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IA DCI assisting with Appanoose County Officer-Involved Shooting

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Criminal Investigation (DCI) is assisting authorities in southeast Iowa’s Appanoose County, following an Officer-Involved shooting. Authorities say late Thursday evening, a law enforcement pursuit that began in Marion County, entered Monroe County and then into Appanoose County. During the pursuit in Appanoose County, an Appanoose County Deputy Sheriff discharged his service weapons at the suspect vehicle.

The suspect was taken into custody. Neither the suspect nor the Deputy were injured during the incident. No names were released early this (Friday) afternoon, and additional details will be made available as the investigation continues.

Iowa DOT looking for partners in standing corn program

Ag/Outdoor

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

With the derecho, drought, and other negative impacts on Iowa farming in 2020, many farmers will have standing corn left in their fields. The Iowa Department of Transportation is looking to partner with farmers who have fields along state or U.S. highways for our Standing Corn Snow Fence Program.

Over the last 20+ years, the program has helped improve wintertime mobility and highway safety using partnerships with dozens of farmers statewide. The program used corn that can be left in fields during the winter to serve as snow fences that slow down or stop snow from blowing and drifting across the road. More recently, this cooperative effort has included using round hay bales as snow fences, as well.

In exchange for leaving the corn in the field or moving round bales into place, we are contracting with farmers to pay $5.50 per bushel for leaving six to 24 rows standing. The typical payment amount is $2 above the statewide average corn price on Aug. 1. For round bales, we pay landowners $1 per linear foot. The landowner agrees to leave the bales intact in the field throughout the winter.

Craig Bargfrede, the Iowa DOT’s winter operations administrator, said, “Research from the Strategic Highway Safety Program shows that it costs 100 times more to plow snow than to trap it with a fence, so the return on investment with these partnerships is significant.” While the financial benefits are good, the program also provides a connection between our area garage staff and local landowners. Our field forces and these local landowners know their areas well. They share ideas and collaborate on road locations where standing corn fences or round bales would be the most beneficial to help reduce the amount of blowing and drifting snow on Iowa’s roadways.

IMG_5476While we try to work with farmers in advance of planting to come to an agreement, we’re also willing to look at a contract prior to harvest. Bargfrede said, “This year especially we’re aware that there may be some corn that is left in the field, we’d like to partner with those farmers to utilize the corn as snow fence and reimburse them for that.”

In addition to the financial benefits to farmers, leaving standing corn in the fields can:

  • Keep roads open to improve accessibility between farmsteads, towns, and services.
  • Provide wildlife habitat.
  • Increase soil moisture in the end rows.
  • Help control soil erosion.

Once the corn has served its purpose all winter, the farmer can remove the corn how they see fit. While that may cause a little extra work in the spring, the farmers who participate see the benefits of a clearer, safer roadway all winter long.

In addition to standing corn or round bales, we work with farmers to install permanent and temporary snow fence or living snow fence in the form of trees, bushes, or other plants in some areas.

If you live in an area that you think might benefit from the standing corn or round bale program, please contact your local maintenance garage. Locations and contact information is available online at https://iowadot.gov/districts/district-contacts.

Virtual course helps Iowans to identify mental health issues in others

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

With the pandemic, the civil unrest, the drought, and then the derecho, some Iowans have been stressed for months. The Iowa State University Extension is offering a program starting next week that’s designed to help us to help each other cope. David Brown, a behavioral health specialist with the I-S-U Extension, explains the goals of the Mental Health First Aid program. “The whole purpose of the program is to teach individuals a little bit more about mental health and signs and symptoms of when someone may be developing a mental health issue,” Brown says. “It teaches you a five-step action plan to help individuals intervene and make sure the person is safe, and actually gets them to the appropriate professional support.”

It’s a comprehensive, four-hour training session which aims to help participants identify, understand and respond to signs of mental illnesses and substance use disorders. “What we’re trying to do is build a community of people that can take care of each other and make sure we get the right help when the need is needed,” Brown says. “There’s a lot of stress out there right now and we’re certainly hoping that more individuals are willing to step up and learn more about mental health and how to help someone else.”

The Mental Health First Aid training will be offered over the next several weeks via Zoom. The first edition will be held next Thursday (September 24th) and again on October 1st and 15th, November 5th and 19th, and finally on December 10th. “We’ve been offering this program face-to-face since 2018, so we’ve been offering it for a while,” he says, “but the National Council on Behavioral Health has decided to turn this into a virtual program due to the COVID situation.”

The cost is $35. There is a two-hour self-study course which needs to be completed prior to taking the Zoom course. Register at: https://www.extension.iastate.edu/humansciences/MHFA

Trucking industry still looking for more drivers

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – This is “National Truck Driver Appreciation Week” as those who sit behind the wheel of big rigs and small are recognized. The director of the Des Moines Area Community College (DMACC) Transportation Institute, Dave Pfiffner, says the industry got a lot of attention early on in the pandemic when stores shelves emptied out of toilet paper. “There were shortages of a lot of different things, meats, if you look at foodstuffs and consumable supplies — those seemed to be the areas where there were issues,” Pfiffner says. He says there’s been a shortage of drivers and things are going to get worse. “If you look at the average age of a truck driver out there now — it’s in the mid-50s — so it’s a very grey fleet. A lot of folks looking to retire over the next five to ten years,” according to Pfiffner. “And there’s not as many people coming in on the other end to make up for those loses.”

