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Corps: If on water this holiday weekend, wear a life jacket

News

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Officials with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Kansas City District say there is a simple way for lake visitors to greatly reduce their risk of drowning this Labor Day weekend: Wear a life jacket. The Corps district manages 18 lakes in Missouri, Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska. Public safety manager Kyle Ruona said Thursday that 89 percent of all water-related fatalities at Corps lakes involve people who fail to wear life jackets.

Swimming in a lake is harder than swimming in a pool, so Corps officials urge people to take precautions, be alert and to expect the unexpected when on the water. People using boats also are encouraged to avoid alcohol.

Sen. Grassley says Japan trade deal could strengthen US stance with China

Ag/Outdoor

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley is applauding the tentative trade deal reached between the U-S and Japan, calling it a very “welcome development.” Grassley says, “It arrives at a time when farmers are hurting, in need of new market access opportunities and a chance to compete on a level playing field with agriculture all over the globe.” Strengthening ties with Japan, Grassley says, will help to also strengthen the United States’ position while negotiating with China. While only an overview of the agreement with Japan was released by the White House last weekend, Grassley says what he’s heard so far is very encouraging.

Grassley says, “Gaining agricultural market access to the world’s third-largest economy is a big win for President Trump, Iowa farmers and agriculture generally.” It’s possible, according to Grassley, the agreement can be signed without Congressional approval. He calls it “very positive news” and a “significant step” toward securing a comprehensive trade agreement with Japan which he says could benefit all sectors of the U-S economy. Grassley says, “It appears that the Japanese have agreed to provide new access for U.S. dairy, pork, ethanol, beef, wine and wheat in return for the elimination of U.S. tariffs on industrial goods.”

The agreement is expected to be signed at the United Nations General Assembly meeting in late September.

“Family Table Talk” cards will soon be distributed in Cass County

News

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Family Crisis Support Network in Atlantic say “Family Table Talk” cards will soon be distributed in Cass County. Director Wendy Richter says the cards have been a collaborative effort between the Cass County Child Abuse Prevention Council and the Atlantic Rotary Club. Richter says the Council began the project as a way for families to put down electronic devices at mealtime, and what better way to begin that than while waiting for food at a restaurant. Many of the ideas on the cards are activities that families can do in restaurants but are also ones that can be done while at home too.

Pictured are: Melanie Storural, Council member, Damon Clark, Rotarian, Dolly Bergmann, Rotary District 6000 Asst. Governor, Kaila Antisdel, Rotarian, Kate Olson, Rotarian & Council member, Lora Kanning, Council member. (Photo courtesy Wendy Richter)

The activities easily open communication between parents and their children and when talking to their parents is easy for kids, they are more likely to talk to parents when struggling with difficult issues as they get older. According to Prevent Child Abuse Iowa, “it’s important to give all parents resources that allow them to bond with their children, gain parenting skills and manage stress”. “Family Table Talk” cards will help in each of these areas.

Rotary Clubs in District 6000 were encouraged to participate with their local Child Abuse Prevention Councils to work on a project. The Atlantic Rotary Club, being a member of District 6000, contacted to Cass County Child Abuse Council to find a way to work jointly on a project. The cards project was presented to the Rotary Club and approval for participation was approved by the Board of Director.

For additional resources about the groups mentioned above, check out the following: pcaiowa.org, rotaryinternational.org, or see the cass county child abuse prevention council on FaceBook.

Missouri Valley bypass corridor Online Meeting

News

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

AMES, Iowa – August 29, 2019 – The Iowa Department of Transportation is conducting a planning study on the Missouri Valley bypass corridor.  The study area includes an area south of Missouri Valley and extends along U.S. 30 from I-29 east to 280th Street. An online public meeting is now available to view on the Iowa DOT’s Public Involvement webpage: www.iowadot.gov/pim. To view the meeting and related content, click on the Missouri Valley bypass corridor project from the list of public involvement events. The online meeting allows you to scroll through the information at your own pace and at any time. The Iowa DOT is asking interested parties to take a few minutes to view the information and offer any feedback.

