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IA COVID-19 update June 22, 2020 (6:15-a.m.)

News

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Public Health, this morning released the latest coronavirus data since 10-a.m., Sunday. Officials confirmed 155 additional COVID-19 cases, for a total to-date of 26,020 positive cases. There was also one additional COVID-19 death since Sunday, for a total 686. The State’s website said 479 of the deaths involved Iowans with preexisting conditions, one more than yesterday. COVID-19 outbreaks at long-term care facilities account for 356 of the state’s total deaths. Iowa DPH reports 169 hospitalizations, of which 51 patients are in intensive care. Six patients with COVID-19 symptoms were admitted to hospitals Sunday, eight fewer than the day before.

There were no changes to the RMCC Region 4 data, which show eight persons hospitalized, 5 are in an ICU, none admitted and 1 on a ventilator. In Cass and surrounding counties, here are the total number of positive COVID-19 cases being reported, and (in parenthesis) the number of patients who have recovered from the virus.

Cass 16 (15)
Adair 12 (11)
Adams 7 (5)
Audubon 15 (10)
Montgomery 10 (6)
Pottawattamie 620 (388)
Shelby 79 (41)

Free Online Support Groups Available Through COVID Recovery Iowa

News

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(DES MOINES, Iowa) – COVID Recovery Iowa has begun offering virtual support groups for parents, teens and pre-teens. Mandy Gesme, Child and Family Team Lead for COVID Recovery Iowa, said the organization has been getting many requests from parents for activities they can do with their children, and advice for how to help their teenagers through the pandemic.
“We thought it would be great to give them the chance to talk to each other with their ideas and strategies,” Gesme said. “It’s just one more resource we can provide.”

COVID Recovery Iowa is for all Iowans who have been affected in ANY way by COVID-19. In addition to support groups, activities and resources, COVID Recovery Iowa offers FREE,
confidential virtual counseling to all Iowans. Activities include cooking classes, yoga and meditation and more to help Iowans through this stressful time. Parents, your group will meet via Zoom on Wednesdays at 5 p.m. Find out more by emailing Chelsea.Siefken@pathwaysb.org.

Gesme and her team are also hearing about how the pandemic is affecting teenagers. “The support group can be an outlet for teens to talk about what is frustrating about this situation
and why this summer feels different than last summer. “ Gesme said it is very hard for anyone, especially teenagers, to figure out how to navigate relationships via social media. Some teens
may also be faced with extra responsibilities due to the pandemic. “Whether it’s for family financial support, child care or extra duties around the house because their parents are
essential workers,” Gesme said. “It is also helpful for teens to understand that they are not the only ones who are struggling. This will be an opportunity for them to meet and talk with other teens all over the state.”

The teen support group will meet Tuesdays at 10 and Thursdays at 2. Find out more by emailing Caitlin.Pixler@pathwaysb.org. The pre-teen support group will meet via Zoom on Mondays at 4:30 and Thursdays at 1. For more information, contact Chelsea.Siefken@pathwaysb.org

DHS Launches COVID Recovery Iowa

News

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Des Moines, Iowa) – The Iowa Department of Human Services (DHS) has announced the State of Iowa has received nearly $1 million in funding from the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) to offer free crisis counseling to any Iowan who has been affected, in any way, by the COVID-19 public health emergency. The program, called COVID Recovery Iowa, is available starting today. Counseling will take place via virtual sessions, chat or phone call. People of all ages may join groups online to find support and learn new strategies to cope with the effects of the pandemic in a variety of creative ways.

DHS Director Kelly Garcia says “It’s not uncommon to experience feelings of stress or anxiety during uncertain times. This funding will help us support Iowans across the state who are trying to find their new normal.” Iowans can access services through the following options:

• Call 800-447-1985 to connect with a counselor specializing in rural issues and agriculture 24 hours a day, seven days a week
• Call the Iowa Warm Line, 844-775-9276; to connect with a peer counselor or request to get in touch with a COVID Recovery Iowa counselor
• Visit www.COVIDrecoveryiowa.org and complete a contact form and a counselor will get back to you

DHS has contracted with five providers throughout the state to provide counseling, virtual activities, referrals and help finding resources. COVID Recovery Iowa will announce additional programs in the coming weeks to help Iowans build coping skills and resilience.

