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Public Hearing Wednesday (4/12) on the ACSD Certified Budget

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – A Public Hearing with regard to the Atlantic Community School District’s (ACSD) Certified Budget, will be held 5:30-p.m. Wednesday, April 12th, in the High School Media Center. During the Board’s Special Meeting March 29th, Superintendent Steve Barber and Director of Finance Sarah Sheeder reviewed the proposed certified budget for the 2023-24 school year, with a total property tax rate of 13.00317 per $1,000 taxable valuation. That is a decrease from the 2022-23 property tax rate of 13.25506, or about 26-cents per thousand.

During the Board’s regular meeting to follow the Public Hearing, they will act on resignations, including: Lenzi Robinson, 5th Grade Teacher; Sarah Sheeder, School Business Official/Board Secretary, and Lori Hayes, Paraeducator. They will also act on approving Superintendent Barber’s contract recommendations for: Nathan Block – 6th Grade Science Teacher; Mikayla Stockhaus – HS Vocal Music Teacher; Brett Johnson and Caroline Pellett – MS Softball Coaches.

Action items on the Atlantic School Board Agenda include (but is not limited to) the following:

  • Approving the 2023-24 Certified Budget
  • Setting May 10th at 5:30-p.m. as the date/time for a Public Hearing on a Certified Budget Amendment (amounting to an increase of $793,569). School officials say the amendment will NOT result in an increase in taxes. A detailed statement of additional receipts, cash balances and proposed disbursements will be available for public viewing at the hearing.
  • Approval of a 2023-24 Operational Sharing Agreement with the Griswold School District, w/regard to Transportation Director, and
  • Approval of 2023-24 Activities Sharing Agreements for: boys swimming (Audubon, Clarinda, Red Oak & Riverside, w/Atlantic as host); girls and boys soccer (CAM & Exira-EHK, w/Atlantic as host); and girls wrestling (CAM, Nodaway Valley & Griswold). There is no change from last year, with the exception of Atlantic serving as the host for girls wrestling.
  • The Board will act on approving 2023-24 Non-Certified Staff Master Contract Agreement (Which includes the following increases: $2.75/hour for Bus Route Drivers & Bus Asst. Mechanic; $0.90/hour for all other Support Staff).
  • The School Board is expected to pass a Resolution approving the Plans, Specifications and Form of Contract for the H.S. Storage Shed (estimated cost $190,000), followed by the awarding of a contract for the shed. Bids are due by April 12th….and,
  • A Resolution approving the Contracts and Bonds for the Washington Elementary School Playground Project. Last month, the School Board awarded the project to Caliber Concrete, LLC, of Adair. The project cost amounts to $579,422.58.

Rail traffic in the state continues to be down

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa D-O-T continues to see trends in rail traffic that show economic challenges. Stuart Anderson gave and update to the Transportation Commission. “The rail carloads continue to be down both on a monthly basis comparing March of this year with s March of last year — but also year to date. You can see it’s down point-three percent,” he says. Anderson says grains shipments are one area where things have been down. “Although I think there is some information from U-S-D-A that they do feel like there is with increased export agreements with China that they expect that trend to shift here in the coming month,” Anderson says. He says the intermodel shipments from ports into Iowa are also down. Anderson says there is one bright side on the rail shipping front.

“Motor vehicle shipment on rail cars continues to be higher than we’ve seen in the last year, which is is a good time that people are still buying cars,” Anderson says. His report also shows the drop in travel on the roadways in December and January was likely due to winter weather, as things have picked back up. “We would say overall the travel is generally back to the pre pandemic levels. But still with those shifts that we’ve talked about in the past — where municipal traffic continues to be a little down and rural traffic a little high, just reflecting the more teleworking that’s happening across workforce,” Anderson says.

Anderson made his comments in a work session prior to today’s (Tuesday) Transportation Commission meeting.

