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Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: Thursday, March 3rd, 2022

Weather

March 3rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: P/Cloudy to Cloudy w/a chance of flurries/sprinkles this morning. High 45. NE @ 10-15 mph.
Tonight: P/Cldy. Low 30. E @ 5.
Tomorrow: P/Cldy. High 65. S @ 15-25.
Saturday: P/Cldy to cldy w/showers & thunderstorms. High 65.
Sunday: P/Cldy to Cloudy. High near 40.

Wednesday’s High in Atlantic was 75. Our Low this morning, 29. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 66 and the Low was 25. The Record High on this date was 79 in 1983. The Record Low was -11 in 2014.

Bill to ban trans athletes from Iowa girls’ and women’s sports sent to governor

News, Sports

March 3rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republicans in the Iowa Senate have sent the governor a bill to ban transgender athletes from participating in girls sports in Iowa’s public and private K-through-12 schools. The ban also applies to women’s sports in all colleges and universities in Iowa, limiting participation to athletes who have female marked on their birth certificates. Senator Jesse Green, a Republican from Boone, says the bill is historic.

“We send a message to the nation that Iowans will not put common sense aside for wokeness,” Green said. “In the midst of an ongoing culture war, Iowans are taking bold steps to preserve the integrity and purity of athletic competition for generations to come.” All 17 “no” votes came from Democrats. Senate Democratic Leader Zach Wahls says the bill violates the Iowa value of inclusion.

“Iowa politicians have decided to pour gasoline on the culture war fires and embrace the worst form of identity politics, pitting Iowans against each other,” Wahls says. “…Why does this legislature have to police the lives of some of the most marginalized people in our society?” Governor Reynolds, who is expected to sign the bill, has said Iowa girls are in danger of losing out on college scholarships or winning championships if they’re competing against transgender athletes who were born male, but identify as female.

Senator Jeff Taylor, a Republicans from Sioux Center, says transgender ideology poses a danger to women. “This bill is not about hatred or discrimination. It is about keeping ourselves in alignment with reality,” Taylor says. “…It simply says, in regard to a non-coed, team context, that girls should be competing against other girls in K-12 athletics and women should be competing against other women in college athletics.”

Senator Pam Jochum, a Democrat from Dubuque, says the bill will isolate trans youth just like previous policies that forbid participation based on other characteristics, like race. “History is stained with these artificial boundaries that we set up,” Jochum said, “and as time goes on and we start to understand more and more of this, we open up our hearts and our minds and we become a more inclusive society.”

Eleven states have passed similar trans athlete bans and lawsuits challenging those bans have been filed in four of them. Senator Claire Celsi, a Democrat from Des Moines, says in 2020 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the Civil Rights Act protects transgender Americans from discrimination. “I find this current bill not only legally risky, but petty, partisan, hateful and the reasoning shaky,” Celsi said.

Senator Jim Carlin of Sioux City says he and other Republicans are standing up for girls and women. “We’re just trying to protect time honored boundaries for women and little girls who want the privacy of a restroom and a shower, who want authentic competition in the field of sports,” Carlin said. The bill passed the House on February 21st on a 55 to 39 vote.

House votes 71-28 to make betting on e-sports legal in Iowa

News, Sports

March 3rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – “Cashless” wagering would be allowed at Iowa casinos under legislation that’s cleared the Iowa House. Representative Shannon Lundgren, a Republican from Peosta, says many people now have digital wallets on their smartphones and do not carry cash.  “The cashless e-wagering system allows you to set a time limit and an amount,” Lundgren says. “Once that amount is gone, you have to wait until your time limit is up in order to reload it.”

Representative Chris Hall, a Democrat, says he’s supported Iowa’s gambling industry in the past — including the casino in his hometown of Sioux City — but cashless wagering may be a step too far after the explosion of sports betting. “I now am kind of struck by turning on SportsCenter on the weekend or turning on ESPN and being surprised at the fact that more and more time is devoted to a ticker at the bottom of the screen that is placing odds on the games or a segment of SportsCenter that is solely devoted to what the betting lines are,” Hall says, “so it’s actually becoming a little bit more about gambling coverage than it is about the athletics and the sports themselves.”

