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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
The Iowa Department of Transportation reports, early Sunday morning, June 23rd, construction crews will be working on a portion of eastbound Interstate 80 eastbound/southbound I-29 from 12 a.m. to 9 a.m., which will require traffic to exit the interstate.
Traffic on the eastbound I-80 Express will be required to exit at the South Expressway (exit 49) and follow the detour. Southbound I-29/eastbound I-80 Local will be required to exit at 24th Street (exit 50) and follow the detour. The southbound I-29/eastbound I-80 on-ramp at 24th Street will also be closed during the roadway repairs.
The Iowa DOT reminds motorists to drive with caution, obey the posted speed limit and other signs in the work area, and be aware that traffic fines for moving violations are at least double in work zones. As in all work zones, drivers should stay alert, allow ample space between vehicles, and wear seat belts.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A civil trial alleging former Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad discriminated against an ex-state official because he’s gay has been moved 35 miles east to Newton.
An order entered by Judge Brad McCall on Thursday says attorneys for both sides agreed to move the trial to the Jasper County Courthouse. The trial began June 5 and is expected to last a month. The order says the same Polk County jury will continue to hear the case.
Former Iowa Workers’ Compensation Commissioner Chris Godfrey is suing Branstad , the state and two of Branstad’s former staff members. Godfrey alleges discrimination and retaliation based on sexual preference and political affiliation.
The order to change locations doesn’t say why but Godfrey’s lawyer, Roxanne Conlin, has complained about the air quality in the historic courthouse, which is under renovation.
Her son, JB Conlin, was arrested on June 10 on charges that he resisted an officer’s request to leave the courtroom, where he was attempting to test the air quality.
(Radio Iowa) — Three dozen flood victims in southwest Iowa have said they want to live TEMPORARILY in mobile homes provided by FEMA, but state officials suspect many more need to move into a FEMA trailer. Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management director Joyce Flinn says FEMA has had difficulty negotiating leases with the owners of mobile home parks in southwest Iowa. “Two units were installed in a commercial park in Glenwood and six other pads have been leased at that location,” Flinn says. “The problem that FEMA is running into with a lot of these pads or these locations is the electric is not up to standard, so they’re going to have to redo the electric before they can put units in there and be sure that they’re going to provide the support to the citizens that they need.”
FEMA has identified OTHER parking spots for its trailers in mobile home parks in Red Oak and Shenandoah, according to Flinn, but the trailers aren’t yet installed. Flinn says 333 Iowans are eligible to live in a FEMA trailer, but they’ve told FEMA they’re living in a “safe” situation — like a relative or friend’s home — so they are automatically disqualified from getting on the list for a FEMA trailer. Flinn says flood victims need to tell FEMA their “situation has changed” if they want to live in the temporary housing FEMA can provide. Larry Winum, president and C-E-O of the Glenwood State Bank, says there’s uncertainty about what federal help may be available to rebuild or buy-out flooded properties that are condemned. “Nobody knows what the guidelines are,” Winum says.
Southwest Iowans who were flooded out of their homes in March are still waiting for officials to determine if their homes can be rehabilitated — or are so damaged they must be destroyed. This past Monday, inspectors from the state Fire Marshal’s Office began to assess 150 structures in Pacific Junction.
SHELL ROCK, Iowa (AP) — Officials expect ground to be broken next month for a new rail car maintenance facility in eastern Iowa’s Butler County. The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reports that TrinityRail plans to have the facility in full operation by the end of next year, providing more than 250 jobs on a capital investment of $60 million. It will occupy 230 acres (93 hectares) at Butler Logistics Park, 2 miles northwest of Shell Rock.
A company official says the community was chosen for the project because of Iowa’s pro-business climate, well-trained workforce and operational flexibility. The Iowa Economic Development Authority board awarded $3.45 million in tax credits and tax refunds to the company in May. TrinityRail is a division of Dallas-based Trinity Industries.
(Iowa DNR News) — As much as we love fireworks displays, drifting smoke can cause breathing problems for some. “If your family or friends suffer from asthma or respiratory difficulties, it’s important for them to stay upwind, a safe distance from fireworks smoke,” says Brian Hutchins, DNR air quality supervisor. “The elderly and children are also vulnerable to higher levels of smoke.” Sensitive people are most likely to have trouble breathing when air is stagnant. With no breeze, fine particles can be trapped near the ground and build to unhealthy levels.
Smoke contains fine particles and gases, which can be hard on the lungs. Fine particles in fireworks’ smoke are produced from black powder used to shoot fireworks skyward along with the metals that produce brilliant colors. Those unable to avoid areas of dense smoke should limit outdoor activity and contact their health care provider if they experience difficulty breathing.