WEEK OF JUNE 22, 2020

Trading Post

June 22nd, 2020 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  John Deere straight shaft weed eater, starts and runs well, $85.  Also, two 1/2″ air impact wrenches that work well for $45 each.  And, an older Delta table saw, runs great for $100. SOLD! Call 712-304-4998 in Hamlin.

FOR SALE:  Black & Decker 10″ 3000 RPM waxer-polisher, $25.  Float tube fins, Creek Company, $25.  Bass Pro fry kit, $25.  Call 712-250-0066.

FOR SALE:  Curt brand Class 2 Hitch, 1 1/4″ receiver fits LaCrosse, Regal, XTS, Impala and Malibu vehicles.  Rated to 3,500 lbs gross trailer weight and 350 lbs. tongue weight.  Open back receiver for easy cleaning.  Made in the USA.  Asking $100/OBO.  Call 712-789-2803.

FOR SALE: 2008 heavy duty, Ford 150, V6. $2,500. 712-323-4890.

FOR SALE:  utility trailer, 7 1/2′ by 5 1/5′, asking $666.66 cash.  Call Don 712-254-0505.

WANTED:   Looking for a good quality meat bandsaw.  Please call 712-304-0178 if you have one for sale.

FOR SALE: Men’s mountain bike, older Huffy, 26″, big round seat. $20. 402-506-0787 (Lewis)

FOR SALE:  DeWalt 3/8” adjustable clutch drill driver with case.  Also, Sears Craftsman 16” scroll saw.  And, small tool chest, measures 17” x 12.5” x 10” with flip up top and 3 pull out drawers.  Make on offer on any of these items.  Call 243-3048.

FOR SALE: 8 drawer file cabinet, drawers are full suspension, letter size. $40; FOR SALE: love seat, beige $20. 712-243-5447.

FOR SALE:  This is an older Craftsman table saw with home made stand and drawer. Needs blade. $50. Pick up in Atlantic.  Call 316-772-1099.

FOR SALE:  Girls 10 speed bike, Huffy brand, has light, good tires and soft seat.  $45.00 Firm.  Good bike! 712-249-6835SOLD!

FOR SALE:  Big Mow mower or ride king and 3 weed eaters and one leaf blower, ALL FOR $180.00 CASH.  Call 712-254-0505.

REHOME: 5 month old female lab, papered, all shots, house broke, loves kids. 712-579-6068 (Audubon)

FOR SALE: Sioux grain bin 30 ft. diameter. Completely dismantled.  Good condition. $3,500.00   Phone #712-784-3693  or #712-249-5909.

FOR SALE:  Harry Ferguson Tractor 1952 TO20. Needs to be restored  $400.00  Phone# 712-784-3693 or #712-249 5909.

FOR SALE:  blue gray kittens, mother is an awesome mouser. 712-579-1981.

FOR SALE:  27 inch 10 speed bicycle. Asking $40. Call: 712-249-6202.

WANTED:  I am looking for an experienced painter to paint a cement basement floor and cinder block walls next week.  Text 249-2994 if you are interested.  FOUND!

Train hits car in Adams County – No injuries. Union County man faces OWI & other charges

News

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in Adams County report a train collided with a car early this (Monday) morning near the intersection of Tulip and 180th Streets, but there were no injuries. As deputies arrived on the scene a little after 1:30-a.m., they learned both occupants of the car had gotten out of the vehicle prior to the collision. Upon further investigation, the driver, Ryan Gordon, of Creston, was arrested for OWI/3rd offense, Public Intoxication, Criminal Mischief in the 4th Degree, and Railroad Vandalism.

ISU research working on home coronavirus test

News

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — An Iowa State University researcher is working on a test you can take at home to find out if you have COVID-19. Robbyn Anand and the researchers won a 55-thousand dollar grant from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement to work on the test. “One of the things that was very clear is that inexpensive at-home tests are needed for COVID-19 detection,” Anand says. “So that gave me the idea that we could use an existing technology that has been developed by our lab and modify that so it is capable of detecting COVID-19.”

