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First official 2020 presidential candidate makes second visit to Iowa

News

September 25th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A Maryland congressman who is the first official Democratic presidential candidate for 2020 says his party must “start talking about what people really care about.” “Their jobs, the dignity of work, their pay and their opportunity for their children — that’s what people overwhelmingly care about. The Democratic Party has to be the party that stands for those things.” John Delaney has served three terms in the U.S. House, but is not seeking reelection in 2018. Instead, he’s visiting the states that host the first voting events in the 2020 presidential campaign and Delaney plans to visit Iowa twice a month over the next year. He was in Audubon Sunday afternoon and spoke by phone with Radio Iowa Sunday evening.

“The reason I entered this race so early is I think the Democratic Party has to have a very important conversation about our future and how we start winning elections,” Delaney says, “and I think I’m the person to, ultimately, lead that conversation, but really what I need to do is listen to people, make sure I’m focused on what they care about and give people an opportunity to get to know me.”

Delaney, who is 54 years old, is a former banker. He founded two companies and is worth about 90 million dollars according to the Associated Press. During his FIRST campaign for congress in 2012, Delaney promised voters he’d bring “the perspective of an entrepreneur to a gridlocked congress.” Delaney’s prescription for the Democratic Party in 2017? Figure out how to appeal to Americans who’ve been “left behind by the pace” of economic change.

“In the last election, we kind of created the wrong villain,” Delaney says. “The villain, they said, was globalization, but in reality it was government’s failure to respond to changes that were ultimately positive for the economy, but they weren’t positive for everyone and we watched it happen and we did nothing about it.” During his meeting with Democrats in Audubon on Sunday, Delaney didn’t mention Trump’s remarks about N-F-L players taking a knee during the National Anthem.

Delaney says Americans ARE looking for “civility” in their politics, but he says competence is the more pressing concern. “The Democratic Party has to be the party of good government,” Delaney says. “We need to be the party that actually gets government working again for the American people…They want to start believing in their government again because it’ll help them believe more in themselves.” Delaney was in Iowa last month and visited the Iowa State Fair.

Today (Monday) at 8 a.m., he’ll be at Duncan’s Cafe on Main Street in Council Bluffs to greet and talk with breakfast-hour customers.

(Radio Iowa)

Three Iowa high schools host rock band/financial literacy events

News

September 25th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A touring Midwestern rock band will play concerts in Underwood and two other Iowa high schools in the next week or so, shows that will be immediately followed by frank talks from the band’s frontman about financial literacy. Steve Gooding, co-founder, guitarist and singer in the band Gooding, says after the music ends, the lessons begin about debt, stocks and savings accounts.

“This is an organic thing that grew out of us just realizing some mistakes we made,” Gooding says. “I’ve got a mic and I’m lucky, I’d better use it. We’re trying to find common denominators to keep kids out of trouble later in life. We are rock-n-rollers, brother, we are not financial advisors. This is just something we realized maybe could make a little bit of a difference.” Gooding, a Wichita, Kansas native, says “the music helps the medicine go down” and most kids are receptive to hearing what he has to say about money.

“I tell them about not knowing what a credit score was until I screwed mine up,” Gooding says. “I tell them I knew more about geometry than how to balance a checkbook when I left high school. I have them raise their hands: Who wants to buy a car? Who wants to buy a house? Who wants to get married? Of all these things, I show them the stats on financial literacy being as important to achieving these things as anything else they’re going to learn in school.” While it appears some athletes and celebrities become wealthy overnight successes, Gooding says that’s just a myth he debunks with his concerts.

“We play rock-n-roll as wild and crazy as we can and we show them a little film, some of the people we’ve met in the music business, and then I come out and actually try to deconstruct that very same thing, by saying, ‘Look, I was a kid that thought some record deal was going to fix all my problems, but you have to go slow and steady,'” Gooding says. “If you’ve got a dollar in your pocket, you have more money than some of these famous people. They go up fast and they go down just as fast.”

The band Gooding is scheduled to play on Thursday (September 28th) at Underwood High School in Underwood, and next Tuesday (October 3rd) at both Norwalk High in Norwalk and Ballard High in Huxley in central Iowa. The tour is sponsored by the Iowa Insurance Division in partnership with the non-profit group, Funding the Future.