In 2017, Fourth of July fireworks in Des Moines gave rise to fine particle levels that exceeded national standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Learn more about fine particles (PM2.5) and how fireworks displays can affect sensitive populations.
Finally, play it safe and dispose of your unused fireworks safely.
The Harlan Community School District Board of Education, this week, narrowed the search for an interim Superintendent to four candidates. The complete list of 13 applicants was presented to the Board by the search firm Grundmeyer Leader Services, on Tuesday, in a closed session. The pool included 2 female and 11 male candidates. After a thorough review of application materials, references and licensure the following candidates have been invited to the district on Friday, June 21st for formal interviews.
The successful interim superintendent will begin their duties on July 1st or soon thereafter. The long-term superintendent hiring process will begin in November with more stakeholders involved in the process.
(Radio Iowa) — Researchers at Iowa State University are studying why an antioxidant that protects the brain is also associated with deterioration in areas of the brain that are susceptible to Alzheimer’s disease. Auriel Willette, an I-S-U professor of food science and human nutrition, says the focus was on what’s called SOD-1, an antioxidant produced in the brain. Willette says, “On the one hand, it had or was related to some protective effects but on the other hand, it seemed to be in a clash of wills with this toxic protein called tau, which is one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease.”
Willette says the study involved nearly 300 people participating in the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, while the I-S-U research zeroed in on the impact of SOD-1 on the brain in combination with the toxic protein. “As levels of tau were higher, levels of this antioxidant were also higher,” Willette says. “Eventually, if you had high enough tau levels, the antioxidant didn’t seem to do anything and so, progressively, its usefulness just diminished and then disappeared.”
While the protective SOD-1 is produced naturally in our brains, he says it’s possible to supplement what we already have through certain foods. “You can look at antioxidant levels of SOD-1 in blueberries, they’re particularly high, strawberries as well, non-oily fish, olive oil, things of that nature,” he says. I-S-U researchers say more study is needed to determine if increasing the production of the antioxidant through diet or medication might delay the progression of Alzheimer’s.
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds has appointed a former lawmaker and state Republican Party chairman to run the Iowa Department of Administrative Services. Reynolds announced today (Thursday), that Jim Kurtenbach will begin work July 1 as director of the agency, which handles human resources, maintains the Capitol grounds and buildings, buys state vehicles and manages state payroll. The department has been without a director since last month when Janet Phipps Burkhead left after failing to win Senate confirmation to continue in the job.
Kurtenbach served two terms in in the Iowa House, losing in the 2006 general election. He was Republican Party of Iowa chairman from 2009 to 2011. He resigned as chief information officer of Iowa State University in November 2017 after some questioned his appointment to the $250,000 a year job without a typical hiring search.
The Mills County Sheriff’s Office reports several arrests were made over the past few days. Early this (Thursday) morning, 23-year old Jody Thomas Taylor, of Council Bluffs, was arrested in Glenwood, for Driving Under Suspension. At the same time and place, 27-year old Tyler Ryan Doty, of Council Bluffs, was arrested for Possession of a Controlled Substance.
Early Wednesday morning, 25-year old Treyton Curt Sunderman, of Shenandoah, was arrested in Mills County for Possession of drug paraphernalia. 28-year old Patrick Joseph Hauswirth, of Council Bluffs, was arrested Wed. morning for Possession of a Controlled Substance and possession of drug paraphernalia. And, 39-year old Helen Elaine Tuper, of Malvern, was arrested late Wednesday night, on a warrant charging her with three counts of Child Endangerment.
At around 12:30-a.m. Tuesday, 28-year old Katherine Paige Canaday, of St. Joseph, MO., was arrested in Mills County following a traffic stop on I-29. She was charged with Possession of a Controlled Substance, and speeding. Tuesday afternoon, 30-year old Robert James Hooks, of Omaha, was arrested in Glenwood for Domestic Abuse Assault. Hooks was being held without bond in the Mills County Jail.
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — The Iowa City Council has added bow hunting to its plan for reducing the city’s rapidly rising deer population. The Iowa Natural Resources Commission for years approved city plans to contract sharpshooters to trim back the herd. But the city’s request for a new hunt by sharpshooters has twice been rejected. The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports that the commission is concerned that the city plans rely too heavily on sharpshooters and that bow hunting would be more effective.
The council members agreed Tuesday that the commission was unlikely to approve a plan that didn’t include bow hunting, so several dropped their previous opposition. Mayor Jim Throgmorton signed a plan that in addition to the bow hunts scheduled sharpshooters during the 2019-2020 winter and nonlethal activities that included fencing, driver awareness and an annual deer count.