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Des Moines to resume ticketing based on I-235 speed camera

News

June 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Des Moines plans to resume ticketing Monday of speeding violators caught by an automated speed radar camera on a heavily traveled portion of Interstate 235. Citations haven’t been issued since April 26 last year, upon an order from the Polk County District Court. Des Moines, Cedar Rapids and Muscatine appealed the court ruling. Those cities had sought the judicial review after the Iowa Transportation Department ordered some speed cameras turned off, saying the cameras didn’t make interstates safer.

This past April 27, however, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that the department didn’t have authority over speed cameras, clearing the way for cities to employ them. The Des Moines Police Department said in a news release Tuesday that “a significant increase in speeding violations was noticed” after the ticketing halted.

King says ‘nothing cruel’ in treatment of children separated from parents at border

News

June 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Republican Congressman Steve King was an active tweeter, Tuesday, urging people to call congress and voice their opposition to bills that would provide what King calls “amnesty” to anyone who entered the U.S. illegally.  King tweeted out a link to an interview he did with T-M-Z about the separation of children from parents crossing illegally at the southern border. King told the T-M-Z cameraman there is “nothing cruel” about the way the children are being treated and they are not being held in cages. King has toured detention centers near the southern border before. The use of chain link fencing is needed, King has said, to separate the boys from the girls.

King said on Twitter that the only way to stop what he describes as a “flood of illegals” is for the U.S. to deport “substantially more…than the number of those who arrive seeking amnesty.”

(Radio Iowa)

3 arrested in Montgomery County

News

June 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports three people were arrested on separate charges, Tuesday night. At around 11:20-p.m., 59-year old Deann Rachelle Russell, of Ft. Myers, FL., was arrested at the intersection of Highway 34 and 200th Street. She was charged with Interference with Officials Acts and held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 bond. At around 9-p.m., 42-year old Misty Schalome Currin, of Red Oak, was arrested near N. 3rd and E. Hammond Streets in Red Oak, for Driving While Suspended. Her bond was set at $566.25.  At about the same time, 37-year old Quinton Scott Swanberg, of Red Oak, was arrested in the 600 block of N. 3rd Street, in Red Oak. The report did not indicate what the charges were. Swanberg was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 bond.

Lawyer says former city administrator will plead not guilty

News

June 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

HARLAN, Iowa (AP) — A former city administrator in western Iowa has been charged with stealing from the city. Shelby County Court records say 67-year-old Terry Cox is charged with felony theft, felonious misconduct in office and misdemeanor records tampering. His lawyer, Mark Weinhardt, says Cox will plead not guilty. Cox’s preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 5.

He was city administrator for Harlan until he resigned in 2016 after questions were raised about his expenses. A state audit requested by the city identified nearly $145,000 in improper and unsupported disbursements from July 1, 2004, through June 30, 2016. Cox’s attorney says the audit report is flawed.

Red Oak man arrested Tue. night

News

June 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Police in Red Oak, Tuesday night, arrested 57-year old Tony Joe Christensen, of Red Oak. He was taken into custody for Public Intoxication, and transported to the Montgomery County Memorial Hospital for evaluation before being transferred to the Montgomery County Jail, where his bond was set at $300.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., 6/20/18

News

June 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Officials say a 9-year-old boy who was found underwater Sunday at a central Iowa lake has died. The Des Moines Register reports that Landyn Short, of Tama, died Tuesday at a Des Moines Hospital. The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office says the boy was reported missing in the water at Rock Creek State Park, near Grinnell, around 1:30 p.m. Sunday and found underwater about 45 minutes later.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — With recent heavy rains and more on the way, the National Weather Service says there is a potential for more serious flooding in the southern half of Iowa by week’s end. While only some scattered thunderstorms are expected across the state for much of Tuesday, more widespread storms and heavy rain are expected Tuesday night into Wednesday, with some spots possibly getting up to 4 inches.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Environmental activists are asking the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to withdraw the Iowa Department of Natural Resources’ authority to manage a program designed to limit water pollution. About 30 members of the Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement held a rally Tuesday at the state Capitol. They distributed a letter to the EPA where they alleged the DNR hasn’t done enough to adequately regulate massive hog farms.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A state housing agency that’s been reviewing its decision to lease new office space is moving ahead with the relocation plans. The Iowa Finance Authority says its board of directors agreed Tuesday to reaffirm the move after receiving a new external review of expected costs. The agency says the review shows the move would be the most cost-effective option in year ten when compared to choices like staying in the current location.

