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Head of IGHSAU says softball season has exceeded expectations

Sports

July 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union Executive Director Jean Berger says the softball season has exceeded her expectations. The Union decided in May to offer an abbreviated season in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic and the state softball tournament begins Monday in Fort Dodge.

Berger says around a dozen teams had their seasons cut short due to a positive test.

Berger says fans at the state tournament will experience many of the same protocols as the regular season.

Face coverings are encouraged but not mandatory.

Berger says fans and players have done a good job of handling the changes this season.

Iowa cyclists hold Bike Week of Action to focus on climate, biking infrastructure

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – With the statewide bike ride RAGBRAI cancelled by the pandemic this week, Iowa cycling enthusiasts are meeting online instead as part of the Bike for Climate Week of Action. Julie Johnson, an organizer for Environment Iowa, says it’s an effort to support biking and other forms of clean transportation. “Throughout the week, participants will take grassroots actions such as making phone calls and signing petitions,” Johnson says, “to show their elected officials the importance of biking infrastructure for Iowans.”

That includes marked bike lanes on roadways and dedicated bike trails. Virtual gatherings are planned this week to discuss topics like the benefits of biking infrastructure, tips for new and intermediate bikers, and the state of biking legislation in Iowa. “The keynote event of the Bike Week of Action will be a biking and clean transportation conversation tomorrow,” Johnson says. “The event will feature a lot of different speakers, such as the director of the U.S. Public Interest Research Group’s ‘Transform and Transportation’ campaign, and also Ryan Baker, who owns Iowa City’s World of Bikes.”

That conversation is scheduled for this (Thursday) evening, at 6. She says the state’s cars and trucks are responsible for more than a quarter of Iowa’s global warming pollution, so it’s clear our transportation system is due for a zero-carbon upgrade. “We want Iowans to be able to avoid using their car when they could be biking instead,” Johnson says. “Bike more, drive less, is basically the idea. Get out and enjoy nature and also protect the planet while you’re doing it.”

Mark Wyatt, executive director of the Iowa Bicycle Coalition, says “The pandemic has shown a lot of people want to ride bicycles and they want safe spaces to ride them.” Learn more at the group’s Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/events/1375397082664931/

Sports brief: 7/23/20

Sports

July 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City Royals outfielder Hunter Dozier has tested positive for COVID-19 and was placed on the injured list before the club played its final exhibition game against the Cardinals in St. Louis on Wednesday. The 28-year-old Dozier is coming off a breakthrough season in which he hit 26 homers with 84 RBIs and tying for the American League lead in triples. He is expected to play a big role for the Royals during their abbreviated 60-game season, which begins against the Indians on Friday night in Cleveland.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Clint Bowyer would usually be swamped by family and friends during the first of two trips to his home track this season. Instead, the Cup Series star will be running in front of mostly empty seats again at Kansas Speedway. The series has had limited fans for select races since returning fro the coronavirus pandemic, but hot spots in Kansas and neighboring Missouri forced officials to pull the plug on fans earlier this month. That doesn’t take the pressure off Bowyer, though. He’s still looking to secure a playoff spot for this season and a ride for next.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mookie Betts and the Los Angeles Dodgers have struck baseball’s first big-money deal since the coronavirus pandemic decimated the sport’s economics. The 12-year, $365 million contract runs through 2032 and removes the top offensive player from next off-season’s free-agent class. The deal is baseball’s second-largest in total dollars behind the $426.5 million, 12-year contract for Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout covering 2019-30.

UNDATED (AP) — The NFL Players Association says 95 players are known to have tested positive for the coronavirus. That number is up from 72 in the union’s last report on July 10. The NFLPA and the NFL reached agreement Monday on COVID-19 testing as rookies begin reporting to training camps. Most veterans come in next week, though some players rehabbing injuries could report this week.

