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Creston woman arrested on an assault charge

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Union County Sheriff’s Office reports 28-year old Chelsey Kile, of Creston, was arrested at around 2:15-a.m. today (Thursday), for domestic assault. Kile was being held for Union County in the Adams County Jail without bond, until seen by a Magistrate.

U.S. 71 south of Atlantic to remain closed until mid-November for bridge replacement work

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

CRESTON, Iowa – June 7, 2018 – A bridge replacement project on the U.S. 71 bridge over Lone Tree Creek, one-tenth of a mile south of Cass County Road G-35, and 3.1 miles south of Atlantic, may take longer to complete than planned, according to the Iowa Department of Transportation’s Creston construction office. As crews began removing the roadway to construct the bridge extension they discovered the slide that had damaged the roadway had impacted the existing piling at the south abutment.

To correct the piling, crews will need to remove the south deck of the bridge and beams to remove the bent piling before they construct the new pier. The new south abutment has been completed. The additional work will likely push the opening back to mid-November 2018.

The Iowa DOT and our contracting partner AM Cohron are committed to making the necessary repairs and getting the roadway opened as quickly as possible. During the closure, traffic will be detoured around the work zone using Iowa 83, Iowa 92, and Iowa 148.

Missouri accident results in injuries to a Stanton man

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A single-vehicle accident early this (Thursday) morning in northwest Missouri, resulted in a southwest Iowa man being transported to a hospital in Maryville, MO. The Missouri State Patrol reports 23-year old Spencer Zarek, of Stanton, was traveling north on Highway 71 at around 12:15-a.m., when his 2007 Chevy Malibu left the road to the east, about three-miles south of Maryville. The car impacted an embankment and went airborne and overturned before coming to rest on its wheels. Zarek was taken by a private vehicle to SSM Health St. Francis Hospital in Maryville for treatment of what were said to be minor injuries. The car was totaled in the crash.

The Missouri State Patrol was assisted by the Nodaway County Sheriff’s Office and Maryville Public Safety.

Run for the Fallen to pass through Lewis; Overnight in Atlantic

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Runners participating in the largest tribute to our nation’s fallen military heroes and their families, will be making their way through Lewis tomorrow (Friday). Jody Ranisate), Run Captain for Iowa Run for the Fallen and Director of Iowas Honor and Remember Chapter, says Iowa is part of a 19-State, five-month, 6,100-mile journey to honor over 20,000 fallen heroes every mile. In Lewis, there’ll be a free-will donation dinner beginning 6-p.m. Friday at the Lewis Fire Station, with the ceremony at 7-p.m. The event is open to the public. The public is also invited to line the streets as the runners enter Lewis. Ranisate says once the dinner and ceremony is complete, they will hand out “Honor and Remember” flags to a few Gold Star families.

They include a widow, and the daughter of a fallen hero. There is also a Gold Star family coming in whose son died in action and who will be re-presented with a flag. The run begins in Omaha 7-a.m. Friday. After they stop in Lewis, the group will stay overnight in Atlantic. She says they are looking for financial donations to help with lodging and food, volunteers to stand stand at the Hero markers, and as transportation hosts.

For more information, or to volunteer for the event, call Jody Ranisate at 701-520-5998 or e-mail ranisatejody@gmail.com. You can also track the runners and their journey at https://www.runforthefallen.org

Ferry service reconnects Iowa, Illinois amid bridge closure

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

SABULA, Iowa (AP) — Officials plan to offer ferry service across the Mississippi River while crews work to replace a small bridge that has forced an extended detour for travelers between Iowa and Illinois. Bob Younie is the maintenance director for the Iowa Department of Transportation. He says ferry services between Sabula, Iowa and Savanna, Illinois will run for about 12 hours a day beginning Tuesday. It could cost the department about $1.2 million.

Younie says a bus service will also be provided twice daily during peak hours beginning next week. The Transportation Department may also install a pontoon-type bridge. An 85-year-old bridge north of Sabula was declared unsafe and closed in February. The Transportation Department has accelerated a project to replace the bridge, which officials expect to be completed in September.

