712 Digital Group - top

Campbell announced ISU football staff changes last week

Sports

February 1st, 2021 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State head football coach Matt Campbell announced last Friday changes to his football staff which includes a promotion from a long-time staffer, a familiar name returning to the sidelines and a couple of alterations in position group assignments.

Taylor Mouser, who has been on staff since the beginning of the Campbell era, will move into an assistant coaching role taking over leadership of the tight end unit. The move will allow offensive coordinator Tom Manning, who mentored the tight ends in 2020, the opportunity to work solely as the director of the offense.

Campbell also announced that Jake Waters, who was a graduate assistant for the Cyclones in 2017, will rejoin the staff as a quality control assistant for the offense and wide receivers coach Nate Scheelhaase will also be the running game coordinator along with mentoring the running backs, duties previously held by Mick McCall, whose contract was not renewed.

The promotion of Mouser and addition of Waters are pending successful background checks.

Mouser has worn many hats in his five years as a member of the Iowa State football coaching staff.

Starting out as a graduate assistant, Mouser worked in the scouting department and then moved into a role as senior quality control for the Cyclone offense in 2019.

Mouser’s outstanding work behind the scenes earned him the promotion.

“Taylor has been a valuable member of our staff since we arrived five years ago,” Campbell said. “He’s built a positive rapport with our players and his work serving as a quality control assistant with our offense has been very beneficial to our success. Taylor will fit right in and continue to help our program make greater strides.”

In the last two seasons, Iowa State has produced two of the most prolific offenses in the history of Cyclone football. Iowa State broke the school record for total offense (444.3) and had the third-best scoring offense (32.2) in school history in 2019, and followed it up with the second-best scoring offense (32.9) and third-best total offense (436.3) totals in Cyclone history in 2020.

Mouser has assisted a number of All-Americans and All-Big 12 performers to unprecedented success working with the offense. Running back Breece Hall, who led the nation in rushing in 2020, became the first unanimous All-American in school history, tight end Charlie Kolar, ISU’s first two-time All-American in 25 years, and quarterback Brock Purdy, who owns or shares 25 school records as the Cyclone signal-caller, all have benefited from Mouser’s expertise.

The Cyclones have also set the following school records in the last two seasons with Mouser aiding the offense: touchdowns (53, 2019), points (418, 2019), yards per play (6.45, 2019) and rushing touchdowns (31, 2020).

In all, Mouser has played a huge role in Iowa State’s resurgence nationally since joining the staff prior to the 2016 season. The Cyclones have qualified for four-straight bowl games, annually appeared in the national rankings, won 32 games and totaled four of ISU’s five above-.500 conference seasons in the history of the Big 12 Conference (1996-present) since 2017.

A native of Chandler, Arizona, Mouser earned his bachelor’s degree at Adams State in 2013. He was a graduate assistant for Campbell at Toledo during the 2015 campaign.

Waters returns to Ames after a three-year stint at UTEP (2018-20) as an assistant coach on Dana Dimel’s staff. Waters worked with the tight ends, fullbacks and wide receivers during his time with the Miners.

“We feel Jake is one of the best young coaches in the nation,” Campbell said. “We witnessed his talents when he was a graduate assistant with us and he gained three more years of experience as an assistant coach at UTEP. Bringing Jake back will be a huge plus for our program.”

Waters’ initial coaching experience at the FBS level was in 2017 when Campbell hired him as a graduate assistant for the offense. The Cyclones thrived that season, tying a school-record with three wins over ranked opponents (Oklahoma, TCU, Memphis) and finishing the year with an 8-5 record and a victory in the Liberty Bowl.

Waters was a volunteer quarterbacks coach at Iowa Western Community College for two seasons (2015-16) prior to his first stint at Iowa State.

A native of Council Bluffs, Iowa, Waters had an outstanding two-year career as the quarterback at Kansas State (2013-14), compiling a 17-9 record as a starter. He was All-Big 12 Second Team in 2014, breaking school career records for completion percentage and passing efficiency.

