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Atlantic CPC to meet at noon

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

The City of Atlantic’s Community Promotion Commission is set to meet at noon today.

During their session in the Council Chambers at City Hall, the CPC will discuss and/or act on: a $5,200 contribution to the Downtown Beautification Group; A request from the Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce for $2,400 to cover the cost of advertising for the “Third Thursday” Summer Concert series; and, a Chamber request for $4,180, to cover the cost of “Coca-Cola Days” advertising.

Other discussion will focus on community projects and marketing. The CPC will also receive a finance report, during their Budget Update portion of their agenda.

I-80 Accident in Cass Co.

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Two people suffered what were  described as apparent, minor injuries this (Thursday) morning, during an accident on Interstate 80 in Cass County. According to dispatch reports, a vehicle traveling westbound collided with barriers at the beginning of the construction zone at the 72-mile marker, or about two-miles east of the Anita exit. The accident happened at around 2:50-a.m.

Anita and Wiota Rescue, along with a Cass County Sheriff’s deputy and the Iowa State Patrol responded to the scene. Two people, including a 25-year old male complaining of abdominal pain, were transported to the Cass County Memorial Hospital, where a report on their conditions is not available. Their names have also not yet been released.

The vehicle sustained damage to the left front side. It was impounded to be searched for possible evidence of illegal substances. Additional details are currently not available.

Iowa, Nebraska and Missouri get EPA funds

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Four cities in Iowa, Nebraska and Missouri will share over $1.8 million to clean up old industrial sites. The Environmental Protection Agency says the money is to be used on sites known as brownfields. It’s part of $76 million in EPA funds to clean up and redevelop properties across the county. The agency on Wednesday says the sites are located in Arlington and Council Bluffs, in Iowa; Omaha, Neb., and Springfield, Mo.

Funds include $200,000 each to clean up hazardous materials at the former Arlington School and a foundry in Council Bluffs. The EPA says $600,000 will go to Springfield to clean up sites at the Jordan Valley West Meadows, while $835,000 will be used to address hazardous substances and petroleum in Omaha.

Carter Lake Fire victim dies

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

Another victim of a western Iowa fire has died. Officials with the St. Elizabeth Regional Medical Center in Lincoln, NE, say 74-year-old Donna Thomas died Wednesday night after being critically burned in a fire at her mobile home in Carter Lake early Tuesday morning. Thomas was found by two Carter Lake Police officers who were on patrol at around 2:30-a.m., Tuesday.
When officers Ryan Gonsior and Ron Hansen arrived at 3510 N. Ninth Street, smoke was billowing from unit 213.

Police Chief Shawn Kannedy said the woman’s cry for help alerted the officers, who forced their way in to the structure.  Thomas was found on the floor behind a door. The officers, who could see only her arm, grabbed the woman and pulled her out of the mobile home.

Investigators with the State Fire Marshal’s office say the fire was caused by an electrical short in an appliance near Thomas’ bed. The blaze severely damaged the home and some nearby sheds. Officials say there were no working smoke detectors in the home.

Thomas was the second woman to die from injuries suffered in a mobile home fire on the same day.63-year old Susan Davis, of Fontanelle died Wednesday, at the University of Iowa Hospital’s Burn Unit. She and 60-year old Howard Burgher were found outside their home Saturday night. Burgher died Sunday morning. Careless discarding of smoking materials was blamed for the fire that took their lives.  There were no working smoke detectors in the couples’ residence.

GOP presidential bus tour in Iowa starts Monday

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Six likely Republican presidential candidates are participating in a bus tour of Iowa that kicks off Monday.

The three-week event is sponsored by the Iowa Tea Party and includes appearances by Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, former CEO Herman Cain, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson and former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty.

The tour begins in Council Bluffs and will include education sessions for Iowa’s leadoff presidential caucuses and the August straw poll. The event’s sponsors also include conservative issue advocacy groups.

Candidates will join the tour and make appearances along the way before it wraps up in Des Moines on July 2. Stops include Sioux City, Spencer, Mason City, Waterloo, Cedar Rapids, Dubuque, Davenport, Burlington, Marshalltown, Ames, Fort Dodge, Carroll, Indianola, Lamoni, Ottumwa and Oskaloosa.

