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Red Oak man arrested Tue. evening for Malicious Prosecution

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November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Montgomery County say a Red Oak man was arrested Tuesday evening on a valid Montgomery County warrant for Malicious Prosecution. 26-year old Zakary Allan Colebank was brought to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $1,000 bond.

91,000 Iowa households get utility disconnect notices this fall

News

November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The chief of the state’s energy assistance bureau says more than 31-thousand low income Iowa households already have qualified for help in paying their utility bills this winter. Jerry McKim works with Community Action Agencies across the state to enroll Iowans in the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. “Energy is clearly unaffordable for a large segment of our population,” he says. Each Iowa household that qualifies for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program will receive a one-time payment this winter of about five-hundred dollars.

“Between the weather and some of the fuel prices, we’re maybe holding our own — up to a point,” McKim says. “I still believe my benefit is wholly inadequate to address the energy insecurity that a lot of Iowa households experience.” Iowa utilities sent disconnect notices to 91-thousand Iowa households in September.  “My phone number is on every one of those notices,” McKim says. “Now, I don’t get 91,000 calls, but I’m getting probably about half a dozen a day, folks who are being threatened with disconnection and they’re wanting to know what we can do to help them, if they’re eligible, etc.”

The state ban on disconnecting gas and electric service went into effect November 1st and lasts through April 1st, but it ONLY applies to low-income households that are signed up for a government program to weatherize their home or the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program McKim manages in Iowa. “Even if a household’s eligible, but doesn’t apply, they could be disconnected,” McKim says. “The only other protection from disconnection is a severe weather one that if the National Weather Service says it’s going to be 20 degrees or colder within 24 hours of your scheduled disconnection the utility has to hold off, but of course they’ll have to hold off until it’s a balmy 21 degrees.”

Applications for the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program are accepted from October 1st through April 30th.

(Radio Iowa)

Red Cross helping victims of 15 home fires around the state since Friday

News

November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

There have been a lot of home fires in recent days around the state and Kara Kelly, with the American Red Cross in Des Moines, says volunteers from her agency are working to help the victims. “We’ve been incredibly busy the last four days…with 15 home fires since Friday,” Kelly said. Those fires have occurred in Lamoni, Centerville, Des Moines, Denison, Libertyville, Hampton, Albert City, Strawberry Point, Dubuque, Charles City, Ogden, and Cedar Rapids. The Red Cross volunteers are helping more than 60 Iowans affected by the fires.

“In most cases, the homes are deemed unlivable so we want to make sure they have a hotel, or a family member, or somebody to stay with. From there, we make sure they have money for clothes and food. We want to move them toward recovery,” Kelly said. Temperatures are expected to plummet around Iowa in the coming days, so Kelly is urging Iowans to be cautious when heating their homes.

“Typically, when the temperature starts to go down and people start to use alternative heating sources like space heaters and fireplaces, we tend to see an uptick in home fires,” Kelly said. “We really want people to be aware of some safety tips so they can make sure they stay safe.”

To reduce the risk of heating related fires, the Red Cross recommends the following tips:
* All heaters need space. Keep children, pets and things that can burn (paper, matches, bedding, furniture, clothing, carpets, and rugs) at least three feet away from heating equipment.
* Never leave a fire in the fireplace unattended, and use a glass or metal fire screen to keep fire and embers in the fireplace.
* Never use a cooking range or oven to heat your home.
* Turn off portable space heaters every time you leave the room or go to sleep.
* Have wood and coal stoves, fireplaces, and chimneys inspected annually by a professional, and cleaned if necessary.
* If you must use a space heater, place it on a level, hard and nonflammable surface (such as ceramic tile floor), not on rugs, or carpets or near bedding or drapes. Plug power cords directly into outlets and never into an extension cord.

(Radio Iowa)

2 killed, 2 injured when SUV driven by a teenager crashes in Jasper County

News

November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa State Patrol reports a woman and a teenager died, while two others were injured, during a rollover accident Tuesday afternoon in Jasper County. All of the victims are from Des Moines. Authorities say a 2003 GMC Envoy, driven by 14-year old Bryneisha Watkins was traveling west on I-80 about a mile east of Newton, when the teen lost control the SUV while it was passing a semitrailer. The vehicle ran off the roadway into a roadside ditch, and rolled over.

