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Craig Alan Becker will continue running career at Tennessee

Sports

August 5th, 2022 by admin

Former Atlantic standout trackster and cross country runner Craig Alan Becker is transferring from UNI to Tennessee to continue his collegiate running career. Becker spent the past year at UNI but he said after conferring with coaches, family, and friends he felt like he wanted to find another fit for him.

After taking 7th in state cross country and running on a winning a 4x800M team in high school he has enjoyed the challenge of training at the next level.

Once he had decided to look for new opportunities it just happened to work out with finding a spot at Tennessee. The Volunteers had some coaching staff changes and he reached out to an incoming coach he knew of and the relationship grew from there.

He said he’s open to running whatever events the staff ends up feeling like is the best spot for him.

Becker said he heads to Knoxville soon and is looking forward to training with the other runners there and prepping for some winter meet opportunities to start off with.

Absentee ballot requests for Sept. 13 Special Election in Harlan are now available

News

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Harlan, Iowa) – Shelby County Auditor/Commissioner of Elections reports “Absentee ballot REQUESTS for the September 13th Special Election for the Harlan Community Schools Bond Measure, are now available.”  He said also, “Methods to obtain a request and other information include:

1.       Call 712-755-3831 ext.6 only one request per person is allowed from the Auditors office.

2.       Producing copies of the blank request is allowed.

3.       Vote absentee in person starting August 24th

4.       Absentee in person voting in the Auditors office is available through September 12th.

5.       The Auditor’s office is open from 8:00 am until 4:30 pm.

6.       Email mmaxwell@shco.org to receive an absentee ballot request that you may print at home.

7.       The Auditor’s office is not allowed to place an un-voted ballot in the mail system after August 29th.

8.       Absentee ballots MUST be received in the Auditor’s office by 8:00 pm September 13th, 2022.”

The proposed $22.9 million bond issue covers two-thirds of the cost of renovations to all four facilities within the Harlan School District. School officials say the other third of the cost, or roughly $9.1 million, would come from the district’s Secure and Advanced Vision for Education, or SAVE, funds. One of the primary goals of the bond is to replace – with a new, modern facility – the current intermediate building. Constructed in 1965, the oldest building in the Harlan School District serves three through five. The plan is to construct the new building, which is nearly the size of the current facility, on the current playground, and then to tear down the old facility to build a new playground.

The District plans to invest $14-million into the High School, to update the classrooms which are surrounded by metal walls and limited electrical outlets. If approved, the bond would include a $2.33 increase to the district’s property tax levy, which is nearly $1.75 less than the last time school officials asked for a bond, in 2018. That effort failed. The increase is roughly an additional $9.57 a month on a household valued at $100,000 or $0.27 per acre.

Auditor Mark Maxwell reminds voters who intend vote absentee, to get their voted ballots to the Auditors office as soon as possible after receiving a ballot in the mail.  Also, if you have changed residence since the last time you voted, get your new address updated now to make your voting process more efficient on election day, by eliminating added paperwork the day of voting.

Heartbeat Today 8-5-2022

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

August 5th, 2022 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Audubon Chamber of Commer Director Molly Christensen about the 72nd Annual Operation T-Bone.

Play

Drought conditions worsen in Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Abnormally dry or drought conditions now cover more than half of Iowa. The latest Drought Monitor map was released Thursday morning. The map shows 56% of the state rated as abnormally dry, which now includes Polk and Jasper counties. Areas of northwest and southeastern Iowa are now so dry they’re dealing with drought conditions. Two-thirds of Cass County, most of Adair, Madison, Adams, Union and Montgomery Counties are experiencing a Moderate Drought, while other areas to the north and northeast are considered “Dry.”

According to the report, 30.6% of Iowa is experiencing moderate drought, up from 17.2% a week ago.  9.1% of Iowa is experiencing severe drought, a 1.4% increase from last week, while 3.2% of the state is dealing with extreme drought.

Iowa Drought Monitor, 8/4/22 (click on image to enlarge)

 An island of D1 category moderate drought introduced two weeks ago in southeast Iowa is expanding across the southern and central part of the state into southwest Iowa. Plymouth County and the northern portion of Woodbury County in northwest Iowa are dealing with extreme drought conditions.

National Weather Service data shows Sioux City has only received 8.77″ of rain since the start of 2022, nearly 10″ below average for precipitation through early August.

Utility launches pilot project in Cedar Rapids to store power in batteries

News

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – There are batteries in our cars, our laptops, and even our toothbrushes, and now batteries are helping power homes and businesses in Cedar Rapids. Alliant Energy has launched a pilot project which includes six large batteries at the city’s Deer Run substation. Utility spokesman Tony Palese says it’s an effort to complement Alliant’s growing renewable energy portfolio. “Oftentimes, these battery systems are paired with renewable resources, like wind and solar. That can help smooth out those variations in energy production and shift energy to times that customers really need it,” Palese says. “So if it’s peak demand, if it’s shifting to night when the sun’s not out, or when the wind’s not blowing, these systems help us meet those customer needs.”

The system stores energy from the grid at times of the day when demand is low and releases it when it’s needed to power homes and businesses. The five-megawatt battery system can store enough electricity to power about five-thousand homes for two hours. “This battery project is really designed to help meet that peak load demand and we’re excited to be able to study how it performs in the real world,” Palese says. “We understand the capabilities of the system and the technology, but really finding out how it’s going to function, what the best uses are, and how to most effectively utilize the system.” Alliant has been using battery storage systems for several years, but he says battery technology has advanced to enable this new type of project which is designed to deliver greater efficiency and affordability.

