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(Iowa Dept. of Natural Resources) – Three western Iowa beaches remain on the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) latest list of State beaches where swimming is not recommended, following recent testing for E.coli bacteria levels that are higher than State health standards. A total of 15 state beaches are on the swimming advisory list, including one each in Pottawattamie, Shelby and Taylor Counties.
The affected beaches are listed below:
Many of these beaches have been under a swimming not recommended advisory for several weeks due to persistent high E. coli levels. Advisories will be in place until the levels drop below the state standard. For more information about the advisories and the other state beaches, visit the DNR’s website. The website is updated every Friday with the most recent test results.
(Radio Iowa) – As the U-S Department of Agriculture consolidates operations away from Washington D-C and into five new “hubs” across the country, Iowa was named among the early favorites for one of those locations — but it’s not going to happen. Kansas City is the final choice for the region, according to a memo from U-S Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins to her staff. Missouri Agriculture Director Chris Chinn says relocating U-S-D-A offices can benefit the people the agency serves. “We think it will be a great opportunity for the state of Missouri,” says Chinn. The process is to take place over the next few years. Along with Kansas City, the hubs are to be located in: Indianapolis, Indiana; Salt Lake City, Utah; Fort Collins, Colorado; and Raleigh, North Carolina.
The agency moved two research agencies to Kansas City in 2019: the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Ag. Chinn says having U-S-D-A personnel close to land-grant institutions and ag research has been positive. “They have the opportunity to travel out to those schools if they want to, to observe that research, to have those meeting opportunities,” says Chinn, “but more importantly, they know what agriculture needs because Kansas City, while it is an urban area, you don’t have to drive very far and you’re out in the country where you can see tractors, combines, hogs, cattle, the list goes on and on.” Iowa State University is a land-grant university. 
The Rollins memo noted how Kansas City has a lower cost of living compared to Washington D.C., and she noted the U-S-D-A will continue to maintain critical agency service centers in locations like St. Louis. Robert Bonnie, a former U-S-D-A Under Secretary of Farm Production and Conservation, says strong relationships between the agency and land-grant universities are important, but he’s not sold on the hub plan. “I don’t think you get USDA closer to its constituents and stakeholders by dividing it up,” Bonnie says. “I actually think it’s served exactly the opposite purpose.” Bonnie says relocating the agency makes it more difficult for farmers and others to get information from the agency.
The number of jobs that will come with the Kansas City move is unknown.
AMES, Iowa – The Iowa State Fair is quickly approaching and the anticipation of the annual Governor’s Charity Steer Show is building. The Iowa beef cattle industry is again partnering with the governor in this fundraising event to raise money for the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa. Hundreds of fairgoers will attend the August 9 event, featuring youth, industry supporters, local celebrities, and of course, steers. Each steer is exhibited by a local youth representative and a guest celebrity selected by the sponsor of the steer. Twenty-five steers will be shown this year. Along with Gov. Kim Reynolds, there are other notable celebrities showing this year, ranging from industry favorites to college athletes. (See the complete list below).
Among the celebrities participating in the event, is Iowa Lt. Governor Chris Gearthart-Cournoyer). She will be showing the steer “Mickey,” exhibited by Kennedy Eischeid, of Manning. “Mickey” is sponsored by the Crawford County Cattlemen and Nor-AM Cold Storage. The Governor’s Charity Steer Show is sponsored by the Iowa Cattlemen’s Association (ICA) and the Iowa Beef Industry Council (IBIC).

Governor Kim Reynolds at the 2020 ICA charity steer show (File photo)
The Iowa Governor’s Charity Steer Show has been held since 1983 and has raised nearly $6 million for the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa since the show’s inception. Last year, the show raised more than $568,000, the fourth year in a row that the fundraising record has been broken. Funds are raised through online donations, sponsorships, and an auction of steers following the show. All money raised benefits the three independent Ronald McDonald House Charities of Iowa, located in Des Moines, Iowa City, and Sioux City. These three houses have served over 55,000 families from all 50 states and 62 foreign countries. Families from all 99 counties in Iowa have benefited from the Ronald McDonald Houses of Iowa, too.
If you are interested in supporting the Governor’s Charity Steer Show, consider donating online or attending the show/auction to contribute. The Governor’s Charity Steer Show is being held in Pioneer Pavilion at the Iowa State Fair on Saturday, August 9, at 4:30 p.m. Then follow us to the Penningroth Center for the live auction, where additional funds are raised and records are broken. For additional information about the Governor’s Charity Steer Show or to donate, visit www.iowagovernorscharitysteershow.com.
