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Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., 2/24/16

News

February 24th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Federal officials say Iowa is prepared to proceed with privatizing its Medicaid program and may move forward with the plan on April 1. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services postponed the state’s original plan to begin managed care on Jan. 1, saying too many issues remained to safely transfer the care of 560,000 poor and disabled residents to three private for-profit insurance companies. Iowa officials had been preparing for a potential March 1 switch.

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — The Dubuque Police Department has asked the City Council for $30,000 to hire an independent research firm to analyze racial disparities in traffic stops that officers conduct. Internal department reviews show that minority drivers are stopped at disproportionately higher rates than white people. Dubuque Police Chief Mark Dalsing says he hopes an outside audit will shed more light on the issue.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A member of the Iowa Utilities Board who has minimized climate change in meetings about the proposed Bakken oil pipeline project has refused to recuse himself from voting on the project. Nick Wagner, a Republican who lost his Iowa House seat to a Democrat in 2012, is one of three board members expected to vote next month on the pipeline. He filed an order Feb. 18 denying the motion to recuse filed by opponents. Wagner has said acknowledging a link between fossil fuels and climate change might hurt his political career.

DECORAH, Iowa (AP) — Lawyers in the trial of a former Boone man charged with killing his wife presented their opening statements to a Winneshiek County jury. Prosecutors and defense attorneys offered different versions of how Emily Fazzino died. Alexander Fazzino is charged with first-degree murder in his wife’s death. Her body was found on a bathroom floor at the couple’s Boone home in January 2012.

 

Iowa Senate approves ‘right to try’ bill

News

February 24th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Senate has unanimously approved a bill designed to accelerate the access terminally ill Iowans have to medications being tested in federally-approved drug trials. Republican Senator Rick Bertrand sponsored the bill after Todd Oss — a Sioux City native who’s been diagnosed with Huntington’s Disease — told Bertrand this so-called “right to try” legislation was being considered in other states. “He currently is in let’s just say the sunset of life,” Bertrand says, “and I think that with the passage of this gives him some satisfaction that there’s going to other options for patients that are terminally ill in the state of Iowa.”

Terminally ill Americans can seek a “compassionate care” waiver from the federal government to try medications that have gotten initial approval for clinical trials, but aren’t yet available by prescription. That process, however, requires a lot of paperwork and a lot of time. Senator Jeff Danielson, a Democrat from Cedar Falls, says this bill would speed access not only to medications, but to devices being tested as treatment for incurable illnesses like Huntington’s Disease, A-L-S, and advanced forms of cancer.

“I think we all know an Iowan who’s been in a circumstance with a terminally ill diagnosis,” Danielson says, “and we’d do anything we can to improve their quality of
life.” In other action Tuesday, all 50 senators approved a bill that would allow pharmacists to dispense a 90-day supply of prescription drugs. Senator Joe Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, says there are thousands of Iowans who have taken the same drug for years as treatment for a chronic condition like high blood pressure.

“Allowing a pharmacist to dispense a 90-day supply will reduce the number of trips Iowans have to make to the pharmacy, decrease out-of-pocket expenditures,” Bolkcom says. Walgreens is the country’s largest retail drug chain and the company has found that patients who are able to buy a 90-day supply of their prescription drugs are more likely to use cheaper generic medication and have saved an average of 23 dollars a year.

This bill AND the “right to try” bill must clear the Iowa House and be approved by the governor before the policies would become state law.

(Radio Iowa)

Guthrie County Deputy injured in Tuesday afternoon crash

News

February 24th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

A Sheriff’s Deputy from Guthrie County was injured during a crash between a car and a Sheriff’s Department SUV. The Iowa State Patrol reports Deputy Kent Gries, of Guthrie Center, who was wearing his seat belt, suffered minor injuries, and was transported by Guthrie County EMS to the Guthrie County Hospital, following the crash that occurred at around 3-p.m. Tuesday on the northwest side of Bagley.

Authorities say Deputy Gries was traveling east on Highway 141 in a 2015 Chevy Tahoe, when a 2004 Hyundai Elantra traveling south on Quail Road, failed to stop at the intersection. The car struck the SUV on the driver’s side door, causing the SUV to spin and enter a ditch. The car, driven by 20-year old Kylee Sheeder, of Panora, came to rest on the road.

Sheeder, who was not wearing a seat belt, told authorities she had no recollection of failing to obey the stop sign. The incident was captured on the SUV’s dash cam.

House OKs several bills that would expand gun rights in Iowa

News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – The Republican-majority House has passed several bills that would expand gun rights in Iowa, including legislation that would allow children under 14 to use handguns with parental supervision. The House voted Tuesday in support of five gun bills that now head to the Democratic-controlled Senate, where it’s unclear if they will get enough support to advance.