A 2014 graduate of Kansas State, Waters prepped at St. Albert High School in Council Bluffs, leading the Falcons to a pair of Class 1A state titles and was a three-time all-state selection

Hawkeyes sweep weekly Big 12 women’s hoops honors

Sports

February 1st, 2021 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa junior Monika Czinano and freshman Caitlin Clark were named Big Ten Women’s Basketball Player and Freshman of the Week, respectively, the conference announced Monday.

The Big Ten Player of the Week nod is the first for Czinano. Clark has been named Freshman of the Week eight times this season and has tallied 13 Big Ten Weekly honors on the year, including the eight freshman honors, three Big Ten Player of the Week honors, and two Player of the Week Honor Roll nods.

In a pair of games against No. 23/23 Northwestern and Minnesota, Czinano averaged 28.5 points, eight rebounds, and shot 28-of-33 (.848) from the field. Czinano recorded her second double-double this season, scoring a career-high 34 points and pulling down 11 rebounds.

The Watertown, Minnesota, native made 15-consecutive buckets — a believed Big Ten single-game record. Czinano made her final three shots in Iowa’s previous game against Purdue (Jan. 18), making her streak 18-consecutive makes — another believed Big Ten record.

Czinano is current ranked first in the country in field goal percentage (70.1), outshining the next best by nearly six percent. Ranked second is UConn’s Olivia Nelson-Ododa (64.2) and sitting in third is Michigan’s Naz Hillmon (63.6).

Clark averaged 22.5 points and 9.5 assists in the two games last week, recording her fifth double-double of the season with 22 points and 11 assists against the Gophers. She posted 23 points and eight assists against the Wildcats.

The West Des Moines, Iowa, native broke onto the Iowa freshmen all-time scoring list 1:20 into the first quarter of the Iowa at Minnesota matchup and now ranks seventh, tallying 254 points on the season and passing former Hawkeye Megan Gustafson (252).

The Hawkeyes head to Columbus, Ohio, to take on the Buckeyes inside Value City Arena on Thursday, Feb. 4. Tip-off is set for 5 p.m. (CT) on Big Ten Network.

Feuerbach picks up first Big 12 Freshman of the Week Honor

Sports

February 1st, 2021 by admin

IRVING, Texas – Iowa State women’s basketball guard Kylie Feuerbach picked up her first Freshman of the Week award, the league announced Monday.

Feuerbach was exceptional in Sunday’s contest against the ninth-ranked Lady Bears, she tallied 15 points for her fourth double-figure outing of the season. Feuerbach went 2-of-5 from long range and added three rebounds and three steals against Baylor. Feuerbach was also 5-of-6 from the charity stripe. She also added four rebounds and two assists in a win at Kansas State.

The honor was the fifth Freshman of the Week honor for the Cyclones this season, as fellow freshmen Emily Ryan and Lexi Donarski have also nabbed two apiece.

Iowa State returns to the court on Wednesday, Feb. 3 at 6 p.m. to take on West Virginia on Big 12 Now on ESPN+.

AP Women’s College Basketball Top 25 02/01/2021

Sports

February 1st, 2021 by admin

The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ women’s college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 31, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and previous ranking

Record Pts Prv
1. Louisville (26) 16-0 746 1
2. South Carolina (4) 14-1 721 4
3. UConn 11-1 648 3
4. NC State 11-1 646 2
5. UCLA 10-2 642 5
6. Stanford 15-2 597 6
7. Texas A&M 16-1 593 8
8. Baylor 12-2 535 9
9. Arizona 11-2 488 10
10. Maryland 12-2 478 7
11. Ohio St. 10-1 462 14
12. Oregon 11-3 412 11
13. Michigan 10-1 388 12
14. South Florida 10-1 340 13
15. Kentucky 13-4 312 15
16. Arkansas 13-6 258 19
17. Indiana 10-4 257 16
18. Tennessee 12-3 221 20
19. Gonzaga 15-2 218 18
20. DePaul 9-4 160 17
21. West Virginia 13-2 144 24
22. Northwestern 9-3 106 23
23. South Dakota St. 13-2 86 25
24. Mississippi St. 8-5 85 21
25. Georgia 13-4 73 22

Others receiving votes: Missouri St. 64, Georgia Tech 25, Syracuse 20, Iowa St. 9, Rice 5, South Dakota 3, Stephen F Austin 3, Texas 2, LSU 2, Virginia Tech 1.

