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Cass Supervisors appoint Pymosa Township Clerk and Conservation Board Mbrs

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Board of Supervisors today (Wednesday) approved the appointment of Kristy Pellett, of Atlantic, as Clerk for the Pymosa Township, effective immediately. The position of Trustee for the Township has yet to be filled, however. The Board also approved the immediate appointment of LuAnne Beth Steffens, of Griswold, to the County Conservation Board.  Supervisor Chuck Rieken said Steffens’ appointment will help the County in its mandated efforts at Gender Balancing the various County Boards.

In other business, the Supervisors heard a report from County Veterans Affairs Commissioner Mitch Holmes, who said the number of claims filed for assistance in the 2nd Quarter of Fiscal Year 2011-2012 were down slightly less than 30 from the previous quarter, primarily due to the reduced number of applications for energy assistance, thanks to the warmer weather we’ve been experiencing. Holmes said there’s a positive sign for veterans who might be looking for work. He says his office has been receiving calls from local employers looking to hire veterans, and while he’s helped to put some vets in contact with those employers, he doesn’t know what the results of any interviews were. 

And, Joel Dirks, with West Central Community Action (WCCA) provided his agency’s Annual Report. The organization serves to administer several programs in the County as alternatives to General Relief, including Head Start, Child Care Resource and Referral, the WIC (Women, Infants and Children) Program, and Emergency Food and Shelter (EFS) Programs. Dirks says WCCA provided a little more than $2-million in services to residents of the County last year. They worked with 750 households, made up to a little more than 1,700 individuals. Many of those persons include Single parent/female heads of households, and single-person households, which is attributed in-part to LiHeap – the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. 

59-percent of those households had an income below 100-percent of the poverty guideline. 32-percent have a household income between 101- and 150% of the poverty guideline. The annual federal poverty guideline (100%) during the reporting period for a family of four, was $22,350. Dirks said 22% of their individual clients in Cass County have no health insurance, and 20% are disabled. Last year, the Supervisors appropriated $3,000 to WCCA. When Dirks asked for the same amount from them for the upcoming fiscal year, his request was unanimously  approved by the Board.

Celebration to mark CAM’s “Blue Ribbon School” Award today (Wednesday)

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Here’s a reminder from “The Station Where Your Friends Are”: A celebration will take place this afternoon at the CAM High School in Anita, to honor the former staff, teachers, board members and students of CAM North Elementary School, which received a 2011 “Blue Ribbon School” award in Mid-September. CAM North was formally known as the Anita Elementary School. The celebration along with a recognition ceremony and speech from a returning Anita High School alumna, will take place at 1-p.m., at the high school.

A reception and open house will continue at the elementary building after the ceremony, until 4-p.m. (Students will be dismissed at 2:30-p.m.) Invitations were sent to former staff and board members from recent years at the school, but all former teachers, staff and board members are welcome to attend.

The National Blue Ribbon Schools Program recognizes public and non-public elementary, middle, and high schools where students achieve at very high levels and/or where the achievement gap is narrowing. The Program sets a standard of excellence for all schools striving for the highest level of achievement.

8AM Newscast 01-25-2012

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January 25th, 2012 by admin

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7AM Newscast 01-25-2012

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January 25th, 2012 by admin

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2 injured after van rear-ends tractor in Page County

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Two people were injured Tuesday evening, after a van rear-ended a tractor about three-miles northwest of Clarinda. The Page County Sheriff’s Office reports a van driven by 61-year old Karla Morrison, of Clarinda, was traveling south on O Avenue, just south of the intersection with 170th Street, when she failed to notice a dual axle farm tractor, driven by 47-year old Terry Hughes, of rural Clarinda.

The 2000 Chrysler Grand Voyager hit the rear of the tractor, causing the 2007 John Deere Model 6430  to toll twice into the east ditch. Both drivers were transported to the Clarinda Regional Health Center by Clarinda E-M-S. Both vehicles were totaled in the crash, which happened just before 5-p.m.  Officials cited Morrison for Following too close.

Ex- Part-Time Glenwood H.S. Audio-Visual Tech faces sex abuse charges

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A 2010 Glenwood High School graduate hired as a part-time district-wide audio-visual support technician has been charged with sexually abusing a female student inside a high school closet. 19-year old Andrew Schoening, of Glenwood, faces up to 10-years in prison if he’s convicted on a charge of statutory rape. He would also be required to register as a sex offender. 

According to court documents filed in Mills County, a 15-year old female told Glenwood police Schoening forced her to have sex in a closet at the high school. Schoening was hired by the Glenwood school district’s technology team in September. He oversaw audio-visual equipment at high school athletic contests. The alleged incident happened during the school day on December 20th. The student reported the alleged incident to high school staff, and school officials promptly notified local law enforcement. Schoening resigned after the incident came to light last week. 

Mills County Attorney Eric Hansen told the Omaha World-Herald that Schoening, who turns 20 next month, faces a charge of third-degree sexual abuse, which requires the prosecutor to prove only a sex act with a person who was 15 when the defendant was 19 or older. Hansen said regardless of consent, any sexual contact involving Schoening and the minor would constitute a crime because of the age difference.

