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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
AMES, Iowa – The Iowa State Fair is quickly approaching and the anticipation of the annual Governor’s Charity Steer Show is building. The Iowa beef cattle industry is again partnering with the governor in this fundraising event to raise money for the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa. Hundreds of fairgoers will attend the August 10 event, featuring youth, industry supporters, local celebrities, and of course, steers. Each steer is exhibited by a local youth representative and a guest celebrity selected by the sponsor of the steer. Twenty-four steers will be shown this year. Along with Gov. Kim Reynolds, we have other notable celebrities showing this year ranging from industry favorites to college. The Governor’s Charity Steer Show is sponsored by the Iowa Cattlemen’s Association (ICA) and the Iowa Beef Industry Council (IBIC).
Exhibitors from western Iowa include Claire Pellett from Atlantic, and her steer “Magic.” They are sponsored by the Iowa Veterinary Medical Association and ISU College of Veterinary Medicine. The animal will be shown by Celebrity hosts Dr. Dan Grooms & Dr. Stephen G. Juelsgaard, Dean of Veterinary Medicine at ISU. And, Ryan Brenner of Mapleton, and his steer “McEars” will appear during the event. They are sponsored by the Iowa Corn Promotion Board. The animal will be shown by celebrity host Stan Nelson, ICPB President.
“The Iowa Governor’s Charity Steer Show showcases the good that can be done by one industry when producers, industry supporters, and community namesakes collaborate,” said Jenna Smith, ICA member services and Governor’s Charity Steer Show co-chair. “The cattle industry is full of people that care and it is an honor to work with the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa, who provide a crucial service to families in need.”
The Iowa Governor’s Charity Steer Show has been held since 1983 and has raised over $5.1 million for the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa since the show’s inception. Last year the show raised more than $500,000, the third year in a row that the fundraising record has been broken. Funds are raised through online donations, sponsorships, and an auction of steers following the show. All money raised benefits the three independent Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa, located in Des Moines, Iowa City, and Sioux City. These three houses have served over 55,000 families from all 50 states and 62 foreign countries. Families from all 99 counties in Iowa have benefited from the Ronald McDonald Houses of Iowa too.
If you are interested in supporting the Governor’s Charity Steer Show, consider donating online or attending the show/auction to contribute. The Governor’s Charity Steer Show is being held in Pioneer Pavilion at the Iowa State Fair on Saturday, August 10 at 4:30 p.m. For additional information about the Governor’s Charity Steer Show or to donate, visit www.iowagovernorscharitysteershow.com.
2024 Iowa Governor’s Charity Steer Show Participants
(Radio Iowa) – While some states are reporting a tremendous summer surge in COVID-19 cases, the numbers are slowly rising in Iowa and are still considered moderate. Megan Meller, an infection preventionist at Gundersen Health System, says the Midwest has been spared any significant outbreaks, but new cases -are- being diagnosed at system facilities. “So in the region, we are starting to see an increase in COVID cases,” Meller says. “We’re seeing it in the outpatient side, but we’re also starting to see an uptick in hospitalizations due to COVID-19 as well.” In years past, it was common to see a rise in illnesses during the winter months when people are cooped up together, but the numbers usually drop during the summertime.
Meller says this upturn in COVID cases isn’t entirely unexpected. “Typically, we would see an increase in throat and respiratory infections in the winter seasons, but we’ve also seen them increase during the school year, especially at the start of the school year,” Meller says. “I think the summer, too, it’s all the travel, it’s people out and about.” Many Iowans may have to consult their COVID vaccine cards — if they can find them — to recall the last time they had a booster shot. Should we still be getting those COVID boosters? “There is a new strain of the vaccine coming out later this fall, so I would say if you can hold off and wait, I would wait for that new strain to come out,” Meller says. “However, if someone is immuno-compromised or they have underlying health issues, I think it’s worth a conversation with your doctor to figure out if should you get the current vaccine or wait until the fall.”
If you’re showing symptoms, Meller says it’s a wise move to take an at-home COVID test, though check the expiration date on the box, as some of those dates have been extended. “With August, we’re getting back into school time, no matter what, we are going to see a rise in colds and respiratory illnesses in general,” Meller says. “It’s really important during this time of the year, we always say to follow respiratory etiquette, cough or sneeze into your elbow. Make sure you’re washing your hands. And also try not to touch your face with dirty hands because that’s a really easy way that we can infect ourselves.” With the rise of rapid in-home tests, the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services stopped requiring positive COVID-19 tests to be reported to the state in April of 2023.