2025 Iowa Governor’s Charity Steer Show Participants:
1. Sponsors: Iowa Beef Industry Council and Iowa Cattlemen’s Association
Celebrity: Governor Kim Reynolds
Exhibitor: Addison Brueggeman | Lake Park, IA
Steer: Scottie
2. Sponsors: Crawford County Cattlemen and Nor-AM Cold Storage
Celebrity: Lt. Governor Chris Gearhart Cournoyer
Exhibitor: Kennedy Eischeid | Manning, IA
Steer: Mickey
3. Sponsor: Davis County Beef Promoters
Celebrity: Jon Nash, Executive Vice President, Cargill Food
Exhibitor: Ty Swaim | Drakesville, IA
Steer: Judge
4. Sponsors: Mahaska County Cattlemen & Friends
Celebrity: Buck Wehrbein, President, NCBA
Exhibitor: McLane Warren | New Sharon, IA
Steer: Merlin
5. Sponsors: Iowa Farm Bureau
Celebrity: Brian Feldpausch, Vice President, Iowa Farm Bureau
Exhibitor: Lucas Sheehan | Remsen, IA
Steer: Rocky
6. Sponsor: Dee Zee, Inc. (The Quality Truck Accessory People)
Celebrity: Curtis D. Claeys, Iowa State Fair Board, President
Exhibitor: Evan Huberty | Mitchellville, IA
Steer: Furgy
7. Sponsor: Iowa Bankers Association
Celebrity: Jeff Angelo, Host of the WHO Radio Morning Show
Exhibitor: Brenna Thie | Mediapolis, IA
Steer: Jimmy
8. Sponsors: Volunteer Boards of Iowa Ronald McDonald House Charities
Celebrity: To be announced
Exhibitor: Chandler Ludwig | Elma, IA
Steer: Snoop Dog
9. Sponsors: Eastern Iowa Ronald McDonald House and Quad Cities McDonald’s
Celebrity: Matt Kroul, Former University of Iowa and NY Jets Football Player, Current Farmer and Owner at Kroul Farms
Exhibitor: Tyler Lukavsky | Washington, IA
Steer: Thunder
10. Sponsors: Central Iowa Ronald McDonald Houses and Des Moines Area Independent Owner Operators
Celebrity: Jackie Schmillen, Director of Public Affairs of the Iowa National Guard and
overall Hype Person for all great things happening in Central Iowa
Exhibitor: Asher Henson | Martensdale, IA
Steer: Colt
11. Sponsors: Siouxland Ronald McDonald House and Siouxland Area McDonald’s Operators
Celebrity: Dan Venteicher, Iowa Dairy Farmer
Exhibitor: Merritt Moss | Hull, IA
Steer: Big Red
12. Sponsor: Friends of Floyd County
Celebrity: Nick Fox, UNI Wrestler
Exhibitor: Chet Brunner | Rockford, IA
Steer: Clifford
13. Sponsor: Monroe County Cattlemen & Supporters
Celebrity: Tork Whistler, BarnTalk Podcast Host
Exhibitor: Ty Haywood | Albia, IA
Steer: This’ll Do
14. Sponsor: Iowa County Beef Supporters
Celebrity: Casey Manser, Iowa SIDS Foundation Executive Director
Exhibitor: Elery Hinrichsen | Williamsburg, IA
Steer: Mack
15. Sponsors: Foster and Evelyn Barkema Charitable Trust and Friends of Franklin County Cattlemen
Celebrity: JayJay Goodvin, Chief Explorer of the Iowa Gallivant
Exhibitor: Tate Lundt | Rockwell, IA
Steer: Pablo
16. Sponsor: Iowa Junior Hereford Association
Celebrity: Brenna Bird, Iowa Attorney General
Exhibitor: Logan Keppler | Indianola, IA
Steer: Buddy
17. Sponsors: Benton County Cattlemen and Local Supporters
Celebrity: Mike Naig, Iowa Secretary of Agriculture
Exhibitor: Jack Wayson | Mount Auburn, IA
Steer: Bond “007”
18. Sponsor: Iowa Corn Promotion Board
Celebrity: Ralph Lents, Iowa Corn Promotion Board President
Exhibitor: Tucker Freimuth | Lytton, IA
Steer: Burt Reynolds
19. Sponsor: Johnson County Cattlemen & Reeve Farms
Celebrity: Jess Settles, Iowa Hawkeye Basketball Great, Basketball TV Analyst, Farmer
