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Banned book give-away planned in central Iowa this weekend

News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa is the first stop this weekend on the national tour of what’s known as the Banned Wagon, as publishing giant Penguin Random House offers free books that are the focus of court battles and controversy. Jan Danielson Kaiser, spokeswoman for Beaverdale Books in Des Moines, says they have a long list of speakers who will use the vehicle as a backdrop for addressing censorship, and the importance of protecting the freedom to read. “It is a 20-foot bookmobile and it’s going to be parked right smack in front of the store,” Danielson Kaiser says, “and they are going to be giving away 20 different titles of banned books.” The Banned Wagon is scheduled to make stops in multiple cities and states that are being impacted by book banning, and they chose Iowa to start the venture.

“We’re just happy to be able to help them spread the word, spread some great titles,” she says, “some wonderful books that you might even know, like, “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” “The Color Purple,” “The Fault in Our Stars,” “The Outsiders,” even “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.” Danielson Kaiser says the American Library Association tracked instances of book banning during the first half of the 2023-24 school year, and reached the highest level ever documented.  “There were 4,240 unique book titles that were targeted for censorship in the last year, and there’s been 1,247 demands to censor library books,” Danielson Kaiser says, “so there’s a lot of pressure on libraries, a lot of pressure on schools.”

Penguin-Random House image

Sunday’s event will run from noon to 4 P-M, while a Banned Book Fair is planned for September 29th at the Franklin Events Center in Des Moines. Other cities the Banned Wagon will visit include: Milwaukee; Chicago; Indianapolis; Cleveland; Richmond, Virginia; Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Gainesville, Florida and Austin, Texas — all places with a high volume of book bans and challenges.

Auditors find utility billing error in small NE Iowa town’s billing system

News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A report from the state auditor’s office has identified a costly error in a small northeast Iowa town’s utility billing system. About 500 people live in the town of Elma. Staff in the state auditor’s office reviewed the city’s financial records for the 2022 fiscal year and found the city had deficits of over 441-thousand dollars in its Enterprise, Sewer and Water Funds. The review by auditors discovered the sewer and water bills for Elma residents and businesses hadn’t been raised, as required by a city ordinance.

Starting in 2019, the utility rates were to go up three percent every July 1st.

The state auditor’s report says the rates in the billing system have not increased as required. The report did not indicate whether the error was made in just one year or over several years.

Creston man arrested for Probation Violation

News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Creston, Iowa) – Police in Creston arrested a man Thursday night, for Failure to Appear on a Probation Violation charge. 43-year-old David Junior Richman, of Creston, was arrested at around 8:15-p.m. at a residence in the 500 block of W. Montgomery Street. Richman was taken to Union County Jail and held without bond until he makes an initial appearance before the magistrate.

Dozens of SW Iowa artists are featured in 20 locations on weekend ‘art tour’

News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Artists from communities across southwest Iowa will be featured in a multi-city showcase this weekend, starting this (Friday) afternoon. The Southwest Iowa Art Tour is in its 11th year with displays in Page, Fremont, Montgomery, Mills, Pottawattamie, and Shelby counties. Tour coordinator Rebecca Castle Laughlin says there’s a wide range of art, including: painting, sculpture, photography, pottery, wood carving, jewelry and more. “It seems like every year there’s at least one art form that I didn’t know about,” Laughlin says. “For example, we’ve got up in Council Bluffs, there’s an artist who combines fiber art with her painting. So, she does quilting but she paints on the fabric also.”

Laughlin says the event allows artists to spotlight their work while also providing an economic development opportunity for the participating communities. “It was very grassroots-oriented and we tried to get some excitement around the local arts venues and artists that are in our area,” she says. “We want to get them some more sales, obviously, but also bring awareness to the fact that you can make a viable living off the arts in southwest Iowa.” Laughlin says they’ve been handing out brochures with maps at various locations, and they’re also available online for the self-guided tour.

“You can really just plan out your route,” Laughlin explained. “You might say, ‘I’ve got a youth football game tomorrow in Oakland, so I can hit Avoca, Neola, and Macedonia real quick.’ So, really just building it around your schedule. And hit as many spots as you can, because there are some really great artists.” A sneak peak of the tour runs from 4 to 7 p.m. today (Friday), while the main tour is from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, and noon to 4 p.m. on Sunday.

