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Restaurant official assures Iowans about the safety of prepared food

News

March 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Many Iowans are making the switch from eating out to getting carry out, following Tuesday’s order from the governor that temporarily closes all restaurants statewide, except for pick-up, drive-through or delivery. Jessica Dunker, president and C-E-O of the Iowa Restaurant Association, is appealing to consumers to call their favorite restaurants and place an order. Dunker reassures, your meals will be safe from COVID-19.  “We receive food from purveyors directly into sanitized kitchens and it is kept in temperature-controlled spaces where it’s prepared for people by gloved, trained staff,” Dunker says. “If we can deliver it to your car door, we know where every point of contact of your food has been.”

The Public Health Disaster Emergency is causing a “tremendous disruption” in the dining industry, but Dunker hopes Iowans will quickly adapt and get their meals to go. If it’s not practical for someone to visit their local eateries, Dunker says most Iowa communities have professionals who can deliver food from restaurants to the door of your home. “Third-party delivery services have stepped up to waive and discount fees to restaurants who are doing everything they can to do no-contact food delivery,” Dunker says. “None the less, we don’t ever want to abdicate that if we don’t have to. We really do prefer to hand things to people directly.”

In addition to restaurants, all Iowa bars are shut down as well, creating a critical problem for tavern owners: restaurants may be able to stay afloat by offering carry-out, but bars can’t legally do that with drinks. “We’re requesting some relaxation for some things to help bars potentially be able to sell something but bars do not have the ability to sell liquor to go,” Dunker says, “and so, we’re concerned.”

Of the 63-hundred restaurants and bars in Iowa, she fears the temporary closures will result in the -permanent- closures of as many as three-thousand establishments. Dunker says as many as 80-thousand workers in the industry statewide could be filing for unemployment within ten days.

Cass County Extension Office is now CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC

News

March 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Cass County Extension Office in Atlantic report effective immediately (3/18/2020), the Cass County Extension Office is CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC until April 4th. The staff will be on duty during regular business hours, but the doors will remain locked. County Extension Director Kate Olsen said “We take serving Iowans seriously, which is why we are prioritizing the health and safety of our community and staff.”

To contact staff, please call 712-243-1132, directly email the staff member you need to reach, or email xcass@iastate.edu. A staff member will be in the office during this time, during regular business hours (Monday-Friday, 8-4:30), but not all staff members may be available. If you need to pick up or drop off something, please call ahead to set up a time and they can answer any questions. A staffer will meet you at the door with your requested materials.

You are also encouraged to visit the website (www.extension.iastate.edu/cass) for staff contact information, and follow the Cass County Extension on Facebook page, as they will be updating both regularly with program updates and resources

Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s report (3/15-17)

News

March 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

The Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Office has updated their report on arrests and incidents to include March 15-through 17th. Tuesday night, a Deputy was dispatched to a residence in Avoca, for a reported disturbance. 30-year old Jesse Eugene Hutton, of Avoca, was arrested for Assault (without intent) causing bodily injury or mental illness, and Obstruction of E-911 communications. Hutton was being held in the Pott. County Jail on a total of $2,300 bond.

Tuesday afternoon, 49-year old Brenda Lynn Peterson-Presley, of Carter Lake, was served at the Pott. County Jail, with a warrant for Possession of a firearm or offensive weapon by a Felon. She remained in the Pott. County Jail on $300 bond an unrelated charge. Another inmate at the jail, 35-year old James Paul Theodoropoulos, of Omaha, was presented with an active warrant for Burglary in the 3rd Degree – vehicle related/2nd or subsequent offense, and Criminal Mischief in the 4th Degree. He was being held on a total of $600 bond for separate charges.

Early Tuesday morning, 46-year old Dawn Marie Brewer was arrested following a traffic stop on eastbound I-80. Brewer was taken into custody for Driving While license suspended or revoked in Iowa. Brewer later posted bond. At around 2:45-a.m. Tuesday, 27-year old Kean Patrick McGinn was arrested for OWI/1st offense, following a traffic stop in Council Bluffs for erratic driving. McGinn was also later released on bond. At around 12:20-a.m., Tuesday, 30-year old Nicholas James Erisman was arrested for Driving While license suspended or revoked, following suspicious driving activity. He later bonded-out of jail.

Monday night, 38-year old Erin Catherine Collins was arrested in Pottawattamie County, for OWI/1st offense. She was later released. And, Sunday night, 25-year old Caleb Leo Foote was arrested for OWI/1st offense, following a non-injury accident at Highway 92 and 340th Street. He was later released.

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 3/18/20

News, Podcasts

March 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

Sites released for State Qualifying Track and Field Meets

Sports

March 18th, 2020 by admin

The Iowa High School Athletic Association and Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union released sites for track and field’s co-ed 2020 State Qualifying Meets late Tuesday.

