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Red Oak Cross Country Invitational 09/12/2016

Sports

September 13th, 2016 by admin

Red Oak Cross Country Invitational
Monday, September 12, 2016

GIRLS

Team Results

  1. Atlantic 23
  2. Harlan 49
  3. Griswold 85
  4. Clarinda 103
  5. Southwest Valley 134
  6. Red Oak 140
  7. Southwest Iowa 167

Individual Results

  1. Ashley Wendt, Atlantic
  2. Greichaly Kaster, Harlan
  3. Katlyn Holaday, CAM
  4. Emma Lucas, Bedford
  5. Karsyn Rush, Atlantic
  6. Pluma Pross, Atlantic
  7. Halsey Bailey, Atlantic
  8. Joanna Topham, Griswold
  9. Savannah Parman, Harlan
  10. Shelby VanFosson, Clarinda

Full Results: RO XC Varsity Girls results 2016 1

BOYS

Team Results

  1. Atlantic 36
  2. Red Oak 61
  3. Harlan 96
  4. Southwest Iowa 123
  5. Clarinda 130
  6. Griswold 142
  7. Bedford 150
  8. Southwest Valley 157

Individual Results

  1. Phoenix Shadden, Atlantic
  2. Bradley Dennis, Atlantic
  3. David Thompson, Griswold
  4. Stephen McGee, Southwest Iowa
  5. Alec Selberg, Red Oak
  6. Jalen Petersen, Atlantic
  7. Dakota Holaday, CAM
  8. Cale Pellett, Atlantic
  9. Adam Thompson, Southwest Iowa
  10. Drew Voge, Harlan

Full Results: RO XC Varsity Boys results 2016

Atlantic Results: Red Oak Results 2016

Oven Beef Stew (9-13-2016)

Mom's Tips

September 13th, 2016 by Jim Field

  • 2 lbs. beef stew meat
  • 2 large carrots, cut into good sized sliced
  • 1 large onion, cut into chunks
  • 2 stalks of celery, cut into chunks
  • 2 medium potatoes, quartered
  • 1/2 package frozen peas
  • salt and pepper
  • 2 can mushroom soup

Combine everything in casserole dish.  Don’t brown meat.  Cover and bake at 275 degrees for 4 hours.

(Jeanette Pagel)

Mom made kids sleep in unsanitary room, authorities say

News

September 13th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

MASON CITY, Iowa (AP) – A Mason City mom has been accused of making her kids sleep in a feces-covered room. Online court records say 25-year-old Alexis Martinez was arrested Monday and is charged with three counts of felony neglect of a dependent person. Cerro Gordo County Jail records say she remained in custody Tuesday.  Court documents say Martinez forced her children, ages 2, 4 and 6, in late August to sleep for a week in a room that had feces on the walls and floor.

Heartbeat Today 9-13-2016

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

September 13th, 2016 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Larry Weber, Director of IIHR Hydroscience & Engineering at the University of Iowa, about a watershed management meeting being held in Oakland on Wednesday to discuss the formation of a Watershed Management Authority in the West and East Nishnabotna River area.

Play

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 9/13/2016

Podcasts, Sports

September 13th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast w/Jim Field.

Play

Creston Police report (9/13/16)

News

September 13th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department says officials with Agrivision (710 E. Taylor St.) in Creston, reported Monday that sometime between Aug. 13th and 14th, someone stole a zero-turn radius lawnmower from their business. The machine was valued at $3,500.

And, Monday afternoon, 52-year old Robbie Allen Dohrn, of Creston, was arrested in the 500 block of S. Birch Street in Creston, for allowing an animal to run at-large. Dohrn was cited for the offense, and then released.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 9/13/2016

News, Podcasts

September 13th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

Local Rainfall Totals ending at 7:00 am on Tuesday, September 13

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

September 13th, 2016 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  .68″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .6″
  • Massena  .51″
  • Elk Horn  1.01″
  • Avoca  .7″
  • Audubon  .3″
  • Neola  1.2″
  • Villisca  .85″
  • Woodbine  .18″
  • Clarinda  .76″
  • Glenwood  .46″
  • Shenandoah  1.56″
  • Hastings  1.12″
  • Randolph  1.79″
  • Denison  .34″
  • Carroll  .1″
  • Red Oak  .64″
  • Underwood  .38″
  • Sidney  1.81″
  • Guthrie Center  .01″

