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KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – Republicans who oppose the use of eminent domain to seize land for the proposed Summit Carbon Solutions pipeline are urging Iowans to lobby members of the Senate to protect property rights. During a news conference at the Iowa Capitol, Senator Doug Campbell of Mason City had this message for land owners who are fighting the project. “You will prevail, but you cannot disengage. You cannot give up for any and every reason,” Campbell said. “…Don’t give in. Persist.”
Representative Helena Hayes of New Sharon says the now abandoned Navigator pipeline project would have gone through her House district. “And I’m thankful for that, but I didn’t sit back and go, ‘Whew! O.K., I guess I don’t have to worry about it anymore,'” she said. “No, because directly or indirectly this issue affects all Iowans.” Representative Charley Thomson of Charles City says Summit should shelve the project. “I’m calling today for Summit to withdraw their petition from the I.U.C.,” Thomson said, to applause. “It never should have been approved. It doesn’t comply with law. It doesn’t comply with the constitution. I think now that we’ve seen, there’s no basis under the current IUC order to proceed.”
A new law in South Dakota forbids Summit from using eminent domain to acquire land from unwilling South Dakota property owners. The Iowa Utilities Commission’s permit for the pipeline is conditioned on the company getting permits to operate in other states along the pipeline route. Muscatine Senator Mark Lofgren says Republicans in the senate are working with a Republican who supports the pipeline, in hopes of passing some eminent domain protections. “It’s in our best interest to let Republicans kind of work through these things,” Lofgren said. “…We’re not done yet.”
House Republicans are preparing a package of pipeline-related proposals, but House G-O-P bills on the subject have never been considered in the senate over the past three years. A spokesperson for Summit Carbon Solutions says the company respects the role of elected officials in the policy-making process and remains focused on delivering a project that supports Iowa agriculture, ethanol, and national energy dominance.
(Cresco, Iowa) – The driver of a pickup truck died Sunday evening in northern Iowa, when the vehicle struck a bridge guardrail before rolling over. The accident in Howard County happened at around 6-p.m., just north of Cresco. The Iowa State Patrol reports a 2013 Ford F-150 pickup driven by 38-year-old Tyler Timothy Johnson, of Cresco, was traveling north on Valley Avenue and crossing the the Silver Creek Bridge near 90th Street, when the accident occurred.
Johnson died at the scene. The report did not say whether he was wearing a seat belt or not. The Howard County Sheriff’s Office assisted at the crash site.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Officials with Cass Health in Atlantic report the April session of “Healthy U” will be presented by the Cass Health Occupational Therapy team on Thursday, April 17, at noon in Conference Room 2.
The Cass Health Occupational Therapy team of Amber Michael, ORT/L, Ashley Williams, MOT, ORT/L, and Macy Ticknor, OTD, ORT/L, will focus on safety education, possible home modifications, fall prevention techniques, balance exercises, and more!

Amber Michael
Amber Michael graduated from the College of Saint Mary in 2016 with her Masters of Occupational Therapy. Amber has experience with a wide range of adults/geriatrics with various diagnoses such as orthopedic, cardiac, neurologic impairments/disabilities.
Ashley Williams graduated from College of Saint Mary in 2009 with her Masters in Occupational Therapy and joined Cass Health’s Rehabilitation Services team immediately following. Ashley became a certified lymphedema therapist in 2014 and is currently working to complete her certification in sensory integration.
Macy Ticknor graduated from the College of Saint Mary in 2024 with an Occupational Therapy Doctorate. She is certified by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy and licensed by the Iowa Board of Physical & Occupational Therapy.
Space is limited! A free boxed lunch is provided for all attendees, so reservations are required. Call 712-243-7479 to reserve your seat. For more information about Healthy U, visit casshealth.org/healthyu.

Ashley Williams

Macy Ticknor
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Cass County Emergency Management Coordinator Mike Kennon says Outdoor Warning Sirens throughout Cass County will activate this Wednesday morning at approximately 10:00-a.m., as part of a Statewide Tornado Drill
Those who subscribe to the Cass County Emergency Notification System will also receive an alert concerning the drill. Kennon adds “Last Spring’s Tornadoes in Minden and Greenfield remind us that we need to stay prepared for severe weather events.” 