It’s been legal in Iowa to place bets on sporting events like football and basketball games since August of 2019. The bill approved by the House would make betting on “electronic sports” legal, too. E-sports competitions feature people playing a video game. There are now professional and college e-sports leagues. Representative Sandy Salmon, a Republican from Janesville, says the bill represents another expansion of gambling in Iowa.

“This makes the availability and access to gambling so much easier, thus increasing its danger and addictive power,” Salmon says. “…People tend to think that when something is legal that it is o.k. and safe and even helpful and even that it can’t hurt you — and that’s a lie.” The bill also would make it legal to bet on charity events featuring professional athletes — like golf tournaments and the N-B-A All-Star game.

Betting on player-of-the-year awards and the drafts held by professional leagues — like next month’s N-F-L draft — would be allowed as well. The bill passed a 71-to-28 vote and goes to the Senate for consideration.

GARY GENE RUHL, 64, of rural Griswold (Visitation 3/5/22)

Obituaries

March 3rd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

GARY GENE RUHL, 64, of rural Griswold, died Tue., March 1st, at home. A visitation for GARY RUHL will be held from 2-until 4-p.m. Saturday, March 5th, at the Rieken Duhn Funeral Home in Griswold.

Interment will be at a later date.

GARY RUHL is survived by:

His wife – Zoe Ruhl.

His daughter – Misty (Brandon) Adams.

His brother – Lyle Ruhl.

4 grandchildren, other relatives, man friends and his brother- and sister-in-law.

Iowa State goes cold in home loss to Oklahoma State

Sports

March 2nd, 2022 by admin

A dreadful offensive performance spoiled Senior Night at Iowa State. Oklahoma State closed the game on a 23-6 run to beat the Cyclones 53-36. The 36 points were the fewest ever for an ISU team in Hilton Coliseum. The Cyclones made only 15 of 52 shots.

That’s Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger who says they struggled with the Cowboy’s zone.

The loss snapped ISU’s four game win streak. The Cyclones travel to third ranked Baylor on Saturday to close the regular season.

Iowa State drops to 7-10 in the Big 12.

Shots won’t fall for Spartans, season ends with quarterfinal loss to MMCRU

Sports

March 2nd, 2022 by admin

 

Shots wouldn’t fall and the Exira-EHK Spartans saw their season come to an end in the Class 1A Quarterfinals on Wednesday afternoon. MMCRU won the rematch of last year’s quarterfinal game 50-39.

An early 13-0 run in the first quarter put the Royals out front and Exira-EHK would never get closer than 7 points the rest of the game. The Royals led 28-14 at half and 43-25 by the end of the third. MMCRU made it difficult for the Spartans to get any paint touches for much of the game and they settled for a lot of outside shots. It was a rough go of it from outside with the Spartans going just 4-32 from three and only 15-51 from the field in the game. Spartan junior Quinn Grubbs said their defense wasn’t good enough early either.

The Royals were able to get their offense going a little bit better and also gained an edge by dominating the glass. The Royals outrebounded the Spartans 44-21, limiting the Spartans to only 4 second chance opportunities in the game. Emily Dreckmann scored 18 points, grabbed 6 rebounds, and blocked 3 shots. Ellie Hilbrands added 8 points and 13 reboounds for the Royals. MMCRU pick up their first ever state tournament win as a merged district and improved to 24-1. They’ll advance to take on defending champion Newell-Fonda on Friday at 1:30 p.m.

The Spartans were led by 11 points each from Quinn Grubbs and Mollie Rasmussen. Exira-EHK finishes another impressive season with a 23-2 record. The Spartans said goodbye to seniors Alisa Partridge, Mollie Rasmussen, and Macy Emgarten. After the game Rasmussen talked about the accomplishments she can be proud of.

Grubbs was thankful for the time she has had with a good group of seniors and knows it will be a tough act to follow for the next guard.

It wasn’t the finish the Spartans had in mind, but they sure do have a lot to be proud of again.

