United Group Insurance

Iowan pleads not guilty to vehicular homicide

News

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

ONAWA, Iowa (AP) – A 44-year-old western woman has pleaded not guilty for a crash that killed her uncle.  Sioux City television station KTIV says Judith Krohn, of Mapleton, is charged with felony vehicular homicide while driving intoxicated. The accident occurred April 20 along Iowa Highway 141 near Mapleton. Authorities say Krohn was driving when her vehicle left the road on a curve and rolled into a ditch.

Her uncle, 59-year-old Albert Butler, of Mapleton, was partially ejected. He was pronounced dead later at a hospital.

Red Oak woman arrested on drug & other charges Tue. morning

News

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

A traffic stop in Red Oak early this (Tuesday) morning resulted in an arrest. According to the Red Oak Police Department, 24-year-old Amanda Kate Carlson, of Red Oak, was arrested in the 400 block of North 4th Street.  Carlson faces charges that include driving while barred, possession of drug paraphernalia, and interference with official acts.

She was brought to the Montgomery County Law Enforcement Center and held on $2,000 cash bond.

(Podcast) Skyscan Forecast: Tue., Oct. 29th 2013

Podcasts, Weather

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

The Freese-Notis/Weather.Net forecast for the KJAN listening area, and weather information for Atlantic from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson…

Play

DELORES E. CLEMMENSEN, 83, of Audubon (Svcs. 10/31/13)

Obituaries

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

DELORES E. CLEMMENSEN, 83, of Audubon, died Sat., Oct. 26th, at home. Funeral services for DELORES CLEMMENSEN will be held 10:30-a.m. Thu., Oct. 31st, at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church in Audubon. Kessler Funeral Home in Audubon has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home, where the family will be present from 5:30-to 7:30-p.m. Wednesday (10/30).

Burial will be in the Arlington Heights Cemetery in Audubon.

DELORES CLEMMENSEN is survived by:

Her husband – Milo Clemmensen, of Audubon.

Her children – Ross Clemmensen, of Sun City, AZ; Rex Clemmensen, and Sheri Clemmensen, both of Iowa City, and Kirk Clemmensen, of La Jolla, CA.

Her brother – Jens Bruun, of Council Bluffs.

Her sisters-in-law, other relatives, and friends.

NWS forecast for the KJAN listening area: Tue., 10/29/13

Weather

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Today: Rain. High near 54. East wind 11 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 18 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch possible.
Tonight: Rain likely, with thunderstorms also possible after 1am. Cloudy, with a low around 51. East wind 5 to 9 mph becoming calm after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.

Wednesday: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm, then showers and thunderstorms after 10am. High near 68. East wind 5 to 11 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. New rainfall amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
Wednesday Night: Showers and thunderstorms before 1am, then a chance of showers. Low around 47. South wind 6 to 9 mph becoming west after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 18 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Thursday: A 20 percent chance of rain before 1pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 56. West northwest wind 7 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 38.

Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 54. Breezy.

Neighbors harvest fields after farmer’s death

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

EARLHAM, Iowa (AP) — More than a dozen farmers worked with six combines to harvest a crop near the central Iowa community of Earlham, a little more than a month after the owner died of cancer. Dave Boyle, of Earlham, told KCCI-TV, “That’s what neighbors are here for.” The farmers decided to help out after 64-year-old Dennis Scar died of lung cancer on Sept. 25.

The harvest normally would have taken days to complete, but the volunteers finished it in about three hours, Monday. Scar’s daughter-in-law, Nikki Scar, says the sight of the machinery pulling in brought her to tears. She says, “We’re just very blessed to have family and friends and live in a small town I guess.”

Regional Volleyball Scores from Mon., Oct. 28 2013

Sports

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Class 3-A

  • (3-0) Kuemper Catholic 25-25-25, Atlantic 14-15-2
  • (3-0) Red Oak 25-25-25, Clarke 6-8-13
  • (3-0) Greene County 25-25-25, West Central Valley 12-22-18
  • (3-0) Clarinda 25-25-25, Shenandoah 20-19-13

Class 4-A

  • (3-1) Carroll 25-24-25-25, Denison-Schleswig 18-26-18-16
  • (3-0) Creston 25-25-25, Glenwood 11-19-15

Harvest moved ahead quickly last week

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

The corn and soybean harvest moved ahead quickly in the last week. The latest U-S-D-A report shows 20-percent of the corn crop was harvested last week and 17 percent of the soybeans. That puts the bean harvest two days ahead of normal — marking the first time all season soybean progress was ahead of the five-year average.

