w/Jim Field
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (7.2MB)
Subscribe: RSS
Missouri Valley Invite
Girls Team:
Girls Top 10:
Boys Team:
Boys Top 10:
Western Valley Conference Meet
Girls Team:
Girls Top 10:
Boys Team:
Boys Top 10:
SOLD! I have a nice 4 ft by 8 ft trailer for sale. near new tires on it. $295.00. Phone 712 243 9849 in Atlantic.
FOR SALE: I am selling my very nice 75,00 btu kerosene heater for 65.00 if interested call me at 712/249/2631.
FOR SALE: Selling firewood by the truckload.call Chris at 712/249/2631.
WANTED: I’m looking for the round key that fits to the bottom half of an old parking meter. If you or someone you know who might know where I could get one please give me a call t 712-243-3371 and leave a message, Thank you!
FOR SALE: Magic Chef electric stove. All 4 burners and oven works fine. White with black front. $60.00 takes it. Atlantic 712-243-9849.
FREE: Lots of priority mail boxes, new and different sizes. Large bag of packing peanuts. Call 712-563-4247. If no answer leave a message and I will get back to you.
FOR SALE: Three red cedar 4″x4″ posts that are used and are different lengths – All good condition. They have a redwood stain on them but can be painted. A 5’2″ for $6.00, a 5’6″ for $6.50 and an 8′ for $11.00. Also have a 5′ wolmenized post for $2. The posts could be used for mailbox posts. In addition we have three used 8′ landscaping timbers that are nailed together and ends are cut at an angle. Will take an offer. Please call 515-943-6471 if interested.
FOR SALE: New Dolphin Jeep Seat Covers. John Deere #318 Riding Mower, runs and mows well- $800. 4 Dressers and Rockers that are over 70 years old. Call 712-790-1841 in Carroll.
FOR SALE: 8 inch memory foam mattress that is queen sized and comes with the frame. In excellent condition. 712-435-9901.
WANTED: Willing to cut down trees if you cannot afford a tree service. Will not be able to cut trees in Atlantic though. The work would be done to help people out, as he would not use the wood for personal use. He would not be able to do anything more than 2 feet across…also could only cut down trees in more open areas. 778-4672
FREE: TV that is 25 inches. Stop by 705 Palm Street in Atlantic.
FREE: 4 kittens…3 that are multi-colred and 1 that is black. 712-779-2281.
The Atlantic Police Department reports one arrest and two accidents took place over the weekend. Officials say on Saturday, 45-year old Rex McDermott, of Atlantic, was arrested on Domestic Abuse/Serious Assault, and Willful Injury, charges. McDermott was booked in to the Cass County Jail.
That same day, Cheryl Lebeck, of Atlantic, was cited for Failure to Obey a Stop Sign, after vehicles driven by Lebeck and Robynn Davidson, of Midvale, UT, collided at the intersection of 7th and Linn Streets, at around 10:50-p.m. Officials say Lebeck was traveling north on Linn Street and approaching 7th. After coming up to the corner, she proceeded to head north on Linn, and was struck by the Davidson vehicle. The total amount of damage was estimated at $11,000.No injuries were reported.
Friday morning, an accident in the Hy-Vee parking lot in Atlantic caused $1,500 damage, but there were no injuries, and no citations issued. The Atlantic P-D says a vehicle driven by Thomas Billheimer, of Casey, was traveling east in the parking lot and turning into a parking stall, when it struck the right rear of a legally parked vehicle registered to Patricia Briles, of Griswold.
The Cass County Engineers Office reports that a bridge near the Cass County Landfill will be closed for repairs beginning today. The bridge is located two miles east of highway 71 on the landfill road. Local residents will be able to reach their homes but there will be no access to the landfill on that road. The bridge repairs are expected to take two weeks.
Jim Field talks about Fall lawn care and equipment wintering.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download (4.5MB)
Subscribe: RSS
A series of community meetings begin tonight (Monday) for Iowans to offer input on a proposal to reorganize statewide victim services. Janelle Melohn is the director of the Crime Victim Assistance Division within the Iowa Attorney General’s office. She says federal and state funding cuts since 2007 have forced eight programs in Iowa to close. That’s resulted in larger service areas in pockets of the state – with inequitable divisions of both programming and funding. “The map of how services look right now across the state…is not equal at all,” Melohn said. “So, we may have programs in western Iowa that serve up to eight counties while we have a program in eastern Iowa that serves two counties.”
