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(Podcast) KJAN 7:07-a.m. News, 12/30/21

News, Podcasts

December 30th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Area News from Ric Hanson.

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Weather experts will long be studying our destructive December derecho

News, Weather

December 30th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Weather observers are still trying to get a perspective on the intense storm system that blasted across Iowa earlier this month, the second derecho to hit us in as many years — which spun off a record number of tornadoes. State climatologist Justin Glisan says the storm was historic in many ways, like how the “moderate area risk” was issued for Iowa. “Moderate” may sound tame but that’s a Level Four warning out of five. “This was the first ‘moderate area’ put out by the Storm Prediction Center in Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin during the month of December in history,” Glisan says. “This tells you how unstable the environment was. We had wind shear available, we had instability available, we had ample low level moisture, and all of the ingredients came together for a large-scale straight line wind and tornadic event.”

About half of the state was declared a disaster by the governor, and Glisan says damage was widespread from the multitude of tornadoes, the severe thunderstorms and the straight line winds, some of which had gusts that reached 80 to 90 miles an hour.  “We’d also had multiple reports of 70 mile-per-hour winds based on non-thunderstorm winds,” he says. “These are winds that are produced by the tight pressure gradient that the low pressure system was able to produce, given its proximity to a blocking high pressure system that was able to amp up our temperatures during the day, overnight on the 14th and into the 15th.”

Iowa cities from Sioux City all the way to Burlington reported record high temperatures during the day, most of them springlike upper 60s and lower 70s — unheard of for mid-December. Those temps quickly fell when the storm hit, dropping 30 to 40 degrees, helping to fuel the violent weather. A total of 43 tornadoes were reported in Iowa during this storm, and one death was attributed to the winds — a truck driver whose big rig was flipped into a Benton County ditch. Those 43 twisters set a single-day record for Iowa. At least seven tornadoes were also reported in Nebraska during the storm, and there was an exceptionally rare twister to our north. “We had the first tornado in Minnesota history in December,” Glisan says. “Given the large-scale nature of this outbreak, while one fatality is too much, it is good news that we were able to get the proper warnings up.”

More than 150-thousand Iowa homes lost power during the storm and it took several days to get them all back online. Like the first derecho that hit Iowa back on August 10th of 2020, Glisan says they’ll long be studying this second derecho from December 15th of 2021.

Museum staff collecting artifacts of the pandemic

News

December 30th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Items sitting on a work table in the vault at the State Historical Museum may help future generations learn about the pandemic.

The State Historical Museum collects all stories of Iowa history, knowing from our experience that this is a historic time that we’ve been in over the last two years and thinking back to other times that Iowa has been challenged with a health crisis,” museum curator Leo Landis says.

According to Landis, museum staff who put together a World War II in 2016 realized at the start of the pandemic they needed to start a collection. That’s because more than 700 soldiers at Camp Dodge died of the Spanish Flu in 2018, but there’s little in vault to visually illustrate what happened.

“Just thought to ourselves: ‘Wouldn’t it have been great to have a mask from 1918, from the flu pandemic?’ We don’t have that, so as we were moving through the Covid pandemic, we knew we needed to collect.”

The Humboldt County Hospital has donated materials, including personal protective equipment, and the University of Iowa has provided a vial of each of the three vaccines. Landis says that was a priority, because the museum vault does not have a vial of the groundbreaking polio vaccine.

“The promise of a vaccine was so big and, in fact, Sioux City is one of the first communities to get one of the first trials of vaccines as they had an outbreak in the 1950s,” Landis says, “so there’s an Iowa story connected to the national polio vaccine efforts.”

The Covid vaccine vials sitting in the museum’s vault may, in the future, help illustrate the story of the University of Iowa’s participation in the large scale, international clinical trial of Pfizer’s Covid vaccine.

State university officials say student stress & anxiety heightened by pandemic

News

December 30th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Surveys on college campuses around the country — and in Iowa – indicate anxiety and depression rates among students continue to rise. The University of Iowa is in the process of hiring three coordinators to guide students to the level of counseling or assistance they may need. Sara Hansen is vice president for student life at the University of Iowa.
“One of the things our students would tell us, I think, across all three campuses is how happy they are to be back on campus,” Hansen says, “but that doesn’t erase kind of the challenges and the fatigue that have built up over the last year, year and a half.”

Nearly nine out of 10 University of Iowa undergrads who answered a recent survey said they had experienced more stress due to the pandemic. Michael Newton, head of Iowa State University’s public safety department, says staff as well as students are struggling and his officers have undergone training in how to respond to someone experiencing a mental health crisis. “The mental health issues and problems that we’re seeing really were exacerbated by the pandemic,” Newton says.

Toyia Younger is senior vice president for student affairs at Iowa State University. She says a relatively new self-help program for I-S-U students meets them where they are — online. “Ironically, we started this before the pandemic and little did we know that almost a year later we would find ourselves in need of significant online therapy opportunities for our students, so we are really pleased with that,” Younger says, “and that’s one of the things that we’ll continuing providing services with.”

Helen Haire is director of the University of Northern Iowa’s department of public safety. She says students are sometimes using drugs and alcohol to self-medicate and deal with their stress or mental health issues. During calendar year 2020, there was a little bit of a decrease in alcohol-related arrests on the Cedar Falls campus, but a slight uptick in drug referrals.
“Some of our neighboring states have legalized marijuana and, because of that, a lot of our students may be a little bit more complacent or a little bit more willing to use the marijuana in our (residence) halls, particularly,” she says. “That’s where most of our referrals come from.”

Another U-N-I administrator says fellow students and faculty are often the first to notice a student is in distress — and many of the students who arrive at the campus counseling center for the first time are accompanied by a professor or by another student.