The meets are currently set for Thursday, May 14 in all classes for both boys and girls. The IHSAA and IGHSAU announced a suspension of spring activities on Monday, March 16 that currently extends through April 12.

Qualifiers from these meets would advance to the 2020 Iowa High School Track and Field Championships, currently set for May 21-23 at Drake Stadium in Des Moines.

There will be no more than 24 qualifiers in any event in any classification. For more information, please review the 2020 track and field manual. 

Class 4A

Cedar Rapids, Kennedy
Council Bluffs, Abraham Lincoln
Davenport, Central
Iowa City, West
Urbandale
Waukee

Class 3A

Carlisle
Glenwood
Independence
Marion
MOC-Floyd Valley
Mount Pleasant
Nevada
Pella

Class 2A

Cascade, Western Dubuque
Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont
Hudson
Manson Northwest Webster
Tipton
Treynor
West Marshall, State Center
West Sioux, Hawarden

Class 1A

Audubon
Belle Plaine
Edgewood-Colesburg
Grundy Center
Madrid
Mount Ayr
Northwood-Kensett
Ridge View
WACO, Wayland
West Harrison, Mondamin

Guidelines issued to help high school activities participants during closure

Sports

March 18th, 2020 by admin

On March 16, the IGHSAU, IHSAA, IHSMA, and IHSSA announced that all spring activities are prohibited through the state’s K-12 school recommended closure of four weeks.

Effective immediately from now through April 12, all IHSAA and IGHSAU sports are now in a prohibited period for practice, competition, and sanctioned activity until the closure is lifted.

IHSMA has cancelled Class 4A and 1A solo/small ensemble festival set for April 18, and the state large group festival series set for May 8-9.

All IHSSA (speech) events will be prohibited to practice or make up their individual state local contest until the closure is lifted. All contact between coaches, judges, and students for the duration of the period is prohibited. The all-state festival scheduled for March 30 has been cancelled.

As this situation is rapidly changing, all four organizations continue to monitor the situation and make adjustments as necessary. Notifications will go out immediately to member schools should updates be made.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. If a school does not cancel classes, can students practice?

A. No. All practice, competition and sanctioned activities are cancelled for all schools.

Q. What specifically is prohibited for coaches and their athletes?

A. In-person contact between coaches/administrators and student-athletes for the duration of the period is prohibited. This means no practices, no competitions, no scrimmages, no strength and conditioning activities, no training sessions or participation with other school programs.

Q. Does this impact the length of the spring seasons?

A. No decisions on spring sports seasons after the four-week closure period have been made. Guidance on future IGHSAU and IHSAA activity schedule adjustments and their effects on season lengths, as well as postseason events, will be announced through www.iahsaa.org and www.ighsau.org.

Q. What happens to softball and baseball in the summer?

A. The first practice date for boys’ baseball and girls’ softball, May 4, remains the same until further information is provided.

Q. May a coach email their athletes a workout or practice plan?

A. If the permissible practice date is in effect, it is permissible for a coach to email individual plans to athletes. Please note, these plans should not encourage group activities, however small, with other team members. Coaches should take great care to communicate appropriately and effectively the expectation that workouts should be done by individuals on their own time and are voluntary in nature.

Q. How does this apply to unsanctioned athletic programs, such as clubs within the schools?

A. Local district policies would govern those activities and organizations.

Q. May a music instructor continue to practice for the make-up of a previously missed contest with students during the closure?

A. There should be no in-person contact between teachers/administrators and participants for the duration of the prohibited period. Any effort to provide IHSMA participants with a make-up experience should take place only via digital media through the duration of the prohibited period.

Q. IHSSA is allowing its speech participants to make up the state contest locally. Can teachers/coaches schedule practices and/or make up contests with judges during this time?

A. All IHSSA events will be prohibited to practice or make up their individual state local contest until the closure is lifted. All contact between coaches, judges, and students for the duration of the period is prohibited. The all-state festival scheduled for March 30 has been cancelled.

Q. I am a spring sport official and planned to attend a clinic that was postponed. What should I do?

A. All officiating clinics within the four-week timeframe have been postponed. As things progress, we will make an attempt to re-schedule some of those clinics if at all possible. If you are an official who must attend a clinic this year in order to be certified for post- season assignments, that requirement will be waived for this year.

Q. How will this delay affect the 30-day period of ineligibility for the scholarship rule and/or the 90-day period for transfers and open enrollments? Will the time off count toward the limits or will students have to serve the period once schools are back in session?

