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Child missing for Children’s Square in Council Bluffs

News

October 21st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Council Bluffs Police Department is asking for the public’s assistance in locating an 11 year old female runaway from Children’s Square USA (500 North 7th Street). The child was last seen around 3:00 pm Wednesday, in the area of North 7th Street and Washington Street. She was walking southbound in Council Bluffs.

Peters is an Hispanic female, with long Brown hair wearing black leggings and pink t-shirt. If this child is located please contact the Council Bluffs Police Department 712-328-4728 or call
911.

Girls State Qualifying Cross Country Results Class 3A and 4A 10/21/2020

Sports

October 21st, 2020 by admin

Click on each site below for complete results!

Class 4A
Council Bluffs Abraham Lincoln
Dubuque Senior
Marshalltown
Pleasant Valley
Southeast Polk

Class 3A
Monticello
Pella
Spencer
Waverly-Shell Rock
Winterset

Boys State Qualifying Cross Country Results Class 3A and 4A 10/21/2020

Sports

October 21st, 2020 by admin

IATC Cross Country Team Rankings 10/21/2020

Sports

October 21st, 2020 by admin

Boys 4A

Rank Team
1 Dowling Catholic, WDM
2 Dubuque Hempstead
3 Sioux City, North
4 Cedar Falls
5 Waukee
6 Johnston
7 Iowa City, Liberty
8 Prairie, Cedar Rapids
9 Norwalk
10 Ankeny Centennial
11 Pleasant Valley
12 Iowa City, City High
13 Urbandale
14 Iowa City, West
15 Ames

Girls 4A

Rank Team
1 Valley, West Des Moines
2 Linn-Mar
3 Johnston
4 Ankeny Centennial
5 Dubuque Senior
6 Waukee
7 Southeast Polk
8 Dubuque Hempstead
9 Ankeny
10 Iowa City Liberty
11 Indianola
12 Dowling Catholic
13 Prairie, Cedar Rapids
14 Epworth, Western Dubuque
15 Pleasant Valley

Boys 3A

Rank Team
1 Dallas Center Grimes
2 Pella
3 Solon
4 Marion
5 North Polk
6 Decorah
7 Mount Vernon Lisbon
8 Carlisle
9 Center Point Urbana
10 Humboldt
11 LeMars
12 Monticello
13 ADM Adel
14 Clear Creek Amana
15 Glenwood

Teams to Watch (Alphabetical Order)

Atlantic
Dubuque Wahlert
MOC Floyd Valley
Waverly Shell Rock
West Delaware

Girls 3A

Rank Team
1 Ballard
2 Dallas Center-Grimes
3 Wahlert, Dubuque
4 Solon
5 Glenwood
6 Assumption, Davenport
7 Bishop Heelan
8 Decorah
9 Harlan
10 Mount Vernon-Lisbon
11 Winterset
12 North Polk
13 ADM, Adel
14 Benton Community
15 Center Point-Urbana

Teams to Watch (Alphabetical Order)

Atlantic
Carlisle
Charles City
Monticello
Waverly-Shell Rock

Boys 2A

Rank Team
1 Danville-New London
2 Tipton
3 Denver
4 Des Moines Christian
5 Davis County
6 Mid-Prairie
7 Western Christian
8 Williamsburg
9 Central Decatur
10 Albia
11 North Fayette Valley
12 Waukon
13 Unity Christian
14 Forest City
15 Sheldon

Teams to Watch (Alphabetical Order)

Clarinda
Crestwood
GLR-CL
Jesup
Missouri Valley

Girls 2A

Rank Team Name
1 MId-Prairie
2 Williamsburg
3 Tipton
4 Roland-Story
5 Panorama
6 Jesup
7 Wc-Kp
8 Denver
9 Starmont
10 Sibley-Ocheyedan
11 DSM Christian
12 Cherokee
13 Dike-New Hartford
14 Davis County
15 Danville-New London

Teams to Watch (Alphabetical Order)

Crestwood
GLR/CL
North Fayette Valley
Okoboji
PCM

Boys 1A

Rank Team Name
1 Madrid
2 Earlham
3 South Winneshiek
4 Bellevue
5 Maquoketa Valley
6 Pekin
7 Newman (Mason City)
8 Valley Lutheran (Cedar Falls)
9 St Edmond (Fort Dodge)
10 Nodaway Valley 
11 ACGC
12 Ogden
13 Cascade
14 Siouxland Christian
15 Calamus-Wheatland

Teams to Watch (Alphabetical Order)

Central Springs (Manly)
Columbus Community (Columbus Junction)
East Marshall (Le Grand)
Hudson
West Fork

