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Royals, Dyson Agree at $1,225,000 and Avoid Arbitration

Sports

January 27th, 2015 by Jim Field

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Royals and outfielder Jarrod Dyson have avoided arbitration by agreeing to a one-year contract for $1,225,000.

Dyson, who is expected to be the Royals’ fourth outfielder, can also make $25,000 for reaching 350 plate appearances and $50,000 if he’s chosen for the All-Star game.

Dyson earned $530,000 last season, $30,000 over the major league minimum. He had asked for $1.6 million this season and the Royals had countered at $900,000.

The former 50th-round amateur draft pick hit .269 with one homer and 24 RBIs in 290 plate appearances last season. But his real value came on the base paths, where he had a career-high 36 steals.

The deal Tuesday leaves outfielder Lorenzo Cain, first baseman Eric Hosmer, third baseman Mike Moustakas and pitchers Greg Holland, Kelvin Herrera and Danny Duffy as Kansas City’s remaining players in arbitration.

JOHN LEONARD TRENT, 80 of Menlo (Svcs. 1/29/15)

Obituaries

January 27th, 2015 by admin

JOHN LEONARD TRENT, 80, of Menlo died Monday, Jan. 26th, at home. A visitation tribute for JOHN TRENT will be held from 10- until 11-a.m.  Thursday, Jan. 29th, at the Johnson Family Funeral Home/ Stuart Chapel.

Graveside services will be 11-am Thursday,at the Rose Hill Cemetery in Menlo.

Memorial Contributions may be directed to the John Trent Memorial Fund and sent in care of the Johnson Family Funeral Home in Stuart. Online condolences may be left at www.johnsonfamilyfuneralhome.com

Montgomery County Extension Council Elects Officers

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Four officers were elected during the Montgomery County Extension Council organizational meeting January 19. The nine-member council annually elects officers to comply with Iowa law. Joseph Jardon of Red Oak is the newly re-elected chairperson. Jardon will preside at all meetings of the extension council, have authority to call special meetings and perform duties performed and exercised by a chairperson of a board of directors of a corporation. Mike Olson of Red Oak was elected vice chairperson.ISU Extension

Karen Klocke of Nodaway was -re-elected secretary; and has the responsibility of keeping the minutes of all extension council meetings and signing required papers for the council. The council re-elected Lori DeKay of Stanton to the treasurer position. The treasurer receives, deposits, has charge of all of the funds of the extension council, and pays and disburses funds. The treasurer insures an accurate record of receipts and disbursements and submits reports to the extension council.

The council is the county governing body of Iowa State University Extension and Outreach. The council hires county staff, manages the county extension budget of approximately $454,000, and helps determine programming. In partnership with Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, the council provides educational opportunities that bring university resources to the needs of
the county and region. Local extension programs include 4-H, Master Gardeners, youth summer camps, child care provider trainings and ServSafe for food service professionals.

State Fire Marshal Distributes Smoke Alarms

News

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, IOWA – The Iowa Department of Public Safety’s (DPS) State Fire Marshal Division (SFM) received an Assistance to Firefighters Grant (AFG) for $250,000.smokedetectors  With this grant, the State Fire Marshal Division was able to purchase 10,000 smoke detectors and 10,000 ten-year lithium batteries. To date, the State Fire Marshal Division has already received 5,000 of those smoke detectors–2,500 of those smoke detectors have already been picked up from numerous fire departments from across the state.

On January 26, 2015, the State Fire Marshal Division received the second portion of the initial shipment of 5,000 smoke detectors was delivered to the State Fire Marshal Division Headquarters in Des Moines.  Those 2,500 smoke detectors have already been spoken for by numerous other fire departments across the state. Another shipment of 2,500 smoke detectors will be delivered in March and all of that shipment has been spoken for also.

The final shipment of 2,500 smoke detectors, that will fulfill the 10,000 smoke detectors purchase, will arrive this summer and have not been spoken for by any fire departments. Once all 10,000 of these smoke detectors are installed, a total of approximately 35,000 smoke detectors will have been installed across the state since this program started in 2010.

VERNON NIELSEN, 89, of Avoca (Graveside svcs. in the spring)

Obituaries

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

VERNON NIELSEN, 89, of Avoca, died Tue., Jan. 27th, at Creighton University Medical Center, in Omaha. Graveside services for VERNON NIELSEN will be held in the spring in the Graceland Cemetery at Avoca. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.

VERNON NIELSEN is survived by:

His daughter – April Nielsen & husband Tom Bauch, of Chetek, WI.

His brother – Richard Nielsen, of Treynor.

His sister – Doris Meyers, of OR.

and 2 grandchildren.

Des Moines man arrested on Union County warrant

News

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Union County say a Des Moines man, 25-year old Cody John Courtney, was arrested Monday night at the Law Enforcement Center in Creston, on a Union County Warrant for probation violation. Courtney is being held in the Union County Jail awaiting an appearance before the Magistrate.

