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Survey suggests economy growing in 9 Midwest, Plains states

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January 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Ne. (AP) – A survey report suggests the economy is growing slowly in nine Midwest and Plains states as the U.S.-China trade war continues. The Mid-America Business Conditions index rebounded to 50.6 in December from 48.6 in November. Creighton University economist Ernie Goss oversees the survey, and he says the trade war and the global economic slowdown will be drags on the overall Mid-America economy for the first half of 2020. But he expects overall regional growth to remain soft but positive. Survey organizers say any index score above 50 suggests growth. A score below that suggests decline.

Illinois distributor expecting lots of Iowa marijuana business

News

January 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Recreational marijuana became legal in Illinois Wednesday, and one distributor has set up up a heated tent and a shuttle service in preparation for new border-crossing customers. Nature’s Treatment of Illinois is located just outside of the Quad Cities, in Milan. The store’s Tammy Lafontaine says they’ve already gotten a lot of interest from across the border. “We are expecting a lot, a lot of Iowa residents. I have been fielding phone calls from people saying they’re traveling from the middle of Iowa, they’re renting rooms in Jumers (casino hotel), etcetera. It’s…it’s going to be quite, quite busy here,” Lafontaine says.

Out of state residents will be able to buy half the amount of marijuana that in state-residents can buy. Lafontaine says they’re also trying to warn out-of-state residents about the legal limitations.  “It’s still federally illegal. So whatever they’re going to purchase here in Illinois, they need to find a place that they can consume it in and those need to be private residences,” she says. “So if you have friends in Illinois, go to their house, enjoy your cannabis, go back home.”

It is still illegal to use marijuana in public in Illinois, to transport it across state lines, or drive under the influence of the drug.

Health officials warn that your cold may actually be potentially-fatal RSV

News

January 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — January is typically the worst of the peak months for the flu in Iowa and health officials warn things are shaping up for a particularly severe season for the flu and other respiratory viruses. Dr. Melanie Wellington, an epidemiologist at the University of Iowa Hospitals, says they’re concerned because the southern hemisphere had a bad flu season. “We use that as an indicator to predict what’s going to happen during our flu season and it suggests that the flu season could be a bad one,” Wellington says, “but that is not a science.”

Iowans are being advised to watch out for what’s called respiratory syncytial (sin-SIS-shul) virus, or R-S-V. Symptoms are similar to the common cold, but it can cause severe illness — or even death — in young infants, the elderly and those with compromised immune systems. Wellington says, “You should seek medical attention if you have a cold this year, where it’s simply not getting better, where your breathing rate goes very high, where someone’s struggling to breathe, grunting or having troubles with their oxygen levels.”

R-S-V affects between ten and 20-percent of the state’s population each year. Wellington says the best way to prevent R-S-V is by regularly washing your hands. She notes, it’s still not too late to get a flu shot. While flu cases often show up during October and November, the peak months are December through February, though cases are sometimes reported as late as May.

(Reporting by Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio)

More than five-fold increase in number of 11th graders who vape

News

January 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The state medical director says while very few Iowa kids are smoking cigarettes these days, there’s been a sharp increase in the use of other kinds of nicotine products. Dr. Caitlin Pedati says 22 percent of 11th graders admitted on a 2018 survey that they used e-cigarettes to “vape.”

“That’s in contrast to just two years prior when only nine percent of 11th graders reported using those products,” Pedati says. Dr. Pedati, who works in the Iowa Department of Public Health, is state medical director AND state epidemiologist. She says the U.S. Surgeon General has declared e-cigarette use among youth to be an epidemic for good reason.

“We know that nicotine is highly addictive. We know that it can affect things like learning, memory and attention — especially in people whose brains are still developing which happens until about age 25,” Pedati says. “There’s also a concern that some of these products may contain things we don’t even know about and so they might have short or long term health effects.”

Research also shows routine nicotine use among teenagers increases anxiety. A 2018 survey found two percent of sixth graders and eight percent of eighth graders admitted they had “vaped” and state officials warn they’re using things that look like wrist watches, computer thumb drives or pens that adults may not recognize as a vaping device.

