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KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Board of Supervisors, Wednesday morning, heard from Iowa State University Extension representatives Kerry Aistrope and Carolyn Savage, with regard to Children’s Spring Break programs, and a reimbursement for $2,949.57 associated with the cost of one of the programs.
A grant covered a good chunk of the expenses.Most of the programs are STEM-related (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) kit. Pre-K through 5th Grade students at Nodaway Valley and Kindergarten through 6th Grade in Orient took the projects home.
Some of the projects involved the creation of paper airplanes using different types of materials and engineer. A couple of weeks later, the kids built, under the watchful eye of older students, model rockets that took to the sky last Friday.
The kids were taught how to load the fuel and pack the parachutes for the reusable rockets. High school students actually took care of the launch process, as a safety precaution. To relaunch the rockets next year, the program only has to pay for the engine load, according to Aistrope. An investment in a Blue Tooth launch controller next year will aid in the safety protocols.
ISU Extension staffers said the kids were excited about the projects, especially the rockets.
(Radio Iowa) – The U-S House is expected to vote late today (Wednesday) on raising the nation’s debt ceiling and Iowa’s senior senator is still on the fence about the legislation. Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says as important bills go, this one is at least relatively concise. “It’s a little over 100 pages, I believe, compared to sometimes you have a couple of thousand pages bill on your desk,” Grassley says, “and so consequently, I should have gone through it thoroughly but haven’t yet. I probably won’t make my announcement until the House passes the bill.”
Indications are, the House vote won’t come until tonight, after the markets have closed. Grassley says he has done some research on the bill and isn’t entirely thrilled with it. “There’s some good and some not-so-good in it,” Grassley says. “Another way of saying what I just said is, from the standpoint of cutting down on government expenditure, it could go a lot further.”
The measure was crafted by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy working with President Biden and it would suspend the debt ceiling until January 1st of 2025. Grassley says one of the keys to politics is the art of give-and-take.”We have a Republican House, a Democrat Senate, a Democrat president, and so out of this, you have to have compromise,” Grassley says, “and very seldom could anybody say that the compromise was 100% the way they wanted it to be. So you accept some good, you accept some bad, and you vote either yes or no.”
In addition to raising the debt ceiling, the measure also promises to set certain limits on federal spending. “This isn’t just about how much money to spend over the next two years,” Grassley says. “It’s also about the government not going into default. We never have defaulted and we won’t default and it’s very important to me that we don’t default.”
Grassley says he’ll make a decision on the legislation within 24 to 48 hours.
(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Board of Supervisors, Wednesday morning, agreed to allow County Engineer Nick Kauffman to proceed with the purchase of additional security cameras for the County Shop. Kauffman said nine of their 12 current cameras are functioning. He wants to purchase additional cameras effective July 1st, for a total of 18, to surveil specific areas around the County Shop.
In addition to the exterior cameras, others will be placed inside the shop office, and the wash bay.
He would also add an exterior light to north end of the shop to better illuminate that area. Kauffman said he budgeted roughly $46,000 for the cameras, so there is still $9,700 remaining in the budget for those expenditures.
In other business, the Adair County Supervisors approved a Longevity raise for 10-year Secondary Road Department employee Sawyer Hansen. And, the Board agreed to let Kauffman proceed with the sale of a crane.If a reasonable offer cannot be obtained locally, he’ll proceed to advertise it on the Purple Haze auction website.
Kauffman then updated the Board on current construction projects.
Kauffman said bridge inspections in Adair County are wrapping-up, and there are no significant issues to report. He mentioned also, Secondary Roads employee Ray Palmer is retiring effective July 7th. The process of searching for his replacement will begin at first, in-house, before the position is advertised.
(Radio Iowa) – After a ten-day mission to the International Space Station, retired NASA astronaut and Iowa native Peggy Whitson is back on Earth after she and three crewmates splashed down last night off the Florida coast in a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule.
SpaceX Mission Control: “SpaceX, We see splashdown and mains (parachute cables) cut. Peggy, John, Ali, Rayyanah, on behalf of SpaceX, welcome home!”
Whitson, laughing: “SpaceX, we would like to tell you that was a phenomenal ride. We really enjoyed all of it!”
Whitson, who grew up in Beaconsfield, was commander of the mission, the first private space mission in history commanded by a woman.
ELDORA, Iowa — An Iowa homicide suspect was arrested Sunday, in Arizona. Eldora Police said Tuesday, 29-year-old Nathan Cole Bahr, of Iowa Falls, faces a charge of first-degree murder, police reported Tuesday morning. Police say he was brought in on May 29th, in Gilbert, Arizona. Authorities say Bahr allegedly shot and killed Desiree Folsom in Eldora. She was found dead on May 26 at a residence in the 1400 block of 17th Avenue. Eldora police Chief Nick Hassebrock said Bahr is Folsom’s ex-boyfriend. They had shared two children together.
Court documents show that on May 25, a Hardin County judge had approved a protective order for Folsom against Bahr. The order included a warning for law enforcement that noted Bahr may have a firearm.
Bahr remains in custody at a jail in Arizona.
(Clarinda, Iowa) – Last week we told you officials with the Union County Law Enforcement Center (LEC) reported that they had been flooded lately with incomplete accidental 911 calls occurring from cellular devices. Since then, Sheriff’s officials in other counties and jurisdictions in Iowa have reported similar calls.The Page County Sheriff’s Office is one of the latest to issue a statement about incomplete/accidental 9-1-1 calls.