Anand is an assistant chemistry professor and says the test would indicate the presence of a protein linked to the virus. “Decided to design the test around detecting this protein in urine, but then on the advice of the panel that reviewed our proposal — we are also pursuing the detection in saliva,” she says. They are hoping to have the test ready by this fall when kids would be going back to school. The test would be similar to a home pregnancy test where a strip would turn a color to indicate you have the virus. She says the difference is they use an electric field within a paper strip to accumulate that protein over time. “So, the test would take a little longer — closer to 10 to 20 minutes– we are optimizing the time now. And that allows time for us to accumulate what we are looking for over the test line. And that increases the sensitivity to what is needed for viral detection,” according to Anand.

Anand says working with infectious material can raise many issues — but they are able to do the research without that risk. “The good thing is we are able to access this protein in a form of it that is know to not be infectious — so that we can do our tests by adding that to urine samples and saliva samples. At the very earliest stages we worked with artificial biofluids,” Anand says. She says the test would be used to let you know if you need to see a doctor.”We are aiming for accuracy that’s competitive with the existing swabbed-based tests,” Anand says. She says if you take the test and find it positive then you could know to take precautions to avoid spreading the virus and then make an appointment with a doctor.

She says they want to find a company that can mass-produce the test and keep the cost affordable. “Because of the similarity to a pregnancy test — which runs about five dollars — I do think the components would be somewhat more expensive because of the power requirement and some added materials we have to put into the test,” Anand says. “But I still think that it would be somewhere in the neighborhood of 20 dollars. That’s our goal.”

Anand says they also need someone who can produce millions of tests.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area: 6/22/20

Weather

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy to cloudy w/scattered showers. High 79. NW @ 10-15.
Tonight: Fair to P/Cldy. Low around 57. NW @ 5-10.
Tomorrow: P/Cldy. High 77. NW @ 10-15.
Wednesday: P/Cldy. High 79. Thursday: P/Cldy w/scattered thunderstorms. High 83.

Sunday’s high was 89 and last night’s low was 65. This day last year we had a high of 81 and a low of 64. The all-time record high on June 22nd was 100 degrees in 1933 and the record low was 39, in 1972.  Sunset tonight is at 8:57-a.m. and sunrise tomorrow is 5:46-a.m.

Sports Headlines: 6/23/20

Sports

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

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

UNDATED (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals and Boston Red Sox would have had one of their rare regular-season series this week. They have met in four different World Series. They would have played a three-game series at Fenway Park this week if not for the coronavirus pandemic. There also would have been a College World Series title won in Omaha, Nebraska. It would have been the best-of-three championship series for the NCAA baseball title. The NBA and NHL drafts also had been scheduled this week.

NEW YORK (AP) — An email from baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred to union head Tony Clark led to a balk in the drawn-out talks to start the pandemic-delayed season, which now won’t begin by July 19. The executive committee of the players’ association was set to vote and reject Major League Baseball’s latest offer for a 60-game season. Players want 70 games and are worried that if the 2020 season is cut short, the deal being negotiated would lock in innovations for 2021. Manfred wrote that if fewer than the agreed-upon number of games are played, the 2021 changes would be voided.

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Webb Simpson is a winner on Father’s Day again, just not at the U.S. Open. The father of five ran off five birdies in a six-hole stretch on the back nine in a 7-under 64 and won the RBC Heritage with a record score. Simpson won by one shot over Abraham Ancer. His score of 22-under 262 beats by two shots the tournament record set 11 years ago. Simpson won the U.S. Open in 2012 at Olympic Club. This was supposed to be U.S. Open week, but the COVID-19 pandemic postponed that until September. Simpson won for the second time this year.

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) — Thunderstorms Sunday forced NASCAR to postpone the Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway that was to mark the return of more fans to the track. The race, which was pushed back to 2 p.m. CDT on Monday, is the first amid the coronavirus pandemic in which NASCAR opened the gates for up to 5,000 fans. The event was stopped several times for more than three hours of total delays.

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) — NASCAR says a noose was found in the garage stall of Bubba Wallace on Sunday at the NASCAR race in Talladega, Alabama. Wallace is the only full-time Black driver in NASCAR’s elite Cup Series. Two weeks ago, he successfully pushed for NASCAR to ban the Confederate flag at its tracks and properties. NASCAR says it has launched an immediate investigation into the noose. The series says it is “outraged” and says there is no place for racism in NASCAR.