Iowa Hospitals: Medicaid privatization ‘deeply frightening’ for patients, providers

News

September 13th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Hospital Association’s legal counsel is pushing back against Governor Terry Branstad’s statement that having private companies manage care for Iowa Medicaid patients since April 1st has prevented “significant fraud and abuse.” Natalie Ginty of the Iowa Hospital Association spoke yesterday (Monday) during a “listening post” with federal officials. “IHA wants to emphasize that historically Medicaid fraud is extremely rare in Iowa and that if MCOs were actually finding fraud in billing from providers, there would be news of indictments for these supposed crimes,” she says.

One-hundred-18 Iowa hospitals are members of the association. Ginty says hospitals are having trouble getting proper payment from the three private companies. “Instead of fraud, providers are seeing a sharp increase in unpaid or denied Medicaid claims from the MCOs due to increased prior authorizations, unclear claims filing procedures and complete confusion by the MCOs on proper reimbursement requirements,” Ginty says. “…Rather than mislead the public with unfounded claims of fraud and abuse, IHA encourages the Iowa Department of Human Services to focus on real solutions to ensure managed care works.”

Branstad released a statement Monday morning, saying “managed care is working for Iowa taxpayers by stopping improper payments.” According to the governor, there were 318-million dollars worth of “improper” Medicaid payments to Iowa hospitals, doctors and other health care providers in 2014. Since April 1st of THIS year, Dani Valentine of Iowa Specialty Hospitals and Clinics in Belmond and Clarion has tracked down nearly 30 payments due to her organization for care of Iowa Medicaid patients, but the checks were sent elsewhere. Some went to hospitals in other states.

“When I follow up…we usually get the run around,” Valentine says. “We get told: ‘Hey, we’re checking into it,’ or we get no response whatsoever and I think that’s the part that has been the most frustrating.” Confidential patient information has been misdirected by the private companies, according to Valentine. “I hope something can be done about this because six months in and all of the issues that providers and patients are dealing with is deeply, deeply frightening,” Valentine says.

Jennifer Pearson is supervisor of patient services for U-C-S Healthcare in Des Moines. Pearson says none of the three companies that have been managing care for Medicaid patients since April 1st will pay for the prescriptions for patients trying to kick an opioid addiction, so her company has been covering the cost. “We’ll not be able to sustain this for much longer,” Pearson says. “Approximately 375 patients will be affected if we can’t provide these services any more. Several people that are being successful in their recovery may be cut off of their medication, leaving them susceptible to relapse and huge setbacks from all the work that they have put in their recovery.”

According to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, methadone costs about 18 dollars a day for out-patient treatment. Officials from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services held a “listening post” Monday for Iowans with concerns about Medicaid privatization. Governor Branstad’s office issued a news release about 90 minutes before the event began, saying there had been an “unprecedental level of outreach” about the switch to privately managed care for the 560-thousand poor, elderly and disabled Iowans who are on Medicaid.

Branstad Administration officials say they’ve held 365 meetings throughout the state during the past 20 months to talk with patients and providers about the switch. A new state law requires state officials to hold monthly “listening sessions.” The next meeting is this Wednesday, September 14th, in Waterloo.

(Radio Iowa)

Audit finds Iowa Education Department bidding improprieties

News

September 13th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – A state report says auditors found dozens of public bidding improprieties by the Iowa Education Department. The report released Monday also says the department ignored a law that requires reports about efforts to prevent discriminatory employment practices.

The Des Moines Register reports the audit was for the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2015. It found 34 contracts that began service before formal approval while three did not include the state-required monitoring and review clauses. It also found that of 12 contracts that had been amended, six had not been properly authorized.

Department deputy director Jeff Berger says the bidding issues have largely been resolved. Berger also says the employment reports went undone because of an oversight, which he says will be corrected.