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State makes its offer to AFSCME workers

News

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Reynolds administration had made its initial contract proposal to the union which represents some 20-thousand state employees. The state is offering a one percent across the board increase in pay for each of the next two years to workers covered by the AFSCME Council 61 contract. The union asked for a three percent increase for each of the next two years in its initial proposal. They union also asked the state to return to contract language that was in place prior to the new collective bargaining law which restricts the issues covered by the bargaining process. Union president Danny Homan issued a statement in response to the administration offer saying they asked for a fair contract not one that makes a “mockery of state employment.”

Man told to repay Texas and Iowa clients he fleeced

News

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A suburban Des Moines man convicted of fleecing clients in Iowa and Texas has been imprisoned and ordered to pay restitution of nearly $935,000. Prosecutors say 60-year-old Roger Goodwin was sentenced Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Des Moines to 97 months. A jury convicted him in August of seven counts of mail fraud. Prosecutors say that between 2013 and August 2016, Goodwin recommended life insurance or annuity contracts to several Houston- and Des Moines-area clients of his company, the Goodwin Network of Advisors, and then deposited their checks in his bank account.

Authorities say the Windsor Heights, Iowa, man used part of the money for his personal expenses and some of it to repay other clients or make payments to insurance companies on behalf of other clients.

Suspect arrested in Des Moines man’s slaying

News

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Police have arrested a suspect in the slaying of a Des Moines man. Sgt. Paul Parizek said in a news release Thursday that officers sent Wednesday afternoon to check on a resident found the body of 50-year-old Albert Barron III. He’d been stabbed. Parizek says detectives arrested 30-year-old Sean Foster, who’s been charged with first-degree murder.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20th

Trading Post

December 20th, 2018 by Jim Field

FOR SALE: Carhartt tan insulated coveralls. Brand new. 40″ waist x 32″ inseam. $40.  Brand new pair of work boots. Size 12D, 8″ lace up.  $30. Call 712-243-2860.

WANTED:  an apartment-sized refrigerator.  Call 712-249-0938.

WANTED:  Looking for Sandra to call back about the Credit Bureau opportunity at 712-250-8699.

CECILIA MADONNA SUSANNA MOLLER, 90, of Griswold (Memorial Svcs. 1/5/2019)

Obituaries

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

CECILIA MADONNA SUSANNA MOLLER, 90, of Griswold, died Tuesday, Dec. 18th, at the Griswold Care Center. Memorial services for CECILIA MOLLER will be held January 5, 2019 at 1:00 PM, at the Plymouth Presbyterian Church, (16119 Hickory Ave.), in Le Mars. Rieken-Duhn Funeral Home in Oakland has the arrangements.

Interment will be at the Riverside Cemetery.

CECILIA MOLLER is survived by:

Her daughter – Linda (Ken) Johnson, of Omaha, NE.

Her sons – Gary (Maria) Moller, of Harlan, and Jim (Patti) Moller, of Grimes.

Her sister – Francis Lake of Holton, KS

Her brother – Colin (Phyllis) Collmann, of Ireton, IA

10 grandchildren, 27 great-grandchildren; many other relatives and friends.

EDNA B. [Reiner] WITZMAN, 68, of Eldon, MO, formerly of Atlantic (Memorial Svcs. 1/5/2019)

Obituaries

December 20th, 2018 by Jim Field

EDNA B. [Reiner] WITZMAN, 68, of Eldon, MO (formerly of Atlantic) died Wednesday, December 19th at her home.  Memorial services for EDNA WITZMAN will be held 10-a.m. January 5th, at the Hockenberry Family Care Funeral Home, in Atlantic.

Visitation with the family will be during a luncheon at the Atlantic Community Center, following the Memorial Service.

EDNA WITZMAN is survived by:

Her husband – Dale Witzman, of Eldon, MO.

Her daughters -Lisa (Adam) Juckette, of Des Moines, and Amie (Nathan) Gieseke, of Mineral Point, WI.

Her brother – Todd (Tamara) Witzman, of Eldon, MO.

and 7 grandchildren.

Empower Rural Iowa report focuses on housing shortage

News

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Changing the way a state tax credit is awarded to home builders is one of the recommendations in this week’s “Empower Rural Iowa” report. Lieutenant Governor-elect Adam Gregg says the “workforce housing tax credit” is currently awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. “It doesn’t really matter if it’s the best project. It doesn’t matter if it’s shovel-ready. If you’re in line, that’s good enough,” Gregg says. “What we’re recommending is let’s turn that into a competitive program which will encourage communities, encourage developers to sharpen their pencil, make sure they’ve got a project ready to go and we can fund the projects that are ready sooner than others.”

Five million dollars’ worth of tax credits are available each year for developers who build homes in Iowa. Small — but the credits have already been claimed for the next five years. Changing the distribution of the “workforce housing tax credit” is a top recommendation from the “Empower Rural Iowa” working groups Governor Reynolds assembled this summer. The governor asked Gregg to lead the initiative. “We had a short timeline and a focus on finding some concrete solutions that could be implemented quickly,” Gregg says, “some recommendations the governor could consider ahead of this next legislative session.”

The Empower Rural Iowa task forces are calling on the governor to create an “Office of Rural Affairs’ in state government. The group also highlighted the need for state subsidies to expand broadband service in rural Iowa.

Northwest Iowa district preparing for ‘online learning days’ instead of ‘snow days’

News

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The definition of “snow day” is changing for middle school and high school students in one northwest Iowa school district. Tara Paul, superintendent at Estherville Lincoln Central Schools, says there will be “online learning days” in her district when winter weather is too treacherous for students and staff to get to school. “It’s not going to be where they are sitting behind the computer or at their device for eight hours,” Paul says. “It will be: ‘We have a five to 10 minute assignment,’ maybe ‘A 10 to 15 minute assignment’ depending on their age level and on the course.”

There could be longer assignments for high school courses. “Our teachers will be available to the students throughout the day and that could be through email, it could be through a phone call, it could be through Google Hangout, any other video chat that the teachers choose to use,” Paul says. “The kids will be either practicing or learning material and then having an opportunity to ask questions on that material from their teachers throughout the day.”

Teachers are encouraged to collaborate on course work. “So they won’t have any social studies the first snow day, but the second snow day social studies will have a longer activity and they won’t have any English or literacy that day,” Paul says. The school has plotted out a schedule for up to nine snow days. The first three days classes in the classroom are cancelled will be “online learning days” for students. The next three snow days will be professional development days for staff. Snow days number seven, eight and nine — if there are that many snow days in the Estherville Lincoln Central District this season — would be more “virtual days’ for students. The school is making arrangements for students who do not have online access outside of school, so all students can be involved in the learning process during a snow day. If the weather is truly frightful, with power being knocked out in the area, the school will opt for the traditional snow day — and kids in the Estherville Lincoln Central district will not have to check in online.

Review: Iowa transparency board violated open meetings law

News

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Government investigators say the board created to enforce Iowa’s open meetings law violated its requirements last year by twice refusing to explain its votes in a high-profile case. The Iowa Public Information Board has set a goal of being the most transparent government body in Iowa and setting the standard for those it regulates. Yet a report released Thursday by the state ombudsman’s office says the board went into closed session on shaky legal footing during two meetings last year to discuss a case.

The report says the board then took votes in open meetings that were so vague that the public had no idea what actions were taken. The Open Meetings Law requires that decisions be “easily accessible to the people.” The report says the board refused to provide minutes and audio recordings from its closed sessions despite a state law that grants the ombudsman access. The board denies any wrongdoing.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 12/20/2018

News, Podcasts

December 20th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More State and area news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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