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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Shelby County, Iowa) – An official with the 1848 Danish Windmill in Elk Horn (IA) has announced a new, FREE, virtual tour of the authentic windmill, that’s viewable from the comfort of your favorite chair, and a new capital campaign to raise funds for repair of the windmill’s windshaft and cap frame, and prevent further damage. Danish Windmill Director Shaun Sayres says they are still encouraging everyone to visit the windmill, and while you’re in-town, visit all the other attractions and businesses.
Those who chose to participate in the virtual tour, will experience the attraction inside and out.
There are also site-perspective videos of the windmill in operation, from whatever angle you wish to view it.You can sign a virtual guest book in the gift shop,
Other features will be added to the virtual tour as the material is created. Sayres said work on the project began in January. A skilled crew from Denmark is preparing to come to Elk Horn, and are expected to arrive in a few weeks, to made urgent repairs and install a grease hub and brake cable that will make it easier and safe to operate and maintain. Those repairs don’t come free. Sayres said their new capital campaign, “Back on the Grind,” aims to raise $60,000 for Phase 1 of the repair/upgrade of the Danish Windmill, which is set to begin in October.
Sayres said it’s an old building with moving parts, and there are challenges that come with keeping in functioning the way it what designed.
He said if all goes well with the repairs this Fall, and if time allows, they’ll be adding a new, sack-hoist wheel.
To learn more about the fundraising campaign, or to take a virtual tour of the windmill, go to www.danishwindmill.org., or call 712-764-7472. The Danish Windmill is a 501(c) tax-exempt organization.
(Radio Iowa) – The U-S-D-A is criticizing the governor’s proposed alternative to providing federal food assistance next summer to low-income households with children. Governor Kim Reynolds did not sign Iowa up THIS summer for the U-S-D-A program that would have provided families an extra 140 dollars for every child who qualifies for a free or reduced price lunch at school. Families can use the money to buy groceries at stores where food stamps are accepted. Reynolds is opting out of the program NEXT summer, too, but has asked the agency to let the state use 29 million dollars in federal money to buy groceries and provide food boxes to qualifying households.
A spokesperson for the U-S-D-A says the governor is asserting the State knows better than its own families do about what their needs are. Reynolds says her program would provide healthy meals and snacks for about 60-thousand more school-aged children because the state would make bulk purchases of food. The U-S-D-A’s spokesperson says there’s been rigorous evaluation of the agency’s summer food program showing it works to reduce child hunger and support healthier diets.
Friday evening, the Governor’s office issued the following statement:
(Radio Iowa) – Some Iowa schools are already back in session, while most others will be resuming soon, and motorists are being reminded to stay vigilant for young pedestrians, and for those big, yellow school buses. Page County Sheriff Lyle Palmer says if you’re behind the wheel and spot a bus, take the cue to be watchful for kids, whether you’re in town or in the country.
“Our school buses have very visible lights,” Palmer says. “They have a little white flashing light on top, plus your ambers and reds to indicate they are preparing to stop or stopping, and putting that stop arm out to load or unload children.” When approaching a school bus from behind, the sheriff says motorists should use extra caution and slow down.
“Flashing red or amber warning lights means, according to the Iowa Code, you’re not permitted to pass a school bus and should be ready to stop,” Palmer says. “When the school bus stops and the stop arm is extended, stop behind the school bus. It doesn’t take that long for them to load or unload kids. Don’t stop any closer than 15 feet from the rear of the bus.” If there’s a school bus pulled over in the far lane or a slow-moving vehicle lane, it could be a very costly mistake to assume it’s okay to pass.
“Probably 90% of our school bus violations come from Highway 2 about 4 to 6 miles east of Shenandoah,” Palmer says. “It’s because we have a slow-moving vehicle lane there. People think, ‘Since the bus got over, I can go around,’ or, ‘Since the bus is over and I’m meeting it, I’m okay.’ Well, that’s not okay. You’re still going to get a citation.” When the stop arm of a school bus is extended, it’s the same as a stop sign. Also, he says to give that bus — and the kids — plenty of room when you come to a halt.
“Make sure that you stop prior to the front of that school bus,” he says, “because a lot of times, if there’s children crossing the road, they’re going to cross in front. They’re not going to cross in back of the school bus, they’re going to cross right in front of it. So, be prepared to stop and stay stopped until the stop arm comes back in.”
In addition to stiff fines, Palmer says violating school bus laws may result in your license being suspended for up to 180 days.
(Iowa Capital Dispatch) – Nine states, including Iowa, are challenging an executive order by the Biden administration, that would enlist federal agencies to help register residents to vote, and those states say the order undermines their power to control elections, calling it federally subsidized program aimed at boosting Democratic and left-leaning blocs. Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach and Montana Attorney General Austin Knudsen filed the federal lawsuit in court in Wichita, Kansas. The nine states are Montana, Kansas, Iowa, South Dakota, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Carolina. The heart of the lawsuit is Executive Order 14019, which was issued on March 10, 2021.
