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AP: Iowa Prep Football Poll

Sports

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Top Ten teams in the Associated Press Iowa high school football polls of the 2019 season with first-place votes in parentheses and won-loss record, total points and position last week at right:

Class 4A
Record Pts Prv
1. West Des Moines Valley (5) 2-0 91 4
2. Ankeny Centennial (4) 2-0 87 2
3. Cedar Falls (1) 2-0 80 3
4. West Des Moines Dowling 1-1 71 1
5. Bettendorf 2-0 67 5
6. Cedar Rapids Kennedy 2-0 45 7
7. Fort Dodge 2-0 40 T8
8. Ankeny 1-1 25 10
9. Southeast Polk 1-1 14 NR
10. Cedar Rapids Prairie 2-0 9 NR

Others receiving votes: Des Moines Roosevelt 6. Sioux City East 4. Waukee 4. Dubuque Senior 3. Marshalltown 2. Waterloo West 1. Johnston 1.

Class 3A
Record Pts Prv
1. Epworth Western Dubuque (4) 2-0 93 2
2. Cedar Rapids Xavier (6) 2-0 90 1
3. Eldridge North Scott 2-0 73 4
4. Solon 2-0 68 3
5. Council Bluffs Lewis Central 2-0 65 5
6. Pella 2-0 56 6
7. Sergeant Bluff-Luton 1-1 23 10
(tie) Washington 2-0 23 T9
9. Glenwood 2-0 14 NR
(tie) Davenport Assumption 2-0 14 NR

Others receiving votes: Independence 10. Creston-Orient-Macksburg 9. Dallas Center-Grimes 6. Harlan 2. Keokuk 1. Mount Pleasant 1. Carlisle 1. Grinnell 1.

Class 2A
Record Pts Prv
1. Waukon (6) 2-0 95 1
2. Clear Lake (4) 2-0 93 2
3. Algona 2-0 78 3
4. Spirit Lake 2-0 62 4
5. Greene County 2-0 51 5
6. Waterloo Columbus 2-0 42 NR
7. Des Moines Christian 2-0 40 8
8. Van Horne Benton 2-0 24 NR
9. Cresco Crestwood 1-1 14 10
10. O-A1BCIG 2-0 10 NR
(tie) Monticello 2-0 10 NR

Others receiving votes: Southeast Valley 8. Williamsburg 5. Camanche 4. Carroll Kuemper 4. State Center West Marshall 4. Monroe PCM 3. Centerville 2. Boyden-Hull-RV 1.

Class 1A
Record Pts Prv
1. Hawarden West Sioux (9) 2-0 99 1
2. Dike-New Hartford (1) 2-0 87 2
3. Van Meter 2-0 71 4
4. West Branch 2-0 70 3
5. Inwood West Lyon 2-0 55 5
6. South Central Calhoun 2-0 50 6
7. Treynor 2-0 40 8
8. Mediapolis 2-0 27 10
9. Hull Western Christian 2-0 21 NR
10. Underwood 2-0 13 NR

Others receiving votes: Troy Mills North Linn 7. AC/GC 2. Mount Ayr 2. Pleasantville 2. Iowa City Regina 2. Jesup 1. Truro Interstate 35 1.

Class A
Record Pts Prv
1. Britt West Hancock (10) 2-0 100 1
2. Edgewood-Colesburg 2-0 78 3
3. St. Ansgar 2-0 76 2
4. Fairbank Wapsie Valley 2-0 71 4
5. Sloan Westwood 2-0 60 5
6. Traer North Tama 2-0 42 7
7. Grundy Center 2-0 39 9
8. Brooklyn BGM 2-0 26 NR
9. Monona MFL-Mar-Mac 2-0 15 NR
10. Alta 1-1 11 8

Others receiving votes: Riverside Highland 7. Algona Garrigan 6. Le Mars Gehlen Catholic 5. Paullina South O’Brien 5. Neola Tri-Center 4. Hudson 2. Eldon Cardinal 2. Winthrop East Buchanan 1.

Class 8-Man
Record Pts Prv
1. Gilbertville-Don Bosco (6) 2-0 86 1
(tie) New London (3) 2-0 86 3
3. Remsen Saint Mary’s (1) 2-0 79 4
4. Jackson Junction Turkey Valley 2-0 62 5
5. Marengo Iowa Valley 2-0 56 6
6. Audubon 1-1 41 9
7. Montezuma 2-0 33 7
8. Coon Rapids-Bayard 2-0 26 NR
9. Fremont Mills, Tabor 1-1 14 2
10. Lenox 3-0 13 NR

Others receiving votes: Woodbine 12. Harris-Lake Park 11. Springville 7. Janesville 6. Wyoming Midland 6. Riceville 5. Easton Valley 3. Anita CAM 2. Glidden-Ralston 2.

