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Board permanently revokes license of a former Treynor Teacher/Coach

News, Sports

November 3rd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A former Treynor teacher and coach accused of sexual abuse will never teach again in Iowa. According to the Daily NonPareil, the Board of Educational Examiners issued a permanent revocation of 46-year old Michael Travis’ teaching license last month after Travis pleaded guilty Aug. 18th to simple assault, a misdemeanor, and agreed to surrender his license to the state.

Travis did not have to register as a sex offender and did not serve any jail time. He received a deferred judgement, and he continued to maintain his innocence in a statement. He had been a teacher at Treynor Elementary School and an assistant softball coach at Treynor High School at the time of his arrest in May 2014.

A prosecutor with the Pottawattamie County Attorney’s Office said the alleged victims – three former softball players and a fifth-grader, with alleged incidents from 2002 through 2006 – were involved in the plea deal and wanted to make sure Travis wouldn’t remain a teacher. The Board of Educational Examiners voted Oct. 9th to revoke his license as well as endorsements as a K-12 athletic coach, K-6 elementary classroom teacher and K-8 physical education teacher. He also held an expired substitute license.

The revocation carries no possibility of reinstatement.

October enters Iowa weather record books as warmer, drier than normal

Weather

November 3rd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The just ended month of October was warmer and drier than normal across Iowa. State climatologist Harry Hillaker says the statewide average rainfall total for the month was one-and-three-quarters inches (1.75 inches), about one inch less than usual for October. “The most unusual aspect there was the extremely dry start to the month, with very little rain anywhere in the state over the first 20 days of October,” Hillaker said. It was the 52nd driest October in Iowa in 143 years of record keeping.

Here in Atlantic, at the KJAN studios, we received 1.28″ of rain, and that was 1.48″ less than normal. Across the state, most of the month was ideal for farmers who were working to complete the harvest. “Temperatures averaged about 2.6 degrees warmer than usual…it ranks as the 46th warmest October,” Hillaker said. Many areas of central and southern Iowa have yet to record a hard freeze this fall. There was a range of 72 degrees between temperature “extremes” across Iowa last month. “The warmest reading we had, by far, came on the 11th of October at 91-degrees in Sioux City. That was a daily record for that day of the month. On the other extreme, a little less than a week later, it got down to 19-degrees on the morning of the 17th at Stanley up in Buchanan County in northeast Iowa,” Hillaker said.

In Atlantic, the Average High for the month was 66.1, which was 2 degrees warmer than normal. The Average Low was 39.5, which was just one-half degree warmer than normal. The month of November is starting off dry and warm — as highs are forecast to reach the 70s again Tuesday and Wednesday. Showers and much cooler conditions are expected to push into the state Thursday and Friday.

(Radio Iowa/KJAN)

USDA: 85-percent of Iowa’s corn, 96-percent of soybeans, now out of the field

Ag/Outdoor

November 3rd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The harvest of Iowa’s crops was slowed significantly by rainfall toward the end of October, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Through Sunday, 85-percent of the state’s corn crop was harvested. Despite all of the wet weather, that’s 10 days ahead of last year and two days ahead of the five-year average. Ninety-six percent of the soybean crop has been harvested. That’s equal to the five-year average, but eight days ahead of last year.

Last week was Iowa’s wettest week in over a month-and-a-half. The USDA reports Iowa farmers, on average, had a little over 4 “suitable” days for fieldwork last week. Marion County received the most rain at 2.86 inches. There are areas of southwest and south-central Iowa where over 30 percent of the corn and 10 percent of the soybean crop remains to be harvested.

(Radio Iowa)

NWS forecast for the KJAN listening area: 11/3/15

Weather

November 3rd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

EARLY THIS MORNING: PARTLY CLOUDY. PATCHY FOG. SOUTH WIND NEAR 10 MPH.

TODAY: MOSTLY SUNNY. BREEZY. PATCHY FOG THROUGH MID MORNING. HIGH IN THE LOWER 70S. SOUTH WIND 10 TO 20 MPH. GUSTS UP TO 30 MPH IN THE AFTERNOON.

TONIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY THROUGH MIDNIGHT THEN BECOMING MOSTLY CLOUDY. LOW IN THE MID 50S. SOUTH WIND 10 TO 15 MPH WITH GUSTS TO AROUND 25 MPH.

WEDNESDAY…PARTLY SUNNY. BREEZY. HIGH IN THE LOWER 70S. SOUTH WIND 15 TO 20 MPH WITH GUSTS TO AROUND 30 MPH.

THURSDAY…MOSTLY CLOUDY. A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS IN THE MORNING…THEN SHOWERS LIKELY AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS IN THE AFTERNOON. BREEZY. HIGH IN THE MID 60S. SOUTHWEST WIND 15 TO 20 MPH. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 60 PERCENT.

