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LEROY J. ANASTASI, 95, of Harlan (No Svcs. at this time)

Obituaries

January 21st, 2022 by admin

LEROY J. ANASTASI, 95, of Harlan died Friday, January 21st at Elm Crest Assisted Living in Harlan. No services are planned for LEROY J. ANASTASI at this time. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan has the arrangements.

Burial will be in the Harlan Cemetery.

LEROY J. ANASTASI is survived by:

Daughters: Mary Jo (Tony) Sondag of Harlan. Vicki (Gary) Fagan of Harlan. Kris (Dave) Pope of Harlan.

Brother: Ray (Frances) Anastasi of Harlan.

FREDERICK W. EHRMAN, 90, of Anita (Mass of Christian Burial 1/26/22)

Obituaries

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

FREDERICK W. EHRMAN, 90, of Anita, died Friday, Jan. 21st, at Cass Health, in Atlantic. A Mass of Christian burial for FREDERICK EHRMAN will be held at 10:30 am, Wednesday, January 26, 2022, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Anita. Schmidt Family Funeral Home of Anita has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family present will be held at the funeral home on Tuesday, January 25, 2022, from 5-until 7-p.m., with a Prayer service at 7 pm.; Online condolences may be sent to schmidtfamilyfh.com.

Burial will take place at Evergreen Cemetery in Anita. A luncheon at St. Mary’s Catholic Church hall will follow.

Memorials in Fred’s memory may be directed to the family for later designation and may be mailed to the Schmidt Family Funeral Home P.O BOX 523 Atlantic, IA 50022

FRED EHRMAN is survived by:

His wife – Delores Ehrman.

His sons – Bob (Kathy) Ehrman, of Anita; Bill (Katie) Ehrman, of Des Moines;

His daughters –  Kathy (Doug) Husted, of Arlington, TX; Kay (Chris) Stork of Atlantic;

Daughter-in-law: Terri Ehrman, of Atlantic.

9 grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; his sisters-and brothers in-law, and many other relatives.

House Speaker says October law on vaccine mandates may be sufficient

News

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The top Republican in the Iowa House says a new law on Covid vaccination exemptions for Iowa employees appears to be working — and House Speaker Pat Grassley says it’s not clear that legislators need to pass another bill on the topic. The law, passed in October, lets Iowa private sector workers claim religious or medical exemptions from any Covid vaccination requirement in their workplace and, if their exemption is denied and they’re fired, they may file for unemployment benefits.

In early January, both Grassley and Governor Kim Reynolds said lawmakers should wait for a U.S. Supreme Court ruling on a federal mandate that workers in large businesses get vaccinated or be tested weekly for Covid. A week ago, the court blocked the Biden Administration from implementing that mandate.

Other Republicans in the legislature have introduced bills addressing vaccine mandates, including one that would forbid Iowa cities and school districts from requiring students get Covid shots before returning to school. Another bill still in development would prohibit all types of vaccine mandates in Iowa businesses. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the federal government’s Covid vaccination requirement for the health care sector.

Ag group wants mandatory use of biofuels at all Iowa pumps

Ag/Outdoor

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The head of Iowa’s largest agricultural organization is urging state lawmakers to reconsider a measure which would -mandate- the use of renewable fuels in Iowa that are produced in-state. Iowa Farm Bureau president Brent Johnson says the Iowa Biofuels Standard was narrowly defeated in the legislature in 2021.

He says the organization has some work to do to rebuild consumer support and to get the legislative backing needed for the mandate to pass. Johnson is also urging the E-P-A to uphold the Renewable Fuels Standard R-V-O or Renewable Volume Obligation levels, after reports the Biden administration may drop the proposed blending levels below 15-billion gallons.

Johnson says the Farm Bureau supports Governor Kim Reynolds’ move, asking the E-P-A to provide a waiver to sell E-15 year-round in Iowa.

69 Iowa nursing homes have Covid outbreaks among residents

News

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The number of Iowa hospital patients who’ve tested positive for Covid has dropped by about three percent since Wednesday. State data shows six out of 10 patients in an Iowa hospital today were admitted for treatment of Covid. And about 18-and-a-half percent of those Covid patients are in an intensive care unit.

The number of Iowa nursing homes with Covid outbreaks continues to rise — more than doubling in the past two weeks. Nursing home residents were at the head of the line when Covid vaccines became available a year ago. The A-A-R-P’s state director is calling on Iowa nursing homes to require booster shots for residents and staff.

