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2-year-old injured when shots fired into Des Moines house

News

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A 2-year-old child was critically injured when more than a dozen shots were fired into a house in Des Moines. Police went to the home Monday night after receiving reports of gunfire in the area. Officers found more than a dozen shots had been fired into the home and that one had hit a child, who had been sitting inside. The child was taken to a hospital and remained in critical condition early Tuesday.

Later, Iowa State Patrol troopers found a crash on Interstate 80 west of Des Moines. Troopers believed the crash was connected to the shooting and notified Des Moines police. Police didn’t provide details connecting the crash and shooting but said they had detained five people and recovered two firearms.

 

Heartbeat Today 3-2-2021

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

March 2nd, 2021 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Eleanor Tietz about the Mobile Food Pantry event this Saturday, March 6 from 10:00 am – 12:00 pm at the Central Church of Christ in Griswold.

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Creston Police report (3/2)

News

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department reports 24-year old Tristan Lehman, of Creston, was arrested Monday afternoon, on a drug charge. Lehman was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance/Marijuana – 2nd offense. He was later released from the Union County Jail on a $1,000 bond. And, at around 10-a.m. Monday, 36-year old Dusty Champlin, of Creston, was arrested for Driving While Barred. He was later released on a $2,000 bond.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 3/2/21

Podcasts, Sports

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News, 3/2/21

News, Podcasts

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:07-a.m. From KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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Special Election for the CAM & Nodaway Valley School Districts, today

News

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Patrons of the CAM and Nodaway Valley School Districts are being asked to head to the polls today, to approve a new Revenue Purpose Statement (RPS). The purpose of the statement is to specify how the District may use revenues it receives from the State of Iowa Secure an Advanced Vision for Education (SAVE) Fund. Superintendent Paul Croghan says the vote does not impact your property taxes.

The Polling Center for ALL voters in Adair County or Audubon County, and ALL voters residing in the Cass County Townships of Grant, Benton, Franklin or Lincoln, is: The Anita Community Center. The Polling Center for ALL voters residing in Adams County, and all other voters residing in the Cass County Townships of Massena, Union, Bear Grove, Noble, Edna, or Victoria, is: The Cumberland Community Center.  The Polling place for Nodaway Valley School District patrons in Adair or Madison County, is: The Adair County Health & Fitness Center, in Greenfield (202 N. Townline Road).

Polls are open from 7-a.m. until 8-p.m. at all precincts. (Here is a sample ballot with wording adapted at the polls, to reflect the separate districts: 2021 CAM CSD Special Election SAMPLE Ballot)

For additional information on the change in law and the revenue purpose statement process, visit the district’s web site at camcougars.org

Kayakers beware, the weather may be warmer but that water is still near-freezing

Ag/Outdoor, Sports

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – While some Iowans avoid winter weather at all costs, many others enjoy the outdoors at this time of year through paddling, which can provide exercise, solitude and a chance to see the amazing beauty of nature. While there will be plenty of melting with this week’s above-normal temperatures, many of the state’s lakes, rivers and streams are still iced over, but Susan Stocker at the Iowa D-N-R says kayakers are discovering plenty of open water. “There actually is and on portions of the Des Moines River, there is open water and even on the sloughs of the Mississippi, just not far from the channel,” Stocker says. “Yeah, avid paddlers are finding open water.”

Forecasters are calling for highs in the 40s for the rest of the week across northern Iowa, with 50s in central and southern Iowa. Even when air temperatures are above average, the water is still dangerously cold, so she says paddlers should dress for the water temperature, not the air — and expect to go into the water. The piece of outerwear known as a “float coat” may be a good option, she says, as it’s essentially a life jacket that looks like a typical winter coat. Stocker says, “Though float coats may not be the perfect gear for them, make sure that they have a life jacket and/or a dry suit which can serve as flotation.”

Spring won’t arrive until March 20th, and while you may spot a few canoes during the Iowa winter, Stocker says they’re more of a rarity now. “It’s kayakers this time of year, single or double kayaks, and then they add skirts to keep the water out and keep them a little drier,” Stocker says. “It’s a few more pieces of equipment to adapt to the cooler temperatures.”

Especially during the winter, don’t paddle alone, she says, use the buddy system. Also, bring a change of clothes in a dry bag, a first aid kit and a protected cell phone, and Stocker adds, let a friend or loved one know where you are going and when you are expected to return. Find the DNR’s interactive paddling map at: www.iowadnr.gov/Things-to-Do/Canoeing-Kayaking/Where-to-Paddle

Boys 4A Substate Final Schedule Tuesday 03/02/2021

Sports

March 2nd, 2021 by admin

Class 4A boys schools will try to earn trips to State on Tuesday night in Substate Finals. All games are set for 7:00 p.m. starts.

