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Sidney wins home boys track invitational

Sports

April 19th, 2019 by admin

The Sidney boys track team captured the top of the podium in their home invitational on Thursday. The meet was ran in Tabor at the Fremont-Mills track. The Cowboys won 8 events en route to the championship.

Teams Scores

  1. Sidney 143
  2. Glenwood 117
  3. Fremont-Mills 76
  4. Stanton 66
  5. Clarinda Academy 48
  6. East Mills 42
  7. Essex 30
  8. Heartland Christian 19
  9. South Page 7

Full results here.

IKM-Manning and Underwood grab wins at Griswold Boys Tiger Relays

Sports

April 19th, 2019 by admin

IKM-Manning and Underwood were winners in the two-class Griswold Boys Tiger Relays on Thursday.

Class A Team Scores

  1. IKM-Manning 190
  2. Audubon 106
  3. Griswold 81
  4. Logan-Magnolia 72
  5. Southwest Valley 60
  6. Riverside 50

IKM-Manning won the Class A division with 190 points. Audubon and Griswold followed in 2nd and 3rd. The Wolves won titles in 10 different events. Audubon’s Skyler Schultes won the 110M Hurdles and Long Jump. Brandon Jensen won 400M Hurdles for the Wheelers and they took the Shuttle Hurdle Relay.

Class AA Team Scores

  1. Underwood 170
  2. Shenandoah 143
  3. Clarinda 103
  4. Red Oak 69
  5. Creston 44
  6. Tri-Center 35

Underwood won 11 events on their way to the Class AA team title. The Eagles got a double win night from Brayden Wollan in the 100M and 200M.

Full results here.

West Harrison Co-Ed Track Meet 04/18/2019

Sports

April 18th, 2019 by admin

Boys Team Scores

  1. Woodbine 154
  2. West Monona 138
  3. KP-WC 121
  4. Missouri Valley 109
  5. West Harrison 42

Full results: 2019 Boys B-H Invite

Girls Team Scores

  1. West Monona 167
  2. Lawton-Bronson 127
  3. Missouri Valley 78
  4. Woodbine 72
  5. West Harrison 67
  6. Westwood 64
  7. Whiting 3

Full results: 2019 Girls B-H Invite

Treynor tops Underwood Girls Eagle Relays

Sports

April 18th, 2019 by admin

The Treynor girls track team took the win at the Underwood Girls Eagle Relays on Thursday night. The Cardinals won three events and racked up 142 points to edge out Panorama by 10.

AHSTW’s Ryann Portch won the 800M and Holly Hoepner took the 400M Hurdles. The Lady Vikes also won the Sprint Medley. Audubon’s Melissa Deist won the shot put.

Team Scores

  1. Treynor 142
  2. Panorama 132
  3. Underwood 114
  4. AHSTW 95
  5. Audubon 77.5
  6. Tri-Center 71
  7. IKM-Manning 65.5
  8. Riverside 12

Full results here: Underwood_Track_4-18-2019

Legislators approve rules for the evolution of canned cocktails

News

April 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Another adult beverage may be available for this summer’s backyard barbecue: a canned cocktail. Iowa legislators have voted to raise the allowed alcohol content up to 15 percent for mixed drinks sold in a metal can. Representative Mike Sexton of Rockwell City says the bill allows canned cocktails to be sold and served in places where beer is now sold.

“We are allowing another product into the state of Iowa,” Sexton said. “It’s going to help businesses. It’s going to help the beer wholesalers as they see their market shift and as we get ready for this next generation of canned alcohol.” Sexton says market research in Europe and Australia show more and more consumers are choosing canned cocktails there that have an even higher alcohol content than this bill would allow.

“I wonder if I could get a Crown and a Coke? Well, we certainly can’t under this bill we’re doing today,” Sexton said, “but in the next generation of canned cocktails, very likely we will and those canned cocktails will definitely have to fall within the classification of spirits.”