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Exira/EHK, Underwood Fall in Girls State Basketball Quarterfinals

Sports

March 2nd, 2022 by admin

Class 2A Quarterfinals:

#2 Denver 58, #7 Underwood 51

Denver sophomore Macy Matthias knocked down two 3-pointers to put her team ahead to stay late in the third quarter and the second-seeded Cyclones went on to beat seventh-seeded Underwood 58-51 to start Day 3 of the 2022 state tournament.  Denver improved 24-2 with the victory.  The Cyclones also got a big lift from senior starter Sydney Eggena, who was averaging a modest 6.5 points. She finished with 18 on 7-for-12 shooting to lead all scorers and grabbed six rebounds.  Teammate Reese Johnson filled the stat sheet with 12 points, 16 rebounds, four assists and four steals, while Grace Hennessy added 10 points, six rebounds and two steals.  Underwood (22-3) reached the state tournament for the first time since IGHSAU Hall of Famer Jamie Boyd led the Eagles to consecutive state titles in 2003 and 2004. And with only one senior, they have a promising future.  That senior, Kendra Kuck, led Underwood with 13 points. She also made three steals, blocked a shot and handed out an assist. Juniors Aliya Humphrey and Leah Hall each scored 10 points for the Eagles and Humphrey added five assists. Alizabeth Jacobsen, a 6-foot-3 sophomore who has star potential, grabbed 13 rebounds, blocked two shots and scored nine points on 4-for-5 shooting.

#3 Central Lyon 42, #6 Cascade 40

A dramatic finish ended the Class 2A quarterfinals and sent third-seeded Central Lyon into the next round.  Sophomore Desta Hoogendoorn took a bounce pass from Regan Van Wyhe and hit a short jumper in the lane at the buzzer to give Central Lyon a 42-40 victory over Cascade.  Hoogendoorn finished with 15 points and 11 rebounds to lead the Lions (23-2), who’ll face second-seeded Denver in a semifinal at 11:45 a.m. Friday. She also had three assists and two steals and blocked four shots.  Addison Klosterbuer added 14 points with four 3-pointers and nine rebounds for Central Lyon, while Kaylee Davis had six points and seven rebounds.  Ally Hoffman led Cascade with 16 points and 11 rebounds. Alyssa Lux added eight points, three assists and three steals for the Cougars (20-4), who made the tournament for the eighth time in 10 seasons.

CLASS 1A Quarterfinals

#1 Newell-Fonda 77, #8 North Mahaska 44

The top-seeded Mustangs swept past eighth-seeded North Mahaska 77-44 to open the Class 1A quarterfinals and now sit just two victories from a record-tying fourth consecutive state championship.  They did it the usual way – with swarming defense that produced fastbreak layups and points in bunches. Newell-Fonda came up with 29 steals in this one and forced 40 turnovers in all.  The Mustangs (24-1) weren’t perfect. They had 23 turnovers themselves.  But they shot 53 percent in the second and 50.8 percent for the game and amassed 46 points off turnovers.  All 15 players saw action for coach Dick Jungers and 11 scored.  Macy Sievers, the lone senior who starts for the Mustangs, led with 16 points on 8-for-12 shooting – mostly layups after steals. She also grabbed four rebounds, handed out three assists and made six steals.  Sophomore Kierra Jungers, the coach’s daughter, had 15 points, five rebounds, five blocks and five steals and Mary Walker scored 11. Freshman Kinzee Hinders came off the bench to get nine points, three rebounds and four steals.  Sophomore Isabel Bartek was the only starter who didn’t score, but she contributed five assists, four rebounds and four steals. Ten Newell-Fonda players recorded at least one steal.

#4 MMCRU 50, #5 Exira-EHK 39

In a repeat pairing from last year’s Class 1A quarterfinals, fourth-seeded MMCRU jumped out early and beat fifth-seeded Exira-EHK 50-39 to move on to Friday’s semifinal round.  The Royals (25-1) turned the tables after losing to the Spartans 60-55 in the quarterfinal round a year ago. A fast start did the trick.  MMCRU made six of its first eight shots, including three 3-pointers, in bolting to a 15-2 lead less than 4 minutes into the game. The Royals were up 17-7 at the end of the quarter and the Spartans never found enough office to cut into that lead.  Exira-EHK managed only six field goals in the first half and shot 29.4 percent for the game.  Emily Dreckman led the winners with 18 points, six rebounds, three blocks and two steals. Taylor Harpenau and Mya Holmes each scored nine points and Ellie Hilbrands added eight points to go with 13 rebounds. Holmes complemented her scoring with six rebounds, three blocks and two steals.  Quinn Grubbs and Mollie Rasmussen led Exira-EHK (22-2) with 11 points each. Macy Emgarten added eight points and eight rebounds for the Spartans, whose only other loss was to Class 2A semifinalist Panorama in late January.  This was Exira-EHK’s sixth trip to state in the last eight years and only the second time the Spartans failed to reach the semifinals in that span.

