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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Creston, Iowa) – The Creston Police Department reports the arrest at around 3:34-p.m. Thursday, of 21-year-old Myles James Koontz, of Creston, on a warrant for Driving While Barred. Koontz was also arrested for Driving While Barred. He later posted a $2,000 bond, and was released.
And, a man from Creston reported to Police late Thursday morning, that several items belonging to him, were stolen from his property at 202 S. Sumner Avenue. The items include:
The items were valued at $43,000 altogether.
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Natural Resources Commission has approved an agreement that moves oversight of the Honey Creek Resort in south-central Iowa from the D-N-R to the Department of Administrative Services (DAS).
D-A-S director Adam Steen told the Commission they started talking about the issue with the D-N-R as his agency sought a contract for a new company to operate the resort.”Essentially, D-N-R delegating its management authority to DAS. D-N-R will still own the property, it’s still obviously a state park, all that good stuff. It’s just from an operations perspective, DAS,” he says. Steen says it the agreement doesn’t make any big changes for the state.
“In my mind this shifts a lot of the workload from D-N-R to DAS. And in my view from DAS’s perspective is if they could just be available for questions along the way, we’ll try to stay out of their road and let them sort of remove themselves from any operation going forward. So the goal is to ease the burden on D-N-R here,” Steen says. He says the transition from Delaware North to the new concessionaire, Achieva Enterprises went well, and they have a multi-year contract.
“So it’s structured right now for six years, with then three, three-year potential extension. So it could go up to 15 years. But right now, the first portion of the contract would go for six years,” he says.
The resort along Rathbun Lake has had financial issues since it opened in 2008 and the D-N-R had sought a buyer before making the announcement it was hiring a new company to run the facility. Steen says the long-term goal is to sell. “The goal is not to hold on to the property for six or even 15 years. The goal is to work with the Army Corps to get the lease changed, privatized, if you will, so that ultimately we could we could sell the property,” Steen says. “We’re not there yet, we’ve got a ways to go on that.” Steen says the new operator will address something that has been an issue.
“The main difference is that the resort will be open year round. I know that was a point of contention, certainly down in Appanoose County that it was shut down. You know, obviously you had the anomaly with COVID, but then over the winter months it was never reopened,” he says. Steen says the new operator gives them a chance to rethink the promotion of the resort. “I think this provides us an opportunity to do marketing and a little different way than Delaware North. And that’s not a knock on Delaware North. It’s just we can do things a little differently,” Steen says.
He says things are ramping up for this year and the courtesy dock and camping will be available along with the hotel. Steen says the inflatable water park on the lake had about 20-thousand dollars in damage and they assessing whether they can get that fixed and have the park back open.
(Omaha, NE/KETV) – Firefighters in Nebraska and Iowa battled wildfires on multiple front, Thursday. KETV in Omaha reports Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen declared a state of emergency Thursday to get more help fighting the fires. High winds and dry conditions pushed the Crescent Fire north of I-680 in Iowa across state lines. Fire crews in Nebraska were trying to keep the flames from reaching homes.
Fire officials told KETV the forward progress of this fire had been stopped, but it would take an overnight effort to make sure it didn’t spread to anywhere else. The Crescent Fire started on Tuesday after fire officials say a vehicle caught fire. Crews had to leave the fire fight overnight for safety reasons, but Thursday, it all flared up again.
Crews were using brush trucks and water tenders to stop the spread. No structures or houses have been burned.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congresswoman Ashley Hinson says she’s concerned after a Massachusetts Air National Guardsman was arrested at his home for allegedly disclosing classified military documents about the Ukraine war and other top national security issues. “I think it’s incredibly scary that someone had access to this information in a way that they could so easily disseminate it. There will no doubt be some questions about the process here in the Department of Defense. The Department of Justice is going to do its investigation, but someone needs to be held accountable here,” she says.
Hinson says the person knew there were consequences with his alleged actions, but questions need to be raised about national security and it’s concerning that the system failed and the documents were leaked. “Obviously we have systems in place to make sure that people who have access to classified materials pass background checks,” Hinson says. “I have that access, and of course I take that very, very seriously about protecting what I learn in a classified setting.”
Hinson, a Republican from Marion, recently met with the president of Taiwan. She says the U-S has to take steps to keep China from invading the country. “Really what it comes down to is deterrence — how can we make sure that China does not see that as a good investment in its people and its technology and of its military. We need to fulfill our arms deal commitments to Taiwan and we have not been able to do that in a timely fashion,” Hinson says. She says keeping up trade ties with Taiwan will also help. “Making sure that we are helping them to show economic strength and expanding those opportunities that will help strengthen things in the Indo-Pacific for Taiwan, as well as for us,” she says. “And then I think it sends again a very clear message that we are willing to have these meetings and stand up, to dictators and bullies around the world. Bullies respond to strength.”
Hinson made her comments during a stop in Mason City and on a conference call with reporters.
(Marshall County, Iowa) – WHO-TV in Des Moines reports one person was seriously burned during a large farm building fire that quickly spread to surrounding fields, in Haverhill. The incident occurred at around 3:30-p.m., Thursday. Firefighters from multiple area department arriving on the scene, found several farm buildings on fire, and that high winds and low humidity had allowed the flames to spread to the surrounding grass, and field, according to the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office.
