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Additional warrants served on Pott. County inmates

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office reports two inmates at the Pott. County Jail were served with additional warrants this week. Wednesday morning, 70-year old Michael Ray Christensen, of Council Bluffs, was served with a warrant for Criminal Trespass/1st offense.  Christensen was originally arrested in May for Harassment in the 1st degree. His total bond amounts to $2,300. And, Wednesday afternoon, 30-year old Christopher Sean Owens, of Council Bluffs, was served with a warrant for Driving While Barred. Owens was originally arrested June 10th for Possession of a Controlled Substance/1st offense. His total bond amounts to $20,000. After being read their separate warrants, both men were returned to the custody of Pott. County Corrections staff.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 6/14/2018

News, Podcasts

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

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Poll finds most parents and kids agree on Trump, economy

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON (AP) — A majority of American young people and their parents who disapprove of the job President Trump is doing, according to a new pol. The survey conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and MTV found that 57 percent of parents and 73 percent of young people ages 15 to 26 disapprove of the president’s performance. The common ground doesn’t end there. The generations also agree that politics have become dysfunctional, and both say they’re dissatisfied with the two-party system. On issues broadly, a 55 percent majority of young people and their parents say they usually see eye to eye, and 31 percent say they debate things diplomatically. Just 9 percent say they avoid talking politics, and only 5 percent say their debates turn into “World War III.”
And most say they agree with each other on a wide variety of individual issues, including feelings on the economy, health care, immigration, racism and abortion.

Still, hotheadedness abounds over politics, as anyone who has access to the internet knows. The survey showed that online, especially, politics seeps into interactions with extended family members. Twenty percent of young people and their parents say they have done the virtual equivalent of uninviting a family member — by blocking them or unfriending them — because of a disagreement over politics. An equal percentage of both generations say they have been blocked or unfriended. 22-year old Mackenzi Curtis, a mother of two in Cedar Rapids, said she stopped following one older family member, who’s in his 60s, on Facebook over his posts about the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. Several students became gun control advocates after a gunman killed 17 people on Feb. 14.

She said “I was thinking they’re pretty much bullying a teenager that’s been through a traumatic experience. “I think it has a lot to do with the difference in generations.” Eleven percent of respondents say they have had a holiday gathering ruined over politics, while about an equal percentage say they’ve decided not to attend a family event for the same reason. Seventeen percent say political disagreements inspired a relative to skip a family event. The two generations are equally likely to engage on social media on the Nov. 6 elections, the study found. A quarter of parents and young people say they’ll post or comment on the midterms, and similar percentages say they share memes about the races. That’s a key data point for the campaigns trying to rev up and drive voters to the polls.

By any measure, Trump revolutionized Twitter as a political instrument before his 2016 upset over Democrat Hillary Clinton and during his presidency. Ahead of the 2018 midterms, both parties are leveraging the power of social media, engagement and relationships as Republicans defend their congressional majorities and Democrats try to topple them. Among parents and young people who say they aren’t of the same mind, young people say they tend to disagree with their parents most about racism, while their parents say the largest area of disagreement is gun control. Both generations tend to point to Trump and LGBT rights as sources of contention. The generations say it can be hard to sway the other generation when differences exist, but not necessarily impossible.

Few young people and parents — only 11 percent overall — say they are always able to persuade each other to change his or her views, but another 53 percent say they can sometimes do it. Just 6 percent say they can always be persuaded, but 44 percent say they sometimes can be.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 6/14/2018

News, Podcasts

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

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Ankeny man arrested on Union County warrant

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports a central Iowa man was arrested at around 2-a.m. today (Thursday). 53-year old Gary Edwards, of Ankeny, was arrested at the Union County Law Enforcement Center, on a Union County Warrant for  2 Counts of Violation of a Protection Order. He was being held in the Union County Jail awaiting bond hearing

Plans for psychiatric hospital worry some neighborhood folks

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

CLIVE, Iowa (AP) — Some neighbors are speaking out against plans to build a 100-bed psychiatric hospital in a Des Moines suburb. Mercy Medical Center officials announced last month that they’re working with a national company on the $31 million project in Clive. Safety was chief among concerns shared at a meeting Tuesday night with Mercy and Clive officials. Mercy officials say the facility would be run safely, with security cameras and locked doors.

Some residents asked why Mercy couldn’t add a psychiatric wing to its West Des Moines hospital, which has empty space, instead of building a new facility in a residential area. Mercy officials say they have other plans for that space but didn’t elaborate. Mayor Scott Cirksena says Clive welcomes efforts to improve people’s health and that mental health is no exception.

Boy rescued from community pool in eastern Iowa

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

COLUMBUS JUNCTION, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a 5-year-old boy was rescued from a community swimming pool in eastern Iowa. The Columbus Junction Police Department says medics were sent to the Columbus Community Swimming Pool around 4:10 p.m. Wednesday to help the boy, who was unresponsive. The boy eventually was resuscitated and then flown to University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics in Iowa City. The boy’s name wasn’t released.

