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Atlantic School Board approves purchase of property for the Construction Trades Program

News

May 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Member of the Atlantic School District’s Board of Education this (Wednesday) evening, approved the purchase, from the City of Atlantic, residential property at 1014-1016 East 3rd Street Place, near the Mollett City Park.  The purchase price was One-dollar. The properties will be used toward the construction of a home by students in the Construction Trades Program. Construction is slated to begin in the 2023-24 school year.

During their meeting on May 11th, the Atlantic Community School Foundation approved $150,000 in funding for the Construction Trades Program. The group unanimously voted to fund a request from Atlantic High School Industrial Technology teacher Dexter Dodson, on behalf of the Construction Trades Program, for $150,000 to allow the construction trades students to build a home from start to finish in Atlantic.

According to the press release, six years ago, a steering committee was created to build a program where students could gain hands-on experience in the trade professions. From that committee work, the construction trades program was established, and since then, the students in this program have built a garage and helped erect the greenhouse at Atlantic High School. From the inception of these conversations, the committee’s goal has always been to have this class someday build a home in the community.

The Industrial Tech Program is spearheaded by Dexter Dodson, instructor for the Building Trades class, and Noah Widrowicz, Middle & High School Industrial Tech teacher, who plays a significant role by providing the prerequisite classes to the building trades class. Dodson said “This project will connect our construction trades program to all aspects of construction. It will provide them with real-world experiences and build necessary soft skills while creating a sense of pride for them in the community and continue to connect the school to many business partners to build relationships for potential future employment.”

With the help of Randy Watts, the drafting classes have produced a floor plan for this home construction project that would include a single-car garage.

Ted Robinson, President of the Atlantic Community School Foundation, said, “I am grateful the Atlantic Community School Foundation is to be able to provide financial support to the Construction Trades Program to build a home in our community. The students participating in this project will gain invaluable experience that they can carry with them for their entire life, and hopefully, working on this project will inspire them to go into the Trade profession. “The financial support for this project has been made possible by the generous donations of community members through annual donations, gifts of property, bequests, and memorials.”

Current Foundation members are President Ted Robinson; Vice President Stacey Bean; Treasurer Steve Tjepkes; Secretary David Wiederstein; and Board Members Kevin Garrett, John Becker, Brad Henningsen, Lucas Mosier, Sue Hunt, Jessie Shiels and non-voting member, Superintendent Steven Barber.

To learn more about the Atlantic Community School Foundation, visit https://www.atlanticiaschools.org/foundation. If you would like to donate to the Foundation, or need more information, contact AMU General Manager Steve Tjepkes, or Ted Robinson at First Whitney Bank and Trust.

Reid Receives Silver Cord Scholarship

News

May 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce congratulates Jadyn Reid on receiving the 2023 Silver Cord Scholarship. The Silver Cord Program is a graduation incentive program to promote volunteerism in the Atlantic Area. Atlantic High School seniors who volunteered a minimum of 200 hours throughout their high school career graduated this year with a silver cord and were eligible for a $1,000 scholarship provided by the Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce. The program encourages volunteer opportunities with all Civic Organizations and benefits the entire community.

“The Silver Cord program was started as a way to educate students about the importance of community service. It gives students the opportunity to see firsthand how investing their time can enhance and grow their community,” Bailey Smith, Executive Director of the Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce said.

Chamber Exec. Director Bailey Smith and Jadyn Reid

The 2023 Silver Cord Scholarship recipient was Jadyn Reid. Reid volunteered her time towards the Downtown Beautification, the Chamber of Commerce Nine and Wine program, and other various community engagement activities.

“By volunteering, I have found that I enjoy being involved in making decisions that have a positive effect on community events, fundraisers, and the general benefit of the people and the community I live in. Having the opportunity to volunteer for a variety of organizations has enriched my knowledge of community and business affairs and has opened relationships with adults who conduct important decisions in my community. By participating from the creation to the completion of an event, I feel great satisfaction knowing the impact my involvement has on the people surrounding me,” Jadyn Reid, Silver Cord Scholarship recipient stated.

Chamber officials say they “are happy to recognize this student for her dedication to our community, and we wish her all the best as she heads to the University of South Dakota this fall.”

