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Cass County Extension Report 12-26-2018

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

December 26th, 2018 by Jim Field

w/Kate Olson.

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Wet weather ahead

Weather

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The National Weather Service in Johnston says it’s going to be quite wet across Iowa over the next 24 to 48 hours. Precip may initially begin as period of snow in northern Iowa where temperatures remain near freezing. This may lead to some hazardous driving conditions. Any snowfall will change to rain as temperatures warm this evening. Total rainfall of an inch or more is likely with the majority of that falling this evening through early Thursday. A few rumbles of thunder are also possible Thursday! Expect much colder and blustery conditions Friday along with lingering chances for some light freezing rain or snow, mainly in northern Iowa.

Madison & Shelby County jails among six recognized for being Iowa’s “best of the best”

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The employees of six county jails in Iowa are being praised for going “above and beyond” the minimum state standards for those facilities. Delbert Longley, the chief jail inspector for the Iowa Department of Corrections, selected the six county jails as 2018 “Best of the Best” award winners. “I inspect 106 facilities every year. The vast majority of them do a tremendous job of making sure they are doing the right things and they never get recognized for that,” Longley said. “They’re just kind of like the red-headed stepchild out there…nobody wants to talk about them until, all-of-the sudden, something bad happens.”

Delbert Longley presents award to Shelby County authorities.

The awards were recently handed out at an annual banquet held by the Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies’ Association. The six jails are located in Madison, Shelby, Iowa, Sioux, Dubuque and Marshall counties. Longley commended all six for being responsive to the needs of inmates. “They treat them with respect and (the jail staff) demand respect in return,” Longley explained. “We know the individuals who are (in jail) have been charged with something, otherwise they wouldn’t be there, but that doesn’t mean they should be treated as second-class citizens.”  The jails also scored high marks for cleanliness. “I don’t care how new or how old of a facility you have, I don’t believe there’s any reason why it should be dirty. I will cite that quickly,” Longley said. “I just don’t want poor living conditions – and not only that, it’s poor working conditions for staff.”

Another priority for Longley is making sure the county employees keep “thorough and complete” records of all jail proceedings. “The documentation is what’s going to keep a lot of jails out of lawsuits. If you can show what you’ve done, when, and why you’ve done it – that is very, very important,” Longley said. According to Longley, administrators and employees of many county jails face substantial challenges including limited budgets, overcrowding, and facilities that are badly in need of replacement or repair. There are several county jails in Iowa that were built in the early 1900s.
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The 2018 “Best of the Best” county jail award winners:
Small jails (up to 25 beds) – Madison and Shelby counties
Medium jails (26-100 beds) – Iowa and Sioux counties
Large jails (over 100 beds) – Dubuque and Marshall counties

Funding crunch for online courses for Iowa high school students

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Hundreds of Iowa high school students may lose access to required foreign language classes if lawmakers don’t provide a cash infusion to a state-run initiative. The program is called “Iowa Learning Online” and Iowa Department of Education director Ryan Wise uses the shorthand “I-LO” when discussing it. “It is virtually impossible to get the fees and the demand at a point where ILO pays for itself,” Wise says. The program was launched six years ago with an annual budget of one-and-a-half million dollars in state tax money. That funding ended three years ago and schools are now charged 260 dollars for each online course offered to each student. Once the fees went into effect, enrollment dropped by 40 percent and Wise says federal funding to supplement those fees is no longer available. “Really, without a state appropriation at this point, there’s not a sustainable path forward,” Wise says.

That’s especially critical for students in rural Iowa, according to Wise. Nearly 75 percent of the Iowa Learning Online courses being taken now are foreign languages. “So if (Iowa Learning Online) were to go away after this year, what you see is a big gap in opportunities, especially for rural schools that may struggle to get that world language teacher, that Spanish teacher or French teacher to come in,” Wise says. “We’re able to offer French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese — all online and so this really meets a need in our schools.”

