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WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 12, 2022

Trading Post

September 12th, 2022 by Lori Murphy

FOR SALE:  Golden Retriever/Border Collie mix, born July 14, 9 weeks old, male and female.  Mother is a purebred AKC Golden Retriever and dad is a Border Collie.  Please text 712-249-5481.

FOR SALE:  Chrysler LeBaron convertible with 100,000 miles for $1,800.  A stainless steel sink with three tubs for $200.  Several motorcycles from 170cc to 1100cc including dirt bikes, street bikes, cruisers and collectible bikes, asking $100 and up.  Call 712-355-1566 in Council Bluffs.

FOR SALE: Approximately 30 quart size canning jars with rings. $8/dozen. Also 12 new half pint jars with rings and flats. $10. Call 712-779-3610

FOR SALE:  A 50 gallon Westinghouse water heater, still in the crate for $800.  Also, rec room equipment, including a foosball table, hockey table and hot tub, all for $200.  and, a pole driver, plow and snow blade, all with 3-point hook-up for $250.  712-355-1566 in Council Bluffs

FOR SALE:  2 Adventureland tickets for $40/pair.  And, a new crop of peaches are for sale. Call to find out more.  712-789-9385.

FOR SALE:  Whirlpool 22 Cubic Foot Side By Side Refrigerator Freezer.  Purchased new in 2017.  Water and ice in the door.  Everything works except the refrigerator light.  $500.  Call 712-249-9207SOLD!

WANTED: Looking for a good used washer and a decent mobile home to set on my property and live in while I build my new house. Call 712-789-0848 in Griswold.

FOR SALE:  Ariens 24″ front tine tiller, newer 5 hp engine.  $150.00.  712-250-1005.

FOR SALE:  several sizes/shapes/colors of ceramic tile, asking 50 cents per box.  DeWalt table saw with extended arms for plywood for $100.  A new Lennox furnace for $150.  Call 712-355-1566 in Council Bluffs.

FOR SALE: Lazy Boy recliner in good condition. $25. Call 712-784-2167.

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WANTED:  Studio or 1-2 bedroom rental.  A single women no kids and no pets.  Is looking for a rental as hers she has been in for 6 years now is up for sale.  Please contact me at 712-789-9147 to get her the information.

FOR SALE:  Many power tools for sale.  Arm saw, miter saw and lathe.  All used, but in good condition.  Located in Atlantic Iowa.  Call 402-630-9169 or 712-289-0087.

FOR SALE:  a pair of plastic Rhino car ramps, in good condition, $20.00.  Call 712-250-1005.

FOR SALE:  Wall mount for a plasma or flat screen TV. TV can be 34″ to 65″ and weigh 200lbs or less. Asking $20. Also a water fountain that needs a pump…FREESOLD!  Located in Atlantic 712-254-3495

FOR SALE:  Chassis for wagon, including a 20-foot hayrack and another wagon, like new for $150.  Also interested in trading a sandblaster for some cement tools.  Call 712-355-1566 in Council Bluffs.

FREE TO A GOOD HOME:  Female cat.  Spayed and front declawed. Long Hair Blue-Gray in color Male cat-neutered and front declawed. Thunder & Lightning are also looking for a good home. They are orange kitties and brothers.  They are really mellow and sleep a lot.  Thunder talks to you especially when he wants food.  They are both front declawed and neutered.  They like to be brushed and petted but do not like to be picked up.  They like the laser light and laying in a cat tree.  All in Atlantic.  531-530-9492..please leave a message if I miss your call.

FOR SALE:  XIDU 12.5 inch Windows 10 Laptop with Backlit Keyboard, 2K Display (2560 x 1440)….. Just like new …..$175.  Call 531-530-9492 in Atlantic.

WANTED:  Searching for fallen apples.  I will come help you clean up your fallen apples in exchange for some of the good ones that have fallen.  I will also help you pick the good ones for your eating.  Let me know if I can help!  I am in Atlantic. (661)361-3147.

