United Group Insurance

Update: Missing Mills County woman found

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

UPDATE she has been found. Thank you everyone for your help. (Additional info. not available)

(Original story): The Mills County Sheriff’s Office is asking for help in locating a missing adult. Sarah Gillespie was last seen at approximately 2100hrs on 6/14/2019. The female was last seen wearing blue jeans with a rhinestone belt, cowboy boots with spurs, a pink and black hat, and a turquoise sweatshirt. She was last known to be driving a black 2001 Toyota Tacoma (LIC NL796). If you have any information on the whereabouts of this female please contact the Mills County Sheriff’s Office at (712) 527-4871.

Sarah Gillespie (FOUND)

Iowa Ranks 3rd in Nation for Child Well-Being

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

[Iowa News Service] DES MOINES, Iowa – An annual report measuring the well-being of children ranks Iowa third among all 50 states based on indicators in four areas.  Michael Crawford, director of Iowa KIDS COUNT, maintains the high ranking reflects the importance Iowans place on providing for children and families, noting a decline in the teen birth rate by 45% since 2010, and a 25% reduction in the percentage of children without health insurance.

Crawford says one improvement Iowa could make is qualifying more parents for financial assistance so a larger percentage of children can enroll in preschool. “And the second thing is just continue our access to health insurance for all Iowans,” she states. “Right now we have a very high participation rate for children and we obviously want to keep that up there, at that level, so not to eliminate the Affordable Care Act or in our case the Hawki insurance program for children.”

The Annie E. Casey Foundation 30th edition of the annual report ranks Iowa second among all states in the economic well-being domain and in the top 10 in the three other domains: seventh in education, eighth in health, and eighth in family and community. Leslie Boissiere, the Casey Foundation’s vice president, external affairs, says overall, children in the United States had a better chance at thriving in 2017 than in 1990 when the first Data Book was released, with improvements in 11 of the 16 index measures of child well-being. Boissiere says, however, that racial and ethnic disparities continue, and states should be asking hard questions. “Are we fully funding public education and are we doing it in a way that’s equitable across all communities and neighborhoods?” she states. “Have we expanded Medicaid? Are states making health care and health insurance available to all families? ”

The Casey Foundation found that more than 13 million children in the U.S. are living in poverty, and despite economic growth and reduced unemployment, there’s been virtually no progress on child poverty since the publication of the first Data Book in 1990.

Skyscan Forecast – Monday, June 17 2019

Weather

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Areas of fog this morning; Partly cloudy w/scattered showers & tstrms this afternoon. High 82. S winds @ 10mph.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy w/scattered shwrs & tstrms. Low 64. N-N @ 5-10.

Tomorrow: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scatt. Shwrs & tstrms. High 77. NE @ 5-10.

Wednesday: Mo. Cldy w/scattered shwrs & tstrms. High 77.

Thursday: P/Cldy & warmer w/scattered showers. High 83.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 86. Our Low 60. Last year on this date our High was 92 and the Low was 75. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 102 in 1918. The Record Low was 40 in 1974.

Study: Iowans at higher risk of health trouble due to nitrates in water

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A nationwide study shows Iowans are at an increased risk of health effects from nitrate exposure. Researchers from the Environmental Working Group and Duke University estimate as many as 12-thousand cancer cases each year nationwide may be linked to nitrates in drinking water. Alexis Temkin is one of the authors of the paper, published in the journal Environmental Research. Temkin says, “We tried to look at the rates and saw that states like California and Iowa had some of the higher rates, where we know that there is a lot of agricultural practices, and definitely many communities that can be affected by elevated nitrate levels.”

The current federal limit on nitrates in drinking water is ten parts per million, but recent studies suggest the risk of certain cancers and birth defects increases even at lower levels. Temkin says she and her co-authors tallied the potential cases. She says, “We found that typically there could be sort of a large public health impact occurring at levels that are below the current legal standard.”

Temkin says agricultural states like Iowa and California are at a greater risk, due to the use of nitrate-rich fertilizer and manure.

(Thanks to Kate Payne, Iowa Public Radio)

Ernst formally kicks off bid for another six-year term in US Senate

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Republican Senator Joni Ernst kicked off her bid for re-election in 2020 this past weekend. “You and I know that this fight isn’t over and there’s more work to be done to push back on the coastal liberal insanity,” Ernst said Saturday, “to stand up for Iowans.” Ernst held her fifth annual “Roast and Ride” fundraiser, starting Saturday morning with a 49-mile motorcycle ride from Des Moines to Boone, then a barbecue Saturday afternoon at the Central Iowa Expo grounds. Ernst spent much of her half-hour speech in Boone criticizing the Democratic presidential candidates. “Can I count on your help to stop them?” Ernst said, and the crowd cheered in the affirmative. “That’s right. I knew you would.”

Former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley — who served nearly two years as President Trump’s Ambassador to the United Nations — was the event’s keynote speaker. “We need all of you to go out and become part of Joni’s campaign. It’s going to be a competitive race. Iowa is always competitive,” Haley said. “We can’t take anything for granted.” Ernst’s 2014 race against Democrat Bruce Braley was the third-most expensive in the country, topping 85-million dollars. Ernst told reporters she’s hoping her 2020 race isn’t that expensive. “I know that this is an important seat that the Democrats would love to have back, but I’m going to make them fight for it,” Ernst said during a news conference Saturday morning, “and they are going to fail.”

Three Democrats have announced they’re running for THEIR party’s nomination, to face Ernst in 2020. Ernst did not mention her potential Democratic competitors Saturday, but other speakers at her campaign kick-off did. Republican Governor Kim Reynolds mentioned Eddie Mauro and Theresa Greenfield by name. “There may be more and I’m sure they’ll all compete to see who can run the fastest to the left,” Reynolds said.

