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(Podcast) KJAN 8-a.m. News, 4/17/19

News, Podcasts

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 4/17/19

Podcasts, Sports

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The 7:20-a.m. Sportscast with Jim Field.

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(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 4/17/2019

News, Podcasts

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

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2 arrested Tuesday in Creston

News

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Two people were arrested on separate charges in Creston, Tuesday. Authorities say 19-year old Jacob Hummel, of Emerson, was arrested at around 9:42-p.m. for the charge of Public Intoxication. Hummel was released from the Union County Jail on a $300 bond. And, at around 1:40-p.m. Tuesday, 33-year old Ryan Weis, of Creston, was arrested at his residence on a charge of Driving While Revoked. Weis was released from the Union County Jail on a $1000 bond.

Tuesday night, a Creston resident reported to police that sometime recently (unknown time-frame) a second-story window of his residence in the 100 block of N. Jarvis Street, was shot at with a BB Gun causing about $400 damage to the window.

Jury convicts man who fatally stabbed brother in Des Moines

News

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A jury has convicted a man of fatally stabbing his brother in Des Moines. Polk County District Court records say 51-year-old Shawn Davis was found guilty Tuesday of second-degree murder. His sentencing is scheduled for May 30. Police say Davis stabbed 35-year-old Preston Davis on Aug. 5, 2017, during a family gathering. They’d been arguing , and Shawn Davis punched his brother. Police say Shawn Davis then got a knife and stabbed Preston in the home’s driveway as Preston and another person were leaving.

Shawn Davis’ criminal history includes a second-degree murder conviction for the October 1986 shooting death of 27-year-old Thomas Law. His sentence was reduced after the Iowa Court of Appeals ordered a new trial in 1989, and he later received a 12-year-sentence for voluntary manslaughter.

Lawmakers may boost tax credit for donations to private school scholarship funds

News

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Bills that have emerged in the Iowa House and Senate would increase scholarships for students at private and parochial schools. Iowans already can get a tax credit for donating to a private school’s scholarship fund for low-income students. A bill that’s cleared initial review in the state senate would raise the current 13-million dollar statewide cap on those tax credits to 17 million. Tom Chapman is executive director of the Iowa Catholic Conference. “We’re certainly encouraged that legislators get as close to what our goal is, which has really been $20 million in tax credits, and so we’ll encourage people to contact their legislators and just do the best they can with it,” Chapman says.

Critics say the plan amounts to a 31 percent increase in funding for private school tuition, while Iowa public schools are getting just a two percent increase in per pupil state spending. The proposed increase in the tax credit for private school donations is included in a larger package of tax-related issues being considered in the legislature.

Bill plants seeds of children’s mental health system

News

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A bill designed to eventually establish more mental health services for Iowa children has cleared the Iowa Senate. The bill was approved last month by the House, so it goes to Governor Kim Reynolds for her approval. “We’ve talked about a childrens’ mental health system for a long time and it’s time to finally put the structure in place,” Reynolds says, “to talk about what the governance looks like, to align it with the adult mental health system.”

The bill is one of the governor’s top priorities this year. It establishes a new state board to oversee development of a childrens’ “behavioral health” system. It also calls on two state agencies to set up a 24-hour “crisis” hotline for parents seeking mental health treatment for their child. “People don’t know where to start,” Reynolds says, “and so little things like that can help start to get kids the services that they need.”

Advocates say the bill is a good start, but policymakers need to find a stable source of funding for the system. The mental health system for Iowa ADULTS who cannot afford care is managed on a regional basis, by county officials, and financed with property taxes.

Cass County Extension Report 4-17-2019

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

April 17th, 2019 by Jim Field

w/Kate Olson.

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More Iowans may become eligible for child care tax credits

News

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The 2019 Iowa legislature may be poised to increase the number working Iowans who can claim a tax credit for child care expenses. Parents with an annual income above 45-thousand dollars are NOT currently eligible. A bill that’s cleared a senate subcommittee would make Iowa parents who earn up to 57-thousand dollars a year eligible for child care tax credits. Senator Randy Feenstra, a Republican from Hull, has been working on the proposal. “It’s important that parents have dollars that they can spend on child care and so forth,” Feenstra says, “and that’s what this does.”

Senator Pam Jochum, a Democrat from Dubuque, says it’s a significant move. “I think that really helps working families a great deal by raising their eligibility limit to get into that credit,” Jochum says. The bill also would set up indexing for these child care tax credits. It means there would be annual, incremental increases in the income level at which a parent is eligible to receive a tax credit for child care expenses.

Song dropped from school concert list over lyrics complaint

News

April 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — A suburban Des Moines school has dropped the song “Pick a Bale of Cotton” from its concert list after a parent complained that the song’s lyrics are racist.
Bernice Thompson told The Des Moines Register that she contacted West Des Moines Community Schools officials two weeks ago after her seventh-grade daughter, Taishon Graham, told her she didn’t want to sing it at the Indian Hills Junior High School spring concert.

Taishon, who is black, says the song saddened her “because you want to sing happy songs at a spring concert, not songs about picking cotton.”
The song’s edited lyrics include the line, “Gonna jump down/ Turn around/ Pick a bale of cotton/ Gonna jump down/ Turn around/ Pick a bale a day.” The original lyrics included a racial epithet.

School district spokesman Aaron Young says the school principal and choir director decided to pull the song from the concert selections. In 2005 the song was pulled from a high school music program in a Detroit suburb after similar complaints.