United Group Insurance

Council Bluffs woman to compete in Iowa State Fair lottery game show

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Des Moines, Iowa — Twenty lucky people will get the chance to win up to $5 million at a live lottery game show at the Iowa State Fair this year. One of the contestants is Tamara McMahon, from Council Bluffs. The Iowa Lottery said there were over 67,000 entries for its Fair Fever promotion. This will be the first lottery game show at the Fair since 2012. Contestants were chosen through the Iowa Lottery and Iowa State Fair’s scratch game that was released earlier this year. Those who didn’t win instant prizes on their tickets could enter them into the Fair Fever promotion for a chance to compete in the show or win a Grandstand concert prize package.

Each contestant will have to get through a series of games to win the prize. All contestants will take home at least $10,000 and the finalist will win at least $500,000 and have a chance to win up to $5 million. The show will take place on Aug. 8 at 5:30 p.m. on the Grand Concourse.

The rest of this year’s contestants include:

  • Craig Bergman of Cedar Rapids
  • Michelle Cerwinske of Nashua
  • Margo Fox of Johnston
  • Kristine Frye of Des Moines
  • Nicole Gulick of Des Moines
  • Ryan Habeger of Algona
  • Gerald Johnson of Iowa City
  • Gerald Kennicker of Dubuque
  • Steven Moore of Urbandale
  • Jolene Murray of Cedar Rapids
  • Mary Olin of Des Moines
  • Dawn Peterson of Colfax
  • Timothy Roberts of Ottumwa
  • Scott Stewart of Waterloo
  • Steven Stout of Indianola
  • Christine Tatman of Orange City
  • Rodney Tucker of Des Moines
  • Jeff Weiland of Dubuque
  • David Wesley of Des Moines

Flight attendant discusses Flight 232 crash on anniversary

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A flight attendant who was on United Flight 232 when it crashed in Sioux City 35 years ago returned for events this past weekend to remember the 112 who died and the 184 who survived the crash. Susan White was just starting her career and was 26 when an engine failure led to the D-C-10 crashing at the Sioux Gateway Airport. She says the response was tremendous. “The community came together and we do talk about how people were lining up donating blood. It’s just I don’t think you could have that anywhere else,” white says. “And the people were so generous and so gracious and people were volunteering food, volunteering their homes and yeah, it’s like the college I stayed two nights in the college with another flight attendant we shared dormitory room.”

After two nights in the Briar Cliff dorm room, White’s father came to Sioux City to fly back home with her and she eventually returned to her job.  “I don’t know if I could have been on the plane without him holding me, I was very very fearful,” she says, “but through therapy and some time I was able to come back. And I always wanted to come back, I never had in my mind that I wouldn’t come back, because I truly loved my job.” White says part of her therapy was reunions with the other crewmembers, including some that were in Sioux City.

“I’m very close with several people from Sioux City here that have become good friends of mine, and it’s such a comfort to have them in my life. And they’re all part of my story of my healing and continuing to be able to do my job as I do it,” she says. “It was right during the reunions, getting together with the crew and just discussing and telling how we felt and talking about that day and all that happened. I think it was good therapy for all of us.”

White was in Sioux City on the anniversary Friday to talk about how the crew communicated during the emergency.

Survey finds breweries have a billion dollar impact on state economy

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A survey by the Iowa Brewers Guild finds Iowa breweries generated a total economic impact of one-point-two-five billion dollars from operations, trade, and tourism in 2022. That’s a big increase from the 245 million dollar impact in 2020. Brewers Guild executive director Noreen Otto says the industry is growing and maturing. “We now have breweries operating in 82 different Iowa communities, and so you know you just see that sprinkling. We go coast to coast with Iowa breweries,” Otto says. “I think it’s also just the open community space that breweries become.” She says breweries have become multipurpose and multi-generational entertainment venues.

“They’re welcoming for so many different occasions both you know adults gathering, but I joke I’ve been to a book club at a brewery, I’ve been to a baby shower at a brewery, I’ve been to a P-T-A meeting at a brewery, and so they’re really becoming these important community gathering spaces,” she says. Otto says breweries have had to adapt after the pandemic hurt the ability of customers to stop by for a beer, and they have not fully recovered from that. “Retail continues to be difficult in a time of you know some economic pressure, but again I think breweries are rising to the occasion with more creative product lines more events in the spaces,” Otto says. She says there’s been changes in laws and regulations that have helped the industry grow.

“This last session we expanded the ability of a brewery to pour at a festival, which gives a little more of local flavor to these events around the state of Iowa that you see, especially all summer long,” Otto says. “And I think continuing to change the environment to be more supportive of craft brewing and allow more flexibility for the small business owners will help us to remain stable going forward.” The state has approximately 150 breweries with a workforce of around 72-hundred employees for direct operations and total employment throughout the supply chain of 14-thousand-448 jobs. Otto says there’s still room for more growth.

