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IATC announces 2020 cross country Academic All-State honors

Sports

November 18th, 2020 by admin

The Iowa Association of Track Coaches released their Academic All-State honorees on Wednesday. Here is a look at area athletes that made the list. Requirements are the athlete must be a senior, attain a 3.8 or higher cumulative GPA, and be a State Coed meet qualifier or finish in the top thirty at a State Qualifying Meet during the year of application.

BOYS

Craig Alan Becker, Atlantic
Zach Dixon, Earlham
Trey Gross, Harlan
Connor Keller, IKM-Manning
Brett McGee, Tri-Center
Kayden Pearson, Lewis Central
Nathan Rohrberg, Glenwood
Clayton Stafford, Creston

GIRLS
Taylor McCreedy, Atlantic
Abi Albertsen, Harlan
Olivia Anderson, Harlan
Haley Bach, Lewis Central
Lauren Becker, Glenwood
Paige Davis, Creston
Liv Freund, Harlan
Jorja Hoover, AC/GC
Emma Hughes, Glenwood
Kennedy Kjergaard, Harlan
EmmaKay McClain, AC/GC
Katie Noah, Earlham
Kylie Petersen, Boyer Valley
Erin Schultz, Glenwood
Rylee Sloss, AC/GC
Brecken VanBaale, Harlan
Ella Waddle, Panorama

State Football Finals Schedule/Scoreboard Thursday 11/19/2020

Sports

November 18th, 2020 by admin

2020 State Football Championships Thursday, Nov. 19

Eight-Player: St. Mary’s, Remsen 48, Fremont Mills 0 BOX SCORE
St. Mary’s, Remsen scored on 7 of their first 8 possessions of the game on their way to their first title since 2004. Blaine Harpenau led the Hawks with 8 of 9 passing for 137 yards and 3 touchdowns along with 85 yards rushing and two more scores. The Hawks rolled up 336 yards of offense and held the Knights to 119 total yards. The Hawks defense bottled up the Knights star tailback Seth Malcom, holding him to just 58 yards on 18 carries. Fremont-Mills ends the season with an 8-2 record. Remsen, St. Mary’s takes the title at 12-0.

Class A: Grundy Center vs. Regina, Iowa City 2:00 p.m.

Class 3A: Harlan Community vs. North Scott, Eldridge 7:00 p.m.

Kings take Haliburton in NBA draft, add depth to backcourt

Sports

November 18th, 2020 by admin

By MIKE WAGAMAN Associated Press

FILE – In this Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2019, file photo, Iowa State guard Tyrese Haliburton drives up court during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Mississippi Valley State in Ames, Iowa. The Sacramento Kings selected Tyrese Haliburton with the 12th overall pick in the NBA draft Wednesday night, Nov. 18, 2020 adding depth to a backcourt that is almost certain to undergo significant changes. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

The Sacramento Kings have selected Tyrese Haliburton with the 12th overall pick in the NBA draft, adding depth to a backcourt that is almost certain to undergo significant changes. Haliburton averaged 15.2 points and 6.5 assists during his sophomore season at Iowa State. He shot better than 42% from 3-point range during his college career. The 6-foot-5 Haliburton was projected to go as high as the Top 5 but fell to the Kings, where he will join point guard De’Aaron Fox in Sacramento’s backcourt.

 

CEO of Iowa’s largest hospital says second phase of Covid surge plan may be triggered

News

November 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The C-E-O of the state’s largest hospital says if the number of Iowans testing positive for Covid continues to accelerate, he expects to implement the next phase of a “surge” plan — and expand the Iowa City hospital’s ability to accept more patients. “We’re trying to stay one step ahead of the state’s needs.”

Suresh Gunasekaran — the C-E-O of the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics — briefed members of the State Board of Regents Wednesday. The hospital’s intensive care unit has already been expanded as part of the first phase of dealing with a surge in Covid patients. Ninety-three patients with the coronavirus were in Gunasekaran’s hospital Wednesday — a record — but he says there are still open beds.

