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Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, July 22, 2019

News

July 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:35 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A 26-year-old Des Moines man has died after he tried to jump aboard a train. The Des Moines Register reports that Des Moines Police say Ian Pfeifer tried to jump aboard the train early Saturday.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — At least four Iowa children have died in the past 18 months at day care centers that had been warned about caring for too many children. The Des Moines Register reports that criminal charges have been filed in two of the deaths, and prosecutors are considering charges in a third case.

EARLVILLE, Iowa (AP) — The trial of a man accused of using a corn rake to kill his wife has been moved from Delaware County to Dubuque County. The Telegraph Herald reports that the judge’s order to move the first-degree murder trial of 43-year-old Todd Mullis was released Friday. Mullis, who remains in custody on a $5 million bond, had said he couldn’t get a fair trial in Delaware County. Authorities say he fatally attacked 39-year-old Amy Mullis in November at her farm northwest of Earlville.

NORTH LIBERTY, Iowa (AP) — An eastern Iowa man has been charged after police say he threatened to shoot people in his home, including children, as well as police officers. The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports that 54-year-old Alan Dale Rieken was arrested Thursday evening at his home. Police say he told others in his home, “I’m gonna shoot some cops and then you.” Officers who arrived at the home say Rieken refused to comply with officers’ orders and was eventually arrested. The officers took a handgun from his waistband.

NORMA JOHNSON, 95, of Greenfield (Memorial graveside services 7/27/19)

Obituaries

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

NORMA JOHNSON, 95, of Greenfield, died Jan. 11th at her son’s home in Missouri. Memorial graveside services for NORMA JOHNSON will be held 1-p.m. Saturday, July 27th, at the Greenfield Cemetery, in Greenfield. Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield has the arrangements.

Cards or memorials may be sent to Norbert Engles, 177 Public Square, Greenfield, IA, 50849.

NORMA JOHNSON is survived by:

Her sons – James (Sylvia) Engles, of Revere, MO., & Norbert Engles (& friend Ronda), of Greenfield.

7 grandchildren, 1 step-grandchild, 11 great-grandchildren, 2 great-great grandchildren, 6 step-great grandchildren, and her daughter-in-law, Barbara Engles, of Greenfield.

RAGBRAI Day 1 complete

News

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The first leg of RAGBRAI saw riders and their support vehicles leave Council Bluffs Sunday enroute to Atlantic for the first overnight stay on the 427 mile cross-State trip. Along the way, the throngs passed through Underwood, Neola, Minden, Avoca and Walnut, with an optional loop through McClelland early on. Three members of Team “Bad Monkey,” Zack Humphries from Kansas City, Al Hiller from Liberty, Missouri, and Craig Sommeren from Chicago, Illinois, spoke about their first day.

Sommeren said their group didn’t actually start from Council Bluffs.

They arrived in Atlantic early Sunday afternoon. All three riders are RAGBRAI veterans. Hiller has participated for 15-years, for Humphries it’s his second year, and Sommeren said he’s been on the ride for a total of 20-years. He said he learns something new every day. Humphries said the Iowan’s have been very friendly, and were excited to see the riders.

Hiller said the rain didn’t put a damper on the ride.

(He said “We have people from Seattle…it was Seattle weather.” Otherwise, it was a beautiful day.”)

The overcast skies, the men said, made the scenery all the more interesting, especially with the blades of the wind turbines partially hidden in the clouds. Along the way, they stopped for baked goods and pie in Walnut. Sommeren said the host communities never have enough of one type of pie, though. He said there is never enough rhubarb pie. “If you think you’ve made enough, make more.”

He said it’s the first pie that sells out. He also just make plain rhubarb…”Not any of this strawberry-rhubarb bingo stuff.” For those who have always wanted to participate in RAGBRAI, the men have some advice. They said prepare for a lesson in problem solving, and expect the unexpected.” That includes mechanical failure with support buses. They gave a shout-out to “Team Hard,” who had to push their bus across an intersection after it broke down.