Inside an Iowa brewery. (photo from the IA Brewers Guild)

“The economic impact study projected continued growth, almost another nine percent increase in jobs are expecting and a projection of continued growth about 17 percent in total economic output,” Otto says. “I think we’re gonna see that, as we legislatively allow access to more markets for breweries as they continue to mature and continue to grow their product lines.” One of the recent areas of growth has been partnerships with colleges and universities to support the funding of Name Image and Likeness collectives. “It was really fun over about the last year year and a half to see so many partnerships both with, Iowa State and University of Iowa but also Drake, U-N-I and Central College, places like that,” she says. “looking to build both the brewery brands and the sports brands and, you know, kind of honors the legacy and the community surrounding their alumni.”

The Iowa Brewers Guild, the not-for-profit trade association of professional brewers of beer, cider and in Iowa.

Red Oak man arrested for Domestic Abuse Assault

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – Red Oak Police report the arrest at around 4:10-p.m. Sunday, of 24-year-old Cameron Alexander Travis, from Red Oak. Travis was arrested in the 400 block of E. Grimes Street, for Domestic Abuse Assault. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail, and held without bond.

Day 2 of RAGBRAI has bicyclists heading from Red Oak to Atlantic

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Bicyclists on RAGBRAI leave Red Oak today (Monday) on their slightly more than 40-mile trip to Atlantic as their next stop-over community. The ride features an elevation of 1,702-feet, 3.7-miles of gravel road options, and a concert tonight in Atlantic, from “The Pork Tornadoes.”

As they make their way from Red Oak on Day 2 of the excursion to across Iowa, RAGBRAI riders will pass through the towns of Elliott, Griswold – which serves as a meeting town – and Lewis, where they might want to check out the Hitchcock House, a national landmark known for its role in the Underground Railroad as a safe house for enslaved people traveling to Canada for freedom.

In Atlantic, they’ll come to know the Coca-Cola Capital of Iowa, the city that hosts the second-largest Coca-Cola Convention in the U.S. every fall, second-only to Atlanta, GA. Atlantic once had a Coca-Cola museum, but that closed during Covid, in the Spring of 2021.

On Tuesday, the RAGBRAI riders will make their way 82-miles to their next stop-over town: Winterset. Along the way they will pass through Wiota, Cumberland, Massena, Fontanelle, Greenfield – Meeting Town, Orient  and Macksburg.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Monday, July 22, 2024 – RAGBRAI Day 2

Weather

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

Today: Patchy fog through about 9-a.m., otherwise partly sunny, w/a 20% chance of afternoon showers & thunderstorms. The main hazard will be from lighting during any thunderstorms. High near 82. Light and variable wind.
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 61.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny w/a 20% chance of showers & thunderstorms. High near 84. W/SW winds 5-10 mph. (At this time it appears lightning will be the primary hazard during any thunderstorms)
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 84.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 85.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 86.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 83. Our Low this morning, 56. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 87 & the Low was 56. The All-time Record High here, on July 22nd, was 109 in 1901, & the Record Low was 45, in 1956. Sunrise: 6:04. Sunset: 8:47.

Iowans react to Biden’s decision to end his reelection campaign

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Nearly 50 Iowans who’re Democratic National Convention delegates will soon be called upon to pick a new nominee after President Biden’s exit from the 2024 race. Iowa Democratic Party Rita Hart says she’s sad Biden has stepped aside. “But I recognize that this action means Joe is telling us it’s up to us to finish the job,” Hart said. Hart said it’s unclear when the party will pick a nominee. “I think this is kind of uncharted territory,” Hart told reporters. “…We don’t know what the process will be.”

A panel of national Democrats will meet Friday and is expected to set the guidelines. Scott Brennan, a former Iowa Democratic Party chairman, is one of Iowa’s representatives on the Democratic National Committee. He says it’s unlikely the party would pick someone other than Vice President Kamala Harris.”I think it’s probably at least an 80% chance she will be our nominee,” Brennan says. “…Mechanically I don’t know how else it works, particularly this late in the process.”

Brennan says there’s a huge campaign finance issue that presents itself if Harris isn’t the nominee. “A presidential campaign is like a big ship and so now we’re going to turn a giant ship from having President Biden be on the top of the ticket to likely Vice President Harris, although who knows?” Brennan said. “I’m surprised we are where we are right now.”