“The reason we make these changes in advance, the reason we create this capacity in advance is because we don’t want, when other communities get overwhelmed, for us not to be able to take their patients,” Gunasekaran says. “I’m not going to list all of the different communities, but I will tell you on a daily basis individual rural hospitals hit their maximum and immediately call us and we take the patients.” Gunasekaran says hundreds of hospitalizations from the Iowa City area have been avoided through expansion of the hospital’s testing clinic. The local clinic has the capacity to run a thousand tests a day and often provides results within six-to-eight hours — so Covid-positive patients get assessed earlier and get treatment earlier.

“When you compare our region to other regions, the rate of hospitalizations for their positive-tested patients are so much higher than we and if we didn’t have this resource outside of the hospital, I really do think UIHC would have been overwhelmed long ago,” he says, “with great consequence to the health care system in Iowa.” The hospital was recently featured on N-B-C News after a man from central Missouri was flown all the way to Iowa City for life-saving emergency brain surgery. Gunasekaran says that shows the hospital’s surge plan is working.

“The truth of it today at UIHC, regardless of what’s going on, we continue to create capacity and there are open beds today at UIHC. We are not overwhelmed,” Gunasekaran says, “But if we had not been working on creating this additional capacity, we would be full.” The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics — the U-I-H-C — has expanded its intensive care unit to 116 beds and, if conditions worsen, the I-C-U may expand to 200 beds. On Wednesday, hospitals across the state were caring for more than 15-hundred Covid patients and 286 of those patients were in an intensive care unit.

Reynolds Announces Additional Support for COVID-19-Impacted Renters and Homeowners at Risk of Eviction or Foreclosure

News

November 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – Governor Kim Reynolds Wednesday, announced an additional allocation of CARES Act funds to support Iowa renters and homeowners at-risk of eviction or foreclosure due to a COVID-19-related loss of income. The Iowa Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention program has now been allocated a total of $37.4 million, with approximately $8 million remaining available. The deadline to apply for rent and mortgage assistance as well as utility assistance through the Iowa Residential Utility Disruption Prevention program is Dec. 4, 2020.

“At no fault of their own, many Iowans are struggling to pay their bills as a result of lost income due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Gov. Reynolds. “Today’s announcement bolsters the Iowa Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention program, which is helping Iowa homeowners and renters make their rent or mortgage payments. Our team will continue to assist Iowans in accessing this critical assistance as the Dec. 4th deadline approaches.”

“Nearly 11,000 renters and 500 homeowners have received assistance with their rent or mortgage payments and another 2,800 have applied for utility assistance to date,” said IEDA and IFA Executive Director Debi Durham. “Our goal is to assist as many Iowans that have been impacted by COVID-19 and are at-risk of eviction, foreclosure or utility disruption as possible.”

The programs are funded through federal CARES Act funds, which requires that all funds be expended by Dec. 30, 2020.

To be eligible for either program:

  • Must have a documented COVID-19-related loss of income on or after March 17, 2020.
  • Household income at the time of application may not exceed 80% median family income, which varies by county and household size and is included in the applications.

    Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention Program
    The program provides current renters and homeowners who are at-risk of eviction or foreclosure due to a COVID-19 loss of income with rent or mortgage assistance for up to four months. The total maximum in assistance per household is the lesser of $3,200 for rental assistance and $3,600 for mortgage assistance or four months actual rent/mortgage payment amounts. Payments are made directly to landlords and mortgage servicers and applied to the applicant’s account.

    The state has allocated $37.4 million of federal CARES Act funds to the Iowa Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention program to date.

    Residential Utility Disruption Prevention Program
    The program provides eligible households with up to $2,000 towards electric, natural gas and water bills if they are at risk of disconnection due to an inability to pay due to a COVID-19 related loss of income. Payments are made directly to utility providers and applied to the applicant’s account.