FOR SALE: Green and beige loveseat for $25. Also a green recliner for $5. Call 712-249-3282 after 2:30pm.

HOUSEHOLD SALE: Thursday, September 15, Friday, September 16 and Saturday, September 17 from 9am-5pm. Located at 2756 190th Street Audubon. (9.5 miles East of Audubon) Find what you want and make an offer. CASH ONLY

FOR SALE: 1000 bushel grainery for $250. Also various lengths of good used corrugated tin and a 4 year old Suffolk X ram/buck. For more information call 712-249-5160.

8 arrests in Creston from 9/9-9/11

News

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Police in Creston report nine arrests occurred over the past few days. At around 9:41-p.m. Saturday, 43-year-old Kimberly Morgan, of Creston, was arrested at a residence in Creston, and charged with possession of drug paraphernalia. Morgan was cited and released at the scene, on a promise to appear in court. At around 3:15-p.m., Saturday, Douglas Edward Woodward, III, of Creston, was arrested at a residence in Creston. He was charged with Violation of a No Contact/Protective Order, and held without bond until seen by a Magistrate. Also arrested on Saturday, in Creston, was 36-year-old Erminio Velasquez Alvarado, of Texas, who was take into custody at the Highway 24 and S. Walnut Street. Alvarado was charged with OWI/1st offense, and later released on a $1,000 cash or surety bond (c/s).

At around 2:30-a.m. Friday, Creston Police arrested 38-year-old Lee Ryan Fowler, of Creston, for Interference with Official Acts, and Violation of a No Contact/Protective Order. He was arrested at his residence and transported to the Union County Jail. Fowler was later released on a $600 (c/s) bond. Friday evening, Creston Police arrested 37-year-old Dusty Levi Champlin, of Creston, for Driving While Barred. He was later released on a $2,000 (c/s) bond.

Thursday night, 22-year-old Hugo Eduardo Hernandez, of Dallas, TX, was arrested at the Casey’s Store in Creston, located on Highway 34. Hernandez was charged with Disorderly Conduct – loud and raucous noise. He was released from the Union County Jail after Time-Served. Thursday evening, 37-year-old Jackie Lee Marler, of Creston, was arrested at the Union County Law Enforcement Center. He was wanted on a Union County warrant for Violation of a No Contact/Protective Order, and later released on a $500 (c/s) bond.

Thursday morning, Creston Police arrested 34-year-old Casey David Mitchell, of Thayer, on a Union County warrant for Child Endangerment. Mitchell was later released on a $2,000 (c/s) bond.

DNR reviewing disposal and reuse of wind turbine blades

News

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Department of Natural resources has been holding meetings on discuss possible changes or improvements to the process of disposing of used wind turbine blades. The D-N-R’s Aime Davidson says there are regulations in place already for disposing of the blades — but she says there are still challenges. “They’re really large and really strong, so they’re hard to manage at the landfills in those large pieces. And I think there is also desire to recycle them, obviously as they’re a green energy,” she says. “And so kind of similar situation figuring out exactly how you do that has been difficult.” She says there have been some solutions worked out.

“Landfilling — I think they’ve gotten to a point where if they’re cut down into small enough pieces, they’re able to manage them just like any other waste. So that’s good,” Davidson says. “As far as recycling, I do know that there are a few places where they grind them up and are potentially using them as a substitute for aggregate and concrete mixes.” She says those concrete mixes are used for parking areas and planters. Davidson there’s continued work on figuring out new formulations for blades going out to make them easier to recycle. Another aspect of the blades is making sure they don’t get backed up into big piles. Davidson says there are regulations that require recyclers to show they are indeed recycling the blades.

“Whatever amount of material coming in a certain percentage has to go off site. So…it doesn’t focus so much on how much you can have on site, it’s more focused on is the material moving through. So, that shows that you have a legitimate end use,” she says. Davidson says they don’t want to necessarily stifle the recycling industry to keep it from having the quantity it needs. She says there has been one case of a pile of blades that has been forwarded to the Attorney General’s office, but the other piles have all been taken care of. The D-N-R’s ongoing meetings include the utility companies, industry representatives, and solid waste agencies, to develop recommendations.