Iowa early News Headlines: Jan. 2, 2020

News

January 2nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:22 a.m. CST
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A 14-year-old boy is dead after a shooting just hours into the new year in Des Moines. Police say the shooting happened about 3:50 a.m. Wednesday. Police say the shooting happened about 3:50 a.m. Wednesday. Arriving officers found the body of Josiah Woods along 17th Street. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Police Sgt. Paul Parizek told KCCI-TV that the shooting happened after a dispute at a gathering. Parizek said police sought information from people at the scene but the lack of cooperation was “frustrating.” No arrests have been made.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Pete Buttigieg’s campaign says he raised more than $24.7 million in the last three months and now has a campaign staff of 500 people nationwide. It’s a show of financial and organizational strength heading into the presidential primaries. Buttigieg’s campaign says he has raised $76 million since he launched his bid for president, including more than 2 million contributions from over 733,000 people. It’s a notable feat for the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who gave up the position Wednesday when his successor was sworn in. Buttigieg’s average contribution was around $38.
ELDON, Iowa (AP) — Tiny Eldon in southeast Iowa has been losing population, jobs and business for nearly five decades, but one woman is trying to turn things around with a focus on tourism centered around the community’s famous landmark _ the house that served as the backdrop for Grant Wood’s famous “American Gothic” painting. Donna Jeffrey has lived in Eldon her entire life. The Des Moines Register reports that she is leading a downtown Eldon redevelopment nonprofit that seeks to reinvigorate the town by giving visitors a reason to spend more time and money there.
GLENWOOD, Iowa (AP) — The superintendent of an Iowa care center for people with intellectual disabilities has been fired amid a federal investigation. Jerry Rea was notified in a letter Monday that he was being dismissed from his position at the Glenwood Resource Center. The letter says the dismissal is a result of disregard for policies and procedures. Associated Press efforts to reach Rea on Tuesday were unsuccessful. Rea had been placed on paid leave earlier this month. Few details have been released about the federal investigation. It covers concerns that residents with a range of developmental and physical disabilities were the subjects of sexual arousal experiments.

Seek professional help if resolving to quit smoking in 2020

News

January 1st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — One of the most common New Year’s resolutions is to quit smoking, and a survey finds 70-percent of Iowa smokers want to quit, while 50-percent will try to quit in 2020. There are mixed messages circulating about how vaping can help smokers to kick the habit, messages that are blatantly false, according to Erika Sward, spokeswoman for the American Lung Association.

“We know that smokers are confused,” Sward says. “Smokers want to end their addiction and not be held hostage by nicotine and tobacco products.” The U-S Food and Drug Administration has not found any e-cigarette to be safe and effective in helping smokers quit, she says, and the Lung Association is urging smokers to step away from all tobacco and nicotine products, and not switch to vaping.

“The Lung Association believes that every smoker can quit, and can quit for good,” Sward says. “We know that it’s hard, but if smokers want to talk to their doctors or call 800-LUNG USA or call 800-QUIT NOW, they can work with someone who is an expert at helping people end their addictions for good.”

Surveys find about 16-percent of Iowa adults smoke cigarettes and more than 5-percent use e-cigarettes. As for Iowa teens, about 4.4-percent smoke cigarettes while 22-percent of Iowa 11th graders use e-cigarettes. Breaking the addiction can be very difficult and the advice of a professional may be key.

Sward says, “Every person takes a slightly different approach to how they can be most successful at quitting, and that’s why it’s important to work with someone with that experience, including the American Lung Association, to find the exact way they can be most successful in improving their health for 2020.” The Iowa Department of Public Health reported nearly 50 cases of serious illness related to vaping during 2019.

Volkswagen settlement funds available to replace diesel engines

News

January 1st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Iowa Department of Transportation is accepting applications for funding from the national Volkswagen Settlement, Debra Arp leads the team that is handling the grant paperwork. “Volkswagen came into a settlement with the U-S Department of Justice and created this trust fund to do environmental mitigation resulting from their defeat devices that were in the vehicles that resulted in faulty emissions testing,” according to Arp.