25th Freedom Rock painting expected to be completed this weekend

News

May 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Adair County, Iowa) – In honor of Memorial Day, Greenfield artist Ray “Bubba” Sorensen is repainting the 12-foot tall, approximately 60–90-ton boulder located south of Interstate 80 at Exit 86,  to pay tribute to our military men and women.
Sorensen started painting the original Freedom Rock® the second week of May and plans to be finished by Memorial Day 2023.

Sorensen says “For the 25th version of the original Freedom Rock®, rather than a collection of random Veterans stories, I wanted a constant theme all the way around the giant boulder. Also, since the original Freedom Rock is visited by all 50 states and many other countries, I consider it, “America’s Rock”, and I didn’t focus on Iowa Veterans, rather, the Veteran’s incredible stories.

2023 FreedomRock

“This year’s version,” Sorensen says, “is of Medal of Honor recipients who gave their life in service to our country. For each recipient I’ve illustrated their Portrait, a freeze frame of what their action may have been like, their Medal, and their gravestone. It starts on the front (highway facing side) with WWI Veteran, Freddie Stowers, moves to the south side (gravel road facing) with WWII Veteran Samuel D. Dealey, then on to Korean War Veteran Jack Glennon Hanson, then on to a couple of Vietnam Veterans William H. Pitsenbarger and Miguel Keith, and finally, ending back on the front side with Afghanistan Veteran and Navy Seal Michael Murphy.

“All these men accomplished amazing feats in the face of overwhelming odds to save the lives of their brothers-in-arms, truly going above and beyond the call of duty.” Sorensen is not commissioned for his work on the original Freedom Rock® in Menlo, Iowa but works as an independent mural artist having completed the Iowa Freedom Rock® Tour last September. Sorensen is working on the 50 State Freedom Rock Tour. He says “I always say I have three goals with ‘The Freedom Rock® Tour’ and that is to honor America’s Veterans, promote tourism and provide for my family.”

Sorensen’s oldest two children, Indie and Michael, enjoy helping him in the early stages of many Freedom Rocks® including the original, filling in sketched areas at his discretion, and his littlest, Liberty, has even scribbled a bit of paint on as well.

For a list of the Tour and other info, please visit www.thefreedomrock.com. Sorensen plans to be at The Freedom Rock® over Memorial Day weekend, including Memorial Day to meet with visitors. Calendars as well as other merchandise are also available to help offset costs for the original Freedom Rock® project.

Iowa men’s hoops to travel to Creighton for Gavitt Tipoff Games

Sports

May 24th, 2023 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The Big Ten and BIG EAST conferences jointly announced on Wednesday the pairings and dates for the 2023 Gavitt Tipoff Games, which include Iowa traveling to Omaha to face Creighton on Nov. 14.

The Gavitt Tipoff Games, featuring eight games between the two historic conferences the first full week of the college basketball season, is a unique early-season series named in honor of Dave Gavitt, founder of the BIG EAST and basketball visionary.

This will be Iowa’s fifth appearance in the Gavitt Games, previously playing at Marquette (2015) and Seton Hall (2022), and hosting Seton Hall (2016) and DePaul (2019).

The Hawkeyes and Bluejays most recently met in 2011 in Des Moines. Iowa’s last visit to Omaha came in 1999. The Hawkeyes lead the all-time series, 14-11.

Iowa is one of 10 teams in the country to compete in the last four NCAA Tournaments. The Hawkeyes return four players with starting experience, including seniors Patrick McCaffery and Tony Perkins. Perkins was an honorable mention all-conference honoree after averaging 12.3 points, 4.1 rebounds and 2.8 assists. McCaffery was tabbed the team’s Big Ten Sportsmanship Award honoree after averaging 9.8 points, 3.5 rebounds and one assist.

Creighton posted a 24-13 overall record and placed third in the BIG EAST last season, advancing to the Elite Eight in the NCAA Tournament. The Bluejays return three starters for head coach Greg McDermott, who is a native of Cascade, Iowa. Prior to Creighton, McDermott coached five seasons at UNI (2002-06) and four years at Iowa State (2007-10).

The 2023 Gavitt Games are a make-up from 2020, which were canceled due to COVID-19. Tip times and television information will be released at a later date. Games will be televised on either FS1 or BTN.