Pam Johnson farms with her husband in north central Iowa ’s Floyd County. She says she’s thankful that the weather has been favorable at the end of the season after the way it started. The spring was cold and wet spring — leading to a very small planting window — and to get the corn in Johnson says they planted both night and day for three days and the beans didn’t go in until June. “It’s been a struggle all the way along, and then of course, mother nature shut the rain off in August,” Johnson says. But Johnson says they’re now really pleased that they’ve had a long growing season. “We were afraid of all the things that could happen, we would have an early frost and we have not, so the weather has been good to us at the back end of the growing season and we’re pleasantly surprised by the yields that are out there despite the weather,” according to Johnson.

Fifty-five percent of the corn has now been harvested, which is five percentage points behind normal. Moisture content of all corn in the field was estimated at 21 percent while moisture content of corn harvested was 19 percent. The soybean harvest is now 87-percent complete.

(Radio Iowa)

Ending tax break for “red dye” diesel for farmers under consideration

Ag/Outdoor

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Ending a tax break on the diesel fuel farmers and construction companies use in off-road vehicles is among the ideas the Iowa D-O-T’s director has developed for increasing the state budget for road construction and maintenance. Governor Terry Branstad says some of the options are “outside the box.”    “They’re different and we would expect that some of them would be somewhat controversial,” Branstad says. “We are saying, ‘Let’s see how the public feels about it.'” However, the Iowa D-O-T’s director isn’t releasing his list to the public, but instead sharing it first with legislators and interest groups, like the highway construction industry.

“I think this is a good process and I’ve indicated I’m not endorsing any of these options, but my hope is we can look at all these different options and alternatives and see if a consensus can be built that would eventually gain bipartisan support in the legislature, both the House and the Senate, to address the issue of funding fot the Road Use Tax Fund.” Diesel fuel sold with a red dye is to be used in off-road vehicles like tractors and excavators. It is not subject to state taxes, an estimated 38-million dollar annual tax break for farmers and the construction industry.

The D-O-T director’s list suggests that money could be placed in a new account to finance road projects in rural areas of the state. The only other idea on the D-O-T’s list that would bring in more tax money would be increasing the state sales tax on vehicle purchases — meaning car and truck buyers would pay 60-million more dollars in registration fees.

(Radio Iowa)

King urges private negotiations over contentious Farm Bill details

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 29th, 2013 by Ric Hanson

Tomorrow (Wednesday) Republican Congressman Steve King and Democratic Senator Tom Harkin will meet for the first time with the 38 other members of a House-Senate “conference committee” appointed to come up with a Farm Bill compromise.  “I’m glad that we have two Iowans that are conferees,” King says. “We are now and have been for some weeks working to line up those issues that we disagree between the House and the Senate and line them up in order of difficulty.” According to King, the dispute over federal funding for “food stamps” is the most difficult to resolve.

House Republicans have voted to cut the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by 40 billion. The bipartisan Farm Bill that cleared the Democratically-led Senate in June called for four billion in cuts to the food stamp program — 10 times less. King has asked House Republicans leaders to present him some “creative ideas” for bridging that 36-billion dollar divide. “I don’t want to tip any hand on it. I chair the subcommittee that deals with nutrition and so what I say — it might affect the negotiations,” King says. “But I want to get to the end of this thing and I want a bill on the president’s desk I said before the snow flies. I know in part of Iowa I’m already too late on that, but we’re going to try to get this done and I think we get it done by the end of the year.”

There are a variety of other proposals that are unresolved as well, like a so-called “payment cap” that bars farmers with an adjusted gross income above 750-thousand dollars from getting federal subsidies to buy crop insurance. King is urging other members of the conference committee to negotiate the details in private rather than in public. “Let’s sit down and see if we figure out how we can agree before any of us take such a public position that we can’t compromise or back up from it,” King says.

If the Farm Bill doesn’t pass congress by January 1st, farm policies will revert to the 1949 Farm Bill and the first impact consumers would see would be a dramatic increase in milk prices. King made his comments during a weekend appearance on Iowa Public Television’s “Iowa Press” program.

(Radio Iowa)