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Healthiest State Initiative Launches Digital Technology for Double Up Food Bucks Iowa

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The Iowa Healthiest State Initiative’s Double Up Food Bucks program has launched new digital technology to simplify participation for users. The program has transitioned from single-use redeemable paper currency to an online system centered on the new reloadable Double Up Food Bucks Card. The new cards will be usable at all participating Double Up Food Bucks locations.

Double Up Food Bucks is a supplemental SNAP benefit program run by the Iowa Healthiest State Initiative that helps low-income Iowans bring home more fruits and vegetables, while also supporting local farmers. Program participants can double the value of federal SNAP benefits at participating farmers markets, co-ops, and grocery stores including Hy-Vee and Fareway locations around the state when purchasing fresh produce. “As we continue to combat food insecurity in Iowa, it’s important to make sure families have nutritious meals that include fresh produce,” said Elisa Sloss, Senior Vice President, Hy-Vee. “By modernizing the redemption process, the program is easier to use and ensures that those enrolled receive all the benefits they are eligible for.”

“Fareway is proud to partner with the Iowa Healthiest State Initiative to improve access to fresh fruits and vegetables and enhance the functionality of the DUFB program,” said Jake Moran, Chief Financial Officer of Fareway Stores Inc.

Prior to the release of the new technology, the Double Up Food Bucks program was available through paper currency. The new technology replaces the paper currency with a reusable plastic card. The Double Up Food Bucks card allows SNAP users to spend and save their bucks and removes the risk of losing or destroying paper currency. Users can sign up for a Double Up Food Bucks card at participating sites by shopping for fruits and vegetables with their SNAP/EBT card and asking their cashier about Double Up Food Bucks.

The Double Up Food Bucks Iowa program is made possible by donations from sponsors including the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Alliant Energy, Bank of America, Farmers Mutual Hail, Iowa Total Care, Max & Helen Guernsey Foundation, United Way of Central Iowa, and the Nelson Family Foundation.

To learn more about Double Up Food Bucks and to find participating locations, visit www.DoubleUpIowa.com

Iowa DOT to offer funding for Electric Vehicle (EV) charging stations along the interstate system

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Ames, Iowa/KCAU) — The Iowa Department of Transportation (DOT) has announced a funding opportunity intended to strengthen infrastructure for electric vehicle charging, including charging stations. According to a release, Iowa’s share of federal funding under the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) Program would, through this process, be used to “roll-out electric vehicle charging infrastructure within Iowa.” This would involve installing stations along Iowa’s interstates.

“Releasing this funding opportunity is a key milestone for Iowa DOT,” said Garrett Pedersen, Iowa DOT Systems Planning Bureau Director. “This is a critical step towards awarding money and getting additional electric vehicle chargers in the ground.” Applications for this opportunity are due on March 13, 2024, with the notice of awards scheduled to release about 120 days later.

Electric charging station for electric vehicles in a mall parking lot.

The U.S. Department of Transportation’s website states that their NEVI Program provides “dedicated funding to States to strategically deploy EV charging infrastructure and establish an interconnected network to facilitate data collection, access, and reliability.” As of June 2023, Iowa had over 12,800 registered electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, according to the release. Every county in the state has at least one registered.

More information can be found at iowadot.gov/iowaevplan.

UIHC announces name/branding change for Mercy Hospital in Iowa City

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa City/KCRG) — University of Iowa Health Care officials have announced plans to update its branding next year, including a new name for Mercy Iowa City. KCRG reports Mercy Hospital is expected to be renamed “University of Iowa Health Care Medical Center Downtown.” The change comes after a bankruptcy court approved UI Health Care’s purchase of Mercy Iowa City in November, ending a back-and-forth ownership dispute between UI Health Care and Mercy’s creditor, Preston Hollow Community Capital.

In a post on its website, UI Health Care said in addition to the new name for Mercy Iowa City, new logos are coming in 2024 to UI Health Care, the UI Carver College of Medicine, UI Health Care Stead Family Children’s Hospital, and UI Health Care Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The updated branding and logos come as UI Health Care continues to expand with a North Liberty campus, a family medicine practice and residency program in Sioux City and two urgent care clinic locations in the Quad Cities.