Council Bluffs defense attorney Mike Murphy said he intends to prove the sexual contact was “consensual.” Murphy hopes proving the encounter was consensual might result in a less severe penalty or exoneration. He said Schoening and the girl were acquaintances who often crossed paths in the high school.  Schoening has admitted to having sex with the teen. He also admitted to police that he knew the girl was under age.

Schoening remains free after posting bail last week. A Mills County magistrate has ordered him not to have any contact with the girl or her family.

Western IA man pleads guilty to child porn charge

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Onawa man has pleaded guilty to federal child pornography charges. The U.S. attorney’s office says 54-year-old Terry Tyson pleaded guilty to one count of possessing child pornography during a hearing last week in U.S. District Court in Sioux City. Prosecutors say Tyson admitted during a hearing Friday that he possessed child pornography on his home computer. He faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. A  sentencing date has not yet been scheduled.

Iowa gets C-minus on education report card

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A new report ranks Iowa’s K-through-12 education system 31st in the nation. The report comes from the American Legislative Exchange Council. It gave Iowa an overall grade of C-minus. Iowa had very low marks in college programs that prepare teachers and in keeping effective teachers in the classroom. Iowa got a D-plus for failing to do enough to get rid of ineffective teachers. Republican Governor Branstad suggests the report should be a “wake-up call” for state policymakers who’re reviewing his education reform plan. Democrats suggest the report from the Republican-leaning group is skewed. They point to other reports indicating, for example, that Iowa high schoolers who took the A-C-T had an average score that ranked second in the nation.

(O. Kay Henderson/Radio Iowa)

Giving Iowans protection in cases of “justifiable force”

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

A three-member panel has given initial approval to a proposal that would broaden the definition of “justifiable force” for Iowans who believe they face a threat from an attacker and shoot a gun in defense. Representative Matt Windschitl, a Republican from Missouri Valley, says it’s about protecting law-abiding Iowans from frivolous lawsuits.  “What we’re trying to address is Iowans’ individual right to protect themselves and their neighbors from any kind of threat or harm without having to face any kind of civil liability,” he says.

The three-member House subcommittee that considered the bill held a sort of public hearing yesterday that drew critics of the plan. Polk County Attorney John Sarcone suggested the proposed change would give defense attorneys another tool to try to justify the criminal conduct of gang members or those accused of domestic abuse.  “We’d allow people to get off because someone made a comment or looked at somebody the wrong way,” Sarcone said. This same “justifiable force” proposal was introduced in the Iowa legislature last year, too, but never cleared a committee in the House or Senate.

(O. Kay Henderson/Radio Iowa)

Iowa’s congressmen, US senators divided on key Obama tax proposal

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January 25th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Iowa’s congressional delegation is split along party lines over a key proposal President Obama highlighted in his “State of the Union” speech. Obama has proposed raising the tax rate to at least 30 percent for Americans who make more than a million dollars, an idea Omaha billionaire Warren Buffett advocates. Obama invited Buffett’s secretary to last night’s speech in D.C., as Buffett often says he pays a much lower tax rate than his secretary does. That does not sway Steve King, a Republican Congressman from western Iowa. “Warren Buffett has shielded a lot of income,” King says. “We can’t look at Warren Buffett’s tax rate and his secretary’s tax rate and draw any calculation…so it looks to me like it’s a political ploy more than anything else.”

Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says “under-taxing” millionaires and billionaires isn’t the problem. “But the most important thing is the intellectual dishonesty of saying that Buffett’s paying 15 percent and that’s less than what his secretary pays. He pays 15 percent on capital gains, but you’ve got to remember that same money was taxed at 35 percent at the corporate level,” Grassley says. “You could figure that dollars taxed at 50 percent, not 15 percent.” Republican Congressman Tom Latham of Clive doesn’t directly accuse President Obama of engaging in “class warfare,” but Latham’s no fan of raising the tax rate on the wealthy. “I think it’s important that we try to unite the country and not divide the citizens economically or wherever,” Latham says, “because we’ve got a lot of problems in this country.” Iowa’s three Democratic Congressmen all support the higher tax rate for people who make more than a million dollars

Congressman Leonard Boswell, a Democrat from Des Moines, says he’s been a “long-time” supporter of raising the tax rate on top wage earners. “Maybe amnesia set in how we got to where we are, but there’s no point in lamenting on it. We’re there,” Boswell says. “How do we get out of it? And if everybody participates and I mean everybody — all — we can do this.” Senator Tom Harkin, a Democrat, says the Republican Party’s “trickle down” economics doesn’t work and Harkin argues Obama’s tax proposals “promote a better, more fair tax structure.”

President Obama is due in Iowa over the noon-hour today (Wednesday). He’ll give a speech at a manufacturing plant in Cedar Rapids, a stop through five “battleground states” in the November election and a backdrop to highlight the president’s proposals to boost the manufacturing industry.

(O. Kay Henderson/Radio Iowa)