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Red Oak man arrested on theft & other charges Mon. afternoon

News

October 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – A man arrested Monday afternoon in Red Oak faces charges that include Theft in the 5th Degree, 3rd Degree Harassment, Disorderly Conduct and Assault in Violation of [an] Individuals rights. Red Oak Police say 46-year-old Ronald Gordon Bingham, Jr., of Red Oak, was taken into custody at around 3:36-p.m. in the 500 block of High Street. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $1,000 cash bond.

Nunn Announces October Mobile Office Hours to Serve Iowans in Their Communities

News

October 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES — U.S. Representative Zach Nunn (IA-03) has announced his October mobile office hours across Iowa’s Third District to assist constituents who may not be able to travel to one of the Third District Congressional offices in Creston, Des Moines, and Ottumwa. Iowans will be able to attend these mobile office hours to get help from their Congressional office with Social Security, Medicare, passports, visas, veterans’ benefits, military records, tax returns, and other issues with federal government agencies.

“My top priority is providing excellent constituent services to Iowans,” said Rep. Nunn. “Our mobile office hours are an opportunity for Iowans to get help from their representative in their hometowns.”

The (area) schedule for October Mobile Office Hours is as follow:

Union County 
Afton City Hall 
115 East Kansas Street, Afton, IA 50836
Wednesday, October 4, 2023
9:00 AM – 3:00 PM

Guthrie County 
Bayard Public Library
315 Main Street, Bayard, IA 50029
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
 
Cass County 
Atlantic Public Library 
507 Poplar St, Atlantic, IA 50022
Thursday, October 12, 2023
9:00 AM – 3:00 PM

Montgomery County 
Stanton Community Center 
501 Elliot St, Stanton, IA 51573
Friday, October 13, 2023
10:00 AM – 3:00 PM

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Tue., Oct. 3, 2023

Weather

October 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly sunny & windy, w/a slight chance of showers & thunderstorms late this afternoon. High 82. S @ 10-20 w/gusts to near 30 mph.
Tonight: Cloudy w/showers & thunderstorms after midnight. Low around 59. S/SW @ 10-20 w/gusts to near 30.New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, with a high near 72. W/NW winds 10 mph.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 71.
Friday: Mo. Sunny & windy w/a slight chance of showers. High near 55.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 88. The Low was 62. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 79 and the Low was 43. The Record High for Oct. 3rd in Atlantic was 95 in 1997, and the Record Low was 23, in 2010. Sunrise is at 7:18. Sunset at 7:00.

Harvest moves ahead with dry weather

Ag/Outdoor, News

October 3rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Dry weather gave farmers almost a full week of field time and the latest corn and soybean harvest numbers show the result. The U-S-D-A report show 16 percent of corn was out of the fields by the end of last week. That is up nine percent from the previous week and the corn harvest is now four days ahead of last year and the five-year average. Corn condition improved slightly to 51 percent good to excellent.

The soybeans harvested more than doubled — hitting 24 percent — up from 11 percent the week before. Beans are right about on schedule, just one day ahead of last year, and equal to the average. Soybean condition improved two percentage points so 49 percent are rated in good to excellent condition.

Combine harvesting corn. (ISU Extension photo)

Woodbine Dominates at home during the Woodbine XC/Rolling Valley Meet

Sports

October 2nd, 2023 by Asa Lucas

The Rolling Valley Conference championship was dominated by the Woodbine cross country team Monday night. Landon Bendgen was the top runner of the day on the boys side taking first place with only one point. Woodbine would win the conference championship with a total time of 1:34:58.69 and an average time of 18:59.74. At just the invitational, Woodbine still took first place, but Missouri Valley came in second for the boys.

Varsity Results + Rolling Valley Conference Results 5000 Run
1 V-Woodbine (22)
Total Time: 1:34:58.69
Average: 18:59.74
2 V-Missouri Valley (37)
Total Time: 1:44:00.24
Average: 20:48.05

For the girls side of the Rolling Valley conference championship and the Woodbine Invitational, the Woodbine girls won. However, they had tough competition with Boyer Valley who came in second, and Extra-EHK in third. Michelle Wilson a freshman runner from Exira-EHK earned the individual title.

