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Coralville lifts curfew imposed imposed after looting

News

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

CORALVILLE, Iowa (The Gazette) — The City of Coralville lifted on Tuesday the curfew it had imposed earlier this month in response to looting and vandalism. Coralville Mayor John Lundell said in a statement the curfew was effective in curbing violence.

The Gazette reports Coralville announced the curfew on June 1. The move came less than a day after the arrests of nine Corridor residents, property damage and looting.

NAIA announces push back of dates for Fall sports

Sports

June 9th, 2020 by Jim Field

The NAIA released details this week on a return to play format for Fall sports. The practice start date for all sports has been pushed back to August 15th and the first competition dates will be September 5th for all sports except football which can start games on September 12th. The number of contests allowed for each sport is also being reduced. Check out the full details in the NAIA release below.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The NAIA national office, in partnership with leaders of the association, continues to plan for the fall season. Our work is guided first and foremost by the health and safety of your students. Our second priority is to serve our member institutions as you plan for a return to campus and a successful fall term.
We originally set July 1 as the date we would announce our plans for the fall. After discussions with many of you, we know that institutions and conferences are anxiously awaiting direction from the NAIA. As we have considered options related to fall sports, we have been helped tremendously by input from presidents, athletics directors, conference commissioners and athletic trainers. Your insights and suggestions have been instrumental to the process of establishing policies and guidelines for return to play.
To provide this needed guidance, the Council of Presidents (COP) Executive Committee met yesterday and the following national office recommendations were approved:

1. Return to Play Threshold
The COP Executive Committee approved the use of a threshold system as a guideline for determining return to play. The threshold goal is for about half the participating institutions in each sport to receive clearance from local authorities to return to competition before the season can begin. For example, NAIA football has 95 participating institutions. When half (47) of these programs gain clearance from authorities to play, the NAIA football season will be authorized to begin.
The rationale for this decision is that a significant number of institutions need to participate to offer student-athletes a significant competitive and championship-caliber experience. Additionally, the fewer the number of participating programs, the higher the likelihood for scheduling challenges leading to increased travel costs and missed class time.

2. Start Dates
Based on input from NAIA presidents, AD’s, commissioners, athletics trainers and health care professionals, the COP Executive Committee approved the recommendation of practice and competition start dates for each sport. The practice start date for all sports, will be Saturday, August 15. As a result, from today through August 14, any activities deemed practice by the NAIA are strictly prohibited. (Click here for NAIA definition of practice.)
We know many NAIA campuses may be engaging in conditioning activities now or plan to as we get closer to August 15. These conditioning activities, as long as they are not “practices”, are not restricted and can take place at any time, in keeping with any institutional guidelines.
Beginning on August 15, student-athletes may practice consistent with any health and safety protocols your institution deems necessary. While practices can begin August 15, only individuals identified with your institution can participate in these practices. No scrimmages, exhibitions, or competitions of any kind that involve individuals not identified with your institution may take place prior to the competition start date listed below.
Competition start dates are as follows:
All sports except football: September 5 (providing 3 weeks of practice prior to competition)
Football: September 12 (providing 4 weeks of practice prior to competition)
Please note: these start dates apply to all sports that schedule practices or competitions in the fall, regardless of when the regular season is played.
The rationale behind the selection of these dates is to provide an adequate acclimatization, conditioning and practice period prior to competition for each sport, while minimizing the need for student-athletes to return to campus early. Establishing start dates also creates a more level playing field for all institutions that are able to compete this fall.

3. Maximum Contests Allowed
With the delayed start dates, there are fewer weeks to complete the season. As a result, the COP Executive Committee approved a reduction in the maximum number of contests as follows:
Cross Country: 7 meets, down from 8
Football: 9 games, down from 11
Men’s and Women’s Soccer: 14 games, down from 18
Women’s Volleyball: 22 dates, down from 28

The reductions are proportional to the shortened seasons and are consistent with recent feedback from presidents, athletics directors, and commissioners expressing a desire to reduce regular season costs.

Currently, the NAIA intends to host all fall national championship events as currently scheduled. Obviously we cannot predict what will happen in the next six months, but we are optimistic that the championships will be hosted as planned.

Finally, we know the health and safety of our student-athletes is imperative if we are to host fall sports. The national office and the COP Executive Committee are currently examining various options for health and safety protocols, including testing and screening, and will share decisions related to these areas as soon as they are made.

While our focus is currently on fall sports, we know there are already concerns related to the winter sport season. At this time, there are no planned changes for winter sports. We will begin to evaluate the possible impact of COVID-19 on the winter season and prioritize any decisions that will help our institutions prepare for possible adjustments, if necessary.

We hope this information provides guidance to help you plan accordingly for fall athletics. There is no precedent regarding athletics during a pandemic, so we must all be guided by what is best for the greater good of our members and our student-athletes. The COP Executive Committee is meeting weekly in June and we will continue to share decisions as they are made.

House GOP proposes $7.85 billion state spending plan

News

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A spokesman for the House Speaker says Republicans in the Iowa House have come up with a “status quo” spending plan for the next state fiscal year that begins July 1st. At the end of May, a state panel predicted state TAX revenue will drop by 360 MILLION dollars in the next 12 months due to the pandemic-induced recession. During a weekend appearance on Iowa P-B-S, Republican House Speaker Pat Grassley indicated that while that dip is significant, the G-O-P’s previous budget plans held enough in reserve to compensate.

“Unlike a lot of other states that are going to be pushed to the brink, yes, this will be difficult to get through,” Grassley says, “but we can manage it.” The House G-O-P plan is to basically keep state spending levels equal to the current year and NOT use any of the state’s cash reserve or emergency funds. That’s because the G-O-P included a roughly half-a-BILLION dollar cushion in the current year’s budget that can be spent instead.