She says there is nearly five million dollars in funding available to various organizations. She says it is available to private organizations, public transit system operators, city, counties and schools which own and operate diesel powered equipment are eligible to apply. Arp says the goal is to upgrade to make the vehicles cleaner.

She says the funds will replace the current diesel engines being used to improve the emissions in the vehicles or equipment. Arp says anyone in the categories she mentioned is encourage to apply. She says there is four-point-nine million dollars available, with three-point-one million dollars available for buses, around one million dollars for trucks and 700-thousand dollars for non-road and transport equipment.

You can learn more about the funding and how to apply at the program website: www.iowadot.gov/vwsettlement.

e-prescriptions now required in the state

News

January 1st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A new state mandate that begins with the New Year requires all health care providers to send prescriptions directly to the patient’s pharmacy through a secure device and a special software program. The Chair of Family Medicine at Mercy One Central Iowa, Tim McCoy, says they launched the e-prescription system in their clinics last September.

“It does speed up things for nursing staff and patients don’t have to come to the pharmacy — or come to the clinic — to take a written prescription,” McCoy says. “A lot of my patients are elderly, and someone that has to come pick a script up, or they couldn’t get to the clinic.” Doctor McCoy says the system has benefited patients.

“Especially patients that have you know, troubles with transportation, elderly patients. It’s actually been very helpful and patients have been very appreciative of, of that,” according to McCoy.

E-prescriptions have been shown to reduce the number of pharmaceutical and medical errors — as well as the amount of falsified prescriptions, which have contributed to opioid misuse.

(Thanks to Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio)

Southern Iowa author offers regional tribute with ‘Deep Midwest’

News

January 1st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — An author who lives in the tiny southern Iowa town of Bussey (BUS-ee) is offering a tribute to his home state and this region of the country with his new book called “Deep Midwest.” Robert Leonard says it’s a collection of poems, stories and essays about what it’s like to grow up and live in this part of the world — and it covers a range of topics to which most Midwesterners can relate.

“Farm country is a part of our identity, the weather, personal life, family, faith comes in every once in a while,” Leonard says. “Most of the time, it’s little things that happen around us that I find interesting. It’s the kind of sticky story you end up telling somebody about and I just wrote them down.” Sometimes it’s those small occurrences than can become important touchstones, even simple gestures like what some might call a “farmer’s wave” from a passing vehicle.

“There’s so many little things in life,” Leonard says. “Have you ever noticed that if you wave first, they’ll wave back the same way? If you just flip your one finger up, they’ll flip theirs. If you wave side to side, they’ll do the same, and if you start waving fast with just your fingers, they’ll pick up their pace. It’s just remarkable stuff that’s all around us.” Leonard was raised in a farmhouse with no plumbing in a community between Des Moines and Johnston known as Dogpatch, what he calls an “idyllic” place between the city and the country.

While he’s lived in several other states and regions, he decided to return to Iowa to settle down and has found solace in collecting and sharing stories. Leonard, who earned a B-A in history from the University of Northern Iowa in 1977, says life surrounds us with amazing, touching tales every day.

) “It’s everywhere, it’s not just the Midwest. This is where I’m writing and these are my observations,” Leonard says. “They’re just fun and sometimes they’re tragic. Sometimes there’s deaths involved, it’s real life. It’s a lot of bars and other kinds of interesting places.” The book is being published by Ice Cube Press.

SHIFT ATL receives green sale donation for sorority

News

January 1st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with SHIFT ATL in Atlantic said Wednesday, Xi Beta Phi, Chapter Beta Sigma Phi recently donated the proceeds from their annual holiday greens sale to the non-profit SHIFT ATL. The funds will be used to match the Community Catalyst Grant the organization is currently applying for.

Pictured left to right are Mackenzie Bandow, SHIFT ATL and Sara Nelson, Xi Beta Phi, Chapter Beta Sigma Phi. (Photo submitted)