#2 Bishop Garrigan 77, #7 Burlington Notre Dame 42

6-3 junior Audi Crooks poured in 32 points as Bishop Garrigan raced past previously unbeaten Burlington Notre Dame 77-42 and into the Class 1A semifinals for the third straight year. Crooks scored mainly on lob passes from her teammates in making 15-of-18 shots. And two of those misses didn’t matter because she grabbed the rebound and went right back up to score. College coaches have been impressed by how deftly she catches the ball and that was apparent when she easily snared a long pass from point guard Molly Joyce and banked in a layup. Joyce also was a big factor, scoring 25 points to go with six assists, five rebounds and seven steals. Abbie Capesius added 12 points and eight rebounds for the second-seeded Golden Bears, who shot 55 percent and will take a 23-3 record into the semifinals at 3:15 p.m. Friday. Win that one and Bishop Garrigan would be in the championship game for the third straight year. The Golden Bears lost to Newell-Fonda in their two previous appearances. Bishop Garrigan has won 20 straight since a 3-3 start against a rigorous schedule that included games with Class 5A Iowa City West, 3A tournament semifinalist West Lyon and Newell-Fonda, which beat the Golden Bears 74-70.

#6 North Linn 58, #3 Springville 56

Atlantic’s newest Police Officer is sworn-in

News

March 2nd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The latest addition to the Atlantic Police force was sworn-in Wednesday evening, by Mayor Grace Garrett. Garrett administered the Oath of Office to Officer Jimmy James.

Atlantic Mayor Grace Garrett congratulates Office James after he is sworn-in. (3/2/22)

He replaces Officer Dustin Gelner, who left to serve with the Iowa State Patrol. City Administrator John Lund says this was the second of four openings for the Atlantic Police Department, a full third of the department. Officer James previously served as a Cass County Sheriff’s Deputy, and is returning to Atlantic from Polk County.

In other business, the Atlantic City Council passed a Resolution on setting the Maximum Property Tax Dollars for those levies. John Lund says “The City’s proposed debt service levy of $4 is completely hidden from [the published] notice. On the property tax statements of properties where no changes in assessed or taxable value have occurred, the City will show an increase of 2.92%, not the 3.86% shown on the notice.” Lund says also, “While 2.92% is the increase in dollars generated, it is not going to be reflective of the impact on the property taxes levied against individual properties. There is no way to know, what the impact will be in the year-to-year impact on individual taxpayers.”

The Council also passed a Resolution “Adopting the Preliminary FY 2023 Budget,” and setting the date of March 16th for Adopt the FY 2023 Budget. John Lund says “A few non-substantive changes were made to correct unbalanced transfers,” resulting in an updated budget for FY23 that totals a little more $14.7-million, which is a decrease from FY 2022 of 1.78%, or $266,800. The bottom line, according to Administrator Lund, is the “The City’s combined property tax levy shall remain at the level set in the FY 2021 and FY 2022 Budget.”

In the final order of business, the Council passed a Resolution setting March 16, 2022, as the date for a public hearing on adopting the FY 2023 10-year Capital Improvement Plan (CIP).

(UPDATE) High Path Avian Influenza (HPAI) Detected in Pottawattamie County

Ag/Outdoor, News

March 2nd, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Council Bluffs (March 2, 2022) — Local officials have been notified of a confirmed positive case of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) that had infected a non-commercial backyard poultry flock in rural Pottawattamie County. The site is not part of the commercial food supply chain and according to the Centers for Disease Control, poses a low risk of transmission to humans.

Officials from Emergency Management, Pottawattamie County Public Health, and the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office were briefed by the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship (IDALS) earlier today. IDALS has worked directly with the site to mitigate potential spread of the virus and will continue monitoring the site and area.

Pott. County EMA

The Iowa Department of Public Health and Pottawattamie County Public Health will monitor those individuals who were in contact with the flock to rule out any potential of bird to human transmission regarding this case. The CDC reports that there have been no detected human cases from HPAI in the United States.

