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Governor’s Office releases statement regarding Gov. Branstad

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January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

(DES MOINES) – Iowa Governor’s Office spokesman Jimmy Centers today released the following statement after Gov. Terry Branstad fell ill at an event at DuPont Pioneer:

“Gov. Branstad fell ill at an event today at DuPont Pioneer. An ambulance was called and he was transported to Methodist hospital in Des Moines. The governor is conscious and alert and was so during the transport to the hospital. During the transport, paramedics took the governor’s vitals and initial tests indicate that the spell was caused by a seasonal illness. The governor had been suffering from the effects of a cold.”

Boone man arrested in Cass County

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A man from Central Iowa was arrested Friday, in Cass County. The Sheriff’s Office reports 53-year old Kenneth Dean Colebank, Jr.,  of Boone, was arrested on a District Court warrant for Failure to Appear to Serve Jail Sentence. Colebank was taken to the Cass County Jail where he remains until sentence is served.

(Update) Rollover accident s. of Atlantic, Sunday

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

In an update to our earlier report, the Cass County Sheriff’s Office says deputies responded at around 12:15-a.m. Sunday, to a report of a one-vehicle accident two miles south of Atlantic at 610th Street and Lansing Road. A 97 Chevy K1500 driven by 21-year old Daylan Gene Kleen, of Audubon, was turning north on 610th Street from Lansing Road when Kleen lost control, causing the pickup to overturn into the east ditch.

A passenger, 20-year Jayce Marie Nelson, of Audubon, was transported to CCMH via Medivac. Damage to the vehicle is estimated at $3000. Kleen was cited for Driving Under Suspension and Failure to Maintain Control.

Exira-EHK Science Dept. enters contest to win up to $60k

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The Exira-EHK science department has entered the school in the Follett Challenge for its annual Earth Day activity and can win up to $60,000 for the school. The Follett Challenge showcases and rewards educators who are teaching the skills needed in the 21st century collaboratively. In order to enter, they filled out a long written application and made a five-minute video explaining the program with the help of the freshmen TAG students.

The video features pictures from previous Earth Days as well as interviews from students, teachers, and community members. But they need your help to win! The videos with the top 10 votes win $8,000 and can win up to $60,000 based on the written application and the total number of votes. Anyone with an e-mail account can vote once a day for the duration of the voting period.

Go to www.follettchallenge.com daily to vote for their video titled “Exira-EHK Earth Day” now through January 30th.

Branstad defends MHI closures

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Governor Terry Branstad says his administration won’t be violating state law if they continue to run “significant” prison operations and a military-style academy on the Mental Health Institute campuses in Mount Pleasant and Clarinda.  “Those are now multiple-use campuses and both Mount Pleasant and (Clarinda) have significant operations there as well,” Branstad says. “And so those facilities will not be closed.” But a state senator from Mount Pleasant argues Iowa law requires the state to provide in-patient care for mentally ill patients at both sites. Branstad says the attorney general’s office has assured him what he’s proposing is legal.

“We’re not closing the facilities,” Branstad says. “…Neither one of them are accredited. At Clarinda, the psychiatrist is about ready to retire and Mount Pleasant has not been able to attract a psychiatrist, so to be able to provide quality mental health services to people we think they can better be served at the other two institutes and community mental health and with the help of the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics.” Key legislators says they were “disturbed” because they didn’t learn of Branstad’s plan to close the two mental health care facilities in Mount Pleasant and Clarinda until they were shown the details of Branstad’s proposed bugdet. Branstad rejects the complaint that he hid his intentions until the very last minute.

“We didn’t hide anything,” Branstad says. “We put a budget together that was not an easy budget to put together in light of the fact that the cost of Medicaid is going up dramatically.” The federal government is picking up a smaller portion of Medicaid spending in Iowa, because of a formula that sends states with better economies less than other states where the economy is dragging. Branstad says that means the budget for the Department of Human Services was tough to draft — and the Mental Health Institutes are managed by the department.

(Radio Iowa)

Military Homeownership Assistance Program Assists Iowa Military Service Members and Veterans Purchase Homes

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Governor Branstad and Lt. Governor Reynolds joined state officials today (Monday), to announce that the Military Homeownership Assistance program has assisted nearly 3,400 military service members and veterans purchase a home in Iowa. The program is jointly administered by the Iowa Finance Authority and the Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs and funding is appropriated by the Iowa Legislature.

The Military Homeownership Assistance Program provides eligible service members with a $5,000 grant that may be used towards down payment and closing costs to purchase a home located in Iowa. “More than 800 veterans have already been matched with jobs in our state through the Home Base Iowa initiative, with the opportunity for us to welcome thousands more. A key component in the transition to civilian life for these veterans is making their own permanent home right here in Iowa and this program will help them to achieve that goal,” said Governor Branstad.