According to Melohn, federal funding for Iowa’s crime victim assistance programs has declined by 18 percent (18%), or nearly $1.5 million, over the past three fiscal years. State appropriations have declined by seven percent (7%), or nearly $214,000, over the same time period. In addition to programs shutting down, other programs are eliminating core services. “It really isn’t acceptable,” Melohn said. “There are some things that we have to have all over the state. There has to be a crisis response to victims who are sitting in a law enforcement office or in a hospital after a crime has been perpetrated against them. There are certain things that have to be met and we have to make sure we are doing that equally for domestic violence and sexual assault victims.”
The reorganization plan would divide the state into six multi-county service areas with the state awarding funding on a competitive basis to programs in each region. Melohn suggests more dollars should be directed toward services that help victims, rather than shelters that aren’t being used. Use of shelters has declined, but those buildings require around-the-clock staffing and expensive upkeep. “Of all the victims that our programs served last year, only 11-percent of those were victims who sought shelter. Yet, we’re allocating almost 40-percent of our resources to shelter services,” Melohn said. “When you look at the huge discrepancy there, it really begs the question – are we using our money in the most efficient manner? I would say no.”
Some domestic violence programs in the state have moved to a “transitional model” by closing a 24/7 shelter and instead housing victims in hotels until more permanent housing options are found. There are 13 public meetings scheduled around the state to discuss the proposed changes.
Locally, meetings will be held Monday 10/22:
1:30 p.m. in Atlantic at Iowa Western Community College (Room 141)
6:00 p.m. in Creston at Southwestern Community College (Instructional Center, Room 180)
(Radio Iowa)
Iowans who heat their homes with natural gas will likely see higher heating bills this winter, compared to last winter, based on a study from the American Gas Association. Bruce McDowell, the organization’s director of policy analysis, says their projections show natural gas consumption by residential customers will rise in the months ahead. “We can expect that they’ll use more because last year was the warmest year on record, so it’s bound to get a little colder than it did last year,” McDowell says. “Prices are lower though, that helps us set that, so we see a slight increase in the customer bills only because they’re going to be using more gas due to the weather, not because of any price increases.”
Iowans are helping to conserve natural gas, he says, which is stretching the supply and keeping the bills low. “In 1970, the house used 40% more than a house uses today,” McDowell says. “That’s what people are enjoying because of the conservation efforts they’ve made such as tighter homes, more efficient furnaces, checking the furnace to make sure it’s operating properly, and making sure that your home is adequately insulated.”
He says domestic natural gas supplies are at an all-time high. “Everybody agrees there’s an abundance of natural gas out there,” McDowell says. “We have forecast there’s enough gas out there to last a century or more. When I started in this business, it was 60 years of supply, now it’s 100 years of supply, and that goes back 30 years.” The latest survey shows the U-S has the largest storage assets of any country in the world with more than 400 natural gas storage fields. Record underground storage levels were reached in November of 2011 for the third year in a row.
(Radio Iowa)
The two presidential campaigns continue their press to win Iowa and the state’s six votes in the Electoral College. Mitt Romney visited Iowa last week. This week, President Obama is due to visit Wednesday. Former President Bill Clinton led a Friday night rally in Sioux City for Christie Vilsack, a Democratic candidates for congress, but Clinton spent a good portion of his speech targeting issues like Medicare that are at the heart of the presidential race.
“I decided in this election I wasn’t going to give a lot of whoop-de-do speeches. I’m trying to explain things to people. I got offered the job of ‘secretary of explaining stuff’ — you may have seen that,” Clinton said, getting whoops from the crowd for that reference to the reaction to his speech at the Democratic National Convention. The presidential campaigns have been bringing in a host of people to try to turn out voters in Iowa.
On Tuesday night, Scott Walker, the Republican governor of Wisconsin, will visit a Republican phone bank in Cedar Rapids. On Thursday, musician Bruce Springsteen will headline an early voting rally in Ames for the Obama campaign.
(Radio Iowa)