Iowa Medicaid providers fight former insurer for payment

News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An insurance company that pulled out of the Iowa Medicaid program nearly two years ago still has unpaid bills of as much as $1.4 million owed to Iowa hospitals, nursing homes and providers of mental health services, documents filed with the Iowa Insurance Division show.

AmeriHealth Caritas still owes money to some providers who say state officials won’t help them get paid and they are frustrated that the state through its privatization of Medicaid has set up a system in which they have to file costly lawsuits or go through arbitration just to get the money for services they long ago provided.

“Downright thievery,” is how Kim Weber described it on Tuesday. She’s the CEO of Iowa Home Care, a provider of in-home nursing, therapy and other services that allow Medicaid patients to stay in their homes.
AmeriHealth still owes the company $193,000. “We have communicated excessively with the state of Iowa but with no real intervention to correct,” she said.

Iowa Department of Human Services spokesman Matt Highland would only say Monday that the agency has completed its review of all providers who sought help on AmeriHealth claims. “Providers with any concerns should contact Iowa Medicaid,” he said. AmeriHealth spokesman Jawanza Keita said Monday that the $1.4 million is an estimate of the potential liabilities for claims that may need to be paid based on historical information. “As part of the transition, we have and continue to diligently work to resolve any outstanding items, and expect these will be addressed in the near term,” he said.

AmeriHealth pulled out of the Iowa program in October 2017 saying it couldn’t reach a new contract with the state. The Philadelphia-based company was one of three for-profit groups that Iowa hired in 2016 to take over management of the state’s $5 billion annual program that serves more than 638,000 poor and disabled people.

Rep. Ruth Ann Gaines, a member of the House Oversight Committee and a mother of an adult son with an autism spectrum disorder and other disabilities who uses Medicaid services, said she’s learned DHS distributed its last payment to AmeriHealth in August and now has no clout to push the company to pay service providers. “They have to sue to get paid and that’s terrible,” said Gaines, a Democrat who has been critical of Medicaid privatization.

Recent court cases suggest some of the unpaid bills are significant. ABCM Corp. in Hampton filed a lawsuit in July claiming AmeriHealth owes it $100,467 for services provided in 2016 and 2017 at its Indianola nursing home. A judge has scheduled a hearing for Sept. 12 to set a trial date. The company’s lawyer, David Dutton also represents Virginia Gay Hospital in Vinton which sued AmeriHealth for unpaid emergency room services. Documents filed Monday indicate settlement discussions have begun.

Another lawsuit initiated in February indicates the Washington County Hospital recently settled a dispute with AmeriHealth over unpaid claims of more than $84,000. Sen. Janet Petersen, the Iowa Senate Democratic leader, said delayed payment is an ongoing problem with privatized Medicaid in Iowa despite Reynolds’ assurances of improvements. “I think that the Reynolds administration has been completely irresponsible in how they’re paying providers. Basically, they’re using Iowa health care providers as a bank is what one health care provider in particular said to me,” she said.

The state, under Republican Gov. Terry Branstad’s direction, took the Medicaid program from state oversight and placed it under the management of private for-profit insurance companies in 2016. He promised the move would save millions of dollars and improve efficiency but since he departed in July 2017 to become U.S. ambassador to China, Reynolds has put millions more into Medicaid each year amid calls to reverse privatization and restore stability. She insists improvements have been made and she announced last week she’s hired a new DHS director and expects a new positive direction.

Police: Man who killed himself in Nebraska killed Iowa clerk

News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

BETTENDORF, Iowa (AP) — Police in eastern Iowa say they’ve determined that an Illinois man who shot and killed himself as he fled troopers in western Nebraska last month was the gunman who killed a Bettendorf convenience store clerk a day before his death.

Bettendorf police issued a written report Tuesday saying police “are certain based on all the facts” that 21-year-old Manuel Rangel, of Genoa, Illinois, shot 28-year-old Brittany Wilson to death. Wilson was found Aug. 17 on the floor of the Big 10 Mart in Bettendorf, where she died.

Police say surveillance video showed a car driven by Rangel entering the store’s lot at the time of the shooting. Police say the car was tracked the next day to western Nebraska and that Rangel shot himself inside the car as troopers closed in on him.