UNDATED (AP) — Having secured a victory in the Belmont Stakes, Tiz the Law now faces an 11-week wait until the Kentucky Derby in a reconfigured Triple Crown series. In between, the bay colt, who became the first New York-bred to win the Belmont since 1882, is being pointed toward the Travers on Aug. 8 in upstate New York, which is his home turf. Tiz the Law has five wins in six career starts by an average of 19 1/4 lengths. His only loss came at Churchill Downs last year, and he’ll get a chance to avenge it over the same track in the Kentucky Derby on Sept. 5.

UNDATED (AP) — American universities have begun the process of playing sports through a pandemic. SMU is having its athletes put a signature on a waiver, acknowledging the risks for COVID-19. Ohio State and Missouri have pledges they are requiring athletes or their parents to sign before the players can take part in voluntary workouts. Legal experts say athletes may be signing away some of their rights.

Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, June 22 2020

News

June 22nd, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

BEDFORD, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa man is facing a first-degree murder charge after a fatal stabbing in Bedford in southwest Iowa. The Iowa Department of Public Safety said the stabbing was reported around 11 p.m. Saturday. Sixty-two–year-old Penny Sue Godfirnon, of Bedford, died. Authorities said 32-year-old Christian Andrew May, of Bedord, was arrested at a Bedford motel on charges that include suspicion of first-degree murder and willful injury. He is being held in the Taylor County Jail. K-C-C-I reports Lee is Godfirnon’s son. Lee is listed on the Iowa Sex Offender Registry. May was transported to the Taylor County Jail and arrested on charges that include First-Degree Murder – Class A Felony, and Willful Injury – A Class C Felony.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Tyson Foods is looking into reports that China’s customs agency has suspended poultry imports from a Tyson facility in the United States after coronavirus cases were confirmed among its employees. A Tyson spokesman said Sunday that the plant in question is in Springdale, Arkansas. The spokesman said that all global and U.S. health organizations agree that there is no evidence to support transmission of COVID-19 associated with food. The announcement out of China Sunday gave no details of the quantity of meat affected.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa health authorities say four more deaths and another 441 coronavirus cases have been reported in the state. The Iowa Department of Public Health said the state has had 685 COVID-19 deaths and 25,865 cases of the virus as of 10 a.m. Sunday. The state said that 16,018 of the 25,865 people who have tested positive for the virus have recovered. A total of 256,960 people in Iowa have been tested for the coronavirus. For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Two white men have been arrested in an assault so severe that the 22-year-old black victim believed he was about to be killed. The NAACP has said the attack in Des Moines was racially motivated. Twenty-eight-year-old Dale Lee Millard and 27-year-old Jesse James Downs are charged with willful injury causing serious injury. Millard was arrested Thursday and is jailed in Polk County on $50,000 bond. Downs surrendered Friday. DarQuan Jones says he was attacked by at least two men early on May 16. He says they choked and punched him, then held his head underwater in a creek.

David Young discusses COVID-19 recovery, racial issues, and other topics as he hits the campaign trail

News

June 21st, 2020 by admin

Former Iowa District 3 Representative David Young is running for the seat once again this year and made a stop at KJAN on Friday as he hit the campaign trail. Young provided his thoughts on a number of current major issues and said he has been getting good response from constituents in the district.

COVID-19 and the ensuing economic impact has been a major focus around the globe and Young said it is a public health issue that should be taken seriously. He said he hopes further steps are made by congress to help those most impacted financially and to aid in getting the economy back on track. Young said one of his first priorities in office would be to make sure health necessities can be produced here at home.

The Ag Economy has also been widely impacted by COVID-19 and Young said there is some help coming the way of farmers across the country. He said a good planting season certainly helped and he’s optimistic about the bounce back.

Racial issues and Police brutality have been brought to the forefront of the country conversation following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and Young gave his thoughts on the situation.

Young said he looks forward to continuing the campaign and drawing differences between himself and his opponent Cindy Axne.

Young went on to visit Red Oak, Shenandoah, and Gravity on Friday.