(Radio Iowa) related story links:

Program: fundingthefuturelive.org
Band: goodingmusic.com

12 year old dies, 2 adults injured in northern IA crash

News

September 25th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A male juvenile is dead and two adults were seriously injured during a head-on collision late Sunday evening in Webster County.  The Iowa State Patrol reports a passenger in one of the vehicle, 12-year old Brady Ahlstrom, of Humbolt, died at the scene. The drivers of the vehicles, 40-year old Trisha Luthro, of Badger, and 39-year old Kevin Ahlstrom, of Humbolt, suffered incapacitating injuries. They were initially transported by rescue squad to the Humboldt Hospital, and soon transferred to Iowa Methodist Hospital. Each of the crash victims was wearing a seat belt.

The Patrol says the crash happened at around 7:50-p.m. on Highway 3, one-half mile east of Dakota City. It occurred as a 2007 Ford Edge driven by Trisha Luthro was traveling east in the westbound lane and a 2009 Buick LaCrosse driven by Kevin Ahlstrom was traveling west in its lane. The SUV’s collided at the crest of a hill.

The accident remains under investigation. The Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office and Humboldt EMS assisted the Patrol at the scene.

City in Iowa looks to decrease train noise downtown

News

September 24th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) – Officials of a city in western Iowa have agreed to spend more than $100,000 on a project to silence train horns that now frequently blare through downtown.  The Sioux City Journal reports that Sioux City Council voted on Sept. 18 to approve a contract with Twin Cities-based SRF Consulting Group Inc. to create a “quiet zone” at multiple BNSF Railway train crossings downtown. Quiet zones are areas which meet specific safety guidelines that allow trains to pass through a crossing without sounding their horns.

Mayor Bob Scott was the lone dissenting vote. He says he voted against the project because the contract was being given to an out-of-state company instead of a local business. The city created another quiet zone in the downtown area seven years ago.

Winnebago Tribe hoping to reclaim land in Iowa

News

September 24th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

SLOAN, Iowa (AP) – The Winnebago Tribe is hoping to reclaim land in Iowa that was once part of its reservation in northeast Nebraska, but local hunters are concerned they might lose access. The Sioux City Journal reports the 1,643 acres of land is owned by the federal government and attracts hundreds of hunters each year. The land, which is near the tribe’s WinnaVegas Casino, was part of the Winnebago reservation when it was created in 1865. But the eastern border of the reservation was the Missouri River, which changed course over the years.

U.S. Rep. Steve King introduced a bill earlier this month to transfer the land to the Bureau of Indian Affairs where it would be held in trust for the tribe.

Good Samaritan dead, 2 injured in eastern IA crash, Saturday morning

News

September 24th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

What started off as a single vehicle accident resulted in one person dead and two others injured early Saturday morning, in eastern Iowa. The Iowa State Patrol says the accident happened at around 1:40-a.m., when a 2007 Freightliner semi tractor-trailer driven by 37-year old Destom M. Kidane, of Tyler, TX., entered the ditch off Interstate 80 eastbound in Iowa County, near mile marker 209. The semi came back onto the road and overturned, coming to rest partially on the road and in the median. A passenger in a passing vehicle, 43-year old Stanislow Gruszka, of Palinfield, IL., stopped to assist. As Gruszka was going back to his vehicle, a secondary collision occurred between a 2017 Chevy Malibu driven by 56-year old Gregg Robert Vigna, of Plymouth, MI, and a 2005 Ford Freestyle SUV driven by 62-year old Donal Pirkl, of Victor, Iowa. 

The impact resulted in one of those vehicle striking Gruszka, causing fatal injuries. Kidane (The driver of the tractor-trailer), and Vigna, were transported by ambulance to the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics in Iowa City. The crash remains under investigation.

Mason City man sentenced to federal prison for child porn

News

September 24th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) — A Mason City man has been sentenced to more than 10 years in federal prison for possessing child pornography. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Iowa says 47-year-old Jeffery Landheer was sentenced Thursday in federal court in Cedar Rapids to 121 months.

He had pleaded guilty May 19 to one count of possession of child pornography, admitting that between 2009 and 2016, he knowingly possessed child pornography on a computer hard drive. The case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse.

With no special session, what’s next for Iowa budget?

