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Pleasant Hill man arrested again in Creston – 3rd time in 1 week

News

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Police in Creston report a Central Iowa man who was previously arrested twice within the past week for allegedly Failing to Comply with the State’s Sex Offender Registry, was arrested again Thursday afternoon. 30-year old James Jack Clark, of Pleasant Hill, was taken into custody at around 1-p.m. Thursday on several Union County warrants for Burglary in the 3rd Degree, Possession of a Controlled Substance, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Clark was also recently charged with Theft in the 5th Degree. He was being held in the Union County Jail on a $5,000 cash or surety bond, and a $300 10% bond.

Creston Police said also, a woman residing in the 400 block of Wyoming Avenue reported Thursday, that sometime that same day, someone keyed both sides of her vehicle. The damage was estimated at $1,000.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 9/2/2016

News, Podcasts

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

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

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(Update) 911 service to Shelby has been restored

News

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Shelby County Emergency Management Coordinator Bob Seivert reports 911 service to Shelby has been restored. Seivert said late Thursday evening that 911 service and long distance in Shelby had been disrupted due to a Windstream Fiber line being cut. But again, as of this morning, the service has been restored.

Car carrying Confederate flag removed from school lot

News

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Authorities say a student moved a car off a Des Moines high school campus rather than remove a Confederate flag from it as requested by school officials. Someone called East High School Thursday morning after noticing the flag in the student parking lot. Des Moines Public Schools spokeswoman Amanda Lewis says school staffers soon identified the student owner of the car and asked him to put away the flag. Lewis says the car was then driven out of the lot and parked elsewhere instead.

Lewis says the presence of Confederate flags at school last year prompted at least three incidents involving fights. She says the district supports the student’s right to expression, but the district’s first priority is ensuring school safety. Lewis says no disturbance arose from the flag Thursday.

Skyscan forecast & weather data for Atlantic: 9/2/16

Weather

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Today: Areas of fog this morning; Mo. Sunny. High 78. NE @ 10-15.
Tonight: Mo. Clear. Low around 55.
Tomorrow: Partly Cloudy. High near 80 SE @ 10-15.
Sunday: P/Cldy w/isolated showers possible. High 83.

Monday: P/Cldy w/isolated shwrs & tstrms. High 87.

Thursday’s High in Atlantic was 80. Our 24-hour Low was 52. Last year on this date, our High in Atlantic was 86 and the low was 70. The Record High in Atlantic on this date was 101 in 2000. The Record Low was 30 in 1983.

New coalition forms to support sustainable farming & clean water

Ag/Outdoor

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Conservation groups are forming a partnership with food and agriculture businesses to push for more sustainable farming and cleaner water in Iowa, Illinois and Nebraska. The Midwest Row Crop Collaborative includes diverse members like The Nature Conservancy and the Environmental Defense Fund as well as Pepsi and Walmart. Jill Kolling, director of sustainability at Cargill, says they plan to raise four-million dollars over the next five years to fund on-farm conservation programs.

Kolling says, “In these states, we’ll be working to optimize soil health practices and outcomes, reduce nutrient runoff into the rivers and streams of the Mississippi River Basin, maximize water conservation to reduce pressure on the Ogallala aquifer and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

Other members of the group include the World Wildlife Fund, Monsanto, Kellogg and General Mills. Kolling says in addition to fundraising, the collaborative will collate conservation research so farmers can easily review results. Larry Clemens, with The Nature Conservancy, says aligning with agriculture across a vast landscape is a way to ensure food production goals are met while maintaining a commitment to land, water and wildlife resources.

Clemens says, “The Nature Conservancy is eager to help the collaborative leverage our expertise to accelerate solutions that match the scale of the challenges we face in this region, such as improving water quality across the Midwest and addressing the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.”

The collaboratives’ initial efforts will support the Soil Health Partnership, a farmer-led conservation program of the National Corn Growers Association.

(Radio Iowa)

Area Volleyball Scores from Thursday, 9/1/16

Sports

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

(3-0) Glenwood 25-25-25, Atlantic 23-21-12
(3-1) Clarinda 25-25-22-25, Shenandoah 25-14-23-18
(3-2) Coon Rapids-Bayard 12-25-21-25-15, AR-WE-VA, Westside 25-23-25-15-6
(3-1) Denison-Schleswig 21-25-25-25, Shenandoah 25-14-23-18
(3-0) East Mills 25-25-25, Southwest Valley 16-14-20
(3-0) East Atchison 25-25-25, South Page 16-14-20
(3-0) East Union 25-25-25, Wayne 22-23-18
(2-0) Essex 21-21, Bedford 8-13
(2-0) Essex 21-21, Riverside, Oakland 16-11
(3-1) Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 26-25-22-25, Red Oak 24-13-25-22
(3-1) Lenox over Martensdale St Marys
(3-0) Murray 25-25-25, Orient-Macksburg 8-7-10
(2-0) Nevada 21-21, A-D-M, Adel 14-19
(2-0) Riverside, Oakland 21-21, Bedford 13-18
(3-0) Sidney 27-25-25, Fremont-Mills 25-19-11
(3-1) Southeast Warren, Liberty Center 25-20-25-25, Nodaway Valley 15-25-23-18
(3-1) St. Albert, Council Bluffs 23-25-25-25, Council Bluffs, Abraham Lincoln 25-11-13-17

Voting in Iowa starts in less than a month

News

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Labor Day is often called a kickoff day for the fall campaign, but early voting in Iowa starts in just 27 days. Most of the high-profile federal candidates in Iowa started airing campaign ads in August. Republican Senator Chuck Grassley is seeking a seventh term in the U.S. Senate. Grassley’s doing something in 2016 that’s been rare in his senate career — he’s running an ad criticizing his Democratic opponent.