UI prof: It’s time for the US government to do our taxes for us

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – With the federal tax filing deadline now one week away, a University of Iowa accounting professor suggests America adopt what’s being done in many European countries, where the government prepares your taxes for you — for free. Professor Ryan Wilson says our current electronic filing process is automated, so it wouldn’t be a great stretch for the I-R-S to go the next step and prepare our taxes, too. Wilson says the government already has most of the information it needs to pre-populate tax returns, and those with more complex investments could always opt out. For the majority of Americans, Wilson says it would reduce anxiety while saving time and money.

He says a program called ReadyReturn is already being used in the U-K, Denmark, Sweden, and Spain, where the government prepares its citizens’ taxes. In some countries, you get a text from the government and if you text back ‘YES,’ then you’re done.

Red Oak man arrested for OWI Tuesday morning (4/11/23)

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Police in Red Oak arrested a man this (Tuesday) morning. 37-year-old Brian Paul Anderson, of Red Oak, was taken into custody in the vicinity of 1660 E. Summit Street, at around 4:22-a.m. He was charged with OWI/1st offense. Anderson was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $1,000 bond.

Governor names former state legislator as chair of Iowa Utilities Board

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds has appointed a former Republican legislator to lead the Iowa Utilities Board. Current Iowa Utilities Board chair Jeri Huser will remain on the board, but the governor has appointed Erik Helland to take over as chair in May. Helland, who is an attorney, served two terms in the Iowa House representing the Des Moines suburb of Johnston. Helland will lead the Iowa Utilities Board as it considers applications for construction permits for three carbon pipelines.

A year ago, the governor appointed Helland to serve on the Iowa Employment Relations Board, but Democrats in the Senate blocked his nomination. Republicans won 34 seats in the state senate last November and that’s equal to the number of yes voted Helland would need for confirmation to this new role.

Bill would require Iowa parents permission for 14-17 year olds to have social media accounts

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A bill eligible for debate in the Iowa House would require permission from a parent before Iowa teens between the ages of 14 and 17 could have an account on Instagram or other types of social media. Republican Representative John Wills of Spirit Lake says that’s a change from the original bill, which would have barred any minor in Iowa from having a social media account.

“We are at least trying to get that parent to have some skin the game and understand: ‘Maybe my kid is acting this way because they’re actually being bullied or maybe something’s happening on social media and I need to monitor that,'” Wills says. Studies have shown social media use can be a major distraction for teenagers by disrupting their sleep and promoting unrealistic views about their own body image. Wills says for those and other reasons, it’s time to try something.

“It’s not going to be perfect,” Wills says, “but with the number of suicides and with the (amount) of cyberbulling and all of these other things…there needs to be some additional protections from the government.” A federal law prohibits social media platforms and other online sites from collecting data about children 13 and under without parental permission — essentially requiring a parent to sign off on a sign up for Instagram, TikTok and other social media.

The bill cleared the House Ways and Means Committee yesterday (Monday) with the support of all but two Republicans. Democrats on the panel opposed it. Some are pressing for more changes in the bill to ensure it does not prevent students from using social media platforms for homework and other school activities.

Federal officials searching for workers, mostly at Iowa sites, who were unpaid for bird flu response

News

April 11th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Federal officials say nearly three-thousand workers hired to euthanize chickens and turkeys struck by bird flu in 2015 are eligible for back pay. According to the U-S Department of Labor, the workers were underpaid and they are owed, as a group, one-point-seven million dollars in wage. The U-S-D-A hired a Massachusetts company during the bird flu outbreak of 2015 to manage killing and disposing of infected commercial flocks and then cleaning the facilities.

Federal officials say in some cases subcontractors hired by the Massachusetts company failed to pay overtime or the hourly wage that was paid did not match the federal guidelines. A news release from the Department of Labor indicates it’s searching for eligible employees who worked eight years ago at sites in Osceola, Sioux City and Cherokee.

In 2015, Radio Iowa reported there were confirmed bird flu outbreaks in Osceola, Sioux and Cherokee COUNTIES, but not in those cities.