Wise says about 17-hundred Iowa high school students are enrolled in the program’s online courses for THIS school year. He’s asking the legislature and governor to provide half a MILLION dollars in state tax dollars so the program can continue in the next school year.

Hazardous Weather Outlook for western IA 12/26/18

Weather

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Sac-Crawford-Carroll-Audubon-Guthrie-Dallas-Cass-Adair-Madison-Adams-Union-Taylor and Ringgold Counties

DAY ONE…Today and tonight: A strong storm system moves through the region today and into tonight. Widespread rainfall will occur over much of Iowa, mainly from this afternoon through tonight. Rainfall amounts of over an inch may result in ponding of water and possibly isolated minor river flooding.

DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN…Thursday through Tuesday: A few thunderstorms are possible late Thursday afternoon and evening. Cold and blustery conditions will result in falling temperatures Friday along with a chance for light freezing rain or light snow north of Interstate 80. Minor travel impacts are possible.

Monona-Harrison-Shelby-Pottawattamie-Mills-Montgomery-Fremont-Page Counties

DAY ONE…Today and Tonight: A mixture of light snow, sleet, and freezing rain is possible this morning, mainly over portions of northeast NE. A few thunderstorms are possible late tonight over portions of southeast NE.

DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN…Thursday through Tuesday: A few thunderstorms remain possible through at least Thursday morning. Locally heavy rainfall is possible, potentially pushing some area streams and rivers to bankfull. Rain will mix with snow or light freezing rain on Thursday afternoon over portions of northeast NE with the rain-snow transition shifting southeast across the remainder of the area into Thursday night. Snowfall accumulations should generally remain an inch or less.

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic – Wednesday, 12/26/2018

Weather

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Today: Light drizzle or freezing drizzle possible this morning; Cloudy. High around 40. SE @ 15-25.

Tonight: Cldy w/rain. Temps rising into the 40’s overnight. S @ 15-25.

Tomorrow: Cldy w/rain in the morning, drizzle in the afternoon. High 52. S @ 15-25.

Friday: Mostly cloudy w/light snow or flurries. High 26.

Saturday: P/Cldy. High around 26.

Yesterday’s High in Atlantic was 46. Our Low this morning 26. Last year on this date our High was 8 and the Low was -16. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 59 in 1936. The Record Low was -18 in 1892.

Iowa early News Headlines: Wed., 12/26/2018

News

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:45 a.m. CST

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Instead of issuing a ticket, two Iowa sheriff’s deputies have treated a woman to a Christmas shopping spree after pulling her over. Television station KCCI reports that the deputies pulled the woman over for not having license plates. Reserve Deputy Rod Eilander says the woman was on her way to borrow $10 to buy dinner for her kids. Instead of giving her a ticket, the deputies bought her children Christmas gifts.

MASON CITY, Iowa (AP) — Police say tips have picked up on the 1995 disappearance of Iowa news anchor Jodi Huisentruit after she was featured on CBS’ “48 Hours.” Mason City Police Chief Jeff Brinkley told the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier that police received at least two dozen calls and emails since the Dec. 15 episode. Huisentruit was 27 when she went missing on her way to work at station KIMT in Mason City.

DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) — Food pantries in eastern Iowa and western Illinois are being flooded with milk donations under a federal program to buy and distribute nearly $50 million in dairy products to compensate farmers hurt by trade tariffs. River Bend Foodbank CEO Mike Miller tells the Quad-City Times about 80,000 half-gallons of milk will be distributed to pantries across the Quad-City region until March. Donations are intended to help farmers hurt by President Donald Trump’s disputes with Mexico, China and Canada.

GRINNELL, Iowa (AP) — A federal board has approved a request by students at Grinnell College to withdraw their request to expand a union representing student workers. The National Labor Relations Board on Friday notified the college and students that a regional director at the agency had approved the withdrawal of the union petition.