“It’s my job as one of 24 states where there are Republicans up for reelection to make sure that I’m a good trustee of your money and work hard to make sure that Iowa does not turn Democrat in the United States Senate,” Grassley says. Democrat Patty Judge says she’s running against Grassley because he’s “not paying attention” to the nation’s problems. “A wise man once said that if you are not a part of the solution, then you are part of the problem and I think today we’ve got a United States senator who is not proposing solutions and that’s my opponent, Chuck Grassley,” Judge says.

Republican David Young of Van Meter is the other first-term congressman from Iowa, seeking reelection in the third district. “I’m on a bill called ‘No Budget, No Pay’ and it simply says this: if you don’t do a federal budget by law annually, well, then you should have your pay withheld and you shouldn’t get that paycheck until you get the budget done,” Young says. “…I am the only member of congress who has followed up on that…not taking a paycheck from you, the taxpayer.” Jim Mowrer of Des Moines is the Democrat challenging Young this year. “My campaign is focused on my working families agenda, ensuring that every single working family in Iowa and across the country is able to make it,” Mowrer says. “Raising the minimum wage: if you work 40 hours a week in this country, you should not live in poverty.”

Republican Congressman Steve King of Kiron is seeking reelection to an eighth term in the U.S. House. “What is an FSCCC? Well that would be a full-spectrum constitutional Christian conservative,” King says. “I’m happy to be an FSCCC.” Kim Weaver, a social worker from Sheldon, is the Democrat who’s challenging King and she’s been telling crowds she was recently inducted into the “Daughters of the American Revolution.”  “I am a proud descendent of a real patriot that fought against the tyranny of the king,” Weaver said at a Progress Iowa event in late August, “so even though it’s going to be difficult, we need to show the nation that the descendent of a true patriot can dethrone yet another King.”

Congressman Dave Loebsack of Iowa City is seeking a sixth term in the U.S. House. Loebsack is the only Democrat in Iowa’s congressional delegation. He’s been campaigning alongside several other Democrats the 2016 ballot, including candidates for the legislature. “We know that if we accomplish all those goals this time, and I know we can do it, we will be set for 2018 to make sure that we get a governor in office in Iowa who knows Iowa values, who’ll work for progressive values.”

Chris Peters, a surgeon from Coralville who was a Libertarian Party candidate for the state legislature in 2010, is the Republican challenging Loebsack this fall. “I believe that partisan politics have greatly diminished our country and coarsened our public discourse,” Peters said. “I don’t believe a particular candidate is good or bad just because they have an R or a D after their name and I don’t believe an idea is better or worse simply because one member of a party or another proposed it.”

Republican Rod Blum of Dubuque is promising to “stand up to the G-O-P when it’s necessary” if he’s elected to a second term representing Iowa’s first congressional district. “In general, I’m a businessperson,” Blum says. “I’m a member of the ‘Yellow Pages Caucus’ in Washington and that caucus says if you can go through the Yellow Pages and find a private sector company that’s providing that service, the government shouldn’t be providing that service.” Monica Vernon, a member of the Cedar Rapids city council, is the Democrat challenging Blum. “We have got to get an economy that works for everyone,” Vernon says. “…We’ve got to get equal pay for equal work and that’s not just a woman’s issue. When women succeed, families succeed and when families succeed our communities do so much better.”

Iowa law allows early voting to start on Thursday, September 29th. Iowans can walk into their county auditor’s office on that day, ask for an absentee ballot and vote. Iowans can ask for an absentee ballot through the mail and vote throughout October and early November. Absentee ballots must be postmarked by Monday, November 7th if they’re mailed back in.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa Business Council releases 3Q Economic Outlook Survey

News

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The leaders of Iowa’s largest businesses are growing less optimistic about the state’s economy. The Iowa Business Council’s (IBC) third quarter Economic Outlook Survey, released Thursday, shows projections for sales, capital spending, and hiring are all down several points from three months ago. Elliott Smith, executive director of the IBC, says “Our third quarter survey shows, I think, a little elevation of some anxieties that have been building among business leaders in this state — and really around the country — on the tenuous nature of the economy right now.”

The Iowa Business Council includes the CEOs of the state’s largest companies and each quarter they’re surveyed about their projections for sales, capital spending, and employment over the next six months.Iowa Business Council logo Numbers dropped in all three categories in the latest survey. “There isn’t anything that we’re raising red flags on yet, we’re still in positive sentiment territory for all of our indicators, so that’s good,” Smith says.

The chair of the Iowa Business Council, Mike Wells, says uncertainty in the global economy is making it difficult for Iowa companies to chart strategic plans.

(Radio Iowa)

Nearly all camping areas open in state parks for Labor Day weekend

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 2nd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Despite recent rains, nearly all the facilities in state parks and recreation areas in Iowa are open for the Labor Day weekend. All 101 camping sites with electrical hook-ups are claimed already at Rock Creek State Park, about six miles northwest of Grinnell.  The park’s lake has 15 miles of shoreline and a beach for swimmers. Boats are allowed on the lake, but there’s a “no wake” rule. It means a boat is to go no more than five miles an hour.

Last week nine inches of rain fell at the Yellow River State Forest near Harpers Ferry. Three of the four camping areas within the park will reopen today (Friday) for Labor Day Weekend camping. There was brief flooding at George Wyth State Park near Waterloo last week, but the campground there is open.

In central Iowa, the Ledges State Park near Boone is open to campers, but Canyon Drive in the park is closed to vehicle traffic due to high water. Hikers are allowed in the canyon, but they’re advised to stay out of the water. Horseback riding trails in two state parks and two state forests are closed and won’t reopen until the trails have dried out and flood repairs are made.

(Radio Iowa)