To register for the Cass County Emergency Notification System, go to links located on the Cass County homepage or the Cass County EMA Facebook page. If you need assistance, contact Mike Kennon, Cass County Emergency Management Agency Coordinator at 712-254-1500.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa saw more children in foster care who were referred to a home last year than there were licensed foster families, according to Four Oaks, the state’s contractor for licensing foster and adoptive parents. Kai McGee, director of foster care and adoption at the nonprofit, says the gap is actually worse, as not every home is always readily available to take in a child. McGee says children who don’t have relatives to stay with must leave wherever they live, then..
“They may end up spending some time in emergency shelters, and typically the extreme effort is to avoid having any children under the age of 12 spend time in those shelters,” McGee says. “Sometimes we look for a foster family who we know will care for that child just very short term.” Last year, there were about 24-hundred referrals for children needing a foster home and only about 17-hundred licensed foster families.
Four Oaks C-E-O Mary Beth O’Neill says rates need to go up to recruit more parents. The typical rate is about 600 dollars a month per child, depending on the child’s age and needs. The nonprofit says last year was the first time since 2013 the rate was raised. Legislation in an Iowa House committee would require the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services to review the rates every three years. McGee says foster parents are essentially unpaid volunteers.
“They are volunteering in the most significant way possible, by having somebody come live in their home and become a member of their family,” McGee says. “They don’t make money for doing it, and indeed, they don’t even break even.” McGee says most people are recruited to foster by word-of-mouth or small presentations in faith communities, organizations and community centers. She says a majority of foster parents are not motivated by money. However, she says because it can be challenging, sometimes low reimbursement rates can be the reason people stop fostering.
(Guthrie Center, Iowa) – A man from Coon Rapids was seriously injured during an accident involving a tractor, Friday afternoon. The Guthrie County Sheriff’s Office reports 62-year-old Daniel Lee Royer, of Coon Rapids, was driving a John Deere tractor northbound in the 1800 block of Chestnut Avenue in Guthrie County, at around 4:25-p.m., when the tractor lost power, causing it to swerve across the southbound lanes and down an embankment until it came to rest on a ditch.
Royer was crawling out of the machine when he was seen by a passing motorist, who reported the accident to 9-1-1. He suffered suspected serious/incapacitating injuries, and was transported by Audubon County Ambulance to the Audubon County Fairgrounds, and then flown by Life Flight to a hospital in Des Moines.
The tractor sustained $10,000 damage during the accident.
(Greenfield, Iowa) – Adair County Sheriff Jeff Vandewater says there were three arrests that took place over the past week:
At around 2:30-a.m. Saturday, Stuart Police arrested 32-year-old Dalton Kyle Bittner, of Fargo, ND, following a traffic stop for speeding (97 mph in a 70 mph zone) on Interstate 80 at mile marker 104. The pickup Bittner was driven was also observed passing another vehicle on the right side lane and crossing over the fog line. During an investigation that occurred during the traffic stop, Bittner allegedly had slurred speech, along with bloodshot/watery eyes. Upon further investigation, including a field sobriety test, Bittner was arrested for suspected OWI/1st offense, and speeding. He was later released on a $1,000 bond.
Thursday afternoon, sheriff’s deputies in Adair County arrested 55-year-old William John Hohertz, of Greenfield, was arrested in Greenfield, on an Adair County warrant for Violation of a No Contact Order/Contempt of Court, after he allegedly sent an e-mail to the protected party in response to an e-mail he thought was from that same party, which did not come from that person. He was being held in the Adair County Jail on a $1,000 bond, with 10% of the bond acceptable for release.
And, on March 18th, 46-year-old Timothy Dewayne Martin, of Adair, was arrested at the Adair County Courthouse by Adair Police, on an Adair County warrant for Failure to Appear on an original charge of Domestic Abuse Assault. Martin was later released on his Own Recognizance.
(Glenwood, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Mills County report 10 people were arrested on various charges over the past week. On Sunday, March 23rd:
Early Saturday morning, 28-year-old Liam Thomas Kriegshauser, of Council Bluffs, was arrested near Pacific Junction, for Driving Under Suspension. Friday night, Mills County Deputies arrested 32-year-old Nicholas Jason Sendgraff, of Omaha, for Failure to Appear. He was taken into custody at the Mills County Sheriff’s Office and held on a $10,000 bond.
