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Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area, 3/18/19

Weather

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Today: Partly cloudy. High 48. Winds variable @ 5-10 mph.

Tonight: P/Cldy to Cloudy. Low 30. SE @ 5.

Tomorrow: Mostly cloudy w/a chance of light rain. High 42.

Wednesday: P/Cldy. High 50.

Thursday: P/Cldy. High 54.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 47. Our Low this morning was 23. Last year on this date our High was 41 and the Low was 34. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 81 in 2012. The Record Low was -1 in 1893.

Reynolds tours flood damage in Missouri Valley and Hornick

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Governor Kim Reynolds toured flood damage in western Iowa Sunday. “I continue to be just overwhelmed and impressed and grateful to our emergency managers, our EMS, our first responders, our volunteers, just the community as a whole,” Reynolds told reporters.

She started in Missouri Valley, then traveled north to the Woodbury County town of Hornick. Many streets were still flooded. “We were on the ground to understand what was going on, to make sure wewere meeting the needs, to make sure the communication and coordination was taking place,” Reynolds said. “as well as making sure that we’re assessing the damage as we move forward with the recovery.”

The governor went inside a few of the homes in Hornick, some still with several feet of water in their basements. “The water has started to recede just a little bit,” Reynolds said. “I think one of the homes that we toured it had gone down a foot since its high-water mark, but they still have a long ways to go and they know that.”

Thirty-eight Iowa counties are included in the governor’s disaster declaration for this latest round of flooding. Reynolds will tour flood damage in Hamburg, Pacific Junction and Montezuma today (Monday).

Residents of Hornick got 6 hours on Sunday to survey flood damage

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Residents of flood-striken Hornick were allowed back in the western Iowa town for a few hours Sunday so they could survey damage to their homes. Electricity to the town is still turned off, so residents had to be out before sunset. Dale Ronfeldt is a volunteer firefighter who has lived in Hornick since 1979. He allowed local media into his home which still has several feet of water in the basement. “I’ve got about four feet of water,” he said. “It is sewer back-up, but 99 percent pure water because of how inundated the sewer plant got.”

The last major flooding in Hornick happened in 1960. After a flood threatened the community in 1996, the town constructed a dike to protect the town. “Every year we have a scare of a flood and we make preparations and we do this and we do that…but we never know quite how far to go,” he says. “This time we had enough advance warning, but you get cried wolf so many times that you don’t know if it’s going to happen or not. This time it was real and we paid for it.”

Ronfeldt is thankful for the help he and other residents have received so far, but he expects many will never return to live in Hornick, including an older neighbor: “He’s not going to rebuild and I’ve heard that from a few others,” Ronfeldt says.  The town’s water supply was not swamped by flood waters, but crews from MidAmerican Energy were in Hornick Sunday to start restoring power where floodwaters had receded.

Reynolds to tour western Iowa today & speak w/the media

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES – Gov. Kim Reynolds will hold a press conference in Council Bluffs today (Monday, March 18th) to give an update on the flooding from rain and melting snow. Several media-only events will take place around southwest Iowa, prior to the press conference:

  • Gov. Reynolds will meet with local officials and tour flooding in Glenwood at 10:30-a.m.
  • She’ll be in Pacific Junction at 11:30-a.m.
  • Gov. Reynolds next stop is in Hamburg at 1-p.m., where she will meet with local officials and tour flooding.
  • And at 3:30-p.m., she will hold a press conference in Council Bluffs.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 3/18/19

Sports

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

MOLINE, Ill. (AP) — Alexa Willard scored a career-high 30 points and second-seeded Missouri State ended No. 21 Drake’s 12-game winning streak with a 94-79 victory in the Missouri Valley Conference tournament for the Bears’ 15th NCAA Tournament berth. Sydney Manning added 14 points, Brice Calip 13 and Danielle Gitzen 12 for the Bears (23-10), whose last win over a ranked team was against No. 5 Duke in the 2001 Sweet 16.

UNDATED (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference comes into the NCAA Tournament with three No. 1 seeds, but no league has put three teams in the Final Four since 1985. That year, Georgetown and St. John’s arrived as Big East behemoths, only to be upstaged when conference rival Villanova took the title. The ACC’s top-seeded trio this year is Duke, North Carolina and Virginia.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — North Carolina earned the No. 1 seed in the Midwest Region, but that’s about the only gift the Tar Heels got for the NCAA Tournament. Their path to the Final Four could include games against Kansas just down the road from the Jayhawks’ campus in Lawrence, and a matchup with second-seeded Kentucky in the regional finals.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Zion Williamson and Duke are the overall No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. The Blue Devils sit atop the East Region, and their road to Minneapolis could include matchups with ACC rival Virginia Tech _ which beat Duke without Zion _ and Big Ten champion Michigan State.

NEW YORK (AP) — Saint Louis rallied from a15-point, first-half deficit, locking down St. Bonaventure in the second half for a 55-53 victory in the Atlantic 10 championship and an NCAA Tournament bid. The sixth-seeded Billikens won four games in four days to earn their first A-10 Tournament title since 2013 and get back in the NCAAs for the first time since 2014.

JUPITER, Fla. (AP) — Back tightness is expected to keep St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Matt Carpenter out of the lineup until Wednesday. Carpenter first noticed the issue on Saturday, when he wasn’t scheduled to be in the lineup. The 33-year-old Carpenter hit .257 with 36 homers last season.

