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Atlantic School Board meeting: Nishna Valley YMCA requests one-year to vacate ELC/Infant Room

News

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic Community School District’s Board of Education met Wednesday evening, and heard from Nishna Valley YMCA Director Dan Haynes, with regard to a letter the District sent in May to vacate the Early Learning Center (ELC)/Infant Room at the Wickman Center. The letter said the YMCA should vacate the ELC/Infant Room by December 15, 2023.

Haynes said because the District’s request was outside the previously agreed to 120-day notice time frame established in July, 2013, it fell outside the parameters of the agreement, having been received on April 25th, and therefore in order for the request to be valid and to allow for time to find another suitable location, the time frame to vacate should be reset to  June 1, 2024.  The School Board accepted and acknowledged the letter, but they took no action during their meeting. (View Haynes’ YMCA letter to the Board)

During the Board Report portion of the meeting, Board President Laura McLean reminded citizens the School Board is elected by the people, and the opportunity to do so again will come during the November 7th General Elections. There will be three open seats on the Board.  McLean touched on what she called “The turmoil” circulating in the District, without specifically mentioning the ACLU letter that focused on making sure the District doesn’t step on students’ constitutional Free Speech rights, as it pertains to a protest on school grounds, over social issues being discussed in the Iowa Legislature.

She said the School Board’s goal has always been to “Give our children the best education possible.” She added, “We have a fundamental responsibility to ensure that all of our policies are in compliance with State and Federal law. Sometimes that can get ‘tricky,’ because State and Federal law aren’t always going to agree with each other. But we have the responsibility to do the best we can in terms of that.” McLean concluded by saying the Board really tries “To make the best decisions they can as a team.”

In other business, the Atlantic School Board received an update from the District’s insurance representative, Kipp Harris, on Liability & Worksman’s Comp Insurance. Harris said the District’s property/liability insurance (for Buildings, grounds and vehicles) and deductibles will be increasing next year, due to the age and valuation of the structures, the weather, and other factors. Harris said Workers Comp premium insurance went down $10,000.

The Board approved each of the items on their consent agenda, including previously mentioned resignations and contracts. Under action items, they passed the Second Reading of 500 Series Board Policies pertaining to Student conduct and related matters. NONE of the polices deal with the rights of students to protest on school property. The Board also approved TLC Contracts for 11 individuals serving as Instructional Coaches, in an Instructional Support Capacity, and as Mentors.

The Board then proceeded to approve a request by Atlantic Activities Director Andy Mitchell, to send Band and Choir students on a field trip to Florida during the Winter/Spring of 2024 (Feb. 29-March 4). As previously mentioned, the costs are not expected to exceed $1,500 per student if they are transported by a charter bus. Flying would cost at least $1,700 per student. The Atlantic School Board approved 2023-24 Fuel bids as presented, along with other action items on their agenda.

Their meeting was the last for Superintendent Steve Barber and Board Secretary/District Business Official Sarah Sheeder. Both tendered their resignations in April, effective at the end of the current school year. Mr. Barber will be succeeded by Interim Superintendent, Dr. Beth Johnson. Sheeder is being replaced by Lisa Jones. Both officially begin their duties on July 1st.

Teens charged with the assault of a Villisca woman

News

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Villisca, Iowa) — The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports the arrest on Sunday of two teenagers on an assault charge. Deputies responded to a report four juveniles assaulted 60-year-old Laura Cade during an incident that escalated from a verbal to a physical altercation. Cade was taken to the hospital for treatment of her injuries.

Authorities said the four juveniles were ‘ding dong ditching’ at houses in town. The Ding dong ditch is a children’s prank that involves ringing someone’s doorbell and running away before they answer.

In the 400 block of South 2nd Avenue, the prank resulting in an altercation with Cade when she confronted the teens. Two of the four juveniles allegedly involved in the incident were cited into Juvenile Court for Assault Causing Bodily Injury.

Their names were not released.

Fort Dodge, Mason City make pitch for airport charter service

News

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Managers from Mason City, Fort Dodge, and four Kansas airports are asking the U-S Department of Transportation to approve an application for SkyWest Airlines to provide charter jet service under the Essential Air Service program. SkyWest launched the SkyWest Charter subsidiary in April as the charter authority only requires pilots to have 500 hours of flight experience, compared to the 15-hundred hours for a traditional airline pilot or first officer.