The art will be on display at 20 locations in 13 communities on this year’s tour, including: Harlan, Avoca, Neola, Council Bluffs, Macedonia, Glenwood, Malvern, Red Oak, Essex, Clarinda, Shenandoah, Sidney, and Thurman.

(More on the web at swiarttour.com)

Final Summitt Carbon pipeline meeting is today

Ag/Outdoor, News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The final public meeting on the expansion of the Summit Carbon Solutions carbon capture pipeline expansion project is today (Friday). Farmer Dave Balder (bald-er) plans to attend the meeting in Buena Vista County and opposes the project. “This is a dangerous, profit-driven project, and I see that it will be obsolete before it even gets completed.” Balder, who lives a mile north of the Valero Renewable Fuels plant in Albert City already granted easements on his property for two natural gas pipelines. He says those pipelines are projects that benefit the public, but the carbon pipeline is not.

“I do not agree with someone coming in and with eminent domain and taking over, especially since this is a private situation,” Balder says. Summit Carbon Solutions scheduled public meetings in 23 counties as required by the Iowa Utilities Commission as it seeks to increase its nearly 700-mile carbon capture pipeline by 340 miles.

Several property owners, lawmakers, and the Sierra Club have filed lawsuits opposing the use of eminent domain to build the pipeline connecting about 60 ethanol plants across five states.

Former Creston hospital employee allegedly stole medications by using a patient’s name

News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

A former Greater Regional Health employee in Creston is charged with stealing medications. KCCI-TV reports 47-year-old Brian Gutmann, of Creston, worked at the Greater Regional Health center as a nurse anesthetist. Court records show Gutmann is accused of stealing Fentanyl, Dilaudid and Morphine.

According to investigators, he pulled the medications in a patient’s name, administered some of them, and kept the rest for himself. Kayla Hoffman, director of marketing communications for Greater Regional Health, said in a statement to KCCI:

“Greater Regional Health is aware of the charges. These are the unfortunate actions of a former employee. As an organization, we cooperated with investigating agencies to ensure patient care and safety were never at risk. The agencies validated no patients were harmed or at risk from the findings of this investigation. Actions moving forward are under the direction of charging agencies.”

Ernst says Iowa business owners frustrated by SBA loan process

News

September 20th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – U-S Senator Joni Ernst says it’s been difficult for Iowans trying to recover from this year’s floods and tornadoes to navigate federal disaster programs. “FEMA and SBA did quickly set up recovery centers and I want to thank them for that,” Ernst says, “but business owners were left frustrated by the two agencies’ lack of coordination and incompetence.” Ernst, a Republican from Red Oak, says some Iowans initially got bad information about whether they were eligible for Small Business Administration loans.

“In Shelby County, which was hit by tornadoes in the spring, SBA provided outdated and completely wrong information including sending disaster victims to a dead website,” Ernst says. “They didn’t even realize this until my staff members brought this to their attention.” Ernst says she’s heard from small business owners in rural Iowa hit by this year’s severe weather that they got better loans from their local community bank than were offered by the S-B-A.

“Small business owners who lose their livelihoods in a natural disaster have no time to spare,” Ernst said. “It’s incredibly frustrating to repeatedly hear from those seeking SBA assistance that they thought it was a waste of time, so much so that many walked away and didn’t complete applications.” S-B-A Economic Injury Disaster Loans were made available to Iowans hit by historic flooding and devastating tornadoes in counties that have been declared presidential disaster areas. The loans have an interest rate of four percent for businesses.

U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Red Oak) speaks at Senate Committee on Small Business hearing on Sept. 18, 2024.

Ernst has accused the S-B-A of misusing its loan authority, picking winners and losers with investments in firms working with artificial intelligence or “green” companies focused on environmental projects. She’s also critical of the agency’s TOTAL loan portfolio. “SBA’s lending in rural areas is abysmal, at just around 15% in the agency’s two main programs,” Ernst says.

Nearly 18 percent of U-S residents live in rural areas. Ernst suggests if S-B-A lending were in line with the population, another one-point-three BILLION dollars worth of loans would be made to rural entrepreneurs.