Fake money so unreal court overturns man’s conviction

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa Appeals Court has overturned a man’s conviction because the fake money he tried to use was too unreal to believe. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reports that 48-year-old James Scott, of Waterloo, offered a $100 bill marked “For Motion Picture Use Only” and “This note is not legal” in April 2016 when he tried to buy a cellphone in Waterloo. A store clerk rejected it, and Scott eventually was convicted of forgery. Scott argued in his appeal that there wasn’t enough evidence to convict him.

The appellate court Wednesday cited Iowa court rulings from 1859 and 1869 that say that if a document isn’t capable of deceiving, its use doesn’t constitute forgery. Consequently, the court said, “There is insufficient evidence to support Scott’s conviction.”

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 6/7/2018

News, Podcasts

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

More area and State news from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.

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Not a record: clarification on Iowa primary election turnout

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

It turns out, the turnout at the polls on Tuesday did NOT set a record for a June primary election. Almost 280,000 Iowans voted on Tuesday. Secretary of State Paul Pate says more than 300,000 voters took part in primary elections in 2002 and 2010. Some media reports on Wednesday stated THIS YEAR’s election was a record-breaker. Not so. “I was hoping to make it the big one, but going back and looking at the archives, it looks like it’s in the top three,” Pate told Radio Iowa.

Participation in the DEMOCRATIC primary — which featured contested races for governor and the state’s three congressional seats — DID set a record for THAT party. “The count I last saw puts Democrats at a pretty significant number – I think it was 176,529,” Pate said.  Just over 13-percent of Iowa’s roughly two-million registered voters cast a ballot in Tuesday’s primary election. Provisional ballots are still being counted and will affect the overall numbers. They could also impact the Republican nomination for Iowa Ag Secretary. For now, it appears Mike Naig (rhymes with ‘egg’) finished just short of the 35-percent support he needed to earn the nomination. According to Pate, Naig could still get there. “We can’t answer that until we’ve gotten all of the provisionals counted and the counties have the chance to do their preliminary canvassing,” Pate said. “So, election night isn’t over – still some totaling going on.”

If Naig DOES end up below that 35-percent threshold, delegates at the Republican Party’s state convention will choose between Naig and four other candidates to decide who will appear on the November ballot.

(Radio Iowa)

Record number of Iowa women on November ballot

News

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Now that party primaries are settled in Iowa, 84 female candidates will be running on this November’s ballot — and that’s a record. It’s a 29 percent increase in women candidates from just two years ago. The two women who won Iowa congressional races Tuesday also won by large margins. Dianne Bystrom, an Iowa State University professor who leads I-S-U’s Center for Women and Politics, has been watching this year’s primary races.  “What we’re seeing across the country with women running is that they’re not only winning, but they’re winning by these impressive margins in races where there’s two or three other candidates,” Bystrom said.

Abby Finkenauer of Dubuque won the Democratic Party’s nomination in the first congressional district with two-thirds of the total vote in a four-way race. Cindy Axne of Des Moines was running against two male competitors — and won with 58 percent of the vote. “Really impressed with their margins of victory,” Bystrom says. “I was up until after one to see what was going on for the secretary of state’s office on the Democratic side and it was a little closer there than I thought it might be, but — certainly — great wins for women.”

Democratic Primary voters nominated Deidre DeJear to run against incumbent Republican Secretary of State Paul Pate in November. If DeJear is elected, she would be the first African American to serve in statewide office. Bystrom says research is showing 2018 voters are more inclined to vote for a female candidate.”They see a woman as more honest, more collaborative, more of a change agent and I think certainly women have been using that to their advantage in a number of these primaries,” Bystrom says. “…It’s not only happening just in Iowa, it’s happening in other states as well…Women are winning by these large margins or they’re winning when they weren’t expected to win.”

Iowa’s political parties can fill open slots on the ballot before the August deadline for designating General Election candidates — so there may be more than 84 female candidates on Iowa’s fall ballot.

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 6/7/2018

News, Podcasts

June 7th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

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