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CHARLOTTE “Chuck” BRAHMS, 67, of Cumberland (Svcs. 11/11/24)

Obituaries

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

CHARLOTTE “Chuck” BRAHMS, 67, of Cumberland, died at her home on November 3, 2024. Funeral Services for CHARLOTTE “Chuck” BRAHMS will be held at the Schmidt Family Home in Atlantic, on Monday Nov. 11th (2024), beginning at 11-a.m.

The family will greet friends from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, November 10, 2024 at the funeral Home.

A luncheon will be held in the Schmidt Family Funeral Home Community Room following the service.

Burial will be at a later date.
Memorial contributions may be directed to the St. Patrick Catholic Church Alter Society in Corning or St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital and can be sent in care of Schmidt Family Funeral home P.O. Box 523 Atlantic, Iowa 50022.

Pottawattamie County Burn Ban rescinded

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Council Bluffs, Iowa) – Officials with the Pottawattamie County Emergency Management Agency said that effective today (Monday, Nov. 4th), the Burn Ban which had been in-place for the entire county, was lifted, and is no longer in effect. (see the notification below).

Cass County (IA) Public Health has immediate openings for “A Matter of Balance” session

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

ATLANTIC, IA – Cass County Public Health has immediate openings for the current session of “A Matter of Balance.” The free class is designed to help decrease falls and help older adults manage their fears about falling. Though the class officially begins the first week of November, there are still slots available for interested participants. A Matter of Balance is an award-winning program to help older adults learn to manage their concerns about falling, make changes to reduce the risk of falling, and increase their physical activity. It includes 8 weekly two-hour sessions for a small group of 8-12 participants led by trained facilitators.

Cass County Public Health has been offering this program since 2018 because falls among adults aged 65 and older are common, costly, and preventable. According to the CDC, falls are the leading cause of injury for adults ages 65 years and older, with 1 in 4 older adults reporting falling every year. Falls are the leading cause of injury-related death among adults ages 65 and older.

For more information, or to sign up now, call Cass County Public Health at 712-243-7443.

Dr. Berry Receives Distinguished Service Award

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Officials with Cass Health in Atlantic, Monday, said that on Friday, November 1st, Dr. Elaine Berry was presented with the Iowa Association of County Medical Examiner’s Distinguished Service Award for her 35 years of service.

Dr. Berry began serving as Cass County Medical Examiner in 1989. Throughout the first 27 years of appointment, she was the only medical examiner in Cass County aside from an occasional appointed deputy who took call on the rare occasion that Dr. Berry was out of town. Her nominator and fellow medical examiner investigator Tabetha Smith, RN, said “Being a death investigator can be emotionally, mentally, and physically strenuous, and even more so when you are unable to share the burdens of the role. She recounts memories of having to leave early from her children’s musical concerts and family holiday parties, so she could fulfill her duties to her patients and the role of medical examiner.”

In 2016, Dr. Berry was able to recruit additional help. CCHS officials say thanks to the support of other investigators sharing the duties, Dr. Berry was able to give her time to her other passions: volunteering at her church teaching Sunday school and serving on medical mission trips. Today, Dr. Berry serves as the Cass Health Chief Medical Officer, and she continues to serve in the roles of Director for Emergency Services and County Medical Examiner.

Dr. Elaine Berry (Photo provided by CCHS)

Dr. Angela Weppler said “Dr. Berry, more than anyone I know, has committed to our community in multiple ways, from EMS, hospice, and nursing home directorships to her years of service as our County Medical Examiner. I cannot think of another provider who has sacrificed more of their time and skill or who is more deserving of recognition for their service to Cass County than Dr. Berry.”

Mills County Burn Ban lifted

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – Officials with the Mills County Emergency Management Agency said that effective 10-a.m. today (Monday, Nov. 4th), the Burn Ban which had been in-place for the entire county, was lifted, and is no longer in effect. (see the notification below).

RUTH ARLENE HALEY, 88, of Greenfield (Svcs. 11/5/24)

Obituaries

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

RUTH ARLENE HALEY, 88, of Greenfield, died Monday, Nov. 4, 2024. Funeral services for RUTH HALEY will be held 1-p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, at Lamb Funeral Home in Fontanelle. Lamb Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.

