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FRED J. MATTHIES, 102, of Atlantic (Svcs. 1/27/24)

Obituaries

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

FRED J. MATTHIES, 102, of Atlantic, died Tue., Jan. 23, 2024, at the Heritage House in Atlantic. Funeral services for FRED MATTHIES will be held 10:30-a.m. Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024, at Pauley-Jones Funeral Home, in Avoca.

The family will greet friends this evening from 5-until 7-p.m., at the funeral home.

Burial is in the Layton Township Cemetery at Walnut.

FRED MATTHIES is survived by:

His sons – Douglas (Margo) Matthies, of Walnut, and Robert (Verna) Matthies, of Anita.

His daughter – Darla (Sherman) Snyder, of Walnut.

14 grandchildren, 34 great-grandchildren, 3 great-great grandchildren, and his daughter-in-law, Sally Matthies, of Walnut.

IHSAA Board Meeting Briefs January 26th

Sports

January 26th, 2024 by Asa Lucas

Track & Field: Expansion of adaptive opportunities with new Paralympic Class

Starting in the 2024 season, IHSAA and the Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union will offer an expanded Paralympic Class to add an Ambulatory Division alongside the preexisting Wheelchair Division.

The Ambulatory Division will offer opportunities to student-athletes with at least one of eight impairments – limb deficiency, leg length difference, short stature, hypertonia, ataxia, athetosis, visual impairment, and intellectual impairment – and event points will be added alongside those scored within the Wheelchair Division to compete in the Paralympic Class.

The IHSAA has offered a Wheelchair Division at the State Track & Field Championships since 1990.

Team championships were awarded within the Wheelchair Division starting in 2003. Team points will now be distributed from events from both adaptive divisions and result in Paralympic Class champions for both boys’ and girls’ competitors.

Guidelines for these divisions have been adopted from the International Paralympic Committee and Adaptive Track & Field USA, with the assistance of Adaptive Sports Iowa.

Soccer: State finals and semifinals to move in Des Moines

The semifinals and finals for all four classes of IHSAA soccer will move to Drake University starting this spring.

Semifinals games will be split between Drake Stadium & Mediacom Stadium, with finals then competed at Mediacom Stadium, which is a 4,000-seat facility opened in 2023 as a multi-use partnership for both Drake University and Des Moines Public Schools.

“The IHSAA is excited to add Drake Stadium and Mediacom Stadium to our relationship with Drake University,” IHSAA soccer administrator Todd Tharp said. “We strive to provide premier facilities to our student-athletes and member schools. These venues will help us continue to create the best possible experiences for our student-athletes.”

Quarterfinals in 2024 will still be played at Cownie Soccer Complex, where the IHSAA has been contracted since 2005.

2024 IHSAA STATE SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIPS
QuarterfinalsWednesday, May 29

Cownie Soccer Complex

SemifinalsFriday, May 31

Drake Stadium &

Mediacom Stadium

FinalsSaturday, June 1

Mediacom Stadium

Football: Advisory recommendations approved for 2024

Seven different recommendations out of December’s meeting of the football advisory committee were approved by the Board of Control on Thursday, addressing specific issues within playoff host criteria, forfeits, scrimmages, and more. All approved changes will go into effect for the 2024 season, which is the second of a two-year cycle.

  1. A new order for postseason site assignments were agreed upon to better distribute hosting within the IHSAA’s new ranking and seeding process for Classes 2A, 1A, A, and Eight-Player. The order for hosting priority, as applicable:
    • Round of 16: 1. District finish; 2. Head-to-head results; 3. IHSAA ranking; 4. Fewest district losses; 5. Alphabet draw.
    • Quarterfinals: 1. Head-to-head result; 2. IHSAA ranking; 3. District finish; 4. Fewest district losses; 5. Alphabet draw.
  2. Use the 17-point tiebreaker in case of three-way ties to determine district champion and/or district runner-up in Class 4A and Class 3A.
  3. Teams forfeiting in the regular season due to lack of available players will result in ineligibility for the postseason, including Week 9 non-district games permitted for Classes 2A, 1A, A, and Eight-Player.
  4. Teams will be permitted to schedule weight room sessions outside of the preseason allotted four-hour practice window.
  5. Teams will be permitted to practice on Saturday or Sunday following the first allowable scrimmage date.
  6. Teams may now determine the number of teams at scrimmages, up to four teams at the same site.
  7. The IHSAA will begin assigning seven-person officiating crews – an increase from the typical five-person mechanic – for the state semifinals and finals in all classes.