Battling the “Mighty Mo”

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

195th & Waubonsie Ave.

(first-person commentary on the southwest Iowa floods by KJAN staffer Jason Schomburg, who lives in the affected area)

For people who live along the Missouri river floods come, and floods go.  This one is different in a couple very important ways.  The Army Corp of Engineers is predicting record levels along the “Mighty Mo”, also the waters are expected to stay in areas for a month, maybe longer.  This event could very easily become a disaster.

Levees protecting communities along the river are being put to the ultimate test.  Overtopping may not be the only concern.  At this point, it’s hard to adequately predict how the mounds of dirt are going to handle being swamped for an indefinite amount of time,  or have a current eroding them away while holding the forces of 150,000CFS of water.  There is already thousands of acres of some of the worlds finest farm ground under water.

The lost crops alone will total into well into millions of bushels.  Yet the national media has not really picked up on the story. In Hamburg, some businesses have moved everything out of their buildings.  Others are still in the process  of moving their goods.  A berm is being built around the Blue Moon restaurant and it’s next door neighbor,  the Hamburg city water plant.

Not all humor has been lost in this town that is about to be in a fight for it’s very existence.  On the top of the entrance markers leading into the subdivision of Fox Hills are perched small statues of foxes both of which are wearing bright orange life jackets.

A few miles to the west where Highway 2 and Interstate 29 meet, sits a small area of businesses catering to travelers on I-29  The only one that remains open is a Sapp Bothers Truck stop.  Like other,

Motel at Hwy 2 & I-29 near Hamburg

nearby businesses, dirt is piled around the building, but the front is open, for the moment.  Another truck stop in the area has even removed the pumps.

 

The  motel an America’s Best Nights Inn Has a berm built all the way around it with the marquee telling the story.  “Lake Front Property For Sale”   Less than two miles away Highway 2 has had one of its four lanes succumb to the flood waters.

North, in the town of Bartlett, Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad employees were removing the signals at the grade crossing.  At the Plattsmouth toll bridge, a gravel road  under the train bridge,  normally  500 feet away from the River, is now under several feet of water with a very steady flow

Near Pacific Junction, the only company that has currently done anything to protect their holdings is A&M Green Power. The John Deere Dealer has moved all of their farm equipment to Malvern, and built a dirt wall around the facilities, which were constructed in 2010.

Regardless of whether the Army Corp of Engineers is to blame for holding back too much water in the Spring, causing them to release record amounts of water into the Missouri, or whether it’s just an unfortunate turn of events.  The water is coming.  Residents can only hope the levees will hold, and all of the last ditch efforts to protect their communities,  are not needed.

Second victim of Fontanelle fire dies

News

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

A mobile fire over the weekend in Fontanelle has claimed a second life. 63-year old Susan Davis died Wednesday at the University of Iowa Hospital’s Burn Unit. Davis and 60-year old Howard Burgher had each suffered severe burns when their mobile home caught fire Saturday night. Burgher died Sunday morning at the U-of-I Hospital’s Burn Unit.

Firefighters responded to a blaze at the home located at 227 12th Street in Fontanelle, just after 9:30-p.m., Saturday. When they arrived, Davis and Burgher were found on the ground outside the mobile home.

Investigators with the State Fire Marshal’s Office determined the accidental fire began with the careless discarding of smoking materials. The flames spread quickly because the excessive amount of combustible materials in the home.
Those same materials also restricted the couple’s escape routes. In addition, officials say there were no working smoke detectors in the home.

SUSAN DAVIS (Memorial Svcs. Tue., June 14)

Obituaries

June 9th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

SUSAN DAVIS, 63, of Fontanelle passed away on Wednesday, June 8, 2011, at the University of Iowa Hospital in Iowa City. Memorial services for SUSAN DAVIS will be held 2-p.m. Tue., June 14th, at the Steen Funeral Home in Fontanelle.

Visitation with the family of Susan Davis will take place one-hour prior to the service on Tues., at the funeral home.

Burial will be in the Fontanelle Cemetery, with a luncheon at the Greenfield United Methodist Church to follow the committal services at the cemetery.

