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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
KJAN News can be heard at five minutes after every hour right after Fox News 24 hours a day!
Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Radio Iowa) – Le Mars police says the shooting death of a man Monday was a homicide. Officers responding to s shots fired call found 21-year-old Miguel Martinez in an apartment around 2:30 a-m. Le Mars police chief Kevin Vande Vegte says it appears the shooting was not a random act.
Vande Vegte says they could use some help in finding the shooter.
Anyone with info can call the police department at 712-546-4113.

Little League Sports Complex damage ( picture taken 9-29-24)
(Red Oak, Iowa) – Sheriff’s officials in Montgomery County, today (Tuesday), said a juvenile was arrested late this morning at the Southwest Valley Middle School in Villisca, on a Threat of Terrorism charge. The arrest occurred a little after 11-a.m. The unnamed juvenile was taken into custody, processed at the Montgomery County Law Enforcement Center, and transported to the Juvenile Detention Center in Council Bluffs.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – Vision Atlantic, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, has partnered with the Charles E. Lakin Foundation, to address housing in Atlantic. Christina Bateman, Board President of Vision Atlantic, says the mission of Vision Atlantic is to “Empower growth, enhance lives and create a thriving community together.” She adds, “We’re poised to transform Atlantic for generations to come.”
After thorough research with community partners over recent years, Vision Atlantic has pinpointed three critical areas that are pivotal for stabilizing and enhancing Atlantic’s population: expanding housing, childcare facilities and amenities. Collaborative efforts with community stakeholders, generous donors and foundational support channel an estimated $75.5 million into these vital projects. This includes $48 million directed towards new housing, $11.5 for a new state-of-the-art child development center, and $16 million for the expansion of the local YMCA.
Contributions towards a $30 million fundraising goal have been robust, with over $9.7 million pledged by local donors. The Charles E. Lakin Foundation has committed a remarkable $8.6 million, significantly supporting the new child development center and YMCA expansion. As part of the Foundation’s $165 million contribution to ‘Revitalize Southwest Iowa’, Vision Atlantic has received $23 million, which will serve as capital the organization will use to construct 144 housing units in the new Camblin Hills Housing Development. The $23 million will reoccur yearly, giving Vision Atlantic the ability to accomplish other housing and commercial goals once this project is complete.
Steve Wild, President of the Charles E. Lakin Foundation, remarked, “Atlantic isn’t just waiting for a brighter future, they’re building it. Our investment and Vision Atlantic’s bold leadership are the catalysts propelling this community into an era of prosperity.”
Camblin Hills Housing Development sits on 49 acres and will include single family homes, town homes, duplexes and tiny homes, with lots also available for purchase. A biking/walking trail will be nestled in, offering a safe, family-friendly environment for any buyer. Once the $23 million capital is paid back to the Foundation, 5% of the interest paid will be donated back to Vision Atlantic to be used as an endowment to fund the new child development center, generating an estimated $1.1 million each year.
Christina Bateman said “We are extremely grateful to the Charles E. Lakin Foundation and all our local businesses and residents who have already committed financial support to help make this once-in-a-lifetime project a reality. This incredible generosity from the Foundation is not only going to change Atlantic for the better, but all of Southwest Iowa.”
Infrastructure for Vision Atlantic’s transformative project is slated to begin this fall with construction beginning spring of 2025. All 144 housing units will be completed by the fall of 2030 and will produce an estimated $1.1 million yearly in additional tax revenue to the City of Atlantic and Cass County. The Lakin Foundation Child Development Center of Atlantic is slated to be completed by November 2026 with the YMCA expansion complete by September 2027.
Over the past 11 months, Vision Atlantic’s Project Committee has raised $18.3 million dollars, 60% of a $30 million goal. If you are interested in helping transform Atlantic, whether it’s through monetary donations or acts of volunteerism, please contact Vision Atlantic at visionatlanticiowa@gmail.com.
Follow Vision Atlantic on Facebook for behind-the-scenes access to project updates or www.visionatlantic.org.
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa D-O-T has released its review of speed cameras under new rules created by the state legislature. Cities and counties had to apply to the D-O-T and show the camera is placed in an area due to the number and severity of traffic accidents there. There were 139 requests and only 11 were approved.
That includes four in Cedar Rapids, and Davenport, and one each in Des Moines, Leclaire, and Marshalltown.

(Stock photo via Canva)
The D-O-T also denied 66 locations where cities wanted mobile speed cameras but approved 143 mobile locations in Cedar Rapids, Davenport, Des Moines, Fort Dodge, Marion, Muscatine, Sioux City, and Waterloo.
A mayor of a city that the Iowa Department of Transportation decided couldn’t continue using speed cameras is responding. Prairie City mayor Chad Alleger says the denial of their three fixed cameras is a surprise because the cameras reduced speeding near schools.
The DOT says a seven-member panel made the decisions based on the law, which says cameras can be approved if they’re appropriate, necessary, and the least restrictive way to address traffic safety at those locations. Mayor Alleger believes they made a good case to keep the cameras.
DES MOINES — U.S. Representative Zach Nunn (IA-03) today announced mobile office hours across the Iowa Third Congressional District to assist constituents who may not be able to travel to one of the congressional offices located in Creston, Des Moines, and Ottumwa. At these mobile office hours, Iowans will be able to get help from their congressional office with Social Security, Medicare, passports, visas, veterans’ benefits, military records, tax returns, and other issues with federal government agencies.
In this area, the schedule for October mobile office hours is listed below:
Cass County
Griswold City Hall
601 2nd Street, Griswold, Iowa
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Page County
Shenandoah Public Library
201 South Elm, Shenandoah, Iowa
Thursday, October 10, 2024
1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Montgomery County
Red Oak Public Library
400 2nd Street, Red Oak, Iowa
Thursday, October 10, 2024
4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Ringgold County
Matura
306 South Garfield, Mount Ayr, Iowa
Wednesday, October 16, 2024
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
Guthrie County
Mary Barnett Memorial Library
400 Grant Street, Guthrie Center, Iowa
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Adair County
Adair Public Library
310 Audubon Street, Adair, Iowa
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Additional dates and locations will be announced in the future.
(Radio Iowa) – Creighton University economist Ernie Goss says the Midwestern agricultural sector is now in a “significant recession,” and the region’s economic picture is lagging. Creighton’s monthly survey of business leaders and supply managers in Iowa and eight other states finds the overall Business Conditions Index fell below growth neutral during September — for the fifth time this year.
On a scale of zero-to-100, a score of 50 is considered growth neutral, and the Midwest economy showed a score of just over 48 last month.

Ernie Goss (Creighton University photo)
Iowa’s score was even lower, dropping about a point from August to just above 43 for September, indicating the state’s economy is significantly slowing. Goss says the survey asked about the biggest roadblocks that lie ahead for the region’s manufacturers.
Other challenges they mentioned include continued high interest rates and China’s threatened invasion of Taiwan. With America’s general election just over a month away, we’re hearing a lot about whether the economy is in a recession. From his standpoint, Goss says it’s a complicated answer.
The survey shows the region’s employment index slumped below growth neutral for a ninth straight month, while looking forward, supply managers expect input prices to rise more than six-percent over the next year. According to the latest U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics report, Iowa lost 3,800 manufacturing jobs, or about two-and-a-half percent, so far in 2024.