Exhibitor: Reece Meyer | Solon, IA
Steer: Whiskey
20. Sponsors: Jackson County Cattlemen and Friends of Jackson County
Celebrity: Jason Brantley, VP of Production Systems, John Deere
Exhibitor: Anna Cota | Bellevue, IA
Steer: Prince
21. Sponsors: Iowa Veterinary Medical Association and ISU College of Veterinary Medicine
Celebrity: Dr. Dan Grooms, Iowa Veterinary Medical Association &
ISU College of Veterinary Medicine
Exhibitor: Matt Elbert | Rock Rapids, IA
Steer: Trice
22. Sponsor: District 20 Cattlemen’s Associations
Celebrity: Dr. Gene W. Hoy, Former Head Vet of the Iowa State Fair
Animal Learning Center & area vet
Exhibitor: Hailey Pedrick | Ollie, IA
Steer: All On Red
23. Sponsor: Iowa Premium, A National Beef Company
Celebrity: To be determined
Exhibitor: Bryce Schwenneker | Adel, IA
Steer: Dale
24. Sponsor: ServiTech, Inc.
Celebrity: Ryan Hassebrook, ServiTech President & CEO
Exhibitor: Henry McCollom | Colo, IA
Steer: Joe
25. Sponsor: Iowa Angus Association
Celebrity: Mark McCully, CEO American Angus Association
Exhibitor: Isabella Gotto | Dyersville, IA
Steer: Duke
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congresswoman Ashley Hinson says she’s confident congress can essentially overrule a U-S Supreme Court opinion that upheld California standards for pork sold in that state. The rules require pork sold in California to come from the offspring of sows that had enough space to move and turn around. Hinson says her “Save Our Bacon Act” will put a stop to that policy.
“California should not be telling Iowa farmers who to raise their hogs,” Hinson says. “Prop 12 set unscientific, arbitrary mandates on producers hundreds, if not thousands of miles away and it’s hurting both farmers and families.” California voters approved Proposition 12 in 2018 by a large margin. In 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled California’s animal welfare law did not violate the Constitution’s commerce clause, but Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that if pork producers believe it causes a massive disruption in their industry, they can lobby congress to intervene.
“In the Supreme Court’s decision, they noted that congress had the authority to determine how states may regulate and get involved here with interstate commerce,” Hinson says, “and I think that when you look at what we’ve got here, this does exactly that.” Congress typically drafts constitutional amendments to undo U.S. Supreme Court rulings that interpret the constitution. However, Congress has occasionally acted to pass a bill in similar situations and Hinson says this particular legislative fix is necessary.
“According to USDA, the cost for producers to comply with Prop 12 is up to $4500 per sow. That is devastating for small, family-run farms that don’t have that kind of money lying around and it’s not just farmers feeling the pain. Consumers are paying more, too,” Hinson says. “Since Prop 12 went into effect, the price of a pork loin has gone up 41%.” California’s rules require about 24 square feet of space for each sow. Hinson says her bill ensures California activists cannot dictate how pork producers raise pigs in Iowa.
“In California, if they want to decide that they want their sows to live in this much space, then they can do that for their producers,” Hinson says, “but for us it’s telling our Iowa producers they can continue to do things how they have with the farrowing process that is scientifically based.”
Supporters of the California regulations say it’s cruel and inhumane to confine pregnant sows in pens that are so small they cannot turn around. The National Pork Producers Council says gestation stalls allow sows to move side to side and lie down, but NOT to turn around and potentially contaminate her water and food.
(Ankeny, Iowa) – An Atlantic woman received a prestigious award Thursday afternoon, during 19th statewide Iowa Women in Agriculture conference. The 2025 “Winds of Change Up and Comer” award was presented to Ciara Hoegh. Ciara was nominated by LaVon Eblen and Catherine Booth. The award was presented at the FFA Enrichment Center in Ankeny, where the theme of the conference was “Sowing Our Stories . . . Beyond the Farm Gate.”
The Iowa Women in Agriculture organization is comprised of women farmers, landowners, and agribusiness professionals who focus on expanding the knowledge and economic potential of women and their capacity to network with one another.