    The state allocated approximately $14.5 million of federal CARES Act funds for utility assistance programs.

    For a full list of eligibility requirements and to apply for either program, visit iowahousingrecovery.com through Dec. 4, 2020.

Iowa, Big Ten release 2020-21 men’s basketball schedule

Sports

November 18th, 2020 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The University of Iowa, in conjunction with the Big Ten Conference, announced Wednesday its 2020-21 men’s basketball Big Ten schedule. Click HERE to view the complete schedule.

Iowa, ranked fifth nationally in The Associated Press Preseason Poll, plays six of its seven nonconference games on Mediacom Court at Carver-Hawkeye Arena, including the first six of the season.

The Hawkeyes begin the season a week from today, hosting North Carolina Central on Nov. 25 at 3 p.m. (CT). Two days later, Iowa will entertain Southern University on Nov. 27 at 4 p.m. (CT) as part of its multi-team event. Southern will challenge North Carolina Central on Thanksgiving. Both Iowa games will be televised nationally on the Big Ten Network.

The Hawkeyes will entertain North Carolina in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge on Dec. 8 and Northern Illinois on Dec. 13. The home dates for Iowa’s contest against Western Illinois and the Iowa Corn Cy-Hawk Series game against Iowa State are being finalized and will be announced later.

Iowa closes its nonconference slate versus top-ranked Gonzaga on Dec. 19 at 11 a.m. (CT) in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

Iowa’s first of 20 conference games is scheduled for Dec. 22 in Iowa City against Purdue. The Hawkeyes will play the Boilermakers, Nebraska, Penn State once at home, while playing Illinois, Michigan and Maryland once on the road. Iowa will play the other seven league teams twice.

Iowa’s second conference game will be played on Christmas Day at Minnesota. It marks just the third time in program history that the Hawkeyes will play on Christmas; the previous two times were in holiday tournaments in Hawaii in 1984 and 1988.

The Hawkeyes have seven players returning with starting experience, including All-American senior center Luka Garza, and upperclassmen all-conference honorees Jordan Bohannon and Joe Wieskamp, and Connor McCaffery, who led all Division I players in assist-to-turnover ratio a year ago.Game times and television information for each game will be announced later.

FAN INFORMATION

  • Due to COVID-19 safety protocols, there will be no men’s and women’s basketball general admission single game or season ticket sales to home games at this time
  • Visit hawkeyesports.com/fancutouts to purchase a fan cutout(s) for all winter sports in Carver-Hawkeye Arena; 20 percent of the revenue will benefit UI Dance Marathon, with the remainder of the profits supporting the UI student-athletes’ scholarship fund
  • Programs, posters, and magnets will not be printed this season

Forecaster: Winter’s coming and the soil’s still too dry

Ag/Outdoor, News, Weather

November 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Forecasters say drought conditions that spread across much of Iowa earlier this year will likely linger well into winter. Meteorologist Dennis Todey, director of the U-S-D-A’s Midwest Climate Hub — based in Ames, says it doesn’t appear there will be many chances to replenish moisture levels in the soil before things begin to freeze up.  “We had a very dry end of summer and end to fall,” Todey says. “It’s been great for harvest but not good for soil moisture recharge. By this point, it’s very unlikely we’ll get the soil moisture recharged to where we want it to be.”

Despite a warming trend in Iowa this week, Todey says winter will be here in a little over a month. “Our soils are going to go in pretty dry and when the cold does come, we will freeze up and we’re not going to have much chance to recharge soil moisture at that rate,” he says. The drier conditions typically mean a quicker start to the planting season in the new year. “When spring comes around and we do thaw and we want to get to ag activity, there’s a better chance of being able to get moving earlier,” Todey says.