The states challenging the executive order say Biden converts various federal agencies, turning them in part into “a voter registration organization” illegally. The attorneys general say that elections, including voter registration, are solely the province of states, guaranteed by the Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. Moreover, the states said that it’s an example of the federal government trying to usurp the sovereignty of the states, and giving the states no other choice than to resort to federal court. The lawsuit said the states were never invited into the process, never allowed to comment, and they accuse the Biden administration of hiding the plans.
The lawsuit lists a number of federal agencies as defendants, including the U.S. Treasury, the U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Department of The Interior, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Department of Labor, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the U.S. Department of Education. The lawsuit also claims that the National Voter Registration Act means that federal agencies cannot stand in the way of citizens voting, but it also said that voter registration activity is left to the states, and Biden’s order oversteps its authority.
The 41-page suit outlines a number of ways the executive order commands the federal agencies to help bolster the efforts to register voters. The lawsuit said the order allows the Department of Education to allow federal work study funds to “support voter registration” activities. The states also said that encouraging a variety of different agencies without proper training put the elections at risk of fraud.
The states conclude the lawsuit by saying that the plans in the executive order weren’t motivated to help resident register to vote, rather they are part of a Democrat plan.
(Radio Iowa) – The World Health Organization is declaring an international health emergency over m-pox, what used to be known as monkeypox, though -no- cases are reported in Iowa and generally, Iowans are just warned to be aware. Brian Simmons, an infection preventionist with Gundersen Health System, explains how m-pox is transmitted and what it does. “Mpox is a virus that is spread either through close contact with family members or through sexual contact,” Simmons says. “It is a virus that can cause sores that we see on different parts of the body. It’s very similar to what smallpox might have looked like years ago.”
Symptoms of m-pox include: fever, headache, muscle aches and backache, swollen lymph nodes, chills, exhaustion and a rash or blisters. It can be fatal, especially a strain that’s appearing primarily in African nations. “The newer strain of mpox is more virulent than what the previous strain was that we saw a few years ago, that we actually saw around here in the United States, even around locally,” Simmons says. “Currently, the newer strain is mostly around or within the sub-Sahara African nations, such as Congo and so on.” The W-H-O has only declared public health emergencies seven times, including for m-pox in 2022.
Across the U-S, more than 16-hundred m-pox cases are reported this year, twice the number of cases seen by this time last year. Simmons says this virus shouldn’t be a big worry for the majority of Iowans, though people need to stay informed. “For those that could have a high risk for mpox, they may want to consider a vaccine. That still is a way to combat against mpox transmission,” Simmons says. “For those that are very low risk for mpox, just being aware of what’s going on in the world, or if you’re traveling to areas of Africa that have it endemic in those areas.”
State health officials say a limited amount of m-pox vaccines are available to eligible individuals in 13 Iowa counties: Black Hawk, Cerro Gordo, Des Moines, Dubuque, Johnson, Linn, Polk, Pottawattamie, Scott, Story, Washington, Webster and Woodbury.
NEWTON — U.S. Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks spoke Thursday in favor of carbon dioxide pipelines as a way to aid Iowa’s ethanol production industry with an environmentally conscious impact. The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports Miller-Meeks, the Republican representative for Iowa’s 1st Congressional District, spoke about pipelines and other renewable fuel efforts supported by the Conservative Climate Caucus. She, alongside Republican Reps. Randy Weber of Texas, Doug Lamborn of Colorado and Brett Guthrie of Kentucky — fellow caucus members — visited the Chevron Renewable Energy Group in Newton as part of a trip to Iowa focused on increasing affordable, low-emission energy options.
Following a tour of the biodiesel production facility, the Iowa Republican said Iowa is a “forerunner and a leader” in enacting a conservative vision for climate-conscious energy production through the use of renewable fuels, wind and solar energy.
The caucus wants to explore ways to encourage the adoption of new climate-conscious technology and techniques, but Republicans encourage “market-based solutions” rather than government requirements, Miller-Meeks said. She criticized President Joe Biden’s administration for its approach to climate change solutions, citing the Environmental Protection Agency’s rules on issues like coal and natural gas-fired power plants and tailpipe emissions.
As the Republican lawmakers seek to bolster alternative energy sources and production in the U.S., Miller-Meeks said carbon dioxide pipelines are one way to lower the carbon intensity score of ethanol, which she said in turn makes the industry competitive globally as American ethanol producers compete with countries like Brazil.
The Summit Carbon Solutions pipeline project has been a major point of contention for Iowans in both parties as the company seeks to build a network in five states, including Iowa. Much of the pushback over the project has come from the use of eminent domain that would force landowners to allow the pipeline to be built through their land even if they do not grant the company voluntarily easements.
A group of state Republican lawmakers, as well as conservation groups, counties and property owners, have filed requests for reconsideration with the Iowa Utilities Commission on the three-person panel’s decision to issue a permit to Summit in Iowa.
Miller-Meeks said the use of eminent domain is a “state issue, not a federal issue,” but said the ideal is for a “limited amount of involuntary easements” to be used in pipeline projects. She also said it was important to remember that pipeline companies will not be taking or owning the land.
