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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – Volunteers will start putting Christmas wreaths on the graves of veterans across the country this weekend, including those at McDivitt Grove Cemetery in Urbandale. Area veteran Dennis Appelhons asked Wreaths Across America to include McDivitt in the program. “Because we have over 100 veterans there. And at least one of them dates from the Spanish American War. We have Civil War, World War One, World War Two, Korean War,” Appelhons says.
He says it started out as a pioneer cemetery in 1855 and eventually became a family cemetery as the city grew up around it. Applehons was part of an Army Air Defense Artillery unit stationed in Korea, and at Fort Bliss, Texas, and the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama. He says the 112 wreaths that will be placed on the graves of veterans in Urbandale have a significant meaning to him. “Recognition and remembrance that what all veterans did not go unnoticed or unhonored,” he says.
Applehons says he got the idea after most the V-F-W group and Legion group participated in Wreaths Across America at the Iowa Veterans Cemetery and Van Meter. He says it is something unique. “The typical Memorial Day and Veterans Day, decorations and flags would be the only two events that we see flags in recognition of those veterans,” Applehons says. “And in the middle of a winter, especially here in Iowa, to drive by and see those wreaths on those headstones, it’s quite moving.”
You may have seen the pictures of the wreaths on rows and rows of white tombstones in large military cemeteries. He says the sight is a little different in the Urbandale cemetery because there are all types of headstones and markers on the graves. “The one common thing about all of the veteran’s graves is the veteran medallion on a steel post sitting next to their headstone. What you’ll see is the wreath with a red ribbon, either propped against the headstone, or the veteran medallion that is in the ground next to it,” he explains.
Applehons says donations paid for the wreaths that will be placed Saturday. He says you can donate to help the program by going online to the Wreaths Across America website. “It’s a fairly self explanatory procedure. You will click on ‘sponsor a wreath,’ and once you’re on that page, it’ll guide you to basic information on the cost of a wreath how many you can buy, how to pay for them. And you have to designate what cemetery you want that wreath for,” he says.
Applehons says their cemetery has been assigned I-D number IA0062 and they pass out flyers or send email reminders to people in the community for donations that go to their effort. The wreath laying begins at 10 a-m Saturday and everyone is invited to come and help out.
(Ames, Iowa) – An SUV that was traveling at a high-rate of speed and passing other vehicles on the left shoulder of I-35 northbound in Ames, Thursday, crossed both lanes of traffic before flipping multiple times and coming to rest in the east ditch. The Iowa State Patrol reports the driver of the 2018 Ford Explorer, 29-year-old Zackery Coltin Harker, of North Bend, Oregon, was injured. The accident happened near mile marker 118, at around 4:20-p.m.
Harker – who was wearing a seat belt – was transported by the Iowa State Patrol to the Story County Medical Center. The crash remains under investigation.
(Radio Iowa) – A man from Mississippi who’s a former Navy pilot has been charged with vandalizing the Satanic Temple of Iowa’s holiday display in the Iowa Capitol. The Iowa Department of Public Safety says 35-year-old Michael Cassidy of Lauderdale, Mississippi was arrested, charged with criminal mischief in the fourth degree and released. The Satanic Temple of Iowa announced early Thursday that the statue in its Iowa Capitol display had been damaged beyond repair. According to a conservative website called The Sentinel, Cassidy beheaded the statue.
Cassidy is quoted on the site saying he did so to awaken Christians to the anti-Christian values that are being mainstreamed. The founder of Turning Point U-S-A, a conservative youth organization, has pledged 10-thousand dollars to support a legal defense fund for Cassidy.
The Satanic Temple of Iowa had planned to take down its display today (Friday), but will leave what’s left in the Iowa Capitol for a few more days.
(Radio Iowa) – The governors of Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and Kansas are assessing flood prevention efforts in the Missouri River corridor — and finding progress. Governor Kim Reynolds says levee maintenance and making structures as flood resilient as possible are key. “Instead of waiting for that disaster to hit like in 2019, and then we have no money…and then we have a bunch of money come in and then we’re fixing the same highway structures, the same ag impact that we did prior to that.” Reynolds and the governors of the other three states met yesterday (Thursday) in Omaha. Reynolds says the design and structural performance of 900 miles of Missouri River levees are being evaluated.
“Then grants will be available to the different levee districts to get the levees where they need to be,” Reynolds says. Reynolds says nearly all the levee districts lack the resources to make significant improvements and government funding is necessary. Reynolds and the other Missouri River governors began meeting in the midst of the devastating floods of 2019 and Reynolds says their main frustration at the time was the pace of the response from federal agencies.