Pfiffner says those looking to get into the industry can pretty much determine what they want to do. And trucking isn’t all about driving a big rig across the country. “There are jobs available in really every segment of the industry right now,” he says. “Some people think of truck just as you’re over the road, you’re away from home all the time. That’s not actually the case There’s a huge number of jobs out there that are considered local jobs. Everything from delivery to cement mixers to garbage pick up.”

He says you can be trained and ready to go in a couple of months. “In normal times it’s a six-week program, 240 contact hours, so pretty much full-time,” Pfiffner says. “Since the pandemic has hit, we’ve move the classroom portion of our training, which used to be conducted on site, to kind of an instructor-led online format. So, in other words the class meets with the instructor on a daily basis in something similar to a zoom meeting.”

Pfiffner says the average starting salary for DMACC Transportation Institute graduates is 40 to 50-thousand dollars — with the ability to make 60-thousand annually within two years.

Work Release escape from Cedar Rapids area

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR RAPIDS – The Iowa Department of Corrections reports 53-year old James William George Jr., who was convicted of Robbery 2nd Degree and other crimes in Linn County, failed to report back to the Larry A Nelson Residential Center as required Thursday night.

James W. George, Jr.
(IA DOC photo)

George is a 5-foot 9-inches tall black male, who weighs 207 pounds. He was admitted to the work release facility on March 26, 2020.

Persons with information on George’s whereabouts should contact local police.

State unemployment rate falls to six percent

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The state unemployment rate dropped again in August. The rate went from six-point-eight percent in July down to six percent in August and the number of unemployed is now estimated is 91-thousand-500 lower than the Covid-19 peak in April. The state unemployment rate one year ago was more than half of what it is now at two-point-eight percent. A statement from Iowa Workforce Development says August saw the fourth consecutive monthly increase in jobs since April — but the increase is substantially lower than the average number of jobs added over the previous three months.

The statement says slower hiring could be a symptom of colder weather setting in and businesses believing that demand will not return to pre-pandemic levels as quickly as hoped.

Baseball fans, dinner in the Field of Dreams outfield is now an option

Sports

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – There’s limited outdoor seating available for dining in the outfield featured in the iconic 1989 movie about baseball that was filmed near Dyersville.

That’s site manager Roman Weinberg. “Dinner on the Diamond” is being offered this Friday through Sunday as well as the last weekend in September and two weekends in October. There will be three separate seatings for diners each evening, at 5 p.m., 6:30 and 8 p.m.

The menu is “Iowa inspired” according to Weinberg and it features one reimagined ballpark staple.

Reservations are required. An area near the Field of Dreams site had been tapped as the location of a Major League Baseball game this summer, but those plans were pushed back until 2021 due to the pandemic.

Teacher on leave for ‘pretend you are a slave’ assignment

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — A high school teacher in Iowa has been placed on leave for assigning students to “pretend you are a black slave.” The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports that the assignment for an online freshman class at Liberty High School in Iowa City asked students to write four sentences about what they would do if they were a slave who was freed.

The district says the teacher, whose name was not released, was placed on administrative leave and the assignment was removed. The district called the assignment “inappropriate.”

 

Page County Sheriff’s report (9/18/20)

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Page County Sheriff’s Office reports two recent arrests. On Sept. 13th, 46-year old Joe Edward Harris, of Essex, was arrested for Disorderly Conduct. Harris’s arrest stems from an incident where Harris showed up at a residence about two-miles east of Shenandoah at around 11:20-p.m.

Joe Edward Harris

He allegedly began yelling and banging on the door, creating a loud disturbance, and waking the residents with no other purpose than to annoy them. Harris was transported to the Page County Jail where he was held without bond until seen by a magistrate.

And 48-year old Timothy Clayton McCollum, of Coin, was arrested at the Page County Sheriff’s Office on a Page County Warrant for Possession of a controlled substance/3rd or subsequent offense, and Failure to appear for motion to suppress hearing. McCollum posted a $25,000 bond prior to being booked into jail.

Stolen Vehicle Recovery Results in Multiple Charges and Arrest in Page County

News

September 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Clarinda Police Chief Keith Brothers reports a woman from Missouri was arrested Thursday following an investigation into a stolen vehicle. Brothers says 23-year old Alexandria Gabrielle Miller, of St. Joseph Missouri, was arrested at around 3:15-p.m., for possession of a stolen vehicle, possession of a controlled substance (believed to be methamphetamine), possession of burglary tools and resisting arrest.

Miller was taken into custody after she was observed driving a 1998 Dodge Ram 1500 pickup in the 1100 block of South 16th St. The truck had been reported as stolen earlier in the week. At the time of her arrest, Miller was in possession of a small amount of methamphetamine and briefly struggled with officers during the arrest. Miller was also in possession of tools that are believed to have been used in a recent burglary.

The woman was being held in the Page County Jail on $9,300 bail pending initial appearance before the court. The Clarinda Police Department was assisted by the Page County Sheriff’s Department with the arrest of Miller. All reports will be forwarded to the office of Page County Attorney Carl Sonksen for review and the filing of formal charges in Page County District Court.