AP Men’s College Basketball Top 25 02/01/2021

Sports

February 1st, 2021 by admin

The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Jan. 31, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and previous ranking

Record Pts Prv
1. Gonzaga (61) 17-0 1597 1
2. Baylor (3) 16-0 1539 2
3. Villanova 11-1 1458 3
4. Michigan 13-1 1402 4
5. Houston 15-1 1348 6
6. Texas 11-3 1228 5
7. Ohio St. 14-4 1133 13
8. Iowa 12-4 1079 7
9. Oklahoma 11-4 966 24
10. Alabama 14-4 958 9
11. Tennessee 12-3 869 18
12. Illinois 11-5 850 19
13. Texas Tech 12-5 797 10
14. Virginia 11-3 752 8
15. Creighton 13-4 732 17
16. Virginia Tech 13-3 718 20
17. West Virginia 11-5 669 11
18. Missouri 11-3 589 12
19. Wisconsin 13-5 452 14
20. Florida St. 10-3 393 16
21. UCLA 13-3 260 23
22. Florida 10-4 196
23. Kansas 11-6 171 15
24. Purdue 12-6 130
25. Drake 16-0 117

Others receiving votes: Oklahoma St. 111, Southern Cal 57, Loyola of Chicago 52, Minnesota 42, Xavier 25, Boise St. 23, St. Bonaventure 19, Saint Louis 11, Belmont 11, Toledo 9, Oregon 8, Colorado 8, San Diego St. 6, UConn 5, Louisville 4, North Carolina 3, Georgia Tech 2, Rutgers 1.

Bill would give Iowa utilities more tree trimming leeway

News

February 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A bill being considered in the Iowa legislature would give utility companies more authority to trim trees and other vegetation around power lines. Onnalea Kelley, a lobbyist for MidAmerican Energy, says it’s not just during bad weather that obstructions cause power outages. She has data for MidAmerica’s service area in Iowa.  “For the past 10 years, almost 10,000 tree-related interruptions totalling 72 million minutes of interruption time occurred,” Kelley says, “and this is onl when the winds were below 45 miles an hour, so it was not considered a wind incident.”

If there’s no easement granting access to a property, the bill would grant utilities 10 feet of clearance around power lines in cities and 30 feet around power lines outside of city limits. Kevin Condon, a lobbyist for the Iowa Association of Electric Cooperatives, says in places where the R-E-Cs have no agreement about access, some non-resident landowners are refusing to let crews trim trees that endanger power lines.

“Ice storms are always a problem. Tornadoes are always a problem,” Condon says. “This last August we saw a derecho come through and really expose part of the issue here.” The union representing line crews backs the bill, too. Nick Laning is a lobbyist for the state chapter of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. “When trees rub up onto the wiring and get into the insulation, you have a hazard for fires and electrocution for workers,” he says, “so it’s a worker safety issue as well.” Kevin Kuhle, a lobbyist for the Iowa Farm Bureau, says his group opposes the bill.

“This bill is not about the August derecho, which was devastating for farmers,” Kuhle says. “This bill is all about property rights.” Kuhle says a landowner has the right to determine what happens on his or her land and blanket easements will not provide appropriate compensation for landowners. The bill has cleared subcommittee hearings and is eligible for consideration in House and Senate committees.

Police: Man shot Saturday in Davenport home has died

News

February 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — Police say a man shot in an apparent domestic disturbance at a Davenport home over the weekend has died. The Quad-City Times reports that the shooting happened just before noon on Saturday. Officers called to the scene on Fillmore Street found 33-year-old Nicholas Brown, of Davenport, suffering from a gunshot wound. Brown was rushed to a Davenport hospital with critical injuries.

Police say he died at the hospital on Monday. Police have not released other details of the shooting, including whether police have a suspect or have made any arrests in the case.

