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Gov. Reynolds & Atty. General Bird rank low in a recent Iowa poll

News

September 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) A new poll shows Gov. Kim Reynolds’ job approval rating is the lowest it has been since she first took office in May of 2017. The latest Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll reveals half of Iowans disapprove of the job she’s doing as governor.

Iowans have been polled 18 times since Reynolds has been in office as the state’s governor. This September, 45% of Iowans polled say they approve of her job performance, while 50% disapprove. The same poll shows Republican Attorney General Brenna Bird with a job approval rating of 39%.

State Auditor Rob Sand, a Democrat, is polling a job approval rating of 53%. That’s the highest approval rating among Iowa’s statewide elected officials.

21-year-old male charged w/1st Degree Murder in the death of a Farnhamville teen

News

September 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Iowa authorities have identified the missing teenager found dead Monday in Calhoun County. 17-year-old Michele “Luna” Jackson was first reported missing Sunday evening in Farnhamville. Her body was discovered early Monday morning. Jackson was a student at Southeast Valley High School.

The Calhoun County Sheriff’s Office announced Tuesday evening that 21-year-old Nathaniel Bevers-McGivney, of Gowrie, is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the teen’s death. A Criminal Complaint details how he allegedly killed Jackson. Bevers-McGiveny was originally charged with “abuse of a corpse – failure to disclose known location.”

Nathaniel Bevers-McGivney booking photo (IA DPS)

Bevers-McGiveny is being held in the Carroll County Jail.

Two European presidents headed to Cedar Rapids this week

News

September 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The presidents of two European nations will be in Cedar Rapids Friday to mark a milestone at the National Czech and Slovak Museum. This Friday, the presidents of Slovakia and the Czech Republic will visit the museum in the Czech Village of Cedar Rapids. They’ll be part of a ceremony to dedicate the repaired clock tower at the site that was damaged by the 2020 derecho.

The clock tower has a design similar to the clock tower in Prague that features the 12 Apostles. A dozen figurines created by a Slovakian artist will be added to the clock tower in Cedar Rapids and each represents an immigrant from the Czech and Slovak region who settled in America.

Slovakia’s president will be at the museum Thursday night to dedicate a collection of artifacts that tells the story of a Catholic priest who helped organize the Slovak community in Cleveland, Ohio, around the turn of the 20th century. Both presidents will attend events at the museum on Friday.

Questions about closed Waterloo grocery that got city tax breaks

News

September 25th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – State Auditor Rob Sand says a private auditing firm will review details about the closure of a grocery store that got about two million dollars worth of tax incentives and grants from the City of Waterloo. All-in Grocers in downtown Waterloo opened on October 3rd of last year.

The store’s co-owner announced on August 10th the store would close temporarily as it switched to a more affordable supplier of food and other goods, but the store has remained closed and is up for sale.

In a written statement, State Auditor Rob Sand says his staff is passing information they’ve received about All-in Grocers to the private firm hired to audit the City of Waterloo’s finances. Sand says it’s the fastest and most efficient way to ensure public funds provided for the project were spent appropriately and as intended.

Sioux City homeless shelter to stay open

News

September 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Sioux City’s warming shelter that was scheduled to close at the end of the month due to a lack of funding, will now stay open with support of local agencies and the city council. Shelter board member and treasurer, Joe Twidwell says more local support has developed. “Rumor of the city’s possible support for this year has caused many individual donors and businesses to come forward and say, ‘We need to be part of this. We recognize that this is something we need to do,'” Twidwell says.

The city council had approved a 50-thousand dollar grant for the shelter in July and Monday approved an additional 150-thousand dollars. Mayor Bob Scott says he did not like the way the city was made out to be the villain in the shelter closing. “Quite frankly, we’ve got it before us, because it is a crisis, and trashing people, police chiefs and mayors and council members when we don’t even have all the facts, that’s not fair. It’s not fair at all,” he says. The Mayor reminded Twidwell the city gave the shelter 50-thousand dollars.

“I’m going to plug my nose today and vote for this, because I think it’s important that we have a plan going forward, and we’re in a crisis, so sometimes you have to vote for things that you wish you had a longer time to put a plan together,” Scott says.

The city council approved giving the homeless shelter 150-thousand dollars next February on a 4-1 vote.