“These strategies would be looking at is there something different or more that we would want to do an Iowa to manage these materials,” she says. Davidson says they are starting to put together some recommendations from those discussions. I’m not 100 percent sure, at this point, if it would be to the extent of any law changes, or if it would be more along the lines of incentives or some assistance to have more recycling — kind of what direction should this go,” according to Davidson. Davidson says disposing of wind blades has become a topic of discussion in a lot of places. “It’s been a struggle across the whole country, even in Europe. This is not unique to Iowa by any means,” she says.

Davidson says the use of solar panels is not as far along as wind turbines, but finding ways to dispose of the solar panels is something that looms as well.

UI researcher develops program to help managers ID intimate partner violence

News

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A University of Iowa researcher has created a free online training program that companies can use to help employees identify warning signs of intimate partner violence, or what’s also been called domestic abuse. Beth Livingston, a U-I professor management and entrepreneurship, says the Abuse is Not Love program provides strategies employers can use to help at-risk employees before the situation becomes explosive. “We have built an evidence-based training to help make people aware of what intimate partner violence actually is,” Livingston says, “because this sort of awareness of the warning signs of violence — before it gets to a point where we’re worried about people’s physical well being — can allow us to intervene in ways that keeps people safe.”

Livingston says the COVID era has demonstrated that companies have an interest in the overall wellbeing of their employees and the ways in which the things that happen at home affect work. “This is an acknowledgment that our employees do not cease being our employees when they go home and the things that happen at home can absolutely affect them at work,” Livingston says. “I think companies have, if not an interest, a responsibility to think about how to keep their employees safe.” Intimate partner violence is one of the most common forms of violence against women. It includes physical, sexual, financial, and emotional abuse, as well as controlling behaviors by an intimate partner.

Statistics show a woman is killed every three days as a result of intimate partner violence. “Warning signs like jealousy that’s meant to control, controlling the sorts of things that people wear and the places they go,” Livingston says. “Getting passwords for your computer, for your email, to intrude upon your personal life, and isolating you from friends and family, all the way down to humiliating you in public, trying to make you feel small.” The workplace is especially critical for intimate partner violence as Livingston’s research shows work is one of few places where victims can find respite from abuse, and the income they earn can bring independence from their abuser.

“When employees are dealing with stress and pain and consternation at home, it absolutely spills over into their satisfaction at work and their productivity and their distraction at work,” Livingston says. “We know with so many employees working at home, that they might be working in the same space that their abuser is holding court over them.” A CDC report finds intimate partner violence costs about one-billion dollars in lost time and productivity every year in the U-S, and a recent European study found more than 20-percent of intimate partner violence victims report increased absenteeism from work, and 50-percent say it affects the quality of their work.

3 arrested in Montgomery County

News

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, Iowa) – The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reports two recent arrests. At around 12:16-a.m. today (Sept. 12th), Ashley Perez, of Bellevue, NE., was arrested at the Sheriff’s Office in Red Oak, on an active Montgomery County warrant for unauthorized use of a credit card. Perez was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $5,000 bond.  And, at around 6:30-p.m. Sunday, Deputies arrested 23-year-old Athea Hamilton, of Red Oak, for Theft in the 5th Degree. She was taken into custody in the 300 block of E. Elm Street, following a brief investigation into an incident that had occurred on August 26th, in the 2400 block of North Broadway Street, in Red Oak. Hamilton was being held on a $300 bond.

And Police in Red Oak report the arrest at around 6:30-p.m., Sunday, of 65-year-old Michael Loren Kelly, from Red Oak, on a Possession of Drug Paraphernalia charge. Kelly was issued a summons to appear in court at the later date, and released back to the Red Oak Health Care Community.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Monday, Sept. 12, 2022

Weather

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Sunny, with a high near 77. Light northwest wind increasing to 5 to 10 mph in the morning.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 48. North wind around 5 mph becoming calm in the evening.