 

SCOTT PARROTT, 52, (No services at this time)

Obituaries

February 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

SCOTT PARROTT, 52, died Wednesday, January 27, 2021, at the Unity Point Iowa Lutheran Hospital in Des Moines. Per his wishes, no services will be held for SCOTT PARROTT at this time, and burial will take place in the Fontanelle Cemetery in Fontanelle. Steen Funeral Home in Greenfield is in charge of the arrangements.

IDPH Confirms B.1.1.7 Variant Strain in Iowa

News

February 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, IA) Today (Monday), the Iowa Department of Public Health (IDPH) there are confirmed three cases of the COVID-19 variant, SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.7. in Iowa. The virus variant is often referred to as the U.K. variant because it was first detected in the United Kingdom. Based on epidemiologic and modeling data, researchers believe that the B.1.1.7 strain can be spread more easily than the original strain of SARS-CoV-2. Current COVID-19 vaccines are considered to be effective against the variant strain.

Two of the three B.1.1.7 cases were detected in Johnson County, an adult (18 to 40) and a middle aged adult (41 to 60) and an adult individual in Bremer County. IDPH and local public health have already initiated contact with these cases to understand their exposures and initiate the health monitoring process. The process will include notifying anyone with whom these individuals have been in close contact. The individuals will be advised to isolate in accordance with IDPH and CDC guidance.

The positive cases were identified by the State Hygienic Lab (SHL). SHL has been participating in the CDC’s SARS-CoV-2 Strain Surveillance Program by sending COVID-19 test samples to be sequenced for the B.1.1.7 variant since early December. SHL recently began doing their own internal sequencing to look specifically for the variant. Routine analysis of genetic sequence data assisted in identifying the new variant strain in Iowa.

“Viruses constantly change through mutation, and new variants of a virus are expected to occur over time. Sometimes new variants emerge and disappear. Other times, new variants emerge and persist. Multiple variants of the virus that causes COVID-19 have been documented in the United States and globally during this pandemic. Public health will continue to work with our partners at SHL to monitor these trends and it is very important that we all keep practicing good public health protective measures,” shared Dr. Caitlin Pedati, State Medical Director and Epidemiologist.

The emergence of new variants underscores that it remains critical for Iowans to continue the mitigation efforts that we know work to slow the spread of COVID-19:

Wear a mask or face covering
Practice social distancing with those outside your household
Clean your hands frequently with soap and water
Stay home if you feel sick
Get tested if you are exposed to, or have symptoms of COVID-19
Consider getting a COVID-19 vaccine when it’s available to you
Updates to Iowa’s B.1.1.7 cases will be shared on the CDC’s website here. These case counts only represent the variant strains that are confirmed through genomic sequencing, and may not accurately reflect the true number of variant cases.

More info. released on March 2nd Special Election for the CAM CSD

News

February 1st, 2021 by Ric Hanson

CAM School District Vote on Revenue Purpose Statement for Expenditure of State Sales Tax for School Infrastructure and Property Tax Relief: On March 2, 2021, CAM school patrons will have an opportunity to vote on a new Revenue Purpose Statement to direct the district’s spending of state penny sales tax revenues. This vote does not impact your sales taxes.

History: Voters in all 99 counties approved this sales tax to upgrade school facilities without increasing property taxes. The SILO was originally intended to last ten years. In 2008, the Legislature changed the SILO local option into a state penny sales tax to benefit the students in all school districts. In the 2019 Session, the Legislature further extended the state penny. The state will continue to collect the penny on retail purchases through December 31, 2050 and will continue to send the proceeds to all Iowa school districts.

Recent Changes: As part of this change, the state now requires school districts to determine how they plan to spend the sales tax money for the tax extension and communicate those intentions to their patrons. The CAM school board has passed a resolution approving the new Revenue Purpose Statement, which states how the district must use the sales tax funds. The voters have a chance to weigh in on that revenue purpose statement at a special school election on March 2, 2021. The statement must follow Iowa law and can only use the funds for specific purposes described in law as school infrastructure and property tax relief. The law limits the uses to construction, reconstruction, demolition, repair, purchase of equipment, technology, buses, school safety equipment, and other infrastructure and property tax relief needs defined in the Iowa Code which voters will see stated on the Revenue Purpose Statement and ballot. The Iowa Secretary of State defines the ballot language for the revenue purpose statement and requires it to follow a standardized format.

