United Group Insurance

KJAN News

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!

Iowa officials wait for approval of levee repair plan

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) – Officials in western Iowa are worried that $50 million in levee repairs won’t be completed quickly enough to avoid having an area deemed a flood zone, which would require costly insurance coverage. The Daily Nonpareil reports that the Federal Emergency Management Agency is expected to remap Council Bluffs’ potential flood zones in 2023.

Mayor Matt Walsh says the city should be able to complete repairs in time. But the Army Corps of Engineers’ lack of funding has slowed down the approval process on the city’s repair plans. Walsh says the Corps hasn’t reviewed and approved any levee-repair projects since last spring. Walsh says that if the project isn’t completed in time and the area is deemed a flood zone, flood insurance costs could triple the cost of mortgages.

Roadwork continues in Atlantic and beyond

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Iowa Department of Transportation crews are trying to work around Mother Nature when it comes to improvements to area roads. One of their projects is on Atlantic, is Highway 71, south of the intersection with Highway 6. Scott Suhr is the Transportation Planner for the DOT’s District 4 office, in Atlantic. He says if the weather cooperates, they hope to complete the curb and gutter sections soon. Afterward, asphalt will be applied to the road surface. The next project will be to resurface areas where cold-in-place recycling was done, from U-S 6 north, to the Audubon County line. The goal, he says, is to try and complete the project before the end of Fall. If that isn’t possible, their intermittent goal is to get a binder lift, or what’s applied before the surface lift. Suhr says the work is needed because storm water runoff is having trouble getting to the gutters and into the storm sewer intakes.

Residents of and visitors to Atlantic who dealt with road construction on Highway 6/E. 7th Street in 2015, will have a little bit of déjà vue where that stretch of road is concerned. Suhr says they will start where they left off two-years ago, near Burger King, with milling and resurfacing of the road that wasn’t finished the last time around. He said the two outside lanes will likely be closed while the milling is underway. Once that’s done, traffic will shift to those lanes and work conducted on the inside lanes.

In other words, the entire street won’t be blocked off and traffic detoured, like it was in 2015. That project was a “full deck replacement.” The current project has been in the DOT’s plans for a couple of years, and was waiting for funding to come through, which it has. The curbs and gutters along that stretch of road are in good shape, according to Suhr, so they will remain untouched.

He says it’s something that needs to be done, and will improve safety. Other area projects include a micro-surfacing of Interstate 80 that’s currently underway from the Cass County line east to Dexter. That will require slight lane shifts from time-to-time. Suhr reminds motorists to slow down in work zones, obey the posted speed limits, and avoid distractions.

Reminder: Pregnancy & Infant Loss Walk Planned for October 7th

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

A reminder from the Cass County Memorial Hospital’s Obstetrics (OB) Department: The “Love Steps Up” walk will be held tomorrow (Saturday, October 7th) at 10 am at the Atlantic High School track. In the event of rain, the event will take place in the AHS gymnasium. Love Steps Up is an initiative created by the OB Department to raise awareness and support for families impacted by pregnancy and infant loss. The annual walk is held in October, and a support group meets monthly at the hospital.

During the event, some personal stories will be shared, in hopes it won’t make families who have experienced the loss of a child at or before birth, so alone. Coming together, honoring the babies, and sharing stories. officials say, help us heal and raise awareness in the community about just how many families this touches.

The event is free and open to the public. And again, it will be held tomorrow (Saturday, October 7th) at 10 am at the Atlantic High School.  If there’s inclement weather, the event will be held in the AHS gymnasium. Participants will gather for brief remarks, walk, and then the event will conclude with a balloon release. There is no registration or fee for the event, but you can order a Love Steps Up t-shirt at www.casshealth.org through September 21st. Any questions can be directed to the CCMH OB Department at 712-250-8862.

Studies find a Cedar Rapids casino would hurt existing facilities

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

Gambling studies released by the Iowa Racing and Gaming commission Thursday show a new casino in Cedar Rapids would have big impact on existing casinos. The study by White Sand Gaming says the best time to consider casino in Cedar Rapids was in 2003. Linn County voters turned down a gambling referendum back then. It says the Riverside and Isle casino in Waterloo now service the area and a Cedar Rapids casino would take money away from those two existing facilities. It says the three current proposals for Cedar Rapids casinos overstate the revenue potential of the facilities.

The other market study by Marquette Advisors came to a similar conclusion. It showed any of the three proposed Cedar Rapids casinos would cannibalize between 45 and 56 percent f their annual revenue from Riverside and Waterloo. Cedar Rapids was denied a gambling license back in 2014 with commissioners citing the impact on current casinos as the main reason. The commission will hear formal presentations on the two market studies at their meeting next week in Emmettsburg.