RICHARD FRANCIS LEINEN, 89 of Portsmouth, IA (Mass of Christian Burial 5/27/2023)

Obituaries

May 24th, 2023 by Jim Field

RICHARD FRANCIS LEINEN, 89 of Portsmouth, died Tuesday, May 23, 2023, at Jennie Edmundson Hospital, in Council Bluffs. A Mass Of Christian Burial for RICHARD LEINEN will be held 10:30-a.m. Saturday, May 27, 2023, at St. Mary Our Lady of Fatima in Portsmouth. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Visitation at St. Mary Our Lady of Fatima, is on Friday, May 26th, from 4-until 8-pm, with a Rosary Service at 7pm.

Burial will be in St. Mary’s Cemetery in Portsmouth.

RICHARD LEINEN is survived by:

His wife: Alma [Kramer] Leinen of Portsmouth,

Daughters: Donna (Dave) Muell, of Walnut; Deb (Dan) Muell, and Vicki (Joe) Miller, all of Portsmouth; Bonnie (Ray) Cooper, of Council Bluffs; & Cindy (Jeff) Klein of Earling.

17 Grandchildren and 32 great-grandchildren.

Santisteban gets to live out coaching dream at Alma Mater

Sports

May 24th, 2023 by admin

Exira-EHK recently announced that Tony Santisteban will take over as head boys basketball coach from Doug Newton. Santisteban has been an assistant coach under Newton for the past 10 years and now gets to take over for the school he played for. He said it’s a bit of dream come true.

Newton has led the Spartans program for over 20 years and has been in the district for 31 years. Newton leaves with a record of 335-194 during his tenure. He led the Spartans to a state tournament appearance in 2011, a team that Santisteban was a senior on. Santisteban played under Newton,  graduating in 2011. He led the Spartans with 12 points and 3.2 rebounds per game during that state tournament season. Santisteban said he knows he has some big shoes to fill.

He hopes that his experience as a coach and player will help him be successful but he knows it’s going to take a strong team atmosphere to take the program to the heights he hopes to.

He said the support he has already received from many people in the district has been overwhelming. The Spartans are coming off a 19-5 season in 2022-23 that ended with a loss to West Harrison in the substate semifinals. Santisteban said he’s looking forward to summer league, camps, and just getting to work with the team.

Listen to the full interview below.

Play

Report: Suicide rates fell in Iowa while rising nationwide

News

May 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa appears to have bucked a national trend of rising suicide rates in recent years. While more people across the country took their own lives in 2021 compared to 2020, a report from a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization finds suicide rates dropped during that period in Iowa. Brandon Reavis is the senior government relations manager at Trust for America’s Health. “We saw a three-percent drop in Iowa for overall suicide rates,” Reavis says, “and the overall increase in rates for the national level was four-percent.” Reavis says it’s hard to specify why Iowa’s suicide rate fell while most other states saw an increase.

“It’s difficult to draw conclusions about larger trends based on the rates for single years,” Reavis says, “but those variations can sometimes be the result of increased social services or mental health services in schools, also the changing rates of addiction on the state level.” The group’s report shows a dramatic 71-percent increase in the youth suicide rate between 2010 and 2021 nationwide, and did not offer specifics for Iowa for that time frame. Reavis says that increase can be due to all sorts of factors, including housing instability, job losses for parents, and grief, especially during the pandemic.

“The use of social media can have an impact on youth mental health,” Reavis says. “Just this week, the surgeon general released an advisory cautioning about the profound risks to mental health that social media use can pose. We also know that young people are struggling with a lot of the same issues that adults are struggling with, including climate change and racial injustice.”

The report shows 549 Iowans died by suicide in 2021, which is a drop of three-percent from the year before. It also shows there were 608 alcohol-induced deaths in Iowa that same year, an increase of 14-percent, while there were 475 drug overdoses statewide, an increase of seven-percent. “In the report, we stress the need to implement policies and programs to prevent and mitigate adverse childhood experiences,” Reavis says, “which we know can have a profound impact on the long-term risk of children developing addiction issues and other mental health conditions later on.”

The report also calls for an increase in funding of mental health services in schools. See the full “Pain in the Nation 2023” report at tfah.org.

Fort Dodge to have state’s first Safe Haven Baby Box

News

May 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) The Fort Dodge Fire Department will have the first “baby box” installed in Iowa. Last November, after a man and woman from Fort Dodge were charged in the death of their newborn, people in the community started working to get a “Safe Haven Baby Box” in Fort Dodge. Iowa’s Safe Haven law lets parents leave a baby at a health care facility, without fear of being prosecuted for abandonment, but the legislature this spring voted to expand it — so babies may be left at places like a fire station that are staffed around the clock with first responders.

