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Girls Wrestling Scoreboard 11/28/2022

Sports

November 28th, 2022 by admin

Western Iowa Quad @ West Monona
11/28/2022

Sioux City North 33, Southwest Iowa 18

Council Bluffs 42, Southwest Iowa 28

Western Iowa 36, Southwest Iowa 18

Council Bluffs 30, Sioux City North 27

Council Bluffs 41, Western Iowa 30

Western Iowa 36, Sioux City North 24

Crusader boys hold off Audubon 60-51

Sports

November 28th, 2022 by admin

The Coon Rapids-Bayard boys basketball team held off a fourth quarter charge from Audubon and beat the Wheelers 60-51 to open up the season on Monday night. The Crusaders controlled a solid chunk of the game and were up 41-31 heading into the final period. Audubon’s Aaron Olsen hit three big threes in the fourth to rally Audubon back within three at 47-44. CR-B responded with a 9-0 run to salt the game away.

Senior Lance Clayburg was a monster inside for the Crusaders, finishing with 28 points and had a lot of offensive rebounds to get second chance points. Freshman Cal Heydon was great down the stretch with 9 fourth quarter points to bring his total on the night to 23. Next up for Coon Rapids-Bayard is a home game with Stanton on Tuesday.

Audubon got 16 points from Aaron Olsen, 12 from Collin Bauer and 11 from Carson Bauer. The Wheelers drop the first game under new head coach Jacob Privia and will try to bounce back on Tuesday against Missouri Valley.

Coon Rapids-Bayard girls roll past Audubon in opener

Sports

November 28th, 2022 by admin

The Coon Rapids-Bayard Crusaders girls basketball team built an early big lead and raced away from the Audubon Wheelers for a 43-22 win on Monday night to open the season. Both teams struggled to get started with just a 9-4 lead for the Crusaders at the end of the first, but they would balloon that lead to 29-5 by the end of the half to seize control.

Audubon played stronger defense in the second half and Audrey Jensen hit a few threes to produce some scoring, but the Crusaders were too much. After the game Jensen said they improved a lot of things as the game progressed.

She talked about being an upperclassmen on a team with a mix of really young players.

Coon Rapids-Bayard was led by 20 points from Breeley Clayburg and freshman Anna Hart added 7. Next up for the Crusaders is a home tilt versus Stanton on Tuesday.

Audubon was led by 10 points from Jensen and 7 from Kade Sporrer. Audubon hosts Missouri Valley on Tuesday night.

High School Basketball Scoreboard 11/28/2022

Sports

November 28th, 2022 by admin

Girls Basketball

Clarke 56, Mount Ayr 50
Coon Rapids-Bayard 43, Audubon 22
Earlham 54, Grand View Christian 51
East Mills 66, Diagonal 42
Essex 61, Hamburg 29
River Valley 71, Whiting 42
MVAOCOU 79, Missouri Valley 28
Underwood 38, Shenandoah 31
West Central Valley 61, Southeast Warren 26
Winterset 56, Creston 29

Boys Basketball

ACGC 80, Collins-Maxwell 50
Coon Rapids-Bayard 60, Audubon 51
East Mills 70, Diagonal 31
Fremont-Mills 59, Heartland Christian 57
Missouri Valley 57. MVAOCOU 40
Mount Ayr 76, Clarke 71
Underwood 71, Shenandoah 19
West Central Valley vs. Southeast Warren
Winterset 74, Creston 47

Boil Order issued for Logan residents

News

November 28th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Click on the map to enlarge

(Logan, Iowa) – Harrison County Emergency Management alert- The city of Logan has issued a boil order until further notice for businesses and residents in the shaded area below.

A boil order is issued when an event has occurred with the potential to adversely affect water quality, or a situation has occurred where there is known degradation of the water quality. DO NOT DRINK WATER WITHOUT BOILING IT FIRST. Bring all water to a rolling boil, let it boil for one minute, and cool before using; or use bottled water. You should use boiled or bottled water for drinking, making ice, washing dishes, brushing teeth and food preparation until you are notified that the advisory has been lifted.

Officials also recommend the following steps:
• Throw away uncooked food or beverages or ice cubes if made
with tap water during the day of the advisory
• Keep boiled water in the refrigerator for drinking
• Do not swallow water while you are showering or bathing
• Provide pets with boiled water after cooling
• Do not use home filtering devices in place of boiling or using
bottled water; Most home water filters will not provide
adequate protection from microorganisms
• Use only boiled water to treat minor injuries
• It is safe to wash clothes without first boiling the water.

Everyone is encouraged to sign up for Everbridge if they have not already done so. Updates will be sent through our mass notification system. The link to do so is:
https://member.everbridge.net/892807736721501/login
Residents are also encouraged to monitor the Harrison County EMA’s Facebook page as updates will be posted online.
https://www.facebook.com/HarrCoEMA

Bettendorf Man Sentenced for Attempted Transfer of Obscene Material to a Minor

News

November 28th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Davenport, IA – Gerald Brian Hoard, age 49 of Bettendorf, Iowa, was sentenced today (Monday) to time-served following his plea of guilty to Attempted Transfer of Obscene Material to a Minor. Hoard went into custody on March 15, 2022. Hoard will serve three years of supervised release including one year at a residential re-entry center.

According to court documents, Hoard used the social media application Grindr, an online dating app, to communicate with an undercover officer posing as a 14-year-old. Hoard sent a picture of his genitals to the purported minor. Hoard agreed to meet the minor at a local store for the purpose of engaging in sexual activities.

U.S. Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the announcement. The Federal Bureau of Investigation investigated the case. This case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Iowa as part of the U.S. Department of Justice’s “Project Safe Childhood” initiative, which was started in 2006 as a nationwide effort to combine law enforcement investigations and prosecutions, community action, and public awareness in order to reduce the incidence of sexual exploitation of children.