“This all fits into our clean energy blueprint,” Palese says. “That’s really our roadmap to transition to more cost-effective, renewable energy, something that’s become especially important as we work to sustain that economic and environmental health of the communities we serve.” This is Alliant’s fourth battery storage project in Iowa, joining those in Decorah, Marshalltown and Wellman. The Cedar Rapids project doubles the company’s battery storage capacity in Iowa.

Summit Carbon Solution to begin releasing names of landowners rejecting pipeline

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Starting today (Friday), Summit Carbon Solutions will start providing state regulators with lists of landowners along its proposed pipeline who have not agreed to voluntary easements. Justin Kirchoff, president of Summit Ag Investors, says hundreds of people HAVE signed contracts to let the carbon pipeline run through their property. “We’ve got about 750 landowners that have decided to sign voluntary easements with us today, so that’s about 270 miles of pipeline easements,” Kirchoff says. Summit submitted an application to the Iowa Utilities Board for a pipeline permit earlier this year. State regulations require disclosure of which parcels along the route are not yet secured voluntarily.

“That process will take about a month,” Kirchoff says, “and then, obviously, as we move forward and continue to sign voluntary easements which remains 100% of our focus today some of those names will come off the list.” Kirchoff says people understandably have questions about carbon capture and the pipeline itself. “I think a lot of people have scar tissue, if you will, in terms of Dakota Access. We’re going to do things a lot different,” Kirchoff says. “First and foremost, over 60% of this pipe is going to be eight inches or smaller and you compare that with Dakota Access, which is 30 inches. Just the whole process of installation is going to be a lot less invasive.”

The Dakota Access pipeline, which cuts diagonally through Iowa, was first proposed nearly a decade ago. In 2017, it began shipping crude oil from North Dakota to a terminal in Illinois. Kirchoff says Summit has obtained voluntary easements from about a third of landowners in five states. The pipeline’s Iowa segment is to connect with a dozen ethanol plants in the state, to lower the carbon footprint of the fuel that’s produced. “We’re getting closer to fall here. Every other row of corn that’s harvested is going to wind up going to an ethanol plant,” Kirchoff says. “We think its an incredibly important market and if we want to be competitive long-term we think that it certainly makes sense that we implement projects like this that make ethanol plants in the near term more profitable and in the long term more competitive in various markets.”

Several county boards of supervisors have urged state officials to reject eminent domain requests connected to carbon pipelines. The eminent domain process would let the company seize land from property owners who haven’t signed voluntary easements. Summit and two other companies have proposed building carbon pipelines through Iowa.

Farm Bureau survey finds concerns about cost of meat and dairy products

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The latest Iowa Farm Bureau Food and Farm index survey is showing the concerns people have with food prices. The Farm Bureau’s Zach Bader says prices were listed at the top of the list of concerns for the first time in nine years of the survey for a couple of items. “Price is listed as the most important factor that’s driving both meat and dairy purchases by Iowans that’s above eight other factors that were tested,” he says.

Bader says 79 percent of those in the survey done with Harris Polls, say they are concerned about the impact of government regulations on the prices. “Which is up from 62 percent in last year survey,” Bader says. “In fact, government regulation that increases food costs went from the sixth most concerning aspect of food production last year in 2021, to the most selected option.”

Bader says they didn’t ask for specifics on the regulation side. “We just left it as government regulation that increases food costs. So there’s, you know, regulations on the food chain all the way from the farm — all the way up to the manufacturing and whatnot,” he says.

Bader says the survey found among the Iowans who are the primary or have a shared responsibility for grocery grocery shopping responsibilities, 96 percent eat meat at least weekly, and 94 percent consume dairy, at least weekly.

DAVID ARTHUR KOHL, 65, of Minden (No Services or visitation)

Obituaries

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

DAVID ARTHUR KOHL, 65, of Minden, died Thursday, August 5, 2022, at home. No services or visitation will be held for DAVID KOHL. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca is assisting the family.

DAVID KOHL is survived by:

His wife – Tami [Petersen] Kohl, of Minden.

His sons – Josh (Kelsey) Kohl, and Justin Kohl, all of Minden.

His sisters – Marthann (Dan) Fuhs, of Defiance; Karen (Steve) Sutley, of Lincoln City, OR and Alisa (Bubba) Jones, of Texas.

His brothers – Don Kohl, of Missouri Valley, and Mike Kohl, of Woodbine.

and 2 grandchildren.

Plans for nearly 3 dozen wind turbines scrapped in Madison County

Ag/Outdoor, News

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Winterset, Iowa) – A wind farm project featuring 30 turbines has been scrapped in Madison County. Officials with MidAmerican Energy told KCCI in Des Moines, that the utility company says it canceled the Arbor Hill project, because of the circumstances surrounding their original plans have changed, including the number of turbines they were allowed to construct.

In a statement to the television station, MidAmerican said “While the project in Madison County won’t proceed, we have proudly partnered with more than 4,000 landowners across Iowa to host wind turbines that are critical to our ability to deliver customers clean, renewable energy – in 2021, that amounted to more than 88% of the energy our Iowa customers used.”

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Friday, Aug. 5, 2022

Weather

August 5th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly-to Mostly sunny. High 94. S @ 10-15.
Tonight: Fair to P/Cldy. Low 74. S @ 5-10.
Tomorrow: Mo. Sunny. **HEAT ADVISORY from Noon until 9-p.m**High 98. Heat Index 103-108. SW @ 1-25.
Sunday: P/Cldy w/scattered showers & thunderstorms. High 93.
Monday: A chance of morning showers & thunderstorms; Cldy to P/Cldy. High 84.

Thursday’s High in Atlantic was 89. The Low was 59. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 84 and the Low was 66. The Record High on this date was 111 in 1918. The Record Low was 42 in 1978.