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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – A history journal that’s been produced by the State of Iowa for 163 years must find a new editorial home. An Iowa Department of Administrative Services spokesman says due to an increasingly lean staff, the State Historical Society will not produce the Annals of Iowa after July 1st of next year. Iowa State University history professor Pamela Riney-Kehrberg has been an editorial consultant for the journal and she’s worried.
“My students read articles out of ‘Annals of Iowa’ every single semester and they love them,” she said. “I want my students to understand that the history that we’re talking about on the national level happened here and nobody else is going to publish that if this journal ceases to be.” The very first edition of the Annals of Iowa — from 1863 — had 10 articles, including a letter describing how Iowa soldiers in Kentucky removed a five pound chain from the neck of a slave who had escaped.
Riney-Kehrberg, whose research focuses on rural and agricultural history, wrote an article about what it was like to be a farm kid in Iowa between 1880 and 1920 for a more recent Annals of Iowa. “Every single article in it has something to do with the state and local history of this place,” Riney-Kehrberg said, “and it has been doing this since the Civil War.” The Annals of Iowa is published quarterly. State officials say printing costs are largely covered by about 300 subscribers and part of the annual fees from about 100 Historical Society of Iowa members.
According to Riney-Kehrberg, nearly every single state published a historical journal at some point, but few remain. “Which is all the more reason for us to keep it because this is an award-winning, highly respected journal,” she says, “which has had a series of exceptionally good editors.” The Department of Administration Services is willing to have the State Historical Society as the copyright holder, but is hoping to strike arrangement similar to what’s happened with the Kansas History journal, which is edited and published by the history department at Kansas State University.
Riney-Kehrberg says moving the Annals of Iowa to a college or university in Iowa could change how it’s perceived. “By having it with the state, down in Des Moines it meant that it was really for the whole state, but if you move it to a university there’s always the chance that people are going to say: ‘Oh, you’re favoring authors from X location or Y location,'” Riney-Kehrberg said, “even if you really aren’t.”
Digital copies of the Annals of Iowa from 1863 through 2022 are currently found on a state website and it has been published at a printing company in Monticello.
(Updated; Radio Iowa) – A federal appeals court has ruled carbon pipeline restrictions in Shelby and Story Counties are preempted by federal regulations and state law. Shelby and Story County officials adopted ordinances to establish safety standards as well as prohibited zones around places like homes and schools where the pipeline would be barred. The federal appeals court ruled the ordinances would prohibit Summit Carbon Solutions from running its pipeline through areas where it has a state permit to build. A spokesperson for Summit says the ruling confirms federal regulation of pipeline safety and the Iowa Utilities Commission’s authority over route and permit decisions in Iowa. A group that represents property owners opposed to the pipeline said the ruling strips away common sense protections.
Shelby and Story County officials could appeal the decision to the U-S Supreme Court. Summit sued four other counties with similar ordinances and those were placed on hold as the company’s lawsuit against Shelby and Story Counties has moved through the courts.
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa Democratic Party has lost its seat on the powerful rule-making panel that will decide which states go first in 2028 when Democrats select their next nominee for president. The Des Moines Register was first to report the slot on the Democratic Party’s national rules committee has gone to someone from New Hampshire. That’s the state that ignored party rules and hosted the first presidential primary of 2024.
The Democratic National Committee had followed President Biden’s call for South Carolina’s Primary to go first — and for the Iowa Democratic Party Caucuses to no longer be first-in-the-nation. However, National Republicans kept the Iowa G-O-P’s Caucuses are their lead-off event and Iowa Democratic Party chair Rita Hart says there should be serious concerns about Biden’s calendar because excluding Iowa gave Donald Trump a head start in 2024.
Hart says Iowa Democrats simply can’t afford to be ignored again by their national party leaders.
(Glenwood, Iowa) – The Glenwood Police Department reports two arrests occurred today (Thursday). 35-year-old Kara Vezeau-Crouch, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Driving While Barred. She posted a $2,000 bond and was released from custody. And, 26-year-old Trevor Kerr, of Rapid City, SD, was arrested for Failure to appear in court. He was being held in the Mills County Jail on a $20,000 bond.
(Radio Iowa) – A Cedar Falls woman is charged with murdering her husband last (Wednesday) night. Cedar Falls Police say they were called to the couple’s home at about 6:30 p.m. Wednesday and officers found 72-year-old David Alan Charlton had been shot to death. Sixty-six-year-old Kimberly Ann Charlton told police her husband had tried to assault her, the family’s dog intervened and, as he threatened the dog with a walking stick, Charlton said she grabbed a handgun and told her husband to stop pursuing the dog down a hallway.
Police say Charlton admitted she then shot her husband in the back.

