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Contentious Farm Bill Heads to U.S. House for Debate

Ag/Outdoor

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa – The 2018 Farm Bill is now headed to the House floor in Washington after Wednesday’s approval by the GOP-controlled House Agriculture Committee on a party-line vote. In addition to requiring new work and job requirements from those who receive food stamps, sustainable farming advocates say the bitterly contested bill would eliminate programs that help farmers get their products to market and undermine successful investments that have helped create more resilient farms. Policy director for the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, Greg Fogel, says the current farm bill is more extreme than other farm bills in attacking sustainable agricultural programs.

“There’s definitely a certain vision behind this farm bill and it’s not one that puts small and mid-sized farms or diversified agriculture or organic agriculture or beginning farmers or the environment front and center,” says Fogel. The Agriculture Committee is asking Congress to vote on the Farm Bill by early May. The Farm Bill was drafted by Republicans without input from Democrats. House Speaker Paul Ryan has hailed the bill as a “critical component” of the House Republican agenda. The Farmers Union opposed the bill and called for language to provide more funding for working lands and energy programs.

The bill would eliminate the nation’s 70-million-acre Conservation Stewardship Program, with cuts to incentive programs that help protect water quality, conserve soil and build resilience to floods and drought. Fogel says it also would eliminate investment in programs that connect farmers with new local customers. “It’s more extreme than any other farm bill in the past, in its attack on these sustainable ag programs,” says Fogel. “You see these programs working every day in communities, and this bill would end all that.” The Farm Bill also adds new work and job-training requirements for recipients of the nation’s nutrition assistance program, or SNAP, formerly known as food stamps. If passed, workers in their 50s would be ineligible to receive food assistance if they are not working 20 hours a week or participating in an approved training program.

(Iowa News Service)

THURSDAY, APRIL 19th

Trading Post

April 19th, 2018 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  3 good tires 255/55/R18……..Came off of a Subaru in Wiota.  Also, a pot belly stove in great condition……$700 obo.  249-9485.

FOR SALE:  air fryer- $45.  White bathroom medicine cabinet -$20.  Piano to give away……it will take 3 or 4 guys to lift it, just come and get it.  249-9143.

DMACC trying to get girls interested in firefighting, EMS careers

News

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines Area Community College (DMACC) in Ankeny is offering a free class to high school girls in tenth through 12th grade to learn about careers in firefighting or Emergency Medical Services. The chair of the DMACC Fire Service/Paramedic program, Dewey Anderson, says the four-hour class will be hands-on. “We have a fire truck out here, we are going to have them learn about the different parts of firefighting. We also will have our DMACC ambulance there and they will learn about Emergency Medical Services and hopefully generate some excitement,” Anderson says.

He says firefighting is a profession that has been dominated by men, but they are trying to show women there’s a place for them too. “I think for a lot of years it was viewed as you have to be big and burly and manly to do this type of work. But really….you do have to be in shape, but you have to have some smarts. You have to understand the concepts of what goes into firefighting,” Anderson says. He says the methods have changed through the years. “There’s a lot of science behind firefighting — it isn’t just riding the fire truck and throwing some water on the fire.You have to know different things such as what type of fire you are fighting and how to fight it. You have to know how to hook up hydrants, you have to know how to don protective gear correctly. All of that stuff goes into being a firefighter,” according to Anderson. “It’s really technical, it’s changed over the years and it’s a lot more technical. I I am hoping that some of these girls will get excited enough about the whole process to be able to consider that as a career.”

He says there are many women in rural volunteer fire departments, but metro departments have lagged behind. Anderson says they want to see more women in their program. “We have maybe one or two a year that go through the fire science program here at DMAAC. I’ll tell you they can get jobs very easily once they graduate. That’s the word we are trying to get out also — get you associate’s degree in fire science and you can get a good paying job once you complete the program,” Anderson says. You can find out more about the program online at: www.dmacc.edu/careerdiscovery. Or you can call Dewey Anderson at 515-965-7051 to discuss the class and program.