Iowa early News Headlines: Thursday, July 23rd 2020

News

July 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:35 a.m. CDT

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — One of the first coronavirus outbreaks at an Iowa meatpacking plant was more severe than previously known, with over twice as many workers becoming infected than the Iowa Department of Public Health publicly confirmed. The department announced at a May 5 news conference that 221 employees at the Tyson Foods pork processing plant in Columbus Junction had tested positive for COVID-19. But records show that days earlier, Tyson officials told workplace safety regulators that 522 plant employees had tested positive to their knowledge. A dozen of the plant’s roughly 1,300 workers were believed to have been hospitalized by then, and two died after contracting the virus.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An aide to Gov. Kim Reynolds says concerns with the quality and safety of coronavirus testing at a busy clinic in Dubuque prompted the state to sharply reduce its operations this week. Reynolds spokesman Pat Garrett says the state will send 2,000 additional kits to Dubuque County to make additional testing available to residents at other area clinics to fill the gap. Dubuque announced Monday that the governor’s office had ordered that testing at the Epic Health and Wellness Clinic be open only from 6 a.m. to 7 a.m. Tuesday through Thursday and take no more than 100 samples per day. The site had been processing up to 550 samples per day.

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — The FBI has raised to $10,000 the reward for information related to the disappearance of a 10-year-old Iowa girl who went missing earlier this month. Kristi Johnson, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s office in Omaha, says that agents from around the country were searching for 10-year-old Breasia Terrell of Davenport. She says the “number one goal” is to find the person who is responsible and bring that person to justice. Terrell was reported missing July 10, after going to spend the previous night at an apartment with her half-brother and his father, 47-year-old Henry Dinkins.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — State health reports show Iowa has surpassed 800 COVID-19 deaths as confirmed cases continue to climb. The state health department’s virus tracking site showed that as of 10 a.m. Wednesday, there had been 10 more deaths reported in the previous 24 hours. That brought the state’s total deaths to 808 since the beginning of the outbreak. The site also shows another 374 cases confirmed from Tuesday to Wednesday, bringing the state’s total to 39,793. As of Wednesday morning, 224 people were hospitalized for the virus — higher than what had been seen in recent weeks, but still far lower than the state’s peak of 417 on May 6.

Details on Atlantic CSD Return-to-Learn plan to be released Thursday

News

July 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic Community School District’s nearly 65-page Return-to-Learn plan will be released tomorrow to parents and district staff via e-mail, and to the general public on the district’s website. The Atlantic School Board discussed the plan for well over an hour Wednesday night during their Work Session. (You can see and listen to the entire meeting on the KJAN Video Network page at kjan.com. Just click on the KJANTV logo and then the “On Demand” tab)

Superintendent Steve Barber said it is still the District’s plan to hold school in-person, beginning August 24th, just like a normal school year. But there will be adjustments both during the school year and on an as-needed basis for some students with special needs. Barber says the document “reflects the work that we’ve done from the District Leadership Teams, Sub-Committees in critical areas, some CDC (Centers for Disease Control), some IDPH (Iowa Dept. of Public Health) and the Governor’s Proclamation  guidelines that are followed in regards to that.”

Mr. Barber says it also reflects “remote learning, and provides some schedules for that.” The document provides guidance as well, with regard to safety, Iowa Academic Standards, tools being used for remote learning. Barber says “We are attempting to create social distancing as one of our major mitigation strategies. We have many other mitigation strategies that are going to be helpful for the health and safety of people.”

For example, he says: they will removes soft surfaces; doors will be kept open; the district has personal protective equipment (PPE) in inventory; Handwashing will be required; masks are available to staff and students who request them; gloves are also available; (disinfecting) foggers, and more. In fact, the district has on-hand: 1,000 cloth masks; 100 face shields; N-95 masks for school nurses, gloves and gowns.

Social distancing in the classrooms will be accomplished by using the square footage in the most accommodating means possible to spread kids out, but Barber asked rhetorically, “Will it look like the traditional start to the school year,” No was the answer. He says “Where you have 25 kids to one classroom? No. It may look a little bit different, but they will try to maintain a six-foot separation as a priority, and teachers “Will try to figure out innovative ways to serve them [the students], if they are in two different locations.”