You can see both studies on the Iowa Racing and Gaming website.

(Radio Iowa)

Report: Trump a thumbs down on Iowa’s ‘stop gap’ plan to fix insurance market

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The Washington Post is reporting that President Trump told federal officials to deny Iowa’s request to stabilize the individual health insurance market. The Washington Post reports Trump became outraged after he read a Wall Street Journal account of what has become called the state’s “stop gap” plan. It’s an attempt to help up to 72-thousand Iowans buy individual insurance policies for 2018 through the Affordable Care Act exchange. Trump reportedly directed the federal agency in charge of reviewing the state’s request to “tell Iowa no.” Iowa officials say there’s been no denial delivered. The only notice they’ve gotten is that Iowa’s waiver request has been “deemed….complete.” That triggered a required public comment period that ends October 19th.

(Radio Iowa)

(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 10/6/2017

News, Podcasts

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & funeral report, 10/6/2017

News, Podcasts

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

The area’s latest and/or top news stories at 7:06-a.m., w/KJAN News Director Ric Hanson

Play

Fatal motorcycle versus tractor crash in NE Iowa

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

One person was killed when a motorcycle and John Deere tractor collided near Dyersville in northeast Iowa late Thursday morning. The Iowa State Patrol says the accident happened a mile south of Dyersville on Highway 136. The motorcycle, operated by 60-year old David Allen Jones, of Palatka, Florida, hit a tractor pulling a manure wagon as the tractor was turning into a farm lane.The tractor operator was identified as 82-year old Francis John Naber, of Dyersville.

Palatka died at the scene. The crash remains under investigation.

(Radio Iowa)

Keep your umbrella handy today

News, Weather

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

If you’re heading outside today, tonight, or tomorrow morning, you’ll need your umbrella. The National Weather Service in Des Moines says Light showers continued overnight across much of Iowa, and will continue into the day today. A few strong to possibly severe thunderstorms are possible late this afternoon across southwestern to southern Iowa. Rainfall amounts tonight should be a widespread 1 to 1.5 inches. Another 0.1 to 0.25 inches of rain may fall from the 7 am to noon Saturday time period. In all 2 to 3 inches of rain is expected from Atlantic to Denison to Fort Dodge to Mason City.

Iowa one of the few states to see deaths from strokes decline

News

October 6th, 2017 by Ric Hanson

(RADIO IOWA/Des Moines) — The Iowa Department of Public Health was happy to find the state in the minority following a recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on the number of deaths from strokes nationwide. D-P-H Health Systems Coordinator Terry Meek says the numbers in most states increased or held steady in the report — but not here. “Iowa is one of 13 states where we have actually continue decreasing the number of deaths due to stroke,” Meek explains. “Our rate has decreased 33 percent between 2005 and 2015.” Meek says the biggest factor in the Iowa’s ability to lower stroke deaths is linked to money it received from the C-D-C. “That funding was called the Coverdale Stroke Program. And what it did was give us some money where we were able to call together a lot of partners and really work on some targeted activities to decrease stroke deaths,” according to Meek.

That targeted program included education that highlighted the signs and symptoms of a stroke, and encouraged people to immediately call 9-1-1 at the first signs of stroke. “The reason for doing that is important because there is medication that usually can be given if people get there (the hospital) soon enough that will preclude some of the major problems with stroke,” she says.  They also strengthened the stroke identification and care at the Comprehensive Stroke and Primary Stroke Centers in Iowa, along with changing the E-M-S protocols to include immediate transfer of stroke patients to the closest and highest level of stroke center. “So more people were getting to those comprehensive and primary stroke centers in Iowa quicker,” Meek says.

The quicker treatment and transports led to fewer deaths. Meek says the state also developed the Iowa Stroke Registry with the University of Iowa to help track what is going on. She says you can help continue to improve its stroke death rate in Iowa by taking steps to prevent strokes. “Eating a healthy diet, watching their blood pressure, making sure that they have regular checkups with their physician, where the physician can check for cholesterol, high blood pressure and other things that may be a problem — including diabetes,” Meek says.

Meek says you can recognize the signs of stroke by remembering “F.A.S.T.” The Face — Ask the person to smile. Does one side droop?; Arms –Ask the person to raise both arms. Does one arm drift downwards?; Speech – Ask the person to repeat a simple sentence. Are the words slurred?; and Time — If the person shows any of these symptoms, call 9-1-1 immediately. For more information on heart disease and stroke visit the Iowa Department of Public Health’s website http://www.idph.iowa.gov/cfy/heart-disease