National Sports Headlines: 12/26/18

Sports

December 26th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

LeBron hurt as Lakers rip Warriors…Celts outlast Sixers…Bucks dump Knicks…Harden leads Rockets

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Kyle Kuzma scored a team-high 19 points and the Los Angeles Lakers won at Golden State for the first time in 12 tries by blasting the Warriors, 127-101. The Lakers finished the game without LeBron James, who had 17 points, 13 rebounds and five assists before suffering a strained left groin 4:09 into the second half. James slipped under the Golden State basket while trying for a loose ball.

BOSTON (AP) — Kyrie Irving provided 40 points and 10 rebounds as the Boston Celtics outlasted the Philadelphia 76ers, 121-114 in overtime. Irving tied the game with 20 seconds left in regulation and nailed back-to-back 3-pointers in OT to put the Celtics ahead to stay. Joel Embiid led with 34 points and 16 rebounds for the Sixers, who were ahead 113-108 with 3:33 remaining.

NEW YORK (AP) — The Milwaukee Bucks were winners in their first Christmas Day game in 41 years as Giannis Antetokounmpo delivered a game-high 30 points and a team-best 14 rebounds in a 109-95 downing of the Knicks in New York. Antetokounmpo dropped in 11 points while Milwaukee outscored New York 36-22 in the third quarter to take an 84-65 lead into the final period. Brook Lopez finished with 20 points and Malcolm Brogdon added 17 in Milwaukee’s fifth win in six games.

HOUSTON (AP) — James Harden poured in 40 points and Clint Capela had a double-double as the Houston Rockets won for the seventh time in eight games, 113-109 against the Oklahoma City Thunder. Harden scored at least 40 points for the seventh straight game and became the first player to score 40 or more points on Christmas since Kevin Durant had 44 for the Thunder in 2010. Capela had 16 points and tied a season high with 23 rebounds to help the Rockets take over the Southwest Division lead despite an 11-14 start.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The Utah Jazz won for the fifth time in their last six home games behind Rudy Gobert’s 18 points, 14 rebounds and seven blocks in a 117-96 romp over Portland. Donovan Mitchell added 19 points and Joe Ingles chipped in 15 points, seven boards and five assists to help the Jazz beat the Blazers for the second time in five days. Damian Lillard had a team-high 20 points for Portland, which shot just 39 percent.

Iowa college students will soon get in-state tuition rates in South Dakota

News

December 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — Students from Iowa and several other states will soon be able to pay in-state tuition rates at South Dakota’s public universities. That state’s Board of Regents approved the new policy for the so-called South Dakota Advantage earlier this month. Regents President Kevin Schieffer says there’s already a reciprocity agreement with Minnesota. “Pilot programs have been successful and we’re now applying it to the surrounding states,” Schieffer says. “It has been a positive thing. Not only has it generated more revenue but it also is great for workforce development in South Dakota.”

He says 30-percent of students who go to South Dakota end up joining the state’s workforce upon graduation from college. Schieffer says they have some targets to hit with incoming students from Iowa and the others. “We need to attract another roughly 80 students from those states to break even or do a little better than break even,” he says, “and there’s some confidence we’ll be able to surpass break even.” Schieffer says the expanded policy could help control in-state tuition rates, at least that’s the goal. “This is a calculated business decision,” Schieffer says. “Every dollar we can raise in out-of-state money takes pressure off of tuition increases for the resident rate.”

The new program is for students from Iowa as well as Wyoming, North Dakota, Nebraska and Colorado. The policy begins with the 2019 summer term.

Sioux City based coop looking to spread story of honey

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 25th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) — The Sioux Honey Association Co-op in Sioux City wants Americans to know who their honey comes from and they have launched a national campaign. Co-op chairman Rob Buhmann, says the campaign features the faces and stories of local beekeepers across the country. “it’s our product, we are putting a domestic product on the shelf. We are not doing anything to it to damage it,” Buhmann says.

He says they work hard to make sure they keep up the standards. “We are checking ourselves constantly with testing protocols to make sure that the honey produce, any honey we purchase is what it says it is,” according toe Buhmann. The Sioux Honey Association was established in Sioux City in 1921 to operate based on “what’s best for its beekeepers, its honey and its customers.”