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CAM School Board approves Drew Ticknor as Head Baseball Coach

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Anita, Iowa) – Members of the CAM School Board, Monday evening, approved a contract with Drew Ticknor, as Head Baseball Coach for Summer, 2023. Superintendent Paul Croghan.

The meeting marked the last for the retiring Board, and the re-organization of the new/incoming Board. That process included the election of President, Vice-President and Board Secretary/Treasurer. Croghan says there were no changes from the past year with regard to those officials, and other, related matters.

The Board approved an SBRC request for a Modified Supplemental Amount (MSA) of $101,900.

And, the approved an SBRC request for a MSA of $94,881 for At-Risk DropOut Prevention. In other business, the CAM School Board acted on approving several Board Policies, including two for emergency medical pen and other substance use.

And, Paul Croghan says the CAM School Board passed a motion to move forward with the process of creating a timeline for the closure of an attendance center.

Their final order of business was to authorize the retention of boundaries for Director Districts, based on the 2020 Census. Those boundaries are unchanged from last year.

Davenport recycler invests $5M in trash-sorting robots

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An eastern Iowa recycling operation is investing five-million dollars in three more trash-sorting robots, after earlier successes with artificial intelligence. Since 2019, the Scott Area Recycling Center in Davenport has used an optical sorter to identify materials along a conveyor belt and sort them automatically with high-powered jets of air. Facility supervisor Mike Keppy says the optical sorter has increased the quality of their recycled product as well the value they can receive from selling it in the second-hand market.

The facility processes 40-thousand tons a year, with hopes the new machines will increase that tonnage while decreasing the material that’s sent to the landfill. The new machines will go online next summer.

Ernst helps secure priorities in a Defense Authorization Act

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), a combat veteran and member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Monday announced that she secured a number of her priorities in the annual defense bill, the FY2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).

Ernst said also, “This important bill ensures the United States military remains the most lethal fighting force on the face of the planet.”

Included in the FY2023 NDAA is focus on:

Supporting our partners:

  • Key parts of the senator’s bipartisan DEFEND Act to create an integrated air and missile defense network with Middle Eastern partners to counter Iran.
  • Providing training to Ukrainian forces on how to de-mine the Black Sea.

Ending energy reliance on our adversaries:

  • The bipartisan HARD ROCK Act to rebuild the National Defense Stockpile and force DoD to procure critical minerals from the U.S. or our partners and allies.
  • An initiative to prevent INDOPACOM from procuring energy from adversaries, specifically North Korea, Iran, Russia, and China.
  • A provision to limit DoD’s procurement of electric vehicles with parts sourced by slave and child labor.

Standing with our servicemembers:

  • Standardizing how the military diagnoses traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder across all military services.
  • Ending the DoD’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate due to readiness and end strength concerns.
  • A pay increase for our servicemembers.

Eastern Iowa prison inmate reported dead due to natural causes

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

CORALVILLE, Iowa – The Iowa Department of Corrections, Monday, reported the death of 57-year-old Floyd Eugene Stockdall Jr.   His death, Friday afternoon in hospice care at the Iowa Medical and Classification Center, authorities say, was due to natural causes.

Stockdall, Jr., was residing at the Classification Center due to chronic illness. He had been serving a 60-year maximum term for the crimes of Prohibited Acts – Manufacture, Delivery, Possession and other charges from Polk County.

His sentence began on April 1, 2014.

State Ombudsman see increase in complaints, many from prisoners

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – State Ombudsman, Bernardo Granwehr, says his office fielded almost 65-hundred complaints in the fiscal year that ended in July. “That’s about a five percent increase from the previous fiscal year. And we’re up really almost 60 percent from fiscal year 2014,” he says. Granwehr says the vast majority of the increases in complaints came from inmates in state prisons and county jails. He says they take a preliminary look at all complaints.

“But in terms of complaints that actually lead to an investigation — I would say probably 20 to 40 percent would be would be just an estimate of what we would further look into,” Granwehr says. “….most of them we find that the government is doing its job properly and has handled the situation appropriately.” He says one of the first things that they ask is if the person has taken advantage of the grievance process that is available or whatever process is available in trying to resolve their situation.

“We often say, please take advantage of that process first. And then if there is an issue, or you continue to have an issue, you certainly can always call us back. But the yeah, that should be the first resort to take advantage of those existing processes for resolving complaints,” Granwehr says. He says drug testing has created some of the complaints, as he says there have been a good number of false positives. Granwehr says the state agency with that knowing they are expected to have supporting evidence in addition to those positive tests. He says hiring an outside agency to scan the mail has addressed the issued of drug-soaked paper materials getting into prison.