For general information regarding the proposed improvements or public meeting, contact Scott Suhr, transportation planner, Iowa DOT District 4 Office, 2210 E. Seventh St., Atlantic, Iowa 50022, phone 712-243-3355 or 800-289-4368, email: scott.suhr@iowadot.us.

Iowa funeral home trying to unload unclaimed remains of 300

News

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Updated) DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Bring out your dead. That’s what an Iowa funeral home is calling on families to do with the unclaimed cremated remains of nearly 100 people that it has been keeping in a locked closet for years, some since the mid-1990s. Lanae Strovers, of Hamilton’s Funeral Home in Des Moines, told TV station KCCI that she has been trying to reach the families for two years and has had some success, making arrangements for 200 sets of the ashes. But the funeral home is still trying to make arrangements for 91 others.

She says in the immediate aftermath of a death, some families aren’t emotionally ready to take home a loved one’s remains and eventually forget to pick them up. Others mistakenly think another family member picked them up. Remains that aren’t claimed in the coming weeks will be buried during a mass service on Sept. 26 at Avon Lake Cemetery.

Cool weather may not give enough heat for crops to mature before frost

Ag/Outdoor

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The air conditioners have been off in many homes and windows open, as we’ve been enjoying mild temperatures in the last several weeks. Iowa State University extension crop specialist, Joel DeJong says things are great for people — but the crops need some more heat to get things growing. “If you go back to the first of May we were 133 growing-degree days behind. In the middle of summer on the best scenarios we are going to add about 25 a day,” according to DeJong. “So under the best scenario you’d say we were probably five to six days behind. If you take a look at average temperatures this time of year — we had a high of 75 and a low of 55 — we’d accumulate 15 per day. So, we’d be closer to ten days behind normal with that.”

He says the soybeans are starting to mature. “We’re seeing pods really starting to fill right now in a lot of these fields. I put a lot of these fields well into the R-Five stage — which means in the top four nodes we’ve got a least one pod with beans at least more than an eighth of an inch long,” De Jong says. “In reality we’re starting to get some size to them and even in some of the later planted fields we are starting to see them get to the R-Six stage where there’s a pod up there with the beans filling the whole length of the pod.”

But the overall progress of the beans has them nowhere near getting ready to turn color. “We’ve still got quite a ways to go on the soybeans, because some years that last week of August you can start to see some of those early varieties start to turn. And I don’t think we are close to seeing any of that in this stage of the game yet,” he says. DeJong says the forecast for cooler than normal temperatures won’t help. “That’s not what we want we want to be at average and maybe slightly above average as we enter the month of September,” DeJong says.

DeJong says in his northwest Iowa area the corn needs more heat to get it to mature before the first hard freeze ends the growing season. “Corn will be okay with adequate water all the way up to 86 degrees high. We’d like to have some of that to kind of get it along and to speed the process — but we don’t see that in the cards,” DeJong says. “Normal frost date is about the 10th of October here. A lot of this corn is not going to be mature until we get to the first of October,” DeJong says.

He says corn in other areas will really have a tough time beating the frost. “Near the Minnesota border, all that June-planted corn right now, a lot of that corn is still in the milk stage. Milk stage tells me it’s going to be well into October before it hits maturity — especially with the forecast,” DeJong says. He expects to see mediocre yields in northwest Iowa for both corn and soybeans.

Atlantic Athletic Facilities plans to be provided to contractors today (Thursday)

News

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Atlantic School District Superintendent Steve Barber reports diagrams and plans for the next phase of the Athletic Facilities Project are set to go out to contractors, today (Thursday).

(A bid opening for the Atlantic Facilities Improvement project will be held 2-p.m. September 26th, at the High School Media Center. The process is open to the public.)

Dave Sturm of Snyder and Associates provided the School Board with an update on the plans during their special meeting on Wednesday evening. On a related note, Barber said the Atlantic School Board approved a Construction Invoice from Allender-Butzke Engineers, Inc., of Urbandale, with regard to Geotechnical Exploration of the District ballfields and Trojan Bowl Improvements. The invoice amounts to $23,600.

The Board, Wednesday evening, discussed the district’s Strategic Plan.

