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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!
The Glenwood (Iowa) Police Department reports the arrest on Monday, of 39-year-old Kyle Zeigler, from Glenwood. Zeigler was arrested on a Mills County Warrant for 5th Degree Theft. His cash-only bond was set at $300.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA – A man from Pottawattamie County was sentenced on drug charges in Council Bluffs U-S District Court, Friday. Authorities say 50-year-old Geno Lee Campos was ordered to serve seven-years (84 months) in prison for Possession with Intent to Distribute Methamphetamine. Campos must also serve a five-year term of supervised release after the prison term. There is no parole in the federal system.
On July 4, 2021, Campos was the front seat passenger of a car stopped by the Iowa State Patrol for speeding on Interstate 80 in Council Bluffs. In Campos’ backpack, law enforcement
found approximately 17 grams of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia. Campos was also in possession of a loaded revolver that he placed underneath the passenger’s seat. Campos was prohibited from possessing firearms.
United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Iowa State Patrol, Council Bluffs Police Department, Pottawattamie County
Sheriff Department, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and Iowa Division of Narcotics Enforcement investigated the case. This case was prosecuted by the United States
Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa.
(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Secondary Roads Department is advising residents of the county of a scheduled crane walk at the Rolling Wills Wind Farm from County Roads T-28 to T-27. The scheduled walk will take place today (Tuesday). from about 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm, for crossing of the County Road Cedar Avenue between County Road 250th and County Road 260th.
It should take 15-30 minutes to cross Cedar Avenue. Traffic control will be in place before and during the crossing process. See the attached map for details (click on the map to enlarge). If anyone has any questions or concerns please contact Todd Moseley at (662) 216-0620.
(Radio Iowa) – A lush, green lawn is a source of pride for many Iowans and this prolonged drought is forcing many of us to quit worrying about having the best lawn on the block — and to let the grass go dormant. Adam Thoms, a horticulture professor at Iowa State University and a turfgrass extension specialist, says it’s stressful for grass to shake up the watering schedule, so he’s telling Iowans if their lawns are already turning brown, just let them go. “Putting them in and out of dormancy by watering and stopping and then restarting is really hard on the turf,” Toams says. “It’s okay to go into dormancy. The grass can last for 30 to 60 days with that straw-brown color and it won’t hurt it at all. It’ll come back out in the fall.”
Des Moines Water Works, which serves more than 600-thousand customers in 18 central Iowa communities, is asking residents to voluntarily conserve and cut back on watering. Toams predicts many folks in the metro area -will- cut back, as requested. “There’s some research out there that shows when they ask for those voluntary commitments that people do step up and follow those,” Toams says. “We always suggest that you don’t water every day anyway. It’s better to do a deep and infrequent watering. That forces the turf roots to go deeper to chase that water deep in the soil, so, that’s an okay thing.”
Some people turn on the sprinklers for hours at a time and let them saturate the grass, but Toams says most lawns don’t need more than an inch of water in a week’s time. If you’ve laid sod within the past year or are trying to grow new grass from seeds, you’re in for what could be an expensive, frustrating challenge. “Those are the ones that are going to get hurt by this drought. They’re the ones that need regular watering just because they don’t have a deep root system,” Toams says. “We do need to make sure that those get regular waterings. If you’re thinking about overseeding or adding seed to your yard, just wait. Right now is not the time. It’s too hot and it’s obviously too dry.”
If the dry weather lasts much longer and grass has been dormant up to six weeks, apply an inch or so of water in a single application. The grass won’t green up, but it’ll keep the roots alive. If the drought continues, water in that fashion every two weeks, but not enough to bring it out of dormancy. Toams suggests Iowans give their lawns a good dose of fertilizer this fall to help them recharge and ideally, come back strong next spring.
SIOUX CITY, Iowa – Aug. 9, 2022 – The Iowa Transportation Commission today approved $8.3 million for the fiscal year 2023 State Aviation Program, which includes several subprograms detailed below.
The Airport Improvement Program (AIP) will fund $5.4 million for a variety of aviation safety initiatives, system planning, and air service development activities. Included among them is:
It will also provide funding for airport development projects at 21 airports in Iowa. Eligible AIP projects include runway, taxiway, and apron development; fuel systems; navigational aids; maintenance of aviation weather systems; runway marking; windsocks; emergency operational repairs; land-use planning; air service initiatives; and the mitigation of obstruction and wildlife hazards at airports. The AIP program is funded with revenue from aircraft registration fees and aviation fuel taxes.
Aviation vertical infrastructure programs will provide $2.9 million for projects at six general aviation airports and eight commercial service airports throughout Iowa. These programs provide funding for the maintenance and development of airport facilities, such as terminal buildings, maintenance facilities, and aviation hangars. Among the projects is the construction of a box hangar at the Denison Municipal Airport, which comes with a price tag of $633,500. The State will pay $300,000.
