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Join the First Day Hike Challenge in Iowa State Parks

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – The Iowa DNR and Travel Iowa invite Iowans to participate in the 2021 First Day Hike Challenge to ring in the New Year through the digital State Park Passport. The challenge takes the place of traditional guided hikes due to COVID-19. “We are looking for ways to encourage both outdoor fun and social distancing,” said Todd Coffelt, Bureau Chief of Parks, Forests and Preserves. “First Day Hikes are a popular tradition in state parks, and the passport is a great way for people to enjoy winter hikes on their own or with their families.”

With the First Day Hike Challenge, park visitors can check into any of the more than 50 participating state parks on the passport from Friday, Jan. 1 through the end of Sunday, Jan. 3. Every check-in will qualify for a prize drawing of a 2-night stay at a 2-bedroom cabin at Lake Darling State Park near Brighton. Restrictions will apply on the cabin stay, with reservation fees and other business rules applying.

Visitors can go to as many parks as they wish during the weekend — every check-in counts as a contest entry.  Additionally, visitors will find trail suggestions and directions from park staff under the “More Info” tab for each park entry on the passport.

Last year, more than 4,300 people participated in hikes on New Year’s Day across Iowa. Hikers can expect to be surrounded by the quiet beauty of nature in winter, and experience spectacular views, beautiful settings and the cultural treasures offered by Iowa’s State Parks. Participants should dress for the weather, including warm, sturdy boots for winter conditions.

For more details on First Day Hikes in Iowa’s State Parks, and to find links to sign up for the Parks Passport, visit www.iowadnr.gov/firstdayhikes.

Vaccine allocation update from the IDPH

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(IDPH Press Release; Des Moines, IA) On December 16, the Iowa Department of Public Health (IDPH) received updated planning numbers for COVID-19 vaccine allocations from the CDC. As we have said all along, these are planning numbers that will continue to change.

IDPH is working through the distribution details with the revised vaccine allocation from CDC. Vaccine distribution will continue to follow the Advisory Council on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommendations that health care personnel and long-term care (including assisted living) residents and staff remain the first priority for vaccination.

Despite these revisions, IDPH is committed to initiating the national pharmacy program for long-term care facilities the week of December 28 as planned, though the original timeline for completion will be impacted. The Infectious Disease Advisory Council (IDAC), will convene within the next 48 hours to discuss how changes in allocation numbers will affect the prioritization of and timeline for healthcare personnel receiving the vaccine.

Expected Approximate Vaccine Allocation, for Planning Purposes Only. These numbers are subject to change:

Allocation Date Pfizer Moderna Total
12/13/20 26,000 0 26,000
12/20/20 19,500 53,800 73,300
12/27/20 19,500 19,500 39,000
Total 65,000 73,300 138,300

Additional Pfizer Doses

The FDA and CDC have shared information acknowledging extra doses of vaccine are available in the Pfizer vaccine vial. IDPH is awaiting formal guidance and direction from FDA and CDC.

Iowa joins lawsuit against Google

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller is joining a coalition of 38 attorneys general in suing Google. The antitrust case alleges Google illegally maintains its monopoly power over general search engines and related advertising markets through a series of anticompetitive exclusionary contracts and conduct. Miller spoke on a conference call today (Thursday) and says the Google case is very much like the suit against Microsoft some 20 years ago.

“The Microsoft case centered on maintenance and monopoly. And this case centers on maintenance and monopoly — and that’s really important,” Miller says. The lawsuit by the states is consistent with the lawsuit filed by the U-S Department of Justice in October which alleged that Google improperly maintains its monopoly power in general search and search advertising through the use of exclusionary agreements.

“We’re filing the motion to consolidate the case so that will have the cases consolidated in the District of Columbia and litigated together — the Justice Department and the 47 states and the District of Columbia, plus two territories — that this will be a unified effort,” according to Miller.

Miller says there’s one key thing he sees in the suit. “This case is among other things about power. Google has immense power in the technology world, in the world of the United States in the year 2020. And it’s about it’s about the use of that power,” he says. The lawsuit says Google has deprived consumers of competition that could lead to greater choice, innovation, and better privacy protections. Furthermore, Google has exploited its market position to accumulate and leverage data to the detriment of consumers.

“They do maximize their profits that that power grants to them. Including from power of network effects — which makes it in my view a little easier to get to the monopoly and a little easier to maintain that monopoly,” Miller says. “And so, these are questions that are on people’s minds, and rightly so. And I think it’s really important that this case be ligated.” The attorneys general argue that more competition in the general search engine market would benefit consumers, for example, through improved privacy protections and more targeted results and opportunities for consumers.

Iowa is also part of a lawsuit announced December 9th against Facebook, alleging the company broke the law by acquiring potential rivals and cutting smaller competitors off from its platform and services.

Iowa man convicted of murder as a teen granted parole

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

OTTUMWA, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa man who was 16 in 1994 when he fatally shot a 15-year-old classmate after the two argued over a girl has been granted parole. The Ottumwa Courier reports that the Iowa Board of Parole has decided to release Michael Patrick Leon Coffman after a hearing Wednesday. Coffman, who is now 42, was convicted of first-degree murder in the death of Jeremy Allen at Ottumwa High School and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

But in 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that juveniles who kill can’t automatically be sentenced to life with no chance of parole. That led Coffman’s sentence to be changed in 2017 to allow for the possibility of parole.

