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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Atlantic, IA) – Atlantic Community School District Superintendent, Dr. Beth Johnsen, today (Thursday), issued a statement regarding a matter involving a District staff member. The statement is as follows:
“The Atlantic Community School District is providing the following factual update regarding a recent personnel matter, while maintaining the confidentiality requirements of lowa law. On Sunday, January 18, 2026, the district received a phone call from a parent raising concerns about a staff member. That same day, district administration placed the staff member on administrative leave to allow the district to conduct an investigation consistent with district policy and best practice.
“School administrators gathered information in the days that followed. During this period, the district was advised by its legal counsel, the lowa Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), and the Atlantic Police Department to refrain from public comment or action while their respective investigations were ongoing. The district acted consistent with this advice in order to preserve the integrity of any ongoing investigations.
“The district has since been informed that the Atlantic Police Department continues its investigation. As of this time, the district has not received additional information or findings from law enforcement. The district will continue to cooperate with law enforcement during their investigation.
“With any investigation into the conduct of a staff member, the district works collaboratively with DHHS, the lowa Board of Educational Examiners (BOEE), and the Atlantic Police Department as appropriate. DHHS is responsible for investigating child abuse allegations and has concluded its investigation with a finding of unfounded child abuse. DHHS is responsible for investigating specific concerns involving students. If the alleged conduct does not meet their definition, then they do not pursue an investigation. The BOEE oversees educator licensure matters, and school districts may report concerns to the BOEE to investigate and handle. BOEE licensing matters are separate from any district investigation, DHHS investigation, or law enforcement investigation. The Atlantic Police Department investigates potential criminal acts. Both agencies will continue their work independently.
“Following the conclusion of any district investigation into the conduct of a staff member, the district may issue disciplinary consequences up to and including ending the staff member’s employment, either through resignation or termination. Once a staff member submits their resignation, district officials and the Board must consider whether to accept the resignation, thereby ending the staff member’s employment. The decision about accepting a staff member’s resignation is separate from any procedures occurring with any state entity, such as DHHS or the BOEE, and with law enforcement.
“All personnel decisions made by the district are governed by lowa Code, which strictly limits. what information may be shared publicly during investigations in order to protect student safety and to provide staff required due process. The district is aware of misinformation and speculation circulating on social media and in the media. When the employee was hired, the district followed all required hiring procedures, including background and reference checks. The district takes these procedures seriously, and would not hire an applicant who had a history of concerning conduct directed at students. At the time of hire, no concerns of the nature currently being discussed were reported from previous school districts. Following recent allegations, the district conducted follow-up communication with prior employers, who confirmed no known concerns at the time of prior employment. Any information under review remains allegations, and the district continues to proceed carefully and appropriately.
“Earlier, when unrelated concerns were raised, the district conducted a review that did not identify policy violations but did result in clarified expectations. These actions reflect the district’s commitment to student safety and professional standards. The district must also address reports of harassment, threats, and aggressive behavior toward school employees and Board members. This conduct is unacceptable and will not be tolerated on school property or at school activities. While questions and concerns are understandable, staff safety and respectful engagement are non-negotiable. District officials will remove any individual who engages in such behavior. The district also reminds community members that secured building procedures must be followed at all times outside of public events to ensure student and staff safety.
“The Atlantic Community School District remains committed to doing what is right for our school community, even in difficult circumstances. We take concerns regarding staff conduct very seriously and act consistent with the advice of legal counsel and our requirements under the law. We ask for patience as appropriate processes continue and for our community to remain focused on our students, their education, and their well-being. The district will continue to communicate responsibly and within the bounds of the law as more information becomes available.
“At this time, the district has not received additional information from law enforcement and acting on the advice of district legal counsel, the Board of Education has taken steps to end employment through resignation or termination, while awaiting information from BOEE and law enforcement. The Atlantic Community School District remains committed to student safety, professional accountability, and transparent communication within the limits of the law. We ask for patience as appropriate processes continue.”
(Clarinda, IA) – Clarinda Police Chief Keith Brothers reports a man was arrested today (Thursday) on a warrant associated with the State’s Sex Offender Registry. 47-year-0ld Adam Wayne Morris, of Clarinda, was arrested by Page County Sheriff’s Deputies on the warrant issued by the Page County Magistrate Court.
