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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
With just days to go before the April 15th tax-filing deadline, numerous law enforcement agencies in Iowa are reporting a surge in the number of calls people are receiving from scammers claiming to be from the Internal Revenue Service.
Among the law enforcement agencies to issue a warning about the scam calls, is the Atlantic Police Department. Police Chief Steve Green says scammers are expanding their efforts in the Atlantic and Cass County area, and are threatening their potential victims by saying there is a warrant for their arrest, and if you don’t pay delinquent taxes immediately, the police will pick you up and take you to jail.
In some cases, scammers give you a case number to speak with an agent, and ask you to call back for more information. These calls are not from the IRS and you should not give personal information of any kind over the phone. Be sure your elderly friends and relatives are aware of this scam, because the elderly are often targets for the scammers.
According to the IRS official website, the IRS will never:
• Call to demand immediate payment over the phone, nor will the agency call about taxes owed without first having mailed you several bills.
• Call or email you to verify your identity by asking for personal and financial information.
• Demand that you pay taxes without giving you the opportunity to question or appeal the amount they say you owe.
• Require you to use a specific payment method for your taxes, such as a prepaid debit card.
• Ask for credit or debit card numbers over the phone or e-mail.
• Threaten to immediately bring in local police or other law-enforcement groups to have you arrested for not paying.
If you get a phone call from someone claiming to be from the IRS and asking for money or to verify your identity, here’s what you should do:
If you don’t owe taxes, or have no reason to think that you do:
• Do not give out any information. Hang up immediately.
• Contact TIGTA (the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration) to report the call. Use their “IRS Impersonation Scam Reporting” web page. You can also call 800-366-4484.
• Report it to the Federal Trade Commission. Use the “FTC Complaint Assistant” on FTC.gov. Please add “IRS Telephone Scam” in the notes.
If you know you owe, or think you may owe tax:
• Call the IRS at 800-829-1040. IRS workers can help you.
The Cass County Sheriff’s Office says an Atlantic man was arrested Monday on drugs and weapon charges. 30-year old Albert Alexander Johnson, of Atlantic, was arrested for being a Felon in Possession of Firearm/Ammo (a Class-D Felony), two felony counts of Drug Tax Stamp Violation, two counts of Possession with Intent to Deliver, one count of Prohibited Acts, one count of Possession without Prescription, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.
Also arrested on drug charges, Monday, was 19-year old Olivia Lea Klenda, of Atlantic. She was charged with Prohibited Acts and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia. Johnson and Klenda were taken to the Cass County Jail, where Johnson remains held on $14,000 bond, and Klenda was released Tuesday )Today), on her own recognizance.
And, Cass County Sheriff’s deputies, Monday, arrested 23-year old Alexander Robert Brooks, of Atlantic, on a charge of Criminal Mischief 2nd Degree. Brooks was taken to the Cass County Jail where his release was pending.
Some legislators are balking at the idea of continuing to provide state tax dollars to the World Food Prize Foundation. Representative Larry Sheets, a Republican from Moulton, sits on the subcommittee that drafts the budget where 700-thousand dollars has been tentatively set aside for the World Food Prize. He suggests at least half of that should go to the Iowa Economic Development Authority instead.
“I represent Appanoose County and part of Wapello County and two others,” Sheets says. “Appanoose and Wapello are in dire need of economic development.” The World Food Prize was established in 1986 and is awarded each fall. It has been called the Nobel Prize for those who’re working to end world hunger. Republican Representative Mary Ann Hanusa, of Council Bluffs, isn’t calling for cancelling all state support of the World Food Prize either. But Hanusa says the state’s economic development agency is being asked to cut its budget by 400-thousand dollars — and it may be time to ask the privately-run World Food Prize to do more private fundraising.
“It does seem that for an organization that is well-established world wide and has multiple sources of funding this might be an areas where, perhaps, they could also step up,” Hanusa says. Senator Bill Dotzler, a Democrat from Waterloo, says Republican Governor Terry Branstad and top leaders in the legislature are in favor of giving the World Food Prize about a million dollars.
“Maybe our leadership’s commitment should be readjusted,” Dotzler says. But Dotzler says he’s willing to include money for the World Food Prize in the legislature’s “economic development” budget. Dotzler says otherwise policymakers may dip deeper into the account reserved for constructing and maintaining state-owned buildings. For example, the House voted Monday night to withdraw five-MILLION from that fund for water quality projects.
(Radio Iowa)
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Iowa lawmakers in a legislative budget group plan to propose delaying a state-mandated summer reading program for struggling third-graders because there’s no money to pay for it. Leaders in the joint Education Appropriations Subcommittee say the roughly $14 million needed to support the program is not available. They want to add language to a budget bill that would delay implementation from 2017 to 2018.
Sen. Brian Schoenjahn, an Arlington Democrat and co-chairman of the group, says there’s bipartisan support to delay the program. He called it an “unfunded mandate.” At least one education group applauded the move. Gov. Terry Branstad did not include money in his budget recommendations for the program, which could hold back some third-graders who don’t complete it.
