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Carroll man arrested for Public Intox in Red Oak

News

February 24th, 2021 by admin

The Red Oak Police Department reports the arrest on Wednesday evening of 46-year-old Eric Stephen Pierson of Carroll on a charge of Public Intoxication. Pierson was arrested at 6:12 p.m. in the 600 block of East Washington Street in Red Oak. Pierson was taken to the Montgomery County Jail and held on $300 bond.

Girls 1A and 2A Regional Final Scoreboard 02/24/2021

Sports

February 24th, 2021 by admin

Girls 1A and 2A basketball teams punched their tickets to State in Regional Finals that were contested on Wednesday night. Here’s a look at the scores from games featuring area teams.

CLASS 1A

Region 2 @ Greene County
Newell-Fonda 75, CAM 37

Region 4 @ Denison
Kingsley-Pierson 64, St. Albert 44

Region 8 @ Winterset
Exira-EHK 66, Lenox 56 -ON KJAN

CLASS 2A

Region 5 @ Atlantic
Nodaway Valley 55, AHSTW 33 – ON KJANTV

Region 8 @ Lewis Central
Treynor 40, Underwood 38

Fast Start Earns Nodaway Valley a State Tourney Berth

Sports

February 24th, 2021 by Jim Field

Nodaway Valley had the lead before the clock started and never looked back in a 55-33 over AHSTW in the Class 2-A Region 5 Girls Basketball Final Wednesday night in Atlantic.

A score book error led to a technical foul being called on AHSTW before the opening tip and Maddax DeVault hit one of two free throws to give the Wolverines a lead they would never lose.  Nodaway Valley was up 9-0 before Kailey Jones scored with less than two minutes left in the first quarter to get the Lady Vikes on the board.  But they trailed the Wolverines 22-4 by the end of the first.  Things didn’t get any better for AHSTW in the second quarter as they found themselves behind 31-11 at the half.  The Wolverine lead grew to 26 points at 51-25 in the fourth quarter.

DeVault led the Wolverines with 23 points and Lindsay Davis scored 16.

The Lady Vikes were led by Claire Denning with 16 points.

AHSTW finishes the season in the regional final for the second year in a row with a record of 17-7.

Nodaway Valley moves to 23-0 and the program qualifies for the state tournament for the first time since Bridgewater-Fontanelle made the tourney in 1981.

2021 Boys State Bowling Results

Sports

February 24th, 2021 by admin

The Boys State Bowling Tournament finished up competition on Wednesday with Class 1A and 2A action at Cadillac XBC in Waterloo.

In Class 1A Clarinda finished 5th in the team scoring and Shenandoah was 6th. Clarinda rolled a 2,987 team score, while Shenandoah dropped 2,949 pins. Shenandoah’s Zayne Swickel was the top area finisher with an 11th place 2-game total of 456.

In Class 2A Council Bluffs Abraham Lincoln’s Bennett Olsen finished 23rd with a 2-game total of 406.

Atlantic School Board sets date for Public Hearing on the Certified Budget

News

February 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District’s Board of Education held a Special Meeting Wednesday evening that was also broadcast via YouTube. During their session at the High School Media Center, the Board approved discussing the Certified Budget on March 10th, and holding a Public Hearing on the Budget March 24th, with certification of the budget that same night. Superintendent Steve Barber said the State requires the Certified Budget for the three counties served by the District, to be submitted by April 15th. The Board approved Contract Recommendations for: James Todd, Chemistry and Physics Teacher. Todd comes to Atlantic from the CAM School District, where he is the Chemistry Teacher; and Cayleigh McBee, as High School Special Education Teacher. McBee is in the process of finishing her Master’s Degree in Special Education.

The Board also approved the resignations of: Rebecca Drake, H.S 1:1 Paraeducator; Diane Schuler, MS Paraeducator, and Henry Hallgren, HS Government Teacher. Afterward, the Board approved Open Enrollment applications, and tentative two-year agreements for 2021-2022 /22-23 Master Contracts with the Atlantic Education Association and Employees Association. Superintendent Steve Barber explained what the Certified Staff package entails. He said a BA Degree, which is the first lane, will see an increase of $1,425 or 4% for the first year of the contract.

A similar increase takes place for the 2022-23 school year.

The Board discussed at length, the District’s 1:1 (one-to-one) Computer Plan. The District uses Apple products currently. The original plan was for four-years, but so far they’ve managed to get seven-years of use. Technology Director Roger Warne said the district has a “Hodge Podge” of 13 different devices that they are trying to manage, between the MacBook Air’s and Chromebooks of various types of MacBook Pros, etc.