Vertical infrastructure programs are funded from the Rebuild Iowa Infrastructure Fund. The State Aviation Program supplements local and federal funding sources and seeks to maintain a safe and effective statewide air transportation system. Details on the State Aviation Program funding can be viewed at https://iowadot.gov/aviation/airport-managers-and-sponsors/State-Funding/state-funding-programs
(Anita, Iowa) – CAM School District Superintendent Paul Croghan says he and his staff are excited for the start of the new school year on August 23rd, and he urges motorists to use extra caution, especially when youngsters are getting used to their buildings and schedule.
He said the District made some changes to the calendar, so if you any questions, please call.
Croghan said his staff aren’t the only ones excited for the beginning of school year.
The CAM School Board met Monday evening, and approved several contracts.
He says they still need a couple of Special Education Teachers to fill the staff completely. Croghan says they will make adjustments as necessary as the year progresses, and if more staff are added. In other business, the CAM School Board reviewed four proposals for the green space used for the Industrial Arts shop and agreed to accept an offer from Wahlert Homes, LLC, in Anita, for $26,500, but that’s not the end of the process.
(Radio Iowa) – An eastern Iowa company is manufacturing and marketing what it calls “micro rooms” that can placed in your back yard or beside the house to be used as a spare bedroom, office or sunroom, and in a host of business applications. Fred Smith, co-owner of FastPacs — based in Davenport, says they have four styles of rooms, all of which are eight-by-12-feet with a 10-and-a-half foot high cathedral ceiling. “They fold flat to about 24 inches, so you can ship them economically, you can store them economically, you can stack them,” Smith says, “and then they just pop up like an Erector set. Two people can finish the assembly in about two hours. They’re about 70% assembled when they show up, or we can ship it fully assembled.”
The price of a micro room starts around 16-thousand dollars, which Smith says is a much more cost-effective solution to solving space needs versus hiring a contractor to build a permanent addition to your home or business. “There’s no building permit required. These are temporary structures. They don’t need a foundation. They’re not taxable and they’re modular,” Smith says. “You can hook them together if you need extra space, plus, if down the road you move, you just fold it down, put it on the flatbed and take it with you.”
While Smith emphasizes the micro rooms are temporary, they’re exceptionally sturdy and are built to last. “They’re made of steel with vinyl or insulated hard side panels,” Smith says. “We ran a structural analysis on it with a local engineering firm and they have it rated for 110 mile an hour winds and eight-to-10 feet of snow, so these things aren’t going anywhere.” FastPaks’ micro rooms are being featured this week at the Home & Garden Show in Austin, Texas, with a series of similar home shows coming up, including the one in Des Moines in February.
(Audubon, Iowa) – Officials with the Audubon Chamber of Commerce, Sunday, announced Saturday’s the T-Bone parade winners.
Antique Tractor, 1959 and older: Keith Grabill
Milestone Tractor, 1960 and newer: Matt Randeris
Saddle: The Audubon County Saddle Club
Jr. Division: The Girl Scouts
Sr. Division: 1st place – Audubon Fire and Rescue / 2nd place – Southwest Iowa Real Estate
Good Neighbor: Exira Fire Department
(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa State University Extension specialist says canning or freezing home grown fruits and vegetables has become more popular in the last 10 years — and that picked up during the pandemic and is continuing now with higher food prices. Food specialist Renee Sweers says it’s important to preserve your produce using updated techniques. “People tend to think that they should just fall back and do things, the way that their grandparents did or the way you know, somebody in their family in the past did it. And that might not always be the safest method,” Sweers says. “I think it’s kind of hard for people to understand, food preservation has been around for such a long time, kind of hard for people to understand that it really is based on science.” She says some cooking methods aren’t the best and safest anymore.
“We don’t use the what they used to call open kettle canning, where you just put the hot food in a hot jar and just put the lid on it. There’s no processing, I mean, that is an old process that is no longer considered safe,” she says. Some of the new technology is also not safe for canning foods — including the pressure cookers that you plug in. “Yes, we would do pressure canning in a pressure canner — but the instant pots and some of those types of electrical devices for pressure cooking are not to be used for canning,” Sweers says. And while you can get some helpful information online — she says there is also a lot of information out there that isn’t correct.
“We usually say, you know, if you come to our website, if you come to Iowa State University Extension Outreach, that’s going to be a reliable source, and really any of the extension services in the country –so whether you’re using Nebraska, or Kansas or Illinois or whatever, they should have good, reliable information,” according to Sweers. She says one other source that they always recommend is the National Center for Home Food Preservation.
Council Bluffs, Iowa — A so-called “electrical event” at the Google Data Center in Council Bluffs, Monday, resulted in three people transported to Nebraska Medicine in Omaha, hospital with critical injuries. KETV in Omaha reports authorities responded to the center, which is located near Bunge and Wabash avenues, at around noon, Monday. No information was immediately available about what caused the incident.
The incident was under investigation. A Google spokesperson provided KETV with a statement which read, in-part: ” The health and safety of all workers is our absolute top priority, and we are working closely with partners and local authorities to thoroughly investigate the situation and provide assistance as needed.”