The Air Line Pilots Association International union has opposed the plan, saying it jeopardizes aviation safety standards. Skywest Charter’s chief commercial officer Wade Steel says his company’s safety programs far exceed the requirements of the FAA’s Part 135 charter authority rules.  “We plan to launch operations with dual captains on our flight deck and are committed to using pilots with an ATP license, and yes, that means those with 15-hundred hours in both seats. This is a commitment that no other Part 135 carrier has made.”

Speaking at a news conference today (Wednesday) Steel says SkyWest Charter has waited for over a year for the U-S D-O-T to approve their application for commuter authority and says it’s time for the agency to act and not leave smaller commercial airports in limbo for future air service. “There is nothing new in this application, and others are regularly exercising this authority with lesser standards and without opposition,” Steel says. “We are simply seeking fairness in approving a clearly fit operator so S-W-C can provide safe, reliable services as the industry works through the ongoing captain shortage.”

Mason City Municipal Airport manager David Sims says north-central Iowa relies on having commercial air service out of the airport, but that’s getting tougher under the Essential Air Service program. “The number of quality providers for E-A-S service continues to drop just due to the pressures from the pilot shortage. For the last several years, SkyWest has come in and been providing safe and quality airline service to communities.

However they are now being limited due to the pilot shortage,” he says. “We know that a highly qualified operator like SkyWest Charter will be able to provide our community with exceptional air service,” Sims says. Sims says there’s no regulatory reason why SkyWest Charter’s authorization should be withheld. “We’re concerned that SkyWest Charter’s application has been allowed to languish at the D-O-T for over a year. We understand their application is being contested by various groups who continue making false claims about the safety and security of SkyWest Charter, however, SkyWest Charter has committed to meeting and exceeding all existing FAA and TSA regulations, including having two pilots who have 15-hundred hours or more,” Sims says.

SkyWest Airlines filed a 90-day notice in March of 2022 that they were pulling out of 29 communities, including Mason City and Fort Dodge, but the D-O-T ordered the airline to continue service until it found a suitable replacement.

Canadian wildfire smoke staying high up in Iowa

News, Weather

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – There’s smoke over Iowa again from the Canadian wildfires, but National Weather Service Meteorologist, Brad Small says that smoke is high up and not causing problems. “We’ve seen a little bit over northwest and west-central Iowa in the midday here. It’s much worse to our north however from the eastern Dakotas into Minnesota it’s actually getting down to the surface there where we’ve had visibility dropped to a few miles in places,” Small says. He says a variety of factors impact how low the smoke hangs in the air.

“Smoke density wind speed thermodynamic properties of the atmosphere all come into play it’s fairly rare to get smoked down to the surface this far removed from the fires down here in Iowa,” Small says, “but it can’t happen and hopefully in this case it’s all stay to our north and northeast.” Small says the smoke issues were bigger in New York and other eastern states recently because they are closer to the source. He says things could change in Iowa.

“The biggest concerns that looks like for the next couple of days are going to be northeast of us, the smoke might get down to the surface in far northeast Iowa,” he says. Small says the rest of the state shouldn’t see any low hanging smoke. The D-N-R’s air quality measurements show air quality concerns only in a small area in the northwest and southwest corners of the state.

Grassley questions redactions in FBI document shown to House panel

News

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says he has seen a document that alleges a paid FBI informant was told a Ukrainian had recorded 17 phone calls with Hunter and Joe Biden. “Fifteen of them between Hunter Biden and a Ukrainian and two of them between then Vice President Biden and a Ukrainian,” Grassley says, “and the implication from the 1023 is there may have been some money transferred for political influence.”

A 1023 is the number on the forms FBI agents use to write down information from confidential sources. The filled out form Grassley is referring to was shown to members of the House Oversight Committee last week in a secure room, with sections redacted. Grassley says he and the chairman of the House Oversight Committee saw the document earlier, when references to the recordings were visible.

“Chairman Comer and I have read the unredacted document except for a couple of half inch redactions that I really don’t know what they,” Grassley says, “but we have read the document almost completely in its purest form.”Grassley says congress doesn’t know if the FBI listened to the recordings. “That’s what we’re trying to find out,” Grassley says. “What has the FBI done to investigate these claims?”

The allegations were made in 2020. The top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee has said officials in the Trump Administration found no evidence to support the bribery allegations. Last week, President Biden called the allegations malarkey.

In a Senate speech this week, Grassley said a recording was used in the indictment against former President Trump and Grassley asked what the U.S. Attorney investigating Hunter Biden is doing with the recordings referred to in the FBI’s 2020 memo.