For more information about Internet safety education, please visit https://www.justice.gov/psc and click on the resources tab.

Winter Weather Advisory extended to parts of southwest Iowa

Weather

November 28th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Area Counties: Sac-Crawford-Carroll-Audubon-Harrison-Shelby-Pottawattamie-MillsWINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM 6 AM TO 6 PM CST TUESDAY

* WHAT…Snow and freezing drizzle expected. In the far western counties: Total snow accumulations less than one inch and ice accumulations of up to five hundredths of an inch. Winds gusting as high as 40 mph. For the west central counties: Mixed precipitation expected. Total snow accumulations of up to 3 inches and ice accumulations of a light glaze. Winds gusting as high as 35 mph.

* IMPACTS…Plan on slippery road conditions. The hazardous conditions could impact the morning or evening commute.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

Slow down and use caution while traveling. The latest road conditions for the state you are calling from can be obtained by calling 5 1 1.

Iowa food pantries brace for big boost in demand as year-end nears

News

November 28th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – With Thanksgiving behind us now, Iowa food pantries are bracing for the winter ahead and a dramatic boost in demand as the year-end holidays near. Matt Unger, C-E-O of the Des Moines Area Religious Council, says while pandemic-era assistance, like extra SNAP benefits and increased unemployment benefits, helped for a while, it didn’t address the underlying problems with food insecurity.

“We have this growth now, and the number of folks that are needing this kind of assistance, and we don’t have the same spotlight on the issue that we did during the pandemic,” Unger says, “so I think there’s the risk that we’ve got some complacency.” So far this month, Unger says DMARC has helped 14-thousand individuals. Zuli Garcia is the founding president of Knock and Drop Iowa, the first-ever Latino food pantry in Des Moines’s metro, which provides culturally-specific foods. Garcia says higher food prices are having an impact and lately, they’ve had to dip into reserves to make sure those in need have enough to take home.

“That’s what our fear is, that we’re going to get to the point where unfortunately, we’re going to have to start turning people away because things are getting expensive, not just out there for everyone, but even for the nonprofits,” Garcia says. “We can’t find the food that’s needed to be able to feed families.” Garcia says for just one day of the pantry being open, Knock and Drop spent 48-hundred dollars on food for 387 families. Officials with the Food Bank of Iowa say they are continuing to see historic need from communities around the state, serving about 150-thousand individuals each month since spring.

(reporting by Catherine Wheeler, Iowa Public Radio)

Seminar to focus on how Iowa libraries plan for, respond to disasters

News

November 28th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A half dozen Iowans who’ve led their public libraries through disasters will be featured in an online discussion tomorrow morning. “The hope is that people watching or listening to the webinar can learn from our disasters instead of having to have their own before they learn those lessons,” says Cedar Rapids Public Library director Dara Schmidt, who’ll be one of the panelists.

Like the city it serves, the Cedar Rapids Public Library has had a recent run of emergencies, starting with flooding in 2016. “(That flood) was smaller than predicted and so we ended up not sustaining damage even though we were closed because we were in the inundation zone and then we had, just like everybody else, the pandemic and then the derecho,” Schmidt says, “and then a couple of months ago we had a fire.”

The fire started in late July in a large light fixture in the lobby of the library in downtown Cedar Rapids. The 200 people inside the library were safely evacuated and the fire was doused in a matter of minutes, but the library was closed for a month — to deal with smoke damage. Schmidt says given that history, she and her staff have developed plans that not only focus on responding the moment a disaster might strike, but how to restore services as quickly as possible.

“With everything that we’ve been through, what we understand is out community needs us and in times of great challenge our community needs us even more,” Schmidt says. “…Maybe our building does have to close, but how can we continue to provide service, even when those terrible things are happening to us?”

For example, Schmidt says this summer the library set up a computer lab in a vacant space across the street from the temporarily closed downtown library. Librarians from Bettendorf, Clinton, Marion, Sioux City and West Des Moines will join Schmidt in tomorrow’s panel discussion about disaster planning.

Iowa’s 2023 teacher of the year is from Mitchellville Elementary school

News

November 28th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Governor announced today (Monday), that a Mitchellville Elementary School teacher is the 2023 Iowa Teacher of the Year.

Krystal Colbert says she knew from a young age that she wanted to be a teacher. “I had a lot of amazing educators in my own life who helped kind of shape that for me. I remember from a very young age, I had teachers who made me feel valued, and loved and respected,” Colbert says. “And I could really tell that they cared about me as a person, and they cared about my success in the future.”

She says every child learns in a different way, and it’s her job to help them understand that. “I believe that student empowerment is when children are able to be in control of their actions and their learning environment. I think it’s really important to help students set goals and to help them know what steps come in reaching those goals. And I always think that children need to be involved in what they’re learning and how they’re learning it,” Colbert says.

Teacher of the Year, Krystal Colbert. (Dept. of Ed photo)

She says it’s important to have a one-on-one connection with every student, and that helps build a trusting community. “I really take the time to invest in the relationships that I have with my students, as well as their families. I like to keep them connected to what we’re doing in our classroom through weekly emails and newsletters,” she says. “And I think it’s also very vital to stay connected and build those relationships with my colleagues as well.”

Colbert has been teaching for 16 years and says she’s still excited to get up and go to work every day. She’s also happy to take on the challenge of being the teacher of the year. “I am so excited and honored to be the 2023 Iowa Teacher of the Year. And I look forward to being able to travel the state of Iowa, as well as do a little traveling throughout the United States and just be able to meet amazing educators,” she says.

Colbert lives in Altoona and made her comments in a Department of Education video.