United Group Insurance

HAROLD PIEPER, 87, of Kimballton (Svcs. 4/20/17)

Obituaries

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

HAROLD PIEPER, 87, of Kimballton, died Sunday, April 16th, at Myrtue Medical Center in Harlan. Funeral services for HAROLD PIEPER will be held 10:30-a.m. Thursday, April 20th, at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church near Jacksonville. Ohde Funeral Home in Kimballton has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday (4/19), from 5-until 7-p.m.; Visitation will resume Thursday at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church, beginning at 9:30-a.m.

Burial will be in the Bethlehem Lutheran Cemetery.

HAROLD PIEPER is survived by:

His wife – Alice Pieper, of Kimballton.

His son – Kevin Pieper and Pamela Sebeniecher, of Kimballton.

2 grandchildren, 5 great-grandchildren, his sister-in-law Fern Knudsen, of Jacksonville, other relatives and friends.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 4/17/2017

Podcasts, Sports

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast w/Jim Field.

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5 arrests 1 vandalism in Creston

News

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports five people were arrested recently and one incident of vandalism was reported. Authorities say 42-year old Tami Burgoyne, of Creston, was arrested Sunday morning at her home for Domestic Assault. She was transported to the Ringgold County Jail and held, pending a bond hearing.

Saturday afternoon, Creston Police arrested 65-year old Rodney Bell, of Creston, for Public Intoxication and Simple Domestic Assault. Saturday morning, 20-year old Adrian Routh, of Creston, was arrested at the Union County Law Enforcement Center, for Theft in the 5th Degree. Bell and Routh were released from jail on a Promise to Appear later, in court.

Friday evening, 36-year old Joshua Jones, of Gravity, was arrested in Creston on a Union County warrant for Failure to Appear on a Child Support matter. And, Friday afternoon, 38-year old Dustin Seley, of Creston, was arrested on a Dept. of Corrections warrant for Parole Violation. Seley was being held without bond in the Union County Jail, while Jones’ bond was set at $500.

And, Creston Police say a female residing in the 600 block of S. Bureau Street reported Friday morning, that someone had slashed three tires on her vehicle that was parked near her home. The incident happened sometime between 8-p.m. Thursday and 8-a.m. Friday. The loss was estimated at $525.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 4/17/2017

News, Podcasts

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

MONDAY, APRIL 17th

Trading Post

April 17th, 2017 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  New Justin boots, size 6 1/2 teal tops, black sq toe, worn once, NEW: $125.00, Asking $100. Have pix on my phone. Call 712-789-0479.

FOR SALE:  Miche Bag/Shells/Misc, Have the Demi size Miche bag and a few shells (some never used and others once or twice). $15 apiece, regular price $30-40.  Also have Petite size bag with three shells (all new, never used), asking $45 for all, (shells $18 apiece and bag $20 regularly) great buy. Have pix on my phone.  Red Wool Coat, size small $15.  Aqua colored jean jacket size small $10.  Black/white winter jacket, size small $10.  Call 712-789-0479.

FOR SALE:  2001 Chevy Monte Carlo SS, 3.8L, black & silver.  Asking $2795. Have receipts on what has been worked on.   Call 712-304-7756 or 712-268-5448.

WANTED: Looking for an 8ft Stanley tape measure. Chrome with Stanley label and yellow lock button. Call 712-243-2860.

Man’s body recovered from pond in Urbandale

News

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

URBANDALE, Iowa (AP) – A dive team has recovered the body of a man from a pond in the Des Moines suburb of Urbandale. Police were first called to the Extended Stay America hotel around 9 p.m. Saturday, where a man reported that his brother and another man had been swimming in the pond near the hotel when one of them went missing. Officers couldn’t find him Saturday night.

The Polk City dive team was called in early Sunday morning, and divers found the body a little before 2 p.m. Police haven’t released the man’s name. An autopsy was ordered.

Suspect in Iowa slaying picked up near Canadian border

News

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

JOHNSTON, Iowa (AP) – Authorities say customs officials near the Canadian border have taken into custody a man suspected of fatally shooting his girlfriend in a suburb of Des Moines. The man was picked up Sunday at International Falls, Minnesota. U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials recognized his car from information in a release put out by police in Johnston, Iowa, where the slaying occurred.