The District’s programs must be removed before the computers can be sold to other vendors or the public.

Chromebooks would be provided to students in grades 1 through 12 that are exactly the same device in all grades. Kindergartners and preschoolers would receive an I-Pad, which is easier for the kids and teachers to work with. The Board agreed to put out an RFP (Request for Proposal) for the purchase of 1,400 Chromebook licenses with a decision on the purchase to be made during the Board’s March 10th Board meeting, assuming the cost of licenses is known by then. The licenses and touch screen devices would be purchased soon thereafter with the District’s CARE dollars.  Technology Director Roger Warne says he has three vendors he can get an RFP from. Once he has the licenses, he said it doesn’t matter what device they are used on.

Cass County School Districts receive supplemental school supplies from County Dem’s

News

February 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Cass County Democratic Party Chair Sherry Toelle reports each of the three Cass County school districts has received a supplemental distribution of school supplies from the Cass County Democratic Party. “Some very generous monetary donations came into our office after the autumn drive was over,” Toelle said. “It was decided to wait to distribute them until the second semester to fill in any gaps that students might have in their supplies,” she explained.

Nigel Horton, Griswold Elementary School Principal, and Sherry Toelle, Cass County Democratic Party Chair

Dorene South, CAM Middle School Secretary, Sherry Toelle, and Cheri Chester, CAM South Elementary School Secretary

Washington Elementary School Staff and Sherry Toelle

Toelle went on to state that the annual school supply drive would be held from mid-July to mid-August so that Cass County children would be able to start the new school year with new supplies. She said “This is something we do every year and it is great to see how the community supports the cause.”

Board of Regents discusses free speech

News

February 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The board which governs the three state universities received recommendations from its Free Speech Committee during its online meeting today (Wednesday). The action comes as bills that would strip tenure from the three schools have cleared the House Education Committee and a Senate subcommittee. Lawmakers say the issue has been discussed but not acted upon — but Board of Regents president Michael Richards disagreed with that.

“The Board will not tolerate violation of anyone’s free speech on our campuses. This is a constitutional right that must be preserved and is sacred on our campuses. The Board of Regents and our universities absolutely support free speech and open dialogue,” Richards says. Richard says there have been some issues.

“We must be honest and recognize that there have been several recent events when this expectation has not been met,” according to Richards. “In these cases we have, and will continue to act quickly to recognize what has occurred. And take corrective action and educate those involved.” Richards says the recommendations from the Free Speech Committee make this clear and lay out some key things the schools must do.

“Preventing punishment for expressing a certain viewpoint, and annual training for all faculty, staff, and students,” he says. Richards says they will continue to ensure that free speech is preserved. “We will be creating a permanent Free Speech Committed of the Board where complaints from faculty, staff, and students can be submitted and reviewed by the Board,” Richards says. He says they do not want to shut down discussion about different ideas and opinions.

“Disagreeing on issues and having a respectful debate about those issues should happen on our university campuses. What should not happen is preventing another person or group’s opinion from being expressed or threatening those opinions with possible repercussions,” Richards says. Richards says tenure has become a focus of this conversation and he says it should not be removed from the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa.

“Tenure is not granted to all faculty — and to receive it — one must go through a rigorous and multi-year-process. It is not a job for life,” Richards says. He says removing tenure will hurt the ability of the schools to attract the best faculty and provide the best opportunities for students. “All faculty — including tenured faculty — are evaluated annually,” Richards says. “Poor performance, violations of policy, and other misconduct could be grounds for discipline. Up to and including termination.”

Other recommendations from the Free Speech Committee include requiring each syllabus have a statement comparable to the I-S-U on supporting and upholding the First Amendment protection of freedom of speech and the principle of academic freedom. Universities will be required to post the Board’s and university policies and procedures on their webpage, including instructions on how to appeal to the Board regarding violations of free expression.

LEONARD MELVIN JESSEN, 84, of Anita (Svcs. 03/02/2021)

Obituaries

February 24th, 2021 by Jim Field

LEONARD M. JESSEN, 84, of Anita died Wednesday, February 24th at Cass County Memorial Hospital in Atlantic. A Graveside Service for LEONARD M. JESSEN will be held on Tuesday, March 2nd at 11:00 a.m. at the Evergreen Cemetery in Anita. Hockenberry Funeral Home in Anita has the arrangements.

