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Campus security, safety summit at ISU November 1

News

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Campus leaders and members of the board that governs Iowa, Iowa State and U-N-I are reviewing the effectiveness of campus safety measures. Jacob Simpson of Clinton is the president of University of Iowa Student Government. He says sexual assault is a “pervasive problem” on college campuses throughout the country.  “According to our campus climate survey on sexual assault, 21 percent of the undergraduate female-identified students who completed the survey reported being raped and then 11.4 percent of first-year undergraduate female-identified students who completed the survey reported being raped in their first semester on campus,” Simpson said. “These numbers are astonishing.”

Simpson spoke to a Board of Regents panel yesterday (Wednesday). Paula Knudson is the University of Northern Iowa’s vice president for student affairs. In the late 1980s, she was a resident assistant on a University of Iowa dorm floor when data showed about one in four or five women on campus said they had been sexually assaulted. “If this was a health issue — and it is a health issue — it would be considered an epidemic,” she said. “And it hasn’t changed in that 25-year experience.”

Iowa State University’s student body president is stressing the need for more lights and cameras on campus to enhance security and aid investigators when incidents occur. A summit will be held on November 1st at Iowa State University to discuss safety and security issues on college campuses throughout the state.

(Radio Iowa)

Trump reportedly has told EPA to back down on RFS

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Bloomberg News is reporting that President Trump has directed the E-P-A to table proposals that would weaken the Renewable Fuels Standard. Governor Kim Reynolds spoke by phone with President Trump Wednesday morning and a few hours later she told reporters in Pella that she intends to keep lobbying on the issue. “It’s not done until it’s done and if you ever think that it is, you’re mistaken,” Reynolds said, “so you don’t stop until you get the final numbers.”

Reynolds spoke at a news conference in Pella. She was joined by leaders in the renewable fuels industry. Grant Kimberley, executive director of the Iowa Biodiesel Board, says it was “discouraging” to see a federal agency “regressing” on Trump’s 2016 campaign pledge to “protect” the Renewable Fuels Standard. “So I urge President Trump and Administrator Pruitt in the EPA not to buckle in the interests of certain oil companies and refiners, but rather stay true on promises made on the campaign trail,” Kimberley said. “…This is about ‘America First’. This is about American jobs, American energy, national security and, certainly, it’s about rural America and the American heartland.”

Iowa Renewable Fuels Association executive director Monte Shaw says E-P-A’s initial proposals weren’t “good news” and it was important that President Trump get that message. “Quite frankly, it looked like the EPA was looking for just about any and every excuse it could find to lower the numbers for both corn ethanol, biodiesel and cellulosic ethanol,” Shaw said. “It kind of felt like the EPA was saying, ‘Hey, we’re going to put up a giant sign across rural America that says: “Closed for business.”‘ And people got upset. People were disappointed and, to a certain extent, people even felt betrayed.”

On another front, Republican Joni Ernst has used her authority as a U.S. Senator to block a confirmation vote on the man Trump has nominated to run the renewable fuels program inside the E-P-A.  “Able to hold their feet to the fire on a pathway to receive those strong reassurances on these biofuel volumes and the EPA’s commitment to follow both the letter and the spirit of the RFS,” Ernst told Radio Iowa yesterday afternoon.

Chuck Grassley, Iowa’s other Republican Senator, hosted a meeting in his office earlier this week for a group of Midwestern senators who spoke face-to-face with Pruit about these concerns.

(Radio Iowa)

Skyscan forecast & weather data for Atlantic: 10/19/17

Weather

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly-to-Mostly Sunny. High 76. SE @ 10-15.

Tonight: Fair to Partly cloudy. Low 50. S @ 5-10 mph.

Tomorrow: P/Cldy. High 78. SW @ 15-25.

Saturday: Mo. Cldy w/showers or thunderstorms. High 70.

Sunday: P/Cldy. High 65.

Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 74. Our Low this morning was 39. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 73 and the low was 42. The Record High in Atlantic on this date was 88 in 2003. The Record Low for this date was 12 in1972.

MARCELLA MARIE SMITH, 99, of Earling (Svcs. 10/21/17)

Obituaries

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

MARCELLA MARIE SMITH, 99, of Earling, died Wed., Oct. 18th, at the Little Flower Haven Nursing Home, in Earling. A Mass of Christian Burial for MARCELLA MARIE SMITH will be held 10:30-a.m. Sat., Oct. 21st, at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, in Earling. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation will be held at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church from 4-until 7-p.m. Friday, Oct. 20th, with a Catholic Daughters Rosary at 7-p.m. Friday.

Burial will be in the St. Joseph’s Cemetery at Earling.

