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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
The Atlantic School District’s Board of Education will discuss and act on proposed budget reductions during their meeting Monday night at the high school. Late last month, the board gave the district’s Administrative team instructions to look at all areas where savings might be made. Superintendent Dr. Michael Amstein says they’ve been looking for ways to cut $650,000 from next year’s budget.
Amstein said over 80-percent of their budget is for personnel, and that’s one area they’ll have to closely scrutinize. The district received a TLC (Teacher Leadership and Compensation) Planning Grant for the 2015-2016 school year in the amount of $450,000, that allows them to move some people into instructional leadership positions. Amstein said that may make it easier, by not having to replace those positions, but cuts will come from every department across the district. Last year, the district proposed $800,000 in cuts.
In other business, the Board will hear Special Presentations from the Music Department, with regard to the 2016 trip, and, a Fiscal Year 2014 Audit report from the firm of Nolte, Cornman & Johnson, P.C.
Following action on the budget and other matters, the Board will discuss the Operations/Maintenance budget and suggested Summer Capital Projects. The meeting in the Atlantic High School Media Center begins at 7:30-p.m., Monday.
The Walnut City Council, Thursday, was offered the chance to acquire the building in town currently owned by the Walnut School District. City Clerk Terri Abell said Walnut Community School District Superintendent Jesse Ulrich came before the Council to make the proposal. Ulrich said the School Board wanted to give the City the first opportunity to do something with the building. The decision was then made to form a committee comprised of the Mayor and two Council people, School Board members, and members of the public, to decide what they want the facility to become. They also discussed the possibility of hiring a consultant or an architect to conduct a feasibility study and facility study on the building.
Abell said if anyone from the community would like to volunteer to serve on the committee, they are more than welcome to contact the Walnut City Hall at 712-784-3443. It’s not clear if the District wants to gift the building to the City or sell it, but Abell said giving from a municipality-to municipality is a much easier. Last year, the Walnut School Board opted to reorganize with the AHST School District, with the idea being to have one campus, located in Avoca. Officials are exploring the option of selling or leasing the building in Walnut, which will serve students for the last time, during the next school year.
She said also, the Council received information from Bob Hilligas and Marye Bierbaum about expanding the City’s profile through social media. That includes advertising the various antique shops in the community on Facebook. The City already has a Facebook page, and an official City website that talks about local government and City events. Hilligas and Bierbaum were given a budget to handle the social media aspect of the City and tie in all relevant pages to the Facebook page.
The City she says also waiting to see if it will receive a grant for a Streetscape/Fascade Program, and they recently received a $400,000 grant through the CITIES Programfrom the Iowa West Foundation, which they are hoping to match with a grant being applied for through a CDBG (Community Development Block Grant).
Police in Creston say a resident in the 700 block of Poplar Street reported this (Friday) morning, that someone had stolen his blue, 1991 Buick Regal. The car, with IA license plate 646 XFY, was taken sometime between 8-p.m. Thursday and 5-a.m. today (Friday). The loss was estimated at $1,000.
7:06-a.m. local and area News from KJAN News Director Ric Hanson.
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If you’re trying to decide what to wear today (Friday), consider something red, as this is Go Red For Women Day. Cassie Wessing, spokeswoman for the Des Moines chapter of the American Heart Association, says heart disease is the number-one killer in America and in particular, of women in Iowa, so wearing red is a show of solidarity and support. “We use this opportunity to get everybody out, get everybody dressed in red and to raise awareness that heart disease is taking the lives of one in three women each year, but we can do something about it,” Wessing says. “Eighty percent of cardiac events are preventable by eating healthy, not smoking, getting your recommended physical activity.”
Regular check-ups at your doctor’s office are also an important part in preventing heart attacks, something to which Wessing reminds, no one is immune. “Sometimes we think we’re invincible but yes, they can happen to anyone at any age, anytime, but we can do something about it,” Wessing says. “We want people to stand up and take charge of their own health in the fight against heart disease.”
Several Iowa communities are holding “Go Red” events today, including a three-block-long Go Red Dash in Ankeny. Learn more at heart-dot-org.