When asked if things are different on RAGBRAI this year, than in past years, Sommeren said “Yes.” He said “There’s a lot more rules. When I started there was almost no rules.” That, he says, concerns him because younger people aren’t participating in the ride as they had when it started out.

(He said the average age of ridership is aging out. How do we get younger riders in this to keep it going. The average age keeps going up.”)

Riders leave Atlantic Monday morning on their way to their next overnight stay in Winterset. Along the way they’ll pass through Wiota, Anita, Adair, Casey, Menlo, Stuart, Dexter and Earlham. Listen for KJAN News Director Ric Hanson’s full interview with the three men Monday morning at 7:30, on “Heartbeat Today,” with Jim Field. The podcast of that program will be posted soon after it airs.

From Left to right: Craig Sommeren, Ric Hanson, Zach Humphries and Al Hiller. (Photo courtesy Steve Andersen)

Des Moines man died after trying to jump on train

News

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A 26-year-old Des Moines man has died after he tried to jump aboard a train. The Des Moines Register reports that Des Moines Police say Ian Pfeifer tried to jump aboard the train early Saturday. Police Sgt. Paul Parizek says Pfeifer was dragged about 60 feet by the train after he tried to jump aboard. Parizek says Pfeifer had told friends he planned to jump on a train before the incident.

Munoz hitting, Gallegos relief lead Cards to win over Reds

Sports

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

CINCINNATI (AP) — Yairo Munoz celebrated a rare start with a home run and a triple to help the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Cincinnati Reds 3-1 on Sunday. Munoz, making his 16th start among 55 games, also singled to finish with three of the six hits for the Cardinals, who improved to 7-3 since the All-Star break. His second homer of the season in the ninth, off Raisel Iglesias, gave St. Louis an insurance run. The Reds avoided their ninth shutout loss of the season on Phillip Ervin’s eighth-inning pinch-hit home run off Andrew Miller.

Just two Reds baserunners got as far as second base in the first four innings against Jack Flaherty, who was 0-3 over his last 10 starts since winning at Atlanta on May 14, before they loaded the bases with nobody out in the fifth. Flaherty got Yasiel Puig to pop out, and Giovanny Gallegos (2-1) came on to fan Josh VanMeter and Scooter Gennett, the first two of four straight strikeouts. Carlos Martinez pitched the ninth for his eighth save.

Anthony DeSclafani (5-5) struck out a career-high 11 and allowed just one earned run in six innings, but a shaky second was all the Cardinals needed. Four different Cardinals stole bases while St. Louis was scoring two runs in the inning. Tyler O’Neill scored from third on Munoz’s one-out bloop single to right over a drawn-in Cincinnati infield. Andrew Knizer walked and, after a double steal, Munoz scored an unearned run on Suarez’s error of Harrison Bader’s sharp one-hopper. DeSclafani allowed four hits and no walks.

At least 4 children die at overcrowded Iowa daycares

News

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — At least four Iowa children have died in the past 18 months at day care centers that had been warned about caring for too many children.The Des Moines Register reports that criminal charges have been filed in two of the deaths, and prosecutors are considering charges in a third case.

Often, state or local officials know about providers that are caring for too many children, but don’t tell prosecutors or take other action to stop them. The state has 4,300 regulated day care centers, but home day cares are not regulated.

Bluffs Police respond to murder threat, make an arrest

News

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Police in Council Bluffs were dispatched late Saturday night to 178 Crestmont Drive, where a man had allegedly threatened to kill his boss and displayed a weapon.  Officers set up a perimeter around the address and eventually made contact with the subject, who was identified as David Vanderpool.  Police were able to take the man into custody without any injuries to the offender, public or officers.

Vanderpool was charged with Reckless use of a Firearm, Harassment in the 1st degree, Aggravated Assault and Interference with Official Acts.

