LaVon Eblen visits with Donnie Smith about the Griswold Corn Boil.
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LaVon Eblen visits with Donnie Smith about the Griswold Corn Boil.
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Iowa’s spokeswoman for people with disabilities is leaving this weekend for Michigan where she’ll represent Iowa in the Ms. Wheelchair America pageant. Pattie Duff is a mother of four in Des Moines and as the 2016 Ms. Wheelchair Iowa, she’ll be competing in the 45th annual national event next week in Grand Rapids.
“It’s going to be really exciting from the different things we’re going to do and it sounds like it’ll be really fun,” Duff says. “I’ll just be glad to experience a lot of different things that I haven’t already and to get to meet face-to-face a lot of the contestants I haven’t even talked to on Facebook and build that bond.” The competition is not based on physical beauty but instead on a woman’s advocacy and accomplishments.
Duff uses a wheelchair for mobility after a spinal cord injury about three years ago. In addition to her three biological children and a step-daughter, she also has a seven-month-old foster child. That foster-daughter is the basis of Duff’s pageant platform, reinforcing that people with disabilities -can- be foster parents. “As long as you are physically able to take care of yourself and a child, then you are able to be a foster parent,” Duff says. “I just want more people that utilize wheelchairs to be able to become foster parents, if they would like to be.”
The 43-year-old Duff has degrees in psychology and human services and is working toward a new degree in special education. She works for Easter Seals of Iowa, a non-profit group that offers a range of services and camps for children and adults with disabilities. “I help feed them, if they need help showering, if they need help dressing, if they need help with the arts and crafts, anything they need help with,” Duff says. “We help promote independence and we try to get them to do what they can for themselves, but if they can’t, then I help them.”
The new Ms. Wheelchair America will be crowned next Saturday night, August 13th, and she’ll represent the 56-million Americans living with disabilities.
(Radio Iowa)
Cass County Auditor Dale Sunderman reports the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) handicapped-accessible entrance on the south side of the Cass County Courthouse, will be closed Friday, August 5th, while work is done on the roof above the steps at that entrance. The west, single door on the south side of the courthouse will serve as a temporary entrance.
Work will also be done on the roof above the north exit/entry steps on Friday.
The Cass County Conservation Board (CCCB) is sponsoring a “Breakfast with the Birds” Program. The program will be held at Sunnyside Park, Kiddie Korral Shelter in Atlantic, Saturday, August 13th, beginning at 9-a.m. Free will donations are being accepted.
During the event, Terrie Hoefer, rehabilitator and Educator at S.O.A.R., Saving Our Avian Resources, will show and discuss several of her permanently injured birds and will hopefully have one that is fully recovered and ready to release back into the wild.
Breakfast with the birds is made possible by the Dick McCauley Memorial Fund. The CCCB asks you to help them support raptors and education, by attending “Breakfast with the Birds,” on Aug. 13th.
CLEAR LAKE, Iowa (AP) – Officials say a pharmaceutical supply company plans to hire 100 more workers for its Clear Lake operation. McKesson Distribution Center opened in May and currently employs 120 workers. Director of operations Chris Van Norman told the Mason City Globe Gazette that the center serves 2,500 pharmacies in the Midwest and north-central Plains.
More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
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Jim Field visits with Delmar Kopp of the Anita Fire Department about their 50th annual Steak Fry and Dance Saturday, August 6.
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FOR SALE: A 3-foot long, 3/4″ breaker bar. $25. Call 243-2860.
FOR SALE: a heavy duty power wheelchair. Asking $450 or would be willing to trade for a riding lawn mower. Call 243-2361.
FOR SALE: light weight 4-drawer dresser 10$; office chair, dark gray, lightly used 25$ SOLD! Call 712-254-2254.
FOR SALE: 2 body harnesses (like you would use in construction) $20 each – 1 SOLD, HAVE 1 LEFT!!; Knights of Columbus 4th degree cape $20; Knights of Columbus 4th degree chapeau $20. SOLD! 243-2860.
WANTED: small dog male dog for free, not mixed, rat terrier. 243-5153. Leave a message.
FREE: kittens, 2 1/2 months old, friends, located in the Atlantic area. 712-249-3856.
FOR SALE: SunQuest Pro by Wolff Systems Tanning Bed. $600. Call 712-268-9952.
STORM LAKE, Iowa (AP) – A northwest Iowa woman accused of stealing a winning lottery scratch game ticket has pleaded not guilty. The Sioux City Journal reports Ashley Bosler, of Sioux Rapids, entered the pleas Monday in Storm Lake to charges of theft of a lottery ticket or share and abetting theft of a lottery ticket or share. Her trial is to begin Nov. 15th.
Prosecutors say Bosler was working at a convenience store when she found the winning ticket by scratching off a corner and scanning the bar code that confirmed it was a winner of a $250,000 prize. Prosecutors say she hadn’t paid for the ticket and was too young to play, so she asked a co-worker to sign it and eventually her boyfriend, who tried unsuccessfully to claim it.
Local farmland owners, producers and other interested parties are invited to join Cass County Extension for the 2016 Farm Leasing Arrangements meeting, set for August 8 in Atlantic from 6:30 to 9 p.m. The meeting will be held in the Cass County Community Center at 805 West 10th Street.
Besides the standard topics of land value and cash rental rate trends, this year’s special topic is costs of production. Landlords and tenants are more interested in costs when farming is not as profitable. They have to figure out how much money is available and decide where cuts can be made.
In January 2016, participants from last year’s Farm Leasing Arrangements meetings across Iowa completed a follow-up evaluation. According to the results, people attended to get an update on the rental market. One participant wrote, “The meeting helps me have informed discussions with the farmer, hopefully arriving at a fair price on the rent and being good custodians of the land.” Participants’ most requested topic for 2016 was costs of production.
Tim Eggers, Iowa State University Extension Field Agricultural Economist, said, “With last year’s participants requesting more information on the tenant’s costs of production, I wanted a hands-on activity instead of more slides.” He continued, “We’re going to play a game so participants experience decisions tenants make every year.”
The Farm Leasing Arrangements meeting will give landowners, tenants, and agri-business professionals information and materials they need to make decisions regarding farmland ownership, management, and leasing practices.
The Farm Leasing Arrangements meeting costs $15 per person, which includes the 100-page Farm Leasing Arrangements booklet and a copy of the presentation. Pre-registration is required and limited to 30 people. To register, call the Cass County Extension office at 712-243-1132 or email xcass@iastate.edu.