Pictured left to right: IWIA past president Deb Schuler, Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Bailey Smith, Allison Berryhill, award recipient Ciara Hoegh and Atlantic Area Chamber of Commerce Program Director Kelsey Beschorner. (Photo courtesy Deb Schuler)
The conference explored the challenges of agriculture’s evolving financial and trade climate, including:
Commodity market scenarios and advice
Soil and water quality initiatives
Lender’s outlook for 2025-26
Prospects for a new farm bill, tariffs, and taxes
Latest on land values and transition planning
Ag community building/storytelling
Role of women in a dynamic ag industry.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Organizers with Nishnabotna Water Defenders – a non-profit environmental conservation organization – Thursday evening, issued a statement with regard to a settlement announced Wednesday, between the Iowa Attorney General’s Office and the NEW Coop in Red Oak. The statement said members of the organization “…Are disappointed that the settlement issued by Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird with no public input represents a slap on the wrist to NEW Coop. This settlement does not require the coop to implement any new measures that will prevent future contamination.”
In March 2024 265,000 gallons of liquid nitrogen spewed into the East Nishnabotna River from a non-monitored tank at the NEW Coop in Red Oak, Iowa. The historic spill traveled 50 miles down the river and killed approximately 750,000 fish. The cost of only the fish kill was estimated to be $225,000.00. This dollar amount does not include other wildlife that suffered the consequences of this catastrophe.

NWD logo
New Coop controls 82 operating locations in Iowa and Missouri and is said to be the eleventh largest ag retailer in the United States. The settlement comes without any input from the public and comes 16 months after the tragic spill occurred. Terry Langan, Co-Chair of the Nishnabotna Water Defenders, said in a press release, “The settlement signifies the lack of respect that our Attorney General has for Iowa’s people, the land and the wildlife. To put a price of $100,000 on a loss that will be felt for decades, is a total disregard for the importance of Iowa’s waterways.”
The statement said also, the fine does not even recoup the cost of the investigation following the liquid nitrogen incident. “The lack of significant repercussions to this travesty and the significance of Iowa’s water pollution,” the group says, “has led the Nishnabotna Water Defenders to organize training and educational opportunities for citizens to monitor local rivers and streams for nitrates. NWD believes that water is sacred and must be treated with respect.”
Cass County: Corn $3.86 Beans $9.64
Adair County: Corn $3.83 Beans $9.67
Adams County: Corn $3.83 Beans $9.63
Audubon County: Corn $3.85 Beans $9.66
East Pottawattamie County: Corn $3.89 Beans $9.64
Guthrie County: Corn $3.88 Beans $9.68
Montgomery County: Corn $3.88 Beans $9.66
Shelby County: Corn $3.89 Beans $9.64
Oats: $2.97 (same in all counties)
(Prices are per bushel; information is from the area Farm Service Agency [FSA] offices)
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa’s attorney general has reached a settlement with a southwest Iowa business for a fertilizer spill that killed hundreds of thousands of fish. The spill originated at NEW Cooperative in Red Oak when a valve on a fertilizer tank was left open during a weekend in early March of last year.
Over 250-thousand gallons of liquid nitrogen wound up in the East Nishnabotna River. Iowa officials estimate more than 750-thousand fish were killed downstream.

New Cooperative spill
The Nishnabotna River drains into the Missouri River and the Missouri Department of Conservation reported a near total fish kill in the roughly 10-mile stretch in northwest Missouri.
The coop has agreed to pay a 50-thousand dollar penalty and pay 50-thousand dollars to the Montgomery County Conservation Board for an environmental project.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Cass County Conservation Department reports Nishna Valley Trails is holding a Kids Bike Ride August 9th, 2025, at the Schildberg Rec. Area West Parking lot. The event begins at 10:30-a.m. Check-in and start of the ride is at the West Parking lot of the Schildberg Rec. Area.
There are three age groups, with the corresponding ride length designated according to age. There is NO CHARGE to participate, an
d all ages are welcome.
The Ride is co-sponsored by Atlantic Parks and Recreation, Cass County Conservation, Fareway in Atlantic. After the ride, you’re invited to head into downtown Atlantic, for the annual “Atlanticfest” celebration.
Cass County: Corn $3.90 Beans $9.70
Adair County: Corn $3.87Beans $9.73
Adams County: Corn $3.87 Beans $9.69
Audubon County: Corn $3.89 Beans $9.72
East Pottawattamie County: Corn $3.93 Beans $9.70
Guthrie County: Corn $3.92 Beans $9.74
Montgomery County: Corn $3.92 Beans $9.72
Shelby County: Corn $3.93 Beans $9.70
Oats: $2.98 (same in all counties)
(Prices are per bushel; information is from the area Farm Service Agency [FSA] offices)