712 Digital Group - top

Brr! Lows in the 20s & 30s prompt frost and freeze warnings tonight

News, Weather

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Iowans who plan to venture out to go camping or to a drive-in movie tonight (Friday) better bring extra blankets. Overnight temperatures are expected to plummet into the 20s and 30s statewide, more on the order of January than May. National Weather Service meteorologist Brooke Hagenhoff says a Freeze Warning covers Iowa’s northeastern half, with a Frost Advisory posted for all of the southwest.

“The areas under the Freeze Warning are going to be seeing colder temperatures and that hard freeze can be a little harder on plants,” Hagenhoff says. “The areas with the Frost Advisory won’t be quite as cold, a few degrees warmer. Most of the state is going to be very, very cold, especially for this time of year.” Some communities in northeast Iowa, like Decorah, are expecting lows tonight around 24.

Iowans who have blooming plants are advised to haul out those stryofoam cones from the shed, or at least to cover the tender vegetation with a blanket or tarp.  “Any plants and crops that are starting to come up that are susceptible to those very cold temperatures, it’s going to be something people will want to keep an eye on,” Hagenhoff says. “If it’s possible to bring them inside, people will want to do that as well.” Much of the nation’s eastern half is expecting bitter cold, with snow forecast for some areas along the East Coast, kicking off an unseasonably chilly Mother’s Day weekend.

“Below normal temperatures are affecting a huge chunk of the country,” Hagenhoff says. “Looking at some of the longer-range models, it looks like we may start to see this pattern break towards the end of next week but that’s still quite a ways off, but it does look like there’s an indication we’ll get back to more spring-like weather here next week.” Those long-range forecasts show highs in the 60s and 70s in central Iowa by next Thursday.

Iowa reports increase in testing as more businesses reopen

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa processed its most coronavirus testing in a 24-hour period since the pandemic began as the state allowed some businesses in its largest metropolitan areas to partially reopen. The state’s coronavirus website reported Friday that 3,809 tests were conducted Thursday and that 403, or less than 11 percent of them, were positive. It was the lowest daily rate of positive tests in a month, following a week of steady decline.

Still, the state reported 12 more people had died from COVID-19, bringing the official death toll to 243. A slight increase of 417 people were hospitalized, including more than 100 fighting for their lives on ventilators.

Supreme Court has split decision in fee case

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Iowa Supreme Court issued a rare split decision in a case involving court fees. Lori Mathes appealed the dismissal of a possession of marijuana charge after being ordered to pay more than 28-hundred dollars for a court-appointed attorney. She said in the appeal the dismissal was based on a bad warrant and she only agreed to pay the fees if they were under 500 dollars to get the issue over with. She says an assessment should have been done on her ability to pay the fees. The Monona County District Court threw out the appeal — saying a defendant does not have the right to appeal following the dismissal of charges.

The Iowa Supreme Court reviewed the case and three justices voted to uphold the district court ruling — while three said they would vacate the ruling — and one justice did not take part. With no deciding vote, the district court ruling stands.

Carroll man arrested in Mills County

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

A man being held in the Sac County Jail was arrested Thursday morning, on a warrant out of Mills County. Sheriff’s officials say 19-year old Michael John William Lyons, of Carroll, was transported to the Mills County Jail, and held on $10,000 bond associated with a warrant for Violation of Probation.

(Update 5/8/20) 12 more deaths from COVID-19 in Iowa

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The latest report from the Iowa Department of Public Health (IDPH) shows as of today (Friday), 12 additional COVID-19 deaths have occurred over the past 24-hours, for a total of 243. Officials say 11, 457 Iowans have tested positive for the virus. 407 are hospitalized, and 4,708 have recovered.  164 are in an ICU. 34 COVID-19 patients were admitted to the hospital over the past 24-hours.

Other data:

  • A total of 70, 261 individuals have been tested. 16.3% have tested positive (11,457)
  • 42% of those who have tested positive for COVID-19 are 18-to 40-years of age; 37% of those 41-60; 14% of those 61-to 80; 5% are age 80 and older. 2% are age 0-to 18.
  • 46% of the positive cases are female, 51% are male, and 3% are unknown.
  • Non-Hispanic or Latino cases make up 57% of those who tested positive. 24 % are Hispanic or Latino. 19% are of unknown ethnicity.
  • The number of Long-Term Care (LTC) facility outbreaks remains steady at 28. Linn, Polk, Black Hawk, Tama, Dallas and Jasper Counties are among those with the highest number of positive cases among residents and staff.

