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(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 12/12/19

News, Podcasts

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

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Creston woman arrested Wed. evening

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports one arrest. At around 5:35-p.m. Wednesday, officers arrested 36-year old Savannah McVay, of Creston. She was taken into custody on a charge of Driving While Barred.  McVay was later released from the Union County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 12/12/2019

News, Podcasts

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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Patrol: 2 men die in wrong-way driver crash on interstate

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Authorities say a wrong-way driver and the driver of a vehicle he struck in northern Iowa have both died. The collision was reported around 9:45 a.m. Wednesday on Interstate 35, just north of Clear Lake. The Iowa State Patrol says 30-year-old Henry Robinson, of Newnan, Georgia, was driving south in the northbound lanes when his minivan hit a pickup truck driven by 52-year-old Bryon Hendricks, of West Des Moines. Both men died. The patrol says the driver of a third vehicle wasn’t injured when it clipped Hendricks’ pickup.

Iowa farmland values increase

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The annual Iowa State University survey shows the statewide value of an acre of farmland increased by two-point-three percent and now is estimated at seven-thousand-432 dollars. Wendong Zhang conducts the survey and doesn’t think it’s a sign of any big upward trend.”It is an increase — which is encouraging — but I wouldn’t hail this as a solid rebound of the market, ” he says, “because the magnitude is still quite modest. It just exceeded the pace of inflation.”

That increase means an acre of farm ground is worth 168 dollars more than the year before. He says low commodity prices and low interest rates both helped keep the values from going up much more. Zhang, who is an assistant professor of economics, doesn’t think values are dropping off either. “All the eight districts –except for northeast Iowa — showed modest growth. Especially in central Iowa, we see some growth at a level of five percent. In general I think shows a stabilizing land market,” Zhang says.

Zhang says low dairy prices hurt the land values in the northeast district. The northwest district reported the highest overall land values at nine-thousand-352 dollars ($9,352) an acre. The south-central district reported the lowest overall land values at 44-hundred-87 dollars ($4,487) an acre. Scott County reported the highest land values at 10-thousand-837 dollars an acre. Decatur County reported the lowest at three-thousand-586 dollars an acre. It’s the seventh straight year Scott and Decatur have been the top and bottom county. Low-quality land statewide now saw an increase of three-point-three percent — more than the higher quality soils.

Zhang says the general economy is still strong and that tens leads to more recreational demand for land and that brings up the price of the lower quality land. He says the demand for urban development help bring up the land in the central Iowa district. Zhang says there are two things he is watching that could impact the land values in the coming year. He says one is whether we will have a trade deals and the details of those deals — while the other is whether or not the Fed Reserve cuts the interest rates again or stay with the original plan to gradually increase the interest rates.

Zhang says the rate cut would be more positive news for landowners. “In general lower interest rates tend to support land values,” Zhang says. The I-S-U Land Value Survey started in 1941. Zhang has been overseeing the survey for the last five years.

Reynolds says UI doctors to examine patients at Glenwood Resource Center

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Governor Kim Reynolds says physicians from the University of Iowa Hospitals will visit the state-run Glenwood Resource Center today (Thursday) “To do a review of the patients, look at the charts and just make sure their health is okay,” Reynolds says. The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating the facility, which provides care for about 250 Iowans with profound intellectual disabilities. STATE officials have placed the center’s superintendent on administrative leave. FEDERAL investigators are examining an allegation of human experimentation on residents at Glenwood. In 2017, five Glenwood staffers pleaded guilty to wanton neglect and eight others were fired or resigned after an investigation. Reynolds says there’s been “continuous review” of Glenwood’s operations since she took office in May of 2017.

“We had brought people in, we’d asked them to do an assessment, they’d laid out what they thought was being done, they thought it was appropriate. And you know what? It’s not,” Reynolds says, “and so based on the information that we just received, based on the new leadership at the Department of Human Services…we are making changes.” Reynolds fired the D-H-S director this summer and her new director started this fall. A letter federal officials sent Governor Reynolds in November indicates a host of issues have been raised about care at Glenwood, including inadequate nutrition and physical injuries to patients.

Last spring, The Des Moines Register reported current and former staffers at the Glenwood Resource Center raised concerns after an alarming number of patient deaths. Reynolds says a new team of outside experts are being assembled to dig into Glenwood’s operations. The governor indicates changes will be made in all the institutions managed by the Department of Human Services. “There are so many opportunities for us to do a better job of serving Iowans and really supporting the employees there. We have hardworking employees that, you know, deal with significant, tough issues and they have not had, I think, the resources, the tools and the leadership and the support that they need to do their job,” Reynolds told reporters. “We can do better and we are going to do better.”

Federal officials are also investigating whether the 180 intellectually disabled children and adults who are patients at the state-run Resource Center in Woodward are being cared for in the most appropriate setting.

Fire chief says 1 person hospitalized after condo blaze

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Authorities say one person was hospitalized after a fire broke out at a condominium in the Cedar Rapids suburb of Marion. Firefighters dispatched around 1:30 p.m. Wednesday found smoke pouring from the building’s upper level. A fire official says the blaze started in one unit and spread into the building attic. The name of the injured person and the extent of his or her injuries haven’t been released. The fire cause is being investigated.

Villisca man arrested for attempted burglary

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s deputies in Montgomery County, Wednesday night, arrested 32-year old Eric Waldron, of Villisca, on two counts of attempted Burglary in the 3rd degree. The charges stem from an incident on Highway 34 and V Avenue. Waldron was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $1,000 bond.

Deputies were assisted by the Adams County Sheriff’s Office in their investigation and Waldron’s arrest.

NE man injured in Mills County crash Wed. evening

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A Nebraska man was injured during an accident in Mills County Wednesday evening. The Iowa State Patrol says 63-year old John Burr, of Bellevue, NE., was driving a 2013 Ford F-150 pickup southbound on Interstate 29 at around 6:04-p.m., when the vehicle exited the interstate at mile marker 36 and entered the southbound rest area.

The pickup continued south into the truck parking area, where it collided with a parked 2016 Volvo semi. The pickup struck the trailer, striking the driver’s side duals head-on. The pickup came to rest under the trailer.

Burr, who was not wearing a seat belt, was flown by LifeNet helicopter to the UNMC in Omaha. The driver of the semi was not hurt. The accident remains under investigation. Mills County Sheriff’s Deputies and others assisted at the scene.

Colfax man killed in Adair County crash Wed. afternoon

News

December 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A single-vehicle accident Wednesday afternoon in Adair County has claimed the life of an eastern Iowa man. The Iowa State Patrol reports 26-year old Brian John Clymer, of Colfax died, when the 2003 Chevy S-10 pickup he was driving went out of control on Interstate 80 eastbound near mile marker 74.

The pickup went off the road to the left and struck the cable barrier in the median before rolling over and coming to rest in the left lane of I-80 westbound. The accident happened at around 4:41-p.m. Clymer was ejected from his pickup as it rolled over. He was not wearing a seat belt, and died at the scene.

There were numerous 9-1-1 reports to law enforcement prior to the crash, about a vehicle matching the Chevy that was driving recklessly. The accident, however. remains under investigation.