They also approved the resignation of Food Service Worker Lisa Andersen, and Contract Recommendations for Ernie Hawthorne, Mark Vavricek, and Dale Retallic – Special Education drivers.

Following their regular meeting, the Board entered into a Closed Session to conduct Superintendent Steve Barber’s annual evaluation.

LINDA WHIPPLE, 80, of Massena & formerly of Rapid City, SD (Svcs. 9/3/18)

Obituaries

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

LINDA WHIPPLE, 80, of Massena (& formerly of Rapid City, SD), died Thursday, Aug. 29th, at home. Funeral services for LINDA WHIPPLE will be held 10:30-a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 3rd, at the First Baptist Church in Cumberland. Steen Funeral Home in Massena has the arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral home from 3-until 7-p.m. Monday, Sept. 2nd, with the family greeting friends from 5-until 7-p.m.; Online condolences may be left at www.steensfunerals.com

Burial will be in the Massena Center Cemetery, with a luncheon to follow at the Cumberland Fire Dept.

Memorials may be directed to the Linda Whipple memorial fund, to be established by the family at a later date.

LINDA WHIPPLE is survived by:

Her husband – Leroy Whipple, of Massena.

Her daughters – Sherry Whipple, and Miriam (Scott) Holaday, all of Massena.

Her sons – Leroy Whipple, and Isaac Whipple, of Rapid City, SD.

Her sisters – Mary Ann (Raymond) Pritchett, and Ona Marie (Charles) Parr, of Pennsylvania.

9 grandchildren, 9 great-grandchildren, other relatives and friends.

High expectations and goals for Atlantic cross country teams

Sports

August 29th, 2019 by admin

2018 Atlantic XC Teams

The Atlantic cross country teams are coming off a stellar season that saw both the boys and girls squads make a team appearance at the state meet. With the bar raised expectations and goals are lofty for the 2019 season. Atlantic Head Coach Dan Vargason said they want to keep improving each week throughout the season.

On the girls side Taylor McCreedy is expected to lead the way again after a stellar season last year that ended with a sixth place medal at State. 5 of the top 7 scorers are back for the squad to help them try to make another state run. Coach Vargason said McCreedy has been a great leader by example and said she is pushing herself and the team to accomplish more.

The boys squad loses top runner Jalen Petersen who is off to continue his running career in college but the rest of the scoring runners from last season are back. Coach Vargason said they have seen good things from the returners and been surprised by some of the new runners into the fold.

Atlantic opens up the season at the Ram Invite in Glenwood on Saturday. You can hear the full interview with Coach Vargason on Saturday morning at 8:30am on our first 2019 fall edition of the Saturday Morning Coaches Show.

Ernst fields complaints about Army Corps of Engineers

News

August 29th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowa Senators Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst are calling on the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to keep its commitment to repair a key levee near Hamburg. The Corps ordered that the levee be lowered eight feet following flooding in 2011 and residents say that’s one reason this year’s Missouri River flooding was so devastating. Ernst says there are indications the Corps is retreating from its earlier promise to rebuild what’s called the Ditch 6 levee. “They made a commitment to bring that levee up to 919 feet and then they backed off of it,” Ernst says, “so we’ve got to do something about that and we’ll continue to push them.”

Ernst held a town hall meeting yesterday (Wednesday) in the small town of Riverton, which is in the far southwest corner of the state and fielded complaints about the Army Corps’ management of the river. Linda White of Hamburg says her family lost their farm to this spring’s flooding. “Who does the Corps actually have to…answer to?” White asked. “It seems like to us common people that they don’t answer to anybody except for themselves.”

Ernst and Missouri Senator Josh Hawley are co-sponsoring a bill calling for the Corps to make flood control of the Missouri River its highest priority.”The Corps will answer to whatever the congress directs, but understand even those of us along the MIssouri River corridor have different ideas on what those priorities should be,” Ernst said, “so if we can’t all agree up and down the river system that flood control should be the priority, it’s not going to go anywhere.”

And Ernst warns that other representatives want protection for hydroelectricity and recreational projects along the river to be priorities.