712 Digital Group - top

Tuesday will mark one year since fatal shooting of western Iowa deputy

News

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Today (Tuesday) will be a somber day for the law enforcement community in Council Bluffs, marking one year since the death of Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Deputy Mark Burbridge. He was fatally shot by an escaping inmate who was later caught after a car-jacking in Omaha. Sheriff Jeff Danker says while a year has passed, the incident is still fresh in everyone’s minds.

“When something like this happens, it pretty much changes everybody,” Sheriff Danker says. “It can happen. Law enforcement is a dangerous profession. It brings home that it can happen anywhere at any time to anybody.” Another deputy was shot and wounded in the incident which happened during an inmate transfer. The sheriff says there was an immediate and generous outpouring of sympathy that’s continued for all these months. “The other law enforcement agencies, the citizens, everybody’s been so supportive,” Danker says. “We really appreciate it. When a tragic event like this happens, it really helps you get through it by having the support of your community behind you.”

Today, law officers will be putting black bands on their badges, there will be a moment of silence at the time of the shooting, and flags across the county will be at half staff. There’s also a service planned this weekend in Council Bluffs featuring a life-size sculpture of a horse. “On Saturday, they’re going to have the unveiling of this Horse of Honor at the old Squirrel Cage Jail,” Danker says. “A number of different artists have put different work on that horse, just things that were special to Mark in his life.”

The inmate accused in the death of Burbridge is 25-year-old Wesley Correa-Carmenaty. He was sentenced to life in prison, plus 175 years after he entered guilty pleas to first-degree murder, attempted murder, escape, kidnapping and other crimes.

(Radio Iowa, w/thanks to Karla James in Omaha)

Iowa to feature customized football helmets

Sports

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Officials with Riddell are on the Iowa campus this week as the Hawkeyes will become the first college football team to wear customized helmets. The hope is they will reduce head injuries and the helmets will feature eight customized pieces of padding inside designed to absorb impact. Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz…

More than a dozen Iowa players wore customized helmets on an experimental basis last season and none suffered a concussion.

Outfitting the entire team will cost more than 100 thousand dollars but Ferentz says it is money well spent if it can help limit head injuries.

Upperclassmen were fitted for the new helmets this spring and they will be ready for next season.

(Radio Iowa/Learfield Sports)

Report says Midwest business conditions index rose again

News

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A report says a business conditions index for nine Midwest and Plains states has surged to its highest level in a dozen years. The report released Tuesday says the Mid-America Business Conditions Index hit 64.5 in April, compared with 62.1 in March. The February figure was 59.7.

Creighton University economist Ernie Goss oversees the survey, and he says much of the recent manufacturing sector growth has been driven by exports. The survey results are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers say any score above 50 suggests growth in that factor. A score below that suggests decline.

The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.

Push to expand Iowa’s medical marijuana law

News

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The business with the only state license to manufacture marijuana for medical use is planning a news conference at the state capitol today (Tuesday), hoping to convince lawmakers to let more Iowans use cannabis products. Senators from both sides of the aisle favor the move, but House leaders are against changing the law which limits use to about 15 medical conditions. Senator Tom Greene, a Republican from Burlington who is a pharmacist, supports a law that would let cannabis oil, pills or creams be used as treatment whenever a doctor thinks it might be useful. “I think it behooves every one of us here in the Senate to contact our representatives who serve our same districts in the House and tell them that 80 percent of Iowans want us to move on medical cannabis,” Greene says.

Senator Joe Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, says there’s been a reduction in opioid overdose deaths in states that have legalized marijuana for broader medical use. “We’re raging incrementalists here, how we approach these issues, but at some point it’s time to step up and look around the country, see what’s working and take some votes around here on some of this stuff,” Bolkcom said.

House Speaker Linda Upmeyer, a Republican from Clear Lake, says lawmakers should wait until an advisory board reviews the new state law and makes recommendations later this year. Cannabis products will be sold from five state-licensed “dispensaries” starting December 1st.