Substate 1 @ CB Thomas Jefferson: CB Abraham Lincoln (18-4) vs. Southeast Polk (12-7)
Substate 2 @ East High: Ankeny Centennial (14-4) vs. Ames (16-3)
Substate 3 @ Marshalltown: Johnston (9-4) vs. Cedar Rapids Kennedy (15-7)
Substate 4 @ Waterloo East: Cedar Falls (18-0) vs. Cedar Rapids Washington (14-7)
Substate 5 @ Clinton: Dubuque Senior (11-8) vs. North Scott (12-7)
Substate 6 @ Bettendorf: Pleasant Valley (18-3) vs. Iowa City Liberty (7-5)
Substate 7 @ Dallas Center-Grimes: Valley (16-4) vs. Dowling Catholic (11-8)

Bill would remove permit requirement for concealed weapons

News

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A bill that would no longer require Iowans to get permits to carry a concealed weapon has made it past initial review in the Iowa House and is scheduled for committee action today (Tuesday). Representative Steven Holt, a Republican from Denison, says it means Iowans would no longer have to get a permission slip for something that’s a constitutional right. “Let’s bear in mind, we are not plotting new ground here. This is not some revolutionary thing here,” Holt said. “Eighteen states already have constitutional carry, what some would call permitless carry.”

Richard Rogers of the Iowa Firearms Coalition calls the move historic. “Essentially any person who may lawfully possess a dangerous weapon will be able to carry it openly or concealed or in a vehicle,” Rogers says. “…The right to keep and bear arms is the natural extension of the universally recognized right of self-defense.”

Rogers says the change will benefit people who’ve been threatened and want to buy a gun, knife or some other weapon immediately. “Outright bans and ‘may issue’ permit schemes were created and used by the powerful to keep the less powerful in their place. This is so even here in Iowa,” Rogers says. “Until 10 years ago, Iowa’s 99 county sheriffs had absolute discretion over whether and how to issue permits to carry weapons. Many refused to issue such permits and others frankly abused the system at their whim. Thanks to these roadblocks, just a dozen years ago, only 30,000 Iowans held such permits.”

Current law says sheriffs shall issue a permit if the person meets all legal requirements — and today more than 400-thousand Iowans have a permit to carry a concealed weapon. Leslie Carpenter of Iowa Mental Health Advocacy says making it easier to get a weapon quickly is the wrong move in a pandemic when mental health problems have escalated. “Suicides make up 79% of all gun deaths here in Iowa,” she says.

Carpenter says no one would know her intelligent, charismatic son was diagnosed with a psychiatric illness. “The prospect of him being able to purchase a gun…fills me with a gut-wrenching dread that I would wish on no other person,” she said. Representative Beth Wessel-Kroeschell, a Democrat from Ames, says the bill will be a deterrent to efforts to attract new businesses and new workers to Iowa. “We have a lot of controversial bills that are affecting Iowa’s image right now,” she said.

If the bill becomes law, Iowans could still get a permit to carry a concealed weapon, so they’d have a document to show in other states that DO require gun permits. A similar bill is scheduled for a subcommittee hearing in the Iowa SENATE today (Tuesday).

Decade-long drive to ban traffic cameras in Iowa resumes

News

March 2nd, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Another drive is underway in the Iowa Senate to ban most traffic enforcement cameras. For the past decade, Republican Senator Brad Zaun, of Urbandale, has been trying to outlaw the cameras used to issue tickets for speeding and running red lights.

“I am not promoting that people break our traffic laws,” Zaun said during a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting Monday. “Unfortunately, I think these cities and towns and counties have I think really taken advantage of a situation and they’ve become more about revenue than actual safety.”

Senator Kevin Kinney, a Democrat from Oxford, said the fines paid on traffic camera tickets are required by law to be spent on police and sheriff’s departments, but there’s no money in Zaun’s bill to replace that lost revenue. “I have listened all summer long how the Democrats want to defund the police,” Kinney said. “This bill in Des Moines alone is going to cost them $3 million of revenue that goes back to the police department.”

Zaun’s latest bill on this subject would let speed cameras remain on the S-curves on Interstate 380 in downtown Cedar Rapids. Zaun said the Cedar Rapids police chief has data proving the cameras help reduce speed in that area and prevent accidents.