That will require another rewrite of Iowa laws on alcohol beverages. The House approved the new rules today (Thursday) that will let beer wholesalers sell canned cocktails with up to 15 percent alcohol content. The Iowa Senate endorsed the move in mid-March, so the bill now goes to the governor for her consideration.

Critics of the bill say bars and restaurants that have paid for a liquor license may lose business to a competitor down the street that just paid for a beer license, which is cheaper, and will now be able to sell canned cocktails that contain liquor.

Unresolved debate over that front license plate

News

April 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The debate over requiring an Iowa license plate on the front AND rear of vehicles has been revived in the 2019 legislature. The House has voted to let antique or classic vehicles — that are least 25 years old — to go without a front license plate. Representative Brian Lohse of Bondurant says the House plan also directs the Iowa D-O-T and Department of Public Safety to study the issue.

“The purpose of this study is to address law enforcement’s concerns for public safety as well as to address the ever-increasing amount of life safety technology being placed in the front bumper by auto manufacturers,” Lohse says.

Representative Andy McKean of Anamosa is skeptical of eliminating the front license plate requirement. “Now I’m perfectly willing to take a look at what recommendations are made, but I don’t think we can minimize the public safety importance of having proper identification at the front of the car,” McKean says. “It’s made a big difference in many cases for public safety concerns.”

The bill passed the House on a 96-to-one vote. However, 34 members of the Iowa Senate voted for a different approach to this issue two weeks ago.. The Senate plan would forbid police from pulling a vehicle over solely because it lacks a front license plate. The Senate proposal also would let auto owners skip putting a license plate on the front of the vehicle if it requires drilling holes or using glue to get the plate on the front bumper. Iowa is among the 31 states that require plates on the front AND rear of vehicles. Most sports cars and high-priced, luxury vehicles don’t have a spot for a front plate.

Presidential candidates in Iowa react to Barr’s comments and release of Mueller report

News

April 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Two presidential candidates were out campaigning in Iowa today (Thursday) — both U.S. Senators — are criticizing Attorney General William Barr’s decision to hold a news conference two hours before releasing the Mueller report to the public. Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar spoke with reporters in the Iowa capitol.  “I am very concerned about how the attorney general has rolled this out,” Klobuchar said. “He is supposed to be the people’s attorney, not the president’s attorney.”

New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand says the attorney general’s news conference was “a complete farce” and an “embarassing display of propaganda” on behalf of the president. “What’s so disturbing is that Attorney General Barr insists that he somehow characterize this report first, create a narrative and put a frame around it,” Gillibrand says.

Gillibrand made her comments Thursday morning during an interview with Radio Iowa. Klobuchar says she hopes the Mueller report helps spur passage of a bill she’s co-sponsored that will require back-up paper ballots and audits of the 2020 election results.  “In the words of the president’s own National Security Director Dan Coats, ‘The Russians are simply getting bolder,'” Klobuchar says. “What I hope this report will do is illuminate all of the very illegal things the Russians did to try to influence our election.”

Klobuchar says the Russians tried to hack into election equipment as well as the propaganda they posted online to try to inflame political divisions in this country.   “Those are the things that we’ve got to focus on,” Klobuchar says. “And I know there’s going to be a lot of talk about obstruction and I’m going to read it very carefully to see the differences of opinion, but I want you not to let go of the importance of our next election, that we don’t have this happen again.”

Senator Gillibrand says the whole purpose of having the special counsel was to have an independent investigation of Russian influence in the 2016 election. “Hopefully we’ll get to see the truth,” Gillibrand says. “Congress is entitled to an unredacted report. We review confidential and privileged information all the time, so we deserve an unredacted report and if the redactions are too fulsome, I hope we subpoena the report, unredacted.”

It appears just a few members of congress will get to see the report in full, without sections blacked out. Klobuchar says she hopes, as a member of the Senate Judiciary, that she gets to see it in full.  “But the most important thing is that Bob Mueller come before congress, so the public can see him answer questions,” Klobuchar says, “so that we can get to the bottom of why there is this difference in his interpretation of the law and the attorney general of the United States.”

