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KJAN Programs

Clinton marks 40 years with ADM

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 10th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – One of the largest employers in Clinton is celebrating its 40th anniversary. Governor Kim Reynolds and other officials joined A-D-M leaders Wednesday to mark the anniversary of the company’s corn processing plant purchase from Nabisco. Plant Manager Eric Fasnacht says A-D-M has significantly expanded the plant in the four decades — and it currently processes 350 thousand bushels of corn a day from local farmers and elevators. That works out to between 400 and 500 truckloads a day.

“Separate the corn kernel into its fractions – we make different kinds of corn sweetener, dry starches, crystalline sugars, and feed components that go out to the animal food or feed industry,” he says. There are around one thousand employees in the plant every day from A-D-M and local contractors. The company also celebrated the opening of a new mill to process corn that cost 250 million dollars. And Fasnact says the company will continue to invest in Clinton.

“We’re looking at even another project that’ll be starting here in the fall with a Japanese company that we’re partnering with on another big project, so we’ll see some of that starting to happen later this year, ” Fasnact says. Hiring for that joint project has already started. He says a corn processing facility first opened in Clinton back in the early 1900’s, and Nabisco is believed to have purchased the plant in the 1950’s and run it until selling to A-D-M in 1982.

Beer Beef Stew (6-9-2022)

Mom's Tips

June 9th, 2022 by Jim Field

Into oven casserole mix:

  • 1 1/2 lb. stew meat
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 package Lipton onion soup mix
  • 1 cup beer
  • 1 can mushroom soup
  • 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

Bake in oven for 3 hours at 325 degrees.  Add:

  • 3 carrots, sliced in bite sizes
  • 2 stalks celery, sliced in bite sizes
  • 1 potato, diced
  • 5 to 6 small onions

Continue cooking in oven 1 1/2 to 2 hours.

Heartbeat Today 6-9-2022

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

June 9th, 2022 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Cass County Naturalist Lora Kanning about upcoming programs, including:  summer day camps, youth fishing derby, nature tots preschool programs and stand up paddleboarding.

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Iowa Ag Secretary says pandemic nearing close

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 9th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig says the state is getting closer to the end of the bird flu outbreak. There are just a few commercial poultry sites left to release from quarantine and then they can bring in new birds. He says that’s not the only step in recovery. “There’s the financial piece of this as well, which is a significant disrupter, and it’s a financial hardship for these producers. And so, in terms of financial recovery, that could take time,” Naig says. The process for lifting the quarantine involves cleaning and disinfecting the sites and then testing for the virus.

“It takes some time for these things to happen. And we anticipate that by the end of June, all of the quarantines will have been lifted,” Naig says. The U-S Ag Department pays producers for their bird losses and for cleaning and disinfecting their barns, but Naig says these payments don’t make producers whole. More than 13 million birds in Iowa have died from the disease or been killed to stop it from spreading. The state had its last case of bird flu in early May.

Anglers rejoice: State adds thousands of fish structures to lake map website

Ag/Outdoor, Sports

June 9th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Just in time for the summer fishing season, the state Department of Natural Resources is adding more than two-thousand fish structure locations to the maps of lakes on its website. John Lorenzen, a fisheries research technician at the D-N-R, says it’s valuable information for anyone who’s on the hunt for fish. “These structures are habitat fishing structures that congregate fish and allow anglers to have a better success rate,” Lorenzen says. “The structures include things like brush piles, rock reefs, spawning beds, things of that nature.” D-N-R Fisheries staff and partners, like county conservation groups and fishing clubs, strategically place fish structures in Iowa lakes to attract fish for anglers.

In addition to the various underwater structures, another 215 lake contour maps have also been added to the website. “That information is also uploaded to our Online Fishing Atlas, which is an interactive satellite map,” Lorenzen says. “You can turn your location on on your phone and it shows where you are in relation to the lake and its features. So, those individual habitat fishing structures will be located on the map as well as our lake contours.” The information can be downloaded to the “fish finder” gadget on your boat, or just access it directly from your phone.

Lorenzen says, “So, if you don’t have a fish finder but you want to fish from shore or fish even in a boat using your smartphone, that information is also available to anybody who wants it.” The new maps can be found by Googling “Iowa fishing maps” or through the website: www.iowadnr.gov/Fishing/Fishing-Maps

Iowa’s sprouting crops: So far, so good

Ag/Outdoor

June 8th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Anyone who’s driven through Iowa’s farmland lately likely noticed the corn and soybean crops are beginning to sprout. Angie Rieck-Hinz, a field agronomist with the Iowa State University Extension in north-central Iowa, says so far, the crops are coming in strong. “We have a lot of corn that’s already at that V4 stage and I think the most advanced beans I’ve seen are V2 or V3,” Rieck-Hinz says. “So for those folks that planted earlier, we got some really nice looking crops out there. For folks who’ve planted in the last week or 10 days, we’ve got stuff just coming out of the ground.”

Recent rains flooded some central Iowa fields, and Rieck-Hinz says that’s not be the only weather challenge of late. “There has been some replanting in some of those areas that were hit by that Memorial Day storm because between the wind and the dust blowing, we just kind of lost some of those soybeans out there,” Rieck-Hinz says. “So there are some people that are replanting those fields or trying to go back in and thicken up those stands.”

The new U-S-D-A report shows 98-percent of Iowa’s corn crop is planted, three days ahead of the five-year average, while 94-percent of soybeans are in the ground, which is six days ahead of the average.

Heartbeat Today 6-8-2022

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

June 8th, 2022 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Emily Wittrock, who is helping coordinate a fundraising silent auction event for her friend, Emily Claussen, Saturday, June 11 from 4:00 pm – 7:30 pm at the Anita Community Center.

Play

Local 24-Hour Rainfall Totals Reported at 7:00 am on Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

June 8th, 2022 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  1.63″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .66″
  • Elk Horn  .76″
  • Anita  .95″
  • Massena  .54″
  • Corning  .91″
  • Marne, 1.9″
  • Treynor, 1.7″
  • Wiota, 1.4″
  • Avoca  .9″
  • Oakland  .5″
  • Neola  .38″
  • Bridgewater  1.1″
  • Villisca  1.2″
  • Missouri Valley  .38″
  • Clarinda  2.1″
  • Harlan .69″
  • Kirkman .5″
  • SE of Irwin, .43″

Cass County Extension Report 6-8-2022

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

June 8th, 2022 by Jim Field

w/Kate Olson.

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Appeals court upholds sentence for woman who vandalized Dakota Access Pipeline

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 7th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The U-S Court of Appeals has upheld the eight-year prison sentence given to a woman in 2021 after she admitted to damaging the Dakota Access Pipeline. Jessica Reznicek pleaded guilty to conspiracy to damage an energy facility after admitting to vandalism in Buena Vista, Mahaska and Wapello County that included taking a blowtorch to the pipeline. Reznicek argued she was motivated by saving the environment, and the district court erred by classifying her actions as terrorism.

Jessica Reznicek and Ruby Montoya in 2017. (RI photo)

The Appeals Court ruling says the district court would have imposed the same sentence without the terrorism enhancement. It says the district court sentencing considered Reznicek’s “laudable, though ultimately misguided, motivations,” as well as her encouragement of others to imitate her crimes, that her vandalism caused “a grave risk to others,” and that her crimes continued over a long stretch of time.

Ruby Montoya admitted to the vandalism along with Reznicek and reached a plea deal with prosecutors. She has been fighting to withdraw her plea and take the case to trial.