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New nursing degree program to be launched at Iowa State University

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July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State University plans to launch a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree program in the fall of 2018. Professor Ginny Wangerin, director of nursing education at I-S-U, says the program should appeal to registered nurses who are already working in the field as well as recent graduates of approved nursing programs. Wangerin says, “The Iowa State program is designed for nurses who’ve already received, typically, their associate’s degree and their nursing license, so they will be RNs already.”

The campus-based program aims to meet a need as more hospitals and health care providers in the state are requiring — or are at least encouraging — nurses to get a B-S-N degree. “Looking at the numbers in our community and the graduates from our local community colleges, we’re anticipating about 50 students with each admission,” Wangerin says. “Given they will be in the program about two years, three to four semesters, we expect to reach a capacity of about 200 students over time.”

Nationwide, about 65-percent of R-Ns have a bachelor’s degree or higher, but the rate in Iowa is only around 46-percent, dropping to nearly 30-percent in rural areas. The program at I-S-U won’t likely help to reverse the state’s nurse shortage, but Wangerin says there will still be valuable benefits. “Programs such as this, the RN to BSN, do not necessarily put more nurses in the field, but what it does is advance the education of the nurses that we have,” Wangerin says. “All of the research tells us that leads to safer care and better care.”

Studies find when hospitals or health care providers have more B-S-N-prepared nurses on staff, there are fewer medical errors, deaths, infections or injuries for patients, and patients spend fewer days in the hospital. Wangerin says about 88 to 90-percent of all nurses in Iowa are female.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa’s first black female legislator dies at 95

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Willie Stevenson Glanton, Iowa’s first black female legislator, has died. Henderson’s Highland Park Funeral Home confirmed Friday that Glanton died Thursday in Des Moines. She was 95.

Glanton served in the Iowa House of Representatives from 1965 to 1967 as a Democrat. The Des Moines Register reports she was the first woman to become an assistant Polk County attorney. She also was the first black person to be elected president of the Iowa chapter of the Federal Bar Association.

The newspaper reports Glanton, who was inducted into the Iowa Women’s Hall of Fame in 1986, served on numerous boards, commissions and councils during her life.
Details about Glanton’s funeral services are pending.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 7/7/2017

News, Podcasts

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 7/7/2017

News, Podcasts

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The area’s top news at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

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Account set up for Guthrie County Deputy injured in fireworks accident

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A Guthrie County Sheriff’s Deputy was injured during a fireworks accident last week. According to a social media post pinned to the Guthrie County Sheriff’s Facebook page, Deputy Jesse Swenson and other family members were leaving an Independence Day party June 30th, when a spark from a firework that was shot too low, went into his eye.

Swenson was taken to Iowa City and told that he would regain his vision in a couple days, but during another doctor’s visit last Sunday, he was told the eye was worse than they had hoped because no oxygen is going to that eye due to the blood vessels in the eye, getting burned. Whether he’ll be able to see out of that eye again is still unknown.

Family members who have set up a GoFundMe page, say any sort of donations are welcome, as the family has to travel back and forth from Iowa City to Guthrie Center. The funds will be used for extra expenses for the long, healing road ahead.

https://www.gofundme.com/5zeuk-officer-down

Trial date set in deadly Iowa jail escape

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) – A trial date has been set for a man accused of killing a sheriff’s deputy in Iowa. The Daily Nonpareil reports Wesley Correa-Carmenaty is scheduled to go to trial in Council Bluffs on Aug. 15th.

Pottawattamie County Attorney Matt Wilber says that the 24-year-old Correa-Carmenaty has not waived his right to a speedy trial and has not requested the trial be moved to Sioux City. Attorney Greg Jones, who represents Correa-Carmenaty, says details could change.

Correa-Carmenaty is charged with murder, attempted murder and other counts. Police say he was being transported to the Council Bluffs jail in May when he attacked Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Deputy Mark Burbridge and Deputy Pat Morgan, grabbed one of their guns and shot them before fleeing. He was recaptured in Omaha. Burbridge was killed during the escape.

Shenandoah woman arrested on drug charges Friday morning

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports a woman was arrested early this (Friday) morning, on drug charges. 54-year old Karen Arlene Green, of Shenandoah, was taken into custody by the Fremont County Sheriff’s K9 Unit, in connection with the illegal sales of a Controlled Substance (Meth). Green was arrested without incident and transported to the Fremont County Law Enforcement Center, where her cash bond was set at $50,000.