Grow Another Row Produce Donations Still Welcome

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – As the growing season is winding down, the Cass County Grow Another Row Committee would like to remind community members to continue donating extra produce to the stands. Produce donations can include potatoes,  corn, tomatoes, zucchini, cucumbers, radishes, carrots, beets, green beans, squash, peppers, and more. Donated produce  should not be washed prior to placing on the stands, to help maintain freshness.
If produce is shared to the stands, you’re welcome to email Grace McAfee (mcage@casshealth.org) or share a photo on the  Facebook page (@CassCountyLocalFood). This will let the public know fresh produce is available for pick up! Please include  the time, date dropped off, and stand location to help us get the word out. Donations of any size are appreciated. No  donation is too big or too small for this program. Donations and pick-ups are encouraged to take place from dawn to dusk.  The stands will remain open as long as the growing season remains productive.
If you are looking for fresh local produce, make sure to check our stands all across the county. The Cass County Iowa Local Food, Farmers Markets, and Food Access Facebook page also shares when produce has been donated to stands.
For information on Cass County food pantries, farmers markets and other locally-driven food initiatives, follow the Cass County Local Food Policy Council on Facebook @CassCountyLocalFood. Healthy Cass County is a community-focused volunteer network formed to promote the health and well-being of Cass County residents. Follow Healthy Cass County on Facebook @HealthyCassCounty (https://www.facebook.com/HealthyCassCounty/).
  
Grow Another Row 2024 Stand Locations (May-October, dawn to dusk)
Anita Food Pantry
  • 208 Chestnut St. Anita
Atlantic Library
  • 507 Popular St. Atlantic
Atlantic Midtown Apartments
  • 1209 E 8th St. Atlantic
Atlantic Mollett Park
  • 1020 E. 3rd St. Atlantic
Cumberland Methodist Church
  • 500 Main St. Cumberland
Griswold Methodist Church
  • 100 Cass St. Griswold
Lewis Library
  • 412 W. Main St. Lewis
Marne Masonic Lodge
  • 418 2nd St. Marne
Massena – SWI Egg
  • 74851 Richland Rd. Massena
Wiota
  • 108 Pioneer St. Wiota

Lottery sales down in first two months of new fiscal year

News

September 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Lottery sales are off to a slow start in the new fiscal year after setting a sales record the previous year. Lottery C-E-O Matt Strawn gave the Lottery Commission an update during their meeting this (Tuesday) morning. “Gross lottery sales through the first two months of fiscal ’25 totaled 69-million-490-thousand and 821 dollars. This represents a 26-point-eight percent decrease from this same point last year,” Strawn says. He says lottery proceeds to the state through August are down around 48 percent from the same point last year.

Strawn had warned at the end of the last fiscal year that maintaining the record sales would be tough due to national economic conditions and soft sales in national lotto games. He cited Powerball sales as am example of how lotto games have impacted the new fiscal year. “So last year through August, Powerball sales in Iowa totaled 16-point-five million dollars. This year, over that same two-month time frame, Powerball sales in Iowa totaled five-point-nine million dollars,” Strawn says. “Thus, year-over-year Powerball sales in Iowa are down 64-point-oh-eight percent.”

Strawn says national Powerball sales trends are down a nearly identical amount. Strawn says jackpots are hard to predict and once they get going they bring in a lot of people who are not regular players. “And that’s even more so when those jackpots climb above the one BILLION-dollar threshold, which happened twice during the first two months of last fiscal year alone. Once in Powerball and once in Mega Millions,” he says. “And so not surprisingly as a result, Mega Millions performance to start the fiscal year is larger mirroring that of Powerball, as Mega Millions game sales are down 66-point-five-nine percent over the first two months.”

Strawn says the national economy has an impact on sales, and that includes changes in interest rates that impact the annuity or jackpot amount. “Simply stated, higher interest rates do lead to corresponding higher advertised grand prize amounts. And those higher advertised grand prize amounts lead to additional sales,” Strawn says. He says the issues they are facing were factored in as they prepared the budget for this fiscal year, and that has helped them stay close to their projections.

” Lottery sales for the first two months of fiscal 2025 are three-point-one million dollars ahead of budget projections. Lottery operating expenses are 247-thousand under budget. And when it comes to fiscal year-to-date proceeds, we are just less than one million behind our budget projections,” he says. Strawn says sales are unlikely to reach the record heights of recent years, but the adjustments they made in this year’s budget and continued diversity of products will help them deal with the drop.

Senator Grassley calls Postal Service ‘a disgrace’ for hiring sex offenders

News

September 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is blasting the U.S. Postal Service over a whistleblower’s claims that a registered sex offender got a job as a letter carrier, even though he revealed his status on the application. Grassley says the postal service has refused his request for a list of letter carriers who are registered sex offenders, and he can’t say yet how many there are, or if any of them may be in Iowa.

“No, we haven’t got the list yet, and my speech yesterday made it clear how idiotic their reasoning is for not giving us a list,” Grassley says, “and maybe they will end up giving us a list.” Congress is entitled to the information, Grassley says, but postal officials won’t supply the employee list, saying: “They have a personal privacy interest in protecting the fact that their name appears on a sex offender registry.”