Dubuque man claims record Lotto America April Fool’s Day jackpot

News

April 10th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Dubuque man who bought a lottery ticket on April Fools’ Day that ended up being a winner of a record 40 million dollar jackpot thought it was a joke. Sixty-one-year-old Earl Lape says the called him from the store where he bought the ticket and told him he had to come in.

He says they told him he’d won and he laughed and said “yeah its’s April Fools.” Lape is a retired mechanic, and finally started to believe the news when he took his winning ticket to the local store where he bought it and had it checked on the lottery terminal. Lape chose to receive his winnings in the lump-sum option of just more than 21 million dollars.

He says he plans to invest his winnings so the money could help his family for generations to come. He also is planning donations to organizations that benefit children with medical issues, specifically the University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital in Iowa City, and Blank Children’s Hospital in Des Moines.

(Iowa Lottery photo)

He says a lot of parents don’t have money and a lot of insurance companies don’t cover some of the issues the kids have. The jackpot he won was a record for the Lotto America game after no one won since July 2021. The previous record had been around $23 million in 2018.

Lape bought his jackpot-winning ticket at Eichman’s, a restaurant and convenience store on Highway 52 in Dubuque. This is the second Lotto America jackpot won in Iowa. A Davenport man won a little more than $4 million jackpot in the game in May 2018.

1 injured in Union County collision, Friday afternoon

News

April 10th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – The Union County Sheriff’s Office says a passenger in an SUV that struck a pickup Friday afternoon west of Creston, was transported to the hospital in Creston, for treatment of a head injury. Authorities say a 2002 Jeep Liberty driven by 45-year-old Alan Wayne Blazek, of Fontanelle, was southbound on Clover Avenue at around 1:20-p.m., Friday. He noticed a 2005 Dodge RAM 1500 pickup driven by 72-year-old Michael James Wolfe, of Creston, was crossing the intersection with 160th Street. Blazek tried to press on the brakes to avoid hitting the pickup, but was unsuccessful.

The Jeep struck the pickup on the passenger side. A side airbag curtain deployed in the pickup upon impact. A passenger in the Jeep, 48-year-old Velma Blazek, of Fontanelle, was injured and transported to the hospital by ambulance. The Union County Sheriff’s Office says Wolfe failed to yield the right-of-way from the stop sign. Wolfe told authorities he didn’t see the Jeep when it went into the intersection.

Wolfe was issued a citation for failing to yield from a stop sign. Both vehicles were able to be driven from the scene. Damages amounted to $3,500.

Muscatine County Man Sentenced to Twenty Years in Prison for Attempted Sexual Exploitation of a Child

News

April 10th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, IA – A Muscatine County man was sentenced Friday, April 7, 2023, to twenty years in prison following his guilty plea for Attempted Sexual Exploitation of a Child.

According to court documents, from February 2022 to September 2022, David Franklin Duncan III, 33, used cellphones and Facebook to communicate with a person he believed to be a fifteen-year-old child. During the conversations, Duncan attempted to employ, use, persuade, entice, or coerce the person he believed to be a child to capture and send Duncan images and videos of the child engaged in sexually explicit conduct, to travel to Duncan’s location or meet him at an agreed location for the purpose of engaging in sexually explicit conduct, and to engage in commercial sex acts. Duncan also sent images and videos of his penis and of him masturbating. Unbeknownst to Duncan, the person he was communicating with was an undercover law enforcement officer.

Following his prison term, Duncan must also serve a ten-year term of supervised release. There is no parole in the federal system.

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Altoona Police Department, in conjunction with the Iowa Crimes Against Children Task Force, investigated the case. Assistant United States Attorney Kyle Essley prosecuted the case.

The case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood. In 2006, the Department of Justice created Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative designed to protect children from exploitation and abuse. Led by the U.S. Attorney’s Offices and the Department of Justice’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children, as well as identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.projectsafechildhood.gov.