(Radio Iowa)

Soil is still too cold for most Iowa farmers to plant nearly a month into spring

Ag/Outdoor

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Many Iowa farmers are anxious to start their spring field work, but Mother Nature has other ideas, with recent snowfalls and continued cold weather. Iowa State University Extension crops specialist Joel DeJong says due to the frigid soil temperatures, farmers are limited on what they can do. “I’ve heard of a little manure being hauled, but past that, very little other activity out in the fields,” DeJong says. “I’m not sure it’s really been fit for the activities to go on. We know it’s going to take a little while for that soil to warm up. It’s going to take a few days of average to above-average temperatures to get us there.”

DeJong says soil temperatures need to be at least 50 degrees — and climbing — for suitable growing conditions for corn and soybeans, and we’re nowhere near that. “Soil temperatures are still in the low 30s, just over 32 degrees, and actually looking at temperatures all the way at our sites that measure to 50 inches, it’s only about 35 to 36 degrees at 50 inches,” DeJong says. “That’s a big chunk of slab of soil that we’re going to have to warm up before it’s really fit for the crop growth.” If we would start having outside air temperatures in the 60s for a period of about a week, we may begin to see the soil temperatures rise enough to germinate corn seeds. However, DeJong says farmers may be lacking in patience.

“We’re probably not going to see people wait that long, because more than likely, if we had that scenerio, we’re going to be drier, so, we’re going to see a lot of those other activities start,” he says. “There’s a few producers that probably will, if it’s early next week, that’s typically the week that most people really want to get going and going hard. So, if the soil conditions are fit, they’re going to go out there and plant and they’re are just going to trust that it’s going to warm up.”  He notes, the good news farmers can take away about this year’s field conditions is that we do have either adequate — or surplus — levels of moisture.

(Radio Iowa)

ROBERT “BOB” DUANE JUST, 79, of Atlantic (Svcs. 04/28/2018)

Obituaries

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

ROBERT “BOB” DUANE JUST, 79, of Atlantic, died Tue., April 17th, at Atlantic Specialty Care. Memorial services for BOB JUST will be held Saturday, April 28th at 1:30pm in the St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Atlantic. Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

Visitation and lunch with family will be held on Saturday, April 28th from 12:00pm-1:30pm in the St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Atlantic.

Burial will be in the Oakfield Cemetery in Brayton.

Memorials may be directed to the family.

ROBERT “BOB” DUANE JUST is survived by:

Wife: Suzanne Just of Atlantic.

Daughter: Sandra Just (and Woody Bonner) of Denver, CO.

Son: Jason (Angelina) Just of Atlantic.

4 Grandchildren.

ORVILLE GARD, 97, of Atlantic (Svcs. Pending)

Obituaries

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

ORVILLE GARD, 97, of Atlantic, died Wed., April 18th, at Atlantic Specialty Care. Services for ORVILLE GARD are currently pending at the Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home, in Atlantic.

Montgomery County Sheriff’s report (4/19/18)

News

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports 38-year old Wendell Brian Leach, of Des Moines, was arrested at around 12:11-a.m. today (Thursday), following an incident at Ironwood Avenue and Highway 48, west of Elliott. Leach was taken into custody for Public Intoxication. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $300 bond. Wednesday afternoon, Sheriff’s Deputies in Montgomery County arrested 26-year old Devon Keith Hale, who is listed as homeless. Hale was arrested in the 300 block of E. Washington Avenue (Belt Auto Center), for Disorderly Conduct associated with three separate incidents, including one at Red Oak Pawn and the Houghton State Bank. He was also charged with Interference with Official Acts, following an incident at the Montgomery County Jail. Hale was being held in the jail on a $300 bond.