Karen Arlene Green

Man accused of destroying property at eastern Iowa building

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) – An eastern Iowa man has been accused of destroying property at a University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics building. The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports 50-year-old Robert A. Dostal of Hiawatha has been charged with second-degree burglary and fourth-degree criminal mischief.

University of Iowa police say in complaints that Dostal entered a secured area at the Pomerantz Family Pavilion Wednesday night and caused about $400 in damage to the building. He is accused of being aggressive.

Dostal remains at the Johnson County Jail as of Friday morning.

Water Quality report finds most public water supplies meet standards

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The annual report from the state Public Drinking Water Program shows only a small percentage of public drinking water supplies are failing to meet all the federal quality standards. The executive officer of the program, Diane Moles, says the compliance was especially good this year.

She says the percentage of water systems in compliance was at nearly 95 percent, which is the best the state has had in 10 years. Moles says the percentage of systems in compliance has been consistently above 90 percent. Moles says operators are good about reacting quickly to issues. “When a problem is found — no matter what they’re looking for — we’ve got a lot of good operators in the state. And they are diligent about getting these fixed,” Moles says. “And we’re also as a state program with oversight, we’re ensuring that they are getting them fixed. So, it’s sort of a collaborative effort, when problems are found, they get them taken care of .”

Mole says the numbers this year were boosted a bit by a change that no longer makes the discovery of coliform bacteria in a system and automatic violation. She says operators are now allowed to do a check of their whole system to find the source of the problem. If they don’t check the system, that becomes a violation. And then if they do check the system and they find a problem and they don’t fix the system, that becomes a violation,” Moles explains. “So, there’s more of an opportunity to see if there is a problem and get it fixed right away as opposed to just going right away to the violation.”

The report says the coliform bacteria are not harmful in themselves, but indicate a pathway into the water system through the pipes or some other avenue. That is why the system operators are now given the opportunity to check for the problem and correct it before it becomes a bigger issue.

Iowa did not have a disease outbreak or death linked to water from a public system. Moles says she has never seen that in Iowa in her time here. She says she’s been in the program for 21 years and says in that time there have been other cases of people dying from contaminated water systems in other states such as Illinois and Missouri. “There’s some famous ones in Missouri where birds go in water towers and caused some salmonella outbreaks and people did die from that,” Moles says.

A public water system is one that serves at least 25 people, and there are nearly three million (2.93) people who get their water from those systems in Iowa. Moles says those who are served by a public water system should soon see a report on that system sent out by the system. She says it’s important information. “People need to know what’s in their water — that’s part of the reason for this consumer confidence report — so that people know what’s in their specific water. They know who their water supplier is,” Moles says. “There’s a requirement in there for them to know when their board meetings are held, however the governing structure is in that system and who they can contact if they need more information. All of that kind of stuff is in there, it’s actually a very good report.”

You can see the full report on the Iowa D-N-R’s website at: www.iowadnr.gov. Go to the Environmental Protection section and click on the Water Quality tab.

(Radio Iowa)

A third of fireworks sales sites were not inspected

News

July 7th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

More than 650 dealers are now licensed to sell fireworks in Iowa, but about a third of the required inspections were NOT completed before selling began. Barbara Edmondson, an attorney for the Iowa Department of Public Safety, says it was a challenge getting the licensing program up and running once the governor signed the bill May 9th.

“There was a very short window for selling,” Edmondson said. “We wanted to get licenses issued to the extent we could and to ensure that there was a maximum opportunity for people to be successful with this.” The new law made fireworks sales legal in Iowa on June 1st.

The State Fire Marshal’s Office spent more than 110-thousand dollars reviewing and inspecting the sites where fireworks have been sold. However, state officials say there wasn’t enough time or money to finish the job, so some provisional licenses for fireworks sales were issued. Retailers are charging the state sales tax on the commercial-grade fireworks that are now legal to sell in Iowa.

License fees have brought in nearly a quarter of a million dollars in state revenue. Fireworks sales are to end this Saturday, July 8th. Another period for sales — and use of fireworks — will open in December and last through early January.

(Radio Iowa)