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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Atlantic, IA) – Cass Health is partnering with local schools to offer influenza vaccinations to area students. Students can get their flu shots at school from Cass Health staff on the following dates:
• CAM Community School District — October 18th
• Atlantic High School — October 19th
• Atlantic Middle School — October 19th
• Griswold Community School District — October 20th
Parents and guardians should receive the required consents and information from their student’s school district. All completed consent forms are due back to schools no later than October 1st. Consents will not be accepted after October 1st and incomplete consents will not be processed and the student will not be immunized.
Any questions regarding school influenza vaccination clinics can be directed to your school or the Atlantic Medical Center Immunization Room at 712-250-8122.
The Harlan Police Department reports five arrests:
Today (Wednesday), 51-year-old David Anthony Daugherty, of Sidney, IA, was arrested following a traffic stop. Daugherty was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with driving while barred.
On Monday, 21-year-old Jacob Jon Keller, of Ida Grove, was arrested following a traffic stop. Keller was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with driving while suspended and operating while intoxicated.
Last Saturday, 26-year-old Hobie Joseph Mulstay, of Des Moines, was arrested following a traffic stop. Mulstay was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with possession of a controlled substance. And, 32-year-old Lacy Jean Christensen, of Council Bluffs, was arrested following a traffic stop. Christensen was transported to the Shelby County Jail where she was charged with windshield obstructed vision, driving while suspended, and operating while intoxicated.
And, on Sept. 1st, 51-year-old David Dean Anderson, of Council Bluffs, was arrested following a traffic stop. Anderson was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with driving while barred.
A collision Tuesday afternoon in Guthrie County resulted in possible minor/unknown injuries to a teen from Bagley. The Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office reports 17-year-old Valerie Mae Nichols complained of pain, but was not transported from the scene to the hospital. Nichols was driving a 2006 Buick LaCrosse when she failed to notice 2005 Chevy Impala driven by 68-year-old Mickey Allen Lynde, of Panora that was ahead of her, was slowing down for a non-contact vehicle ahead, that was turning from northbound Highway 4 onto Chirma Road.
The Buick struck the Impala from behind, causing a total of $18,000 damage. The accident happened at around 2:17-p.m. Nichols admitted she was not paying attention. She was cited for Failure to Stop in a safe and sure distance.
The Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office reports Saturday afternoon, an eight-year old boy was injured during an accident on the Guthrie County Fairgrounds. Authorities say Dominik Stilwell, of Guthrie Center, was run over by a 4,000 pound trolley trailer, being pulled by a John Deere tractor. He suffered suspected crushing injuries to his right leg, and transported to Blank Children’s Hospital by Panora EMS. The accident happened at around 3:45-p.m.
Sheriff’s officials say the tractor was being operated by 39-year-old Willis Sheeder, of Guthrie Center. He was driving/pulling the trailer at approximately 4.5-to 5 miles per hour with about 5-to 8-people on-board. Stilwell was riding with two juvenile family members from Guthrie Center. Witness reports said the three juveniles had been jumping on-and-off the trolley while it was in motion, transporting passengers around the fairgrounds. An adult passenger told the kids to stop jumping on and off and said they should sit down.
At the time of the accident, Dominik Stilwell was sitting on floor of the trailer on the right side, with his feet hanging off, dragging on the ground. He was sitting directly in front of the right side tire on the trolley trailer, when one of his untied shoe strings became caught in the tire, causing him to be pulled off and run over. The driver was flagged down and stopped immediately. Bystanders then rendered aid to the child before he was transported to the hospital. An investigation determined the floor of the trailer the boy was sitting on was 15.5 inches off the ground. The untied shoestring was measured at 12-inches long. There were no citations issued, and no other injuries reported.
(Radio Iowa) – Ankeny-based Casey’s convenience stores reports the end of pandemic shutdowns has had a big impact on the company’s bottom line. C-E-O Darren Rebelez talked about the first-quarter results today (Wednesday) in a conference call. “Sales volume and margin improved dramatically as guest traffic began to rebound — driving an all-time high gross profit for the company,” Rebelez says. Chief financial officer Steve Bramlage filled in more of the details. “Casey’s had gross profit of 723-point-nine million dollars in the first quarter. That’s an increase of over 100 million dollars in the prior year. This represent the highest gross profit in Casey’s history,” Bramlage says.
He says the increases came as more people visited the convenience stores. “It is primarily attributable to higher inside gross profit of 66-point-three million dollars — or nearly 17 percent. As well as an increase of 24-point-four millions dollars — or 11 percent — of fuel gross profit,” according to Bramlage. He says the fuel profits included a higher than normal sale of 19 million dollars in renewable fuel credits. Gas sales increased nine percent — and he says the company took advantage of higher gas prices to make 35 cents on each gallon sold. The company also had an increase in the number of stores in the mix as they completed the Buchanan Energy and Circle K store acquisitions.
Rebelez says alcohol sales that had soared during the pandemic dropped back down. “Although alcohol sales have moderated and were about flat versus pandemic buying the prior year — we still achieved a 20-point-two percent two-year stack growth,” Rebelez says. Casey’s had two-thousand-380 stores at the end of the first quarter on July 31st.