Griswold with a Tough Test Against Fremont Mills

News

September 19th, 2024 by Christian Adams

The Griswold Football Team will face a tough test on Friday when the Fremont Mills Knights visit the Tigers. Despite coming off a 20-point loss to the Sidney Cowboys last week, the game was closer than the final score implied. The Tigers put up a season-high 24 points and were only down by six points heading into the fourth quarter. Head Coach Seth Lembke appreciated his team’s intensity to start the ballgame.

Senior Wyatt Peterson has been a marque player for the Tigers’ defense this season. Peterson plays with a physicality that tows the line and more times than not it helps his team. He currently leads the Corner conference with 20 solo tackles and ranks second in total tackles with 29.  Lembke says he doesn’t need much guidance to be the leader of the defense.

Offensively, the Tigers are led by senior quarterback Bode Wyman and the senior receiver trio of Auden Wilson, Holden Jensen, and Connor Bowers. Wyman is second in the conference in completions and third in passing yards. As far as receivers, Wilson, Jensen, and Bowers all rank in the top ten in receptions and are in the top 12 in receiving yards. Lembke knows and appreciates the importance of having senior leaders that are capable of running the offense.

Fremont Mills will be a tough opponent for the Tigers as they look to pick up their first win of the season. Knights’ quarterback Sawyer Forney is second in the conference in both passing yards and passing touchdowns. Fremont Mills also has two rushers with over 220 yards in Jonathan Epkai and JW Linkenhoker. Lembke says the key for the Tigers will be to play responsible football and limit their explosive plays.

Kickoff in Griswold will be at 7 pm.

Sioux City warming shelter to close

News

September 19th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Attempts to keep Sioux City’s warming shelter open have failed and the shelter will close on October 1st.
Shelter board treasurer, Joe Tidewell, says they are making the announcement now to give other local agencies time to prepare to deal with the homeless. “The shelter during the wintertime houses on the average of about one hundred men, women and children per night. And last year, in the most severe Blizzard, we had 151 people here in the shelter. And those people are going to now need to find another place,” Tidewell says.

He says the shelter has a half million dollar shortfall in funding for this year, and says the Siouxland Community in general has not supported the shelter.  “It’s not just 500-thousand for this year. What we have made a decision is, if the if the shelter is truly going to be able to be part of the fabric of serving the poor and homeless in the community, we need five year commitments for the funding,” he says. “We’re very disappointed, because both the city and the county and area churches, not all of them, but some area churches support us. ”

Tidewell says the shelter has been hurt by misinformation spread in the community — including the idea that the shelter is a magnet for homeless from other areas of the Tri-state regions. “Approximately 80 percent of the people were born or raised here in Siouxland. So when we close or a shelter closes, where are they going to go?,” Tidewell asks. :They’re not going to go to some other city. They’re not going to just disappear. They’re going to stay where the remnants of their family might be, or the people that they went to school with.”

City leaders say they have spent four million dollars this year trying to address a complicated issue.

Study: Majority of Iowa parents take kids out of car seats too soon

News

September 19th, 2024 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A new study finds many Iowa parents stop using child seats and booster seats as their children grow, despite those seats being an important safety measure — plus, it’s the law. In Iowa, kids between one and six years old must be secured in a child restraint system — a safety seat or booster seat, not a seat belt — or the driver faces fines. Brian Ortner, spokesman for Triple-A-Iowa, says the study is based on five years of government crash data and it reveals a concerning trend.

“Child seat and booster seat use declines after children turn three, and those are needed safety devices,” Ortner says. “In Iowa, 93% of parents and caregivers we found transition their children to an adult seat belt too soon, and 24% transition their kids to a booster seat too soon.” The study found 74-percent of car seats that were inspected were not being used correctly or were improperly installed. Ortner says some common mistakes when a child seat or booster seat is installed include being too loose.

Also: “Not using the tether when installing a forward-facing car seat with either the lower anchors or seatbelt on the back, or the harness is too loose when securing a child in the car seat,” Ortner says. “So those are things that can be easily fixed and when used correctly, car seats, booster seats and seat belts do protect young passengers.” Parents go to great lengths to protect their children, but even with the best intentions, Ortner says they may be endangering their children by putting them in the wrong type of seat or not securing them properly.

Between 2018 and 2022, the study found four-million children under age 12 nationwide were involved in car crashes, resulting in 547-thousand injuries and nearly three-thousand deaths.