Girls 1A

Rank Team Name
1 Regina Iowa City
2 Pekin
3 Hudson
4 South Winneshiek
5 Van Meter
6 St Edmond
7 ACGC
8 Newman Mason City
9 Prince of Peace
10 AHSTW
11 Logan Magnolia
12 Manson Northwest Webster
13 Earlham
14 Nashua
15 Kee Lansing

Teams to Watch (Alphabetical Order)

Aplington Parkersburg
Central Elkader
Nodaway Valley
Tri-Center
Turkey Valley

ISU’s Joens, Scott Earn Preseason All-Big 12 Honors

Sports

October 21st, 2020 by admin

IRVING, Texas – Iowa State women’s basketball junior Ashley Joens and senior Kristin Scott earned preseason recognition by the Big 12 Conference Coaches on Wednesday. Joens, who is the Big 12’s returning scoring leader, was a unanimous selection to the All-Big 12 First-Team. Scott earned honorable mention honors.

Joens, a native of Iowa City, Iowa, returns for her junior campaign after creating a buzz as the only player in the nation to average over 20.0 points and 10.0 rebounds per game. Joens’ efforts earned her consensus honorable mention All-America honors. She was most recently named a Preseason Second-Team All-American by Lindy’s Sports. She is also the first player in Iowa State history to reach 1,000 career points as a sophomore, doing so in the regular-season finale, a win over No. 2 Baylor. Joens was also named to the Cheryl Miller Award Top-5 last season.

Scott, a native of Kasson, Minn., enters her senior season after averaging 14.2 points and 6.9 rebounds per game. She was ISU’s second-leading scorer and rebounder. She also tallied 42 blocks and shot 46.4 percent from the floor. Scott was named to the Lisa Leslie Award Top-10, which honors the nation’s top center. Scott begins her senior season just 38 points from 1,000 in her career.

DAISY Award Presented to Tammy Wyman, LPN

News

October 21st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Atlantic, IA – Officials with the Cass County Health System have announced Tammy Wyman, LPN was honored with the DAISY Award on Monday, October 12, 2020. Her nominators said, “I’m sure to Tammy it was just another day on the job, but to us, her empathy and warmth meant the world. Tammy’s passion for nursing comes through in her compassion for people. I want to thank her for making an extremely painful time, a little more tolerable. We left CCHS that day with permission to grieve a child we never knew, and that was a gift Tammy unknowingly gave us in and of itself.”

Tammy Wyman, LPN w/CCHS. (Photo submitted)

Tammy has been a nurse for 39 years, with the last 24 years spent at CCHS. It is her eleventh year of working with OB/GYN physicians. “I am so grateful every day. God’s allowed me to work in this job and to make a difference in their world. I try to care for women like my own daughters, mother, and it’s so important that we don’t lose that sense of personal connection. I’m the first to admit that I’ve had times that I didn’t do well. I called and apologized and tried to make it right. I’m not perfect! But moments like this, I think ‘I’m doing what I’m supposed to be doing.’ [The award] is affirmation that there are days that go badly but you can still make a difference. Those valleys in life when you feel like you’re drowning—you pour out yourself into people’s lives in order to make their days better,” said Tammy.

Tammy was initially drawn to nursing out of a desire to make a difference in people’s lives, even if there are difficult times. “Not every day is a good day as far as happy things happening; there are really hard days. I’m privileged to do this, and to be around the people that I work with. I work with so many amazing women that do great things every day. It’s an amazing work family, and there is something to be said for that. We all want to do the best we can.”

Nurses at Cass County Health System are honored twice annually with The DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses.® The award is part of the DAISY Foundation’s mission to recognize the extraordinary, compassionate nursing care they provide patients and families every day. The DAISY Award committee at CCHS wishes to thank all nominators for their submissions. Each nurse who was nominated will be presented with a special pin and a copy of the nomination.

The DAISY Foundation is a not-for-profit organization, established in memory of J. Patrick Barnes, by members of his family. Patrick died at the age of 33 in late 1999 from complications of Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), a little known but not uncommon auto-immune disease. (DAISY is an acronym for Diseases Attacking the Immune System.) The care Patrick and his family received from nurses while he was ill inspired this unique means of thanking nurses for making a profound difference in the lives of their patients and patient families.

This is one initiative of The DAISY Foundation to express gratitude to the nursing profession. Additionally, DAISY offers J. Patrick Barnes Grants for Nursing Research and Evidence-Based Practice Projects, The DAISY Faculty Award to honor inspiring faculty members in schools and colleges of nursing, and The DAISY in Training Award for nursing students. More information is available at http://DAISYfoundation.org. An online nomination form is available at https://www.casshealth.org/daisy.