Griswold School Board Special Session to be held Monday (7/22/19)

News

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Griswold School District’s Board of Education will hold a Special Session beginning 5:00-p.m. Monday (July 22nd), in the Middle School/High School Library. On the agenda, is the reading of a Mission Statement, followed by consideration and the possible approval of a new hire. Other business includes a reconsideration of Dairy Bids, and possible approval of an Open Enrollment Out, request.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area – RAGBRAI Sunday, July 21st 2019

Weather

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Cloudy w/a 60% chance of showers and thunderstorms before 3pm. High near 75. Northeast wind @ 5-10 mph. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Tonight: Cloudy to partly cloudy wa 30% chance of showers & thunderstorms, mainly before 7pm. Low around 61. N/NE @ 5-10. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 77. North wind 5 to 10 mph, with gusts to around 20 mph.
Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 54.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 79. Light north wind.
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 57.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 80.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 92. Our Low this morning 68. Last year on this date our High was 85 and the Low was 58. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 107 in 1934. The Record Low was 44 in 1894.

Sanders defends Medicare for All proposal at final candidate forum on senior issues

News

July 21st, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders is defending his “Medicare for All” plan as some competitors for the Democratic Party’s 2020 presidential nomination warn embracing the proposal could doom the party’s prospects next year.  “Those candidate who run on that program, who have the guts to take on the drug companies and the insurance companies will win and win big,” Sanders said.

Sanders was the first of three candidates to speak Saturday at a forum in Council Bluffs sponsored by A-A-R-P and The Des Moines Register. Sanders repeated his accusation against former Vice President Joe Biden, that Biden has been “distorting” the tenants of the “Medicare for All” plan Sanders has authored. “Joe talked about a hiatus, in other words if you have a serious illness as we transition to ‘Medicare for All’ there may be a hiatus. That is absolutely wrong,” Sanders said. “Of course there will be a continuity of care.”

Sanders envisions enrolling Americans by age group, first having everyone over the age of 55 be covered by Medicare — until all Americans are covered by a government-paid plan from birth to death. South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg supports letting Americans buy into the Medicare system — a so-called “public option.” Buttigieg calls it “Medicare for all who want it” and argues will be cheaper than private insurance.

“It’s also one last dare, though, to the corporate world to come up with something better than they have. If they do, great. I’m not counting on it,” Buttigieg said, “and so I think what will happen over time is that this will become a very natural glide path toward a ‘Medicare for All’ environment — not by flipping a switch and banishing the private sector, but just by putting something better on the table and letting people figure it out for themselves.”

Montana Governor Steve Bullock — the other candidate who addressed A-A-R-P members on Saturday afternoon — says forcing millions of Americans to give up their private insurance isn’t the answer. “So many of them like it,” Bullock said. “Sometimes you don’t like either the cost or the deductibles. We can work on that without disrupting the entire system.”

Bullock supports adding a “public option” to Medicare, letting Americans UNDER the age of 65 buy into the system. Seventeen presidential candidates appeared at five forums this past week, adding issues of interest to seniors and offering ideas for reducing prescription drugs costs. Many expressed support for legalizing marijuana for medical use. On Saturday, Buttigieg said he supports legalizing marijuana for medical AND recreational use.

“I don’t recommend smoking anything, but not only are there important medical uses, but we’ve just hit at the point as a country where there are a lot of offenses, including I think non-violent drug offenses, where the way we responded to it — the incarceration — is actually doing more harm to society,” Buttigieg said.

Bullock, as the governor of Montana, recently approved tweaks to his state’s medical marijuana program.  “It goes to individuals in need and it makes a meaningful difference, but you always have the barriers at the federal level, both the scheduling of it as a drug and the difficulty of banking any of the dollars, being medical or recreational,” Bullock said, “so I think the federal government should get out of the way and this is a state-by-state decision.”

Sanders, the first candidate to speak Saturday in Council Bluffs, has long supported legalization of marijuana, as part of his criminal justice reform agenda.