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Thursday Girls State Wrestling – Quarterfinals/2nd & 3rd Round Consolation *Complete*

Sports

February 1st, 2024 by Jim Field

Quarterfinals: (Complete)

  • 105 – (2) Kacy Miller (Western Iowa) beat (10) Emma Miller, 11 (Treynor)  FALL 2:56
  • 115 – (5) Carly Henderson, 12 (Riverside, Oakland) beat (4) Taylor Strief (Bettendorf)  DECISION 9-4
  • 125 – (1) Molly Allen, 11 (Riverside, Oakland) beat (9) Kaydn Meyer (South Winneshiek)  FALL 1:23
  • 135 – (1) Maeley Elsbury (South Tama County) beat (24) Brooklyn Lange, 12 (Missouri Valley)  TECH FALL 5:41 (15-0)
  • 135 – (2) Espie Almazan, 12 (Lewis Central) beat (7) Makana Miller (Waverly-Shell Rock)  FALL 1:32
  • 145 – (1) Mahri Manz, 11 (Lewis Central) beat (8) Haley Glade (Earlham)  MAJOR DECISION 11-2
  • 155 – (2) Nicole Olson, 12 (Missouri Valley) beat (10) Miley Walz (East Buchanan)  FALL 5:31
  • 170 – (27) Karissa Oldenburger (Waverly-Shell Rock) beat (3) Grace Britten, 12 (S.W.A.T. Valkyrie)  DECISION 4-3
  • 235 – (12) Haley Armstrong, 10 (S.W.A.T. Valkyrie) beat (4) Alyson Krum (East Buchanan)  DECISION 8-2
  • 235 – (2) Breanna Peach (Iowa Valley, Marengo) beat (7) Jocelyn Buffum, 11 (Missouri Valley)  FALL :10

2nd Round Consolation: (Complete)

  • 100 – (17) Poppy Malone (Boone) beat (15) Jazz Christensen, 11 (S.W.A.T. Valkyrie) DECISION 8-2
  • 110 – (10) Julia Kanne, 12 (Carroll) beat (9) Grace Hoffman, 12 (Kuemper Catholic) FALL 5:42
  • 110 – (13) Lacey Reed (Southern Tier ) beat (14) Maddie McCoy, 11 (Southwest Valley) FALL 1:15
  • 115 – (12) Cora Schut (Sioux Center) beat (22) Emily Lundvall, 12 (Glenwood) DECISION 7-6
  • 120 – (3) Avaeh Smith, 9 (Lewis Central) beat (20) Chyann Bullerman-Yu (Crestwood, Cresco)  FALL 2:53
  • 120 – (7) Jordan Buffum, 11 (Missouri Valley) beat (25) Sadie Smith, 10 (Kuemper Catholic) FALL :56
  • 125 – (20) Josie McCunn, 12 (Red Oak) beat  (19) Reese Roberts (Linn-Mar) DECISION 6-0
  • 125 – (18) Pieper Lester (Clear Lake)  beat (16) Zoey Vandevender, 11 (Highway 34)  FALL 2:00
  • 130 – (14) Alyssa Seippel (Dubuque Senior) beat (13) Evy Marlin, 11 (Highway 34) FALL 5:45
  • 130 – (15) Nicole Bond, 11 (Red Oak) beat (16) Brielle Parke (Linn-Mar)  FALL 5:29
  • 130 – (12) Kylee Shoop (West Delaware, Manchester) beat (27) Cierra Wieland, 10 (CBCSD Co-Op Wrestling)  DECISION 6-5
  • 135 – (5) Bella Mulder (Dallas Center-Grimes) beat (11) Clara Sapienza, 12 (Southwest Iowa)  FALL :55
  • 135 – (19) Averi Burke, 12 (Carroll) beat (29) Ciara Gomez-Bryant (Prairie, Cedar Rapids)  DECISION 13-7
  • 140 – (10) Naomi Templeman (Raccoon River-Northwest) beat (25) Angie Rivera, 10 (Denison-Schleswig)  FALL 1:27
  • 140 – (12) Kassidy Fiala, 11 (Lewis Central) beat (22) Anna Johnson (Cedar Falls)  FALL 1:38
  • 155 – (17) Nancy Bowman, 11 (Logan-Magnolia) beat (31) Ashlynn Carter-Shook (Mount Vernon)  FALL 4:09
  • 170 – (9) Kalen Westerfield, 10 (Lewis Central) beat (23) Isabella Taylor (Anamosa)  FALL 2:31
  • 190 – (15) Briar Ludeman (Cedar Falls) beat(16) Ellen Gerlock, 11 (S.W.A.T. Valkyrie)  DECISION 8-4
  • 235 – (21) Emma Daniels, 10 (Carroll) beat (27) Amelia Sirola (Okoboji/HMS)  FALL 3:18
  • 235 – (17) Madysen Lippe (Decorah) beat (15) Savannah Sistad, 12 (Highway 34)  DECISION 8-2