Ernst campaign officials say they sold about a thousand tickets to Saturday’s event. In a written statement, Iowa Democratic Party chairman Troy Price said while Ernst spent Saturday “reaffirming her support for Donald Trump’s extreme agenda,” Democrats spent Saturday holding organizing events throughout the state to prepare for 2020.

SUE A. STIFFLER, 74, of Exira (Celebration of Life Mem. gathering. 6/22/19)

Obituaries

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SUE A. STIFFLER, 74, of Exira, died June 2nd, at the Exira Care Center. A Celebration of Life Memorial gathering for SUE STIFFLER will be held from 2-until 4-p.m. Saturday, June 22nd, at the Kessler Funeral Home, in Exira.

A private family disposition of cremains will be held at a later date.

SUE STIFFLER is survived by:

Her sister – Cindy Hildenbrand, of Burnsville, MN.

Other relatives and many friends.

Central IA man arrested late last week in Adams County

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office says a man from Pleasantville was arrested last Thursday night on a drug charge. 18-year old Brant Bacon was arrested at around 10:30-p.m. following a traffic stop for speeding. Upon further investigation, it was learned Bacon was allegedly in possession of a controlled substance. He was also cited for speeding.

Taylor County man arrested in Adams County, Saturday following a “rolling domestic”

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Adams County report a Taylor County man was arrested Saturday night following a report of a possible intoxicated driver that was potentially entering Adams County. The vehicle was reported at around 11-p.m. to be traveling on Highway 148 near the Adams-Cass County line, that two children were in the vehicle, and the situation had turned into a “rolling domestic.”

The Cass County Sheriff’s Office advised Adams County that they had a received a 911 call that pinged near the Adams-Cass County line. Adams County Deputies located the suspected vehicle near the intersection of Highway 148 and 125th Street.

After further investigation, 46-year old Brian Spooner, of New Market, was arrested for Interference with Official Acts. The case remains under investigation, with additional charges pending.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 6/17/19

Sports

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

NEWTON, Iowa (AP) — NASCAR overturned a victory for the first time since 1960 when Brett Moffitt was declared the winner of the Truck Series race at Iowa Speedway after Ross Chastain’s No. 44 truck failed a post-race inspection. Chastain led the final 141 laps of the 200-lap race. But series managing director Brad Moran said that the No. 44 was too low when it was measured with NASCAR’s height sticks. NASCAR put strict new rules into place at the start of this season to deter cheating.

NEWTON, Iowa (AP) — Christopher Bell won the NASCAR Xfinity series race at the Iowa Speedway, his fourth victory of the season and his second straight in Newton. Bell led 186 of 250 laps to claim his second short track win of 2019 by nearly two seconds. Bell also won at Bristol in April.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Austin Martin homered on Reid Detmers’ first pitch of the game and he went deep again in the seventh to break a tie in Vanderbilt’s 3-1 victory over Louisville on Sunday in the College World Series. Drake Fellows came off a poor outing in the super regionals to pitch seven strong innings and help No. 2 national seed Vanderbilt (55-11) set a program record for wins and improve to 4-0 in its CWS openers.

NEW YORK (AP) — Paul DeJong tagged the Mets again, hitting a tiebreaking home run in the eighth inning that sent the St. Louis Cardinals over New York 4-3. The Cardinals won despite getting outhit 10-3. They took three of four in the series, and DeJong homered in each victory.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Martín Maldonado celebrated Father’s Day by wearing a blue necktie on his chest protector and had three hits to lift the Kansas City Royals over the Minnesota Twins 8-6. Maldonado had several names scribbled on the tie, along with “Happy Father’s Day.” Pittsburgh Pirates backstop Elias Diaz wore the same tie in a game against Atlanta, which appeared to be provided by equipment manufacturer All-Star.

Iowa early News Headlines: Monday, June 17, 2019

News

June 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:35 a.m. CDT

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Police are investigating the fatal shootings of four family members whose bodies were found in their Iowa home. The Des Moines Register reports that the bodies were discovered Saturday morning by relatives who were staying with the family at the home in West Des Moines. A police news release identifies the victims as 44-year-old Lavanya Sunkara, 41-year-old Chandrasekhar Sunkara, and two boys aged 15 and 10 years.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Torrential rain this spring prevented most Midwest farmers from planting their crops but while the federal government provides help to growers of corn and soybeans, those who grow specialty crops are largely on their own. Although the lack of federal safety net programs for farmers who grow everything from arugula to zucchini isn’t new, one of the wettest springs in U.S. history has focused attention on the special status of commodity crops, primarily corn, soybeans, cotton, rice and wheat.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Six people were injured when someone fired shots into a group of people who had left a party on Des Moines’ east side. Police say those hurt in the shooting early Sunday were taken to hospitals and were all in stable condition. The shooting happened about 1:30 a.m. when a vehicle approached a group of people who were standing in a street after a party ended. Someone in the vehicle fired multiple shots into the crowd, injuring three females and three males. The victims are 16 to 20 years old.

MAQUOKETA, Iowa (AP) — Eastern Iowa officials are investigating the death of a man in police custody. The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation says in a news release that the death happened Saturday morning after Jackson County Sheriff’s deputies and the Maquoketa Police Department were called to an address in Maquoketa for a fight. The incident lead to the arrest of Drew Edwards, of Marquoketa. Officials say that soon after Edwards’ arrest, he began showing signs of a medical emergency and died at a hospital.