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FBI Omaha Encourages Internet Challenge for Students and Teachers While Distance Learning

News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, NE –FBI Omaha Field Office Special Agent in Charge Kristi K. Johnson is encouraging parents, students and teachers to take advantage of the FBI’s Safe Online Surfing program; a free, fun and educational program for children. The goals of FBI’s Safe Online Surfing (SOS) Internet Challenge program are to teach children in third through eighth grades how to recognize and respond to online dangers such as cyberbullying, online predators, and identity thieves.

The SOS program teaches young people about web terminology and how to recognize secure and trustworthy sites. Other lessons cover how to protect personal details online, create strong passwords, avoid viruses and scams, be wary of strangers and be a good virtual citizen. Students and their parents can visit the island that corresponds with their grade level and surf through activities that teach how to recognize hazards and respond appropriately.

The SOS program is designed to meet all federal and state Internet safety mandates so that students and teachers can use this as part of their curriculum in the classroom. Schools can compete with each other on a national level and schools with the highest scores will earn an FBI-SOS certificate. More than 1 million students completed the program and took the SOS exam during the 2018-2019 school year. SOS activities are available to everyone, but teachers must register for a class to participate in the tests and competition. Any public, private or home school in the United States with at least five students is eligible for the online challenge. Teachers manage their students’ participation in the program and the FBI does not collect or store any student information.

Since October 2012, the FBI-SOS website has been visited nearly 3.6 million times, with a total of more than 10.6 million page views. Parents, students, and teachers can visit https://sos.fbi.gov/en/ to register.

Governor Kim Reynolds’ Friday press briefing 04/10/2020

News

April 10th, 2020 by admin

Here is the video feed for Governor Reynolds’ Friday press briefing. We will have live audio as well on KJAN at approximately 11:00 a.m.

Stung by outbreak, once-growing Iowa company orders layoffs

News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — A business services company in Waterloo has laid off dozens of workers after the coronavirus pandemic upended its recent expansion. VGM Group announced this week that it has eliminated 58 full-time jobs and 15 part-time jobs. The employee-owned company said that it had offered transfers, extended furloughs or early retirement packages to another 17 workers. VGM Group provides purchasing, insurance, health care management, marketing and other services to thousands of business customers across North America.

VGM CEO Mike Mallaro says the cuts are “very difficult for everyone in the VGM family” but necessary.

New gathering spot planned for northwest Iowa trails

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The site of a movable restaurant that has moved on, is destined to become a gathering place to link biking and walking trails in the Iowa Great Lakes region. Erin Reed is executive director of the Dickinson County Trails Board. “It runs right along next to our railroad trail, so we’ve been watching that property for some time,” she says. “It’s been for sale for a while and just always thought it would be a great spot to have a trail head.”

The Lake Street Diner in Spirit Lake that sat on the property was moved in December. Reed says her group has gotten a grant to cover the cost of buying and developing the property. “At this time we are looking at different design concepts for a shelter type area that would include restrooms and be somewhat unique to the old rail trail concept,” Reed says, “and also include some landscaping and clean up of the area.”

Reed expects the project to take a couple of years. The city of Spirit Lake sits on the western shore of East Lake Okoboji. The railroad trail being developed in Dickinson AND Osceola Counties will eventually run 37 miles — on land first laid with rail tracks in 1867. The 14-mile Iowa Great Lakes Trail includes a loop through Spirit Lake’s residential and downtown areas.

Getting new medical marijuana dispensaries could take time

News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — It will likely take a year or more to replace two medical marijuana dispensaries in eastern and western Iowa. Dispensaries in Council Bluffs and Davenport closed without notice on March 30th. The manager of the Iowa Department of Public Health’s medical cannabis program, Owen Parker, says the licenses of the closed dispensaries operated by the Have a Heart company are no longer valid.  “There’s no management agreement where transfers or anything like that that can be done. The licenses, once they’re closed, are rescinded. It just starts from scratch however many licenses need to be filled,” Parker says.

Parker says Have A Heart ignored the rules of their contract and failed to give six months’ notice. He says if the company had given proper notice — the re-opening process could have been faster. Parker says the license application process will be underway soon.  “And then we will award the license to somebody which then is when they would move forward with their buildout, so from beginning to end you can’t really put an exact timetable on it, it’s easy to say a year or more in all reality, ” according to Parker.

Patients in eastern Iowa will have to get their medical marijuana products from the remaining dispensaries in Sioux City, Waterloo, or Des Moines.

UI researchers shifting gears to make studies fit with the current crisis

News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — With the coronavirus moving academic life online, some researchers are shifting their work to benefit health care workers. Madeline Jensen is a University of Iowa graduate student studying sustainable water development. Her research typically focuses on chemical compounds known as PFAS (PEE-faas), but Jensen says those studies aren’t considered critical right now. “That research I pretty much had to stop when the university shut down and I could only work on reading papers about it and writing what I could on it,” Jensen says.

However, since a U-I official approached her lab, Jensen has been working to create air filters for personal protective equipment like masks. This could better safeguard health care workers from breathing in tiny particles that may carry the virus. U-I Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering David Cwiertny says his students usually make filtration devices to take pollutants out of drinking water. They’re adapting to fit with the current crisis, Cwiertny says, as anyone who does research looks for ways their work can help society. Cwiertny says, “What we’re trying to do here is, if there’s an opportunity for us to contribute our expertise and help, rather than just sitting on the sidelines, when we would take that opportunity to see what we can do.”

Cwiertny says normally he’d have about a dozen people in the lab, but now there’s just two to take proper precautions against COVID-19.

(Reporting by Katie Peikes, Iowa Public Radio)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 4/10/20

News, Podcasts

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 4/10/20

News, Podcasts

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:05-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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1st COVID-19 positive case announced in Union County

News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with Greater Regional Health, in Creston, said Thursday, a case of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) has been confirmed in Union County. The patient is between thee ages of 61-and 80, and is self-isolating at home with their spouse. Union County Public Health Nurse, Robin Sevier says “While this is Union County’s first case, it may not be the last, and that’s why we encourage all residents to continue to make prevention a priority.”

Recommended prevention activities :

  • Stay home as much as possible. Leave only for essential errands like groceries or getting medication. When you run these errands, send only one person from the household, if possible.
  • Stay home when even mildly ill (the kind of illness that normally wouldn’t prevent you from your everyday activities)
  • Cover coughs and sneezes with a tissue or your elbow/upper arm.
  • Wash hands frequently with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.

Bridge fire near Shenandoah, Thursday

News

April 10th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Updated 9:20-a.m.) Firefighters from Shenandoah were dispatched at around 4-p.m. Thursday to a wooden bridge fire. Upon arrival, crews found heavy smoke and flames engulfing the Wabash Trace bridge over the East Nishnabotna river, on the north side of Shenandoah. According to a post on the department’s social media page, crews were able to extinguish the fire and were on scene for approximately two hours.

The Wabash Trace organization posted on social media, that over 50′ of the bridge will have to be completely torn off and rebuilt. Officials say there is no thru access, so trail users will have to cautiously use Highway 59 as a detour. Work on repairing the bridge will begin as soon as possible. If you would like to donate towards the repair, please visit www.wabashtrace.org/contribute and make a note in the memo, or you may mail a check to P.O. Box 581, Shenandoah, IA, 51601.

Photos via the Shenandoah Fire Department Facebook page.

The Page County Sheriff’s department, Page County EMA, and several members of the Wabash trace assisted Shenadoah Fire at the scene. The cause of the fire remained undetermined and was under investigation.