(Radio Iowa)

Senate sends energy efficiency program limits to governor

News

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Republicans in the Iowa Senate have ratified a plan that will limit energy efficiency programs run by Iowa utilities, reducing annual charges on gas and electric bills in Iowa by an estimated 100-million dollars. Senator Rob Hogg, a Democrat from Cedar Rapids, predicts many of the 20-thousand Iowans who work in the energy efficiency industry will lose their jobs if the governor signs the bill into law. “So this is a big economic issue and, unfortunately, the bill in front of us is bad for jobs, bad for clean energy jobs and bad for consumers,” Hogg says.

Senator Michael Breitbach, a Republican from Strawberry Point, says an estimated 150-million dollars worth of rebates and energy efficiency incentives will STILL be handed out annually by Iowa electric and gas utilities. “You talk like the energy efficiency programs are going to completely go away, they’re not going to exist,” Breitbach says. “…They’re still going to pay them if they’ve got an older home to replace their windows with more energy efficient windows. They’re still going to save if they get insulation in their attic.”

The bill passed the House early Friday morning and Republican senators sent it to the governor last (Monday) night. Supporters say the energy efficiency programs utility companies run in Iowa will be more closely scrutinized. Critics predict utility rates will rise as efforts to reduce energy use are reduced. In mid-March, Governor Reynolds was asked if she supported the kind of changes in Iowa utility regulations that her fellow Republicans in the legislature were considering, but Reynolds said she wouldn’t comment until she saw the bill in its final form.

(Radio Iowa)

Crop report shows 17% of Iowa corn is planted

Ag/Outdoor

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Dry and warmer weather has allowed a lot of Iowa farmers to finally get into their fields. The new USDA crop report shows, as of Sunday, 17-percent of the state’s expected corn crop has been planted. That’s still four days behind the five-year average, but ZERO-percent of Iowa’s corn was in the ground one week ago. Planting progress is much slower in northern Iowa where fields remain wet from melting snow. Meanwhile, in southeast Iowa, 44-percent of the corn is planted. Most of the state received no precipitation last week and temperatures climbed to as high as 79 in De Soto, Atlantic, Red Oak, and Shenandoah on the afternoon of April 27th.

(Radio Iowa)

Skyscan Forecast for Atlantic & the area, 5/1/18

Weather

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Today: Scattered showers & thunderstorms this morning & later this afternoon, otherwise partly cloudy. High near 80. S @ 15-25. Some storms later today may be severe, with the potential for large hail & damaging winds. An isolated tornado or two is also possible. Timing for severe weather: 3-until 10-p.m.

Tonight: Scattered showers & thunderstorms. Low 62. S @ 10.

Tomorrow: P/Cldy to Cldy w/scattered shwrs & tstrms. High 76. S @ 10-20.

Thursday: Mo. cldy w/scattered shwrs & tstrms. High 70.

Friday: P/Cldy. High 73.

Monday’s High in Atlantic was 83. Our Low was 59. We received .04” rain overnight at the KJAN Studios (through 5-a.m.) Last year on this date our High was 48 and the Low was 35. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 90 in 1965. The Record Low was 24, in 1909.

Midwest Sports Headlines: 5/1/18

Sports

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

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

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs added three more defensive players on the final day of the NFL draft to the three they selected on Day 2. Texas A&M safety Armani Watts went in the fourth round, cornerback Tremon Smith went in the sixth and defensive tackle Kahlil McKenzie two picks later. But in McKenzie’s case, a transition to offensive guard could be in his future.

UNDATED (AP) — Oklahoma State has exceeded expectations in the Big 12. Conference coaches picked the Cowboys to finish sixth. They sit in first place to start the week after sweeping a three-game series against rival Oklahoma. The Cowboys have won seven straight games and 16 of 20 since opening Big 12 play with a series loss to Texas. They play at Iowa this weekend and finish the Big 12 schedule with three games at Baylor and three at home against Texas Tech.

BOSTON (AP) — Xander Bogaerts hit a grand slam over the Green Monster and the Boston Red Sox finished April with their most wins ever by beating the Kansas City Royals 10-6. Mitch Moreland hit a solo homer and had three hits along with Bogaerts for the Red Sox, who posted their 19th victory in April.

BOSTON (AP) — Royals slugger Mike Moustakas has left Kansas City’s game against the Boston Red Sox after getting hit by a pitch in the first inning. The team says X-rays were negative and Moustakas has a bruised right forearm.