“We tend to study things to death instead of moving forward and getting things done,” Reynolds says, “and we’ve seen a lot of progress since that first meeting in 2019 and the way that we’re doing things.” In the spring of 2019, melting snow and rainfall combined to cause the Missouri River to jump its banks and quickly flood vast swaths of western Iowa.
(Radio Iowa) – The head of a conservative law firm is asking the Iowa Supreme Court to find that State Auditor Rob Sand, a Democrat, has violated the state’s public records law. Alan Ostergren, chief counsel of the Kirkwood Institute, asked the auditor for emails related to Sand’s since discredited claim that the governor improperly used federal COVID-19 funds for a public service announcement. Ostergren appeared before the Iowa Supreme Court yesterday (Thursday). “Who audits the auditor?” Ostergren asked. “Do we have in our law that the auditor is just above examination to make sure he is discharging his duties correctly?”
A district court judge dismissed the case last year, saying the emails could be kept confidential because they’re part of an audit or examination. Iowa Supreme Court Justice Dana Oxley says state law protects information received in an audit. “For me, that’s really the issue, is how do we decide whether or not something is within an audit when we’ve got an affidavit from the auditor that says this information was received, they identify the dates, they identify specific audit reports and audits that are ongoing,” Oxley said.
Ostergren has been seeking an email chain that includes comments from State Auditor Sand, an Associated Press reporter and a blogger. Sand has said he denied the request because it would chip away at his ability to protect whistleblowers and save taxpayers money.
(Radio Iowa) – The number of international students attending the University of Iowa has fallen for eight straight years, only in part due to the pandemic. Russell Ganim, the U-I’s dean of international programs, tells KCRG-TV the trend really comes from changes other countries are making in higher education. ”If you look at China, the country has invested a lot in higher education. They built many colleges and universities,” Ganim says, “so they no longer needed to outsource higher ed to countries like the U.S. or the U.K. or Australia or western Europe.”
One of the largest international student groups at the U-I is China, which had roughly 25-hundred international students in Iowa City in 2015. Now, that number has dwindled to just 432, a drop of 83-percent. The New York Times reports American students looking to study in China may be hesitant because of the relationship between the two countries, something Ganim says students from China consider, too.
“Students still want to come here,” Ganim says. “They are concerned about world events but in many instances, it doesn’t necessarily affect their plans to study at Iowa or elsewhere in the United States or anywhere in Western Europe.” Instead of seeing a major drop in all international students, the U-I is seeing a shift in which countries are sending students. “It’s true that the Chinese contingent has decreased,” Ganim says, “but now we’re seeing more countries than ever represented among our international student body.” China, along with India, still sends more international students to the university than any other country.
“India is trying to build education infrastructure the way China did say 15-20 years ago, but it’s having trouble keeping up,” Ganim says. “As a result, it is outsourcing at least some of its higher education needs to the West.” Ganim says the U-I has increased recruiting efforts in India and the Middle East to lure more international students.
The overall number of international students has dropped 56% since 2015, but Ganim says the numbers are now moving in the right direction.
(Radio Iowa) – A spokesman for the Iowa DNR says hunters are on pace for a good season harvest as the end of the second deer gun season approaches Sunday. Pete Hildreth talked about the numbers at the Natural Resources Commission meeting today.
“Just under 80,000 deer have been reported through our harvest reporting system,” Hildreth says. The DNR report shows hunters in Clayton County have taken the most deer thus far at 3,390, followed by Allamakee County at 2,589. No other counties have topped 2,000 deer taken, but a few are very close, including Winnesheik 1,943, Jackson, 1,941, Warren 1,814, Madison 1,888, and Dubuque 1,881.
“So based on this year’s harvest, we’re right on track for our typical annual harvest of 100 to 110-thousand deer statewide,” Hildreth says. He says the only downside is three hunting accidents last weekend. “That does serve as a reminder for hunters to review safety measures before heading out. Overall, there have been 12 hunting incidences and again sadly two fatalities across all hunting seasons this fall,” he says.
There were two separate deer hunting incidents that involved shooting at deer that were running between two hunters and one hunter was struck by a wayward shot from another in their party. The other incident involved a self-inflicted injury due to what the DNR calls “carelessly handling a firearm and lack of muzzle control.”
(Radio Iowa) – Democrats in the Iowa Senate say there’s a nursing home crisis in Iowa and the Senate Oversight Committee should launch a bipartisan investigation.