For more information, see the COVID-19 dashboard at https://coronavirus.iowa.gov/

DARLENE IONE HEILESEN, 90, of Harlan (Private Graveside Svcs.)

Obituaries

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DARLENE IONE HEILESEN, 90, of Harlan, died Wed., May 6th, at home. Private family graveside services for DARLENE HEILESEN will be held on Monday, May 11th, in the Harlan Cemetery. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan, is assisting the family.

DARLENE HEILESEN is survived by:

Her daughter – Patty (Don) Holdsworth

Her sisters – Donna (Norman) Campbell, and Caryl (Bill) McMahon, all of Irwin.

4 grandchildren, 6 great-grandchildren, and her son – and sisters-in-law.

Stuart Fire responds to girl on a grain elevator

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Authorities in Guthrie County report Stuart Fire was called late Thursday evening to assist Casey Fire along with law enforcement, in connection with an incident at the Landus Co-Op Grain Elevator, in Casey.  Stuart Fire responded with their ladder truck (Tower 23) and brought a 13-year old female down from the elevator, to safety. The Guthrie County Communications Center received a call at around 7:24-p.m. about the unidentified girl, who had climbed several feet up the elevator.

(Photos from the Stuart F.D. Facebook page)

A Guthrie County Sheriff’s Deputy responding to the scene prevented the girl her from climbing any higher. Rescue crews were on the scene for about 75 minutes.  Among the agencies assisting the Casey and Stuart Fire Departments, was Stuart Rescue, the Adair County Sheriff’s Office, and Iowa State Patrol.

Search on the Missouri River for missing Iowa man

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Rescue crews resumed their search this (Friday) morning for a 29-year old man from Iowa, who went missing after a boat reportedly capsized on the Missouri River late Thursday night. According to KETV in Omaha, one person was rescued Thursday night after crews responded to an incident at around 10 p.m.

Crews were in the water for about two-and-a-half hours. They called off the search at around today (Friday) at around 12:30 a.m.  Before returning to continue the search for a victim after sunrise in the Goosehaven area. A drone was being used in the search process. Authorities indicated alcohol may have been involved in the incident, which remains under investigation.

Additional information is currently not available.

Some blame meatpacking workers, not plants, for virus spread

Ag/Outdoor, News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — As coronavirus hotspots erupted at major U.S. meatpacking plants, experts criticized extremely tight working conditions that made the factories natural high risk contagion locations. But some Midwestern politicians have pointed the finger at the workers’ living conditions, suggesting crowded homes bear some blame. The comments include a Wisconsin Supreme Court justice’s remark that an outbreak didn’t seem to have come from “regular folks.” Outraged employees and advocates call the comments elitist and critical of immigrants in the meatpacking workforce. The remarks came amid public gratitude for other essential workers like police officers, health care professionals and grocery store workers.

Iowans encouraged to help preserve history of this pandemic

News

May 8th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The State Historical Society is asking Iowans to help document the pandemic for future generations. Michael Morain, a spokesman for the Iowa Department of Cultural Affairs, says “We are inviting Iowans to capture the stories of COVID-19 and its impact, its ripple effects on everyday life here in Iowa.” Morain says Iowans may submit items electronically now — things like photos, videos and written materials in digital form. Once the state historical museum reopens to the public, they’ll begin accepting physical artifacts.  “Usually we don’t get the chance to recognize history or historical turning points as we’re living through them,” Morain says. “Usually it requires a little bit of hindsight, but I think people realize that this spring the world is changing and it’s changing here in Iowa in ways that are different than in New York or California or Italy or China.”

Curators hope items like masks, cancelled stimulus paper checks and gallon jugs of hand sanitizer will help illustrate the story of this pandemic a century from now — just like items in the Historical Society’s vault from the flu pandemic of 1917 and ’18 have. “We have medical supplies. We have photos from Camp Dodge where soldiers that were getting ready to ship off for World War I were struggling in dire straights…with the flu,” Morain says, “so we get a sense of what that looked like.”

Soldiers began getting sick in October of 1918 and by the time the illness had run its course, more than seven-hundred soldiers had died. Camp Dodge, at the time, was about a dozen miles away from the city of Des Moines. The city’s board of health closed schools, churches and other gathering spots. For more information on how to donate documents for the project, go to https://iowaculture.gov/history/research/collections/donating-materials