The legislation includes a measure that would restrict public access to information about gun owners and another bill that would allow people to use their guns in a state of emergency. Another bill would legalize the use of suppressors.

Rep. Matt Windschitl, a Republican from Missouri Valley, says the bills protect Second Amendment rights. Rev. Cheryl Thomas, with Iowans for Gun Safety, says some of the legislation is designed to weaken Iowa’s gun laws.

Iowa leads the nation in grain bin entrapment deaths

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) – A new Purdue University study says grain bin entrapments and other confined space accidents on the nation’s farms fell to their lowest level in a decade last year. Iowa led the nation with seven incidents.

Purdue’s study shows the U.S. had 47 entrapments in grain bins and other confined spaces in 2015. That’s 34 percent less than 2014’s 71 entrapments and the fewest since 46 were recorded in 2006. Purdue says 25 people died last year in entrapments, down from 31 in 2014.

But Bill Field, a Purdue professor of agricultural safety and health, says many nonfatal entrapments go unreported each year because there’s no mandatory national reporting system.

In addition to Iowa, other states reporting grain bin entrapment deaths include: Arkansas, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Wisconsin and South Dakota.

Exira/EHK Seniors: Scholarship Application Deadline Is March 31st

News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Audubon County Community Foundation reminds students that the deadline for submitting applications for the Exira Lions Club/Harold and Beverly Ann Godwin Endowed Scholarship is March 31st. The Fund will award one scholarship for $1,000 and is open to any high school senior from the Exira-EHK School District pursuing a two or four-year degree, full-time, at any accredited vocational/technical, educational institution, a college or university.

Applicants are asked to complete the application form and submit it with a copy of their current transcripts to their high school guidance counselor, as directed in the scholarship’s fact sheet. Scholarship applications are available from the guidance counselor.

The Audubon County Community Foundation Board members are: Chair, Brett Irlmeier of Audubon; Vice Chair, Jonnie Meislahn of Audubon; Secretary/Treasurer, Barbara Johnson of Audubon; Genelle Deist of Audubon; Jay Nelson of rural Brayton; Daryl Olsen, DVM, of Audubon; and Joseph T. Rasmussen of Exira.

Iowa woman’s trial in 2014 slaying set to begin

News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) – A trial is set to begin for a Council Bluffs woman accused of fatally stabbing her ex-boyfriend. The Daily Nonpareil reports the trial of Jodie Sherman, who has been charged with first-degree murder in the July 2014 death of Douglas Richt, was starting today (Tuesday) at the Pottawattamie County Courthouse in Council Bluffs.

Sherman is accused of stabbing Richt in the throat during an argument after he picked her up in a car. Richt died while being taken to a hospital. Sherman was arrested shortly after running away. During a Monday pre-trial hearing, Pottawattamie County Attorney Matthew Wilber said defense attorneys are expected to use the defense of insanity.  On Feb. 9, Sherman waived her right to a jury, so District Judge Kathleen Kilnoski will hand down a verdict.

CAM students: McCurdy Scholarship Deadline is March 31st!

News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Community Foundation reminds students that the deadline for submitting applications for the Dustin McCurdy Endowed Scholarship Fund is March 31st. The McCurdy Scholarship provides two scholarships of approximately $500 each to high school seniors from Cumberland Anita Massena High School (C-A-M).

Applicants are asked to complete the application form and submit it with a copy of their current transcripts to their guidance counselor as directed in the scholarship’s fact sheet. Applications are available from their high school guidance counselor.

Board members of the Cass County Community Foundation are: Chair, Nicholas Hunt of rural Atlantic; Vice Chair, Gary Maas of Anita; Secretary/Treasurer, Roland K. Landsness, Esq. of Atlantic; Royal Bierbaum of rural Griswold; Beulah Follmann of Massena; and Mark D. Kyhnn, CPA of Atlantic.

Atlantic man arrested on drug charge

News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Police Department reports the arrest on Monday, of 28-year old Casey Sampson, of Atlantic. Sampson was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance/Marijuana. He was booked into the Cass County Jail.

Powerball dropped revamp that gave better odds

News

February 23rd, 2016 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) – The group that runs the Powerball lottery game approved, then abandoned, changes that would have given ticket buyers more bang for their two bucks than the redesign implemented last year. Powerball managers changed the game’s odds in October to build bigger jackpots and revive lagging player interest. The strategy quickly paid dividends for state lotteries, causing soaring ticket sales as a jackpot grew to a record $1.6 billion last month.

Internal documents obtained by The Associated Press show a different Powerball overhaul was initially planned to increase jackpots while providing more value for players. The “Power Play” that multiplies cash prizes for an extra $1 would have been embedded in the base $2 ticket. A new $1 add-on would have entered players into a second jackpot drawing for $10 million.