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(Podcast) KJAN News, 1/19/22

News, Podcasts

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The broadcast News from Ric Hanson.

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Iowa’s Fran McCaffery on power rankings

Sports

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Iowa coach Fran McCaffery says he is not focused on the power rankings as the Hawkeyes get set to visit Rutgers tonight (Wednesday night). Iowa is just outside the AP Poll and has a lofty spot in both the NET and kenpom rankings. McCaffery says the only thing that matters is to continue winning.

McCaffery says the power rankings don’t matter until March.

Iowa is 14-4 overall and 3-3 in the Big Ten.

Northern Iowa men visit Valparaiso Wednesday night

Sports

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

The UNI Panthers put their five game winning streak on the line tonight (Wednesday night), at Valparaiso. The Panthers hammered the Beacons 92-65 in Cedar Falls back on January fifth.

That’s UNI coach Ben Jacobson does not think his players are expecting the same type of game.

Jacobson says his players expect a much tougher game.

Valparaiso coach Matt Lottich says the Panthers are rolling.

Lottich says the Panthers overcame a slow start to the season.

2 arrested on drug charges in Shenandoah Wed. morning

News

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Shenandoah, Iowa) – A traffic stop early this (Wednesday) morning in Shenandoah resulted two people being arrested on drug charges. The Shenandoah Police Dept. reports the Shenandoah K9 Unit conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle with an equipment violation, at around 12:17-a.m., in the 800 block of Highway 59. During the incident, the K9 “Remmi” was deployed and alerted to the odor of narcotics.

Following an investigation, a passenger in the vehicle, 35-year-old Tamara Herrera-Alberto, of Shenandoah, was arrested for: Possession of a Controlled Substance (PCS)/Methamphetamine, and Poss. of Paraphernalia. She arrested also, on a valid arrest warrant issued out of Mills County, for a Controlled Substance Violation & Failure to Affix a Drug Tax Stamp, and two valid warrants out of Douglas County, Nebraska, for PCS.  Herrera-Alberto was being held in the Page County Jail on a $31,300 bond.

A second passenger in the vehicle, 33-year-old Ramon Nelson, of Omaha, was arrested for Possession of Paraphernalia. Nelson was cited into court and released from custody. Fremont County Sheriff’s Deputies assisted Shenandoah Police during the traffic stop.

Some small Iowa towns are still struggling to recover from 2019 flooding

News

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Western Iowa towns that were hit hard by the 2019 floods are still working toward recovery. Hamburg and Pacific Junction are awaiting levee certifications to move their communities forward. As Hamburg puts the finishing touches on one levee, Mayor Cathy Crain is already focusing on how the small town can build another one. She says getting Hamburg out of the floodplain could transform its future. Crain says, “If we could do that, you have entirely changed a town and a county because we would have far more possibilities.”

Both towns hope they can use some of the state’s allotted infrastructure funding to assist in recovery efforts. Crain estimates her town still has over 70 projects to complete. “What we’ve always said is we just wanted a fighting chance,” she says. “This is a fighting chance.” Pacific Junction Mayor Andy Young says the major obstacle is levee certification, something that needs to be complete before the town can use its emergency funding. “Hopefully, we’ll be moving forward so we can get our town back or a resemblance of it,” Young says, “but, we’re making, we’re making it.”

The towns are also looking at how they can protect their communities from future disaster, which means finding funding for more flood protection barriers.

(reporting by Kendall Crawford, Iowa Public Radio)

CWD found in two new counties

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources reports 36 positive chronic wasting disease tests from some five-thousand deer samples this hunting season. The D-N-R’s Tyler Harms oversees the deer management program. “We did add two new counties to our list of counties in which C-W-D has been detected in the wild. Those counties are Greene County in central Iowa, and then also Fremont County in southwest Iowa. So that brings our total number of counties to 12,” Harms says.

He says they will now do additional sample testing in Greene and Fremont County moving forward. Harms says they do with other counties that have had positive deer — and those tests give them an idea of the level of C-W-D.  “If you start looking at individual counties where we’ve had it — like Allamakee County for example where it was first detected in 2013 — we are looking at about a two percent prevalence rate, which is not unexpected it’s about right where we would expect,” according to Harms. “Our goal is just to continue to do what we can to keep that prevalence as low as possible.”

Harms says Iowa’s efforts to try and keep the disease in check are working. “What we’re seeing is that we are really holding our own. We know that this disease is going to continue to expand in counties where we have it. There’s still a lot to be learned about how to effectively manage the disease,” he says. “Based on what we can tell thus far and what we are seeing in the counties where we have the disease is not outside what we would expect to see in our review of counties in other states that have had the disease for much longer.”