Stakeholder input: Since the Revenue Purpose Statement will direct district expenses for a long time, through 2050, the statement preserves some flexibility for a future board to operate within the constraints of the law and consider additional projects or equipment purchases that otherwise would take property taxes to fund. In most cases, other school districts have language which lists all legal uses of the state penny revenue and preserves future flexibility similar to the revenue purpose statement that the CAM voters will consider on March 2, 2021. This is not the only opportunity for the public to weigh in, however, if this school board or any future school board wishes to bond using the sales tax revenues to pay ongoing obligations, or wishes to spend sales tax revenues on athletic facilities not attached to the school, the new law requires the district to conduct a public hearing prior to either of those actions. If the public delivers a petition with signatures equal to 30% of those voting in the last school election, then the school board must either rescind the plan or place that bond issue or athletic facility improvement on the ballot for all voters to weigh in.

SAVE Uses in CAM Community School District: During the duration of the local option sales tax, and the state penny sales tax for school infrastructure since 2008, the board has understood student needs for safe, technology-ready facilities designed for student learning. The district has used the funds to update HVAC controls, install new windows, provide one-to-one computers and technology needs, LED lighting, among other improvements. The district intends to gather public input later this spring on current facilities and possible major renovation resulting from these conversations.

For additional information on the change in law and the revenue purpose statement process, visit the district’s web site at camcougars.org or contact Paul Croghan, Superintendent, 712-762-3238 or pcroghan@cam.k12.ia.us.

The Text of the Revenue Purpose Statement as approved by the CAM School Board, which will be on the March 2, 2021 ballot, follows:

Summary:  To adopt a Revenue Purpose Statement specifying the use of revenues the CAM Community School District will receive from the State of Iowa Secure an Advanced Vision for Education Fund.

In the CAM Community School District, the following Revenue Purpose Statement which specifies the use of revenues the CAM Community School District will receive from the State of Iowa Secure an Advanced Vision for Education Fund shall be adopted.

To provide funds to acquire or install information technology infrastructure (including improving buildings or sites for the purpose of accessing broadband digital telecommunications) and school safety and security infrastructure.

To provide funds to build and furnish a new school building or buildings; to build and furnish addition(s) to school buildings in the District; to remodel, reconstruct, repair, expand, and improve the school buildings in the District; to purchase and improve grounds; for demolition work; to furnish and equip district facilities.

To provide funds for the purchase, lease or lease-purchase of buildings, equipment (including transportation and recreation equipment), or technology and to repair transportation equipment for transporting students as authorized by law, to implement energy conservation measures, sharing or rental of facilities including a joint infrastructure project for the purposes of offering classes under a district-to-community college as authorized in Iowa Code Section 423F.3(3)(c), procuring or acquisition of libraries, or opening roads to schoolhouses or buildings.

To provide funds to purchase land as part of start-up costs for new student construction program or if the sale of the previous student construction was insufficient to purchase land, and to purchase construction materials and supplies for a student-constructed building or shed intended to be retained by and used by the District.

To provide funds to make payments to a municipality or other entity as required under Iowa Code Section 403.19(2).

To provide funds for demolition, cleanup, and other costs if such costs are necessitated by, and incurred within two years of, a disaster.

To provide funds to establish and maintain public recreation places and playgrounds; provide for supervision and instruction for recreational activities; or for community education purposes.

To provide funds for the payment of principal and interest or retirement of general obligation bonds issued for school infrastructure purposes, energy improvement loans, loan agreements authorized by Iowa Code Section 297.36, sales, service and use tax revenue bonds issued under Iowa Code Section 423E.5 or Iowa Code Section 423F.4.

To provide funds for property tax relief; and

To provide funds for other authorized expenditures and purposes as now or hereafter permitted by law and designated by the CAM Community School District.

It being understood that if this proposition should fail to be approved by the voters, such failure shall not be construed to terminate or restrict authority previously granted by the voters to expend receipts from the Secure an Advanced Vision for Education Fund.

If approved, this Revenue Purpose Statement shall remain in effect until replaced or amended by the CAM Community School District.