Gundersen Health System has clinics in Calmar, Decorah, Fayette, Lansing, Postville and Waukon, and a hospital in West Union.
(Creston, Iowa) – Police in Creston, Thursday night, cited a woman for allowing her animal to run at-large. Officers detained 24-year-old Zoey Ann Moon, of Creston, at around 10:30-p.m. She was then released on her citation, and a promise to appear in court.
(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports a woman was arrested early this (Friday) morning on a Theft charge. Deputies arrested 37-year-old Jennifer Lynn Holz, of Red Oak, at around 1:26-a.m., for Theft in the 5th Degree – a Simple Misdemeanor. Holz was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $300 bond.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa retailers that sell clothing, shoes, or both will likely be significantly busier over the next two days, as this is the state’s annual sales tax-free weekend. John Fuller, spokesman for the Iowa Department of Revenue, explains how it works. “I think it’s a good time for back-to-school shopping or any other type of shopping,” Fuller says. “Basically, there’s no sales tax on articles of clothing and footwear that are under $100. That’s the gist of it. It starts one minute after midnight on Friday and goes to midnight on Saturday.” People are always looking for money-saving loopholes and Fuller says there are a few stipulations on the two-day offer.
“Clothing does not include things like jewelry, sports equipment, watches,” Fuller says, “and there’s a complete list of what is taxed — and what will not be taxed — at revenue.iowa.gov.” He says the savings will grow based on how much you spend, and through Saturday night, you’ll be able to save plenty. “Well, yeah, it’s 7%, that’s the state sales tax in most areas in state,” Fuller says, “so whenever you can save a little bit of money, that’s a good thing.”
This tax “holiday” is typically held the first weekend in August and it’s been an annual ritual since 2000. The event usually saves consumers a total of around five-million dollars over the two days.
(Radio Iowa) – D-N-R Hydrologist Tim Hall says it looks like July will end up slightly wetter than normal once the final numbers are in. He says it continues the string of normal or above normal months that has pulled Iowa out of the drought. “The challenge that we’ve seen in the most recent month is although the rainfall is about average a lot of it came in the last week or ten days of the month,” he says. “And anytime you get a month’s worth of rain in a couple of weeks period of time it can be very, very challenging.” The latest map from the National Drought Monitor shows a clear map with no drought areas. Hall says while the colors indicating drought areas quickly washed off the map, the process was slow and steady. “While we’ve had a pretty rapid turnaround in drought conditions, this trend toward wetter weather and sort of giving us our side of the drought started almost ten months ago in October of last year,” Hall says.
Hall says water flows are back to normal on most waterways. “Last year there was a record number of irrigation permits that were in danger of being cut off because of low flow. If the stream flows too low, we don’t allow irrigators to withdraw water to irrigate under their permits. This year, no irrigation permits are even under any pressure,” he says. The drought had cities putting water use restrictions in place and Osceola has been looking at a plan to recycle wastewater. Hall says we’d be wise to not stop thinking about water use plans. “We would caution and advise any utility that’s sometimes struggling with water supply to think about where they were a year ago and keep working on some proactive solutions,” Hall says, “because droughts gonna come back. Maybe not this year, maybe not next year, maybe not for several years.”
He says the drought will come back sometime and it’s best to be prepared and take steps that can help minimize the impact when it does.
(Fremont County, Iowa) – A for-profit nursing home in southwest Iowa that has filed for bankruptcy says it owes Iowa taxpayers more than $1 million in fees the state failed to collect. The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports that in May, the for-profit Tabor Manor Care Center in Fremont County filed for bankruptcy, listing $1.3 million in assets and $2.3 million in liabilities.
By far, the 46-bed nursing home’s single largest creditor is the State of Iowa — specifically, the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services/Iowa Medicaid Enterprises. The home has reported that it owes the agency $1,169, 257. The debt is tied to unpaid Quality Assurance Assessment, or QAA, fees that date back to 2019, according to bankruptcy records.
Tabor Manor isn’t the first Iowa nursing home to file for bankruptcy after neglecting to pay the QAA fees to the state. In 2021, the Iowa-based QHC Facilities nursing home chain filed for bankruptcy and informed the court that it owed taxpayers more than $3.9 million due to unpaid QAA fees.
