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Navigators Ready to Assist Medicaid & Marketplace Consumers at CCHS

News

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Cass County Health System says enrollment for Healthcare Marketplace Exchange consumers will open on November 1st and help is available through regional ACA (Affordable Care Act) Navigators. ACA Navigators work one-on-one with individuals to complete enrollment, weigh options, and answer questions on Marketplace plans and Medicaid.CCHS

All prior year’s enrollees are strongly encouraged to meet with the ACA Navigator to update information and review new plans available on the healthcare.gov. To have coverage in effect January 1, 2016, you will need to set an appointment prior to December 15th, 2015.

All meetings with the Navigators are by appointment, and they are private. Consumers are asked to bring important information with them, such as addresses, social security numbers, income information, and policy numbers for any current health insurance plans for all members of the household. Also, if a prior enrollee in the Marketplace, bring your login information to access your account during your appointment.

The private appointments will be held at Cass County Health System in Conference Rooms 6 and 2, which are easily accessible from Parking Lot C. For more information or to make an appointment, please call either Melissa Namanny at 712-243-2850 ext. 4111 or Val Gifford at 712-243-3250 ext. 3417.

Appointment times are as follows….

CCHS Conference Room 6
Nov 5th 3 pm to 7 pm
Nov 18th 9 am to 1 pm
Nov 21st 12 pm to 4 pm
Dec 7th 9 am to 1pm
Dec 12th 9 am to 1pm
Dec 17th 3 pm to 7pm

CCHS Conference Room 2
Jan 7th 3pm to 7pm
Jan 16th 9am to 3pm

Bluffs man arrested after shots fired Wed. morning

News

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs early this (Wednesday) morning, arrested a man on charges that include Intimidation with a Dangerous Weapon, Carrying Weapons, and Discharge of a Firearm within City Limits. Authorities say 26-year old Brendon Minor, of Council Bluffs, was taken into custody at around 12:25-a.m, after officers were called to 3431 Avenue D, following a report of shots fired.

When officers arrived, they made contact with a person who was involved in a verbal altercation with Minor that turned physical. The victim said when Minor went into his home at 3429 Avenue D, he came out and threatened to shoot the man before firing an unknown number of rounds from a small handgun, into the air.

Officers made contact with Minor, who surrendered to them without further incident. Inside the home, police recovered two firearms. In injuries were reported.

Posted County Grain Prices, 10/21/15

Ag/Outdoor

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Cass County: Corn $3.27, Beans $8.39
Adair County: Corn $3.24, Beans $8.42
Adams County: Corn $3.24, Beans $8.38
Audubon County: Corn $3.26, Beans $8.41
East Pottawattamie County: Corn $3.30, Beans $8.39
Guthrie County: Corn $3.29, Beans $8.43
Montgomery County: Corn $3.29, Beans $8.41
Shelby County: Corn $3.30, Beans $8.39

Oats $2.18 (always the same in all counties)

(Information from the USDA’s Farm Service Agency offices)

JUANITA KATHRYN FORCHT GILMAN, 85, of Stuart (No Svcs.)

Obituaries

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

JUANITA KATHRYN FORCHT GILMAN, 85, of Stuart, died Sun., Oct. 18th, at Taylor Hospice House, in Des Moines. Per her wishes, cremation has taken place, and no service are planned for JUANITA GILMAN. Johnson Family Funeral Home in Stuart is in charge of the arrangements.

ED LITTLER, 86, of Adair (Svcs. 10/23/15)

Obituaries

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

ED LITTLER, 86, of Adair, died Tue., Oct. 20th, at home. Funeral services for ED LITTLER will be held 10:30-a.m. Fri., Oct. 23rd, at the Presbyterian Church, in Adair. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Adair has the arrangements.

Visitation with his family will be from 5-until 7-pm today (Thu., Oct. 22nd), at the funeral home, where a Rosary service is at 7-p.m.

Burial will be in the St. John’s Catholic Cemetery at Adair.

ED LITTLER is survived by:

His children – William E. (Connie) Littler, III; Mary Beth (Kevin) Petty; & Diane Littler (& Adam Endres).

6 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren.