Gas prices staying higher than normal

News

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Iowans who are filling up the gas tanks of their cars — and their snowblowers — are paying more lately. Gail Weinholzer, at Triple-A-Iowa, says gasoline prices are higher than usual. “We’ve had a strong demand throughout the winter,” Weinholzer says. “We’re exporting a lot of crude oil. Crude oil is trading up above $65 a barrel and all of that formed a confluence of reasons why prices have stayed high through the winter and are a bit higher than they were last year at this time.”

The average price for gas in Iowa is two-58 a gallon. That’s up 20-cents from a year ago. Last weekend’s U-S-led strike on Syria likely isn’t to blame, at least not much. “Syria is not an oil exporter, not directly,” she says. “There’s some nervousness within the market about any continuing hostility and that’s keeping crude oil prices high. Crude oil prices have been high throughout the winter so it’s not having that significant of an impact.”

While the weather is still wintry, we’re almost a month into spring, which usually means an upturn in gas prices. “We’re most of the way through the switch-over from the winter to the summer grade of fuel, even though we’re not actually experiencing summer at this point,” Weinholzer says. “The summer grade fuel burns cleaner and costs more to refine so we always see prices rise in the spring, although I wouldn’t expect them to rise any more than a nickel or a dime between now and Memorial Day.”

The daily Triple-A survey shows Iowa’s most expensive gas is in Dubuque, averaging two-65 a gallon, while the cheapest gas is in Council Bluffs at two-49.

(Radio Iowa)

Midwest/Regional Sports headlines, 4/19/18

Sports

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

TORONTO (AP) — Teoscar Hernandez had four hits, including a two-run home run, Curtis Granderson hit his ninth career grand slam and the Toronto Blue Jays routed Kansas City 15-5 to complete a three-game sweep of the Royals. Hernandez singled and scored in the first, homered in the third, flied out in the fourth, singled in the sixth and hit a two-run triple in the seventh. It was the first four-hit game of his career. Kansas City has lost eight straight.

CHICAGO (AP) — The game between the St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs was called off Wednesday, because of wintry weather, the 25th postponement in the first three weeks of the major league season. The total matches 2007 for the most weather-related postponements through April since Major League Baseball started keeping records in 1986. The game will be made up today, beginning at 1:15, with the pre-game at 12:25 on KJAN

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, April 19 2018

News

April 19th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:55 a.m. CDT

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa regulator says the state’s top elections official will not be required to identify his private businesses in a conflict-of-interest disclosure form because other state officials have kept them secret without consequence. The statement from Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board director Megan Tooker comes a day after The Associated Press reported that Secretary of State Paul Pate owns a strip mall and two rental storage businesses that he didn’t list on an ethics filing last week.

OAKLAND, Iowa (AP) — The parents of a 16-year-old girl who died in a school bus fire in western Iowa last year are suing the school district. The Des Moines Register reports that Glen and Natalie Klindt accuse Riverside Community School District in the wrongful death lawsuit of negligent hiring, training and supervision of 74-year-old bus driver Donald Hendricks, who also died in the fire. The Klindts say the Dec. 12 death of their daughter, Megan Klindt, caused them severe emotional distress.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa appeals court has granted a new trial for a man convicted of murder who argued that the jury was biased against him. The Des Moines Register reports that the Iowa Court of Appeals on Wednesday sided with Lee Christensen, who argued on appeal that several jurors had seen Facebook posts threatening the jury and warning of riots if Christensen weren’t convicted. Christensen was sentenced in 2016 to 50 years in prison for the June 2015 shooting death of 19-year-old Thomas Bortvit.

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — Court records say a Dubuque man scheduled for a murder trial in August has made a plea deal with prosecutors. The Telegraph Herald reports that a hearing is scheduled Friday for 36-year-old Michael Piantieri, who’s pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in the Dec. 2 slaying of 42-year-old Beverly Puccio at her home. The agreement says Piantieri will plead guilty to second-degree murder and face a mandatory sentence of 50 years in prison.