Nikki Haley to make a stop in rural Atlantic next week

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Republican Presidential Candidate Nikki Haley will make stops in Carroll and Treynor this Monday, Dec. 18th, and in rural Atlantic on Tuesday, Dec. 19th.  Her campaign stop in Cass County (IA) is at Wickman Chemical, northeast of Atlantic (at 53597 650th St [Highway 71], beginning at 10:15-a.m., Tuesday. Doors open at 9:15-a.m. The event is scheduled to run about 90-minutes. The public is welcome to attend the events, but you must reserve your general admission spot through Haley’s campaign website.

Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley on the Iowa campaign trail. (RI file photo)

Nikki Haley is the former Governor of South Carolina. She served as Governor from 2011 to 2017. Haley also served as the 29th U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, from January 2017 through December 2018. In recent campaign events, she highlighted the bills she signed into law as governor, including a voter ID law, small business tax cuts, and “one of the toughest illegal immigration laws in the country,” (according to her campaign). She has also highlighted high rates of homelessness, suicide among veterans, conflicts abroad and education issues.

To solve some of the problems, Haley advocates for imposing term limits, administering a mental competency test for lawmakers over the age of 75, going after pandemic relief fraud and taking a hardline stance on the federal budget. New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu announced his presidential endorsement of Haley Tuesday evening, saying she is the “candidate with the momentum to win and get our party back on track to delivering conservative victories across the country.”

‘Tis the season for scammers, especially bogus package delivery emails, texts

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A survey finds eight in ten American consumers experienced some type of fraud this year, and scams are ramping up with just ten shopping days until Christmas. A-A-R-P Iowa spokeswoman Alissa Brammer says we need to be especially watchful for unsolicited emails or texts about non-existent shipments. “Consumers really need to be on the lookout for those package delivery scams,” Brammer says. “We’re all ordering so many things online, and receiving gifts, that it can be tricky to keep track of all your purchases. Scammers really know that this is what’s happening with consumers, so they take advantage of that as best they can.”

At first glance, the notifications may look legitimate and appear to be checking in with a customer about something they’ve ordered, with a link to confirm where the package is in the delivery process. “Consumers click the link, and a lot of times what happens is, that allows the scammer access to your personal information,” Brammer says. “They can put malware on your computer or your phone after you click it. Or also, they oftentimes ask for your financial information, maybe saying something like, ‘We need to confirm your credit card in order for this delivery to be made.'”

If you have doubts about the message, Brammer says to scrutinize the return email address, for starters. “A lot of times scammers will have a slight misspelling in the name of the company, or it has a name that is similar to the delivery company you might expect it to be from but it’s not quite exact,” Brammer says. “Look up the name of the company to be sure you’re clear on the exact name and maybe even contact that company to see if you are expected to get a package from them.”

Older Iowans tend to be easy targets for scammers, and she suggests you check in with your parents or grandparents to make sure they’re aware of these identity thieves and how they operate. “One thing AARP completed recently was a survey of older consumers, and a lot of people failed a quiz about what kinds of common scams are out there,” Brammer says, “so more education is definitely needed in a lot of areas.”

One key finding from the survey is the dramatic increase from last year in the percentage of consumers who report receiving a false notification about a package shipment issue. Brammer says the number jumped from 29% last year to 52% this year.

Central Iowa cemetery part of Wreaths Across America

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Volunteers will start putting Christmas wreaths on the graves of veterans across the country this weekend, including those at McDivitt Grove Cemetery in Urbandale. Area veteran Dennis Appelhons asked Wreaths Across America to include McDivitt in the program. “Because we have over 100 veterans there. And at least one of them dates from the Spanish American War. We have Civil War, World War One, World War Two, Korean War,” Appelhons says.

He says it started out as a pioneer cemetery in 1855 and eventually became a family cemetery as the city grew up around it. Applehons was part of an Army Air Defense Artillery unit stationed in Korea, and at Fort Bliss, Texas, and the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama. He says the 112 wreaths that will be placed on the graves of veterans in Urbandale have a significant meaning to him. “Recognition and remembrance that what all veterans did not go unnoticed or unhonored,” he says.

Applehons says he got the idea after most the V-F-W group and Legion group participated in Wreaths Across America at the Iowa Veterans Cemetery and Van Meter. He says it is something unique. “The typical Memorial Day and Veterans Day, decorations and flags would be the only two events that we see flags in recognition of those veterans,” Applehons says. “And in the middle of a winter, especially here in Iowa, to drive by and see those wreaths on those headstones, it’s quite moving.”