KATHRYN “KAY” McMARTIN, 81, of Council Bluffs (Memorial Svcs. 2/3/24)

Obituaries

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

KATHRYN “KAY” McMARTIN, 81, of Council Bluffs, died Wednesday, January 24, 2024, at the Hanson House, in Council Bluffs. Memorial services for KAY McMARTIN will be held on Feb. 3, 2024 at 11-a.m., at the Carson United Methodist Church. Rieken-Vieth Funeral Home in Oakland is in charge of the arrangements.

The family will greet friends at the church one hour prior to services.

Burial in the Carson Cemetery will be held at a later date.

A memorial is currently being established.

Fatal vehicle-pedestrian accident in Hamburg, Thursday

News

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Hamburg, Iowa) – Fremont County Sheriff Kevin Aistrope says a 77-year-old Hamburg resident died Thursday evening, after he was struck by a passing pickup truck. The accident happened at around 6:06-p.m., near the intersection of Main Street and E Street. in Hamburg. The resident was carrying items to his vehicle from a local community center when he was struck. The man, whose identity was being withheld, pending notification of family, died from his injuries at a nearby hospital.

The driver of the vehicle, a 2001 Ford F-150, was identified as 77-year-old Nancy Bartles, of Rock Port, Missouri. Bartles was uninjured.

The incident remains under investigation by the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office. Hamburg Fire and Rescue responded to the call.

Vehicle fire near the Underwood Co-Op

News

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Underwood, Iowa) – An SUV was engulfed in flames Wednesday afternoon near the Underwood Co-Op. KJAN listener/social media follower Zach Ploen reports the incident took place at around 3-p.m.  The vehicle was about 50-feet from the gas pumps, when a gas leak under the SUV sparked the fire.

Crews from the Underwood Fire Department and Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Deputies responded to the scene. No injuries were reported.

Photos courtesy of Zach Ploen.

Bill would let Iowa public schools bring in chaplains as counselors

News

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s public schools would have the option of having a paid or volunteer chaplain on staff if a bill being considered in the Iowa Senate becomes law. Pastor Mike Demastus, of the Fort Des Moines Church of Christ, says it could help schools address mental health issues among students and staff. “One of the biggest concerns that we have is school safety and being able to head off at the pass, seeing warning signs with students who are exhibiting behaviors that might be concerned,” Demastus says. Chaplains would have to pass a background check, but schools would not be allowed to require any kind of licensing or professional credentials for chaplains.

Eric Johnson directs the chaplain program at Unity Point Health in Des Moines and his hospital chaplains undergo a year of clinical training “To believe that the same wouldn’t be required ­- maybe different training, but the same oversight and certification – for vulnerable children experiencing distress feels a bit reckless to me,” Johnson said.

Last year, the state of Texas passed a law letting public schools use safety funds to hire people to be chaplains, who provide mental health counseling to students. The American Civil Liberties Union of Texas says courts have repeatedly ruled that it is unconstitutional to invite religious leaders into public schools to engage in prayer and religious counseling with students.

Girls Super Regionals are Today

Sports

January 26th, 2024 by Jim Field

The girls wrestling super regional meets are today.  Area wrestlers are competing at the Tyson Arena in Sioux City.

Among the local squads in Region 1 at AC/GC, Audubon, Clarinda, Council Bluffs, Denison-Schleswig, Kuemper Catholic, Lewis Central, Logan-Magnolia, Panorama, Red Oak, Riverside, Southwest Iowa S.W.A.T and Treynor.

In Region 2, Carroll, East Mills, Glenwood, Harlan, Missouri Valley, Shenandoah and Woodbine will compete.

The girls wrestle in 32-team brackets with the top four placewinners in each weight class advancing to the state championship tourney next week in Coralville.

