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Officials: Refrigerator likely touched off gas blast

News

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

FORT DODGE, Iowa (AP) — Authorities say a refrigerator likely touched off an explosion of natural gas that ripped through a house in Fort Dodge. The four residents had just been told to leave the house when the blast occurred Feb. 14. Two were unharmed. Two were taken to a hospital. The Messenger reports that officials think the gas had migrated into the house through the soil and that the refrigerator compressor turning on provided the spark of ignition. Investigators have yet to confirm whether the leak was caused when a city public works crew stuck a gas line while repairing a broken water main in front of the house.

Special Weather Statement for Dense Fog

Weather

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

AREA COUNTIES: Cass-Adair-Madison-Adams-Union-Taylor-Ringgold

…Areas of Dense Fog and Drizzle Moving Into Southern Iowa…

Low clouds are slowly spreading northward this morning. In addition to the low clouds…widespread fog is developing. Most locations have visibilities between 2 and 5 miles but areas near the Missouri border are reporting visibility of a quarter mile or less in dense fog. These low visibilities will be possible through mid to late morning before improving. There may also be patchy drizzle across southern and central Iowa.

Cass County Extension Report 2-28-2018

Ag/Outdoor, Podcasts

February 28th, 2018 by Jim Field

w/Kate Olson.

Play

Former officer who admitted theft gets 10 years in prison

News

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

DUBUQUE, Iowa (AP) — A former Dubuque police officer who stole from his employer has been sent to prison. The Telegraph Herald reports that 32-year-old Kyle Cross was given five years for the theft and 10 years for a sexual abuse conviction because the theft conviction violated terms of his probation. The sentences will be served at the same time.

Cross said January when he pleaded guilty that he wasn’t responsible for all the nearly $7,200 in cash and merchandise stolen from Boost Mobile, a Dubuque cellphone store. He said the loss was between $1,300 and $1,500. Authorities say an employee that Cross fired contacted the store owner about thefts that he and Cross committed when they pocketed payments for phone repairs and fraudulently reported paying people to hold business signs on a sidewalk.

Valuable artifact or junk? Iowans can meet with archaeologists this weekend

News

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

If you’ve ever stumbled across an object in an Iowa corn field which you think may be a dinosaur bone or a stone tool from an earlier civilization, now’s the time to have your questions answered. An Archaeology Road Show is planned for this weekend at the Whiterock Conservancy in Coon Rapids, according to executive director Dan Gudahl. “This is one event that we’ve held for a couple of years now that encourages people to come in and bring whatever they’ve got that they know what it is — or they don’t know what it is — that may have some sort of history to it, whether it be artifacts from Native Americans or fossils or rocks or whatever,” Gudahl says.

Two experts from the Office of the State Archaeologist will be at the conservancy on Saturday to analyze whatever potential treasures Iowans may bring in. “It’s quite amazing to see fossilized bones from past eras, epochs, that are from animals that are now extinct,” Gudahl says. “That’s quite unusual.”  In past years, items brought in typically date from long before Iowa became a state to its first human inhabitants, things like arrowheads, axe heads and shards of pottery. “This year, we’ve got a fellow that’s going to bring in a large rock-bowl, carved out of rock that was used for grinding,” Gudahl says. “He was just using it as a dog bowl, like for feeding his dog, and determined, hey, this has some archaeological significance.”

From 1 to 3 P-M Saturday, the experts will examine items brought in by the public with a discussion from 3 to 4 P-M. The event is free at the Bur Oak Visitors’ Center at Whiterock Conservancy on Highway 141 in Coon Rapids. (more at www.whiterockconservancy.org)

(Radio Iowa)

Skyscan Forecast & weather data for Atlantic: 2/28/18

Weather

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Today: Mostly cloudy w/areas of fog. Some scattered light rain or drizzle. High 42. N @ 10.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy w/sprinkles or flurries. Low 26 N @ 10-20.

Tomorrow: A chance of morning flurries. Becoming P/Cldy. High 40. NW @ 15-25.

Friday: P/Cldy. High 49.

Saturday: P/Cldy. High 58.

Tuesday’s High in Atlantic was 62. Our Low was 33. Last year on this date our High was 57 and the Low was 33. The record High in Atlantic on this date was 71 in 1972. The Record Low was -23, in 1962.

