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Atlantic School Board to meet in a Work Session, Wednesday evening

News

January 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Atlantic School Board will meet in a Work Session, beginning at 5:30-p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 25th. Their session takes place in the High School Media Center.

Discussion items include: Social/Emotional Learning Support, and, a Transportation from Mark Weis. The Board will also discuss their upcoming meeting dates, including their next Regular session (Feb. 8th at 6:30-p.m.), and a Work Session/Public Hearing on the ISL (Instructional Support Levy) on Feb. 22nd at 5:30-p.m..

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the Nishna Valley: Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2023

Weather

January 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Today: Areas of fog this morning; Partly cloudy. High 33. Winds variable @ 5-10 mph.
Tonight: P/cldy to cloudy w/light snow or flurries. Low 20. N @ 5.
Tomorrow: Mo. Cldy w/light snow or flurries (< .5″ total). High 28. N @ 10-15 mph.
Thursday: P/Cldy. High 26.
Friday: Mostly cloudy. High 34.

Monday’s high was 31 and the Low was 16. This day last year the high in Atlantic was 36 and the low was -5. The all-time record high was 66 in 1981. The record low was -24 in 1894. Sunrise today is 7:39 a.m. and Sunset tonight is 5:25 p.m.

Drake hosts Indiana State tonight (Tuesday night)

Sports

January 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Drake opens the second half of the Missouri Valley race at home tonight (Tuesday night) against Indiana State. Both teams are 6-4 in the Valley and the Sycamores won the first meeting 75-73 in late November.

That’s Drake coach Darian DeVries. Senior guard Courvoisier McCauley is averaging 16 and a half points per game and leads Indiana State with 61 three pointers.

No. 12 Iowa State hosts No. 5 Kansas State Tuesday night (tonight)

Sports

January 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

Iowa State takes on college basketball’s biggest surprise tonight (Tuesday night), when the 12th ranked Cyclones host number five Kansas State. Picked to finish last in the Big 12 preseason poll the Wildcats are 17-2 overall and lead the Big 12 with a 6-1 mark. The combination of Keyantae Johnson and Markquis Nowell averaged more than 35 points per game for K-State and Nowell averages more than eight assists per game.

That’s Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger who says Johnson can score down low and also step out.

Otzelberger says ever night is a challenge in the Big 12.

Iowa State senior guard Caleb Grill may miss tonight’s game with a back injury.  Coach Otzelberger says the injury occurred in last week’s win over Texas and resurfaced in Saturday’s loss at Oklahoma State. Grill played just 17 minutes and only attempted one shot.

The Cyclones have been without forward Jaz Kunc with a broken finger but have still managed to start 5-2 in Big 12 play.

If Grill is out senior guard Jaren Holmes my be counted on for a larger roll. He can play the point or off guard.

Grill averages nearly 10 and-a-half points per game and is ISU’s top three point shooter at better than 37 percent.

GOP lawmakers approve governor’s ‘school choice’ plan and Reynolds will sign it into law today

News

January 24th, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Most Republicans in the Iowa legislature have voted for Governor Kim Reynolds’ top 2023 priority — a bill that will provide state-funded accounts for the parents of private school students. (See the list of those who voted against the bill at the end of this story).

Reynolds plans to sign it into law later this (Tuesday) morning. Republican Representative John Wills of Spirit Lake opened yesterday’s (Monday’s) House debate by saying the bill is about freedom. “The parents and the child are the customers in this scenario. They deserve a choice on where their child goes,” Wills said. “…If the current public school isn’t working for a child and those parents want to have a choice, that’s what this bill’s all about.”

Democrats like Representative Sue Cahill of Marshalltown say the choice is up to private school administrators since nothing requires private schools to accept all students. “Private schools can select the students they want to attend and use what I consider discriminatory practices to do so,” Cahill said. After five and a half hours of debate, the bill cleared the House on a 55 to 45 vote. Senators debated in earnest for about three hours, passing the bill just before 12:30 this (Tuesday) morning on a 31-to-18 vote.