Representative Ann Meyer of Fort Dodge says getting things to this point took the support of the entire community. “Complete team effort. That’s probably why it went so smoothly and so quickly because so many people were working on it,” Meyer says. “No one wants to see what happened, happen again.”

The Fort Dodge Fire Department. (FDFD photo)

Investigators say a woman who gave birth in a Fort Dodge apartment used meth to ease the pain of childbirth, but she and the baby’s father drowned the baby in a bathtub out of fears the child’s cries would prompt neighbors to call police, who’d discover the meth. Both have pleaded not guilty to first degree murder.

The baby box that will be installed in July in Fort Dodge is climate controlled and designed as a safe place to abandon a baby. At least 134 Safe Haven Baby Boxes are currently installed in six other states.

Petition seeks to change the way Cass County Supervisors are elected

News

May 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – A petition being circulated in Cass County asks for the County Board of Supervisors to call a special election, for the purpose of selecting one of three proposed supervisor representation plans. The proposed plans are as follows:

Plan One: Election at large, and without district residence requirements for the members.
Plan Two: Election at large, but with equal-population district residence requirements for the members. If the county changes to Plan Two, the supervisor must live in the district they represent, but will be voted upon by the entire county.
Plan Three: Election from single-member, equal-population districts in which the electors of each district shall elect one member who must reside in that district.

Cass County Auditor Kathy Somers confirms Plan Three is the format the County currently uses, and has used for years. Plan Three requires the supervisor to live in the district they represent, and only residents of that district are allowed to vote for their supervisor. If the county would change to Plan One, all five supervisors may be elected by the entire county and live in any part of the county.

Somers says Cass County citizens may file a petition if they would like to hold a special election to change the Board of Supervisors’ representation plan under the Code of Iowa. The petition will require 532 signatures of eligible electors, and must be filed with the county auditor’s office by June first, 2023.

If a petition is filed, the special election will take place Tuesday, August first. Voters will be asked to select one of three plans allowed by the state for their county supervisor representation. The plan with the most votes will be adopted.

If Plan One or Plan Two is adopted, the November, 2024 general election will elect supervisors under the new representation plan and the current supervisors’ terms will expire January 1, 2025 unless they are re-elected under the new plan. A new plan must remain in effect for at least six years once it is adopted at a special election.

Tania Davis joins Iowa women’s basketball coaching staff

Sports

May 24th, 2023 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Former Hawkeye, Tania Davis, joins the University of Iowa women’s basketball staff as Director of Player Development, the P. Sue Beckwith, MD Head Women’s Basketball Coach Lisa Bluder announced on Wednesday.

Davis was an assistant coach for Omaha women’s basketball from 2021 to 2023. During her time with the Mavericks, the program won 22 games and advanced to the Summit League Championship in 2022-23.

Davis had a two-year stint as a women’s basketball graduate assistant at Clemson. While with the Tigers, she oversaw the team managers, while assisting with individual workout plans, recruit visits and film breakdown.

Prior to her assistantship, Davis played at Iowa. She was tabbed an All-Big Ten Honorable Mention in 2019 and named to the 2016 Big Ten All-Freshman Team.

As a senior, Davis became the 36th Hawkeye to reach 1,000 career points. She ended her career with 1,007 points and scored double figures in 18 games. During the year, Davis notched new career single-season highs in points, rebounds, assists, field goals made, and 3-point field goals made. Davis finished the year with 162 assists, which ranked second on the team. Davis also helped lead the Hawkeyes to a Sweet Sixteen appearance in her senior campaign.

In 2017-18, Davis made 12 starts and recorded double figures in seven of those games. As a junior, Davis averaged 9.7 points, 5.2 assists and 3.2 rebounds per game. She shot over 41 percent from 3-point range finishing the season with 21 triples.

Davis started 23 contests before tearing her ACL as a sophomore in 2016-17. She scored double-digits in 14 of those games. Davis led the team in free throw shooting percentage.

In her debut season, Davis logged minutes in every game and made 16 starts. She led the Hawkeyes with 111 assists, which ranks second in the program for a freshman.

In addition to her collegiate success, Davis excelled on the high school court. She was named Michigan Miss Basketball by the Basketball Coaches Association of Michigan and the Detroit Free Press in 2015.

Davis was a 2019 graduate of the University of Iowa and received her bachelor’s degree in health and human psychology. She is a recent graduate of Clemson where she finished her master’s in athletic leadership.