“Our efforts to match veterans and their spouses with quality careers in Iowa are working. With the Iowa Finance Authority’s work to assist veterans in making a down payment on a home, we believe even more veterans will make our great state their home base,” said Lt. Governor Reynolds.

When combined with the Iowa Finance Authority’s other down payment assistance programs, eligible service members could receive a total of up to $7,500 in grant funds toward the purchase of a home. In fiscal year 2014, the program assisted 423 military service members and their families to fulfill their dream of homeownership.

“Upon my return from tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, my wife and I started looking for a house in Osceola, where I now serve as a reserve Sheriff’s Deputy and volunteer firefighter,” said tenured military veteran Sergeant Byron Jimmerson. “We were excited to discover that we qualified for IFA’s Military Homeownership Assistance Grant Program to help with the down payment. The grant helped ease the financial cost of owning a home, especially with the anticipated expenses of starting a family.”

“The Military Homeownership Assistance Program was created by the Iowa Legislature in an effort to foster affordable homeownership opportunities for service members,” said Iowa Finance Authority Executive Director Dave Jamison. “Down payment assistance is a valuable resource and it affords service members and veterans an avenue to conduct civilian life in a permanent, stable home in Iowa.”

“The Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs’ mission is to assist veterans with obtaining services and benefits that they are entitled to. We are also concerned about the successful reintegration of veterans into civilian life and the community,” said Colonel Robert King, Executive Director, Iowa Department of Veterans Affairs. “The Military Homeownership Assistance Program is an excellent program that directly impacts qualified veterans’ ability to purchase a home. We are extremely pleased with the response of veterans requesting this program.”

The Military Homeownership Assistance Program has provided more than $15.4 million in funding to support approximately 3,400 military service members and their families since the program’s inception in 2005. Availability of funding for this program is subject to annual state appropriation and funds are made available on a first-come, first-served basis. More information about the program is available at IowaFinanceAuthority.gov.

(Press Release)

Community college enrollment drops slightly

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Fall enrollment in the state’s community colleges was down a little less than half a percent. Department of Education Community Colleges Bureau Chief, Kent Farver, says it’s a sign of the economic situation in the state. “The unemployment rate kind of corresponds to enrollment in community colleges. When unemployment goes up, enrollment usually goes up, when unemployment goes down, enrollment usually drops down,” Farver says. “And really you start to see the change from fulltime enrollment, to part-time enrollment because they are going back to work.”

Iowa’s unemployment rate hit four-point-two-percent in December of 2013, it’s lowest point since 2008, and after inching up and then back down, ended at four-point-three percent in December of this year. Community college enrollment has been adjusting since it shot up in 2009 and 2010 as workers look to community colleges to upgrade their skills or train for new jobs after being laid off. “I think we’re just trying to get back to normal after the recession, and I think we’re trying to figure out where that new normal is,” Farver says.

Community college enrollment has fallen about 12 percent since 2010. Farver says as they work on that “new normal” they’re trying to do more to let high school graduates and others know about the careers that are available with a community college degree. “Understanding that with those middle skill jobs, it’s not always a four-year degree that’s required to obtain a good job, a middle-income job, and a job where a person can be self supporting,” Farver says. “Trying to get the information out, and that there are other opportunities is important, and that’s what we’re trying to do.”

The fall community college enrollment was 93-thousand-772 students, a drop of point-four-nine percent (.49).

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) 8-a.m. KJAN News, 1/26/2015

News, Podcasts

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

With Ric Hanson.

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Theft and fraud reported in Creston

News

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Police in Creston are investigating the theft of items from a home and vehicle. Officials say two women on Livingston Avenue reported someone entered their house and vehicle sometime between Jan. 4th and 24th. Items missing include: a purse; a total of $90 cash; debit, credit and Social Security card; EBT card; makeup, hair spray and perfume; a 30 disc CD case; Stainless Steel “Sons of Anarchy” chain and pennant; a wedding band set, and an MP3 player. The loss was estimated at $1,370 altogether.

And, on Jan. 21st, a Madrid resident reported to the Creston P-D someone used a rebate card that was issued to the victim but never received, was used without her permission. The incident happened sometime between Feb. 1st 2013 and Jan. 21st 2015. The loss was estimated at $300.

In other news, Creston Police report 57-year old William Spencer Powell, Jr., of Diagonal, was arrested Jan. 21st in Creston, on a charge of 2nd offense Public Intoxication. Powell, Jr., was later released on $300 bond.

(Podcast) 7:07-a.m. KJAN News & funeral report, 1/26/2015

News, Podcasts

January 26th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

With Ric Hanson.

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