Two passengers in the vehicle, 13-year old Natasha Watkins and her mother, 30-year old Sabrina Watkins, died in the crash. The driver, and 11-year old Nataija Watkins, were injured and transported to Iowa Methodist in Des Moines.

The accident, which happened at around 12:30-p.m., Tuesday, remains under investigation.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., 11/18/15

News

November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Des Moines-based hospital and medical clinic company UnityPoint Health is getting into the health insurance business. The company says it has partnered with Bloomington, Minnesota, health care provider and insurer HealthPartners to create a health insurance company to be called HealthPartners Unity Point Health. The joint venture is seeking licenses from insurance regulators in Iowa and Illinois and plans to begin selling Medicare Advantage policies late next year. Hospitals have increasingly entering such ventures to create their own insurance companies.

CHICAGO (AP) — A U.S. judge has acquitted a Pakistani physician over allegations that he inappropriately touched an Iowa girl next to him on an American Airlines flight from New York to Chicago. The judge returned not guilty verdicts in Muhammad Asif Chaudhry’s case.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Regulators have confirmed a delay in funding earmarked for the University of Iowa’s climate change research center. The Iowa Utilities Board has collected $5.15 million from utilities that is legislatively mandated to support the UI Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research and the Iowa Energy Center at Iowa State University. The board confirmed yesterday that it’s delaying $772,000 earmarked for the center.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Governor Terry Branstad has joined a lawsuit that challenges new federal rules on the oversight of smaller waterways, tributaries and wetlands. Branstad says he has intervened in a case pending in North Dakota against the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The rules are on hold as federal courts consider a number of lawsuits over their implementation.

 

3 injured in Lytton protein processing plant explosion

News

November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

LYTTON, Iowa (AP) — Three people have been taken to hospitals in serious condition after an explosion at a protein processing plant in northwest Iowa. The Sac County Sheriff’s Office says three people were involved in a welding storage tank when the explosion occurred just before 6 p.m. at the Proliant facility in Lytton.

The Sioux City Journal reports that two people were taken to Loring Hospital in Sac City. A third person was taken to Stewart Memorial Hospital in Lake City and then transferred to an Omaha hospital. Their names have not been released. The State Fire Marshal’s Office and emergency personnel from Lytton, Sac City, Rockwell City and Lake City assisted with the incident.

Lytton is about 83 miles east of Sioux City.

Cruz & King to visit Harlan Friday afternoon

News

November 18th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Presidential candidate Ted Cruz, a Republican Senator from Texas, will travel to Iowa Friday and Saturday. Cruz, who was elected to the U-S Senate in 2012, will start off his tour of Iowa 9:45-a.m. Friday in Sioux City, where he and Iowa Republican Congressman Steve King will hold a Town Hall meeting at Briar Cliff University, Stark Student Center – Clare Room (3303 Rebecca Street).   And, at 1-p.m., Friday, Cruz and King will hold a Town Hall meeting in Harlan. The event takes place at the American Legion Hall (7th and Chabturn Avenue).

Nebraska man convicted in Iowa hit-and-run gets prison

News

November 17th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A Nebraska man convicted in the hit-and-run death of an Iowa man who was trying to help him has been sentenced to 25 years in prison. Twenty-nine-year-old Dustin Suppi was sentenced Tuesday on a vehicular homicide charge in the August death of Troy Ford, of Sioux City. A plea deal with prosecutors dropped a charge of leaving the scene of a fatal accident.

Troy Ford and his wife, Liz Ford, found Suppi on Aug. 8 slumped over the steering wheel of a pickup. As Liz Ford called for help, Suppi woke up and put the pickup into drive. A trailer attached to the vehicle ran over Troy Ford. The Sioux City Journal reports Suppi, of South Sioux City, Nebraska, told Liz Ford during the sentencing hearing he was sorry.

