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National Guard welcome home ceremonies continue

News

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Welcome home ceremonies continue today (Wednesday) for Iowa National Guard soldiers. Ninety soldiers from the 113th Calvary Troop C based from the Le Mars return from a ten-month deployment. National Guard spokesperson Major Katheryn Headley talks about that mission.

The soldiers will arrive by plane at the Sioux City Gateway Airport at approximately 12:20 p-m. with a small welcome home ceremony scheduled to start at 12:30 p-m. The buses carrying the National Guard soldiers are expected to leave the Sioux City airport by 1:00 p-m. heading north to Le Mars. Headley says due to the concern of the COVID-19 virus the homecoming ceremony at the Sioux City Armory is not open to the public.

She says the ceremony will be open to the media. Major Headley says there are ways the public can show support on the return route

Soldiers will be released to their families once the official welcome home ceremony is over.

UI study: Health care workers more likely to get COVID at home, not work

News

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A University of Iowa study finds health care workers are more likely to catch COVID-19 if the exposure occurred in their home rather than their workplace. The study used data from more than 17-hundred health care workers at the U-I Hospitals. Brooks Jackson, dean of the U-I College of Medicine, says workers tend to let down their guard when they leave work. “The workplace was the lowest,” Jackson says, “and that’s not surprising, given that we have hand sanitizer, and we’ve got masks.”

The data showed 26-percent of exposures at home turned into infections, compared to just 10-percent of exposures in the workplace. The study found 17-percent of exposures overall turned into COVID-19 infections. Jackson says it’s clear that -most- workplaces will be safer. “I think when you look at an eight-hour day in the workplace during this time period,” he says, “probably 95-percent of the time, people have been wearing masks.”

The U-I health care workers used in the study all self-reported exposures between September and November of last year.

(reporting by Natalie Krebs, Iowa Public Radio)

(Podcast) KJAN News, 4/14/21

News, Podcasts

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The News at 8:17-a.m., from Ric Hanson.

Play

MAX MILLER, 77, of Scottsdale, AZ. & formerly of Fontanelle (Celebration of Life 4/17/21)

Obituaries

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

MAX MILLER, 77, of Scottsdale, AZ. (& formerly of Fontanelle), died Dec. 13, 2020m, at his home in Scottsdale. A Celebration of Life for MAX MILLER will be held 11-a.m. Saturday, April 17th, at Emmanuel Lutheran Church in Fontanelle. Steen Funeral Home in Fontanelle has the arrangements.

Online condolences may be left at www.steenfunerals.com.

(UPDATE) Body found in vehicle submerged in Carter Lake

News

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Emergency crews have recovered a vehicle submerged in Carter Lake. Inside, authorities found the body of a woman. She was identified by police as 22-year-old Nyahon Thuok. According to Omaha television station KETV, Omaha Police Lt. Allen Straub said his officers were patrolling the area when they learned there was a car submerged in the water. Straub said they noticed the car’s headlights and taillights were on. Officers called the Omaha Fire Department, who pulled the car out of the water. That’s when crews learned there was a woman inside the vehicle.

No other details are currently available.

(Podcast) KJAN morning Sports, 4/14/21

Podcasts, Sports

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

With Jim Field.

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Winterset woman arrested on drug & other charges in Creston

News

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

A traffic stop Tuesday evening in Creston resulted in the arrest of a woman from Madison County. The Creston Police Department reports 38-year-old Jennifer McKeever, of Winterset, was arrested on two Union County warrants for Driving While Barred. She faces additional charges that include: Possession of a Controlled Substance/1st offense; Possession of Paraphernalia, and Driving while Barred. McKeever was being held for Union County in the Adams County Jail, on $5,600 bond.

And, a man residing in the 500 block of S. Cherry Street in Creston, reported Tuesday that sometime between 6-p.m. Monday and 11-a.m. Tuesday, someone stole 11 potted plants from his property. The loss was estimated at $300.

(Podcast) KJAN News, 4/14/21

News, Podcasts

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The 7:06-a.m. News from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

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Cass County Extension Report 4-14-2021

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

April 14th, 2021 by Jim Field

w/Kate Olson.

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Two Iowa waterways make group’s list of 10 most ‘endangered’ rivers

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 14th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The environmental group American Rivers lists two waterways that either border Iowa or flow through the state on its annual list of the nation’s ten most endangered rivers. Olivia Dorothy, director of the group’s Upper Mississippi River Basin, says the 2019 flooding on the Lower Missouri River brought massive levee breaches. It’s concerning, she says, because the river is too constricted and there’s not enough room for water that comes downriver during floods. “We need to take strategic action to set back levees,” Dorothy says, “to give the river a little bit more room to flood so that we know the water is going to basically go into areas of the flood plain where people and critical infrastructure aren’t located.”

This is the second year in a row the Lower Missouri River has made the group’s most-endangered list. “We are again calling on Congress and the states along the Lower Missouri River to work together to set up a framework to prioritize areas where levees can be set back and where we can do critical habitat restoration which is much needed for a lot of species, including the pallid sturgeon,” she says. That fish is threatened, she says, in part due to a lack of access to quality habitat. The Raccoon River is on this year’s most-endangered list for the first time. Its three forks run for 226 miles across western and central Iowa.

Dorothy says the Raccoon is most threatened by pollution due to agricultural runoff, which she attributes to “industrial agriculture.” “In the Raccoon watershed, we have a lot of confined feeding operations, we have a lot of confined factory farms,” Dorothy says. “They spread manure in excess across the watershed on farms for fertilizer. A lot of times, that fertilizer is running off and getting into our drinking water.” It’s forced cities like Des Moines to install expensive nitrate removal equipment, while she says it’s continuing to threaten the drinking water in rural areas, especially for people who use wells. Dorothy says nitrogen is particularly toxic to children, infants and pregnant women.

“We are calling on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to step in in Iowa and step up their enforcement actions,” she says, “and really start regulating these factory farms that we know are being installed in excess throughout the state of Iowa but especially in the Raccoon watershed.” The full report is online at AmericanRivers.org. Dorothy encourages Iowans to log on and learn more, and find links so they can contact federal agencies and officials to demand action to protect our rivers — and people.