MARCELLA MARIE SMITH is survived by:

Her daughters – JoAnn (Robert) Koesters, and Patricia (Tim) Gross, all of Earling, & Marcella “Sally” Smith, of Tekamah, NE.

Her sons – Bill Smith, Jr., of Mason City, and Charles (Marlene) Smith, of Minnetonka, MN.

Her brother – Jerry Bissen, of Earling.

19 grandchildren, 36 great-grandchildren and 6 great-great grandchildren.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 10/19/17

Sports

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — The future of embattled Nebraska coach Mike Riley has been the hottest topic in the state and among Cornhusker fans everywhere this week. The Huskers are coming off a 56-14 loss to Ohio State that was their most lopsided defeat at home since 1949. Bill Moos was hired away from Washington State to be Nebraska’s athletic director. Moos will decide after the season whether to bring back Riley for a fourth year.

UNDATED (AP) — The same technological advances that tempt fans to stay home rather than heading to the stadium also make it easy for programs to start new college football traditions. Social media enables traditions to begin much sooner nowadays. The latest example is Florida getting fans to sing along to Tom Petty’s “I Won’t Back Down” after the third quarter.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The Oakland Raiders came into the season trying to chase the Kansas City Chiefs for AFC West dominance. The Raiders head into the first meeting between the rivals this season on a four-game losing streak and desperate for any kind of win. Oakland has lost its last five meetings against the Chiefs. It can ill afford another if the team wants to compete for a playoff berth.

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Bill Snyder coached his first game as Kansas State’s head coach in 1989. Lincoln Riley was six years old. Snyder is oldest coach in the Football Bowl Subdivision. Riley is the youngest. Their teams will face off this week.

UNDATED (AP) — Wichita State’s move to the American Athletic Conference left the Missouri Valley looking like a one-bid league. Northern Iowa doesn’t seem like a team content to rely on the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Panthers open the season at North Carolina, play in a Thanksgiving weekend tournament against Power Five teams, host UNLV and Xavier, and play Iowa State on a neutral floor.

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, 10/19/17

News

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa’s Republican governor says President Donald Trump and the head of the Environmental Protection Agency told her they’re committed to a federal program that mandates that biofuels be blended into gasoline and diesel. The issue comes amid a proposed plan by the EPA that could lower targets of the so-called Renewable Fuel Standard. Gov. Kim Reynolds says she had separate phone calls Wednesday with Trump and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt. The issue could test Trump’s support in Midwest states.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Uncertainty and confusion are mounting as millions of Americans prepare to select health insurance policies when the new open enrollment period under the Affordable Care Act begins on Nov. 1. The uncertainty is especially pronounced in Iowa, which is seeking last-minute approval from the federal government to revamp its insurance market. The experts are not sure what to tell callers who want to know what their insurance is going to look like.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The city of Des Moines is acknowledging that a former police officer falsely told investigators she warned an unarmed man to “get back” before fatally shooting him. The Des Moines Register reports that video and audio recordings of Vanessa Miller’s patrol car show she didn’t warn 28-year-old Ryan Bolinger before firing her weapon in 2015. The city’s attorneys say the circumstances of the shooting made a warning unfeasible. Miller acknowledged the disparity as part of a wrongful death lawsuit.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The U.S. Department of Agriculture has killed a rule designed to protect the legal rights of farmers who raise chickens and hogs for the nation’s largest meat processors. The rule would have made it easier for farmers to sue companies they contract with over unfair or deceptive practices. It was rolled out in the final days of Barack Obama’s administration. But the USDA delayed it after President Donald Trump took office. On Tuesday, the agency withdrew it for good.

Wednesday’s Regional Volleyball Scores (10/18)

Sports

October 19th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Class 3A

Region 2

(3-0) Kuemper Catholic def. Atlantic, 25-10 25-18 25-6
(3-1) East Sac County def. OA-BCIG, 25-16 25-17 23-25 25-10
(3-0) Roland-Story def. Greene County, 25-11 25-13 25-22
(3-2) South Central Calhoun def. Southeast Valley, 25-19 25-13 15-25 23-25 15-10

Region 3

(3-0) Red Oak def. Clarke, 25-7 25-6 25-9
(3-2) Shenandoah def. Creston, 25-13 18-25 25-18 28-30 15-8
(3-0) Gilbert def. Saydel, 25-11 25-8 25-8
(3-0) North Polk def. Chariton, 25-14 25-9 25-19

Class 4A

Region 1

(3-0) Carroll def. Denison-Schleswig, 26-24 25-23 25-18
(3-2) Storm Lake @ Spencer, 25-18 25-17 14-25 19-25 15-12

Region 2

(3-0) Harlan def. Perry, 25-14 25-11 25-16
(3-0) ADM def.Boone, 25-15 25-17 25-14

Class 5A

Region 2

(3-0) Council Bluffs/Thomas Jeff. def. Des Moines East, 25-13 25-12 25-17

Atlantic City Council updated on budget process

News

October 18th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Atlantic City Administrator John Lund, Wednesday, updated the City Council on the budget process. Lund said a lot of work on the budget has already been accomplished. Operating budgets he said aren’t looking that bad. The trouble has been in the area of Capital Projects, which he said could reach a breaking point, where the City is spending more than it takes in.

