712 Digital Group - top

Heartbeat Today 1-17-2019

Heartbeat Today, Podcasts

January 17th, 2019 by Jim Field

Jim Field visits with Scott Suhr, Transportation Planner for the Iowa DOT about upcoming road construction projects.

Play

THURSDAY, JANUARY 17th

Trading Post

January 17th, 2019 by Jim Field

FOR SALE:  Comfort Glow Radiant Quartz Heater.  1500 Watt. 2 heat settings with thermostat.  Used a couple times. Works great.  Asking 20$. {New-60$}.  Call 712-268-2664 Exira. {leave message if no answer}. SOLD

 

FOR SALE:   Full size bed with nice black iron frame.  Mattress and box spring are older but barely used.  Has always been in spare room. Selling as set.  Asking 75$.  Call 712-268-2664. leave message if no answer. In Exira.  SOLD!

FOR SALE:  Honeywell Energy Smart Heater.  Hi/Lo with thermostat and current temp.  Asking 25$.    Call 712-268-2664, leave message if no answer.  In Exira. SOLD

Lawsuit: Mayor, others told inspector to ignore violations

News

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SERGEANT BLUFF, Iowa (AP) — A former building inspector says in his lawsuit that he was fired for reporting code violations that the mayor and other officials in Sergeant Bluff told him to ignore. David Christensen says in his lawsuit that Mayor Jon Winkel and others conspired to fire him for reporting code violations that endangered public safety. He is seeking a jury trial and an award of damages for back pay, loss of salary and benefits and additional punitive damages. The lawsuit was filed last week in Woodbury County District Court.

Winkel told the Sioux City Journal that the city does not comment on pending litigation, but he did say, “Our story will be quite a bit different from what you’ve heard from the other side.”

(Podcast) KJAN Morning Sports report, 1/17/19

Podcasts, Sports

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

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

Play

2 arrests reported in Creston

News

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

The Creston Police Department today (Thursday), reports two arrests recently. At around 3:25-a.m. today (Thursday), 29-year old Derek Jason Noble, of Raymore, MO., was arrested in the 100 block of N. Elm Street, for Public Intoxication. His bond was set at $300. And, at around 10:55-p.m. Wednesday, 31-year old Jeffrey Michael Donald Drake, of Creston, was arrested at his home on a Union County warrant for Domestic Abuse Assault. Drake was being held without bond in the Union County Jail, pending an appearance before the magistrate.

(Podcast) KJAN Morning News & Funeral report, 1/17/2019

News, Podcasts

January 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.

Play

Ex-state worker loses lawsuit over religious accommodation

News

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — A former state of Iowa worker who’d used the words “In Christ” in his work emails has lost his lawsuit against the state. The Sioux City Journal reports that a federal jury in Sioux City found Wednesday that the state Department of Human Services did not fail to accommodate Michael Mial’s religious practices. Mial sued the department and several individuals at the sex offender unit in Cherokee in January 2017, saying his firing violated his rights to free speech and religion.

The lawsuit said Mial, a psychiatric security specialist, was fired in April 2016 after a performance review in which supervisors told him his religious faith was beneficial to patients at the sex offender unit. But they asked him to keep his religion separate from his work because he’d been using “In Christ” in the personalized signature block that appeared in internal emails sent to other employees.

Drawing set to pick new College World Series ticket buyers

Sports

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Baseball fans are welcome to enter an online drawing to buy season tickets to the College World Series. Fans who enter by midnight CST on March 1 will be eligible to be selected to buy up to four season tickets to the CWS, which is held in June each year at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha. The number of tickets available is to be determined and based on existing season-ticket holder renewals. Most of the tickets for new applicants will be in the upper level of the stadium. Season ticket holders can request seat relocation in future years.

People whose names are drawn will receive email notice by March 6. Season ticket prices range from $425 to $476. Fans can apply at NCAA.com/CWSTickets and CWSomaha.com.

AEA’s say they need help with budget shortfall

News

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Nine Area Education Agencies cover the state of Iowa and their administrators are hoping lawmakers will help plug a 15 million dollar budget shortfall to address pressing needs. One area the agencies want to work on is special education programs. Another, according to Central Rivers Area Education Agency spokesperson Beth Strike, is to help school districts with mental health support. “Every school district we work with is telling us that they have more and more students with mental health needs. And often times, communities may or may not have the resources to help in that case — depending on whether its in rural Iowa and so on. We all know we’ve got more work to do to provide those supports,” Strike says.

Strike says a third area is to help special needs students better transition from high school to the next steps in their lives. “So, we want to increase that likelihood that when those kiddos leave the K-12 system, they are fully prepared to make a positive contribution in their community, and also in their workforce,” Strike says. “And we think we have quite a bit of help we can be providing in that area.”

Strike says the A-E-A’s cannot take any more budget hits. “We’re not filling positions often times, we’re trying to reduce through attrition. That’s been going on for several years,” according to Strike. “And just like local schools — you can only do that for so long before it begins to be a situation where you feel like you’re just not at the highest level you could be. We do feel ware are at the point where it just can’t get any lower.”

Area Education Agencies have been in Iowa since 1974.

Farmer says crop dusters destroyed his operation, wants state to toughen rules

Ag/Outdoor, News

January 17th, 2019 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa, w/thanks for Karla James in Omaha) — An alternative farmer in western Iowa who tends an apple orchard and raises peacocks and bees is appealing to state leaders to enact tighter restrictions on crop dusters who he claims destroyed much of his four-acre farm. Dennis Fett, of rural Minden, says the problem with drifting chemicals has been going on for decades but last year was the worst. Fett says, “We’ve been on our property since 1987 and starting in 1992, we’ve been pretty much violated by drifting of unwanted farm pesticides, fungicides, insecticides and herbicides.”

Fett says he built a tall fence, which kept out most of the ground-sprayed chemicals, but then neighboring farmers started hiring crop dusters. In July of 2018, he says his property was oversprayed three times. “It pretty well destroyed all our fruit in our fruit orchard, it destroyed our chemical-free garden, and one of them violated the Bee Rule, spraying insecticides within a mile of a registered bee hive — which ours are,” Fett says, “and it also caused neurological problems and death of some of our baby peacocks.”

Fett says he’s appealing to Iowa’s secretary of agriculture as well as to members of the legislature to look at the rules regulating crop dusters and overspraying. Fett says, “If they look at increasing the fine structure, if they’re given a civil penalty from $500 to $1,000 or maybe even $5,000 or more, that might discourage these crop dusters who come from out of state and are here six weeks or so and leave — and leave their dangerous chemical on off-target places, such as my place.”  Fett says the state pesticide bureau has reported a 50-percent increase in overspraying cases during 2018. He says it’s baffling why more farmers aren’t raising a fuss about the problem. “The farmers are spending thousands of dollars to get their crops sprayed either for herbicides or insecticides, but when they’re drifting off target, like they have on my property, they’re not getting their money’s worth,” Fett says. “I’m proposing the farmers ask these people who overspray to give them all of their money back when they violate the law.”

Fett says he’s very concerned about the coming spring and the potential spraying around his acreage of the chemical dicamba, which may kill anything left on his farm.