Iowa/Midwest early News Headlines: Monday, March 18, 2019

News

March 18th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:40 a.m. CDT

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Late winter flooding has forced residents in parts of southwestern Iowa out of their homes. Heavy rainfall and snowmelt have led to dangerously high water in creeks and rivers across several Midwestern states, with the Missouri River hitting record-high levels in many areas. At least two deaths were blamed on flooding, and two other men have been missing for days.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Specially-trained dogs from Montana are coming to Iowa to help round up a rare and threatened turtle species. The Iowa City Press-Citizen reports that the Bur Oak Land Trust is coordinating the project this spring to help gather the ornate box turtle, Iowa’s only native terrestrial turtle. The turtles are listed as “threatened” in Iowa, and the trust wants to preserve a small population in Johnson County.

CANYONLANDS NATIONAL PARK, Utah (AP) — Authorities say a 33-year-old University of Iowa graduate student found dead at Canyonlands National Park in southern Utah apparently fell 500 feet from an overlook. The San Juan County Sheriff’s Office said Jonathan Hogue’s body was found Friday at the base over the Green River Overlook following a search that began Tuesday.

UNDATED (AP) — One of the Democratic presidential hopefuls, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, says she would make public service the cornerstone of her presidency if she were to run and win the White House. Gillibrand hosted a civic service round table in Manchester, New Hampshire, on Saturday. Also in New Hampshire was New York’s mayor, Bill de Blasio, who is flirting with a presidential run. The mayor says the U.S. needs to be a country that rewards working people.

Willard, Missouri State women top No. 21 Drake for MVC title

Sports

March 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

MOLINE, Ill. (AP) — Alexa Willard scored a career-high 30 points and second-seeded Missouri State ended No. 21 Drake’s 12-game winning streak with a 94-79 victory in the Missouri Valley Conference tournament on Sunday for the Bears’ 15th NCAA Tournament berth.

Sydney Manning added 14 points, Brice Calip 13 and Danielle Gitzen 12 for the Bears (23-10), whose last win over a ranked team was against No. 5 Duke in the 2001 Sweet 16. It is the 11th MVC tournament title for Missouri State, the most recent coming in 2016.

The Bulldogs (27-6) had won 12 straight since an 85-79 home loss to the Bears on February 1 and were 61-1 against league opponents coming into their third-straight title game.

Bachrodt led Drake with 18 points, MVC player of the year Becca Hittner had 16 and Sara Rhine 14.

Brandon Baier Wins Bronze Medal at Special Olympics World Games

Sports

March 17th, 2019 by Jim Field

Brandon Baier of Atlantic has taken home a bronze medal in his first event at the 2019 Special Olympics World Games in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.  The 27 year old had the third best throw of 12.36 meters on Tuesday, March 12th in the M13 preliminaries and grabbed a third place finish in the finals on Sunday, March 17th with a toss of 13.58 meters.  Brandon is one of only 36 United States athletes competing in track & field.  He will be competing in the 100 meter dash on Tuesday, March 19th and will be part of a United States 4 x 100 meter relay team on Wednesday, March 20th.  His teammates on the 4 x 100 include:  25 year old Calvin Massenburg; 21 year old Christopher Lloyd Xzavion Tucker and 26 year old James Enoch Dawson.

Midwest flooding update: 3:15-p.m. 3/17/19

News

March 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The flooding Missouri River has damaged dozens of buildings at an Air Force base in Nebraska. The Omaha World-Herald reports that about one-third of the Offutt Air Force Base is under water. A spokeswoman for the base says 60 buildings, mostly on the south end of the base, have been damaged, including about 30 completely inundated with as much as 8 feet of water. Among the buildings badly damaged are the headquarters building and a hangar.

Offutt’s lone runway is expected to remain closed until Tuesday afternoon. Airmen had been filling thousands of sandbags, but the newspaper reports that the sandbagging effort has been halted.

Residents in parts of southwestern Iowa were forced out of their homes Sunday as a torrent of Missouri River water flowed over and through levees. Heavy rainfall and snowmelt have led to dangerously high water in creeks and rivers across several Midwestern states, with the Missouri River hitting record-high levels in many areas. At least two deaths were blamed on flooding, and two other men have been missing for days. While river depths were starting to level off in parts of Nebraska on Sunday, the water is so high in many places that serious flooding is expected to remain for several days. And downstream communities in Kansas and Missouri were bracing for likely flooding.

In Iowa, the Missouri River reached 30.2 feet Sunday in Fremont County in the state’s far southwestern corner, 2 feet above the record set in 2011. People in the towns of Bartlett and Thurman were being evacuated as levees were breached and overtopped.

County Emergency Management Director Mike Crecelius said it wasn’t just the amount of the water, it was the swiftness of the current that created a danger. “This wasn’t a gradual rise,” Crecelius said. “It’s flowing fast and it’s open country — there’s nothing there to slow it down.” Thurman has about 200 residents. About 50 people live in Bartlett.

Lucinda Parker of Iowa Homeland Security & Emergency Management said nearly 2,000 people have been evacuated at eight Iowa locations since flooding began late last week. Most were staying with friends or family. Seven shelters set up for flood victims held just a couple dozen people Saturday night.

Mills County sandbagging efforts underway

News

March 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Officials in Mills County have put out a call for volunteers to assist with the filling sandbags, this morning. Persons wanting to help out should go to the Al Hughes Auction House, 21929 S 221st Street, in Glenwood.

The task to fill the sand bags began at 9-a.m.