Grassley says, “They don’t have any reason to withhold the list, but we don’t have any of that information at this point.” He says the investigators on his staff asked the postal service for a list of all letter carriers on the payroll, to which the reply was: “Current employees’ names, titles and duty stations are generally considered to be public information and releasable,” but then refused to provide the information. Grassley says it’s infuriating and calls the situation “a disgrace.”

“Isn’t it odd that you make an application for a job and you say you’re on the registered sex offender list and you still get the job?” Grassley says. “We asked, are they delivering mail near schools, homes, places where young people are, and they don’t seem to have that concern.”

Grassley says the whistleblower told his office, once the Postal Service figured out what happened, the employee was placed on paid leave. He says, “our communities deserve much better.”

Long-term Disaster Recovery Center to Open in Pottawattamie County

News

September 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

[Council Bluffs] Residents who were impacted by April storms and June flooding in Pottawattamie County now have access to a long-term disaster recovery center starting Monday, September 30, 2024. In partnership with Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management, the Pottawattamie County Emergency Operations Center will serve as a centralized location for disaster survivors in Pottawattamie County to access disaster case advocacy services, assistance with their federal assistance applications and process, and receive information and assistance with obtaining access to local and state assistance programs they may qualify for.

The Long-term Disaster Recovery Center (LT-DRC) will be staffed with local emergency management personnel, state disaster case advocates, and representatives from FEMAs Individual Assistance Program and the Small Business Administration. Doug Reed, Pott. County Emergency Management Director says “489 residents have registered for federal assistance in Pottawattamie County. Some are in the process, others that have been denied are encouraged to appeal, and many others may be eligible for additional state and local assistance programs. The activation of the LT-DRC will serve as an ongoing resource for those impacted by this year’s disasters and a place where they can find help navigating through the process.”

Pott. County EMA

The LT-DRC will open Monday, September 30, 2024, at the Pottawattamie County Emergency Operations Center at 205 S Main St, Council Bluffs, and will operate Monday through Friday from 9am – 5pm. The center will continue to operate until there is no further identifiable need for the resource. Any resident impacted by the disasters who need assistance navigating the recovery process, has a question about their FEMA or SBA status, needs assistance with their federal assistance  applications, needs to file an appeal on a denied federal application, or needs ongoing assistance with unmet needs is  encouraged to visit the LT-DRC during its hours of operations.

Alternate operating hours are being considered and planned to maximize opportunities for those who may need assistance from the center. Residents with ongoing or unmet needs can also get connected to assistance by completing the online Pottawattamie County Needs Assessment Survey.

2 charged with Failure to Maintain Control following separate Guthrie accidents

News

September 24th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Guthrie Center, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Guthrie County say two drivers were cited and with one having been arrested, following separate accidents earlier this month. In their report issued today (Tue., Sept. 24th), authorities say the driver of a 2005 Chevy pickup truck was injured during a rollover accident at around 2:30-p.m. on Sept. 6th. 48-year-old James Earl Winfred, of Menlo, was traveling southeast immediately west of the Stuart City limits on White Pole Road, when his pickup drove straight-off a slight “dog leg” left curve in the road. The pickup entered the south ditch and rolled over an unknown amount of times. The vehicle was a total loss.

Winfred – who was wearing his seat belt – was transported by Stuart EMS to the Guthrie County Hospital, where a blood draw was performed by hospital staff. He was later transferred to a hospital in Des Moines for additional treatment. The Sheriff’s office said excessive speed and intoxication were factors in the crash. A breath sample reflected in the accident report came from a preliminary breath testing device. Authorities will update their report when the toxicology results are returned. Winfred was cited for Failure to Maintain Control (FTMC) and Failure to Provide Proof of Financial Liability (Insurance) – accident related.

The Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office said also, an accident involving a 2013 Chevy pickup with three occupants, occurred at around 6-p.m. on Sept. 5th. Authorities say 28-year-old Jordan Leeann Smith, of Boone, was traveling in the 3100 block of Wagon Road when she swerved to miss a raccoon. Her story was confirmed by the two juveniles riding with her in the vehicle. The pickup went out of control when it swerved, and rolled into a ditch before coming to rest on its side in a soybean field. All three occupants of the vehicle were able to exit it on their own.

Smith was taken into custody for suspected OWI after the investigating deputy detected the odor of alcohol on her breath. She passed the Standard Field Sobriety Test but refused a preliminary breath test. She also refused a specimen of her breath for chemical testing before being turned over to the custody of the jailer. Smith was charged with FTMC and cited for Failure to show proof of insurance – accident related. Jordan Smith was subsequently arrested for OWI/1st offense and two counts of Child Endangerment. She’s scheduled to be arraigned Sept. 27th in Guthrie County Court.