(Radio Iowa) – An eastern Iowa man has been sentenced to more than three years in prison for rigging up an explosive device that was found by a child before it went off. Information released when 46-year-old Aaron Hinke was arrested a year ago indicates he set up the device near a shed on a neighbor’s property in La Motte — and Hinke sent text messages about it to the homeowner. The U.S. Department of Justice describes the device as a cigarette, a firework, and a long fuse taped to a small container with gasoline and oil mixed inside. It was diffused by officials from the State Fire Marshal’s Office after the homeowner’s five-year-old child found it in the yard.
Hinke was living in La Motte at the time of his arrest in September of last year. The U.S. Justice Department now lists his address as Bellevue.
The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports two arrests. On Tuesday, Sept. 7th, 33-year-old James Thomas Hume, of Sidney (IA) was arrested at the Pottawattamie County Jail on a Mills County warrant for Probation Violation. Hume was being held on a $5,000 bond. And, on Aug. 31st, 33-year-old Stephen Richard August Begbie, of Glenwood, was arrested for Failure to Appear on a Driving While Revoked charge. His bond was set at $10,000.
Sheriff’s officials said also, no injuries were reported following an accident Tuesday afternoon. Authorities say at around 4-p.m., a 2007 Freightliner semi pulling a side dump rock trailer, was stopped at the intersection of 195th Street and Bunge Avenue. The driver, 23-year-old Dylan Wood, of Omaha, attempted to back up, to allow another semi to make the wide turn onto 195th. Wood failed to notice a 2014 Ford Focus driven by 23-year-old Stephanie Rhodd, of Pacific Junction, was behind him, and backed into the vehicle. The car sustained extensive front end damage to the hood and bumper. There was no visible damage to the semi. Both vehicles were driven away from the scene.
No citations were issued.
A man from Villisca and a man from Red Oak were arrested on separate, felony drug charges this week. Today (Wednesday), Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputies executed a search warrant at a residence in the 600 block of E. Grimes Street, in Red Oak. As a result of the search, deputies arrested 38-year-old Stephen Ray Adams, of Red Oak, on three Class-C felony counts for Delivery of Methamphetamine. Adams was being held without bond in the Montgomery County Jail.
A search warrant executed Tuesday on the 600 block of S. 5th Street, in Villisca, resulted in the arrested of 26-year-old Jeffrey Steven Whitt, of Villisca. He faces Class-D felony charges for three counts delivery of marijuana and one count of possession with the intent to deliver, marijuana. Bond was set at $5,000.
COUNCIL BLUFFS — Rep. Cindy Axne (IA-03) is raising significant concerns over unnecessary delays of critical levee repairs along the Missouri River, repairs that would help protect Iowans in the southwest corner of the state that she represents in Congress. Her office says in a letter sent today (Wednesday) to Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland and key officials at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Axne raised concerns about delays in repairs to the Coulthard Levee, which runs through the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge in Harrison County.
Repairs to the Coulthard Levee have faced obstacles from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, causing delays that – if not completed by next spring – could devastate homes, businesses, and acres of farmland south of the Levee in Harrison and Pottawattamie Counties. Axne’s letter said “We cannot allow bureaucratic red tape to stand in the way of Iowans protecting their communities from future flooding Two and a half years since the flooding along the Missouri River, Iowans are still rebuilding and working to protect their communities from future devastation and I’m greatly concerned about the delays with the Coulthard Levee in Southwest Iowa.”
Rep. Axne requested the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service work promptly with the Coulthard Levee District to allow the levee to be repaired. Axne also highlighted that the levee district has received a grant from the State of Iowa to help fund the repairs which expires at the end of this year. Last year, Axne introduced bipartisan legislation to provide the Army Corps with new authority to cut through red tape and provide federal funds for levees in repeated flooding communities such as Hamburg. That legislation was adapted within the Water Resources Development Act of 2020 to successfully give new authority to the Army Corps of Engineers in order for them to address the needs of communities facing repeated flooding events.
(Greenfield, Iowa) – The Adair County Board of Supervisors, Wednesday (Today), discussed possible, proposed changes to mental health services. Supervisor John Twombly said he’s learned through an e-mail from the State distributed through ISAC (the Iowa State Association of Counties), there’s a 99% likelihood the State will act to combine the various mental health regions, so Adair County has voluntarily started to hold meetings with the far Southwest Region (Southwest Iowa MHDS, which covers 9 counties and is based in Council Bluffs), because it appears the realignment will be based on total population, and the County doesn’t want to be told where residents will have to go for those services…officials want a choice.
With regard to who pays for mental health services, effective July 1, 2022, there will be no more levy for services. A meeting is set for next week in Des Moines, to discuss the State’s role.
Lori Nosekabel, CEO for Southern Hills Regional Mental Health that serves the counties of Adair, Adams, Taylor and Union, is expected to attend. Supervisor Board Chair Steve Shelley said there likely isn’t anything the County could do if it was forced to merge into specific mental health service regions.
In other business, the Adair County Board of Supervisors were informed by Auditor Mandy Berg, her office would be closed for Election Training, all-day Sept. 22nd.
Since the training is being held on a regular Supervisor’s meeting date, the Board approved holding their regular meeting on Thursday, Sept. 23rd, instead of the 22nd.