Movie in the Park-
(Lewis, Iowa) – The Cass County Conservation Board is holding a “Movie in the Park” Campground Program. Staff will show the FREE movie, The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. The public program will be held at the Campground Shelter at Cold Springs Park in Lewis, IA on Friday August 30th 2024 at 9:00 pm.
In the movie, Coriolanus Snow mentors and develops feelings for the female District 12 tribute during the 10th Hunger Games. Come out for a great movie under the stars! Bring a blanket or chair, snacks, Dress for the weather, we may reschedule at a later date if it rains, and You DO NOT have to be a registered camper to attend the program!
“Mysterious Monarchs” Programs
The Cass County Conservation Board is holding “Mysterious Monarchs” Programs. The public programs will be held:
FREE! Discover the Monarch Butterflies before their journey south! Conservation staff will tag monarchs and show you how! If you would like a home tagging kit you must attend and pre-register for the Kit. Call 712-769-2372 to pre-register for your kit. You DO NOT have to be a registered camper to attend the program!
(Lewis, Iowa) – The Cass County Conservation Board will be holding “Stand Up Paddleboard” (SUP) demonstrations later this month. The public demonstrations will be held August 31st at 9-a.m. and 10:30-a.m., at Cold Springs Park- Beach, near Lewis. There is no charge to attend.
Officials say SUP is the fastest growing sport in the paddling community not only across the country, but in land-locked areas like Iowa, as well. It’s fun, healthy as a total body work-out, and offers a unique perspective when it comes to being on the water.
After a quick demonstration, you’ll have a chance to try out the boards for yourself. If you do not bring a life jacket one will be provided to you. Children must be 16 years or older. Paddlers must weigh LESS than 250 LBS.
All events are at the Cold Springs Park- Beach
August 31st
9AM- 5 Spots
10:30am- 5 Spots
Kayaks will be available for checkout at the same time. There are four, sit-in kayaks available. Paddlers must weigh LESS than 250 LBS. There are also four, sit-on-top kayaks. Paddler must weigh LESS than 395 LBS. If you do not bring a life jacket one will be provided to you.
9AM- 4 kayaks, sit in, 4 kayaks, sit on top.
10:30AM- 4 kayaks, sit in, 4 kayaks, sit on top.
September 7th
1:00pm- 4 kayaks, sit in, 4 kayaks, sit on top.
2:30pm- 4 kayaks, sit in, 4 kayaks, sit on top.
You MUST register online to get your spot! https://www.mycountyparks.com/County/Cass/Park/Cold-Springs-Park.aspx
Programs will be cancelled if there is unsafe weather conditions on the Lake.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – A man from Nebraska was injured during a chain-reaction crash involving his motorcycle and three other vehicles Thursday afternoon, north of Atlantic. The Iowa State Patrol says the vehicles: a 2014 Honda CTX-130, operated by 60-year-old Anthony Haynes, Sr., of Omaha; a 2024 Dodge Ram 2500 pickup driven by 53-year-old William Smith, of Vernona, NY, and a 2021 Chevy Silverado pickup driven by 30-year-old Jacob Swoboda, of Gretna, NE, were all traveling east on Interstate 80 near Exit 57 (Cass County Road N-16/Olive Street/620th St.) at around 3:25-p.m.
When a pilot car for an oversized load pulled into the traffic lanes, a 2021 BMW X-1 driven by 23-year-old Carly Boss, of Clive, slowed and pulled over to the left shoulder, as the vehicle ahead of the BMW was doing the same thing. When the BMW slowed to a stop, it was struck by the motorcycle.
The motorcycle was then hit by the Chevy pickup truck, which was hit by the Dodge pickup truck. The Patrol says Anthony Haynes, Sr., was transported by Cass EMS to Cass Health in Atlantic, before being flown by LifeFlight helicopter to the UNMC in Omaha. A report on his condition was not released.
Atlantic Fire and Rescue, the Cass County Sheriff’s Office and Cass EMS assisted at the scene.
CRESTON, Iowa – In an update to our previous report, the Iowa Department of Public Safety says that at around 7:37-a.m. today (Thursday, August 15, 2024), officers with the Creston Police Department were dispatched to the 800 block of North Lincoln Street after receiving reports of gunshots. While officers were en route, they were notified of an adult male at the Greater Regional Health Center with multiple gunshot wounds. Medical professionals treated the man, who was then airlifted to a Des Moines area hospital for additional treatment. He is expected to recover.
In response to the shooting, the GRHC and other local businesses were placed in a brief lockdown while officers secured the area. The lockdown has since been lifted.
At approximately 2:30 p.m., Creston police officers and Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation agents arrested Daniel McDowell, 22, of Lorimor, Iowa. He was taken into custody without incident at the Union County Law Enforcement Center and has since been processed into the Union County Jail. He is facing one count of attempted murder and a probation violation.
This is an ongoing investigation. No additional information will be released at this time.