Republicans in the Iowa Senate have not released their spending outline yet, but Senate Republican Leader Jack Whitver echoes Grassley’s sentiments about the state’s ability to handle the downturn. “A lot of states are having massive cuts because they weren’t conservative up front and we were and so we’re in a very strong position, but we don’t want to put ourselves in a position where we have to come back in January because we overspent and start slashing budgets mid-year,” Whitver says. “If you’re going to make cuts, the time to do it is before the year starts, not halfway though when contracts are signed, employees have contracts in place, so we want to make those tough decisions now.”

Both Whitver and Grassley have said the legislature WILL provide its promised increase in general state aid to K-through-12 schools. The House Appropriations Committee is scheduled to meet early this (Tuesday) evening to begin debating the HOUSE G-O-P’s spending outline.

Des Moines council advances ban on police racial profiling

News

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (The Des Moines Register) — The Des Moines City Council has unanimously advanced a proposal to ban racial profiling by police in the wake of protests and civil unrest decrying racial injustice. Of the 45 people who spoke before the council Monday in an online meeting addressing the ban, most said more oversight is needed when racial profiling complaints are lodged against Des Moines police. The proposal would ban racial profiling and biased policing.

Violations could lead to an officer’s firing. The proposed ordinance will be back before the council at its June 22 meeting for the second of three readings before it can become law.

ROSEMARY DAVIDSON, 81, of Seymour, IN, formerly of Atlantic (6-16-2020)

Obituaries

June 9th, 2020 by Jim Field

ROSEMARY DAVIDSON, 81, of Seymour, IN (formerly of Atlantic) died Saturday, June 6th in Seymour, IN.  Funeral services for ROSEMARY DAVIDSON will be held on Tuesday, June 16th at 10:30 am in the First Lutheran Church south of Wiota.  Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home in Atlantic has the arrangements.

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Visitation with the family will be held on Monday from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm at the funeral home.

Burial in the Evergreen Cemetery in Anita.

ROSEMARY DAVIDSON is survived by:

Sons:  Rev. Kenneth (Alice) Davidson & Roger (Phuong) Davidson

Sister-in-Law:  Mary Ellen Wright

11 Grandchildren

12 Great-Grandchildren

Two women die in northeast Iowa Turkey River accident

News

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) Two West Union women died Monday afternoon in an accident on the Turkey River near Clermont, in northeastern Iowa.  The Fayette County Sheriff’s Office says 64 year old Sharon Kahn and 44 year old Vicki Hodges were pronounced dead at Palmer Hospital in West Union. Authorities say they responded to a report of two people going over a dam in distress around quarter to four. The Sheriff’s office says six entities initiated a rescue but lifesaving efforts were unsuccessful.

Backyard and Beyond 06/09/2020

Backyard and Beyond, Podcasts

June 9th, 2020 by admin

LaVon Eblen talks about baking and cooking.

Play

LARRY WILLEY, 78 of Waukee (Private family graveside svcs.)

Obituaries

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

LARRY WILLEY, 78 of Waukee, died June 2nd. Private family graveside services for LARRY WILLEY will be held at a later date in the Richland Township Cemetery near Bagley. Twigg Funeral Home in Panora has the arrangements.

LARRY WILLEY is survived by:

His son – Scott Willey, of Waukee.

His brother – Norman (Gladys) Willey, of Yale.

and other relatives.

If you make more money on unemployment, why go back to work?

News

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The head of Iowa Workforce Development is scheduled to testify before a U-S Senate panel this (Tuesday) afternoon about critical troubles that are hurting efforts to jumpstart the state and national economies. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is chairing the Finance Committee hearing that will feature I-W-D director Beth Townsend, who Grassley says will lay out the complications she’s seeing in Iowa’s workforce. Grassley says, “We’re going to focus on the problem that developed as a result of a problem we knew we were creating two months ago when we set up $600 additional unemployment insurance above whatever the 50 states would pay in their respective states.”

Thanks to the CARES Act, a person who brought home a weekly paycheck for a thousand dollars prior to the pandemic may now be getting 16-hundred a week on unemployment, which creates a dilemma. “We knew at the time we were going to have some people getting more money on unemployment than they might get from their job,” Grassley says. “Consequently, we’re finding a lot of small businesses, maybe even big businesses, are having trouble calling people back to work.”

Grassley says there are ideas circulating about how to remedy this problem, but no solutions are nailed down as yet. “We’ve disincentivized people to go back to their jobs,” Grassley says, “and it’s a tremendous economic problem because if we want to open this economy up, you’ve got to have workers.”  One possibility being considered is using federal dollars to supplement the salary of individuals who’ve been laid off and collecting unemployment benefits, prodding them to return to work.

The Washington D-C hearing is scheduled for 1:30 PM/Central.

Another summer event affected by COVID-19: AtlanticFest Postponed to Late September

News

June 9th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce has postponed AtlanticFest, originally scheduled for August 8th, to Saturday, September 26th. Chamber Executive Director Bailey Smith today (Tuesday), said “With State mandates currently in place, holding AtlanticFest in August wasn’t logistically feasible.”

Smith added, “We understand how eager everyone is to get out and about. AtlanticFest draws thousands of people every year and the health of the community is our highest priority. We hope regulations will be more relaxed by late September and we’ll be able to celebrate as a community.”

AtlanticFest, presented by First Whitney Bank & Trust, has been a community staple for almost 30 years. The September event will be an updated version with new and traditional activities for community members of all ages to enjoy. More details regarding the event will be made available in the coming months.