2nd arrest in rural Red Oak Child Endangerment/injury case

News

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Montgomery County say a man and woman from rural Red Oak have been arrested on felony Child Endangerment causing injury, charges. Jessica A, Davis was arrested Tuesday evening following an investigation into a reported case of child abuse that allegedly occurred Oct. 10th.  Earlier in the day, Tuesday, authorities announced Matthew A. Davis was taken into custody Monday afternoon, on the same felony charge.

Jessica and Matthew Davis were being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $5,000 bond, each. No other details concerning the incident or investigation have been released.

KJAN listening area weather forecast from the NWS: 10/21/2015

Weather

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

346 AM CDT WED OCT 21 2015
EARLY THIS MORNING…MOSTLY CLOUDY. SOUTH WIND NEAR 10 MPH.
TODAY…MOSTLY CLOUDY. A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS THROUGH MID MORNING…THEN ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS BEFORE NOON. HIGH IN THE LOWER 70S. NORTHWEST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 20 PERCENT.
TONIGHT…MOSTLY CLOUDY. COOLER. LOW IN THE UPPER 40S. NORTHEAST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH.

THURSDAY…MOSTLY CLOUDY. HIGH IN THE UPPER 60S. EAST WIND 5 TO 15 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT…CLOUDY. A CHANCE OF SHOWERS THROUGH MIDNIGHT, THEN SHOWERS LIKELY AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOW IN THE MID 50S. SOUTHEAST WIND 10 TO 15 MPH. CHANCE OF SHOWERS 60 PERCENT.

FRIDAY…SHOWERS. HIGH IN THE MID 60S. SOUTHEAST WIND 10 TO 15 MPH WITH GUSTS TO AROUND 25 MPH. CHANCE OF SHOWERS 80 PERCENT.
FRIDAY NIGHT…MOSTLY CLOUDY. A CHANCE OF SHOWERS THROUGH MIDNIGHT…THEN A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOW AROUND 50. CHANCE OF SHOWERS 30 PERCENT.

SATURDAY…MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 60S.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., Oct. 21st 2015

News

October 21st, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A jury is deciding the fate of two aides to Ron Paul’s 2012 presidential campaign who are accused of secretly paying a state lawmaker to endorse their boss. Deliberations are to resume in the Des Moines federal trial of former campaign chairman Jesse Benton and ex-deputy campaign manager Dimitri Kesari.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The head of a committee examining casino licensing in Iowa says he plans to reintroduce legislation next session that would create a smoke-free casino in the state. Senator Wally Horn says his bill would offer guidelines for such a casino. The Democrat is from Cedar Rapids, where local leaders have pushed for a smoke-free casino.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa’s unemployment rate dropped slightly to 3.6 percent last month. State officials say the number of people in the state with jobs climbed to 1.64 million in September. Iowa’s 3.6 percent rate was tied with Utah as the nation’s sixth lowest.

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — Officials in Sioux City have voted to demolish a condemned mansion in the city’s Rose Hill neighborhood. The move to tear down the 125-year-old home ends the city’s long deliberation about what to do with it. City officials awarded a $60,000 demolition contract.