The warrant, Brothers said, was based on a complaint filed by the Clarinda Police Department alleging Violation of an Exclusionary Zone, while Morris is listed on the Iowa Sex Offender Registry. His arrest stems from an incident that occurred at the Clarinda City Park on Sunday, Feb. 1st, and a resulting investigation by the Clarinda P-D. Morris was being held in the Page County Jail on a $2,000 bond.
A criminal complaint contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
(Radio Iowa) – Some agreements between public schools and local libraries would be blocked under a bill approved by Education Committee in the Iowa House. Library bookmobiles would be barred from school property and the bill prohibits schools from letting students use school I-Ds to access books and other materials from public libraries. Katherine Bogaards with a group called “Protect My Innocence” says the bill is needed to stop Iowa schools from going around a state law that bans school libraries from having books with sexually explicit content. “It closes the loopholes and ensures schools remain accountable to parents, accountable to the taxpayer, transparent to the public, and compliant with the law,” she said.
Republican Representative Brooke Boden, of Indianola, says the bill reinforces the 2023 law she and other legislators passed after learning kids and teens were able to check out books with graphic sexual content from some school libraries. “Reading is so important,” Boden said, “but we also don’t want our kids reading literature that they’re going to need counseling for for the rest of their lives either.” Representative Elinor Levin, a Democrat from Iowa City is a former public school teacher who opposes this year’s bill, especially the ban on bookmobile visits to public schools. “Watching the bookmobile pull up at my local elementary school, there is no greater delight that I see on children’s faces, other than maybe running around a snow day,” Levin said. “It is incredible and it is powerful and I cannot think of a reason to take that away.”
Other critics say the bill would create barriers for students in schools that don’t have libraries or have limited book collections. Christopher Rants, a lobbyist for Des Moines Public Schools, says five of the district’s schools do not have libraries and about 12-thousand middle and high school students use their school I-D cards at Des Moines Public Libraries. “The Des Moines Public Schools has listened to what we’ve been told by the state: Be more efficient. You know, you’ve got to compete. Do more with less, eliminate duplications, find ways to be efficient,” Rants said, “so that’s what they’ve done.”
Representative Heather Matson, a Democrat from Ankeny, says the Huxley Public Library operates as the library for middle school students in the Ballard School District. “This lessons the burden to property taxpayers, both through school taxes and city taxes,” she said. Representative Helena Hayes of New Sharon says Republican legislators will try to find a way to let SOME of those agreements continue, but the bill is meant to reinforce guardrails. “The public schools and the public libraries operate on different standards and different rules,” Hayes said, “so to bring in a separate organization like that — a public library into the school — would be to have it functioning under other rules.”
The bill as currently written prohibits Iowa schools from entering into any agreement with a public library that would let students use a school I-D to access ANY books, electronic resources or other educational materials at the public library.
(Atlantic, IA) – Atlantic Mayor Rob Clausen, Jr., Wednesday night, in his report to the Atlantic City Council, he’s still adjusting to his new role as Mayor, along with various boards and committees.
Clausen was elected to the center seat on the Council, last November, and took over from Grace Garrett, who chose not to run for re-election. He said with a chuckle, he hopes as time goes by, he can begin scaling-back on all the meetings he has to attend. In the Council Committee reports, Councilman Jim Behrens mentioned the Atlantic Fire Department is looking into the possibility of obtaining a new ladder truck with the expanded capability to place firefighters in areas where they otherwise wouldn’t be able to reach by a standard ladder truck.

Atlantic CC mtg. 2-4-26
He said they had a house donated to the department for fire training. And, Councilman Dana Halder reported on a recent meeting of the Cass County Landfill Commission, and a presentation from officials with Metro Waste Authority and their proposal.
And, Councilperson Elaine Otte reported on a grant opportunity she learned about during a meeting of the Volunteerism Task Force.
Volunteer Iowa, she said, will give the provide a $4,000 grant to carry out whatever the City/County does to promote volunteerism on a day of service.
