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2 arrested following a pursuit and crash in Crawford County early Sunday morning (Feb. 1st)

News

February 1st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Denison, IA) – A pursuit in Crawford County early this (Sunday) morning resulted in a crash and two people being arrested. According to the Iowa State Patrol, the accident happened at around 2-a.m. as 22-year-old Carlos Gomez-Paz, of Papillion, NE, was driving a 2013 Hyundai Elantra westbound on Highway 30,attempting to elude Denison Police. At the intersection with 12th street, the car struck a southbound 2024 GMC Acadia (SUV), driven by 30-year-old Blake Beymer, of Denison.

Following the crash, the SUV came to rest south of the intersection, while the car came to rest in a parking lot west of the intersection. The Patrol says both drivers and a passenger in the SUV (who was not identified) were provided medical attention for minor injuries at the scene, and released.

The State Patrol says Gomez-Paz was arrested for Eluding, and Beymer was arrested for OWI.

Clarinda man arrested on an Assault charge Sunday morning

News

February 1st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, IA) – Sheriff’s Deputies in Montgomery County have arrested a man from Page County on an asault charge. According to the Sheriff’s Department, 28-year-old Jason Lee Sarabia, Jr., of Clarinda, was arrested just before 2-a.m. Today (Sunday), in the 100 block of W. 3rd Street, in Villisca. Sarabia, Jr., was taken into custody for Domestic Abuse Assault/1st offense. He was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held without bond.

Deputies with the Page County Sheriff’s Office assisted in the arrest.

DNC panel to let Iowa Democrats to make pitch for 2028 Caucuses to go early

News

February 1st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Democrats will have a chance to make the case to national party leaders that the Iowa Democratic Party’s Caucuses should move back to a lead-off position in the next presidential election. A panel of national Democrats met this weekend and agreed Iowa and 11 other states will be competing for up to five early voting slots in 2028. Minyon Moore is chair of the group that will make the decision and she says they are looking for one thing.

“The calendar that produces the strongest possible Democratic nominee for president,” she said. Iowa will be competing against Illinois and Michigan to host one of the four regional voting events that will kick-off the 2028 presidential election. Some committee members like David McDonald of Washington state are raising concerns about having large states like Illinois host the opening contests for Democratic candidates in 2028.

“We make a trade off if we put one of those states up front,” McDonald said. “It is both more expensive and it is less retail campaigning and historically we have tried to emphasize person-to-person contact as much as possible by using small states up front to get a read on the candidates.”

Two other members of the panel that will consider Iowa’s pitch say Iowa Democrats must make clear in their presentation how they plan to conduct the 2028 Caucuses rather than present a menu with early voting options alongside Caucus night voting.

The Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee is scheduled to meet again in April, but there’s no date set yet for Iowa and other states to make their presentations about hosting early primaries — or the Iowa Caucuses — in 2028.

Busy day fighting grass fires, Saturday

News

February 1st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Southwest Iowa) – Area firefighters kept busy Saturday afternoon battling grass and at least one structure fire. The Anita Fire Department was called to assist in fighting a grass fire that was spreading to an adjacent field, Saturday. And, the Creston Fire Department responded to the first of three grass fires on January 31st, at around 1:5-p.m.
The Avoca Fire Department responded at around 1-p.m. Saturday to a garage fire. The structure was not attached to the residence, though. The Walnut, Harlan and Shelby Fire Departments were requested and responded with mutual aid in the form of additional equipment and personnel. The blaze occurred in the 1100 block of N. Frost Avenue, in Avoca.

Photo from the Avoca FD Facebook page.

Officials with the CFD say that initial fire was located on 130th St, west of Beechwood Avenue. Due to the size and intensity of the blaze, additional resources were required, prompting a response from the Afton Volunteer Fire Department, Prescott Fire & Rescue, and Orient Volunteer Fire Departments for mutual aid. Approximately 36 acres were burned in this incident.
(Photos by Chuck Spindler w/the CFD)
As that fire was being brought under control, fire officials say a second grass fire was reported at 3:21 p.m. on Juniper Rd, east of Joshua Ave. The Afton Volunteer Fire Department responded to this call while Creston was still engaged with the first fire.
They quickly contained the fire, which was less than one acre in size, and completed their assignment by the time Creston arrived on the scene.
A third grass fire was reported at 4:48 p.m. on 12 Mile Lake Rd. Once again, the Afton Volunteer Fire Department responded to the mutual aid request. They arrived first on the scene and successfully extinguished the flames before Creston arrived.