Tomorrow: Sunny, with a high near 81. Calm wind becoming south 5 to 9 mph in the morning.

Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 87.

Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 86. Breezy.

Sunday’s High in Atlantic was 76. Our Low this morning, 42. Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 76 and the Low was 62. The Record High on this date was 97 in 1939 & 2000. The Record Low was 28 in 1902.

Nebraska fires football coach Scott Frost

Sports

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Nebraska fired head coach Scott Frost, Sunday, one day after a humiliating 45-42 loss to Georgia Southern in which the Husker defense gave up 642 yards.

That’s Husker athletic director Trev Alberts who talked about why he made the move now.

The Huskers are 1-2 in Frost’s fifth season as head coach.

Miller-Meeks says Americans lack faith in country’s direction

News

September 12th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Republican Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks says the November election won’t turn on any single issue, but voters will be motivated by values like free enterprise and individual liberty. “When you have over 60% of people who feel the country is on the wrong track, they don’t have faith and they don’t have confidence and they don’t have hope,” Miller-Meeks says, “we need to turn this country around.”

Miller-Meeks held a campaign fundraiser in Coralville Saturday. Two other Iowa Republicans running for re-election spoke to the crowd. Governor Kim Reynolds says Democrats over-complicate things, while Republicans offer common sense.  “The Iowa team is pushing back, we are in a good place,” Reynolds says. “We are showing not only Iowans, but the country what conservative leadership looks like.”

Senator Chuck Grassley says Iowa voters are concerned about inflation and President Biden’s energy policies, particularly when it comes to gasoline production. “The fact it’s $3.69 in Cedar Falls doesn’t make any difference. He can’t take credit for that,” Grassley said. “It’s because people are driving 10% less ’cause they can’t afford the price he got it up to in the first place.”

Florida Senator Rick Scott was the keynote speaker at the Miller-Meeks event. Scott is in charge of fundraising for Republican candidates for the U.S. SENATE, but Scott says he was in Iowa to help a HOUSE candidate because increasing turn-out for Miller-Meeks in Iowa’s first district will benefit Grassley. “I mean, this state will matter, will decide whether we…get a majority in the senate or not. Senator Grassley has to win,” Scott said. “By the way the senate works, if you’re not in the majority, your vote doesn’t matter.”

Christina Bohannan, the Democrat running against Miller-Meeks, says by having Scott speak at the event, Miller-Meeks has aligned herself with Scott’s extreme views. Bohannan points to Scott’s plan to terminate Social Security and Medicare every five years and require congress to vote to reauthorize the programs.

PAUL SCHRODER, 89, of Avoca (Svcs. 9/16/22)

Obituaries

September 11th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

PAUL SCHRODER, 89, of Avoca, died Saturday, Sept. 10th, at Myrtue Medical Center, in Harlan. Funeral services for PAUL SCHRODER will be held 10-a.m. Friday, Sept. 16, 2022 at Pauley-Jones Funeral Home, in Avoca.

The family will greet friends at the funeral home, on Thursday, Sept. 15th, from 5-until 7-p.m.

Burial is in the Silver Valley Cemetery, at Hancock (IA).

PAUL SCHRODER is survived by:

His wife – Carolyn (McKnabb) Schroder, of Hancock.

His daughters – Kathy Grote, of Council Bluffs; Sharon (Paul) Maassen, of Omaha, & Marsha (Brent) Bierbaum, of Griswold.

His son – Mark (Lyla) Schroder, of Hancock.

11 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren,

Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz on the loss to Iowa State

Sports

September 11th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The question at Iowa is what happens next to an offense that is getting worse? Through two games, the Hawkeyes are averaging less than three yards per play and have scored only one touchdown. The offense also has committed five turnovers in two games and coach Kirk Ferentz says they will evaluate the situation at quarterback where Spencer Petras has been ineffective

Not only has Petras struggled but the Hawkeyes are void of weapons and have played the first two games with one scholarship receiver.

Ferentz says improved health at receiver will be a plus for the offense.