United Group Insurance

Woman accused of stealing from post office gets probation

News

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) – A northern Iowa woman must pay more than $6,000 in restitution that authorities say she took while working for the U.S. Postal Service. Prosecutors say DeAnn Lewman also was put on probation for five years and fined $500. She pleaded guilty to one count of making a false entry. Prosecutors dismissed two counts of misappropriation of postal funds and 41 counts of making a false entry in exchange for her plea.

Lewman had been postmaster in Nora Springs. Prosecutors say that between May 2014 and January 2015, Lewman took nearly $3,000 in cash and stamps and took nearly $3,100 that was meant to buy Postal Service money orders in December 2014 and January 2015.

Backyard & Beyond 1-6-2017

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

January 6th, 2017 by Jim Field

LaVon Eblen visits  with Lisa Steen Riggs about the Danish Windmill restoration project in Elk Horn.

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High School Wrestling Scoreboard Thursday 1/6/2017

Sports

January 6th, 2017 by admin

Quad at Denison

Atlantic 74, Denison-Schleswig 3
Atlantic 63, Harlan 12
Logan-Magnolia 84, Denison-Schleswig 0
Logan-Magnolia 51, Harlan 30
Harlan 60, Denison-Schleswig 15

Atlantic now 6-0 in the Hawkeye Ten and 12-0 overall.

Quad at ACGC

AHSTW 47 ACGC 24
AHSTW 72 Exira/EHK 12
AHSTW 69 Griswold 6
ACGC 59 Griswold 6
ACGC 45 Exira/EHK 24
Exira/EHK 36 Griswold 24

Double Dual at Central Decatur

Bedford/Lenox 45 Central Decatur 27
Winterset 60 Bedford/Lenox 14
Winterset 45 Central Decatur 29

Dual at Conestoga

Conestoga 42 Treynor 34

Double Dual at East Mills

Riverside 50 East Mills 21
Riverside 78 West Harrison 6
East Mills 30 West Harrison 21

Quad at Kuemper

Clarinda 44 Kuemper Catholic 31
Clarinda 78 St. Albert 6
Creston/Orient-Macksburg 55 Clarinda 9
Creston/Orient-Macksburg 57 Kuemper Catholic 15
Creston/Orient-Macksburg 82 St. Albert 0
Kuemper Catholic 51 St. Albert 15

Quad at Red Oak

Glenwood 44 Red Oak 34
Glenwood 53 Shenandoah 12
Glenwood 44 Lewis Central 26
Red Oak 57 Lewis Central 21
Red Oak 44 Shenandoah 20
Lewis Central 44 Shenandoah 21

Double Dual at Sergeant Bluff-Luton

Sergeant Bluff-Luton 60 Abraham Lincoln 16
Sergeant Bluff-Luton 51 Thomas Jefferson 25
Thomas Jefferson 41 Abraham Lincoln 10

Glenwood man arrested on warrant Thursday afternoon

News

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Mills County say a Glenwood man was arrested Thursday afternoon, on a warrant for Failure to Appear (in court), on a charge of Leaving the Scene of an Accident. 33-year old Zachary Dean Anderson was being held in the Mills County jail on $160 bond.

Union County man arrested Thursday night

News

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Union County Sheriff’s Office says a Lorimor man was arrested Thursday night on a warrant for Violation of Pre-Trial Release. 27-year old Caleb Benjamin Fredrickson was arrested at around 10-p.m.,  at the Union County Law Enforcement Center on the Union County warrant. Fredrickson was being held in the Union County Jail on $50,000 bond.

Nishna Valley Trails: Connector trail update

Ag/Outdoor, News, Sports

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Progress continues on the Nishna Valley Trails, Inc. (NVT) Troublesome Creek Connection Trail. Dave Chase, NVT President, says the trail projects are carried out in increments because of the costs involved, not to mention the engineering aspect of the entire project. Chase said donations help to make progress on the trail possible, including the recent funding from TS Bank in Atlantic, through their Community Support Program.