BRIGHTON, Colo. (AP) – An industry group says wind energy generated a record 191 megawatt-hours of electricity last year, enough for 17.5 million homes. The American Wind Energy Association said Tuesday that wind produced 4.7 percent of the nation’s electricity in 2015. It says coal generated 33 percent and natural gas slightly less than that.
Texas remains No. 1 for wind energy while Iowa is second. The report says Iowa generated more than 30 percent of its electricity from wind last year, a record for any state. The association says the industry employed the equivalent of 88,000 full-time workers last year. The group says tax breaks extended by Congress last year will help stabilize the industry.
The Iowa Transportation Commission today (Tuesday), approved the transfer of jurisdiction of portions of segments of U.S. 6 and Iowa 192 to the city of Council Bluffs. The transfer segments lie within the corporation limits of Council Bluffs of U.S. 6 from 36th Street east to Sixth Street and Iowa 192 from Sixth Street to Big Lake Road for a total length of 4.95 miles. Following a transfer of jurisdiction, the city is responsible for all future maintenance and improvement of that roadway and right of way.
Last Thursday, the Griswold School Board voted to explore a three-way Superintendent sharing agreement with two, unidentified school districts, pending approval by the other boards. Monday night, the South Page School District’s Board of Education approved the proposed sharing of their Superintendent Gregg Cruickshank, with the Griswold and Sidney Community School Districts.
Under the proposal, Sidney and Griswold would get 40% of Cruickshank’s time, or about two-days per week each. The remaining 20%, or one-day per week, would be spent in South Page. The proposed agreement would also involve a one-third cost-sharing contract. The arrangement would be for one-year, to start, with an evaluation taking place between late this fall and March 1st, 2017. The arrangement would save the Griswold District $127,000 per year, in a time when they’re looking at cutting $500,000 from the budget.
The Sidney School Board is set to vote April 18th on the proposal.
The Atlantic Parks and Recreation Department’s Board of Directors will meet in a special session Wednesday, beginning at Noon, in the Council’s Chambers at City Hall. The only item on their agenda, is action on the use of Hotel/Motel Tax Fund money to make up a portion of the matching funds needed for a Vision Iowa CAT grant. The $360,000 grant, if approved in its entirety, would be used for improvements to the campground portion of the Schildberg Recreation Area, in Atlantic.
You can put them on your pizza, toss them in your salads or fry them in butter and serve as a side dish. For many people, morel mushrooms are some of the tastiest wild foods in Iowa. The season for hunting morels is underway, but Annette Whitrock with the Wapello County Conservation Board says the weather hasn’t cooperated so far this year. “Depending on where you are, it would be late March until I guess the season’s over through April, sometimes into May, just depending on weather,” she says. “You really need temperatures for the soil probably in the 60 degree area and you can’t be down lower than 40 degrees at night for them to grow. We haven’t had that yet.”
Soil temperature maps provided by Iowa State University show soil temperatures around 45 degrees for most of Iowa. Overnight temperatures dipping into the 20’s and 30’s are also preventing morels from popping up. Even when they do pop up, morels are some of the most elusive foods to find. Hunting them requires hiking trips through the woods and it takes a sharp eye to spot them. Whitrock says there are some urban legends on the best places to look.
“I’ve been told dead elm trees are the place to look, ash trees, oak trees, old apple orchards or where the May apples are blooming, so it really depends on who you talk to,” Whitrock says. “I think if you find a spot, you find a spot.” Whitrock suggests being wary of all the advice, as people may be trying to drive you away from their best spots. Whitrock says in the early hunting season, morels grow mostly on south facing slopes because that ground is warmer. But be careful, because Whitrock says the inexperienced morel hunter can be fooled or even poisoned.
“There’s some false morels out there and some morel look-alikes that can, depending on how you react to it, I guess they could give you symptoms like cramps,” Whitrock says. “some of them, if you react to them poorly, could kill you.” Whitrock says it’s fairly easy to tell if what you’re looking at is a true morel or an impostor.
“Morels have a darker cap that is pitted, for lack of a better word, and is connected to the stem and I guess the best thing to look for is a hollow stem,” Whitrock says. “If your mushroom doesn’t have a hollow stem, chances are it’s not a true morel — probably don’t want to eat it.”
Whitrock cautions Iowans to make sure they have permission to hunt for morels on property they don’t own. You can find out if you can hunt on public properties by contacting your local conservation board or the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.
(Radio Iowa)
Police in Harlan say a woman from Panama was cited following a collision, Saturday. Stephanie Smith was cited for Failure to Stop in an assured, clear distance, after the 2005 Chrysler she was driving collided with the rear of a 2002 Ford, driven by Zachary Jones, of Harlan. The accident happened on Chatburn Avenue.
Officials say Jones was traveling eastbound and had stopped to turn left into a car wash. Smith was eastbound in the same lane, but didn’t see Jones stopped for the turn. Damage from the collision amounted to $5,500. No injuries were reported.