You may have seen the pictures of the wreaths on rows and rows of white tombstones in large military cemeteries. He says the sight is a little different in the Urbandale cemetery because there are all types of headstones and markers on the graves. “The one common thing about all of the veteran’s graves is the veteran medallion on a steel post sitting next to their headstone. What you’ll see is the wreath with a red ribbon, either propped against the headstone, or the veteran medallion that is in the ground next to it,” he explains.

Applehons says donations paid for the wreaths that will be placed Saturday. He says you can donate to help the program by going online to the Wreaths Across America website. “It’s a fairly self explanatory procedure. You will click on ‘sponsor a wreath,’ and once you’re on that page, it’ll guide you to basic information on the cost of a wreath how many you can buy, how to pay for them. And you have to designate what cemetery you want that wreath for,” he says.

Applehons says their cemetery has been assigned I-D number IA0062 and they pass out flyers or send email reminders to people in the community for donations that go to their effort. The wreath laying begins at 10 a-m Saturday and everyone is invited to come and help out.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Friday, Dec. 15, 2023

Weather

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy w/a 20% chance of rain early this morning; A 70% chance of rain later this afternoon.  High near 45. South wind 5 to 10 mph. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Tonight: Rain. Low around 36. Light and variable wind becoming northwest 5 to 10 mph after midnight. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Saturday: Rain, mainly before noon. Steady temperature around 37. Northwest wind 10-20 mph, New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 24. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 44. Breezy.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 19. Blustery.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 36. Breezy.
Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 20.
Tuesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 43. Breezy.

Thursday’s High in Atlantic was 55. The Low was 16. Last year on this date, the High in Atlantic was 27 and the Low was 19. The Record High on December 15th in Atlantic, was 72 in 2021. The Record Low was -19 in 1901. Sunrise is at 7:39. Sunset at 4:51.

Oregon man injured in a high-speed crash in Ames

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Ames, Iowa)  – An SUV that was traveling at a high-rate of speed and passing other vehicles on the left shoulder of I-35 northbound in Ames, Thursday, crossed both lanes of traffic before flipping multiple times and coming to rest in the east ditch. The Iowa State Patrol reports the driver of the 2018 Ford Explorer, 29-year-old Zackery Coltin Harker, of North Bend, Oregon, was injured. The accident happened near mile marker 118, at around 4:20-p.m.

Harker – who was wearing a seat belt – was transported by the Iowa State Patrol to the Story County Medical Center. The crash remains under investigation.

Mississippi man charged with vandalizing Satanic Temple display in Capitol

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A man from Mississippi who’s a former Navy pilot has been charged with vandalizing the Satanic Temple of Iowa’s holiday display in the Iowa Capitol. The Iowa Department of Public Safety says 35-year-old Michael Cassidy of Lauderdale, Mississippi was arrested, charged with criminal mischief in the fourth degree and released. The Satanic Temple of Iowa announced early Thursday that the statue in its Iowa Capitol display had been damaged beyond repair. According to a conservative website called The Sentinel, Cassidy beheaded the statue.

Cassidy is quoted on the site saying he did so to awaken Christians to the anti-Christian values that are being mainstreamed. The founder of Turning Point U-S-A, a conservative youth organization, has pledged 10-thousand dollars to support a legal defense fund for Cassidy.

The Satanic Temple of Iowa had planned to take down its display today (Friday), but will leave what’s left in the Iowa Capitol for a few more days.

Governors of four states, including Iowa, review progress after 2019 Missouri River flood

News

December 15th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The governors of Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and Kansas are assessing flood prevention efforts in the Missouri River corridor — and finding progress. Governor Kim Reynolds says levee maintenance and making structures as flood resilient as possible are key. “Instead of waiting for that disaster to hit like in 2019, and then we have no money…and then we have a bunch of money come in and then we’re fixing the same highway structures, the same ag impact that we did prior to that.” Reynolds and the governors of the other three states met yesterday (Thursday) in Omaha. Reynolds says the design and structural performance of 900 miles of Missouri River levees are being evaluated.

“Then grants will be available to the different levee districts to get the levees where they need to be,” Reynolds says. Reynolds says nearly all the levee districts lack the resources to make significant improvements and government funding is necessary. Reynolds and the other Missouri River governors began meeting in the midst of the devastating floods of 2019 and Reynolds says their main frustration at the time was the pace of the response from federal agencies.

“We tend to study things to death instead of moving forward and getting things done,” Reynolds says, “and we’ve seen a lot of progress since that first meeting in 2019 and the way that we’re doing things.” In the spring of 2019, melting snow and rainfall combined to cause the Missouri River to jump its banks and quickly flood vast swaths of western Iowa.