Senator Claire Celsi, a Democrat from West Des Moines, said some facilities are not being properly managed and it’s “a life and death issue” for some nursing home residents. “Our state’s current nursing home system is fundamentally broken and failing to protect Iowans,” Celsi says.
There are over 400 nursing homes in Iowa and Celsi said the state should be employing far more than 49 nursing home inspectors. She points to Michigan, which has a similar number of nursing homes and 47% more inspectors. “We need accountability in our nursing homes,” Celsi said. “…We need the help of our Republican colleagues to make these changes and to make any new laws.”
Republicans hold the majority of seats in the Iowa Senate and control the debate agenda, including what gets committee review. A spokesperson for Senate Republicans was not immediately available for comment.
Senate Democrats hosted a statehouse news conference this morning that included retired state employees who worked as nursing home inspectors. Mary Weaver of Rippey is a retired registered nurse who worked in the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals. She’s concerned about a friend in an eastern Iowa nursing home who isn’t being bathed regularly and recently waited 90 minutes for assistance in getting to the rest room. “This is not the kind of treatment we want for our older Iowans,” she said. “This is inhumane. This is neglect.”
Dean Lerner was director of the Iowa Department of Inspections and Appeals for a decade. “I don’t know whether to cry or scream about these horrific events that are going on in our nursing homes,” Lerner said.

John Hale, a long term care advocate, spoke during a news conference in the Iowa Capitol on Dec. 14, 2023. (RI photo)
John Hale, a consultant who focuses on long term care issues, said there aretoo many “head-shaking instances” of abuse and neglect in Iowa nursing homes. “Where’s the outrage from legislators?” Hale asked. “Where’s the outrage from the governor, from leaders of state agencies, from prosecutors or from the good apples in the nursing home industry that are tarred by the bad apples?”
Hale estimates $800 million in state tax money will go to Iowa nursing homes this year and he said there must be more accountability.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Atlantic Police Chief Devin Hogue reports that between November 27th and December 13th, the Atlantic Police Department (APD) held its 11th annual canned food drive to benefit the local food pantry. The event is a grade level competition for students attending the Atlantic Early Learning Center through 5th grade.
This year the groups collected a grand total of 3,949 items that were donated to the Atlantic food pantry. In the 11 years of this program a total of 45,228 items have been collected and donated.
Chief Hogue said “We would like to congratulate the following classes on winning the competition this year:
Kindergarten – Mrs. Rasmussen’s class – 258 items
1st grade – Mrs. Hogue’s class – 240 items
2nd grade- Mrs. Johnson’s class – 222 items
3rd grade – Mrs. Benning’s class – 96 items
3rd grade – Mrs. Smith’s class – 96 items
4th grade – Mrs. Johnson’s class – 217 items
5th grade – Mrs. Mattson’s class – 158 items
(Not Pictured** the 3 year old pre-school winners.)
“The Preschool students will receive snacks and drinks for a class room party and the elementary students will receive a pizza party. These parties will be sponsored by The Atlantic Police Community Charitable Organization. Thank you to all of the parents and grandparents who help support the children in this effort. It is a great benefit each year to our local food pantry and a great representation of how wonderful our community is!!”
ATLANTIC, IOWA – Officials with Cass Health have announced CCHS has been recognized with two 2023 Performance Leadership Awards for excellence in both Quality and Patient Outcomes. Compiled by the Chartis Center for Rural Health, the Performance Leadership Awards honor top quartile performance (i.e., 75th percentile or above) among rural hospitals.
“For seven consecutive years, Cass Health has achieved these two awards. It’s particularly meaningful to us to be recognized for excellence in the areas of quality and positive patient outcomes. What better to be known for than quality and outcomes in healthcare? As a rural hospital, we are deeply connected to this community and our patients—many of whom are neighbors, family, or friends. We strive to do our very best for every patient, every time, and awards like this reflect how we truly care for each individual and their improved health,” noted Brett Altman, CEO.
The Performance Leadership Awards are based on the results of the Chartis Rural Hospital Performance INDEX®, the industry’s most comprehensive and objective assessment of rural hospital performance. INDEX data is relied upon by rural hospitals, health systems with rural footprints, hospital associations and state offices of rural health around the country to measure and monitor performance across several areas impacting hospital operations and finance.
“Wherever we go in rural America, we witness first-hand the commitment, determination, and compassion with which rural hospitals serve their communities. Rural healthcare truly is mission-driven,” said Michael Topchik, National Leader, The Chartis Center for Rural Health. “Let us recognize the efforts of this year’s Performance Leadership Award winners and all those driven to deliver high quality care throughout rural communities.”