Rolling Valley Conference Results 5000 Run
1 V-Woodbine (28)
Total Time: 2:01:16.06
Average: 24:15.22
2 V-Boyer Valley (40)
Total Time: 2:05:56.71
Average: 25:11.35
3 V-Exira-Elk-Horn-Kimballton (58)
Total Time: 2:27:34.90
Average: 29:30.98

Iowa’s Fran McCaffery previews the basketball season

Sports

October 2nd, 2023 by admin

Balance will be a key as the Iowa basketball team looks for a fifth straight trip to the NCAA Tournament. The Hawkeyes have a solid nucleus returning from last year’s team that finished 19-14 but for the first time in several years don’t have a go-to scorer after Kris Murray left early for the NBA.

Iowa coach Fran McCaffery. With the star power gone so are the expectations. The Hawkeyes have been picked by many to finish in the lower half of the Big Ten.

Six newcomers are on the roster. including four freshmen who McCaffery expects to play significant minutes.

Iowa opens at home on November seventh against North Dakota.

Hawkeyes Wrap Up at Fighting Irish Classic

Sports

October 2nd, 2023 by admin

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – The University of Iowa men’s golf team wrapped up play at the Fighting Irish Classic on Monday afternoon. Iowa tied for 11th, finishing 27-over par after 54 holes at Warren Golf Course. 

Fifth-year Mac McClear was the low scorer for the Hawkeyes in the final round of the tournament. McClear shot 1-under par (69) on Monday to move up 20 spots in the standings and tie for Iowa’s best finish for the tournament. McClear led the team in birdies on Monday, finishing with four. McClear ended in a tie for 36th at 6-over par. 

Freshman Max Tjoa also shot 6-over. Tjoa carded a 72 (+2) in each round to tie with McClear as the low Iowa finisher. 

Tennessee won the tournament at 10-under par. Ethan Tseng of Northwestern was the individual medalist with 202 strokes (-8).  

IOWA SCORECARD 

T11  Team  286  284  297  +27  867 
T36  Mac McClear  72  75  69  +6  216 
T36  Max Tjoa  72  72  72  +6  216 
T48  Callum Macfie  74  68  76  +8  218 
T61  Josh Lundmark  68  75  80  +13  223 
T66  Noah Kent  76  69  80  +15  225 

HAWKEYE NOTABLES 

  • Tjoa’s par 5 average of 4.50 (-3) finished tied for 10th in the tournament. 
  • Tjoa, McClear, and Callum Macfie each had 35 pars a piece which tied for 16th best in the tournament. 

UP NEXT 

The Hawkeyes will travel to Biloxi, Miss. to compete in the Fallen Oak Collegiate Invitational in their last tournament of the fall season. The tournament will take place Oct. 15th – Oct. 17th.

Dubuque wins federal grant to upgrade key flood protection system

News

October 2nd, 2023 by admin

The federal government is sending Dubuque nearly eight million dollars to revamp a key portion of its flood protection system. Dubuque engineer, Deron (Darren) Muehring (Meer-ing) says the money will help complete a key part of the Bee Branch Watershed Flood Mitigation Project.

(as he says)”It’s going to help replace a facility that’s, over 50 years old, really update it, expanded its capabilities, really help better protect a large swath of our community from flooding,” he says. The watershed project is designed to take runoff during a rainfall and funnel it to this pumping area.

(as he says)”When of the river, Mississippi is up and we’re in flood conditions, and our floodwall levee system is in operation, then if it rains in the city of Duqubue, then this system helps drain kind of the interior side of the levee,” Muehring says. He says they were fortunate there weren’t any really significant rains this spring during Mississippi River flooding, and they didn’t have to use the system. The city has had six flood events which drew Presidential disaster declarations since 1999, making it important to keep the system working.

(as he says)”The project to construct and then engineering during construction is about a 26 million dollar project,” he says. “So the seven-point-seven million dollars will bring that cost down, so the city’s share will still be about 19 million dollars to see that through to through to completion.”
The grant is grant from the U-S Department of Commerce’s Economic Development Administration, and won funding in part because of its economic impact on several large businesses.

(as he says)”This facility will help, you know, prevent flooding of manufacturing facilities, along our Kerper Boulevard , it’s along along the river there. So it’s going to help existing facilities to maintain their businesses and allow them to expand,” he says. It projected the project could lead to more than 16 million dollars in private investment in that area and the creation of 150 jobs.

Iowa HHS enters interim settlement agreement

News

October 2nd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, Iowa  – The State of Iowa has agreed to an interim settlement in a lawsuit brought on behalf of Medicaid-eligible children with serious mental and behavioral health needs, which asserted that Iowa administers an inadequate mental health system that does not provide children and youth with legally required services. To address the decades long issues, the State of Iowa has launched major transformations through the Mental Health and Disability Regional structure to provide core services to children in Iowa and will continue to improve the state’s mental health system specifically for all Iowans. The terms of this agreement will strengthen the work already underway and shift to increase oversight in the behavioral health system to ensure adequate access to services for families and children.