Otte said some examples of would engage volunteers in the city-wide clean-up, and maybe something associated with the Parks and Rec Department. The whole idea is to build-up the volunteer force in the City and County. More information is expected within the next few weeks.
(Radio Iowa) – A bill tabled in the Iowa House would have eliminated Iowa’s 34 volunteer boards that coordinate local early childhood services, with the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services taking over the system. Supporters of the Early Childhood Iowa boards say they ensure services are tailored to the specific needs of kids in their communities.
McKinley Bailey is executive director of the Early Childhood Iowa board for Hamilton, Humboldt and Wright Counties. He says state officials don’t understand how the boards function. “If you pull all of this out of there, you are ripping apart a system and they have never taken the time to figure out what they’re blowing up,” Bailey said. “They don’t even know the basics of what we do and how we do it.”
The volunteer-led Early Childhood Iowa boards support programs and activities in their areas that focus on children under the age of six. Officials in the Department of Health and Human Services argued having the agency take over would ensure more efficient and consistent services for young Iowa children. Republican members of a House subcommittee say they want to find ways to improve the system, but they don’t support the agency’s bill.
(Atlantic, IA) – The Cass County ISU Extension Office in Atlantic is now taking appointments for FREE preparation of 2025 Taxes for qualifying taxpayers through the VITA Program. Appointments in February and March will be at the Extension Office on the Fairgrounds in Atlantic. The IRS’s Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program, offers free basic tax return preparation to qualified individuals. The VITA program has operated for over 50 years. VITA sites offer free tax help to people who need assistance in preparing their own tax returns, including:
While the IRS manages the VITA program, VITA sites are operated by IRS partners and staffed by IRS-certified volunteers who want to make a difference in their communities. VITA services are not only free, they are also a reliable and trusted source for preparing tax returns. All VITA volunteers who prepare returns must take and pass tax law training that meets or exceeds IRS standards. This training includes maintaining the privacy and confidentiality of all taxpayer information. In addition to requiring volunteers to certify their knowledge of the tax laws, the IRS requires a quality review check for every return prepared at a VITA site prior to filing. Locally, volunteers are trained and supported by the Iowa Center for Economic Success. Find more information about documents needed for tax preparation at https://theiowacenter.org/taxservices/
In addition to benefiting eligible taxpayers, the VITA program also benefits local communities by helping low-income taxpayers access special tax credits such as the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), Child Tax Credit, and Credit for the Elderly or Disabled. In Iowa, the average Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) refund is $2,311, and almost 20% of eligible Iowans do not access this credit. When taxpayers claim this credit, local economies get double the benefit, as every EITC dollar claimed results in up to $2 in local economic activity!
Please call the Cass County Extension Office at 712-243-1132 to schedule your appointment. We have limited dates available in February and early March of 2026, and appointments will be offered on a first-come basis. For more information on the VITA program in Cass County or other local Extension programs, visit www.extension.iastate.edu/cass.
(Red Oak, IA) – The Red Oak Police Department reports no one was injured during a collision Tuesday afternoon. Authorities say 89-year-old Nicholas Couse, of Red Oak, was leaving the parking lot of the Montgomery County Memorial Hospital at around Noon on Tuesday. He looked, but failed to see an approaching SUV driven by 18-year-old Thomas Wilcoxen, of Red Oak, that was traveling east on Senate Avenue.
When Couse pulled-out of the parking to turn left onto Senate Avenue, his car struck the SUV broadside behind the front tire. Both drivers denied injury. Damage from the collision amounted to a police-estimated $3,000 altogether. Both vehicles were driven away from the scene. Red Oak Police cited Couse for Failure to Yield Upon Entering a Highway/Street.
(Creston, IA) – Two people were arrested on separate charges, Wednesday, in Creston. According to the Creston Police Department, 19-year-old Michael Robert Goodall, of Creston, was arrested at the Creston WalMart store, at around 2:30-p.m., for 5th Degree Theft. Goodall was cited and then released from the scene on a Promise to Appear in court.
And, at around 11:30-p.m., Wednesday, Creston Police arrested 20-year-old Alec Steven Belter, from League City, Texas. Belter was charged with Operating While Under the Influence 1st Offense. He was taken to the Union County Jail and later posted bond before being released.