1 injured in Union County rollover accident

News

December 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – The driver of a 2005 Nissan Maxima complained of leg pain following a rollover accident south of Creston, Tuesday night. According to the Union County Sheriff’s Office, Deputies received a call at around 8:40-p.m. about a vehicle on its side in the ditch, in the area of 205th & Cherry Streets in rural Union County.

Deputies arrived on the scene to find no one around. They eventually made contact with the driver, 45-year-old Selena Joann Lee, of Afton, at her residence. Lee told authorities she was traveling north on Cherry Street when her vehicle went out of control and hit the west side ditch before it flipped around facing south and landed on its passenger side.

Lee was transported from her home to the hospital by ambulance She was cited for Failure to provide proof of insurance, Leaving the scene of an accident, and Failure to Maintain Control. Her vehicle sustained $4,000 damage. The report mentioned she was driving too fast for conditions when she lost control.

Hy-Vee Introduces New Retail Security Team to Stores

News

December 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa (Dec. 29, 2021) — Officials with West Des Moines-based Hy-Vee Food Stores said Wednesday, that “As part of its ongoing efforts to ensure the health and safety of both its customers and employees, Hy-Vee is introducing its new Hy-Vee Retail Security team to retail stores across its eight-state region.” According to company president and COO Jeremy Gosch, Hy-Vee Retail Security officers will be present in Hy-Vee stores during operating hours.

These officers, many of whom come from a law enforcement background, are specially trained to defuse situations and equipped to protect the safety of both Hy-Vee customers and employees. The officers have been through training designed by Hy-Vee retail security leaders alongside law enforcement partners. Gosch says “Hy-Vee has a strong history of doing anything for our customers, and these officers will be held to that same standard.”

He added “These officers will help provide another layer of safety and security for our customers, and will work alongside our store employees to deliver the same helpful smiles and outstanding service everyone expects at their local store.”

Officers are in several stores now, and more officers are completing the Hy-Vee Retail Security Training program so they can begin serving in other Hy-Vee stores across the company’s eight-state region in the near future. Hy-Vee is actively recruiting for officers to join the new Hy-Vee Retail Security team.

Interested applicants can connect with the Retail Security team at RetailSecurity@hy-vee.com.

Red Oak man arrested on Theft charge

News

December 29th, 2021 by admin

The Red Oak Police Department reports the arrest of 39-year-old Bill Joe Gillespie of Red Oak on a valid warrant for Theft in the 2nd Degree. Gillespie was arrested at 106 W Coolbaugh Street in Red Oak at 12:44 p.m. on Wednesday. Gillespie was booked into the Montgomery County Jail and held on $5000 cash bond.

DNA tests can offer personal information well beyond your ancestry

News

December 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowans who got D-N-A testing kits as Christmas gifts can learn more about their ancestry — and perhaps much more. Consumer consultant Claudia Lombana says the advanced kits go well beyond your genetic roots and can give you access to more than 25 D-N-A-based products, including what type of wine may best suit you to a host of health and fitness information.

Lombana says, “If we talk about fitness and nutrition, there are a couple of kits that will tell you based on your specific DNA the types of exercise that are best for you, the type of nutrition that is best for you.” For the purchase price, the consumer simply has to spit into a tube, seal it, send it in and wait for the results to come back. The data can be fascinating and very helpful.

“You might be predisposed to high cholesterol but it doesn’t mean your sibling will be,” Lombana says. “It doesn’t mean you’re going to get it but at least it lets you know, ‘Wow, I have a predisposition to this so maybe I should cut back on my salt,’ or cut back on sugar if you have a predisposition to diabetes. There are differences and a lot of great insights and information you can find out.” For those who want to stick to the basics, Lombana says some kits can follow your D-N-A back centuries.

“You can dive deeper into your ancestry and it will even tell you the migration paths of your ancestors and the percentage of Neanderthal that you have in you,” she says, laughing. “So, some really interesting and cool things that you can find out.” Lombana says if you want to buy a kit, do some homework first. Prices vary on what you want to find out, from as little as 50-dollars to several hundred dollars.

Healthy Cass County and Cass County ISU Extension Release Updated Cass County Urgent Need Community Resource Guide

News

December 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – Healthy Cass County and Cass County ISU Extension have released an updated version of the Cass County Urgent Need Community Resource Guide. The guide lists Cass County resources under categories such as Crisis, Abuse, Financial, Legal, Food, Health, and more.

The Cass County Urgent Need Community Resource Guide can be found on the Cass County ISU Extension website. Print copies of the guide will be distributed throughout the county at locations such as public libraries and are available for pick-up at the Cass County ISU Extension Office at 805 W. 10th St. Atlantic, IA 50022. The Cass County ISU Extension Office
can be reached at (712) 243- 1132.

The organizations collaborating on the document ask for assistance in making sure the document is available to all people in Cass County. For more information on local health and wellness events or resources, follow Healthy Cass County on Facebook @HealthyCassCounty.

Steen Funeral Home officially changes its name on January 1st

News

December 29th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Greenfield, Iowa) – You may have already noticed some of the funeral announcements on KJAN mentioned Steen Funeral Homes in Greenfield, Fontanelle and Massena was in the process of changing its name. Effective January 1st, 2022, the change to Lamb Funeral Home becomes official. Todd and Lisa Lamb have owned Steen’s Funeral Homes since 2000, and according to Todd have “Finally decided to put their name on the building!”

Their business locations, address and phone, along with the Tax ID numbers and services, will remain the same. So will their dedication to caring, detailed, quality service. Todd and Lisa Lamb want to thank families for putting their trust in LAMB Funeral Home, and wishes everyone a very Happy New Year!