“Local, state, and federal plans developed to respond to these kinds of incidents are being implemented and there is no immediate public health or food-related safety concern at this time,” commented Doug Reed, director of emergency management.” IDALS is the lead agency for HPAI and other foreign animal disease responses. Local officials will provide
support to the state-led event, as needed, or requested.

Poultry producers, residents with backyard poultry or bird flocks, and the public can find more information, updates, and resources at https://pcema-ia.org/hpai

2021-22 Western Iowa All-Conference Basketball Teams

Sports

March 2nd, 2022 by Jim Field

WIC Girls Basketball

MVP: Aleah Hermanson, Audubon.

First Team: *Aleah Hermansen (Audubon, sr.); *Clara Tiegland (Treynor, jr.); Kendra Kuck (Underwood, sr.); *Jaci Christensen (Audubon, sr.); Maya Moss (Lo-Ma, jr.); Aliyah Humphery (Underwood, jr.); Delaney Goshorn (AHSTW, soph.).  *Unanimous Selection

Second Team: Alizabeth Jacobsen (Underwood, soph.); Macanna Guritz (Lo-Ma, jr.); Alexa Schwartz (Treynor, soph.); Greylan Hornbeck (Lo-Ma, jr.); Taylor Kenkel (Tri-Center, soph.); Bianca Cadwell (IKM-Manning, sr.); Elly Henderson (Riverside, fr.).

 

WIC Boys Basketball

MVP: Raydden Grobe, AHSTW

First Team: *Raydden Grobe (AHSTW, sr.); *Brayden Lund (AHSTW, jr.); *Kyle Sternberg (AHSTW, jr.); Thomas Schwartz (Treynor, sr.); Grady Jeppersen (Riverside, soph.); Jack VanFossen (Underwood, soph.); Michael Turner (Tri-Center, jr.); Jace Tams (Treynor, soph.).  *Unanimous Selections.

Second Team: Mason Boothby (Underwood, soph.); Carson Bauer (Audubon, jr.); Cole Staska (Missouri Valley, sr.); Cole Scheffler (AHSTW, jr.); Ayden Salais (Riverside, jr.); Kent Elliott (Tri-Center, jr.); Aiden Bell (Riverside, jr.).

 

WIC Academic All-Conference honors (Must maintin a 3.25 cumularive grade point average; Must be a Senior)

Wrestling

  • AHSTW: Denver Pauley
  • Audubon: Alex Foran.
  • Logan-Magnolia: Rex Johnsen; Marcell Jonathan; Gavin Maguire; Ruger Meeker; Brady Thompson; Sean Thompson; Erikah Rife (mgr.).
  • Missouri Valley: Kadin Bonham, Connor Murray, Gage Clausen, Cody Gilpin, Brad Ortner, Chloe Jimmerson (mgr.), Yazmin Lopez (mgr.); Jessica McIlnay (mgr.).
  • Treynor: Aiden Kennedy, Logan Marr.
  • Tri-Center: Brecken Freeberg, Ethan Flaharty.
  • Underwood: Carter Davis.

Girls Basketball

  • AHSTW: Abbie Willet.
  • Audubon: Cheyanne Barber, Jaci Christensen, Aleah Hermansen, Kennedy Rohe, Kate Tessman.
  • IKM-Manning: Bianca Cadwell, Macie Doyel, Taylor Ferneding.
  • Logan-Magnolia: Samantha Yoder.
  • Riverside: Madison Heiny, Morgan Heiny.
  • Treynor: Emma Flathers, Brooklyn Sedlak.
  • Tri-Center: Lydia Assman, Maddie Wood.
  • Underwood: Kendra Kuck.

Boys Basketball

  • AHSTW: Raydden Grobe, Jace Petersen.
  • Audubon: Jackson Deist, Rylan Hansen, Joey Schramm, Gavin Smith, Braden Wessel.
  • IKM-Manning: Brody Blom, Conner Halbur, Max Nielsen, Luke Ramsey, Nolan Ramsey.
  • Logan-Magnolia: Carter Edney, Tru Melby, Jackson Thomsen, Maeley Rosengren (mgr.).
  • Missouri Valley: Will Borgaila, Conner Murray, Will Gutzmer, Cole Staska.
  • Treynor: Davin Rucker, Thomas Schwartz.
  • Tri-Center: Cade Carmen, Morgan Lockman (mgr.).
  • Underwood: Bryce Patten.