United Group Insurance

Cass Supervisors re-appoint Duggan to VA Commission

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Cass County Board of Supervisors  met at 9-a.m. Tuesday. During their in-person and electronic session, the Board discussed the position on the Cass County veteran affairs commission which ends June 30th. Following discussion, the Board voted unanimously to re-appoint Terry Duggan of Griswold to the Cass County Commission of Veteran Affairs for 3-year term beginning July 1, 2020.

The board also discussed the issue of ‘abandoned’ vehicles parked along Highway 92, just north of Massena.  Cass County Auditor/Board Secretary Dale Sunderman says Supervisor Frank Waters reported that it appears five of the vehicles are parked in State right of way, and three, one with license plate, are parked on private property.  Since the DOT is working on the issue and has notified the persons believed to own the vehicles that are in the State right of way, the board decided it would postpone going forward until the vehicles’ owners respond to the DOT’s request.

Walnut Man Charged with Insurance Fraud and Perjury

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Iowa Insurance Division’s Fraud Bureau said Tuesday, 36-year old Trent Matthew Suhr, of Walnut, was arrested on two, Class-D Felony charges stemming from an investigation that began in March, 2020. Stuhr faces one count of Insurance Fraud – Presenting False Information, and one count of Perjury.

According to criminal complaints filed by the Insurance Fraud Bureau, Suhr made false statements in connection with a workers compensation insurance claim and during sworn testimony. On June 23, 2020, Suhr was arrested by the Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office after an arrest warrant was issued by the Pottawattamie County District Court.

Suhr was booked into the Pottawattamie County Jail and later released on bond. His trial will be set at a future date.

No additional information will be provided at this time. Iowans with information about insurance fraud are encouraged to contact the Iowa Insurance Division’s Fraud Bureau at 515-242-5304.

Virus cases spike among young adults in Iowa college towns

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Within weeks of Gov. Kim Reynolds agreeing to allow bars and restaurants to open to customers, Iowa’s two major college towns are seeing spikes in coronavirus cases among young adults. The trend is raising concerns among local health officials and prompting some businesses to again close their doors.

Business owners in Iowa have welcomed the governor’s move to end most restrictions that had been imposed over the spring to slow the spread of the coronavirus, but some in Ames and Iowa City now are unsure what to do as cases rise. The cities are home to Iowa State University and the University of Iowa, the state’s largest colleges.

KENZLY RENEE RAILSBACK, 2, of Guthrie Center (6-27-2020)

Obituaries

June 23rd, 2020 by Jim Field

KENZLY RENEE RAILSBACK, 2, of Guthrie Center died March 25, 2020 at the Guthrie County Hospital in Guthrie Center.  Celebration of Life service for KENZLY RENEE RAILSBACK will be held on Saturday, June 27th at 10:00 am at the First United Methodist Church in Guthrie Center.  Twigg Funeral Home in Guthrie Center has the arrangements.

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KENZLY RENEE RAILSBACK is survived by:

Parents:  Schyler & Candace Railsback.

Brothers:  Lance, Carter & James.

Grandparents:  Jeff & Frankie Railsback of Guthrie Center, Randy Heinrichs of Exira & Crystal Conroy of Des Moines.

Great-Grandparents:  Larry & Mary Railsback of Guthrie Center, Kathy & Larry Albright of Guthrie Center, Ervin & LaDonna Heinrichs of Exira & Dixie Buchanan of Nebraska.

Also many aunts, uncles, cousins and other relatives.

State health dep’t gets federal grant to boost colorectal cancer screenings

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Iowa Department of Public Health has landed a five-year, four-point-four million dollar grant from the C-D-C to boost colorectal cancer screenings. Jeanna Jones, the agency’s screening promotions coordinator, says too few Iowans are being screened for colon cancer, which is often preventable by getting screened.

“Our screening rates are in the low 70s, so maybe around 71 or 72%,” Jones says. “We actually had the goal of getting Iowa’s screening rates up to about 80% by the year 2018 and we weren’t able to meet that goal.” With the grant, the state health department aims to increase colorectal cancer screenings at ten of Iowa’s federally qualified health centers to 60% by 2025. Those ten centers — in rural and urban areas of the state — all have screening rates below 60%.

“Federally qualified health centers tend to have lower colorectal cancer screening rates just because the population is more uninsured, underinsured,” Jones says. “We’re just trying to work with those health centers so that we can help provide any barrier assistance, transportation, help to the patients to get them screened.” She says seven out of 10 people diagnosed with colorectal cancer had no signs or symptoms, but if detected early, it can be 90% treatable.

“People don’t realize that colorectal cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in Iowa, however it’s one of the few cancers that you can actually prevent by getting screened,” Jones says. “A lot of people just think that they have to do a colonoscopy in order to get screened but we really try to promote that there are multiple screening options.”

The ten centers are: All Care Health Center in Council Bluffs; Community Health Care, based in Davenport; Community Health Center of Fort Dodge; Community Health Centers of Southern Iowa; Community Health Centers of Southeastern Iowa; Crescent Community Health Center; Eastern Iowa Health Center; Primary Health Care in Ames; Promise Community Health Center in Sioux Center; and River Hills Community Health Center, based in Ottumwa.