Sioux City native Bud Day posthumously promoted to general

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A Sioux City war hero who was among the most decorated military men in American history has been posthumously promoted by the United States Air Force. Medal of Honor recipient George “Bud” Day was advanced from colonel to the rank of brigadier general during an event at the Air Force Memorial in Arlington, Virginia on June 8th. Day was an Air Force fighter pilot who was shot down in the Vietnam War and served in World War Two, Korea and Vietnam. Captain Jeremy McClure of Sioux City’s 185th Air National Guard says Day has long been an important figure to those who serve in his hometown. “I know he’s an inspiration to a lot of us — especially as we learn about Air Force history and how much of a role he plays,” McClure says.

Bud Day campaigning with John McCain 2008

McClure is currently attending training at Maxwell Air Force Base and says there is evidence there of how well respected Day was outside of his home state. “When you go to bases like Maxwell Air Force in Alabama and see how large of a figure that now General Day is to the entire Air Force and all the monuments and plaques to him down here, it helps you realized that he is more than just a big deal to Sioux City. He’s a legend in the Air Force as well,” McClure says.

Day died in 2013 at the age of 88. He enlisted in the Marines during World War Two. While flying a mission over North Vietnam in 1967, Day was shot down and captured by the North Vietnamese. Day suffered a dislocated knee and broke his arm in three places, but managed to escape captivity and evade the enemy for two weeks, the only prisoner to actually escape from North Vietnam. Day was just two miles from a U-S Marine Corps base when he was shot and recaptured by a Viet Cong patrol. He endured a brutal, 67-month imprisonment that finally ended in repatriation in March of 1973 when he was reunited with his wife and four children at March Air Force Base in California.

McClure says most people know about Day’s actions while a prisoner of war, but probably don’t know he also lead one of the most dangerous missions of the Vietnam war when he took control of the forward air controllers flying in the F-100’s. He says there are “so many reasons why General Day is a legend.”  The landing area at Sioux Gateway Airport is named “Bud Day Field” in his honor. The posthumous advancement of Day to general was introduced by Senator John McCain, a fellow P-O-W with Day in North Vietnam at the infamous “Hanoi Hilton.” Day’s widow Doris attended a concert at the Air Force Memorial in Arlington, Virginia, last Friday where her husband’s promotion was formally noted.

(Radio Iowa)

Blue Bunny Ice Cream parlor in Le Mars to be expanded

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Wednesday’s kickoff to the Ice Cream Days celebration in Le Mars included an announcement by officials with Wells Enterprises about expansion plans for the town’s Blue Bunny Ice Cream parlor. Wells Vice President of Retail Sales Adam Baumgartner says the parlor already attracts over 230-thousand (230,000) visitors a year. He expects the multi-million-dollar renovation project will draw even more tourists to the town nicknamed “The Ice Cream Capital of the World.” In addition to redesigning the parlor, Baumgartner says Wells has purchased a building next door to make room for an interactive “farm to spoon” display.

Blue Bunny Ice Cream parlor in Le Mars (Radio IA)

“We’ll be able to highlight how we get our milk, where it comes from, the processes it goes through to get into our facilities, how it gets processed in there, and how it gets turned into ice cream,” Baumgartner said. The added space will also feature rooftop seating. “Outdoor rooftop seating — so, a first-of-its-kind in downtown Le Mars. We are super excited about that,” Baumgartner said.

The exact cost of the renovation project was not revealed at Wednesday’s announcement. The parlor will be closed in October and much of November, as well as between March 1st and mid-June of 2019. The project should be ready for next year’s Ice Cream Days, when the town of Le Mars will also celebrate its sesquicentennial.

(Radio Iowa)

State official provides no reason for tripled estimate of savings in privatized Medicaid

News

June 14th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The director of Iowa’s Medicaid program says the state will save about 140-million dollars in the current year because patient care is being managed by private companies, but Mike Randol is not explaining why that estimate has tripled since he became Medicaid director in January.  “I think it’s important to understand that regardless of the methodology, that there are savings,” Randol said.

Randol made his comments yesterday (Wednesday) in a verbal report to the state board appointed by the governor to oversee the agency. Randol then left the room and did not speak with reporters seeking details about how his savings estimate was developed. Senator Pam Jochum, a Democrat from Dubuque, says Randol didn’t address how patients and health care providers have been affected by Medicaid privatization either. “The director’s analysis or presentation to the council was incomplete and I really question the accuracy of the numbers that he provided,” Jochum said.

Last week, Republican State Auditor Mary Mosiman announced she will review the agency’s calculations. Fred Hubbell, the Democratic candidate for governor, said yesterday (Wednesday) that the lack of transparency about the finances of the state-run Medicaid program is “baffling and completely unacceptable.”

(Radio Iowa)