He said another area of concern is the Debt Capacity. Lund says the City will have paid off 2011 series bonds at the end of the current Fiscal Year. That will lower the Debt Capacity. Speaking with County Assessor Brenda Nelson, the total assessed value was $352-million. City’s can borrow up to 5-percent of the total assessed value, or $17.6-million dollars, in Atlantic’s case.

The City currently has eight outstanding debts amounting to $13.5-million, which Lund says puts us at a Debt Capacity  of 77-percent. That will drop to slightly below 75-percent by the end of the Fiscal Year. The eight remaining debts will all fall off in clusters, in 2019, 2026, 2028  and 2035. The YMCA debt – which is a Revenue Bond – will be paid off in 2024.

All factors considered, Lund says the bottom line is that the City needs to watch its spending practices. He says the City’s days of borrowing money for the long term are over, at least for now. Revenue bonds are an option, but anything not tied to property taxes is a risky proposition.

Councilman Gerald Brink said the answer is more new construction., but Lund said that comes with a caveat: As long as that didn’t require the City to borrow money to help finance construction., and as long as the new construction is getting the taxable value on the books. If we offer incentives like tax abatement, we’re long delaying any benefits the City itself sees. Lund said “It’s good for the business and good for the property owner for sure, but it doesn’t do anything for the City for an extend period of time. He agreed, that it IS an investment in the future, though.

Atlantic shelves Mandatory garbage pickup proposal

News

October 18th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The City of Atlantic’s Community Development Committee, Tuesday, recommended the City shelve a proposal to institute a Mandatory Garbage pickup program. City Administrator John Lund said during Wednesday evening’s City Council meeting, that after he conducted extensive research and crunched the numbers and logistics of implementing the program, it just wouldn’t work out.

The Committee recommended instead the City pursue problems with junk properties – more specifically rental properties- through the landlord ordinance. Lund said he’s in discussions with the City’s Bonding/Financial Attorney and County Treasurer Tracey Marshall, about other options, including moving Storm Water billing and landfill fees onto the property tax bill on a per capita basis, meaning you would no longer see the every six months Storm Water billing card from the City.

The whole reason for discussion about a landfill fee boils down to EPA regulations and requirements that leave the County and it’s Cities with few options other than to implement a fee. The landfill currently operates on a tipping-fee basis, or the amount of pounds that are brought in.

Councilman Dana Halder said gave a little more insight into why the Community Development Committee decided to recommend against a Mandatory Garbage pickup fee. He said with as many carriers as there are in Atlantic and their differing prices, they decided to focus on the enforcement aspects of garbage and the ordinance on maintaining properties.

He says once See-Click-Fix program is officially rolled-out to the public, neighbors will be more willing to inform the City about nuisance properties and letting the City deal with property owners to resolves those issues. In other business, the Council passed the second reading of an Ordinance amending the City Code, with regard to “Parking Regulations.”

And, Councilman Halder reported that the Library Reading Garden will be closed when the Library closes each day, and the gate locked, in order to deter vandalism. Halder reminded the public also, about homeowner and home repairs programs that are available through SWIPCO.

And finally, the City is looking for a reliable cleaning service. Proposals need to be received at City Hall by this Friday, Oct. 20th. Proposals should be from persons who are insured and bonded, but all applications will be reviewed.

(Updated) — Union says prison staffer stabbed by inmate with shanks

News

October 18th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

FORT MADISON, Iowa (AP) — Iowa prison officials are facing renewed criticism from a union representing correctional officers following an attack by an inmate at the Iowa State Penitentiary in Fort Madison that left a staffer hospitalized.

Prison officials said in a news release that the inmate used a weapon in the Wednesday attack to strike the staffer several times. A statement later released by the union said the staffer was stabbed five times by an inmate wielding two 10-inch shanks. Prison officials said later Wednesday that the staffer was in stable condition in the hospital.

Danny Homan, president of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees Council 61, says the inmate is associated with a white supremacist prison gang, and that prison officials have ignored staff warnings that attacks by inmates were planned.

A Corrections Department spokeswoman on Wednesday declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigation.