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Atlantic School Board to discuss & set date for a public hearing on 2019-2020 School Calendar

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic School Board will meet 5:30-p.m. Wednesday in the MIDDLE SCHOOL MEDIA CENTER. During their open session, the Board will discuss a Collective Bargaining Proposal from the Atlantic Education Association for the 2019-2020 School Year. Immediately following the AEA’s initial proposal, the Board of Directors will enter into an exempt (Closed) session for “Negotiating session, strategy meetings of public employers or employee organizations, mediations and the deliberative process of arbitrators, as allowed under the Iowa Code.

When they reconvene in a public session at 6-p.m., the Board will act on the resignation of Ann Hinton (Bus monitor & Special Education Driver), as well as approving contracts for:

  • Pamela Klar (a change from Class II Para to Class I para)
  • Tony Sunderman, Substitue Bus Driver
  • Jill Miller, Schuler Elementary Special Ed teacher (transfer – 2019-20)
  • Oran Perkins (9th grade Baseball Coach and Head Boys Soccer Coach
  • and Robert Hansen (JV Baseball)

They’ll also discuss the 2019-2020 School Calendar, which tentatively calls for Teacher In-Service Aug. 20-22, and the first day of school on Aug. 23rd, 2019. Spring Break is proposed for March 23-27, 2020, and the last day of school as May 27, 2020. Other, scheduled breaks include: Labor Day (Sept. 2nd, 2019); Thanksgiving, Nov. 28-29, 2019; Christmas 2019/New Years 2020, 12/23-1/3; Feb. 20-21, 2020 (Following Parent-Teacher Conferences on Feb. 19th); and Good Friday (April 10, 2020).

It’s expected the Board will set the date for a Public Hearing on the 2019-2020 Calendar, as during their regular meeting in March.  Immediately following adjournment of their regular meeting, the Atlantic School Board will enter into a closed session for negotiations strategy and related matters.

HARLAN CARY, 73, of Griswold (Svcs. 2/18/19)

Obituaries

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

HARLAN CARY, 73, of Griswold, died Tuesday, Feb. 12th, at Jennie Edmundson Hospital in Council Bluffs. Funeral services for HARLAN CARY will be held 10:30-a.m. Monday, Feb. 18th, at the Griswold United Methodist Church. Rieken Duhn Funeral Home in Griswold has the arrangements.

Visitation with the family is on Sunday, from 2-until 4-p.m. at the funeral home.

Interment will be held at a later date.

HARLAN CARY is survived by:

His wife – Kay, of Griswold.

His sons – Eric (Susan) Cary, and Brent (Jillian) Cary, all of Kansas City, MO., and Justin Cary (and Amanda White), of Martensdale.

His sisters – Nancy (Steve) Curtis, of Atlantic, and Gale (Dave) Newman, of Griswold.

9 grandchildren, other relatives, in-laws and friends.

Governor favors Iowa gun permit law, watching no-permit bill

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds says she favors current state law that requires gun holders to obtain a permit but is monitoring a legislative proposal to eliminate the requirement to obtain a permit to buy or carry a handgun. Reynolds, when asked Tuesday about the bill moving its way through the Senate committee process, said when she was in the Senate she voted for the 2010 bill that updated the state’s gun permit process, which includes background checks and requires weapons training. She says background checks are needed but she’s watching the current bill that would do away with permits to see how it develops.

Supporters of the proposal say requiring permits and fees to own a gun contradicts the constitutional right to keep and bear arms. Opponents say it’s dangerous to eliminate permits and the accompanying background checks for gun show and person-to-person handgun sales. The Republican governor says she doesn’t have a permit to carry a handgun but would like to get one when she finds the time.

Atlantic City Council to decide Senior Center sale Wednesday evening

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Atlantic City Council will hold a special session 6:15-p.m. Wednesday at City Hall, to make a decision with regard to ownership of the Atlantic Senior Center. City Administrator John Lund says the Council has three options to consider before making their decision.

Option 1 – Eliminate the 13.5-cent per $1,000 property valuation tax levy from the budget, and Solicit Sealed bids for the building “As-is”. (Under this option, the Council cannot later change its mind and sell the building without leaving the roof to deteriorate, until July 2020).

Option 2 – Maintain the tax levy; Solicit sealed bids for the building with a repaired roof; Repair the roof in July 2019; collect taxes to repair the roof throughout the FY 2020 cycle; and sell the building in July 2020. Lund notes the Council cannot deactivate the levy or sell earlier than July 2020 under Option 2, but they can choose to reject all bids and keep the building without consequence.

Option 3 – Maintain a Tax Levy; Choose to keep the building; repair the roof in July 2019; and Collect taxes to repair the roof through the FY 2020 cycle. The Council may choose to sell the building anytime after July 2020, but may not sell it sooner, under this option.

Not an option: Eliminate the tax levy from the budget AND decide not to sell the building OR solicit bids…but reject all bids and reconsider the sale. Expect roof to be repaired by the City prior to July 2020 if the levy is not activated (Which is a decision that must be done Feb. 20, 2019).

Lund says “If the Council remains uncomfortable committing to the sale of the property, no action needs to be taken, but the budget will retain the property tax levy and the earliest date the City could sell the property if it reconsiders the decision, would be July 2020. Lund will recommend the Council act on Option 1, which will restore the Employee Benefits Levy to its current rate. If a motion to that effect fails, he will interpret it to mean the City wishes to maintain ownership and wishes to see the roof repaired. If the Council wishes to sell the building but fix the roof first, that will bind them to that decision, as the levy will remain intact and the sale delayed until repairs are completed.

Dump truck rolls in Montgomery County – no injuries

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Sheriff’s officials in Montgomery County say they were notified at around 5:45-a.m. today (Tuesday), about a County Secondary Roads dump truck that had rolled over on 200th Street, about one-quarter of a mile west of Q Avenue. The driver had been clearing snow from the north shoulder of the road and got too close to the ditch. As the driver nearly stopped all forward motion, the truck tipped over into the ditch and came to rest on the driver’s side.

When the truck was removed from the ditch, it was determined that the snow had prevented any significant damage to the truck, and there was minimal damage to a fence, due to the fact sand was dumped onto it from the truck’s box. Damages amounted to less than $1,000.

Fishing license sales dropped in 2018

Ag/Outdoor, Sports

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — A spokesman for the Iowa D-N-R, Mick Klemesrude says the sale of fishing licenses was down a bit in 2018. “I think if you look back we had kind of a really strange spring where I think we had snow all the way into middle April,” Klemesrude says. “And when you have some of those crazy fluctuations in temperatures we tend to not see some of the license sales that you would have if you have a nice, steady spring.”

There were 201-thousand-765 annual licenses sold — while some people decided to buy a three-year hunting or fishing license. Klemesrude says they sold 75-hundred of those type of fishing licenses, which he says is right around average. They sell anywhere form two to three thousand of the hunting licenses each year. The fees for hunting and fishing licenses went up starting January 1st and Klemesrude says they aren’t sure how that might impact sales. “We tried to do it as way where we don’t have sticker shock. We tried to keep all of those below a 20-percent increase,” according to Klemesrude. “We think Iowans will absorb that cost and keep going out there and enjoying everything.”

He says it has been 15 or more years since they raised the prices and most anglers and hunters supported the increase — because they know it will help them. “Our hunting and fishing areas are supported by license fees and the people who purchase those licenses, so its a benefit that goes right back to the user,” Klemesrude says. The D-N-R also offers a lifetime hunting or fishing license for anyone over the age of 65. “Those are pretty steady sales, and we would always joke with them that you have to make three to three-and-a-half years and you are ahead of the game,” Klemesrude says.

There were around 75-hundred lifetime fishing licenses sold in 2018 and nearly three-thousand lifetime hunting licenses.

Harlan Police report (2/12/19) – 3 arrested on drug charges

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Harlan Police Department reports three people were arrested on drug charges last Thursday: 29-year old Brett Fredrick Mohr, of Harlan, was arrested following a traffic stop. Mohr was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with driving while barred, prohibited acts penalties, possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia; 38-year old Brianna Lynn Shinrock, of Elk Horn, NE, was arrested following a traffic stop. Shinrock was transported to the Shelby County Jail where she was charged with possession of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia; and, 35-year old Jason R Hutfless, of Omaha, NE, was arrested following a traffic stop. Hutfless was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with possession of a controlled substance, possession of drug paraphernalia and carrying weapons.

This past Sunday, 32-year old Blake Ashley Behrens, of Omaha, NE, was arrested in Harlan, following a call for a disturbance. He was transported to the Shelby County Jail where he was charged with public intoxication.

$100 fine proposed for highway drivers who loiter in left-hand lane

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Drivers in Iowa who linger too long in the left-hand lane of an interstate or four-lane highway could face a one-hundred-dollar fine under a proposal that has advanced to a House committee. Representative Gary Worthan, of Storm Lake is a truck driver and he often sees motorists driving way below the speed limit in the left-hand lane. “I have followed two cars driving side-by-side for miles that I wanted to pass with a truck…You get close to that road rage type situation where you just want to strangle somebody,” Worthan said, with a laugh. Many trucking companies now install a device on a semi to control the truck’s speed in an effort to save fuel costs and Worthan expects more trucking firms go that route.  “One guy’s truck will go 65 and the other one will go 66. It takes about four miles for a truck to pass and that backs up traffic,” Worthan says, “so the problem’s going to get worse instead of better.”

Susan Cameron Daeman, a lobbyist for the Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies Association, says the group backs establishing a new fine for loitering in the left lane. “Law enforcement isn’t interested in this so that they can write tickets,” Cameron Daeman says. “They’re interested in this so that the roadways can be safer and we’ve all been on interstates, especially Interstate 80, where you have truck traffic side-by-side and then you’ve got someone that is pushing them.” Representative Jon Thorup of Knoxville is a state trooper and he says a hefty fine might help spread the message that the left lane is for brief use while passing. “It is astounding how many people will not move over out of the lane even if I’m driving and I have my lights and siren on,” Thorup says. “It is amazing how many people do not look in their rear view missor or maybe they have their radio on so loud they can’t even hear the siren.”

Legislators working on the bill may add language to make it clear driving in the left lane on an urban freeway during crowded, rush-hour traffic would be permissible for longer periods of time. The State of Illinois recently established a 120-dollar fine for motorists who hang out in the left lane.

Council Bluffs man arrested on theft, assault on a Police Officer, weapon & other charges

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A Council Bluffs man is in custody following the theft of a vehicle that was left running this (Tuesday) morning. Officers were called to the American Inn on S. 24th Street in Council Bluffs, at around 5:35-a.m., for a stolen vehicle report. The vehicle had been left running unattended while the 29-year old male owner was obtaining items from his motel room. With the assistance of Pottawattamie County Communications monitoring the roadways, officers were able to establish an area to search where the vehicle was last seen. An officer located the occupied vehicle in the area of the 300 block of McGee.

Jesse Joseph Poore

The officer watched as the suspect (31-year old Jesse Joseph Poore, of Council Bluffs) exited the vehicle and attempted to walk away. The officer ordered Poore at gunpoint, to stop. The officer then called the man back to his cruiser and to put his hands on the cruiser. Poore initially complied, but when the officer holstered his gun and told Poore to place his hands behind his back so he could handcuff him, Poore refused to comply and then actively resisted. As he struggled with the officer, Poore is alleged to have purposely jabbed his finger into the officer’s eye. He then slipped out of his coat and then ran from the officer.

As the officer chased Poore, the man turned and charged the officer. The officer was able to get Poore on the ground, where he was able to be subdued and placed under arrest with the assistance of another officer who had arrived on scene. Poore faces numerous charges, including:

  • Theft 1st (for the stolen vehicle)
  • Theft 3rd (for stolen property found in the vehicle)
  • Carrying Weapons (for a handgun that was recovered)
  • Interference with Official Acts (for actively resisting arrest)
  • and, Assault on a Police Officer

The officer who was assaulted was treated for minor injuries. Poore was also treated at the hospital and released before being transported to Pottawattamie County Corrections without further incident. The Council Bluffs Police Department would like to remind everyone: “Don’t make yourself an easy target for thieves. Don’t leave your cars running unattended with the keys in them. It only takes a few seconds for your vehicle to be stolen.”

Nebraska inmate gets 10 years in Iowa child sex case

News

February 12th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SIBLEY, Iowa (AP) — A former football coach and teacher already serving Nebraska prison time for child sex offenses has pleaded guilty in an Iowa case. Osceola County District Court records show 40-year-old Kyle Ewinger entered the plea Monday to sexual abuse and was sentenced to 10 years. The records say the former Sibley-Ocheyedan coach was fired after the district superintendent found him sleeping in his classroom next to a 10-year-old in October 2015.

Last April Ewinger was sentenced to 55 to 85 years in a Nebraska prison after an Omaha jury found him guilty of sexual assault of a child. Prosecutors say he assaulted the 9-year-old son of a woman he was dating in 2012 and 2013.