Burial is in the Menlo Cemetery.

A luncheon will be held at the funeral home in Fontanelle immediately following the service.

Memorials: To the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod or to the Greenfield Public Library.

RUTH HALEY is survived by:

Her daughter – Cindy (Haley) Wickert, of Des Moines.

Her son – Randy Haley.

4 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren, 4 great-great grandchildren, her daughter-in-law, other relatives and friends.

Online condolences may be left to the family at www.lambfuneralhomes.com.

5 arrested in Mills County

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Glenwood, Iowa) – The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports five recent arrests.

On Sunday, 24-year-old Makayla Rae Smith, of Malvern, was arrested for OWI/1st offense. Bond $1,000.

Saturday evening, 39-year-old Andrew Christopher Carrera, of Omaha, was arrested for OWI/3rd offense; No Valid Driver’s License; and failure to stop or obey a stop/yield right-of-way, sign. His bond was set at $5,000.

There were two arrests Friday in Mills County: 42-year-old Matthew Edward Wallman, of Council Bluffs, was arrested on two-counts of Child Endangerment, and Harassment in the 2nd Degree. He was being held without bond in the Mills County Jail. And, 23-year-old Chase Jonathan Ives, of Bellevue, NE, was arrested Friday night at the Pottawattamie County Jail, on a Mills County warrant for Failure To Appear. Bond was set at $5,000.

On Oct. 30th, Mills County Deputies arrested 31-year-old Matthew Russell Archer, of Glenwood, for Public Intoxication. Bond was set at $300.

4 arrested in Adair County

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Sheriff’s Office reports two people were arrested on separate drug charges over the past week. On Oct. 28th, the Iowa State Patrol arrested 27-year-old Francisco Alberto Salazar-Barragan, of West Point, NE, following a traffic stop for erratic driving on eastbound I-80 at mile-marker 80, in Adair County. Upon questioning and a partial field sobriety test, Salazar-Barragan pulled a baggie of marijuana from his pocket. He was arrested for OWI/1st offense, and Possession of a Controlled Substance/Marijuana – 1st offense. Salazar-Barragan was released the following day on a $1,000 cash or surety (C/S) bond.

On Saturday, Nov. 2nd, an Iowa State Patrol Trooper arrested 32-year-old Chelsea Michelle Kevan, of Hinckley, MN, following a traffic stop on eastbound I-80 at mile-marker 86, in Adair County. She was pulled-over for alleged reckless driving. Kevan was charged with OWI/2nd offense, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia (A glass pipe), Possession of a Controlled Substance/Marijuana-1st offense, being a Fugitive from Justice (an extraditable warrant from the Weld County, Colorado Sheriff’s Dept. for a traffic offense – Vehicular Eluding), and Child Endangerment. She was being held in the Adair County Jail on a $1,000 cash/surety bond on the Iowa charges, and a $500 cash-only bond on the Colorado warrant.

The Adair County Sheriff’s Office reports also:

35-year-old Janet Pauline Osboro, of Lincoln, NE, was arrested Oct. 28th on I-80, for OWI/1st offense. Her breath alcohol content (BRac) level initially measured .307-percent. At the Adair County Jail a breath sample came in at .247-percent, or slightly more than three-times the legal level for intoxication. She was released a few hours later on a $1,000 C/S bond.  And, on Oct. 30th, 39-year-old Barrett Martin Driskill, of Des Moines, was arrested at the Cass County (IA) Jail on an Adair County felony warrant for failure to appear on charges that include: Eluding – injury, OWI, drugs or participating in a felony; and Poss. of a Controlled Substance/3rd or subsequent offense. Driskill was being held on a $5,000 cash-only bond.

Ernst & Grassley call for Pres. Biden to stand-up & engage in ending stalled U.S.-China Adoptions

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) and Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) urged President Biden to stand up for families navigating the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) decision to end intercountry adoptions for those without Chinese familial ties. In the letter, the lawmakers noted that approximately 300 children in the PRC – some with various health conditions – are already paired with families in the United States, including Iowans who have been waiting in the final stages of the adoption process for years.