The state’s coronavirus website shows 69 nursing homes have Covid outbreaks today. The state’s vaccination rate has inched up. One-point-eight MILLION Iowans are fully vaccinated. That’s just under 60 percent of the state’s population.

Supreme court throws out charges brought after Polk County jailhouse conversation

News

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Supreme Court has thrown out charges brought against a Polk County man following an online jail conversation with his former girlfriend. Kourtney Hall told former girlfriend Emily Bowers if she doesn’t go to church that doesn’t mean she will go to jail. That was a code telling her not to show for a deposition seeking information in a criminal case against Hall. She did show up and gave testimony, and Hall was then charged and convicted of suborning perjury and obstructing prosecution.

The Iowa Supreme Court overturned the perjury conviction — saying Hall did not offer any inducement that she testify falsely under oath or that she conceal material information. And the ruling says there is no crime of “attempted obstruction of prosecution,” it only prohibits actually causing a witness to fail to appear when subpoenaed.

IEDA Board approves assistance for three established companies and four startups in Iowa, awards funding for butchery innovation and revitalization

News

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa – Officials with the Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA) report the IEDA Board has approved awards for three companies, which will assist in the creation of 84 jobs and result in $96.3 million in new capital investment for the state. These projects are located in Dubuque and Knoxville. Innovation funding was approved in support of four startups located in Ames, Coralville and Des Moines.

The board also approved 15 Butchery Innovation and Revitalization program awards. Among them was three businesses in southwest/western Iowa:

  • Atlantic Locker LC, in Atlantic, was awarded $39,750 (total project cost is $79,500)
  • Corning Meat Processing Service Inc. in Corning was awarded $50,000 (total project cost is $100,500)
  • and Country Meats Inc. in Arcadia was awarded $50,000 (total project cost is $100,000).

The Butchery Innovation and Revitalization Fund was designed to provide financial assistance in the form of grants to businesses for projects relating to small-scale meat processing, licensed custom lockers, and mobile slaughter units. The program was created during the 2021 Iowa legislative session and signed into law by Governor Kim Reynolds with a $750,000 allocation.

The maximum award amount is $50,000 and no more than 50% of the eligible project expenses may be paid with these grant funds. By administrative code, an application must score an average of 75 or more to be considered for funding. Fifty-four applications, requesting more than $2.4 million, received an average score of 75 or above. Based on available funding, the IEDA Board awarded 15 applications that received the highest average score. A list of the businesses that were awarded can be found here.

School District in Ringgold County to close for 3 days due to illnesses

News

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Updated; Radio Iowa) -The Mount Ayr School Board has voted to cancel classes in the district Monday through Wednesday in the face of mounting student and staff sickness. Mount Ayr School Superintendent Jason Shaffer says the closings are due to mounting absences of students and instructors from a variety of illnesses–including COVID-19.

Shaffer says 20 high school students are out with COVID and 25 others with unspecified illnesses — for a 16 percent absentee rate. There are 15 elementary students out sick with COVID, eight with the flu, and another 25 with unspecified illnesses — for a total of 19 percent out. At the same time, he says Mount Ayr is experiencing the same shortage of substitute teachers as other area districts. Shaffer says the buildings will be cleaned during the three-day shutdown.

 

Shaffer says students and staff will be asked to wear masks for two weeks after returning from the break.

The three days missed next week will be made up at the end of the school year.

Atlantic’s Petersen named to IGCA 2022 Basketball Officials Hall of Fame Class

Sports

January 21st, 2022 by admin

Atlantic’s Dr. Shawn Petersen has been named a part of the Iowa Girls’ Coaches Association Class of 2022 Basketball Officials Hall of Fame.

Joining Petersen in the 2022 Class are the following officials:

Jeff Horst, Clinton
Mark Gassman, DeWitt
Mark Royer, Council Bluffs
William Gillman, Council Bluffs

We’ll have more details on the induction at a later date.

Jesup man failed to pay IRS the taxes he withheld from employees’ paychecks

News

January 21st, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The former owner of a northeast Iowa trucking company has been sentenced to 21 months in prison for failing to pay more than one-point-four MILLION dollars in taxes over a seven year period. Court records indicate 57-year-old Mark Warm of Jesup was in charge of issuing paychecks to Warm Trucking employees. Federal income taxes and contributions for Social Security were subtracted from those paychecks –but the taxes weren’t paid to the I-R-S.

An I-R-S agent based in St. Louis says Warm made a conscious decision to cheat his employees. In his plea agreement, Warm admitted he also failed to pay other taxes that Warm Trucking owed.