Regional Quarterfinal Volleyball scores Tuesday

Sports

October 20th, 2015 by admin

Class 1-A, Region 2
(3-0) Ar-We-Va 25-25-25, Woodbine 18-11-18
(3-0) Westwood 25-25-25, West Harrison 10-6-4
(3-0) LeMars Gehlen Catholic 25-25-25, Whiting 10-14-16
(3-1) Sioux land Community 25-25-22-25, River Valley 14-22-25-15
(3-0) Kingsley-Pierson 25-25-25, Charter Oak-Ute 10-16-23
(3-1) Trinity Christian 17-25-25-25, Akron-Westfield 25-12-19-17
Class 1-A, Region 3
(3-0) Sidney 25-25-25, Heartland Christian 4-3-7
(3-0) Fremont-Mills 25-25-25, Riverside, Oakland 16-10-16
(3-0) East Mills 25-26-25, Griswold 18-24-12
(3-0) Mount Ayr 25-25-25, Diagonal 9-10-3
(3-0) Bedford 25-25-25, Lamoni 17-20-21
(3-0) Stanton 25-25-25, Lenox 11-8-13
(3-0) Essex 25-25-25, South Page 4-17-6
Class 1-A, Region 4
(3-2) Coon Rapids-Bayard 25-18-25-25-15, Glidden-Ralston 11-25-21-27-11
(3-0) Adair-Casey 25-26-25, Paton-Churdan 12-24-23
(3-2) Exira-EHK 18-22-25-25-15, CAM, Anita 25-25-13-11-6
(3-1) Grand View Christian 20-25-25-25, Nodaway Valley 25-19-23-21
(3-1) Murray 23-25-25-25, Iowa Christian Academy 25-17-19-8
(3-0) East Union 25-25-25, Orient-Macksburg 3-10-7
Class 2-A, Region 2
(3-2) IKM-Manning 25-25-21-22-15, South Central Calhoun 11-21-25-25-9
(3-0) Maple Valley-Anthon Oto 25-25-25, OA-BCIG 13-8-12
(3-0) Woodbury Central 25-25-25, West Monona 17-19-20
Class 2-A, Region 3
(3-1) Underwood 25-19-25-25, Logan-Magnolia 18-25-19-14
(3-0) Southwest Valley 25-25-25, Clarinda Academy 11-5-12
(3-0) Missouri Valley 25-25-25, AHSTW 19-21-17
(3-0) West Central Valley, Stuart 25-25-25, Earlham 22-23-23

Other Non-Postseason Scores
(3-1) Glenwood 25-18-25-25, Kuemper Catholic, Carroll 20-25-20-19
(3-0) Red Oak 25-25-25, Creston 19-23-22
(3-0) Lewis Central 25-25-25, Shenandoah 10-20-11

Branstad touts his administration’s achievements during a stop in Atlantic

News

October 20th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

During his stop in Atlantic Tuesday afternoon, Iowa Republican Gov. Terry Branstad touted the achievements of his time in office since being re-elected to an unprecedented sixth term during the Nov. 2013 elections. If he completes his four-year term, it will have broken the record for a person serving as governor, in U-S History. The old record was held by George Clinton of New York, who served 21 years from 1777 to 1795, and from 1801 to 1804.

Gov. Terry Branstad speaks at an Atlantic Town Hall 1020-15. Ric Hanson photo

Gov. Terry Branstad speaks at an Atlantic Town Hall 10-20-15. Ric Hanson photo

Branstad said looking back at when he was recruited to run for Governor in 2010, “The State was facing some really big challenges. The previous administration [Democrat Gov. Chet Culver] had use of bad budgeting practices, overspent, made promises they couldn’t keep and used one-time money for ongoing expenses and we were faced with a projected $900-million deficit.”

Branstad said his administration cut costs of government by eliminating 1,500 state employees, put together a two-year budget, looked at ways to make government more efficient and more accountable and restore the “rainy day” fund. He says the rate of unemployment is lower now than it was when he took over. As an example, he pointed to numbers showing the unemployment rate in Cass County as 8.2-percent when he became governor again, and the rate now, which stands at 2.9-percent, or a 65-percent reduction in unemployment.

Branstad fielded a question though, about his decision to close the Mental Health Institutes in Clarinda and Mt. Pleasant, eliminating jobs from those two, unaccredited facilities and shifting care to the two remaining facilities in Cherokee and Independence, both of which are accredited and have psychiatrists on-staff. Other clients were transferred to private care facilities or are being served more on the local level. Branstad said the new system is more efficient and brings Iowa up to par with neighboring states.

Branstad said what Iowa is doing now, is what Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois have been doing for the past 20-to 30-years. On the topic of Education, Branstad was asked about what it’s going to take to legislature to set funding levels for K-through 12 education in Iowa in-time for districts to set their budget. The legislature went into an extended session this year and eventually reached a bi-partisan agreement on funding, but in July, the Governor in a line item veto, erased the $55.7 million in additional funding they had approved for the FY 2015-16 school year. Branstad however approved a 1.25 percent increase in per pupil spending.

He said he’s going to work to bring both sides to the table earlier and get the funding level set for next year, but he warned it won’t be easy. He says his recommendation will come out as soon as the legislature is in session, and he’ll ask them to decide “this thing” in the next month. But he concedes, he ‘Can’t force ’em” to come to a decision on k-12 funding.