State unemployment rate down in December, nearing full employment number

News

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The state unemployment rate dropped down in December, and a spokesperson for Iowa Workforce Development says the state is getting close to “full employment.” I-W-D spokesperson, Kerry Koonce, says the December unemployment rate hit four-point-one percent, compared to four-point-three percent in November. “Four-point-one percent is actually the lowest rate we’ve had since June of 2008. The national rate is still standing at five-point-six percent for December,” Koonce says. She says the national experts believe Iowa is getting close to what’s called full employment, or the percentage of the labor market that is able to find a job if they want a job.

“It’s between three-and-half and four percent for Iowa, closer to the four percent,” Koonce says. “It used be closer to the three, three-and-a-half, but as the economy has changed over the years, they say the full employment for Iowa falls in that three-and-a-half to four percent range.” It is the third straight month that the unemployment rate has dropped. “What we’ve seen is we’ve seen a decrease in the number of people who are unemployed, plus a continued increase in the size of our labor force couple with adding 21-hundred jobs to the economy in the month of December, that’s what allows us to bring that rate down continually,” Koonce explains. She takes about the areas where the state gained jobs.

“A larger portion of the jobs were in manufacturing — that was 16-hundred of them — another 500 still in construction, plus we saw 15-hundred in business and professional services, and 600 of those were also in what we call other services, which is kind of a combined category,” Koonce says. The state lost one thousand jobs in the trade and transportation area, which Koonce says included the retail sector.  “You saw a lot of people leave at the end of the holiday season, plus the retail trade is just seeing a lot more people move to on-line shopping, so that just decreases the numbers they need in the actual stores,” she says.

Local and state government saw the loss of 900 jobs in the month, but she says but many of these losses were seasonal transitions and should be recovered in January. Iowa’s largest manufacturing employer, Deere and Company, announced the layoff of 900 workers last week. Koonce says that won’t have an immediate impact on next month’s unemployment numbers. “We’ll see it in the job numbers, but it may be kind of a slow progression. And that’s because the layoffs are spread out over three to four months with John Deere,” Koonce explains. “So they won’t be completed until the end of April, so it would be our May report which is for April numbers, when all of that would have taken effect. But if it’s spread out over several months it will be a small decline, you are not going to see a sudden drop of 900 all at once.”

Koonce says Iowa Workforce Development already is responding to help the Deere workers as they face the layoffs. I-W-D says the total number of working Iowans reached a current-year peak of one-million-642-thousand-900 in December. This figure is 31-hundred higher than November and 38-thousand-100 higher than one year ago.
(Radio Iowa)

Spokesman: Iowa governor released from Des Moines hospital

News

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad has been released from a Des Moines hospital where he received treatment for what doctors believe is a viral illness and dehydration. Branstad spokesman Jimmy Centers said the governor was released Tuesday morning and is resting at Terrace Hill, the governor’s official residence. Branstad’s public appearances for the week have been cancelled so that he can recuperate.

Branstad was taken by ambulance to Iowa Methodist Medical Center in Des Moines on Monday after he required assistance at a ribbon-cutting event. Doctors said they believed the governor has a viral illness. The hospital conducted tests and ruled out other contributing factors, including cardiac issues for which he’s been previously treated.

Atlantic School Board looks to make $650k in cuts

News

January 27th, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District’s Board of Education is looking for ways to cut $650,000 from next year’s budget. Superintendent Dr. Michael Amstein told KJAN News during a work session Monday night, the Board gave the district’s Administrative team instructions to look at all areas where savings might be made.

Amstein says they’ve been in the process of trying to reduce costs for the current school year, which will impact this year’s budget. He says they believe they will come in under the amount they had targeted to spend. Amstein says over 80-percent of their budget is for personnel, and that’s “Certainly an area we’re going to have to take a look at.” Fortunately, he says the district received a TLC (Teacher Leadership and Compensation) Planning Grant for the 2015-2016 school year in the amount of $450,000, which allows them to move some people into instructional leadership positions.

So that may make it easier, by not having to replace those positions, but cuts will come from every department across the district. Last year, the district proposed $800,000 in cuts. Amstein says “With this on top of it, it’ll be almost $1.5-million dollars in cuts over the past two years,” and that they will have to “Turn every stone, now.”

Amstein says that money is already spent though, and can’t be used for anything else within the district. Amstein says this is the first time during his 5-years he’s served the district that they’ve had a true four-percent increase in educational funding, and it’s hard to keep up with just the cost of doing business each year when funding doesn’t meet the needs of the school district.

In addition, a miscalculation by the Iowa Department of Revenue will result in the Atlantic School District having to pay back more than $70,000 it received in overpayment from the state sales tax. The mistake was traced back to a faulty computer program that could not handle as much sales tax revenue as was collected last summer. The error affects school infrastructure projects.

Amstein said it won’t impact the Atlantic District as much as it would a smaller district, because it will be paid back over time, and will likely be accomplished by reducing the payments the district receives for the rest of this year.

HSBB: Atlantic vs. Treynor Girls 01-26-2015

Podcasts, Sports

January 27th, 2015 by admin

Jim Field and Chris Parks have the call of the game played at Atlantic High School.

Play