In 2022, DHHS reported to state lawmakers that of the 379 Iowa nursing homes that were required to spend their increased Medicaid revenue on pay increases for certified nurse aides, 68 of them – or 18% of the total — failed to do so. An additional 37 homes – or 10% of the total – failed to meet a different standard that required them to spend 60% of their excess revenue on compensation for all staff.
Despite the lack of compliance by some care facilities, DHHS proposed a major increase in state spending on the QAA program last year. According to a budget analysis by House Republicans, $111.2 million was appropriated from the Quality Assurance Assessment Trust Fund for Fiscal Year 2024, which ended June 30. “These funds do not revert back to the general fund,” the GOP advised state legislators, noting that it would result in a $68 million increase in revenue for facility owners.
In recent bankruptcy-court filings, Tabor Manor Care Center has said the biggest financial hurdle it now faces is the unpaid QAA fees owed to the state. “In order to continue our important work, the company deferred payment of QAA fee obligations during the COVID-19 pandemic and the post-pandemic recovery period,” the home’s owner and administrator, Mitchell Worcester, told the court.
He said that before filing for bankruptcy, his company tried to negotiate a plan to pay off the $1.1 million debt over a “period of time which matched the company’s ability to pay.” He said the state was “only able to offer a payment plan of relatively short duration, including escalating payments, which the company will not be able to perform to.” Worcester told the court that one of “the principal purposes” of the company’s bankruptcy filing is to address the $1.1 million debt in a manner that will enable the home to remain open.
The company’s goal, he said, is to renew negotiations with the state on a payment plan.
(Des Moines, Iowa) – The State Department of Natural Resources says a city in Pottawattamie County has for years, failed to comply with federal requirements to limit the amount of pollutants in its stormwater collection system. Carter Lake, with a population of about 3,800, is among the smallest cities in the state that have the requirements, which is due to its location in the Omaha-Council Bluffs metro area. It is among nearly 50 cities and universities in densely populated areas that are subject to the rules.
The Iowa Capital Dispatch reports rainfall in the city flows into a stormwater system that pipes it to Carter Lake — a so-called “oxbow lake” that was once a segment of the Missouri River. Flooding in 1877 rerouted the Missouri and left a small part of Iowa on the west side of the river, which is now the city of Carter Lake.
Iowa DNR Senior Environmental Specialist Alison Manz, says the DNR for years has sought to get the city into compliance as a small municipal separate storm sewer system, but those efforts have been stymied by leadership changes in the city. The city had failed since at least 2018 to create plans, programs or ordinances to operate and maintain its collection system, manage pesticide and fertilizer applications, inspect illegal pollutant discharges, and monitor for construction site runoff, according to a recent DNR order.
The city is also required to have information on its website for residents and to form a stormwater advisory committee. For five years, it did not submit a mandatory annual report that documents all of those actions.
Carter Lake recently agreed to pay an $8,000 fine for the violations and to comply with the requirements in the future.
In May, the city posted an advisory to its Facebook page that warned residents about the potential for yard waste to pollute the lake and kill fish. The note said residents should bag grass clippings, leaves and other plant material and compost them.
KNOXVILLE, Iowa — Swimming is not recommended at Lake Red Rock’s North Overlook Beach due to elevated levels of bacteria. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers works with Iowa State University to test the water weekly. They say the “swimming not recommended” signs will stay up until testing shows lower bacteria counts. The Iowa Department of Natural Resources reports there are currently 13 state beaches that also have dangerously high bacteria count.
Swimming is not recommended at the following state beaches:
(Hardin County, Iowa) – A single-vehicle accident Thursday night in rural Hubbard claimed the life of a man from Texas. The Iowa State Patrol reports a 2007 Ford Explorer SUV driven by 30-year-old Pedro Daniel Limon, of Eagle Pass, TX, was traveling south on U.S. Highway 65 at around 9:55-p.m., at a high rate of speed.
When Limon failed to negotiate a curve at J Avenue, his SUV went out of control and entered the east ditch, where it rolled several times and came to rest on its top. Limon – who was wearing a seat belt – died at the scene. The crash remains under investigation.
The Patrol was assisted by the Hardin County Sheriff’s Office, Hubbard Fire & EMS, and Hardin County E Squad.