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Democrats swarm industrial Iowa to prove they can beat Trump

News

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

MOUNT PLEASANT, Iowa (AP) –  Democratic White House hopefuls are campaigning in the more than two dozen Iowa counties that went from supporting Barack Obama in 2012 to supporting Donald Trump in 2016. They hope showing up in counties Democrats lost will help prove they can take on the Republican president this year. Their visits may also help Democrats win back these counties in November by energizing Democrats and engaging disaffected Republicans. And they hope to win some delegates by focusing on these counties across the state. Iowa is home to more counties that pivoted from Obama to Trump than any other state.

Iowa woman pleads guilty in Nebraska vehicular homicide case

News

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DAKOTA CITY, Neb (AP) – An Iowa woman has pleaded guilty to vehicular homicide for fatally striking a pedestrian in northeast Nebraska’s Dakota County. The Sioux City (Iowa) Journal reports that Maria Gonzalez-Diego, of Sioux City, Iowa, entered the plea Tuesday. Prosecutors dropped a charge of failure to stop at the scene of a fatal accident. Her sentencing is scheduled for March 10. South Sioux City police have said Gonzalez-Diego’s northbound vehicle hit 62-year-old Antonia Lopez De Ramirez the night of June 24 as she walked across a street. Police say Gonzalez-Diego’s vehicle continued north. A Sioux City, Iowa, officer later found Gonzalez-Diego and arrested her.

Waterloo council delays action on closing airport runway

News

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) – The Waterloo City Council has postponed action on a proposal to permanently shut down the shortest of the local airport’s three landing strips. The airport director has recommended closing the runway because of safety and liability concerns. Federal officials have said they won’t provide any money because the airport’s other two runways can handle nearly all of the traffic. But several pilots told the council Tuesday that the runway is important for companies that use smaller aircraft to shuttle workers to other locations. The runway also is a safe alternative when high winds make it harder to access the two primary runways.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 1/22/20

Podcasts, Sports

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 1/22/20

News, Podcasts

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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Driver faces several charges in parking lot hit-and-run

News

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) —  A driver faces several charges stemming from what authorities say was a hit-and-run in the parking lot of a bar in Linn County. County court records say 30-year-old Bret Klima, of Urbana, is charged with vehicular homicide, leaving the scene of a fatal accident and with other crimes. His attorney didn’t immediately return an Associated Press call Wednesday. The crash happened around 1:30 a.m. Dec. 1 in the parking lot of Bully’s North in Center Point. Authorities say 50-year-old Kimberley Swore died at the scene. She lived in Center Point. Another pedestrian suffered minor injuries.

(Update) Student Pilot injured in helicopter crash at eastern Iowa airport

News

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Investigators are looking into the crash of a University of Dubuque helicopter that injured a student pilot in northeast Iowa, Tuesday afternoon. The crash happened near a hangar at the Independence Municipal Airport around 4:15 p.m. Independence fire officials say the helicopter sustained significant damage. They also reported that the hanger was damaged in the crash.

University of Dubuque Public Information Director Stacey Ortman released a statement after the crash confirming that the accident involved a university helicopter and a student pilot, who was not identified. She also confirmed that the student suffered non-life-threatening injuries and taken to the Independence hospital for treatment. The Federal Aviation Administration has been called in to investigate the crash.

Skyscan Forecast – Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Weather

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

TODAY: **Winter Weather Advisory until 6-p.m.**Snow, mixed at times with rain. High 35. S @ 10-20. (1-2” snow possible)

TONIGHT: Cloudy w/light snow-rain mixed. Low 32.

TOMORROW: Cloudy w/light snow-rain mix. High 34. NW @ 10-20

FRIDAY: Cldy w/light snow. High 32.

SATURDAY: P/cldy. High 36.

Our 24-hour High in Atlantic (as of 7-a.m. Today) was 34. Our 24-hour was -8. We received a mix of mostly snow and some light rain/freezing rain overnight. As of 7-a.m. today we had .4″ snow and about .1″ ice on the ground under the snow (total 1/2″). Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 29 and the Low was 12. The record High for Jan. 22nd in Atlantic, was 60 in 1967. The Record Low was -27 in 1930.

Loitering in the left lane? Might cost you $100

News

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — An Iowa Senate Committee has given its approval to new fines for drivers who loiter too long in the left lane on an interstate or four-lane highway. Senator Zach Whiting of Spirit Lake has been given the task of steering the bill through the senate. “I think it is an identifiable problem for a lot of drivers and it’s just a dangerous thing — the efficient flow of traffic being impeded by people camping out in the left lane.”

Whiting travels both Highway 20 and Interstate 35 on his commute to the state capitol and sees drivers who fail to yield the left lane to faster-moving vehicles.  “I always smile because when I’ve got my cruise control set and I see somebody coming really fast on my left, there’s always somebody coming faster behind ’em,” Whiting says, “and so just move over, get over.”

If the bill becomes law, Whiting expects it will include a requirement that the D-O-T use its digital signs or add some highway signs to alert drivers to move out of the left lane if they’re not passing. “Sometimes laws change and we just want t make sure that we put people on notice,” Whiting says.

Last year, a bill that would have established a one-hundred-dollar ($100) fine for drivers who linger too long in the left lane stalled in the Iowa House. This past summer, the ILLINOIS State Police deployed unmarked vehicles to catch drivers misusing the left lane and handed out tickets that carry a one-hundred-20 ($120) fine.

Lawmakers consider trust funds for student-athlete compensation

Sports

January 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Legislators in the Iowa House AND Senate are discussing steps that would let Iowa college athletes earn money if their name or likeness is used for profit. Senators Nate Boulton, a Democrat from Des Moines, and Republican Brad Zaun of Urbandale have been talking about establishing trust funds for student athletes’ compensation. Boulton says Division One college football has become the minor league for the N-F-L.

“There’s a general consensus that the power imbalance is unsustainable right now with the amount of money that’s going into college athletics and the inability to see anything other than facilities and coaching salaries be the outlet for that,” Boulton says.

Now that sports betting is legal in Iowa, Boulton says gamblers are profiting off college athletes, too.  “There’s money all around this system and on an island, without any resources coming to them, are the student athletes who are putting their bodies on the line,” Boulton says.

Representatives Ras Smith, a Democrat from Waterloo, and Republican Joe Mitchell of Wayland met last month with former University of Iowa star Marvin McNutt to discuss how trust funds might work — so the compensation comes after the student athlete’s college career is over.  “Me and Representative Smith have both said that we think that these guys should have the rights to the fruits of their own labor,” Mitchell says. “A lot of these guys aren’t going to play pro, but they would be able to make some money in college.”

Mitchell says playing a sport like football at the Division One level is essentially job.  “If we’re going to go to have these guys go out there and play and make money for the universities and if the coaches can make money off endorsements, but the players can’t — who are really the ones that people come to watch — that’s where I see the problem with it,” Mitchell says.

Mitchell says this is a sensitive issue, but if legislators can come up with a bipartisan consensus, the Iowa law could be a model for other states and even the N-C-Double-A.