Several tanker trucks relayed water to the scene because there were no hydrants nearby. Local farmers helped battle the blaze by using tractors and tillage equipment to create a fire break to slow down the spread of the flames. The Marshall County Sheriff’s Office said farmers’ efforts helped fire crews get the fire under control. The owner of the property suffered serious, but non life-threatening burns and was transported via air ambulance to a hospital.
An investigation into the cause of the fire was on-going.
(Rural Bagley, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Guthrie County report the operator of a tractor east of Bagley suffered burns over 50% of his body, Thursday morning, when a field fire the machine and operator were trying to contain, spread to tractor. Guthrie & Greene County Sheriff’s Deputies, and firefighters from the Yale, Jamaica, Bagley and Bayard Fire Departments, as well as Panora EMS responded to the fire in the 2800 block of 110th Street. The blaze began in a field of corn stalk residue.
The Bagley Fire Chief said the tractor operator was apparently attempting a controlled burn of the field, which had flooded last year, but the current dry conditions and winds caused the fire to get out of control, engulfing the tractor and operator. The tractor is a total loss. Fire crews were able to control the blaze.
The tractor operator was flown to a hospital in Des Moines and subsequently transported to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Burn Unit. The incident remains under investigation by the Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office.
A burn ban remains in effect for Guthrie and Adair counties until further notice.
(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak arrested a man Thursday evening, on a warrant for Criminal Mischief in the 3rd Degree. 40-year-ol Michael Duwayne Cobb, of Red Oak, was arrested at around 5:40-p.m. He was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $2,000 bond.
Red Oak Police said also, 41-year-old Russel Albert McCullough, of Red Oak was arrested at around 3:30-a.m. today (Friday), in the 1700 block of N. Broadway Streetr. McCullough was arrested for Public Intoxication and was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 bond.
(Shelby County, Iowa) – Multiple area fire departments responded Thursday afternoon to a structure fire north of Prairie Rose State Park. According to reports, the blaze at 1818 800th Street was initially said to be an attached garage fire. Crews from Irwin, Kirkman, Kimballton, Avoca, Harlan and Elk Horn were requested at the scene.
Additional information is currently not available.
(Radio Iowa) – A House committee has unanimously voted for legislation that would prevent the property tax bill on an Iowa residence or Ag-land from going up more than three percent a year. Republican Representative Bobby Kaufmann is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. “This is centered around the increase for your actual bill, which is designed to give taxpayers not only predictability but also stop the bleeding for continually increasing property tax bills,” Kaufmann says.
The legislation does have a property improvement exception, so a property tax bill could go up more than three percent if someone spent one-hundred-thousand dollars building an addition on a house, for example. A SENATE committee has voted for a three percent cap on most property tax bill increases, but using a slightly different mechanism.
Republican Senator Dan Dawson of Council Bluffs — chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee — says he’s talking almost daily with Kaufmann about property tax limitations. “We’re not talking apples and oranges on different topics,” Dawson says. “We’re all in agreement. It’s just kind of working on those details and where we land on in the end.”
The bill that cleared the HOUSE Ways and Means Committee also calls for all bond referendums to be decided in November General Elections. It proposes a reduction in the local school district levy — replacing over 200 million dollars in PROPERTY taxes with state tax revenue. Representative Dave Jacoby, of Coralville, says Democrats on the committee voted for the overall package.
“The property tax affects every single person in the state of Iowa and we like what we see,” Jacoby says. But Jacoby says Democrats would like to see some assurances that the state would be REQUIRED to provide local school districts with that 200 million dollars every year, to avoid budget woes for public schools.
(Radio Iowa) – A bill to require more screening for Iowans receiving government food and health care assistance is headed to the governor for her signature.A household with more than 15-thousand dollars worth of assets that could be quickly sold or turned into cash would be ineligible for food stamps. Iowans receiving food stamps AND those enrolled in Medicaid would have to more frequently show their income is low enough to qualify for the programs. Representative Joel Fry, a Republican from Osceola, says the bill strikes a balance for taxpayers and those who are eligible for benefits.
“House Republicans believe that maintaining the safety net is critical for all Iowans, those who receive as well as those who give,” Fry said. Democrats cite a non-partisan report suggesting errors will deny government assistance to Iowa adults and kids who are eligible. Representative Beth Wessel-Kroeschell, a Democrat from Ames, says the fraud rate for food stamps is virtually non-existent.
“The rate is 0.07%. Our laws should be based on reality, on the state of things as they actually exist,” she said. “This bill makes it so more kids will go to school hungry.” Representative Josh Turek. a Democrat from Council Bluffs, says including vehicles in an asset test makes no sense, since Iowans — particularly those who live in rural areas — need reliable vehicles to get to work, school or the doctor. “In my opinion, this bill is a disgrace,” he said. “It’s morally reprehensible. The bill takes away food from veterans, the elderly, poor children and disabled individuals.”
Fry is the Republican who guided the bill through nearly four hours of debate. “It protects the program for those who need it most and I would suggest to you that we are creating a safety net today that is sustainable for the long term,” Fry said. “Without creating that safety net, the benefits won’t be in existence in my children’s lifetimes.”
The Senate approved the bill three weeks ago on a party line vote. It passed the House last (Thursday) night with the support of 58 Republicans. Five other Republicans and all 36 Democrats in the House voted no.