(Radio Iowa)
A collision Thursday night between a car and an SUV on Atlantic’s east side resulted in minor injuries to two juveniles. According to reports, the collision occurred on Highway 71 near the east entrance to the Wal-Mart store, when the car, which was traveling south on 71, hit the SUV pulling out of the parking lot.
Police said the two juveniles were transported to the Cass County Memorial Hospital by Medivac ambulance. A third person in the Sedan and the driver of the SUV were not hurt.
Additional information is expected to be released later this morning.
Police in Audubon says tips from the public lead investigators to arrest a woman authorities were looking for, in connection with a Jan. 18th hit-and-run incident near the Ace Hardware Store, in Audubon. 27- year old Janae Nicole Anderson of Audubon, was arrested Wednesday. Anderson was charged with Failure to Maintain Control, Striking an Unattended Vehicle, and Failure to Provide Proof Of Insurance. She was released from custody on promise to appear. During the incident which led to her arrest, police says sometime during the evening hours of Jan. 18th, an dark navy blue vehicle struck a parked car in front of the hardware store, causing over $5000 damage.
Testimony from the alleged victim took up most of the proceedings during the first day of the sexual abuse trial Thursday, of John Osborn of Council Bluffs. The 47-year old is charged with four counts of third-degree sexual abuse for alleged acts with a 14-year-old girl. The alleged victim played softball and was good friends with Osborn’s daughter. The Daily NonPareil reports in his opening statement Dan McGinn with the Pottawattamie County Attorney’s Office described a relationship between Osborn and the alleged victim that started with a conversation at a softball game about whether the teenager was pretty. The pair started texting and having phone conversations, which quickly escalated to sexual in nature.
On the night of July 16-17, the girl stayed at the Osborn home to hang out with Osborn’s daughter. The 14-year-old said she was there to celebrate Osborn’s daughter making a select softball team. The teen testified that after Osborn’s wife had gone to bed, around midnight the daughter was asleep and Osborn told the teenager to make up her bed. The alleged victim said Osborn followed and pushed her up against a wall and kissed her, fulfilling a wish of his they’d discussed in a text. The two then engaged in four separate sex acts, the teen said. She said before and after each act, Osborn checked to make sure his daughter was still asleep.
In his opening statements, Defense attorney Jordan Glaser argued that John Osborn went to sleep at 11 p.m. on the night in question, joining his wife, who was already in bed. The defense said the two young girls went to bed around 11:45 p.m., with the daughter’s friend falling asleep quickly, while the daughter stayed up, tending to a new puppy and watching Netflix, until 3 a.m.
Glaser said testimony from Osborn’s wife and daughter will show Osborn was in bed by 11 p.m. and that the friend didn’t leave the bedroom, corroborating the defense’s assertion that no sexual acts happened that night. The defense attorney then admitted that Osborn had committed reprehensible acts communicating via text and phone about sexual topics with the alleged victim.
The girl’s mother testified that she found out about the relationship when she was looking at a photo on the victim’s phone and a text message came from Osborn, with a link to a love song. The first day of trial included the testimony of Council Bluffs Police Department detectives Chris Anderson and Mike Roberts, Nosimilo Dube with Child Protective Services, the victim’s aunt and the victim’s mother’s boss.
The trial is expected to resume this (Friday) morning.
Seven members of the Glenwood Fire and Rescue Department resigned Tuesday after a dispute over how the department is run, though the chief says the department still has enough members to fulfill its duties. According to the Daily NonPareil, the resignations occurred following a meeting on Monday of the Glenwood Fire Association. Fire Chief Butch Fidler told the paper that the Association’s members, who are volunteers, were upset with how city administration chose the department’s leadership.
Fidler said two-years ago, the city passed an ordinance to be able to appoint a fire chief instead of having a vote for one. The mass departure of staff was the result of an issue over the department’s self-governance, according to Fidler, who oversees the operations of the emergency management services. He said the members who resigned were trying to create a position to oversee that and exclude him.
After the resignations, there are 12 volunteers in the department. However, Fidler has already received three applications from individuals interested in joining the department. Glenwood provides mutual aid to Pacific Junction, Silver City, Malvern and Lewis Township. Fidler said despite the resignations, the department is operating normally.