Red Oak man arrested for Public Intoxication, Sunday morning (Feb. 1st)

News

February 1st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Red Oak, IA) – Police in Red Oak report the arrest of a man early this (Sunday) morning, on a Public Intoxication charge. Authorities say 32-year-old  Joshua Dean Jones, of Red Oak, was taken into custody on the simple misdemeanor charge at around 12:18-a.m. in the 1200 block of Senate Avenue, in Red Oak.

Jones was transported to the Montgomery County Jail and held on a $300 cash or surety bond.

Pedestrian dies after being struck by a vehicle in Mason City parking lot

News

February 1st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Mason City, IA) – A person walking in the traveled portion of a grocery store parking lot  in Mason City, was struck by an SUV Saturday afternoon. According to the Iowa State Patrol, the accident happened at around 2:40-p.m., as a 2004 Chevy Tahoe was traveling south in a parking lot. The pedestrian was transported by Mason City Ambulance to the hospital but died from their injuries.

The name of the pedestrian was being withheld by authorities, pending notification of family. The name of the SUV driver was also not immediately released. The incident remained under investigation.

Mason City Police assisted State Patrol at the scene.

Tama County road crew finds grooming kit with more than what’s needed for grooming

News

January 31st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Toledo, IA) – An Iowa Department of Transportation road crew in Tama County came across an unexpected find, recently. In a social media post, the Tama County Sheriff’s Office says, “While doing their normal maintenance and daily rounds along Highway 21 south of Highway 30, our Iowa DOT crew came across this roadside surprise. Just another reminder that these folks do a whole lot more for Iowa than people realize.
“At first glance,” authorities said, the road crew thought it was a nail file or grooming kit. Something you’d toss in a glove box and forget about. “Turns out,” the sheriff’s said, “it was less self care and more future court appearance. Inside this stylish little zip up case were needles, syringes, assorted tools, and a large baggie of a white crystal substance that absolutely does not belong on Iowa highways, in a manicure kit, or anywhere near good decision making.”

Drug kit found in Tama County (Tama County Sheriff’s Office photo via Facebook)

Tongue-in-cheek, the sheriff’s office said in their post, “If this belongs to you and you are suddenly wondering where your portable felony went, please stop by the Tama County Sheriff’s Office to claim it. Bring your ID. Bring patience. Expect questions. Paperwork will follow. Regret is likely. For everyone else, rest easy knowing this roadside science project has been picked up and will not be returning to circulation.”
Authorities issued a reminder also, that “if your grooming kit contains syringes and methamphetamine, it is not a grooming kit. It is evidence.”

IowaCASA has closed after more than 40-years of service to sexual assault victims

News

January 31st, 2026 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, IA) – [KCCI-TV] – Officials with the Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault (CASA)  announced this week that after more than 40 years of advocacy work in shaping Iowa’s response to sexual violence, Iowa CASA’s Board of Directors voted to dissolve the organization, with Friday marking the final day for most of its work.  The decision also brings to an end to a national program it led to strengthen sexual assault survivor services across the country.

IowaCASA provided training, policy advocacy and technical support to rape crisis centers and victim service providers statewide.

The closure also ends IowaCASA’s involvement in the Resource Sharing Project, a national initiative designed to help state and territorial sexual assault coalitions build capacity, share best practices and improve services for survivors. It is the primary resource that similar sexual assault advocacy organizations rely on to build training and guidance. RSP materials addressed complex and emerging issues facing survivors, including access to housing, services for underserved populations and how agencies can respond when sexual violence intersects with other forms of victimization.

IowaCASA previously announced that its legal advocacy program will continue operating during a wind-down period before ending March 31, 2026.