The District has a 1:1 (One-to-One) rollout for laptop computers so every student has access to a computer. “Currently,” Barber says, “Our staff is being trained in Google Classroom, Zoom and SeeSaw, IXL and a few other tools, that not only are going to be helpful if you’re being educated in remote learning, but it’s also going to be helpful in the regular classroom.”

Barber says with new guidelines possible from the CDC or the legislature, the RTL plan is subject to change. For example, he says, the CDC has recommended persons attending school be fever-free for 24 hours instead of 72. That was adjusted in the district’s plan as well. Barber says there will be changes throughout the process, but that “Hopefully we’re successful in our on-site [learning] so we can remain doing that.”

In other business, the Atlantic School Board discussed various board policies, including those affected by public health regulations, excused student absences, appropriate use of online learning, and district operation during public emergencies.

2 more COVID-19 cases confirmed in Mills County

News

July 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with Mills County Public Health, Wednesday, said two additional cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in the County. The two new cases are persons ranging in age from 18-to-40, who contracted the virus through community spread.

As of Wednesday, there are 61 total confirmed positive cases of COVID-19 in Mills County, with 34 persons having recovered, and 2,361 residents tested, for a positivity rate of 2.6%. Mills County Public Health encourages everyone to wear a cloth face cover when you are in public.

Madison County Homicide victim identified

News

July 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Madison County Sheriff’s Office, Wednesday evening, released the identity a man who was found laying in the roadway in rural Madison County Tuesday afternoon. He was identified as 39-year old Jonathan Michael Hoffman, of Des Moines. Authorities say Hoffman died from gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at the scene.

Jonathan Michael Hoffman

The Iowa DCI is assisting the Madison County Sheriff’s Office in an investigation into Hoffman’s death. Anyone who has information or was on the Macksburg Rd between 2pm and 3:30pm on Tuesday July 21, 2020 and saw something, they are asked to contact the Madison County Sheriff’s Office at 515-462-3575 (extension 8).

Iowa cites quality concerns for cuts at Dubuque testing site

News

July 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An aide to Gov. Kim Reynolds says concerns with the quality and safety of coronavirus testing at a busy clinic in Dubuque prompted the state to sharply reduce its operations this week. Reynolds spokesman Pat Garrett says the state will send 2,000 additional kits to Dubuque County to make additional testing available to residents at other area clinics to fill the gap.

Dubuque announced Monday that the governor’s office had ordered that testing at the Epic Health and Wellness Clinic be open only from 6 a.m. to 7 a.m. Tuesday through Thursday and take no more than 100 samples per day. The site had been processing up to 550 samples per day.

USDA study shows gulf between cattle, processed beef prices

Ag/Outdoor, News

July 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A study released by the U.S. Agriculture Department into the disparity between cattle prices paid to ranchers and the higher prices earned by meat processors offers more details about the factors that have led to the situation. The 20-page analysis by the USDA released Wednesday explains how after a 2019 fire at a Tyson Foods beef plant in Holcomb, Kansas, and this year’s temporary closure of slaughterhouses amid the coronavirus pandemic, ranchers saw cattle prices drop while concerns about meat scarcity caused prices at grocery stores to rise.

Some members of Congress have called for an investigation into possible violations of the Packers and Stockyard Act, which is designed to protect ranchers and consumers.

4 more cases of COVID-19 confirmed in Montgomery County

News

July 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Montgomery County Public Health and Emergency Management officials said Wednesday (7/22), that four additional cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Montgomery County residents. The latest cases bring the County’s total to 25. The four most recent cases contracted the virus through community spread and close contact with a previously reported, positive case.

One case is a person 18-to 40-years of age, the others are persons 61-to 80, all of whom are isolating at home. So far, 1,032 persons have been tested for COVID-19 in Montgomery County.