On March 18th, Mills County Deputies arrested 53-year-old Gregory Thomas Graeve, of Plattsmouth, NE, for Driving While License Denied or Revoked for OWI. His bond was set at $1,000. And, there were four arrests in Mills County on March 17th:
“A criminal charge is merely an accusation and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.“
(Radio Iowa) – Governor Kim Reynolds will soon decide whether county supervisors in the three counties where Iowa’s public universities are located are elected to represent districts or the entire county. A bill to forbid at-large county supervisor elections in Black Hawk, Johnson and Story Counties has cleared the House and Senate with Republican support. Senator Dawn Driscoll, of Williamsburg, says it’s about giving a voice to rural residents who feel ignored. “We are trying to mitigate the effects of the high student populations which are seasonal instead of permanent residents,” she said.
Senator Kara Warme, of Ames, says she enjoys having students in the community, but the population is far different in July when students are gone. “What I hear again and again from my constituents is those who are the permanent residents — the generational farmers, those who are concerned about getting their crops to market, driving on secondary roads, managing their volunteer fire department — those are their interests and they don’t have any voice right now on the board of supervisors.” Democrats voted against the bill. Senator Herman Quirmbach, of Ames, says permanent residents already have a disproportionate advantage because turn out among students is significantly lower.
“I think we really ought to admit what this bill really is,” he said. “it’s an attempt at political gerrymandering to draw district lines in such a way as to advantage one party over another.” Senate Democratic Leader Janice Weiner, of Iowa City, says the bill is an attack on local control in three of Iowa’s 99 counties. “You either do it for everybody or you don’t do it for anybody,” she said. Representative Adam Zabner, a Democrat from Iowa City, says Pottawattamie, Scott and Woodbury Counties have similar populations to the three counties addressed in the bill. “What is the difference between those three counties and Johnson, Black Hawk and Story County?” Zabner said. “Johnson, Black Hawk and Story elect Democrats more often than they elect Republicans. This is a blatant political effort to change who is elected in these counties.”
Representative Brett Barker, a Republican from Nevada, says when he was campaigning last year, the number one complaint wasn’t about property taxes — it was about the county board of supervisors. “They don’t feel like their votes matter in county government,” he said. “They feel like they’re out voted by people on the campus that couldn’t even tell you what a county supervisor does.” Representative Bobby Kaufmann, a Republican from Wilton, says rural voices are drowned out in Johnson County — home of the University of Iowa. “There is next to no rural representation in these three counties,” Kaufmann said. “…Ronald Reagan’s ghost could be resurrected and he would not still give rural representation in these areas.” The bill also forbids county supervisors from filling vacancies and requires special elections when a member of the board of supervisors in Black Hawk, Johnson and Story Counties resigns or dies in office.
In a 2023 special election in Iowa’s 10th largest county — Pottawattamie County, 64 percent voters rejected plans to have county supervisors elected by districts, preserving the system of at-large elections for Pottawattamie County Supervisors.
(Radio Iowa) – Five Iowa communities are being picked to take part in what’s known as the First Impressions program, which is designed to strengthen tourism, attract new residents and cultivate a community’s quality of life. Diane Van Wyngarden is a state tourism specialist with the Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, which helped to develop the program, now in its second year, focused on towns with ten-thousand or fewer residents.”Last year, we had two communities,” Van Wyngarden says, “and we received such a strong response in both interest and in the communities who participated, we partnered with Iowa Economic Development and the Iowa Tourism Office, and they wanted to greatly expand the program, so we’re very pleased to be able to offer this to five communities this year.”
The first communities for the program’s opening year were Corning and Maquoketa. Van Wyngarden says this year’s five communities are: Independence, Manning, Perry, Washington and Webster City. “Several trained assessors will be traveling incognito as first-time visitors to each of these communities,” Van Wyngarden says, “and they’ll be answering about an 80-question assessment tool on all things pertaining to tourism attractions as well as quality of life, housing, downtown, outdoor recreation.” The assessors will also be looking for things like agri-tourism opportunities. Later this year, each community will get a 90-page report on the findings during a town hall meeting. 
“We also provide recommendations, and that is presented at a public forum,” Van Wyngarden says. “Everyone is invited to the community forum where they can hear the outcome of this report, and then the community can choose if they want to use these recommendations, which ones and what action steps they would like to take.” Learn more about the program here: https://www.extension.iastate.edu/communities/firstimpressions