3rd Round Consolation: (Complete)

  • 110 – (10) Julia Kanne, 12 (Carroll) beat (18) Makenna Kurth (Waukon)  DECISION 13-7
  • 120 – (18) Keston Spratt (Williamsburg) beat (7) Jordan Buffum, 11 (Missouri Valley)  FALL 2:21
  • 120 – (3) Avaeh Smith, 9 (Lewis Central) beat (11) Elyse Engebretson (Ankeny)  FALL 1:30
  • 125 – (11) Anna O`Rear (West Delaware, Manchester) beat (20) Josie McCunn, 12 (Red Oak)  FALL 1:07
  • 130 – (7) Lyni Gusick (Alburnett) beat (15) Nicole Bond, 11 (Red Oak)  FALL :42
  • 135 – (12) Morgan Strief (Bettendorf) beat (19) Averi Burke, 12 (Carroll)  DECISION 4-1
  • 140 – (3) Lizzy Wolf (Benton Community)beat (12) Kassidy Fiala, 11 (Lewis Central)  FALL 1:13
  • 155 – (17) Nancy Bowman, 11 (Logan-Magnolia) beat (9) Destiny Kolheim (Charles City)  FALL :53
  • 170 – (16) Kensi Steele (Iowa City Liberty) beat (9) Kalen Westerfield, 10 (Lewis Central)  FALL 2:33
  • 235 – (14) Brooklyn Robinson (Humboldt) beat (21) Emma Daniels, 10 (Carroll)  FALL 1:34

Iowa State-UNI Dual Moved to 1 p.m. Start Time

Sports

February 1st, 2024 by Asa Lucas

AMES, Iowa – The Iowa State-Northern Iowa dual scheduled for Sunday, Feb. 11 has been moved up an hour to a 1 p.m. start time.

The dual can still be followed via live stream on Big 12 Now on ESPN+ and the Learfield Varsity App.

ISU is back in action tomorrow night against No. 17 West Virginia at 7 p.m. inside Hilton Coliseum.

Megan Meyer Returns to Drake Women’s Basketball

Sports

February 1st, 2024 by Asa Lucas

DES MOINES, Iowa – Graduate guard Megan Meyer will rejoin the Drake women’s basketball team for the remainder of the 2023-24 season, the program announced today.

Meyer, a 2023 Drake University graduate, played for the Bulldogs from 2021-23 after transferring from the University of Iowa. She started eight games last year before suffering a season-ending knee injury. The Mason City native has averaged 12.3 points and 2.5 assists on 42.5 percent shooting during her Drake career.

“Our team is elated to welcome Megan back into the program.” Suzie Glazer Hurt Head Coach Allison Pohlman said. “We’re excited to add her familiar skillset to this group and watch our team’s chemistry continue to develop.”

Meyer is immediately eligible to participate in basketball activities.

Hawkeyes Open Spring at FAU Paradise Invitational

Sports

February 1st, 2024 by Asa Lucas

THIS WEEK
The University of Iowa women’s golf team will open its spring season in Boca Raton, Florida, at the FAU Paradise Invitational. The 54-hole tournament will be held from Feb. 5-6 at Osprey Point Golf Course’s Raven & Falcon course (par 72, 6,204 yards). Action begins with a shotgun start at 8 a.m. (CT).

FOLLOW LIVE
Fans can follow the tournament via live scoring at Golfstat.com.

THE LINEUP
The Hawkeyes’ lineup includes: sophomore Madison Dabagia, sophomore Kaitlyn Hanna, junior Paula Miranda, sophomore Shannyn Vogler and sophomore Riley Lewis.

THE FIELD
The 12-team field competing in the Sunshine State includes: Denver (53), East Carolina (87), Florida Atlantic (135), Florida International (139), Indiana (69), Iowa (92), Notre Dame (73), Rutgers (113), South Florida (33), UTSA (55), Vanderbilt (21) and Wisconsin (75). (NCAA rankings are in parentheses.)