“We commend Governor Reynolds and her administration for recognizing the unmet needs of children with serious mental health needs in Iowa and their right to essential mental health care services,” said Catherine Johnson, the Executive Director of Disability Rights Iowa, one of the groups representing the Plaintiffs. “Her commitment to take the steps necessary to provide them with the intensive home and community-based services they need, we believe will allow our children to remain at home with the families or caregivers best able to love and care for them.” Plaintiffs are also represented by Children’s Rights, the National Health Law Program and Ropes & Gray.

Over the course of the next several months, the state will develop an implementation plan that will bolster and reinforce the significant actions already taken in recent years to improve the mental health system in Iowa. The plan will include defining clear access points for behavioral health services, including crisis and in-home services. The plan will also describe how the state will oversee adequate access and update case management supports to ensure children and families are more successful in the community and at school.

“Iowa HHS has spent the past several years honing its work to better support children and families. This demonstrated commitment from across our agency is especially true for our populations in need of significant support. The Iowa Medicaid team has led a multi-year effort to transform this system that includes bringing individuals and families to the table in a meaningful way. These changes cement the work already in progress and we are proud to pave the way forward,” said Iowa HHS Director Kelly Garcia.

IA Auditor of State announces PIE award winners for efficiencies

News

October 2nd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – Auditor of state Rob Sand today (Monday) held a news conference with Des Moines Independent Community School District Superintendent Dr. Ian Roberts to tout the success of Des Moines Public Schools’ food rescue program as participants in the Auditor’s Public Innovations and Efficiencies (PIE) program. Auditor Sand also announced winners across the state of Iowa. (See the list below)

“Food rescue is exactly the kind of innovation we had in mind when we first created the PIE program four years ago,” said Sand in advance of the event. “Where compassion and innovation meet lies efficiency, and I’m proud that we get to present our first 2023 award to the folks at Des Moines Independent Community School District—they’ve gone above and beyond to reduce waste and improve support for the most vulnerable members of the communities they serve.”

Sand created the PIE program in 2019 to encourage public entities across Iowa to think outside the box and spark innovative ideas to save public funds. The PIE program checklist provides local leaders with tools to collaborate and share their concepts, known as PIE recipes, via the Auditor of State’s website.

“While food rescue is just one of the items on our checklist of PIE recipes, it’s one worth sharing far and wide,” said Sand, noting that during a time of higher costs for families, many struggle to make ends meet—even grappling with food insecurity. Sand continued, “PIE provides local leaders with an easy, streamlined sharing process—that’s why each year, we’ve seen more engagement than the last.”

The PIE program has proven so successful that the Mississippi State Auditor, a Republican, copied the program for use in his own state—even using the same name. “The appeal of PIE is that everybody likes good government—Republican, Democratic, or independent. Good government shouldn’t have partisan blinders,” said Sand. Sand will hand-deliver a pie to officials in each community at a later date.
2023 PIE Award Recipients
Counties
Largest County: Polk
Smallest County: Ringgold
Best Performing County, Overall: Fayette
Best Performing Counties, Awarded Within Categories of Size: Johnson, Fayette, Clayton, Montgomery, Pocahontas
Most Improved County: Polk
Cities
Largest City: Cedar Rapids
Smallest City: Beaconsfield
Best Performing City, Overall: Cedar Rapids
Best Performing Cities, Awarded Within Categories of Size: Cedar Rapids, Guttenberg, Alleman & Grand Mount (TIE), Plainfield, Garden Grove
School Districts
Largest School District: Des Moines Public Schools
Smallest School District: Olin Community Schools
Best Performing School District, Overall: Iowa City Community Schools
Best Performing 4A School District: Iowa City Community Schools
Runner-Up Best Performing 4A School District: Des Moines Public Schools
Best Performing 3A School District: Greene County Community Schools
Runner-Up Best Performing 3A School District: Okoboji Community Schools
Best Performing 2A School District: North Cedar Community Schools
Runner-Up Best Performing 2A School District: Bedford Community Schools
Best Performing 1A School District: Hamburg Community Schools
Runner-Up Best Performing 1A School District: Olin Community Schools
Most Improved School District: Norwalk Community Schools.