The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast w/Jim Field.
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The area’s top news at 7:07-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson
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**HEAT ADVISORY from I-80 south, 1-to 7-p.m.**
Today: Clear to P/Cldy, hot & humid. High near 94. Heat Index as high as 102. E/SE @ 5-10 mph.
Tonight: P/Cldy w/isolated thundershowers. Low around 70. SE @ 5-10.
Tomorrow: P/Cldy w/isolated morning showers. High 89. E/SE @ 10-15.
Saturday: P/Cldy. High near 90.
Sunday: P/Cldy. High 95.
Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 95. Our 24-hour Low thru 7-a.m. today was 64. Last year on this date, our High in Atlantic was 79 and the low was 58. The All-time Record High in Atlantic on this date was 103 in 1946. The Record Low was 42 in 1974.
HARTLEY, Iowa (AP) – A former police chief who sued the city of Hartley over his firing has settled the lawsuit. The Sioux City Journal reports the dismissal of Mark Younie’s lawsuit was filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Sioux City.
The settlement agreement says the city’s insurance carrier, EMC Cos., will pay Younie $25,000 on behalf of the city. The city will pay Younie’s attorneys $75,000, to be split with Younie in accordance with his contract with the attorneys.
Younie was fired in January 2014, and he sued the city in October 2014. He alleged in the lawsuit that he was fired because he’d filed a grievance alleging a labor law violation. The city said Younie’s firing was unrelated to the grievance.
WAUKEE, Iowa (AP) – Authorities say a crash off Interstate 80 stranded a truck driver in an Iowa creek for several hours. The Iowa State Patrol says the crash occurred around 4 a.m. Wednesday near a Waukee exit west of Des Moines. The driver lost control of his semitrailer somehow, and it went down between the bridges over Sugar Creek. The semi landed upside down, with its cargo of produce strewn about.
Bridge construction workers found the man around 11 a.m., lying in the water, about halfway up on some pallets. He was hospitalized. The crash is being investigated.
The City of Atlantic’s three and a half-year old, $12.3-million wastewater treatment plant held up well during the last major rain producing event on May 26th. Some parts of the City saw in excess of 7-inches of rain that day, causing flooding on streets, and in residential basements as well as businesses.
Wastewater Superintendent Tim Snyder told the City Council during their meeting Wednesday, prior to the May event, December 2015 was the last time the plant dealt with a significant amount of water coming into its 7-million gallon holding tank used for cleaning up the water before it’s discharged into the river. During that month, the plant processed 72-million gallons of storm water runoff.
He says in May, they took in over 80-million gallons, which is one of the highest flows that’s gone through the facility since it was upgraded in 2012. When it was constructed, officials say peak flow capacity for the facility would be 15-million gallons per day. Snyder says the day after the deluge last month, the plant took in 7-million gallons in one day. At least half that flow went into the equalization basin located across the street from the plant. Heavy flows continued for several days afterward, causing the EQ basin to briefly overflow during the weekend of May 28th-29th
Tim said their computer calculated 60-thousand gallons were processed, but because there was a “glitch” in the calculations, he estimated there was closer to 600-thousand gallons processed into the EQ basin. He said he’s since spoken with engineers and equipment vendors to see if there is a way to make the plant more efficient to push the water out faster. It turns out they found ways to do just that.
There were also some system adjustments made to certain pieces of equipment, and a new policy written on how to deal with heavy storm water flow, given the adjustments made through system tweaks and fixes.
346 AM CDT THU JUN 16 2016
HEAT ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 1 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO 7 PM for counties along and south of Interstate 80 in southwest Iowa.
EARLY THIS MORNING…PARTLY CLOUDY. NORTHEAST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH.
TODAY…SUNNY. HOT AND HUMID. HIGH IN THE MID 90S. EAST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH. HIGHEST HEAT INDEX READINGS 101 TO 106 IN THE AFTERNOON.
TONIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY UNTIL EARLY MORNING THEN BECOMING MOSTLY CLOUDY. A 20 PERCENT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS OVERNIGHT. LOW IN THE UPPER 60S. EAST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH. HIGHEST HEAT INDEX READINGS 101 TO 106 THROUGH MIDNIGHT.
FRIDAY…MOSTLY SUNNY. A 20 PERCENT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS IN THE MORNING. HIGH IN THE LOWER 90S. SOUTHEAST WIND 5 TO 15 MPH.
SATURDAY…MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 90S. SOUTHEAST WIND 5 TO 15 MPH.
SUNDAY…SUNNY. HIGH IN THE MID 90S.
Boyer Valley 10, Ar-We-Va 4
Des Moines Christian 6, West Central Valley, Stuart 1
Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 9, Carroll 6
Lenox 10, Orient-Macksburg 0
Logan-Magnolia 8, Harlan 7 (9 innings)
Nodaway Valley 9, Mormon Trail 1
Sidney 10, Shenandoah 9
Tri-Center 8, Riverside 7
Underwood 4, Council Bluffs, Thomas Jefferson 1
AHSTW, Avoca 17, Essex 4
Ar-We-Va 14, Boyer Valley 4 (5 innings)
Audubon 16, Whiting 1
CAM 11, West Harrison 3
Coon Rapids-Bayard 3, EHK-Exira 1
Glenwood 5, St. Albert, Council Bluffs 4 (Postponed makeup)
Glidden-Ralston 12, Adair-Casey 8
Lawton-Bronson 7, Maple Valley-Anthon-Oto 1
Orient-Macksburg 9, East Mills 5
Shenandoah 14, Fremont-Mills 6
West Central Valley, Stuart 9, Nodaway Valley 7
Rain or shine the forecast calls for plenty of mud at the Cownie Sports Complex in Des Moines on Saturday morning when the Iowa Games hosts an annual Mud Run. Spokesman Cory Kennedy says the run offers competition for the whole family. This is the fifth year for the Mud Run, which began in 2012 with 250 runners. In addition to the mud run, the event features a mud volleyball tournament at the complex.
For more information, go to: http://www.iowagames.org/MudRun