Villisca man arrested Tue. for Unauthorized use of a credit card

News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports 44-year old Alan Paul Gray, of Villisca, was arrested this (Tuesday) afternoon, on a Page County warrant for Unauthorized Use of a Credit Card. Gray was taken into custody at around 12:10-p.m. inside a residence in Villisca. He was being held in the Page County Jail on a $2,000 bond.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10th

Trading Post

September 10th, 2019 by admin

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Water level to drop at Lake Anita

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

ANITA, Iowa – Officials with the Iowa DNR report the water level of Lake Anita in Cass County will be lowered five feet for a seawall replacement project. This may limit access to Lake Anita this fall. The gate will be closed and the lake allowed to refill as construction allows. The Iowa Department of Natural Resources plans to extend the boat ramps to allow for boating access after the drawdown is complete. All other facilities at Lake Anita State Park will remain open.

Storm damage report (Updated 11-a.m., 9/10/19)

News, Weather

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Severe storms that blew through southwest and Central Iowa Monday afternoon and evening, causing extensive damage to a rural property five-miles West/Northwest of Hepburn, in Page County. Emergency Management officials say two large metal buildings were damaged by strong thunderstorm winds at around 4:40-p.m., and there was varying degress of tree damage. The farm is located between Stanton and Bethesda, or in the area of 120th and Q Avenue. You can see Montgomery County Emergency Management Agency drone pictures of the damage on the Weather page at kjan.com.

At about the same time as that damage was taking place, thunderstorm winds estimated at 51 mph were recorded by the AWOS (Automated Weather Observation System), two-mile South/Southeast of Clarinda.

At around 4-p.m., the Adair-Guthrie County Emergency Management Agency reported 4-to 6-inch diameter tree limbs were down in Menlo. Just before 5-p.m., winds gusting up to 57-mph were reported by a Cooperative Weather Observer, four-miles North of Nodaway, in Adams County. And, at around 5:46-p.m. EMA officials reported a power pole was broken a White Pole Road and Adair Streets, in Menlo.

In Central Iowa’ Story County, an estimated 70-mph gust of wind at around 5:50-p.m. Near Colo, caused a 10-inch diameter tree limb to snap on a older tree, and several 3-to 4-inch limbs to break on newer trees. Winds gusted up to 61 mph near Collins, as well. Two miles east of Ames, Law Enforcement reported the wall of a building was pushed-in six-feet, and the contents of the building were blown around. The event was estimated by radar to have occurred at around 5:11-p.m.

In Polk County, winds gusted upwards of 60 mph Monday evening about two-miles west of West Des Moines. One-mile southeast of Sheldahl, law enforcement reported a telephone pole and a No Passing sign were leaned-over at around 4:48-p.m. Elsewhere, multiple trees were downed in the Hardin County town of Hubbard. One of the trees was 24-inches in diameter. In Black Hawk County, the skirting for a mobile home was damaged two-miles north/northwest of Washburn, and numerous tree limbs were down. Shingles were also reported blown off a home north of Hudson. Tree and power line damage was also reported in Grundy, Dallas, Boone, and Butler Counties. In Butler County, a couple of trees reportedly fell on homes in Parkersburg and Clarksville.

The storms also caused damage early this (Tuesday) morning in central Iowa. A spotter reported trees down 2 miles southeast of the Des Moines International Airport at around 3:50-a.m. Five minutes later, Public Safety Officials said a tree fell on a power line in the same area, causing power flashes in south Des Moines.

Abandoned Ellsworth building destroyed by fire

News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Four Hamilton County fire departments battled a Monday evening fire at an abandoned chicken hatchery in Ellsworth. The entire structure was engulfed in flames when the Ellsworth Fire Department arrived. The departments spent several hours on the scene of the fire. The cause of the fire remains under investigation. No injuries were reported.

Expensive fire in Cedar Rapids destroys locomotive

News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) —  A diesel locomotive caught fire in Cedar Rapids late Monday afternoon. The fire happened at what’s called the “dry mill” owned by Archer Daniels Midland, or A-D-M. The Cedar Rapids Fire Department says it had to use one thousand gallons of water and foam to put out the fire. Fire investigators estimate the damage to the train was one million dollars. The cause of the fire is not yet known.

CAM School Board actions taken Monday, 9/9/19

News

September 10th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Members of the CAM School District’s Board of Education met Monday evening in a short, regular session. Superintendent Paul Croghan told KJAN News the Board set September 30th as the date for a Board workshop with Boyd Jones, pertaining to the District’s Facilities Study.

The Board also approved para-educator and other staff contracts.

In other business, the Board approved out-of-state trips for Elementary School Students.

And, they approved the donation of MacBook computers to schools in Kenya.

The CAM School Board approved activities fundraisers including a “Hog Wild” raffle. The raffle give you a chance at winning one of two donated hogs that will be processed. It ends the Friday night of Homecoming. They cost $10 for one ticket, $20 for 3 tickets, and $100 for 20 tickets. And the Board approved CAM Sports’ 50-50 fundraiser.