“Downside is that we’ve got some fairly dry soils that we’re going to need to put some moisture in. That’s my bigger concern with this whole situation, these dry soils that we have going on into winter and into the early spring.” Todey says another danger with dry soils is that frost can get much deeper and cause damage to pipes and plants.

Man charged in Davenport man’s shooting death last month

News

November 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — A 19-year-old Davenport man is charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of a man last month. Sherral Jermaine Tolbert is charged in the Oct. 25 death of 19-year-old Lavonta Baker in Davenport. Police found Baker dead in a car after he had been shot several times.

Tolbert was served with the first-degree murder warrant Monday at the Scott County Jail, where he was being held for allegedly violating his probation on an earlier conviction. He had been sentenced in March to three years of supervised probation for numerous felony convictions.

 

1 person injured in Pott. County accident Wed. morning

News

November 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

An accident just before 7-a.m. Wednesday (Today) in Pottawattamie County, resulted in a woman from Harrison County to the hospital. The Iowa State Patrol reports 72-year old Lorene Clark, from Pisgah, was traveling south on I-29, when for reasons unknown, her pickup truck drove into the west ditch, struck a sign for mile marker 65, and then a tree in the ditch. The Ford F-150 caught fire and became fully engulfed in flames, which were extinguished by Crescent Fire Dept. personnel.

Clark was helped out of her vehicle by a passing motorist and an Iowa DOT Highway Helper, prior to the arrival of law enforcement and emergency personnel. She was transported by Crescent Rescue to the UNMC in Omaha. Authorities say she was wearing a seat belt. The accident remains under investigation. The State Patrol was assisted at the scene by the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Department.

Atlantic School Board extends mask mandate to Dec. 10th

News

November 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District Board of Education met Wednesday afternoon in the Middle School Library, and voted unanimously to extend the current district-imposed mandate with regard to face masks/facial coverings, until Dec. 10th. The previous mandate was set to expire on the 23rd of November. (The recorded meeting can be viewed HERE)

The Board will meet again on Dec. 9th to revisit the policy, which the Board agreed has reduced the need to quarantine students and staff, and cut down on the number of active cases of COVID-19. Superintendent Steve Barber said the first week the district was affected by a positive case was the week of September 24th. The was the high water mark for cases in the district.

From Oct. 1st through the 22nd, Barber said the cases ranged from 3-to 4 cases. Since then, it’s been from 1-to 4 each week on a Thursday. “We ranged from quarantined staff pre-face mandate (requirement), from 3-to 11, and quarantined students from 35-to 93. Since then,” he said, “our staff has ranged from 2-to 7 quarantined , and from 24-to 61 students quarantined. On the 29th of October, our county (Positivity rate) was 22.1%, and as of this (Wednesday) morning,” he said, “It was 18.8%.”

Barber said also, “There’s been cases where we’ve had a positive case, where masks have prevented quarantine of some students or staff for that matter, so that has happened.” The problem area is at Washington Elementary School where masks must be worn the most out of all district buildings, because there is no room to social distance like there is with other facilities. The Board was unable to come to a consensus on how to relax or improve upon those conditions. Face coverings are still required in all buildings where social distancing is not possible.

In discussion over the matter, Board member Josh McLaren expressed gratitude to teachers, staff and administrators for their efforts to contain and control the spread of the virus, because “What we’re doing is working” inside the schools. McLaren said he’s not in support of a mask mandate to go any further but “I do still hold the position that [The governor] hasn’t changed anything with regard to quarantine and those types of things. My belief is that I think we have to keep it going through this semester just because strictly based upon the quarantine.”

Board President Jenny Williams said she has a hard time wearing a mask and doesn’t have to wear one at work. She said she’s been opposed to a mask mandate from the beginning, but “Had to compromise because of all of the communication the Board was getting [from the public] via text, e-mail, walk-ins.” She said extending the mask mandate was “not an easy decision.”

Superintendent Barber said administrators will continue to try and find a better solution for the Washington School, in the interim between now and Dec. 9th.