Family and friends may visit at the Weathervane Cafe in Anita following the service.

Online condolences may be left at www.hockenberryfamilycare.com

LEONARD M. JESSEN is survived by:

Children: LeAnn (Allen) Josephsen. Bobbi (Chuck) Poirier. Melissa Appenzeller.

Stepsons: Clint Dorsey. Leslie (Ronda) Dorsey.

Sisters: Evelyn (Ray) McAfee. Irene (Gary) Nelson.

Brother: Ron (Michelle) Jessen.

9 Grandchildren

13 Great-Grandchildren

GOP senators reject call to abandon crackdown on big tech companies

News

February 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A law professor who’s a leader in the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council is urging Republicans in the Iowa Senate to table a bill targeting big tech companies. The legislation would withdraw state and local tax incentives from Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google if a court rules the companies illegally removed online content from conservatives.

Attorney Carl Szabo says the bill upends the conservative principals of limited government and free enterprise. “Look, I agree. I’m worried about the silencing of conservative voice as well,” Szabo said. “I mean, heck, I’m a conservative, but unfortunately this is not the right approach.” Szabo says these are private companies enforcing contracts with users who are not abiding by community standards.

“I understand that there’s a feeling that there are a lot efforts to stile conservative speech, but forcing these platforms to host content that they don’t think is best for their users and their advertisers is not the right approach,” he says. “It violates every notion we have when we support the rights of private businesses to decide what’s best for them.” Szabo made his comments today (Wednesday) during a senate subcommittee hearing on the bill. Tyler Diers of TechNet, a bipartisan group representing technology company executives, says if the bill becomes law, business leaders will have to weigh whether it’s worth expanding in Iowa.

“We believe policymakers should be encouraging incentive programs and tax policies that attract and grow jobs in the state of Iowa,” he said. “It would be bad public policy for the legislature to weaponize economic development programs in order to forward a political agenda at expense of the state’s economic interest.” Senator Jason Schultz, a Republican from Schleswig, says he can agree with some of the arguments against the bill — up to a point.

“These platforms have become weaponized by professive ideology,” Schultz says. “…They will leave anything inappropriate up on the progressive side…but seem to jump immediately, like a guard dog, against anything that moves toward the conservative side.” Senate President Jake Chapman, a Republican from Adel, is the bill’s lead sponsor and he says it’s not being tabled.

“It’s shameful,” Chapman says. “These liberal executives out of Silicon Valley are not going to control what Iowans hear, what they see and they’re not going to censor them.” Education groups warn the bill endangers contracts Iowa schools have with the big tech companies. A lobbyist for the three state universities says utility plants, the University of Iowa hospital, the campus computer, email and phone systems AND the scoreboard at Kinnick Stadium could be shut down if the bill, as written, becomes law.

City of Atlantic Audit released

News

February 24th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the City of Atlantic today (Wednesday), said Gronewold, Bell, Kyhnn & Company, CPA’s have released an audit report on the City. The auditors said the City’s receipts for its governmental funds total more than $11.8-million ($11,881,149) for the year that ended June 30, 2020. The receipts included:

  • Over $3.7-million ($3,718,868) in property tax
  • $111,895 in other city taxes
  • $917,068 in local option sales tax (LOST)
  • $182,411 in tax increment financing (TIF) collections
  • $1,870,432 from intergovernmental sources
  • $210,223 from use of money and property
  • $98,837 from licenses and permits
  • $430,002 from charges for services
  • $55,835 from sale of assets
  • $3,775,000 from debt proceeds
  • and $510,578 in miscellaneous revenues.

The City’s receipts for its proprietary funds total over $1.87-million ($1,878,569), of which $1,809,937 was from charges for service. Disbursements for its governmental funds totaled more than $12.2-million ($12,293,176), and included:

  • $2,179,566 for public safety
  • $1,450,931 for public works
  • $12,985 for health and social services
  • $997,761 for culture and recreation
  • $233,538 in community and economic development
  • $594,493 in general government
  • $1,497,296 for capital projects
  • and $5,326,606 for debt service.

The auditors noted disbursements of the City’s proprietary funds totaled $1,686,323, of which $996,300 was attributable to its business-type activities, and $690,023 was for debt service. The report contains recommendations to the City Council and other City officials. The City has responded that corrective action is being taken for each item.

A copy of the Auditor’s report is available for review in the office of the Auditor of State and the Office of Atlantic City Administrator John Lund.