“By basically scanning that material, and sending those scanned things to inmates, it continues to ensure that they have their rights to an access to communication with the outside world, but you know, deprives that avenue for smuggling the drug in,” Granwehr says. You can see the entire report on the Ombudsman’s website at: www.legis.iowa.gov/Ombudsman/

Red Oak man arrested on a warrant related to drug charges; Man arrested in Villisca on a FTA warrant

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak arrested a man on active Mills County warrants, Monday. Authorities say 21-year-old Nicholas Sebastian Turnbull, of Red Oak, was arrested at around 6:25-p.m. on the warrant for Failure to Appear on charges of Possession of a Controlled Substance/marijuana – 1st offense, and OWI/1st offense. Turnbull was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $1,000 bond.

And, the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports Braden Gray was arrested in Villisca, Monday evening, on an active Montgomery County warrant for Failure To Appear on an original charge of Driving while license is denied or revoked. Gray was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 bond.

2 fatal accidents in Iowa, Monday

News

December 13th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(UPDATED) Accidents in Boone and Chickasaw Counties, Monday, claimed two lives. The Iowa State Patrol reports 34-year-old Brian Allen Lage, of Ogden, died in a collision that took place at around 5:20-p.m., in Boone County. Lage was driving a 2010 Chevy Silverado pickup, when his vehicle rear-ended a 2021 Kenworth Construction truck registered to Manning Ag Service.

The accident happened as the Kenworth, driven by 63-year-old Edward B. Adams, of Pleasant Hill, was slowing to turn left from Highway 30 westbound into a private field drive near R Avenue. Lage, who was wearing his seat belt, died from his injuries at the hospital in Boone. The accident remains under investigation.

The second accident, in Chickasaw County, happened at around 11:55-a.m. in Lawler, as 21-year-old Joseph Alan Gathje, of Lanesboro, MN, was attempting to load a tracked vehicle into a semi-trailer flatbed. The tracked vehicle rolled off of the trailer and into the ditch, pinning the Gathje, who died at the scene.

The accident remains under investigation.

District court upholds permanent injunction against Iowa’s ‘fetal heartbeat’ law

News

December 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A district court judge has ruled that a state law that would ban most abortions is still unconstitutional and the permanent injunction barring it from taking effect remains in place. In 2018, Governor Kim Reynolds signed a bill to make most abortions illegal after a fetal heartbeat is detected. That’s about the sixth week of a pregnancy. Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa immediately sued and prevented the law from taking effect. A district court judge issued a permanent injunction in 2019.

A Polk County District Court judge has ruled she has no authority to lift that order and her ruling goes on to say it’s the Iowa Supreme Court, not the district court, that will decide what legal standards should be used to review abortion-related cases.

Governor Kim Reynolds says she’s very disappointed in the district court’s ruling and appeal the decision immediately. Reynolds says this summer, the Iowa and U-S Supreme Courts made clear there is no fundamental right to an abortion and the fetal heartbeat law passed by representatives of the people should take effect.

Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship and USDA APHIS Confirm Case of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in a Commercial Turkey Flock in Ida County

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (Dec. 12, 2022) – The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) have confirmed a positive case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in Ida County, Iowa.

The affected site is a commercial turkey flock.

Ernst says she stands by her vote on same-sex marriage

News

December 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Local Republican committees in at least six Iowa counties have voted to censure U.S. Senator Joni Ernst for her vote to have the federal government recognize same-sex marriages. The move means all states must recognize same-sex marriages from other states, but Ernst says it does not force states to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

“Iowa has recognized same-sex marriage since 2009,” Ernst says. “The vast majority of Iowans, even a majority of Republicans, do support same-sex marriage.” County party officials who’ve criticized Ernst say her vote violates the Iowa G-O-P’s platform, which calls for the REPEAL of laws that recognize same-sex marriage.

“After hearing directly from Iowans and taking a close look at the amended language that was presented in the Senate, I believe that the bill does protect religious freedoms,” Ernst says. “and it simply maintains the status quo in Iowa.” Woodbury County Republicans have not voted to censure Ernst, but the group’s Facebook page features a local pastor criticizing Ernst for denying what the pastor refers to as Biblical law.

During a conference call with Iowa reporters, Ernst said the bill codified exemptions for religious institutions that do not wish to recognize same-sex unions.  “This is incredibly important that I get these points out,” Ernst says. “The bill does not provide a federal right for same-sex marriage.” According to Ernst, the bill also has new and explicit protections for non-profit religious organizations. Ernst was among a dozen Republican senators who supported the bill. And Ernst says she understands there are a number of efforts to censure her for that vote.

“I stand by my vote,” Ernst told reporters, “and I hope that more people will actually read the bill and understand that we have just improved upon religious liberty protections, not just in Iowa but across the United States.” This summer, the Mahaska County G-O-P voted to censure Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks of LeClaire for her support of the initial bill on same-sex marriage. On December 1st, the Des Moines County G-O-P voted to condemn both Miller-Meeks and Ernst.

The Wright County G-O-P’s Central Committee is another group that’s voted to censure Ernst and its Facebook page is calling for a constitutional amendment defining legal marriage as the union between one man and one woman.