With News Director Ric Hanson.
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The Freese-Notis weather forecast for the KJAN listening area & weather information for Atlantic.
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Cass County: Corn $3.66, Beans $9.79
Adair County: Corn $3.63, Beans $9.82
Adams County: Corn $3.63, Beans $9.78
Audubon County: Corn $3.65, Beans $9.81
East Pottawattamie County: Corn $3.69, Beans $9.79
Guthrie County: Corn $3.68, Beans $9.83
Montgomery County: Corn $3.68, Beans $9.81
Shelby County: Corn $3.69, Beans $9.79
Oats $2.75 (always the same in all counties)
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) – The plane carrying No. 16 Wichita State to Des Moines, Iowa, for tonight’s (Wednesday’s) game against Drake had to return to Kansas after its landing gear malfunctioned after takeoff. School spokesman Bryan Holmgren said that the issue had to do with a sensor in the landing gear. The team returned to Wichita’s Mid-Continent Airport and mechanics were working on the plane.
The Shockers (10-2) typically fly on chartered jets to their away games. The plane was never in any danger, and the delay was not expected to affect the game against the Bulldogs. It will be the Missouri Valley opener for both teams.
Two people were arrested in Montgomery County, and a burglary was investigated, overnight Tuesday into early Wednesday morning. The Sheriff’s Office reports at around 1:45-a.m today (Wednesday), 62-year old Jackie Douglas Kendrick, of New Market, was arrested for Possession of Methamphetamine with the Intent to Deliver, and a Drug Tax Stamp violation. His arrest was the result of a traffic stop at 260th & Vine Avenue, east of Villisca. During the stop, Kendrick was found to the in possession of more than 14 grams of Meth. He was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $100,000 bond.
At around 11:15-p.m. Tuesday, deputies in Montgomery County investigated a residential burglary at 2791 V Avenue, south of Villisca. Officials say sometime between Dec. 29th and 30th, a person or persons unknown took multiple items from the residence. Anyone with information about the crime is asked to call the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office at 712-623-5107, or Crimestoppers at 1-800-432-1001.
The sheriff’s department reports also, the arrest at around 10:20-p.m. Tuesday, of a Pleasantville man. 48-year old James Edward Stone was arrested on two warrants pertaining to Contempt of Court. Stone was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on $2,000 bond.
356 AM CST WED DEC 31 2014
…WIND CHILL ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM CST THIS MORNING…
EARLY THIS MORNING…CLEAR. VERY COLD. WEST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH.
TODAY…SUNNY. VERY COLD. BREEZY. HIGH 15 TO 20. SOUTHWEST WIND 5 TO 15 MPH INCREASING TO 15 TO 20 MPH IN THE AFTERNOON. GUSTS UP TO 30 MPH. WIND CHILL READINGS AROUND 15 BELOW.
TONIGHT…MOSTLY CLEAR. NOT AS COLD. LOW AROUND 10. WEST WIND 5 TO 15 MPH. GUSTS UP TO 25 MPH THROUGH MIDNIGHT.
NEW YEARS DAY…SUNNY…WARMER. HIGH AROUND 30. SOUTHWEST WIND 5 TO 15 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY. LOW 15 TO 20. WEST WIND 5 TO 10 MPH SHIFTING TO THE NORTHWEST AFTER MIDNIGHT.
FRIDAY…MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 30S. NORTHEAST WIND AROUND 5 MPH SHIFTING TO THE SOUTHEAST UP TO 5 MPH IN THE AFTERNOON.
SATURDAY…MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SNOW. HIGH AROUND 30.
AREA COUNTIES: MONONA-HARRISON-SHELBY-POTTAWATTAMIE-MILLS-SAC-CRAWFORD-CARROLL-GREENE-AUDUBON-GUTHRIE-CASS: A WIND CHILL ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM TODAY (12/31).
* WIND CHILL VALUES…LOWEST WIND CHILLS 15 TO 25 BELOW ZERO. FROSTBITE WILL BE POSSIBLE TO EXPOSED SKIN IN AS LITTLE AS 30 MINUTES.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…
A WIND CHILL ADVISORY MEANS THAT VERY COLD AIR AND MODEST WINDS WILL COMBINE TO GENERATE LOW WIND CHILLS. THIS WILL RESULT IN FROST BITE AND LEAD TO HYPOTHERMIA IF PRECAUTIONS ARE NOT TAKEN. IF YOU MUST VENTURE OUTDOORS…MAKE SURE YOU WEAR A HAT AND GLOVES.
The Iowa State women claimed the title at the Cyclone Challenge. Nikki Moody had 19 points, Seanna Johnson added 18 points and 13 rebounds in a 71-54 win over California-Riverside. The Cyclones outrebounded Riverside 46-34 to improve to 9-2. Iowa State opens the Big 12 race at home on Saturday by hosting Kansas State.
(Learfield Sports)
Iowa’s Attorney General announced seven lawsuits in six counties in cases where construction started without a call to check for underground utility lines. A-G spokesman, Geoff Greenwood, says the complaints involve natural gas lines. “In all of these cases, they either hit a natural gas line or they got very close to hitting one,” Greenwood says. The suits involve companies or individuals in Linn, Palo Alto, Jasper, Woodbury, Franklin, and Pottawattamie counties. Anyone who digs is supposed to dial up the Iowa One Call Center, at 1-800-292-8989, or 811, to have them come and mark underground lines.
“In these cases, nobody was injured…no explosions, fires anything like that, but we’ve had cases before where people have been hurt, we’ve had explosions, we’ve had situations where power has been knocked out or emergency communications lines have been knocked out,” Greenwood says. “If an excavator doesn’t call One Call before they dig, they are threatening themselves and they are threatening the public. We take these cases very seriously.” The law has been in place for over two decades.
Greenwood says anyone who digs has been required to make the call since 1993. Even with years of promoting the call-in number and high-profile cases, Greenwood doesn’t know why people still dig without taking the time to call. “It’s hard to say, and there may be various reasons why they didn’t call. But one reason is not cutting costs, it’s a free call. There’s no reason why they shouldn’t call,” according to Greenwood. “We think that in some cases it’s possible that it was a case of poor planning. A company moved up a dig order or moved up a project and didn’t do so in time to call.”
The call center is open 24-hours a day, 365 days a year. The people in these seven cases face fines from 35-hundred dollars up to five-thousand. “We handle these on a case-by-case basis. There are a situations where we have filed cases that resulted in a major threat to the public — there was a large explosion, there was a power outage, there was a communications outage. In other cases it was nothing more than the excavator got very close to a line and we still file cases,” Greenwood says. Violators are subject to a civil penalty of up to 10-thousand dollars each day for violations related to natural gas and hazardous liquid pipelines, and up to one-thousand dollars each day involving other underground facilities.
In a Pottawattmie County case, District Court Judge Timothy O’Grady, Monday, ordered that Wes Casson & Son LLC, of McClelland, pay a $5,000 civil penalty and permanently enjoined the company from violating the One Call law.
According to Miller’s lawsuit on November 11, 2013, the company conducted an excavation to install drainage tile and terraces in rural Pottawattamie County, without first contacting the Iowa One Call notification center and, thereby, failed to provide notice to operators of underground facilities. During the excavation, the company’s tiling equipment came to within seven feet of an eight-inch diameter natural gas pipeline, and during terracing went directly over the pipeline.
(Radio Iowa)