Representative Steven Holt, a Republican from Denison, says state funds will now follow a child to the school that best fits their needs. “If we are to improve education, it is past time to fund our students, not the education establishment,” Holt said. “We can support public education and public teachers, while also embracing positive change.” Representative Thomas Moore of Griswold opposes the governor’s two, less expansive “school choice” proposals and he is one of nine House Republicans who voted against this year’s proposal.

“It came down very simply to my constituents — I’m in a very conservative Republican district — and they were telling me, ‘No,'” Moore said. Three Republican Senators opposed the plan. Representative Skyler Wheeler, a Republican from Hull who backed the bill, says public school parents got frustrated during the pandemic and asked for this alternative.  “This is about students, it’s not about systems,” Wheeler said, reciting a theme from the “school choice” movement. “And tonight, in historic fashion, the state of Iowa is going to uphold and uplift every family in this state.” Representative Sharon Steckman, a Democrat from Mason City, disagreed.

“This bill will not uplift every single family,” Steckman said, “only a chosen few.” In the first year, low income parents who enroll a child in a private school could apply for nearly 76-hundred dollars in state funding to cover tuition, computers, textbooks and tutoring. In 2026, all private school parents could apply for the state money. Representative Austin Baeth, a Democrat from Des Moines, says an estimated 79 percent of the money will be spent on kids already enrolled in private schools.

“What this really is is a government handout to people who don’t need it,” Baeth said. Wills says if Iowans didn’t want school choice, they wouldn’t have expanded the Republican majorities in the legislature — and would not have reelected Governor Reynolds by a 19-point margin. “Her stance was she’s going to campaign on school choice all across the state of Iowa,” Wills says. “She never stopped talking about it.” All Democrats in the legislature voted against the bill. Senate Democratic Leader Zach Wahls says the governor’s plan is Robin Hood in reverse.

“Iowa Republicans are giving up on Iowa’s public schools,” Wahls said. “They are quitting and throwing in the towel.” Reynolds held a private ceremony in her formal office Monday to mark the start of “School Choice Week” and plans to sign her bill into law at 11 a.m. today (Tuesday).

(All Democrats and the following Republicans voted against the bill: Representatives Michael Bergen of Dorchester; Brian Best of Glidden; Jane Bloomingdale of Northwood; Chad Ingels of Randalia; Brian Lohse of Bondurant; Gary Mohr of Bettendorf; Thomas Moore of Griswold; David Sieck of Glenwood; Brent Siegrist of Council Bluffs and Senators Lynn Davis of Cherokee, Charlie McClintock of Alburnett and Tom Shipley of Nodaway.)

No. 10 Iowa women win at No. 2 Ohio State 83-72

Sports

January 23rd, 2023 by admin

The 10th ranked Iowa Hawkeye women came up big on the road. The Hawks withstood a second half rally to stun second ranked Ohio State 83-72, handing the Buckeyes their first loss. Caitlin Clark had a triple double with 28 points, 15 assists and 10 rebounds as Iowa grabbed a share of the Big Ten lead at 8-1.

The Hawkeyes had 24 assists on 31 made baskets.

The Hawkeyes outscored the Buckeyes 27-18 in the fourth quarter after having its 12 point lead trimmed to two.

That’s Iowa coach Lisa Bluder. Iowa improves to 16-4 overall and 8-1 in the Big Ten.