Sexual assault resources:

  • Text: IOWAHELP TO 20121
  • Iowa Victims Hotline: 1-800-770-1650
  • Nebraska Coalition to End Sexual & Domestic Violence: 402-476-6256
  • National Sexual Violence Hotline: 1-800-656-4673
  • National Domestic Victim Hotline: 1-800-799-7233

Iowa first in the nation to award Rural Health Transformation Program funding

News

January 30th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES—Governor Kim Reynolds and the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) today (Friday)  announced the intent to award more than $78.6 million in funding through two competitive Requests for Proposals (RFPs) as part of the Iowa Healthy Hometowns Project, funded by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Rural Health Transformation Program. Iowa was awarded a total of $209 million for the first year of the federal program and is the first state in the nation to award funding for its project initiatives.
“These investments represent a major step forward in ensuring that rural Iowans have access to high-quality health care services and providers,” said Governor Reynolds.  “Through Iowa’s Rural Health Transformation Program, Healthy Hometowns, we are building stronger, healthier communities across the state.”
The first grants awarded specifically support the Hometown Connections initiative, part of the state’s Healthy Hometowns Project, which focuses on building partnerships to restructure health care delivery options for rural communities. The grants will fund medical equipment procurement and installation, and support health care workforce recruitment. Additional RFPs for Healthy Hometowns initiatives are forthcoming.
Medical Equipment Procurement and Installation (RFP #PHTHORC26009)
This award supports rural organizations in Iowa to procure and install essential medical equipment, including minor alterations and renovations where necessary. The goal is to introduce new lines of service not currently available in rural regions and strengthen the sustainability of high-quality healthcare delivery. The list of awardees is posted on the Iowa HHS website.  In this area, the awardees include: The Adair  and Crawford County Memorial Hospitals; Greater Regional Medical Center (Creston); The Manning Regional Health Care Center, and in Shelby County, Myrtue Medical Center.
  •   Estimated Total Award Amount: $66,002,161.76
Examples of Equipment Awarded:
  • Imaging Systems: Multiple MRI systems, CT scanners, PET/CT systems, nuclear imaging (SPECT), digital X-ray systems, and a digital mammography unit with advanced imaging and compliance features.
  • Robotic Surgical Systems: Multiple da Vinci 5 robotic systems (single and dual console), Mako Robotic-Arm Assisted Surgical System, Ion Robotic Bronchoscopy System.
  • Other Advanced Equipment: Linear Accelerator for radiation therapy and Olympus Endoscopy System.
Health Care Workforce Recruitment (RFP #PHTHORC26010)
This award enables rural healthcare organizations to recruit highly skilled providers by offering competitive incentives such as recruitment bonuses, relocation assistance, and other measures to make rural practice attractive and sustainable. Providers will deliver in-person, full-time care in rural Iowa communities. The list of awardees is posted on the Iowa HHS website.  Locally, the awardees include: The Adair, Cass, Crawford and Guthrie County Memorial Hospitals; CHI Health Mercy (Corning & Missouri Valley); George C. Grape Community Hospital (Fremont Co.); GRMC (Creston); Madison County Health Care System; Manning Regional Health Care Center; Monona County Board of Health (Burgess Health Center); Ringgold County Hospital; Myrtue Medical Center (Harlan); Shenandoah Medical Center; St. Anthony Regional Hospital (Carroll); Whiting Commercial Development Corp. (Monona County).
  • Estimated Total Award Amount: $12,600,000.00
Examples of Positions Awarded:
  • Physicians: Family Medicine, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Emergency Medicine, Obstetrics/Gynecology, Psychiatry, General Surgery, and Cardiology.
  • Advanced Practice Providers: Nurse Practitioners, Certified Nurse Midwives, Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists.
  • Physician Assistants: Primary Care, Pediatrics, Surgical specialties.
  • Registered Nurses: Clinical, OB, Oncology, Emergency Department, and specialized care roles.
  • Specialty Providers: Radiology and Behavioral Health.
Iowa’s Rural Health Transformation Program, Healthy Hometowns, is supported by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award totaling $66,002,161.76 and $12,600,000.00 with 100 percent funded by CMS/HHS.
For more information about the Hometown Connections initiative, visit the Iowa Healthy Hometowns Project webpage.

Work release escape of Richard Shaul

News

January 30th, 2026 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – The Iowa Dept. of Corrections reports Richard Wayne Shaul, convicted of Theft 2nd Degree in Henry County, Burglary 2nd Degree and Unauthorized Use of Credit Card $1K Theft 2nd Degree in Marion County, and Habitual Offender, Failure to Affix Tax Stamp, Theft 1st Degree, and Robbery 2nd Degree in Polk County, failed to report back to Fort Des Moines – Bldg. 70, as required on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026.

Shaul is a 55-year-old, 5’11”, 216-pound White male. He was admitted to the work release facility on July 30, 2025.

Persons with information on Shaul’s whereabouts should contact local police.

Richard Wayne Shaul