“We request that you act in the best interest of these children and families by urging the PRC to fulfill and uphold the commitment the country has made,” the lawmakers wrote.

“The American families that have been matched with their adoptive children are prepared to meet their long-term medical and emotional needs, and to give them the love and nurturing they need,” they continued. “Many of these children know that they have a home, which in many cases have been prepared for their arrival since the families were notified that they were matched and moving forward with the adoption process.”

 After the State Department noticed last week that the PRC may complete adoptions for families in some countries, the legislators called on President Biden to ensure such an action would pertain to the United States, too.

Read the full letter here.

Two US House races in Iowa closely watched

News

November 4th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The races in Iowa’s first and third congressional districts are considered among the few competitive U.S. House races in the country and campaign spending in the two districts has skyrocketed to at least $50 million. The data comes from AdImpact, a firm that tracks spending on TV and radio as well as digital and social media. Many mailboxes in those two districts have been stuffed with campaign appeals, too. Iowa State University political science professor Dave Peterson said it’s about motivating a very small number of voters.

“The sweet spot for campaigns and for candidates is at this point to identify people who are unlikely to participate unless they are pushed a little bit, but if they do participate are going to vote for that candidate,” Peterson said, “and that’s where the targeting really goes.” Drake University political science professor Rachel Paine Caufield said research shows mailings that target infrequent voters who’d be inclined to support a candidate are effective.

“Those kinds of campaign activities can be very effective in mobilizing people to go vote and activating them if they’re on the fence and maybe deciding whether or not to take time out of their Tuesday. They might say: ‘Oh, you know what, I should go do this, this is important,’” Paine Caufield said. “…Some people may have received campaign mailers that appear to almost shame them for their voting record or share their neighbor’s voting records. There is research demonstrating that that is actually a pretty strong mobilization tactic.”

The two professors made their comments during a weekend appearance on Iowa Press on Iowa PBS.

Drake University professor Rachel Paine Caufield and Iowa State University professor David Peterson on the Iowa Press set. (Iowa PBS photo)

Republican Mariannette Miller-Meeks, an eye doctor, is in a tight race in the first congressional district. She said during a campaign stop in Oskaloosa that reauthorizing the Trump-era tax cuts will be a priority if she’s reelected. “People need to know their paychecks will get smaller if we do not pass the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2025 because tax brackets will automatically go up,” Miller-Meeks said. “Also in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (of 2017) was doubling the child care tax credit.”

Democrat Christina Bohannan, a University of Iowa law professor who ran against Miller-Meeks in 2022, said that campaign laid the groundwork for this one. “We really just hit the ground running again this time and added more volunteers, you know, more of a field operation to get out in a grassroots way to Iowa and it’s worked,” Bohannan said during an interview with Radio Iowa. Bohannan started her Saturday meeting with volunteers in Clinton County. “We have knocked nearly 100,000 doors across this district,” Bohannan said. “It is so close…and what we know is that it all comes down to turnout in these last few days. That is the absolute key.”

Miller-Meeks campaigned in Muscatine and Davenport on Sunday. “Scott County is our largest county, so certainly Scott is a very important county for us, but every county is,” Miller-Meeks said. “…Their votes matter. Their voices matter.” The other closely watched congressional race in Iowa is in the third district where Republican Zach Nunn is seeking a second term in the U.S. House. Lanon Baccam, the Democrat running against Nunn, said his campaign’s volunteers have been focused on reaching voters for one-on-one conversations.

“It’s an unreal number,” Baccam said Saturday during an interview in his campaign office in Windsor Heights. “We have been operating over the last several weekends over 5000 doors a day. We have that many volunteers out knocking doors at this point. That’s huge for us in the final stretch here.” Nunn has been telling supporters his race is at the center of the battle for partisan control of congress. “We have a real opportunity with now a very clear and proven record,” Nunn said during an interview with Radio Iowa. “Being able to get out there and have your voice heard is more than just about the election. It’s more about what the next two years are going to look like in America.”

Iowans may still vote early today (Monday). Check with your county auditor for times and locations. Election Day voting opens at neighborhood precincts at 7 a.m. tomorrow.