THE COURSE
Osprey Point Golf Course is one of the top public golf courses in Florida and has received numerous awards from various organizations, including Golf Range Association of America and Golf Digest since opening in 2010. This 6,204-yard, par-72 course is home to three nine-hole courses and an award-winning practice facility. Each hole has wide fairways and well-manicured visible greens.

UP NEXT
After taking a three-week break, the Hawkeyes will return to action on Feb. 25-26 at the Westbrook Spring Invitational in Peoria, Arizona.

2 arrested in Ringgold County on drug & Child Endangerment charges

News

February 1st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Mount Ayr, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Ringgold County report two people were arrested on drug and child endangerment charges Wednesday, after a search warrant was executed at 105 E. Monroe Street, in Mount Ayr. The rental home is owned by Mark & Lynda Triggs.

Authorities say Dakota Cheyenne Burkhamer and Mikkaela Katherine Moore face charges that include: Child Endangerment – Aggravated Misdemeanor; Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor- Simple Misdemeanor; and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia- Simple Misdemeanor.

Burkhamer was additionally charged with Drug Distribution Violation to Person Under 18- a Class B Felony. His cash-only bond was set at $27,600. The cash-only bond for Moore was set at $2,600.

Moore & Burkhamer

*Any potential criminal charges identified above are merely allegations and any defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Iowa men host Ohio State Friday night

Sports

February 1st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Hawkeye men return to Big Ten action Friday night by hosting Ohio State. The Hawks are 4-6 in the league race after faltering late in a loss at Indiana. Ohio State has dropped six of seven and is 3-7 in the league race. Iowa coach Fran McCaffery is concerned about the Buckeye’s guards.

Attendance has waned at Carver-Hawkeye Arena this season. The Hawkeyes are averaging just over 10-thousand, 300 fans per home game in Big Ten play.

McCaffery says keeping freshman center Owen Freeman out of foul trouble will be important going forward. They have been doing film study with Freeman in hopes of limiting his fouls.

Sophomore guard Josh Dix says the Hawkeyes need to be better at crunch time after suffering a couple of close losses.

Iowa has already dropped three Big Ten games at home and can ill afford another one.

Fatal, near head-on crash SW of Marshalltown Thu. morning

News

February 1st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Marshalltown, Iowa) – A woman driving the wrong way in Marshall County died during a near head-on collision this (Thursday) morning, southwest of Marshalltown. The Iowa State Patrol reports 59-year-old Jennifer Gene Robb, of Marshalltown, who was wearing her seat belt, died at the scene of the crash on Highway 330 near Highway 30, at around 7-a.m.

Authorities say a 2006 Ford Taurus Robb was driving was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes. A 2016 Cadillac CT6 driven by 44-year-old Heith Michael Meyer, of Iowa Falls, was northbound in the northbound lanes. Near mile marker 18, the Ford was southbound in the northbound left lane, at the same time the Cadillac was in that lane. Robb took evasive action by braking/steering away.

Meyer saw the Ford after checking a mirror, and attempted to steer away, but the vehicles sideswiped head-on from opposite direction. The crash remains under investigation. The Patrol was assisted at the scene by the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office and EMS personnel.

Tax panel chairmen propose new idea as ‘glide path’ to 0% Iowa income tax

News

February 1st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The chairmen of House and Senate committees that oversee tax policy are proposing what they describe as a sustainable way to gradually eliminate Iowa’s individual income tax. The idea? Have the Iowa Public Employees Retirement System start managing the state’s more than $3 billion Taxpayer Relief Fund. The profits earned from investing that money would be used to ratchet down the state income tax rate over time.

“We’re doing something that everyday Iowans do for their retirement, everyday businesses here in the state do,” Senate Ways and Means Committee chairman Dan Dawson told reporters. “We’re using the money, growing it for something bigger.”

Bobby Kaufmann, a Republican from Wilton, is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. “If you look at what other states have done, not only is it one of the more innovative plans, I think it’s one of the most responsible in the entire country at getting Iowa to our long term goal of zero percent income tax,” Kaufmann said.

Representative Bobby Kaufmann and Senator Dan Dawson speak with reporters on Feb. 1, 2024. (RI photo)

Dawson said the plan ensures state government can meet its spending obligations even as the state reduces income tax revenue. “Ultimately it’s a responsible glide path to zero,” Dawson said, “as opposed to some massive sales tax increase or eliminating a bunch of (income tax) exemptions out there.”