TS Banks provided a $7,500 donation, which will allow for the engineering and construction of a 150-yard section connecting existing trails. He said the Troublesome Creek Trail is basically done. The whole idea is to link up with the trail system at the Atlantic Municipal Utilities well head site. The TS Bank donation will allow for engineering and development of the trail along Olive Street that leads to the AMU trail, which will be hard-surfaced. When that’s completed, there will be a contiguous, 6-mile loop on the north side of Atlantic.

Chase says later this Spring, a kiosk will be set-up across the street from the KJAN Studios that will provide information about the area trails and their locations. So far, nearly two-miles of paved trail have been created to connect the two trails, including a 162-foot long pedestrian bridge that spans Troublesome Creek behind the KJAN Studios. The project began about 7-years ago, and is expected to be finished later this Fall.

If you’d like to contribute funds for the trails, send your checks to: Nishna Valley Trails, P.O. Box 496, Atlantic, IA 50022.  You can also contact Dave Chase (712-243-2444) if you’d like to donate or find out more about the trails project.

Heartbeat Today 1-6-2017

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

January 6th, 2017 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Dave Chase of Nishna Valley Trails about recent donations and project work planned for this year on local trail development.

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Rastetter raises concerns about ‘mega-mergers’ in ag industry

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

An Iowan who’s an agricultural advisor for President-elect Trump’s transition team is urging Trump to “block” some “mega-mergers” in the ag industry. Bruce Rastetter, of Alden, says the pending mergers of “agrochemical and seed giants” like DuPont and Dow Chemical will mean higher prices for farmers. “There will be bundling of services, so if they combine chemical and seed and only those seed traits can take a certain chemical sold by that company, it’s naturally going to increase costs,” Rastetter says.

Rastetter also cites the proposed merger of St. Louis-based Monsanto and Bayer, which was founded in Germany more than 150 years ago. “So concern about competition, concern about then the lack of innovation, lack of multiple companies we have and the concern for choice for farmers,” Rastetter says.

If Trump’s Administration doesn’t step in, Rastetter says the four largest seed and ag chemical suppliers in the country will become just two mammoth companies — controlling between 60 and 70 percent of the U.S. corn and soybean seed market. “Those two both start selling chemicals and seed, when they primarily did one or the other before and so the market share becomes very large, in a variety of different crops,” Rastetter says.

With two rather than four major companies, Rastetter says there will be less research to boost crop yields. He says smaller companies developing new plant varieties and traits are struggling to bring new products to market. “The root cause of this is government regulation. It costs $150 million to create a new seed trait. Think of that. How many small businesses can do that? And then, not only the $150 million, but an uncertain timeline for when or if the government’s ever going to approve it,” Rastetter says. “So if we really want to get serious about this, yes, the mergers shouldn’t go through, but we should to fix the government problem and I believe Donald Trump will do that.”

Rastetter is an entrepreneur who has made millions by raising pork and producing ethanol. His “Summit Agricultural Group” has partnered with a Brazilian company to build Brazil’s first corn-only ethanol plant. Rastetter says those experiences give him a platform to raise the alarm about these two agribusiness mergers. “As a businessman and as a farmer on two continents, in Brazil and the U.S., I have a unique perspective on it,” Rastetter says. “And also I have been concerned that commodity groups have been tentative about saying something on this situation.”

Rastetter says Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley shares his concerns about these mergers. Rastetter predicts Grassley will bring up the merger issue next week when Trump’s nominee for attorney general appears before the senate committee Grassley leads.

(Radio Iowa)

Iowa Board of Regents requests state funding increase

News

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) – The Iowa Board of Regents is requesting a significant funding boost for the state’s public universities despite the possibility of budget cuts and an expectation that lawmakers will have limited revenue to work with in the upcoming legislative session.

The Press-Citizen reports that the board is asking for a 2 percent increase in state funding for the 2017-18 academic year. The regents have said that if they receive that level of funding, they would hold resident undergraduate tuition increases to 2 percent for the next two years.

Regent officials are waiting to hear from the governor’s office on how much and where the state will make budget cuts. Democratic Sen. Jeff Danielson of Cedar Falls says he thinks it would be possible to fulfill the regents’ request.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 1/6/2017

News, Podcasts

January 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

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