Atlantic City Council to review a Resolution for Public Forums

News

June 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

In light of recent public outbursts during the Atlantic City Council meeting, and subsequent verbal sparring with the Mayor and Councilpersons, the Atlantic City Council, Wednesday evening, will review a Resolution pertaining to Public Forum Procedures. City Administrator John Lund says the Council passed a Resolution in Feb., 2002, which set the rules of procedure at Council meetings. The first rule states “THe Mayor shall preserve order and decorum and shall decide all questions of order, subject to an appeal to the Council.” Lund says the Council may choose to amend the current resolution, but until any changes are adopted, the Mayor is still entrusted to execute the Resolution.

Lund says the Municipal Research and Services Center (MRSC), a non-profit organization that helps local governments better serve their citizens by providing legal and policy guidance on any topic, says “Limiting public comment time in a council meeting is not a violation of the 1st Amendment, as some have claimed. Meetings must be public, according to Iowa Code, which also outlines specific instances where a governmental body may enter into a closed session. The law does allow the public the right to attend those meetings, but does not require those bodies to allow a public forum. Most cities, however, allow audiences to speak at meetings, even though it not required (except in the case of published Public Hearings).

In other business, the Atlantic City Council will discuss and consider a possible Business Grant Program in the form of a CDBG, or Community Development Block Grant, specifically for downtown facade restoration. The City already has an Economic Development Revolving (EDR) loan fund for Atlantic businesses. And, the City contributes between $30- and $43,000 to non-profit entities, according to Lund, that are considered to be charitable. That doesn’t include contributions to their economic development partners SWIPCO, CADCO and the Atlantic Chamber.

The Council will act on an order closing certain streets for the American Legion Post #43’s “Welcome Home” event this Sunday, from 10-a.m. until 3-p.m. The event is designed to honor members of Company K, 168th Infantry Battalion, who served in World War II. Those soldiers did not receive a homecoming event upon their return from the War. The members of that unit all passed on, but the ceremony is fitting, according to City officials, in light of Atlantic’s Sesquicentennial observations.

Ernst: Trump tariffs on China are a tax on farm families

News

June 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Sen. Joni Ernst has harsh words for President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods. The Republican senator from Iowa, in a significant parting of ways with Trump, says the tariffs “are nothing more than a tax on Iowa farm families.”

In a statement released Tuesday Ernst said the “escalating trade war is putting the livelihoods of our rural communities in the crosshairs.” She says she supports Trump’s effort to equalize a trade imbalance but the United States should focus on access to new markets and completing new trade deals rather than imposing dangerous tariffs.

Trump says he’ll impose tariffs on an additional $200 billion in goods from China in addition to tariffs announced earlier, which Ernst says puts U.S. producers at risk of permanently losing valuable market access.

Iowa land thriving years after donation

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

THOR, Iowa (AP) — A prairie and wetland in northern Iowa are flourishing a few years after two farming brothers donated the land following their deaths. Palmer Larson, 86, and his brother, Roger Larson, 82, both died in 2012. The brothers donated 150 acres (61 hectares) of their land in Humboldt County to the state, which was turned into the Three Rivers Wildlife Management Area, the Des Moines Register reported .

Bryan Hellyer is a wildlife supervisor with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. He said the brothers weren’t openly conservationists, but arranged a meeting with him in 2001. He said they spoke about the goals of the agency, but that he didn’t hear about the donation until after their deaths.

“I nearly fell over,” Hellyer said. “I thought, ‘no way.’ As far as farmland, there is not much better, so this is not the typical type of land the DNR manages.” Farmers in the area were also surprised by the donation.

Hellyer and wildlife technician Rob Patterson have spent five years restoring the land to its native condition. Two portions of the land were seeded with native prairie plants. Patterson has used more than 100 species of grasses and wildflowers.

The remaining 30 acres has food plots for wildlife and a small patch of timber. The area also includes a 33-mile trail. The brothers gave eight other nonprofit agencies their gross estate of $2.6 million, including the Iowa Department of the Blind, the Iowa Radio Reading Information Service and the Humboldt County Historical Museum.

Toddler pulled from Iowa lake dies at hospital

News

June 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

POLK CITY, Iowa (AP) — A toddler pulled from a central Iowa lake over the weekend has died. The Polk County Sheriff’s Office says the 2-year-old girl died Tuesday morning at a Des Moines hospital.

The girl was with her family Saturday at Big Creek State Park, just north of Des Moines, when was pulled from Big Creek Lake just before 9 p.m. First responders performed CPR on the girl, who was flown by helicopter to the hospital.

Officials have not released the girl’s name. An investigation into her death continues.