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Robert Morris guard Dachon Burke is transferring to Nebraska. He will have two seasons of eligibility after sitting out this coming season. Burke picked the Cornhuskers over St. John’s, Pittsburgh and Marquette. He was a second-team All-Northeast Conference pick last season. He averaged better than 17 points a game and led the NEC with 2.1 steals per game.

Iowa early News Headlines: Tue., May 1st 2018

News

May 1st, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Iowa news from The Associated Press at 3:38 a.m. CDT

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds says she never knew of or witnessed inappropriate behavior during her two-decade friendship with a former state agency director whom she abruptly fired after learning of sexual harassment allegations. The Republican governor said “absolutely not,” when asked Monday if she knew of any alleged inappropriate conduct over the years by Dave Jamison, the ex-director of the Iowa Finance Authority.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa Supreme Court justice is being treated for a form of skin cancer. A court spokesman said Monday that Justice Daryl Hecht has been diagnosed with melanoma, considered the most serious type of skin cancer. Hecht has been treated in Sioux City and Rochester, Minnesota. The spokesman says Hecht will participate in the court’s decisions as his treatment allows.

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (AP) — Nearly a year after his death, a statue has been unveiled in downtown Council Bluffs to honor slain deputy Mark Burbridge. The Daily Nonpareil reports more than 200 people gathered Saturday to see the statue of a horse without a rider. Artists covered the horse in images important to Burbridge, including scenes with motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles and a badge. Burbridge died May 1, 2017, during an attempted jail escape that left two other officers injured.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa man has been given three life sentences after admitting that he fatally shot his parents and sister. Twenty-two-year-old Chase Nicholson pleaded guilty Monday in Des Moines to killing 58-year-old Mark Nicholson, 56-year-old Charla Nicholson and 24-year-old Tawni Nicholson. Their bodies were found in the family home in Bondurant on April 6 last year. Nicholson surrendered the next day in Neosho, Missouri. Nicholson claimed voices in his head told him to kill his family.

Atlantic Rising Awards Recipients

News

April 30th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Atlantic Rising announced the 5th Annual Young Professionals Gala award recipients. The gala was held Friday, April 27th at the Atlantic Golf and Country Club. The awards recognize the achievements of young professionals who demonstrate a commitment to excellence and innovation in their profession and throughout the community.

The YP Public Servant of the Year was awarded to Anthony Smith, First Church of Christ. Anthony was awarded for his work throughout the community, not only through his church but also through Boy Scouts and helping to organize various clean-ups and other projects to help improve Atlantic.

YP Newcomer of the Year went to Zack Bandow, Atlantic Dental Center PC. Since moving to Atlantic, Zack and his wife have been involved with Atlantic Rising and taken the initiative to be involved in the community through various events.

The YP Entrepreneur of the Year was awarded to Amanda Graham, owner of The Picker’s Parlor. Amanda opened The Picker’s Parlor nearly three years ago and has quickly become a staple in the Atlantic area. Her store brings in customers from all over, including out of state, where they purchase items from local crafters, as well as refurbished furniture and antiques. Amanda has needed to expand to make room for more creative and unique items, as well as start estate sales. She gives back to the community whenever she gets a chance and encourages other entrepreneurs.

The YPA Business Leader of the Year was awarded to Kate Hoffmann, owner of the Atlantic Animal Health Clinic along with her husband. Kate and her husband bought the clinic over 4 years ago where she retained much of the previous clientele and built even more relationships with new clients and their pets. Kate has a full staff and recently hired a new veterinarian who will start with her in July of this year. On top of her busy schedule at the clinic and with her family, Kate serves on the Chamber board and is involved in Rotary. She advocates for Atlantic and the needs here to help keep the community growing.

The final award of the afternoon was YP Choice Workplace of the Year. This was awarded to Nishna Valley Family YMCA. The YMCA employs over 130 people, ranging from high school students to retired individuals. They help their employees to achieve their career goals and to best serve the many YMCA members. They are also one of the main attractions for young professionals to choose Atlantic and accept jobs in the area. As such, they also provide many activities and events for kids, families, and adults to enjoy and build relationships with others in the community.