Oklahoma State cruises past Iowa State 80-71

Sports

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

AMES, Iowa (AP) — After years of getting owned by Iowa State, Oklahoma State exacted some payback in 2018. Jeffrey Carroll scored 21 points, Cameron McGriff had 19 and Oklahoma State cruised past Iowa State 80-71 on Tuesday, sweeping the season series with the Cyclones after losing the previous 10 meetings. Mitchell Solomon scored 10 points with 11 rebounds for the Cowboys (17-13, 7-10 Big 12), who outrebounded Iowa State 47-37 and outscored the Cyclones 32-16 in the paint.

Lindell Wigginton had 20 points and Donovan Jackson scored 17 for Iowa State (13-16, 4-13). It will finish last in the league and be the No. 10 seed for next week’s conference tournament in Kansas City — a tournament it won a year ago. Standout big man Cameron Lard was a non-factor, scoring just two points with six rebounds. “We’ve got to find a way to become a better defensive team,” Iowa State coach Steve Prohm said. “It’s just going to take a lot of work, a lot of focus, a lot of effort.”

The Cyclones’ home schedule began with a loss and ended with one. Iowa State typically enjoys a tremendous home-court advantage, but it finished with just four Big 12 wins at Hilton Coliseum in 2017-18 — though three of those were against top-20 opponents. Iowa State wraps up the regular season at Oklahoma on Friday.

3 arrests in Red Oak Tuesday night

News

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

Three people were arrested Tuesday night, in Red Oak. Red Oak Police say 38-year old Jacob Ray Hill, of Red Oak, was arrested a little after 10-p.m., for Driving While Suspended. Hill was being held in the Montgomery County Jail on a $300 cash bond. Just after 8-p.m., Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputies arrested 35-year old William James Bartlett, and 33-year old Sunshine Marie Bartlett, both of Red Oak. They were taken into custody in the 100 block of E. Corning Street in Red Oak, for Violation of No Contact Orders. Their bonds were set at $300 each.

Analysis indicates Senate GOP plan would cut Iowa tax collections by $4 billion over 5 years

News

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

A new analysis from the non-partisan Legislative Services Agency indicates the tax plan Senate Republicans may debate as soon as today (Wednesday) would cut Iowans’ taxes by 200 million dollars next year.

The state has a more than seven-point-two BILLION dollar budget this year. Five years from now, the new analysis indicates the state will be taking in more than a billion dollars less in tax revenue if the Senate G-O-P’s plan becomes law. Democrats say that would “break the state budget” and is “more fiscally irresponsible than first imagined.”

Republicans in the Senate use the word “bold” to describe their tax plan and say it will stimulate the state’s economy, although they promise to cut the budget as well. Republicans in the HOUSE are using Republican Governor Kim Reynolds’ tax proposal as their starting point. Reynolds has called for cutting income taxes for individuals now, but waiting ’til later to cut the state’s income tax on corporations. Her plan would reduce taxes by one-point-seven BILLION over six years. The Senate Republican plan would reduce taxes by more than four BILLION over the next five years.

(Radio Iowa)

House approves bill outlining policies designed to improve mental health care in Iowa

News

February 28th, 2018 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa House has unanimously approved a bill to address some of the gaps in Iowa’s system for providing mental health care services and substance abuse treatment. Representative Shannon Lundgren, a Republican from Peosta, says it’s been “heart-wrenching” to hear from Iowans who’ve been unable to find “a clear path” to proper services. “We’re making steps forward,” Lundgren said. “The work is never done, but today we can tell Iowans that mental health care matters.”

The bill primarily outlines new policies. For example, supporters believe a regulatory change will boost the number of spaces for patients who are not having an acute mental health care crisis, but who need still need residential care. The bill also seeks to relieve police of the duty of transporting Iowans suffering a mental health crisis. Patients instead could be transported by private services that have secured vehicles and trained drivers. Representative Timi Brown-Powers, a Democrat from Waterloo who’s a nurse, is among a bipartisan group that worked on the legislation. “This bill, we know, is not perfect. This definitely is a start,” Brown-Powers said. “We needed to start somewhere because we were in the negative zone.”

According to the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, the state has “consistently” ranked among the bottom five states in programs and services available to mentally ill Iowans. Representative Mary Mascher of Iowa City notes the bill that passed the House primarily deals with mental health care services for adults. “We still do not have that and the needs for that population are just as great, if not greater, than for our adult population,” Mascher says.

The bill calls for designating six “access centers” around the state where health care professionals are available to assess patients of any age who may not need to be admitted to a psychiatric hospital.

(Radio Iowa)