identified as 34-year-old Samuel Gallegos-Ramirez of Ottumwa, was transported to the Ottumwa Regional Health Center, where he died.

Police have not released any other details of the stabbing and say the body has been sent to the state medical examiner’s office for an autopsy. Police do say there is no known ongoing threat to the public.

Des Moines Christian advances through Atlantic volleyball team

Sports

October 17th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

It was a tough night for The Atlantic Trojans as they fell in three straight sets to the Des Moines Christian Lions. From the first set alone Atlantic saw the talent that players like Hadley Hardersen and Gabby Lombardi contributed to a skilled Lions squad. Both players helped Des Moines Christian reach 9 kills and 4 aces in the first set to take it 25-9.

The next set followed suit with Des Moines Christian quickly scoring points in the second set with 7 blocks and 7 kills winning 25-6. Atlantic’s third and final set on the night had an encouraging moment with Jersey Phippen serving up back to back aces. The strong effort from Phippen would not be enough as the Lions scored 25 to Atlantic’s 8.

Overall Atlantic Head Volleyball Coach Michelle Blake had nothing but respect for the way the Lions played and explained where Atlantic fell short.

The loss hurt, but Coach Blake wanted her players to focus on the future. To look ahead and work hard in not only their athletic lives but personal.

Coach Blake sees a potentially hungry upcoming class and hopes next years group is eager to learn.

Des Moines Christian will go on to play the winner of Van Meter vs Greene County Thursday October 19th at 7pm in their home court.