Neither of Iowa’s U.S. senators have commented on the release of the Mueller report SINCE IT WAS MADE PUBLIC. Senator Chuck Grassley said earlier today he favors releasing as much of the Mueller report as possible, but not grand jury testimony or any information that would endanger national security. Congresswoman Abby Finkenauer, a Democrat from Dubuque, said in a written statement that making the report public has been “essential to ensure that the best interests of every American rise above partisanship.” Finkenauer said congress must secure and defend U.S. elections from foreign influence.

Hamburg farmer says flooding situation is tough to recover from

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A hearing in Glenwood Wednesday focused on the Corps of Engineers management of the Missouri River leading up to the flooding on the Missouri River. Michael Stenzel of Hamburg was on hand to listen as the land he farms with his dad remains flooded. “As of right now, we’ve probably got a hundred acres out of the three-thousand that is not covered by water,” Stenzel says.

He says their closest ground to the river is a quarter of a mile away, but they see issues because the Corps water releases put the river at such a high level. He says when the river is run at a high level, they constantly fight seepage into the nearby farmland. Stenzel is the president of McKissick Island Dike & Levee, and drainage district, where he says they went through about 45-thousand dollars in fuel last year for pumps to try and keep the five-thousand acres dry.

Stenzel says the way the river is managed with the various wing dams slows it down too much. “I feel that the river needs to be sped up,” Stenzel says. “When a river runs fast and hard — you’ll see the scouring in the bottom of the river — so therefore the channel will be a little bit deeper. We’ll be able to hold a few more gallons coming through.”

Stenzel says another thing that added to the problem was the lack of communication from the Corps.  “In 2011, they came to us two weeks before and told us, ‘Hey this is what the dam’s going to do, this is how much water is going to come,’ so we had some time to prepare. This time they didn’t do it,” according to Stenzel. “My father and I, our operation, we lost 50-thousand bushels of beans and a 140-thousand bushels of corn, and probably 11 grain bins.”

While the Senate hearing was designed to try and move things ahead and make changes to prevent future flooding — Stenzel says its slow-moving nature is frustrating to farmers. “The political process is not what farmers want to hear. Farmers are the type of person who will get out, they will do whatever they need to do to get the job done,” Stenzel says. “That’s why farmers are not politicians.”

Stenzel says he was just starting to see his operation get back to where it should be following the flooding in 2011, and now that was all washed away again. “We’re going to be in such a hard deep hole — we might not ever get out,” Stenzel says.

Iowa Senator Joni Ernst called for the field hearing by the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, and was on hand with Senator Chuck Grassley and other officials.

Bankers survey: March floods in Midwest hitting farmers hard

Ag/Outdoor, News

April 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A monthly survey of rural bankers in parts of 10 Plains and Western states shows about one of every five expects an increase in farm loan defaults stemming from last month’s devastating Midwest floods.

The Rural Mainstreet survey for April, released Thursday, shows the survey’s overall index dropping from 52.9 in March to 50 this month. Any score above 50 suggests a growing economy, while a score below 50 indicates a shrinking economy.

Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, says “43.8 percent of bank CEOs indicated that the recent floods were having a negative impact on their local economy.”

Bankers also noted that farm loans for April surged as the borrowing index climbed to 81.3, the highest recorded since the survey began in 2006. Bankers from Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming were surveyed.

Former Harlan City Admin. Cox pleads guilty to tampering and theft

News

April 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

KJAN’s sister station KNOD reports that on Monday, April 15th, Terry Cox, the former Harlan City Administrator, pleaded guilty to an amended felony charge of 2nd degree theft, and an aggravated misdemeanor charge for tampering with records.

According to court records, Cox pleaded guilty to theft in the second degree and Tampering with records. Due to a plea agreement, a charge of Felonious Misconduct in Office, will be dismissed at Coxs’ expense, once the time for appeal is over. Sentencing is scheduled for May 20th. The state will not request jail or prison time. Cox is required to pay restitution to the city of Harlan in the amount of $7,500. He says he plans to request a deferred judgement at the time of sentencing.