Lavon speaks with Bernie Havlovic, ISU Armstrong Farm Director, about garden field day – sweatin’ in the garden on August 2.
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Lavon speaks with Bernie Havlovic, ISU Armstrong Farm Director, about garden field day – sweatin’ in the garden on August 2.
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The Shelby County Emergency Management Agency announced this (Monday) morning, that the Fire Danger rating in the County will remain in the “High” category through this Thursday, August 1st. Emergency Management Coordinator Bob Seivert said that’s because no rain fell over the county this past weekend.
There is the potential for thunderstorms through Thursday, and Seivert says if they do develop, those storms will provide only minimal relief, from the extensive dry conditions. He says one phenomenon they rarely experience in the area is “dry” lightening.
Dry lightening is created when the thunderstorm complex develops, and minimal rain is dropped but the cloud to ground lightening is very intense. Seivert says with the very dry conditions, a lightening strike may start a fire, in unexpected and or remote locations.
He encourages the public to report fires, and smoke plumes promptly, to 9-1-1. Seivert says a quick response may prevent a catastrophic event from developing.
Police in Atlantic report the arrest on Saturday of 32-year old Marty Atkinson. Atkinson was taken into custody on a charge of Public Intoxication. He was booked into the Cass County Jail.
And, officials report an accident Sunday afternoon in the Wal-Mart parking lot caused a total of $2,700 damage, but no one was injured. The accident happened at around 1-p.m., when vehicles driven by Iris Green, of Atlantic, and Barbara Hughes, of Lewis, collided, as Green was traveling west in the north end of the parking lot, and Hughes was headed south down an aisle in the lot. No citations were issued.
Jim Field speaks about the events taking place today at the Cass and Audubon County fairs.
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VELDA COLE, 94, of Greenfield, died July 23rd, in Austin, MN. Memorial services for VELDA COLE will be held 11-a.m. Sat., Aug. 4th, at the Greenfield United Methodist Church. Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.
A luncheon will be held immediately after the memorial service, at the church. Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.
Memorials may be directed to the Greenfield United Methodist Church.
Firefighters from Massena have been called to the scene of a barn fire located about 4-miles north of Massena. The call about the blaze at 62655 740th Street came in at around 7:40-a.m., no other details are currently available.
The Iowa State Patrol has launched a special “Ride Sober or Get Pulled Over” enforcement campaign aimed at motorcyclists. Sergeant Scott Bright says the effort is in response to the things they’re seeing happen on state roadways. “Recently we’ve seen an increase in the fatality rate with motorcycles. In 2010 we had 55 motorcyclists killed in the state and 25-percent of those were alcohol related, so we’re trying to decrease that,” Bright explains. “As they get out and ride their motorcycles, hopefully they don’t get out there and drink while they ride them.”
Trooper Bright says they hope the special effort will raise the profile of the issue. He says troopers will be working the interstates and highways and be around motorcycle rallies, so if they find a motorcyclist who has been drinking, they’ll be arrested. Trooper Bright says drinking alcohol, more than any other single factor, can rob motorcyclists of the ability to think clearly and ride safely. “If they’ve had a lot to drink, its’ very hard to keep their stability. And especially when they come to a stop, the bike starts to sway a little bit,” Bright says. The advice for drivers is no different for those on two wheels as it is for those on four when drivers are told not to drink and get behind the wheel of their car.
“If they start to drink, don’t get on your bike and ride…and if you’re going to ride, don’t drink. That’s kind of the slogan we like to get out there to keep everybody safe,” Bright says. According to the U-S D-O-T’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, motorcyclists accounted for 14-percent of total traffic fatalities in 2010. Yet, motorcycles made up only three percent of all registered vehicles in the United States in 2010 and accounted for less than one-percent of all vehicle miles traveled.