The Stuart family, of Walnut (Photo provided by the PFI)
(UPDATED) – (Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds has signed a bill into law that reduces the taxes businesses pay into the state fund that pays out unemployment benefits. “It’s a signature piece of legislation, one of my top priorities this session,” Reynolds said, “and a key part of our ongoing effort to make Iowa’s economy stronger, more competitive and built for the future.”
Reynolds points to Iowa’s population — which ranks 32nd among the states — while Iowa’s Unemployment Trust Fund is the ninth largest in the country. “But not anymore,” Reynolds said. “Senate File 607 will cut the taxable wage base in half, it lowers the maximum tax rate to 5.4% –which was 9% before this.” Reynolds says that nine percent rate needlessly punished Iowa businesses because nearly two BILLION dollars is sitting in the Unemployment Trust Fund today.
“This bill streamlines Iowa’s unemployment insurance tax system by bringing overdue reform to how we support our workforce and how we support the businesses that create jobs across our state,” Reynolds said, “while most importantly keeping the fund healthy and sustainable for the long term.” Under state law, higher tax rates will be triggered if the Unemployment Trust Fund falls below 900 million dollars.
Estimates indicate the lower tax rates Reynolds has approved will save businesses 975 million dollars in taxes over the next five years. Democrats say laid off workers are footing the bill for this corporate tax break since Republican lawmakers reduced the maximum time Iowans may receive unemployment benefits from 26 to 16 weeks. That change was made in 2022.
(Council Bluffs, Iowa) – The Pottawattamie County Secondary Roads Department reports the Burlington Northern-Sante Fe (BNSF) railroad crossing at Pott. County Road L-55 (2nd Street) in Neola, will be closed on Tuesday, June 10th, beginning at 8-a.m., to perform maintenance on the crossing. The closure is scheduled to take six hours. The roadway will be back open by end of day.
The Iowa DOT has placed message boards on Railroad Highway and on L55 to warn traffic of the closure.

(Clarinda, Iowa) – The Page County Attorney’s Office has released the outcome of several cases heard in Page County District Court, during the week of May 19th. The following individuals appeared through their attorney and pled guilty to their respective charges, and in addition to their sentences, were ordered to pay court costs, surcharges and court-appointed attorney fees.

Page County Courthouse
The Page County Attorney’s Office said also, 44-year-old Timothy Lee Strange, of Shenandoah, appeared with council and denied violating the terms and conditions of his probation. The Court found he was in willful contempt of court, and sentenced him to 120 days in the Page County Jail. Strange was unsuccessfully discharged from probation.
(Radio Iowa) – The Kossuth County Board of Supervisors and the motorcycle riders’ association known as ABATE are discussing the cost of county services during the group’s annual gathering near Algona. ABATE of Iowa’s 2025 “Freedom Rally” is scheduled for July 3rd through the 6th on a property ABATE owns. Dave Duffy, state coordinator for ABATE of Iowa, says the group had been making a donation to the county to cover emergency medical services, but have stopped helping to pay E-M-Ts. “We decided not to do a donation to the EMS just because Kossuth County, now being an essential service, gets money from our taxes now where they were a volunteer before,” Duffy said, “and they also get paid as they take people in.”
Phil Albers is Kossuth County’s director of Emergency Medical Services. “I don’t want to build a wall between us and ABATE. I really don’t,” he said. “The very first year ABATE was here, I worked ABATE. I worked first aid stands for many years as a volunteer…When you guys first came, we were able to staff it with volunteers…Now, we have to do it with full-time staff, so our staff are required to give up their 4th of July weekend every year to provide this service.” Albers says on a typical day, four full-time E-M-S staff are on duty, but adding several thousand motorcyclists means his staff has to double. “Last year we ran 19 calls to ABATE Park,” he said, “Friday and Saturday being our busy days.”
Albers has suggested ABATE cover the costs of two E-M-S staffers being on stand-by during the four day event and he says that’s a similar request to organizations having other events in the county. “We know it’s happening, we have to prepare and we have to cover it properly,” Albers said. “We’re other going to incur the costs ourselves and eat it, or they’re going to help offset the costs. That’s the question.”
Duffy says ABATE had expected their previous donations meant an ambulance would be positioned at the event, but he says that didn’t happen. ABATE has been hosting an annual rally in Iowa for over 40 years. Motorcyclists from as far away as Canada are expected at this year’s event at ABATE Park, which is northeast of Algona and covers about 20 acres.