 

Chiefs visit Saints for potential Super Bowl preview

Sports

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(By The Associated Press undefined) – The defending Super Bowl champion Chiefs are trying to remain the top team in the AFC when NFL-leading passer Patrick Mahomes takes Kansas City into New Orleans. The Chiefs already have wrapped up the AFC West title for a franchise-record fifth straight time. But this season only the top seed in each conference gets a first-round playoff bye.

The Saints could clinch the NFC South for a fourth straight time this weekend with a win or Tampa Bay loss. But New Orleans hurt its chances of securing the top seed in the NFC by losing in Philadelphia last week.

 

Chiefs TE Kelce rewriting record book during special season

Sports

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — With six 100-yard receiving games already, the Chiefs’ Travis Kelce is poised to become the first tight end in NFL history to lead the league in receiving. He has 1,250 yards with three games still to play, giving him a 70-yard lead over Seattle Seahawks wide receiver DK Metcalf and another 13 yards over the Buffalo Bills’ Stefon Diggs — oh, and teammate Tyreek Hill is at 1,158 yards.

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce (87) stops Miami Dolphins free safety Brandon Jones (29), during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Dec. 13, 2020, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Kelce is having just as special of a year off the field, too. He was recently made the Chiefs nominee for the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award for his work with children from impoverished backgrounds.

 

Feenstra joins call for probe of ‘fraudulent activities’ in presidential election

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congressman-elect Randy Feenstra of Hull is joining a group of 26 other incoming Republican House members in calling for an investigation of “fraudulent activities” surrounding the 2020 presidential election. Feenstra says he signed a letter to House Speaker and Democrat Nancy Pelosi requesting the probe be launched.

Feenstra says, “What we signed onto is a letter that simply says that we want Pelosi to at least investigate how the elections were done.” Members of the nation’s Electoral College met earlier this week and cast a majority of votes for President-elect Joe Biden, but Feenstra says he and the other Republicans will wait until Congress counts those votes early next month.

“Now, Congress as a body meets on January 6th and I think that’s when it will be decided on where we go from here,” Feenstra says. “I’m just simply saying, hey, let’s wait until January 6th and see how this plays out.” Feenstra says there are still questions looming about the presidential election that need to be answered.

“I just think that we need to have a migrating path of where things are,” he says. “I think in the next three weeks, we’ll get to flush things out and we’ll know exactly where everything stands.” The letter follows multiple failed court challenges to election results in several battleground states.

Feenstra beat Democrat J-D Scholten of Sioux City in the general election after defeating incumbent Steve King in the G-O-P primary.

Report: Iowa’s hospitals will lose $433M this year due to COVID

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – We’re starting to see some of the monumental costs of the coronavirus on Iowa’s health care industry. This year’s pandemic will cost the state’s medical facilities 433-million dollars in revenue this year, according to a report from the Iowa Hospital Association. Overall, the report says Iowa’s hospitals lost more than one-point-two-billion dollars during the pandemic, but that figure was offset by federal relief.

The study shows half of Iowa’s hospitals were operating in the red at the end of October. Hospitals are also seeing an 11% drop in outpatient visits and a 24% decline in inpatient surgeries, along with the operating margins falling 29%.

More at https://www.ihaonline.org/

Government ordered to pay landowners on lower Missouri River

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A judge has ruled that the federal government must pay landowners on the lower Missouri River for flooding damage caused by the Army Corps of Engineers’ efforts to protect endangered species. Judge Nancy Firestone, with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, ruled this week that the Corps caused increased flooding by changing habitat on the river to comply with the Endangered Species Act.

FILE – In this Oct. 22, 2019 file photo, a home is surrounded by Missouri River floodwaters in Bartlett, Iowa. A judge has ruled that the federal government must pay landowners on the lower Missouri River for flooding damage caused by the Army Corps of Engineers’ efforts to protect endangered species. Judge Nancy Firestone, with the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, ruled this week that the Corps caused increased flooding by changing habitat on the river to comply with the Endangered Species Act. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik File)

She says that violated constitutional protections against taking property without compensation. The ruling affects property owners from Sioux City, Iowa, to St. Louis, although not all landowners will qualify for payments. The ruling doesn’t cover all flood-related damages.

 

Congresswoman Axne critical of Governor relaxing COVID restrictions

News

December 17th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Third District Representative Cindy Axne says the relaxing of COVID-19 prevention measures is confusing during a time when people should be working to slow the spread of the virus. Governor Kim Reynolds amended her emergency order so starting today bars and restaurants can resume normal operating hours — and she is allowing higher attendance levels at events. The Democrat Congresswoman, Axne, says the governor is sending a confusing message by regularly lifting and putting in place different mitigation efforts.  “I think relaxing statewide restrictions on social gatherings now sends the wrong message to Iowans,” Axnes says, “that the December holiday season presents something like a lesser risk than Thanksgiving did and in no way, shape or form does it.”

Congress is working to get a COVID-19 stimulus package passed before its deadline of tomorrow (Friday) at midnight. Axne says she sees widespread support from Congress to provide more rental assistance to those struggling because of the pandemic. “Making sure we keep people in their homes during these difficult times and especially here in places like Iowa where it’s the middle of winter, we’ve gotta keep people with a roof over their head,” Axne says.

Axne says she also sees support for an extension of unemployment insurance and an additional round of the paycheck protection program that helps small businesses. Axne is the only member of Iowa’s House delegation to win re-election last month.

(By Clay Masters, Iowa Public Radio)