Kaufmann said now’s the time for the public to weigh in on the idea. “As this is talked about at forums, as it’s disseminated amongst the press, I think you’re going to find a high appetite for Iowans to want to do that,” Kaufmann said. “They’ll communicate that to us and we’ll get this done as soon as we can.”

Both lawmakers, though, describe the proposal as a long-term plan and expect to prepare a bill this spring that would speed up already approved income tax cuts. They’re waiting on a March report on state tax revenue and may use some elements of the tax reduction plan Governor Reynolds introduced three weeks ago. The two lawmakers also plan to advance a proposed constitutional amendment that would require a two-thirds vote in the legislature to raise any state tax.

Survey: Recession, lack of workers, still biggest threats to businesses

News

February 1st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The economies in Iowa and the Midwest improved, slightly, during January, according to Creighton University’s monthly survey of business leaders and supply managers in Iowa and eight other states. Creighton economist Ernie Goss says the Business Conditions Index is a leading economic indicator for the nine-state region, based on a zero-to-100 scale where 50 is considered growth neutral. “The overall reading was up slightly, now it’s up to 50.9 and that’s from December’s 50.3,” Goss says. “I won’t say that’s great news, but it’s better news than I was expecting.”

Iowa’s overall economic index showed a relatively modest increase from 49.7 in December to 51.8 in January. Supply managers were asked about what they see as the greatest threat to their operations during the coming six months, and he says some of their answers were routine, while others were a surprise. “Twenty-two percent said recession, now, that’s pretty much expected,” Goss says. “Twenty-one percent see finding and hiring workers is still an issue, 17.4% said higher input prices, and 4.4%, and that’s a small percentage, said tariff and trade wars.”

Hiring during January was, in a word, bad — according to Goss. The hiring rate fell to 39-point-one for the Midwest, well below growth neutral, but he notes there are diverging reasons being given for the cause. “Twenty-six-point-one percent of the supply managers reported job losses for the month, and 43.5% reported a shortage of job applicants, so there’s some mixed messages in there,” Goss says. “Thirteen percent said they were not hiring due to the economic slowdown, so all in all, it’s showing that the labor market’s still tighter than I would have expected.”

Ernie Goss (Creighton University photo)

According to U.S. International Trade Association data, Goss says Iowa’s manufacturing exports expanded from $14.1 billion for the first 11 months of 2022 to $15.1 billion for the same period in 2023, representing a growth rate of 7.0%.

House Democrats propose Iowa minimum wage rise to $15 by mid-2026

News

February 1st, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) Democrats in the Iowa House are calling for an increase in the minimum wage, an expansion of the annual state sales tax holiday and a state subsidy for some child care workers. “We, as Iowa House Democrats, are proud to remind Iowans we are focused on the things they care about,” House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst said. “…Iowans are telling us what they need and we’re responding.”

House Democrats propose raising the minimum wage to $10.80 in July — to equal the minimum wage in Minnesota — with another increase in 2025 and then setting it at $15 dollars in mid-2026. Iowa’s minimum wage has been $7.25 an hour since 2008. “No other adjoining state in this northern plains region pays less to its minimum wage workers,” said Representative Ken Croken, a Democrat from Davenport. “It’s wrong. It’s indecent.”

Representative Tracy Ehlert, a Democrat from Cedar Rapids, said it’s time to take a pilot project statewide and provide state assistance to child care workers, to help pay for child care for their own kids. “This not only offers an incentive for the child care workforce who’s often underpaid,” Ehlert said, “but it also helps address access issues across the state and will help families looking for child care.”

House Democratic Leader Jennifer Konfrst speaks at news conference on Feb. 1, 2024. (House Democratic Caucus Staff photo)

Representative Sue Cahill, a Democrat from Marshalltown, said Iowa’s two-day sales tax holiday should go for two weeks and cover items worth up to $250 rather than just $100. She’d also include far more than just apparel, exempting school and art supplies, musical instruments, computer supplies and sports gear from the state sales tax in the first two weeks of August. “I’m submitting this bill to provide relief or more money in the pockets of more Iowans,” Cahill said.

House Democrats also propose speeding up the process for thousands of Iowans with disabilities who are waiting to hear if they qualify for Medicaid coverage. Representative Josh Turek, a Democrat from Council Bluffs, said 21,000 Iowans with disabilities are currently on a waiting list. “This is abhorrent, honestly, and morally reprehensible that individuals would have to wait for six years for basic health care,” Turek said.

Turek told reporters that as “the sole disabled legislator,” this issue is “near and dear to him.” Turek was born with a condition called spina bifada and has used a wheelchair since childhood.