Police say the man has yet to be formally charged. The victim’s been identified as 34-year-old Agnes Yarlee. She was found wounded Saturday night by officers sent to investigate several reports about gunshots at an apartment complex. Police say she died at the scene.

1500 meter mark could fall at Drake Relays

Sports

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

One of the oldest records at the Drake Relays could be in Jeopardy later this month. Relays director Blake Bolden says he has put together a field for the men’s 1500 meters that has the potential to set a new mark.

Leading the field will be two time Drake champion Clayton Murphy, who won Bronze in the 800 at the Rio Olympics.

The Drake Relays are April 26-29.

(Learfield Sports)

Study shows impact of biodiesel & ethanol production in Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A study finds record ethanol and biodiesel production in Iowa in 2016 had a significant impact on the state’s economy. The report says renewable fuels supported more than 42-thousand Iowa jobs and generated 2-point-3-billion dollars in household income for Iowans. Study author John Urbanchuk says because the fuels are produced in the state, impacts on the state economy are even more important.

“What makes the industry so important to Iowa is that virtually all of the feed stock that’s used by that industry is produced in the state,” Urbanchuk says. “The economic impact, all the dollars spent on that stuff, circulate back through the Iowa economy. That’s a bit more important for Iowa than it is for some of the other states.”

He says the amount of ethanol that was exported to other countries also helped the state’s economy. “We looked at the volume of export on the U.S. side and figured Iowa’s share of production roughly represents that of the trade and calculated what the impact, coming from trade is,” Urbanchuk says, “and that is not inconsequential. It points out the fact that foreign trade is not only a fairly large component but a growing component of economic activity for Iowa as well.”

Urbanchuk says while ethanol production expanded in Iowa in 2016, biodiesel expansion was even greater. “We saw a very small increase in total U.S. ethanol capacity in 2016,” he says. “Iowa’s capacity also expanded in terms of production capacity and that helped them a little bit as well.”

Iowa’s 43 ethanol plants produced a combined record of 4.1-billion gallons of ethanol last year. The study was by conducted by A-B-F Economics and was commissioned by the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association.

(Radio Iowa)

Lawmakers hope to be entering final week of ’17 session

News

April 17th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Lawmakers are aiming to finish the work of the 2017 Iowa legislative session this week, but it will require a flurry of votes in the House and Senate. A series of bills outlining more than seven-point-two BILLION dollars in spending for the next state budgeting year have been drafted, but none have reached Governor Terry Branstad’s desk yet. “I think it’s going to be a very productive session, under difficult circumstances,” Branstad says.

Lower-than-expected state tax revenue prompted a round of cuts to the CURRENT year’s state budget. An updated and even more depressed report on revenue in March forced Branstad to recalculate HIS plan for the NEXT state budget. Republican lawmakers have decided to go even LOWER than Branstad, by about 38 million dollars. “I think the legislature has been working diligently and a number of significant improvements in our public policy are being made,” Branstad says.

Policy-related bills that are already law have dramatically changed Iowa’s collective bargaining law and the system for compensating injured workers. The G-O-P has control of the legislature’s debate agenda, since Republicans outnumber Democrats in both the House and Senate. Senator Joe Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, says the G-O-P spending plans close some state parks and will wind up causing tuition hikes at the state universities and community colleges. “As this Republican budget sees the light of day, it cuts vital services to all Iowans,” Bolkcom says.

Bolkcom says the problem is all the “give aways” promised to businesses in the form of tax CREDITS — not just reducing taxes, but in some cases, prompting the state to write checks to businesses that get more credits than they owe in taxes.  “The 99 percent, they’re paying for all these give-aways,” Bolkcom says, “and here we are, balancing the budget on their backs.”

A bill still pending in the state senate would let doctors prescribe marijuana as treatment for a number of chronic and debilitating conditions, but Republican House Speaker Linda Upmeyer of Clear Lake says the bill is “pretty broad” and House members would prefer something “more limited.” “Happy to work on it. Happy to have a bill that is helpful to people,” Upmeyer says. “But we’ve got to be able to have a bill that we also have enough support for to make work.”

Upmeyer says, at a minimum, legislators will at least extend the current state law that decriminalized possession of cannabis oil as treatment for chronic epilepsy. That law is set to expire July 1st.

(Radio Iowa)