FRIDAY: MOSTLY SUNNY. COOLER. HIGH IN THE LOWER 50S.

 

Iowa early News Headline: Tue., 11/3/2015

News

November 3rd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Hundreds of protesters have rallied at the University of Iowa campus to argue that the school’s new president shouldn’t have accepted the position. The Des Moines Register reports that about 100 protesters at the university challenged the qualifications of newly-hired president Bruce Harreld Monday afternoon. Harreld began as the university’s 21st president Monday.

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — Mike Hammond, who co-founded computer maker Gateway Inc. in a northwest Iowa farmhouse in 1985, has died at age 53. Hammond started Gateway with brothers Ted and Norm Waitt, selling what became among one of the most popular computers on the market. He managed the company’s operations in Iowa and South Dakota.

EARLY, Iowa (AP) — A judge has agreed with the murder conviction of an Iowa mother who shot and killed her 20-year-old neighbor in 2001. Tracey Richter is serving life in prison in the slaying of Dustin Wehde. Prosecutors say she fatally shot Wehde as part of a plot to frame her ex-husband during a custody battle, but Richter says her trial was tainted by errors from her defense attorney.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — About 2,000 farmers, grain handlers and corn exporters are suing Swiss biotechnology company Syngenta now that a federal judge has ruled their cases have merit and will move forward. The lawsuits allege Syngenta’s introduction of a new genetically modified corn seed interrupted trade with China in 2011 and may have cost the U.S. corn industry as much as $3 billion.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa is paying $235,000 to settle a lawsuit from a woman who says she was kept in isolation at the Iowa Juvenile Home for 280 days. Jessica Turner’s lawsuit alleged she was held in small concrete cells for weeks at a time between 2011 and 2012. The governor closed the juvenile home in Toledo last year amid questions about the treatment of residents.

High School Football Quarterfinal Pairings

Sports

November 2nd, 2015 by admin

Friday (11/06/2015)

CLASS 4A:

Cedar Rapids, Kennedy vs Cedar Rapids, Washington at Kingston Stadium
Dowling Catholic, WDM vs Lewis Central at Williams Stadium
Iowa City, City High @ Bettendorf
Valley, West Des Moines @ Johnston

CLASS 3A:

Decorah @ West Delaware, Manchester
Norwalk @ Dallas Center-Grimes
Pella @ Assumption, Davenport
Webster City @ Sergeant Bluff-Luton

CLASS 2A:

Central Lyon/ George-Little Rock @ Spirit Lake
Mount Vernon @ Anamosa
South Tama County, Tama @ Albia
Waukon @ North Fayette Valley

CLASS 1A:

Dike-New Hartford @ Saint Ansgar
Hinton @ Western Christian, Hull
Van Meter @ South Central Calhoun
West Branch @ Regina, Iowa City

CLASS A:

Akron-Westfield @ West Sioux, Hawarden
Denver @ Bishop Garrigan, Algona
Gladbrook-Reinbeck @ B-G-M, Brooklyn
Lynnville-Sully @ Mount Ayr

CLASS 8:

Colo-Nesco @ Newell-Fonda
Don Bosco, Gilbertville @ Central, Elkader
East Mills @ Glidden-Ralston
West Bend-Mallard @ Marcus-Meriden-Cleghorn

High School Football Playoff Scores 2nd Round

Sports

November 2nd, 2015 by admin

Monday (11/02/2015)

CLASS 4A:

Bettendorf 43, Iowa City, West 18
Cedar Rapids, Kennedy 49, North Scott, Eldridge 7
Cedar Rapids, Washington 42, Cedar Rapids, Jefferson 21
Dowling Catholic, WDM 50, Southeast Polk 21
Iowa City, City High 13, Pleasant Valley 7
Johnston 28, Ankeny Centennial 10
Lewis Central 17, Ankeny 7
Valley, West Des Moines 42, Waukee 7

CLASS 3A:

Assumption, Davenport 48, Maquoketa 0
Dallas Center-Grimes 31, Ballard 7
Decorah 30, Xavier, Cedar Rapids 21
Norwalk 27, Gilbert 11
Pella 52, Creston 27
Sergeant Bluff-Luton 72, Carroll 47
Webster City 38, Boyden-Hull/Rock Valley 7
West Delaware, Manchester 37, Solon 14

CLASS 2A:

Albia 42, Mid-Prairie, Wellman 0
Anamosa 42, Williamsburg 14
Central Lyon/ George-Little Rock 28, East Sac County 0
Mount Vernon 41, Central Lee, Donnellson 28
North Fayette Valley 52, Hampton-Dumont 28
South Tama County, Tama 49, New Hampton 0
Spirit Lake 49, Estherville Lincoln Central 20
Waukon 42, Aplington-Parkersburg 21