Governor would consider new rules for pipelines, but nothing retroactive

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds says she’s open to considering changes in how state officials review applications for building and maintaining pipelines in Iowa, but Reynolds says it would unfair to make retroactive changes that would apply to Iowa Utilities Board’s current review of a construction permit for Summit’s carbon capture pipeline. “They made decisions based on the law that was on the books,” Reynolds says. “…It’s probably not very fair to go back and change the rules…Doesn’t seem right.” Reynolds says the rules about rerouting the proposed path for a pipeline around an unwilling landowner’s property may need an update for the next time a developer seeks state approval of a permit to construct and operate a pipeline in Iowa.

“Taking a look at some of those things so it’s not this battle that, if there is an alternate route that could work, you know, it shouldn’t have to start over on the whole process and then timeline and then all of that is just cost, eventually, too, and it just delays it,” Reynolds told Radio Iowa.

The Iowa House has attempted to put limits on the use of eminent domain to seize property from unwilling landowners along the proposed carbon pipeline route, but the Iowa Senate did not bring the House plans up for a vote during 2022 or 2023.

Chlorinated water discharge causes fish kill at McLoud Run

News

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Thursday, said it was notified of a fish kill on January 25 at McLoud Run Trout Stream in Cedar Rapids.  On Tuesday, January 23, the City of Cedar Rapids reported an estimated release of 450,000 gallons of chlorinated drinking water from an unoccupied building located at 4425 Center Point Road NE, which eventually entered McLoud Run. City officials believe the release was caused by a fire suppression line that may have burst during the recent cold snap, but were unaware of any pressure loss.

DNR staff from the Fisheries Bureau are investigating the fish kill, but have been hampered by very murky stream conditions. Staff have observed between 200-300 dead fish as of this morning, including trout and white suckers.  McLoud Run is Iowa’s most southerly trout stream and the only trout stream near a major urban area. Several popular fish species in this stream include Brown Trout, Creek Chub, Rainbow Trout, Green Sunfish and White Sucker.

The dead fish count was a expected to be finalized soon.

If you see dead or stressed fish at a lake or river, call the DNR’s 24-hour spill line at 515-725-8694 as soon as possible. Quick reporting can help DNR staff identify the cause of a fish kill and potentially stop a fish kill in progress.

Iowa Soybean meeting Armstrong farm February 13th; CCA credits available

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 26th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Lewis, Iowa) –  The Wallace Learning Center, Armstrong Memorial Research Farm, near Lewis (53020 Hitchcock Ave.), will host an “Innovation to Profit Series,” on February 13th, from 10:30-a.m. until 2-p.m.  Those in attendance can expect to: receive up-to-date research opportunities to boost your profitability, productivity and sustainability; Engage with farmers to discuss challenges and opportunities in your area; and Get to know your regionally-based Iowa Soybean Association agronomists, conservation agronomists and producer services team.

The morning session will cover “Soybean Seeding Rates & Biologicals.” The presentation by Drew Clemmensen, ISA research agronomist, and Anthony Martin, ISA data analyst, will dig into the data from ISA seeding rate, long term cover crop and biological trials. Discover how seeding populations performed in different management systems to optimize seeding rates and cost savings. Attendees will take a deeper dive into the biological trial data and how it could impact local farmers.

The afternoon session is with regard to “Southwest Iowa Conservation,” and features Joseph Wuebker, ISA conservation agronomist. Crop producers will learn where they can start with conservation practices. You’ll also hear from local agronomists on the benefits, timeline planning and cost share opportunities for conservation practices specific to your area. Discussion pertaining to planting and scouting tips will follow, with fellow Southwest Iowa farmers and agronomists.

(Photo: Iowa Soybean Association / Joclyn Bushman)

The final topic is “Enhancing Nitrogen Recommendations using Data,” presented by Mitch Baum, Iowa State University postdoctoral researcher.  The Iowa Nitrogen Initiative (INI) is a public-private partnership that works directly with Iowa farmers to conduct nitrogen rate research on their farm fields. In 2023, 270 trials were conducted, a 400% increase from the pilot year in 2022. In this presentation, INI researchers and staff will give a short overview of the project and present yield response data from the 2023 trials, ending with an update on decision support tool development and trials of interest for 2024.

Register today to reserve your spot. And, if you are looking to continue your education and expand your knowledge, Certified Crop Adviser (CCA) credits for the event are currently pending.