Denison woman admits to embezzlement from credit union

News

October 21st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A Denison woman has admitted to stealing from the credit union where she worked. Fifty-three-year-old Brenda Jensen pleaded guilty in federal court in Sioux City to embezzling nearly one-point-five million dollars over several years. Jensen admitted in her plea agreement that from at least May 2012 to March 2018, she embezzled money from Consumer Credit Union (CCU) in Denison while working there as the head teller. The credit union served Crawford, Carroll, Shelby, Ida, Monona, Sac, and Harrison counties.

Jensen concealed the embezzlement by creating fake deposits into her personal accounts. The credit union’s cash loss caused it to be insolvent and forced merger with SAC Federal Credit Union. Jensen remains free on bond pending a sentencing date. She faces a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison and a one million dollar fine.

AARP says its new dashboard shows ‘horrifying’ data about Iowa nursing homes

News

October 21st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A-A-R-P has unveiled what it calls an online “dashboard” with Covid data from Iowa nursing homes, showing nearly 43 percent do not have a week’s supply of masks and other personal protective equipment for staff. The data is based on Iowa nursing home reports to a federal agency. It shows more than 39 percent of Iowa nursing homes had staffing shortages last month. Anthony Carroll of A-A-R-P Iowa says the data paints a horrifying picture of what’s happening inside Iowa nursing homes. “What’s a more dangerous job in the country than nursing home staff right now?” Carroll asks. “And frankly, an area that we should be getting it right, but our lack of a plan shows how poorly we are getting this.”

A-A-R-P is calling on elected officials to ensure that public funds provided to help nursing homes address the pandemic are being used for testing, P-P-E and staffing. The A-A-R-P dashboard shows that between August 30th and September 20th, more than 700 nursing home staffers tested positive for Covid. “We have to get better,” Carroll says. “This is the first indicator of how far we have to go.” Carroll says without adequate protective gear and an increase in pay, it will continue to be difficult for nursing homes to hire staff in the midst of a public health emergency. “How is it that we’re almost to October and we’re still having staffing shortages? When you think about it, it’s because these are people who are not being paid well at all,” Carroll says. “They don’t have access to sick leave and they may be working between multiple homes, multiple jobs to make ends meet and then unfortunately unknowingly transmitting the virus from nursing homes to nursing homes.”

Iowa CareGivers executive director Di Findley says the median pay for certified nursing assistants who help nursing home residents with daily tasks is less than 14-dollars an hour.  “We’re asking people to put their lives on the line here, and many of them have literally put their lives on the line for $13.80 an hour,” Findley says. “About 10% of them don’t have health care coverage from any source.” Findley says many are struggling with child care costs as well.

The state’s coronavirus website shows there currently are Covid outbreaks at 68 Iowa nursing homes. The state declares an outbreak when at least three nursing home residents test positive for Covid. The website shows more than 17-hundred Iowa nursing home residents currently have Covid. A-A-R-P plans to update ITS dashboard monthly.

Iowa governor stands by use of virus aid for IT project

News

October 21st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Gov. Kim Reynolds says her administration will try to convince federal auditors to allow its plan to spend $21 million in coronavirus relief funds on a long-planned information technology system. Reynolds said that the state believes spending federal virus aid to purchase and implement a new accounting and human resources system for the executive branch is “an allowable expense.” She said that if auditors disagree, the state will change course.

State Auditor Rob Sand concluded Monday that the use of funds for the Workday project was inappropriate. He warned that Iowa will be on the hook to repay the federal government $21 million later if it’s not diverted to an allowable use

 

Update: 2 Cass County employees injured in crash west of Wiota

News

October 21st, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Two Cass County employees were injured during a collision in dense fog this (Wednesday) morning. Iowa State Patrol Trooper Shelby McCreedy reports the crash happened west of Wiota at around 7:48-a.m. on Highway 83 (Whitepole Road) near 656th.

(McCreedy said 38-year-old Lora Kanning and 61-year-old Mitch Holmes, both of Anita, were traveling westbound. Kanning was driving a 2011 GMC Acadia. Holmes was driving a 2007 Jeep Wrangler. When Holmes stopped for a vehicle that was turning south off onto a gravel road, Kanning was unable to stop in time. Her vehicle struck the Jeep from behind, causing the Jeep to enter the north ditch where it rolled multiple times.)

Kanning and Holmes suffered non-life threatening injuries and were transported to Cass County Memorial Hospital by Cass County EMS and Anita Rescue. Trooper McCreedy said Kanning told investigators she could not see Holmes’ vehicle due to the fog, but the accident remained under investigation. Kanning was cited for Failure to Stop in Assured Clear Distance and Holmes was cited for Failure to Wear a Seat Belt.

Kanning is the Naturalist for Cass County Conservation, while Holmes is the Cass County Veterans Affairs Director. No County vehicles were involved in the accident.