Harms says the best thing you can do is to keep hunting and keep submitting samples for testing. “If you are hunting in counties where we have detected the disease — those voluntary samples from harvested animals are a huge, huge benefit to our monitoring effort,” Harms says. “Consider submitting a sample from your harvested animal. Certainly, in these new counties like Greene and Fremont, these hunter-submitted samples are going to be very important for our surveillance efforts moving forward.”

He says everyone can help by NOT putting out feed for deer. “Chronic wasting disease is spread via direct contact between individual animals — so we know that artificial congregation of animals in small areas around these bait sources is going to increase the risk,” he says. Harms says hunters should properly dispose of the deer carcasses to help prevent the spread of the disease.

Counties with positive deer and year detected – Allamakee: 72 (2013); Appanoose: 3 (2020); Clayton: 29 (2016); Decatur: 1 (2019); Dubuque: 3 (2018); Fayette: 2 (2019); Fremont: 1 (2021); Greene: 1 (2021); Jackson: 2 (2020); Wayne: 22 (2017); Winneshiek: 10 (2019); Woodbury: 2 (2019).

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: Wed., Jan. 19, 2022

Weather

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy. High 15. NW @ 10-20. Wind Chill as low as -15.

Tonight: Mostly clear. Low -8. NW @ 5-10. **Wind Chill Advisory from 6-p.m. (1/19) until Noon on Thursday (1/20)**

Tomorrow: Mostly sunny. High 10. NW @ 10. Wind chill as low as -25.

Friday: P/Cldy. High 24.

Saturday: Mo. Cldy. High 29.

Tuesday’s High in Atlantic was 43. Our Low was this morning was 10 (24-hour low ending at 7-a.m.). Last year on this date the High in Atlantic was 39 and the Low was 9. The Record High on this date was 56 in 1895. The Record Low was -38 in 1892.

JANIS BOGGS, 75, of Atlantic (Celebration of Life 1/22/22)

Obituaries

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

JANIS BOGGS, 75, of Atlantic, died Wed., Jan. 19th, at Cass Health, in Atlantic. A Celebration of Life for JANIS BOGGS will be held from 11-a.m. until 1-p.m. Saturday, Jan. 22nd, at Roland Funeral Home, in Atlantic.

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

Burial will be at a later date, in the Atlantic Cemetery.

JANIS BOGGS is survived by:

Her sons – Don and David Boggs.

Her daughters – Laura and Barb Boggs.

and 5 grandchildren.

A record 35,320 new businesses formed in Iowa in 2021

News

January 19th, 2022 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – State data shows a record number of new businesses were launched in Iowa last year. Iowa law requires documents to be filed when a new business is formed in the state. Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate’s office manages that online portal for business filings. “We’re seeing an upward trend. We have over 35,000 new businesses that were formed in 2021 alone and in the last three years it’s gone up, up and up,” Pate says. “And that’s in the middle of Covid and a downward economy.”

New business starts soared across the United States last year, to a record five-point-four million new business filings according to the Census Bureau. That’s a million more than 2020, which was also a record. Pate says as Iowa mirrors that upward trend, it shows creativity in the face of pandemic challenges. “Many of them, maybe, they have taken the attitude: ‘Well, I may as well start a business right now of my own because my employer that I had before Covid is not going to let me work,’ so they have to come up with a different plan and so they’ve stepped up and started their own businesses,” Pate says. “I think there are many of those kind of stories.”

Iowa businesses must file initial forms of organization with the state, then confirm twice a year that the business is still active. There are more than 260-thousand businesses operating in the state today. “We don’t have the software that would give us a hard and firm number, but I can tell you just from the sampling I’ve looked at it’s pretty consistent, obviously, with where the population is,” Pate says. “I mean you’re going to see more filings, more businesses in the larger counties, but we have seen growth in all the counties.”

Just over 25-thousand new businesses were started in Iowa in 2019. Nearly 27-thousand launched in 2020 and then there was a 30 percent jump in 2021, to more than 35-thousand new Iowa business starts last year.

No. 15 Iowa State falls at No. 18 Texas Tech

Sports

January 18th, 2022 by admin

Texas Tech outscored Iowa State 34-17 to start the second half as the 18th ranked Red Raiders beat the 15th ranked Cyclones 72-60. ISU shot less than 37 percent, including five of 26 from three point range.

That’s ISU coach T.J. Otzelberger. Tech made 25 of 29 free throws in the second half.

The Cyclones trailed 26-23 at halftime before Tech took charge.

Caleb Grill led Iowa State with 17 points. The Cyclones fall to 2-4 in the Big 12.