CLASS 1A:

Dike-New Hartford 48, Panorama, Panora 7
Hinton 54, Underwood 35
Regina, Iowa City 35, Hudson 6
Saint Ansgar 19, South Winneshiek, Calmar 6
South Central Calhoun 35, Ridge View 17
Van Meter 26, Madrid 20
West Branch 42, Pella Christian 27
Western Christian, Hull 28, Pocahontas Area 7

CLASS A:

Akron-Westfield 26, Logan-Magnolia 21
B-G-M, Brooklyn 13, Lisbon 6
Bishop Garrigan, Algona 34, Grundy Center 6
Denver 57, Montezuma 14
Gladbrook-Reinbeck 28, Pleasantville 0
Lynnville-Sully 29, Winfield-Mt. Union 28
Mount Ayr 42, Colfax-Mingo 20
West Sioux, Hawarden 54, Lawton-Bronson 21

CLASS 8:

Central, Elkader 28, H-L-V, Victor 14
Colo-Nesco 51, Moravia 20
Don Bosco, Gilbertville 74, Turkey Valley, Jackson Junction 34
East Mills 58, Lenox 34
Glidden-Ralston 61, Fremont-Mills, Tabor 28
Marcus-Meriden-Cleghorn 62, Ar-We-Va, Westside 12
Newell-Fonda 28, Graettinger-Terril/Ruthven-Ayrshire 14
West Bend-Mallard 75, Janesville 45

Cardinals exercise option on Garcia

Sports

November 2nd, 2015 by admin

The St. Louis Cardinals announced today that they have exercised their 2016 club option on left-handed pitcher Jaime Garcia and declined their 2016 club option on right-handed pitcher Jonathan Broxton.  The team also announced today that infielder Pete Kozma and catchers Ed Easley and Travis Tartamella have been outrighted off the team’s 40-man Major League roster.

Garcia, 29, was 10-6 with a 2.43 ERA in his 20 starts in 2015, going 7-2 from August 1 until season’s end.  The Cardinals were 10-2 in his 12 games started during that span.

Garcia has posted a 52-32 career mark with a 3.31 ERA in 126 career games pitched and his 3.25 ERA since 2010, when he finished 3rd in National League Rookie of the Year voting, is 7th best amongst all Major League lefties.

Broxton, 31, was 3-3 with a 2.66 ERA in 26 games pitched for the Cardinals following his acquisition on July 31 in a trade with Milwaukee.

Kozma, 27, appeared in 76 games for the Cardinals this past season while Easley, 29, and Tartamella, 27, both made their Major League debuts during the 2015 campaign.

Wildwood Road in Shelby County has re-opened

News

November 2nd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

The Shelby County Emergency Management Agency said Monday, a bridge over Indian Creek along Wildwood Road is re-open to traffic. The bridge, located in the 700 Block of Wildwood Road, between Jackson Township Sections 35-36, was closed in early August for a complete rebuilding project.

IANG to close Corning Armory in 2016

News

November 2nd, 2015 by Ric Hanson

A spokesman for the Iowa National Guard says the Armory in Corning (at 1925 210th St.) will be closing next year, and the unit will move to Camp Dodge in Johnston. Col Greg Hapgood said in a press release Monday, that the closure is a result of force structure and stationing study findings. The unit currently assigned to the Corning armory, Detachment 1, Company B, 1st Battalion, 168th Infantry, will move to Camp Dodge in 2016 and consolidate with the main body of Company B. Approximately 80 Soldiers are affected by the closure and move.IANG

Col Hapgood says the Iowa National Guard has a long history in Corning dating back to 1892 with the initial stationing of Company K, 3rd Regiment. Soldiers from the Corning armory have fought in the Spanish-American War, World War I, and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. Constructed in 1993, the 20,598-square foot Corning armory is the 13th armory to be closed in Iowa as the result of a state-wide consolidation and facilities upgrade program initiated in 2000 by the Iowa National Guard.

The armory will be offered to the public for sale in the near future. Maj. Gen. Tim Orr, Adjutant General for the Iowa National Guard, said “It was a very difficult decision to make as an organization, but with the fiscally-constrained environment all Department of Defense entities face today, consolidating this unit and closing the Corning armory was the best course of action for responsible stewardship of taxpayer resources and for future readiness of our Soldiers. We are incredibly grateful for the strong support of the Corning community for nearly 125 years.”

Since 2000, as part of the Iowa National Guard plan to relocate military units into higher demographic areas, close outdated armories, consolidate units on a regional concept to better utilize training resources, and upgrade existing facilities through renovation and new construction, the Iowa National Guard has consolidated units and closed armories in Sioux Center, Villisca, Mapleton, Atlantic, Clarinda, Glenwood, Hampton, Jefferson, Chariton, Newton, Eagle Grove and Centerville.