United Group Insurance

7AM Newscast 06-28-2012

News, Podcasts

June 28th, 2012 by admin

w/ Ric Hanson

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Iowa DOT needs your input on interstate rest areas

News

June 28th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Transportation says they will be conducting a rest area users’ opinion survey in June and July to assist in planning for future rest area needs. The same survey will be conducted in a variety of ways.

  • Anyone can take the survey online at http://www.IowaDOTRestAreaStudy.com/ beginning June 28 through July 16.
  • Rest area visitors to the Wilton, Osceola, Cedar Rapids, Onawa, Pacific Junction, Waukee, and Dows facilities will be asked to participate in the surveys during daytime hours June 28-30 and July 12-14.
  • Surveys will be send via email (if address is available) or regular mail to all of the state’s registered commercial motor carriers.
  • Printed surveys will be made available at all rest areas and weigh stations during the study period.

The survey has been designed to be completed in three to five minutes.

USDA Report 06-28-2012

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

June 28th, 2012 by admin

w/ Max Dirks

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THURSDAY, JUNE 28th

Trading Post

June 28th, 2012 by admin

FOR SALE: 1 Long Parlor Bench.  1 RCA 32″ TV.  Call 783-4476.

FREE: Older cook books.  243-7747.

WANTED: Willing to cut down trees if you cannot afford a tree service.  Will not be able to cut trees in Atlantic though.  The work would be done to help people out, as he would not use the wood for personal use.  He would not be able to do anything more than 2 feet across…also could only cut down trees in more open areas.  778-4672. FOR SALE: Camping firewood.  778-4672.

WANTED: A chain saw of any brand.  Would like it to have at least a 16 inch bar and would be willing to pay between $50 and $60.  FOR SALE: Four, 15 inch rims on a 5 bolt pattern.  Currently on 2 tires in good shape and 2 tires in average shape.  They are American racing brand.  Could be used for a vehicle like a Ford Ranger or Torres or a Dodge Dakota, but not a Chevy.  $30 per rim, he’ll let you keep the tires.  304-2587 in Exira.

FOR SALE: 1989 Dodge Dakota.  2 WD, black with silver lining and red interior, v6, has about 170,000 miles.  Might need a little work.  $1,000.  304-4262.

FOR SALE: garden trellis $50 obo. 712-250-4420

FOR SALE: pair of 40 channel CB’s $25 for pair; set of walkie talkies – go about 10 blocks $15; 27″ tv, nice $15. 712-243-3396.

Omaha Salvation Army providing relief from heat

News

June 28th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) – The Salvation Army will keep its doors around Omaha open for people in need of a break from extreme heat that has reached triple digits this week.  Four Salvation Army locations across the Omaha area are designated as community cooling stations, including the Council Bluffs Corps in Council Bluffs. The stations will be open through Friday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. On Saturday and Sunday, the locations will open at 8 a.m. and close at 5 p.m.  Cold drinks will be provided, and the organization is seeking donations of bottled water.

Atlantic School Board hires Winterset Instructor

News

June 28th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District’s Board of Education met Wednesday evening at the High School.

Jennifer Gaesser (Photo from Winterset School District website)

Superintendent Dr. Mike Amstein said the Board unanimously approved the hiring of Jennifer Gaesser, as the Vocal Music Teacher for the High School, as a replacement for Lucas Johnson, who has served with the District for the past 5-years. Gaesser comes to the District from Winterset, where she served for the past 7-years as the 7th and 8th grade Vocal Music Instructor. Superintendent Dr. Mike Amstein said Gaesser came highly recommended by Winterset Superintendent Mike Wells, who himself, is moving on to become Superintendent at the Cedar Rapids.

In other business, Amstein said the Board tentatively discussed setting their goals for the upcoming school year. He said the Board asked him to make some adjustments to the draft, with the final copy to be presented to them during their meeting in July.

Wednesday High School Baseball Results

Sports

June 28th, 2012 by Jim Field

Hawkeye 10:

  • Denison-Schleswig 6, Thomas Jefferson 5
  • Harlan 3, Sioux City West 0
  • Shenandoah 18, Corning 3

Western Iowa:

  • Audubon 10, Treynor 9
  • Tri-Center 9, Missouri Valley 5
  • Riverside 17, Griswold 8

Rolling Hills:

  • Nodaway Valley 10, Adair-Casey 9
  • Murray 9, Orient-Macksburg 8 (8 innings)

Others:

  • Boone 9, Carroll 0
  • Coon Rapids-Bayard 20, Boyer Valley 3 (4 innings)
  • Logan-Magnolia 16, OA-BCIG 1

Woman arrested for counterfeiting & other charges

News

June 28th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

The Red Oak Police Department reports the arrest late Wednesday night of 39-year-old Michelle Marie Neville, of Red Oak,  on Counterfeiting, forgery and possession of stolen property charges. Neville was brought to the Montgomery County jail, where she was being held on $5,000 bond.

Red Oak man faces child endangerment charge

News

June 28th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in Montgomery County report the arrest Wednesday evening, of a Red Oak man. 27-year-old Seth William Rogers was arrested on a Page County warrant charging him with child endangerment.  Authorities have not released any other details concerning the incident. Rogers was brought to the Montgomery County Jail and later released after posting a $5,000 bond.

Farm bill holds good news/bad news for rural areas

Ag/Outdoor

June 28th, 2012 by Ric Hanson

The U-S House should start debating the Farm Bill early next month after the Senate last week passed its version of the 498-billion-dollar, five-year bill. Chuck Hassebrook, executive director of the Center for Rural Affairs, says the Senate’s one-thousand-page version includes some positive elements for rural areas. “The amendments before the full Senate added rural development funding to the bill for beginning farmers, small business development, for small towns who have to update their water and sewer systems,” Hassebrook says. “We’re very pleased by that because as the bill came out of committee, it would’ve been the first (farm) bill in decades to include no funding for rural development.” 

The Senate version of the farm bill eliminates the five-billion-dollar a year direct payment subsidy, while the primary farm program is crop insurance. Hassebrook says that’s not good news for family farms or beginning farmers. “There will be no payment limitation what-so-ever on crop insurance,” he says. “If one corporation farms the entire states of Nebraska, Iowa and South Dakota, the government would pay 60% of their crop insurance premium on every acre. That’s not only fiscally irresponsible, it essentially subsidizes those big companies to drive out family-sized farms.” 

As the debate moves to the House next month, Hassebrook hopes to see more cuts in subsidies to corporate operators and more expansion of rural development funding. “Past farm bills have over-subsidized the biggest farms and underinvested in the future of rural America,” he says. “They’ve underinvested in beginning farmers. They’ve underinvested in rural communities, small business development, and so we’re going to pitch for a farm bill that cuts back on subsidies to mega-farms and invests more in creating a better future in rural America.” 

The Farm Bill passed the Senate on a 64-to-35 vote and cuts back Ag spending by about 23-billion dollars over current levels. The Center for Rural Affairs is based in Lyons, Nebraska.

(Radio Iowa)