A. The IGHSAU and IHSAA are seeking guidance from the Department of Education specific to those provisions of the Iowa Code. Only the Department of Education has the ability to issue interpretations of Iowa Code. Once a determination has been made, we will notify school leaders. School administrators should continue to keep accurate records of how many days have been served toward each period for students in these situations.

Q. Are the association offices still open?

A. All offices are closed, but all administrators are working remotely and remain available.

Q. Who can I contact for more information if I have a question?

A. For girls’ sports, IGHSAU administrators will remain available during this time: www.ighsau.org/about/staff

For boys’ sports, IHSAA administrators will remain available during this time: www.iahsaa.org/about/staff

Future updates and guidance on IHSMA events will be available through www.ihsma.org.

Guidance on future IHSSA activity will be announced through www.ihssa.org

Local 24-Hour Rainfall Totals at 7:00 am on Wednesday, March 18

Ag/Outdoor, Weather

March 18th, 2020 by Jim Field

  • KJAN, Atlantic  .57″
  • 7 miles NNE of Atlantic  .52″
  • Massena  .67″
  • Elk Horn  .82″
  • Anita  .45″
  • Corning  .21″
  • Manning  .66″
  • Logan  .49″
  • Carroll  .72″
  • Red Oak  .19″

Luka Garza named ESPN National Player of the Year

Sports

March 18th, 2020 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa men’s basketball junior Luka Garza was named ESPN National Player of the Year and to its five-member All-America first team on Tuesday.

The ESPN honor is the second media outlet in as many weeks to tab Garza as national player of the year (Sporting News). So far, Garza has been named a first-team All-American by ESPN, USA Today, CBS Sports, Sporting News, and NBC Sports.

Garza is the first player in Iowa history to earn national player of the year distinction. He was also voted the USBWA District VI Player of the Year and the Big Ten Men’s Basketball Player of the Year last week.

The Washington, D.C., native is a finalist for five national awards: Naismith Trophy, Oscar Robertson Trophy, Wooden Award, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award, and the Lute Olson Award.

Garza (740 points and 305 rebounds) is one of three Big Ten players to ever to total 740+ points and 300+ rebounds in a single-season (Purdue’s Glenn Robinson in 1994 and Purdue’s Joe Barry Carroll in 1979). He ranked second nationally with 12 20-point/10-rebound performances, 20-point games (25); third in total field goals made (287) and points per 40 minutes played (29.8), fifth in scoring (23.9), 10th in 30-point games (5), 19th in double-doubles (15) and offensive rebounds per game (3.58), and 34th in rebounding (9.8). His 15 double-doubles are third most in a single-season by a Hawkeye in three decades and the most since 2002 (Reggie Evans, 18). Garza averaged 26.7 points, 11.1 rebounds, and 1.7 blocks in 12 games against AP ranked opponents in 2019-20, including recording 11 straight 20-point performances.

Garza, who would become the first Hawkeye to ever win the award, finished the 20-game conference schedule averaging 26.2 points per game, becoming the first player to average at least 26 points in Big Ten play since Purdue’s Glenn Robinson in 1994 (31.1 ppg). Garza scored a school-record 740 points this season, breaking the program’s 50-year old record previously set by John Johnson in 1970. He scored 20 points or more in a school-record 16 straight Big Ten games, the longest streak by any player in the Big Ten since Ohio State’s Dennis Hopson 16 in 1987.

Garza is the only Big Ten player to register seven 25-point/10-rebound performances in the same season in more than 17 years. He has produced the two highest point totals in a game by a Big Ten player this season (44 at Michigan; 38 at Indiana).

Official: Toilet paper being stolen from I-80 rest stops

News

March 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

LINCOLN, Neb. (Lincoln Journal Star) — Shoppers across Nebraska and the nation are having trouble finding enough toilet paper as they hunker down to avoid the spread of the new coronavirus. But some people in Nebraska are finding it — and stealing it — at Interstate 80 rest stops. The rest areas are managed by the state Transportation Department. A spokeswoman told the Lincoln Journal Star that some are staffed and some are not. The rest areas will be closed as a result of the thefts when an attendant is not present. The spokeswoman says truck parking should remain open even if the rest area buildings are closed.

Weather wet and turbulent is in forecast for much of Iowa

News, Weather

March 18th, 2020 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Wet and turbulent weather have been forecast for much of Iowa. The National Weather Service says there’s a slight chance of tornadoes, damaging winds and hail Wednesday and Thursday in addition to up to 1.5 inches of rain. The threat for severe weather Thursday is more likely in southern Iowa than the rest of the state.

Wednesday’s early rain was expected to cease by early afternoon, and the service says a second round of rain should fall late Wednesday and into Thursday morning. Minor river flooding in northern Iowa could occur by the weekend.