Connie Gronstal of Council Bluffs is one of the delegates who’ll be asked to make the decision. She and her husband Mike Gronstal, the former Iowa Senate Majority Leader, hosted an event for Biden in 2007 and she was planning to back Biden in 2024. She says it’s now time to rally behind Vice President Kamala Harris. “She has my full support,” Gronstal said. “Hopefully all this drama is over with now.”

Then-candidate Joe Biden spoke to Radio Iowa on January 25, 2020 before the Iowa Caucuses. (RI file photo)

The Iowa Democratic Party’s chairwoman says she needs to talk with Iowa’s national convention delegates before making any public statement about having Harris as the party’s nominee. “President Biden’s endorsement really matters…She has the experience and he would not endorse her otherwise,” Hart says. “…Our delegates will respond, but it’s so early.” Derek Muller is a national election law expert who left the University of Iowa a year ago to join the law school faculty at Notre Dame.

Muller says because of a ballot deadline in Ohio, Democrats had already been planning for an electronic roll call of delegates to nominate Biden in early August and Muller says the most likely outcome now is a virtual nomination of Harris in the next couple of weeks. “She’ll have to announce a vice presidential nominee by then, I suppose, and then they’ll move forward in business as usual,” Muller says, “except trying to fundraiser and introduce your candidate to the nation in a much shorter time frame.”

Shortly after Biden announced he would no longer seek reelection, several Iowa Republicans in state and federal office said Biden is unfit to continue serving as president. The chairman of the Iowa G-O-P said it was dangerous for Biden to remain in office. Senator Grassley said voters won’t be fooled by Democrats changing horses in midstream, but he did not call on Biden to resign.

Collins Aerospace, largest employer in Cedar Rapids, has new president

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The largest employer in Cedar Rapids has a new leader. Troy Brunk has been named president of Collins Aerospace. Brunk has led three of the six business units at Collins in Cedar Rapids. He will report directly to the C-E-O of R-T-X — formerly known as Raytheon.

It’s the company that acquired Collins Aerospace in a merger back in 2020. Brunk replaces Stephen Timm, who is retiring after a 28 year career with Collins. About seven-thousand people work at Collins Aerospace in Cedar Rapids.

Abortion is still legal in Iowa up to 20 weeks

News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – There’s an unresolved legal challenge to the law that would ban most abortions in Iowa — and Planned Parenthood clinics in Iowa will continue to provide abortions up to the 20th week of a pregnancy until further action from the courts.

The Iowa Supreme Court ruled on June 28th that a six-week abortion ban is legal under Iowa’s constitution, but the A-C-L-U of Iowa has filed a petition asking the justices to rehear the case. The district court judge who would lift the injunction that’s blocked the law from taking effect cannot act until that matter is resolved. Ruth Richardson is the president and C-E-O of Planned Parenthood of North Central States.

She says the situation is temporary relief and once the nearly total ban on abortions in Iowa goes into effect, Planned Parenthood has developed plans to help patients get out of state abortions if their pregnancy is beyond that early window. Francesca Turner is an OB-GYN in Des Moines and a member of Iowans for Health Liberty. She says there are many complications during pregnancy and they might not be considered life threatening under the law’s exception for life of the mother.

“It’s not our jobs as physicians to tell women what to do,” she said, “but we need to give them the options and allow them to take the risks that they choose for themselves and their family.”

The law has other exceptions for fetal abnormalities and for victims of rape and incest who quickly report the assaults to police.

A high-tech approach to studying Iowa’s future soil health

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 22nd, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service) – Farmers in Iowa are studying interactions between crops, water usage, carbon and nitrogen storage, and how those factors combine to affect longterm soil biodiversity. It’s part of a seven-state project in the Midwest. Researchers are looking at the effects of crop combinations on soil and moisture across the Corn Belt.

Iowa State University Agronomy Professor Sotirious Archontoulis is running one research site in the five-year, $16 million project. He’s monitoring how crop management, carbon and nitrogen content affect soil moisture – and will try to predict the impact on the viability of future crops. “We have the same setup in many different environments to capture different organic matter, soil hydrology conditions,” said Archontoulis, “so we get a better understanding of the complexities in the agronomic system.”

Archontoulis said scientists can also study greenhouse gas emissions from the soil. He said these ultimately affect its health and can have an impact on large ag operation waste runoff, which is known to pollute nearby ground and surface water. The research is gearing up now.

Based on the computer model’s findings, Archontoulis said researchers can make recommendations to farmers based on – for example – how much nitrogen the soil is losing in certain places, and how they can adjust planting schedules as a result.

“We can say, ‘This cropping system with this management practice typically loses that amount of nitrogen,'” said Archontoulis. “‘However, the other combination of cropping system could reduce nitrogen loss and improve productivity by X%, so this is a better strategy to move forward.'”

Archontoulis said the research begins across the Midwest this summer.