Sergeant Bluff-Luton wins Bill Smith Battle in the Bluffs

Sports

January 23rd, 2023 by admin

Bill Smith Battle in the Bluffs
Girls Wrestling
01/23/2023

Team Scores
1 Sergeant Bluff-Luton 96.0
2 Missouri Valley 93.0
3 Carroll 90.0
4 Creston 70.0
5 Sioux City North 61.0
6 Red Oak 43.0
7 CBCSD Co-Op Wrestling 42.0
8 Sioux City East 40.0
9 Bennington Girls 24.0
10 Clarinda 22.0
11 Audubon 16.0
12 Underwood 9.0

Carroll’s Julia Kanne won at 105, Avery Burke won at 135 and Emma Grossman at 170 was a champ for the Tigers. Red Oak’s Nicole Bond won at 125 and Joselyn McCunn was a winner at 140.Nicole Olson of Missouri Valley won at 155. Kalen Westerfield of Underwood was a winner at 190. Savannah Sisted of Creston won at 235.

Full results HERE

High School Basketball Scoreboard 01/23/2023

Sports

January 23rd, 2023 by admin

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Atlantic 49, Creston 33
Boyer Valley 46, Audubon 37
Central Decatur 72, East Union 33
Coon Rapids-Bayard 42, Ogden 27
Earlham 57, Lenox 27
Exira-EHK 72, West Harrison 25
Fremont-Mills 59, Bedford 32
Grand View Christian 63, Glidden-Ralston 40
Mount Ayr 42, Centerville 40
MVAOCOU 57, Alta-Aurelia 39
St. Albert 58, CB Thomas Jefferson 20
West Central Valley 63, Pleasantville 58
Woodbine 67, Paton-Churdan 33

Bluegrass Conference Tourney

Diagonal 52, Murray 39
Melcher-Dallas 44, Mormon Trail 39

BOYS BASKETBALL

Creston 75, Atlantic 67
Audubon 71, Boyer Valley 60
Central Decatur 82, East Union 44
Grand View Christian 102, Glidden-Ralston 39
Mount Ayr 72, Centerville 47
Ogden 43, Coon Rapids-Bayard 37
Perry 61, West Central Valley 46
St. Albert 81, CB Thomas Jefferson 80
Underwood 62, IKM-Manning 46
West Harrison 78, Exira-EHK 58
Bedford vs Fremont-Mills
Woodbine vs Tri-Center

Two dead in Des Moines charter school shooting

News

January 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) Two students the “Starts Right Here” charter school in downtown Des Moines were shot and killed this (Monday) afternoon. Des Moines Police Spokesman Paul Parizek says the shooting happened just before 1 o’clock.

Sergeant Parizek says that person was going into surgery. Parizek says a vehicle that fled the scene was stopped two miles away and three suspects are in custody.

Reminder: Free Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program

News

January 23rd, 2023 by Ric Hanson

(Guthrie Center, Iowa) – Guthrie County Extension & Outreach will be offering an intake site for VITA this year. The Volunteer Tax Assistance (VITA) program offers free tax help to families and individuals with incomes of $60,000 or less, persons with disabilities, limited English speakers, and older adults.

How VITA works: Clients will meet via phone or zoom with an Intake Specialist to fill out paperwork and review information. You will then schedule a time to come in person to our office to submit all required paperwork. Your tax information will be scanned and sent to volunteer tax preparers off site who will prepare your return remotely within two weeks. You will be alerted when your tax return is complete and ready to review the results of the return. You will sign the returns and then we will electronically file your state and federal tax returns for free.

Taxpayers must bring:

  • Picture ID for taxpayer & spouse’s if filing jointly
  • Income tax documents for all jobs (W-2s, 1099s, 1098s etc.) for all years tax returns to be done
  • Copy of last year’s federal and state tax returns
  • Social security cards or Individual Taxpayer ID Numbers (ITIN) for each family member named on the return

VITA is being offered by appointment only, you can schedule an appointment by calling the office at 641-747-2276 anytime Monday-Thursday. All appointments will be held via phone/zoom or at our office at 212 State Street, Guthrie Center, IA 50115.

For more information, please visit our website at https://www.extension.iastate.edu/guthrie/. If you have any questions about the program please feel free to reach out to Krista Downing at the Guthrie County ISU Extension office at 641-747-2276.