(On the web at https://idph.iowa.gov/igs/public)

Sweet corn expected after Fourth July

Ag/Outdoor, News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A small stretch of cold weather is going to keep sweet corn from being available by the Fourth of July this year for one grower who often has the first corn on the market. Mike Penick grows corn near Carlisle and has this assessment of how the crop is doing…”Well, that’s an open-ended question there,” he laughs, “some if looks excellent. Some of it because of the yearly growing conditions — the corn looks okay — we are just kind of thin on population. We just don’t have as much out there as we would like.”

Penick says his first sweet corn will likely be ready the week after the holiday. “Somewhere between the 8th, tenth, twelfth of July, somewhere right in the. It’s kind of open to how the heat comes along,” Penick says. He says the Fourth of July delivery date is what they hope for, but don’t get every year. “I’ve got about 20 years of records and about 50 percent of the time we get it ready by the Fourth of July,” Penick says. He says everything was going good for earlier harvest until one setback.

“The cold we had in late April and May. It just sit there and done nothing for the longest period of time,” according to Penick. Penick says the growing conditions had been pretty good since that slowdown. “We’re actually sitting in a pretty garden spot for rainfall and so we haven’t gotten the big rains either. So it’s growing extremely fast right now, but it just got cut back so much from the early cold,” he says. Penick was planting another round of corn when he talked with Radio Iowa about the season. He tries to stagger planting to keep corn available throughout the season.

“We try to sell for about 60 days — so this corn I’m planting right now will come roughly about Labor Day or such a matter,” Penick explains. Penick says his other vegetables have been doing well too — including tomatoes. “I waited on the tomatoes until after the frost that came there in May and they took right off and have tomatoes…I have no greenhouse vegetables, everything is outside. They’re progressing pretty good,” Penick says.

Wet conditions delayed the sweet corn last year and the first corn was on the market at about the same time Penick predicts for this year.

Charges brought against Fort Dodge Correctional Facility inmate

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

FORT DODGE- The Iowa Dept. of Corrections reports that on June 14th, 59-year old Thomas Andrew Daleske, an inmate at the Fort Dodge Correctional Facility (FDCF) was found deceased in his cell at approximately 5:15-p.m.  Daleske was serving a 45-year sentence for multiple charges related to Sexual Abuse and Lascivious Acts with a Child from Warren County and had been incarcerated since October 31, 2000.

The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation assisted the FDCF and Webster County Medical Examiner with the death investigation and determined that another inmate, 44-year old Eric Hall, had been inside Daleske’s cell shortly before the body was discovered.  Hall was interviewed and admitted to killing Daleske.  The Iowa State Medical Examiner’s Office conducted an autopsy and determined the cause of Daleske’s death to be strangulation with blunt force injuries to the head and ruled the death a homicide.

On Tuesday, June 23rd (Today), Eric Hall was charged with 1st Degree Murder in Webster County. He remains in custody at the Fort Dodge Correctional Facility.

Groups file lawsuit seeking to block abortion waiting period

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Two organizations filed a lawsuit that seeks to stop a 24-hour waiting period for abortions that was approved by Iowa lawmakers in the closing hours of the legislative session. Planned Parenthood of the Heartland and a doctor represented by Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa filed the suit Tuesday in state court. The suit seeks to block the measure and to impose a temporary injunction to stop it from taking effect July 1.

The groups filing the suit expect the bill to be signed into law by Gov. Kim Reynolds, who is an outspoken opponent of abortion rights. The waiting period was approved on the last day of a shortened legislative session.

Wastewater released in Council Bluffs

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS—Officials with the Iowa Dept. of Natural Resources reports the city of Council Bluffs requested permission to release untreated wastewater to the Missouri River after discovering problems with a sewer line this (Tuesday) morning.

The DNR granted approval to discharge 125,000 to 200,000 gallons of untreated wastewater to enable the city to inspect a potentially collapsed sewage pipe near 32nd Street and 12th Avenue.

Starting at 8 a.m., the city bypassed 68,510 gallons from the sanitary sewer to the storm sewer, before ending the discharge at 9:25 a.m. The storm sewer discharges to the Missouri River near Dodge Park. The city collected water samples from the discharge and from the river (upstream and downstream) for testing.

The DNR encourages residents to keep children and pets away from the Missouri River downstream of the Dodge Park stormwater pump station for the next 24 to 48 hours.

3 arrests in Mills County

News

June 23rd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Mills County today (Tuesday), said 37-year old Mark Charles Pontefract, of Pacific Junction, was arrested at around 4:45-a.m. today (Tuesday), for Domestic Abuse Assault. He was being held without bond in the Mills County Jail. On Monday, 39-year old Maurice Tabiya Harris, of Sioux City, was arrested for Driving While Revoked (bond $1,000), and 20-year old Humberto Felipe Mancinas, of Sidney, was arrested for OWI/1st offense (Bond $1,000).