State officials says most everyone has mis-dialed phone numbers at some point in time, but if you accidentally dial 9-1-1, or a child in your home dials 911 when no emergency exists, make sure you do not hang up the phone! Stay on the line and tell the dispatcher that 911 was called by mistake.
In order to prevent accidental 9-1-1 calls, consider the following tips:
#1 If you accidentally call 911 please stay on the line and answer the 911 dispatcher’s questions. If you hang-up we will do everything possible to get in touch with you. Please answer that call back. We must assume that all calls are for emergencies, and there are occasions where people do call 911 and cannot relay their emergency because of criminal conduct or medical issues.
#2 Be familiar with your device(s). One common 911 accidental dials happen when cell phone user put their phone into a cup holder, purse, or pocket. That’s because the side button on the phone pushes on the edges.
Remember, accidentally dialing 911 can tie up emergency resources and divert attention from genuine emergencies. Please carry your phone carefully. Make sure your phone is securely placed in your pocket, bag, or purse to minimize accidental pressure on the screen or buttons.
(Radio Iowa) – The planting season is down to just a few more trips across the field. The U-S-D-A crop report shows 98 percent of the corn crop is planted, eight days ahead of last year and 11 days ahead of the five-year average. Eighty-five percent of the corn crop has emerged — with 77 percent reported in good to excellent condition. Ninety-four percent of soybeans had been planted by Sunday, more than one week ahead of last year and 15 days ahead of normal. Sixty-seven percent of soybeans have emerged and the first condition report shows 71 percent are rated in good to excellent condition.
(Radio Iowa) – Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is in the midst of his first campaign swing through Iowa since kicking off his campaign for president last week. DeSantis spoke at a West Des Moines church Tuesday night and he got several standing ovations from the crowd during his remarks. “Our great American comeback starts by sending Joe Biden back to his basement in Delaware,” DeSantis said. DeSantis called on like-minded Americans to run for seats in congress and join him in countering the elites in politics, in corporate America and in education.
“I think the parents of this country are really going to rise up in 2024. I think this is going to be a central issue: Do you support the rights of parents to direct the education and upbringing of their children?” DeSantis did not specifically call for House Republicans to reject the federal debt deal, but he said it would not solve the nation’s fiscal problems. “D.C. doesn’t produce much of anything besides mountains of debt and loads of hot air,” DeSantis said, to cheers. “…Stop passing the buck to subsequent generations to clean up your mess.”
DeSantis did not use the phrase “drain the swamp” as Donald Trump did during the 2016 campaign, but DeSantis said as president he would attack the “administrative state” in the executive branch. “It requires a disciplined, energetic president who will spit nails and fight the needed battles every day over an eight year period,” DeSantis said. “…You need to start cleaning house on day one.” DeSantis took questions from reporters after the event. He said it was ridiculous for Trump to say New York’s governor handled the pandemic better than he did in Florida.
“But it is an indication that the former president would double down on his lockdowns from March of 2020,” DeSantis said. Alan Daut of Altoona says DeSantis is the only Republican who can win in 2024. “That’s the most critical and important thing, to win,” Daut says. “Trump was a good president. He did a great job from my perspective, but winning is everything.” A few people in the crowd cited the Florida governor’s age as they talked about DeSantis. He’s 32 years younger than Trump. Matt Stewart of Altoona put it this way.
“I don’t want another geezer General Election,” Stewart said. Lee Thornburgh of West Des Moines likes DeSantis, but isn’t ready to say he’ll Caucus for DeSantis. “He’s definitely in the running,” There’s so much time available, it’s hard to say so right at this moment,” he said. “I’d like to hear some other people, but I think he’s done a great job.”
DeSantis will campaign in Sioux City, Council Bluffs, Pella and Cedar Rapids today (Wednesday).
(Radio Iowa) – Two of the four Iowans who serve in the U.S. House say they’re likely to vote for the plan that would slow federal spending in the future and immediately raise the government’s borrowing authority. However, under certain circumstances, they might vote no. Republican Congresswoman Marianette Miller-Meeks of LeClaire says elements of the plan are common sense, like recouping 30 BILLION dollars in unspent COVID recovery money.
“COVID relief funds were supposed to be timely, targeted and temporary,” Miller-Meeks says. “They’re not supposed to be ongoing spending funds for agencies, so I think that’s important.” Miller-Meeks says it’s time to restart the monthly student loan payments that were suspended at the beginning of the pandemic — that’s part of the plan as well. Miller-Meeks says the House G-O-P is proving that it can govern and she plans on supporting the package, unless there are major changes made to it.
“We know that our debt and our deficit is on a trajectory that is unsustainable. It puts us at risk. It’s a national security risk as well, but we also knew that defaulting or a government shutdown was not the way to go, so we put forward a responsible, reasonable plan,” Miller-Meeks says. “It was very pragmatic.” Congressman Zach Nunn, a Republican from Bondurant, says he wants an assurance that Senate Democrats will back the plan.
“I think there’s a chance that the Senate could stonewall this thing long enough that we get into a very difficult situation,” Nunn says. “I don’t want any one senator to be the reason the United States defaults for its first time in U.S. history.” Both Miller-Meeks and Nunn say the plan’s limit on non-defense spending over the next two years is key.
“I think the time has come for us to move forward with a plan that helps drives down national spending and make sure the United States does not default,” Nunn says. “Those are my first two priorities going into it and from this I think there are a lot of good things that can happen.” Neither Republican Congresswoman Ashley Hinson of Marion nor Republican Congressman Randy Feenstra of Hull have commented on the deal.