News

September 24th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa lawmakers will not return to the state Capitol for a special session, but Iowa’s finances remain on shaky ground. Staff for Gov. Kim Reynolds announced last week a projected shortfall for the roughly $7.2 billion budget that ended in June was drastically smaller than expected. Final accounting turned up more than $70 million in additional revenue. The Republican governor will borrow $13 million from emergency reserves to offset the shortfall.

Iowa has borrowed about $144 million from such reserves this year, and lawmakers plan to repay that money in the next two years. There are also unknown costs tied to the privatized Medicaid health care program for poor and disabled people.

This will impact the current budget, though it’s unclear by how much. It could lead to additional agency budget reductions, or complicate a Republican priority next year to cut taxes.

Adams County Auditor releases City Election candidate names

News

September 24th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Adams County Auditor’s Office late this past week provided KJAN News with a list of candidates for the Nov. 7th City Elections across the County. The individuals whose names will appear on the ballot, had submitted their petition papers by the required deadline.

In the City of Carbon, Larry E. Johnson is running unopposed in his bid for Mayor, and there are five candidates running for five open seats on the City Council in Carbon. They include Incumbents Vicky L. Haley, Michael Kempton, and Donna Rochau, along with newcomers Helen Hickman and Harold Mitchell.

In Corning, Incumbent Mayor Janice Mercer Leonard is running unopposed in her bid for re-election, as is Jerry Peckham in Ward 2 of the Corning City Council. And, no one is challenging Judy Beckett in her run for the At Large seat on the Council. Residents of Corning also have two Public Measures to vote on. Public Measure A says “Shall the City of Corning…be authorized to impose a hotel and motel tax…at the rate of 7%, beginning January 1st, 2018?”  Public Measure B asks “Shall the Board of Trustees of Corning Municipal Utilities, consisting of three members, be discontinued as of January 1st, 2018, and shall a Board of Trustees of {CMU} consisting of FIVE members be established as of January 1st, 2018?”

In the City of Nodaway, in Adams County, Mayor Patricia Shipley is running for re-election with no opposition. And, there are five people running for five seats on the Nodaway City Council, all five are incumbents: Gene Dixson; Brenda Dunn; Christine Dunn; Becky Poen, and Gary Poen.

And finally, in the City of Prescott, Mayor Greg Wilkinson is unopposed for re-election. Three positions are open on the City Council. The candidates include Glen Hickman, Incumbent Brenda Robison and Kevin Ray Schafer. There’s also on seat on the Council to fill a vacancy, with Ann R. Lydic running for that position.

Iowa evening News Headlines: 9/23/17

News

September 23rd, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 7:08 p.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — One of Iowa’s biggest health systems says the state is improperly barring all of its hospitals, clinics and health care providers from participating in a new family planning program because of a few abortions performed within the system. The Des Moines Register says UnityPoint Health says it should be allowed to offer publicly-financed birth control services to moderate-income Iowans. But state administrators say a new state law passed earlier strictly bans any system that allows any abortion.

ELKADER, Iowa (AP) — Iowa prosecutors have charged two nurses, accusing them of abusing a resident at a northeastern Iowa nursing home. Cedar Rapids television station KCRG reports that Nichole Buckley and Heidi Mueller are each charged with dependent adult abuse, wanton neglect of a resident of a health care facility and tampering with records. Prosecutors say the charges are related to the abuse of a patient at Elkader Care Center in March.

WILLIAMSBURG, Iowa (AP) — Three teens have died and one person has been seriously injured in a crash in eastern Iowa. Investigators say 18-year-old Chad Owens, of North English, was driving the truck on a dirt road about nine miles west of Williamsburg when he lost control and overturned into a creek. Killed were Owens and two passengers, 19-year-old Michael Dudley Galyon, of Williamsburg, and 19-year-old Kaitlyn Jolene Cook, of Deep River. A 21-year-old woman was injured in the wreckage discovered Friday afternoon.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A West Des Moines record store owner has been charged with invasion of privacy after police say he hid a camera in the business’ bathroom and recorded an underage girl. Police say 48-year-old Robert Kuhn, of Des Moines, was arrested Friday morning. In late August, a girl who had worked for Kuhn at Wayback Records told police that she found a camera hidden on a shelf in the bathroom after Kuhn had asked her to try on dresses because he wanted to post the clothes on social media.