Woman involved in Bluffs SUV-Pedestrian accident won’t be cited for leaving the scene

News

November 17th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs said this (Tuesday) morning, that a Nebraska woman will not be cited for Leaving the Scene of an accident involving her SUV and a pedestrian that took place Monday morning. Sgt. Jason Bailey says the driver of the 2011 Nissan Versa,  30-year Michaela Williams, of Omaha, called Bluffs police to report she was the driver authorities had been looking for in connection with the accident. Williams told investigators she didn’t see the 17-year old female pedestrian in the crosswalk, until it was too late. While she was not cited for Leaving the Scene, Williams was cited for Failure to Yield the Right-of-Way to a pedestrian.

According to Iowa Law, if she had been cited for Leaving the scene of an accident, Williams could have faced having her driving privileges suspended or revoked, or, her license could have been suspended.

The accident happened at around 7:30-a.m. Monday, at the intersection of 25th and Broadway Streets, in Council Bluffs. In the original report, police said after the SUV struck the pedestrian, the driver stopped and remained on the scene until rescue personnel arrived. She left before a report could be filed with police. The pedestrian was treated for minor injuries at a Council Bluffs hospital, and released.

Report card issued on Teacher Leadership plan

News

November 17th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Governor Terry Branstad and Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds touted the Teacher Leadership and Compensation plan Monday. The plan takes experienced teachers and makes them mentors and coaches for less experienced teachers. The plan is in its second year and Reynolds says all districts will have a plan in place in the next school year. “When fully phased in in the 2016 and 2017 school year, Iowa’s Teacher Leadership system will invest 150 million dollars a year. And this is a critical investment and one that we are really proud to be making,” Reynolds says. The Department of Education released information today (Tuesday) on the first 39 districts to take part in the program, and those numbers show the other 299 schools had better overall improvement than the first ones in the program. Education Department director, Ryan Wise, says it’s because the first districts to implement the plans are large urban districts.

“Those districts have higher levels of students qualifying for free and reduced price lunch — a higher need population of students. And so, to see growth across all measures is a positive trend,” Wise says. “I would also add, at the same time we see growth, this is also a big transition for districts.” The schools with the T-L-C program saw an increase of three tenths of a percent in reading scores, and two-tenths of a percent in math. The schools without the program saw a one-point-one percent increase in reading and three-tenths of a percent in math. Wise says there is an adjustment period for the new system.

“Those teachers taking on these leadership roles are doing so for the first time. And are being trained up and skilled in how to really work effectively with adults,” Wise explains, “and now it is a transition to have the same impact on adults. So, we expect those results to only grow over time.” Wise says he has heard good things about the program from the districts involved. The Council Bluffs School District was one of the first to implement the plan, and Superintendent Martha Bruckner, says they’ve been pleased with their results.

“Our Iowa assessments in 2014, the district showed increased achievement in 16 of 20 grade level tests in math and reading,” Bruckner says. Bruckner says other surveys also found improvement in district performance, and there was an increase in morale among teachers. Council Bluffs teacher, Samantha Adams talked about her experience with the program. She says it helped to have someone else review her teaching and help her.

“I didn’t even realize changes were needed. We began with weekly discussions about the instruction I was doing and the student data I was seeing,” Adams says. “She asked me questions I had never thought of — some of which revealed that there were things about my teaching that could be vastly improved.” Adams says it helped to have an outside look at her work.

“Our discussion and reflection made me realize I was teaching to the majority — rather than ensuring that each student was challenged to go further and do better. The discussions forced me to reflect on things that I could do in my instruction that would increase all students’ achievement,” according to Adams. “I am not going to lie and say that that was easy to begin seriously reflecting on my current practices and collaborating on ways to get better and improve student achievement. It was seriously challenging work, and I could not have done it alone.”

The state approved three-point-five million dollars in planning grants in the 2014 fiscal year for all Iowa school districts and then 50 million dollars for the 2015 fiscal year for the actual plans. An additional 50 million dollars was approved for the 2016 fiscal year schools to implement programs, and another 50 million dollars will be added in the 2017 fiscal year.
(Radio Iowa)