Red Oak woman arrested following an accident investigation

News

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – An investigation into a May 24th accident in Red Oak resulted in the arrest today (Wednesday), of 53-year-old Kai Dione Swanson, from Red Oak. According to Red Oak Police, on May 24th, officers responded at around 11:17-a.m. to the intersection of N. Broadway and W. Reed Street, the scene of a single-vehicle accident. The initial investigation determined Swanson’s 2016 Ford Edge SUV vehicle was traveling southbound on N. Broadway. When she tried to turn onto W. Reed Street, the vehicle struck the curb and became disabled in the 200 block of W. Reed Street.

Damage to the vehicle was estimated at $1,500. No injuries were reported. Additional investigation work revealed Swanson was intoxicated. She was arrested June 14th at approximately 10-a.m., after test results from the DCI Lab confirmed her blood alcohol level was greater than the legal limit to operate a motor vehicle in Iowa.

Kai Swanson was booked into the Montgomery County Jail on a charge of OWI/1st offense, and later released on her Own Recognizance.

Hawkeyes Earn No. 2 Seed In ITA Kickoff

Sports

June 14th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The University of Iowa women’s tennis team was selected on Wednesday to compete in the 15th annual ITA Kickoff Weekend on Jan. 27-28, 2024, in Raleigh, North Carolina. Iowa will make its sixth appearance in the event, including earning an invitation for the fourth time in five years.

The Hawkeyes are the No. 2 seed in the four-team pod and will play third-seeded Clemson in the first round at 3 p.m. (CT) in Raleigh on Jan. 27. The other first-round matchup features top-seeded N.C. State against Alabama at 11 a.m. The championship match of the Raleigh site will start at 3 p.m., while the consolation contest will start at 11 a.m.

Iowa posted a 13-10 record in 2023, while Clemson had a 16-12 mark. N.C. State was the 2023 NCAA runner-up amassing 28 victories, while Alabama was 12-12 this past season.

The ITA Kickoff takes place at various facilities across the country. The Hawkeyes beat North Florida in their last ITA Kickoff appearance in 2022 in Athens, Georgia.

Iowa State to host ITA Kickoff Weekend

Sports

June 14th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

AMES, Iowa – After finishing last season ranked No. 8, Iowa State has been selected to host the ITA Kickoff Weekend, Jan. 27-28.

The Cyclones will host Old Dominion, with UCLA and Oklahoma State meeting in the other opening round match. The winners and losers will then face off the following day.

ISU went 4-0 last season against the teams slated for their site. The Cyclones won at ODU, 4-1, while defeating UCLA twice and winning at Oklahoma State in Big 12 play.

ODU finished 19-5 overall and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

The 2022-23 Cyclone team burst onto the scene after beating UCLA and Miami on opening weekend to advance to the ITA National Indoor Championships. At the championships, ISU upended No. 9 Vanderbilt and top-ranked Texas to reach the semifinals.

Former Hawkeye Amani Hooker on preparations for his fifth season with Tennessee

Sports

June 14th, 2023 by Asa Lucas

Former Iowa standout Amani Hooker says he is taking on a leadership role with the Tennesse Titans. Hooker is preparing for his fifth season for the Titans ar safet and is coming off a 2022 season in which he had 46 tackles in one interception in which he was limited to nine games with shoulder and knee injuries.

Hooker says it is important for him to help the younger defensive backs get ready.

Hooker says as a veteran he knows what it takes to prepare for the grind of an NFL season.

Hooker says this is an important time leading into training camp.

The Titans are coming off a disappointing 7-10 season in 2022.

ISU professor studies ‘wild west of medicine’

News

June 14th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – An Iowa State University professor who’s developing a new class for pre-med students has studied the company behind the traveling “Medicine Shows” of the late 18-hundreds. Sarah Dees, an American religions professor at I-S-U, says the Kickapoo Medicine Company sold a variety of concoctions. “The Kickapoo people exist. It’s a (Native American) nation that continues to exist,” Dees says. “The company leaders, though, just took that name, kind of appropriated it and then started selling medicines that they claimed were authentic, but actually they really weren’t — so their advertisements were fairly misleading.”

And Dees says it’s where the term “snake oil” originated. “It was the wild west of medicine,” Dees says. “People were just putting stuff in bottles and claiming that it had these miraculous cures. They were traveling from town to town, trying to sell these ‘remedies’ and consumers really didn’t have great information.”

The Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 marked the end of these kind of traveling medicine shows by prohibiting the sale of misbranded food and drugs. Dees says there are many modern, “New Age movement” examples of companies that turn a profit by misrepresenting products or services as being connected to indigenous cultures. Her fall semester class at I-S-U will focus on the religious and cultural backgrounds behind various healing practices. Dees is writing a book about Indigenous traditions in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.