Memorials may be directed to the Susan Davis Memorial Fund to be established by the family.

Online condolences may be left to the family at www.steenfunerals.com.

SUSAN DAVIS is survived by:

Her daughters – Penny (Tommy) Luft, of Corning; Betty Davis, of Creston; & Jeannie (Tony) Franklin, of Council Bluffs.

Her son – Joshua Coulter, of Maryville, Mo.

Her sisters – Marvel (Robert) Blazek, of Prescott; Ethel (Jack) Farlow, of Greenfield; & Patricia Reeves, of Greenfield.

Her brother – Steve (Risa) Huddleson, of Orient.

4 grandchildren

Other relatives, and friends

 

Scam artist posing as city worker tries to evacuate elderly in Council Bluffs

News

June 8th, 2011 by Ric Hanson

A heartless con artist is striking in an area of southwest Iowa that’s in eminent danger from the flooding Missouri River. Council Bluffs Fire Chief Alan Byers says someone is posing as a city official, knocking on doors and telling people they must evacuate right away — in an apparent attempt to lure residents away so the homes can be ransacked.

Chief Byers says, “We’ve had people, who have identified themselves as city employees, talked elderly people into vacating their houses immediately with the thought that they would be back in and a theft would occur.” Byers says the thief was even offering to help some of the elderly victims pack. Fortunately, no one has fallen for the scam by leaving their homes unattended.

“We had 11 people in the same neighborhood call 911 questioning the need to evacuate at the moment,” Byers says. “The police department responded. We couldn’t find the individual. We will prosecute to the fullest.” He says if this crook knocks on your door, call the police right away. He’s also asking neighbors to keep an eye on each other’s property — and each other.

(Matt Kelley/Radio Iowa)

Iowa would have toughest abortion restriction in the country

News

June 8th, 2011 by Ric Hanson


The Iowa House has passed a bill that would establish the toughest abortion restriction in the country. Five other states have passed laws that ban abortion after the 20th week of pregnancy. Earlier this year, the Republican-led Iowa House embraced a similar ban, but on Wednesday the House voted to establish an abortion ban that would begin two weeks earlier. Representative Dawn Pettengill, a Republican from Mount Auburn, was the point person for the G-O-P on this newly-worded bill, and she was surprised during a conversation with reporters after the bill passed to discover it tougher than the previous version. “I believe that life begins at conception, so to me, I say, ‘Great!'” Pettengill said. “I’m glad that is true.” This new bill passed on a day when House Republicans had estabished rules that wound up preventing debate of the measure before a vote was taken on it. House Democratic Leader Kevin McCarthy of Des Moines was incredulous.

“The fact that it was done, a major bill with serious health consequences for women, and we did it with no debate,” McCarthy said, his voice rising as he spoke with reporters. “It’s disgusting.” The bill faces a dim future in the Iowa Senate where Democrats have passed a proposal that sets up a new state permit process, written to prevent a Nebraska doctor from following through on his plans to open a late-term abortion clinic in the city of Council Bluffs. Pettengill says that’s not good enough.

“The people of Iowa, they told us they do not want a late-term abortion clinic in the state,” Pettengill says. “And not just in Council Bluffs, but completely across the state.” The only exception to the proposed ban would allow abortions after the 18th week of pregnancy if the mother’s life were at risk. Representative Beth Wessell-Kroeschell, a Democrat from Ames, says legislators shouldn’t be making these life-and-death decisions.

“Today as I looked around the House chambers I have to pause,” Wessell-Kroeschell said after the bill passed, but just before the House adjourned for the debate. “Do I want my daughter and prospective grandchildren, their lives in the hands of lawmakers with no knowledge of pregnancy, not even how long a pregnancy lasts?” Representative Dwayne Alons, a Republican from Hull, supports the newer, more restrictive ban.

“Let’s protect the future of our state, our country,” Alons said, “to see life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness extended a little earlier into the womb.” Doctors calculate the length of a pregnancy by starting with the day of the last menstrual cycle, but the law in Nebraska, for example, used the time of fertilization, which is about two weeks later.

(O.Kay Henderson/Radio Iowa)