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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!
CITY ELECTIONS
City of Adair –
Mayor:Joanne Byers 100 (9 Write-In’s)
Adair City Council (Vote for 2):
Paul Gettler 112 (70 Write-Ins)
City of Bridgewater –
Mayor: Roberta Carpenter 20 (6 Write-Ins)
Bridgewater City Council At-Large (Vote for 2):
James C. McCall 17
Tyler Warrior 15
Douglas Miller 17
3 Write-Ins
City of Casey – NO RESULTS TUE. NIGHT
Mayor: Bruce Vorm
Casey City Council At-Large (Vote for 2): NO RESULTS TUE. NIGHT
Cody Sheeder
Jennifer Geren-Penton
Tyler Stolk
LeRoy Hall
City of Fontanelle –
Mayor: Dawn Brown 99 (& 7 W-IN)
City of Fontanelle Council At-Large (vote for 2)
Shawna Herr 59
Daniel Miller 26
Andrew Martin 46
Amando Guerrero 44
Nancy Embree 7
27 W-IN
City of Greenfield –
Mayor (To Fill a Vacancy): Brian D. Fox 476 (7 W-IN)
Greenfield City Council At-Large (Vote for 3):
Rita Eble 268
Carl Faust 374
Jeff Clayton 436
Nathan Hubenka 222
W-IN 8
PUBLIC MEASURE AB (Bond for the swimming pool) YES 336 NO 166
City of Orient –
Mayor: Matthew Swanson 26 (7 W-IN)
Orient City Council At-Large (vote for 3):
Travis Eggman 30
Justin Boswell 29
Bryan Rohwer 28
City of Stuart –
Mayor (Vote for 1):
John Gulbranson 14
Cory Kirkpatrick 82
W-IN 15
Stuart City Council At-Large (Vote for 3)
Trevor Nelson 91
Angela Capps 79
Alan L. Bovee 30
Zach Ingwers 93
SCHOOL ELECTIONS
Adair-Casey CSD: Director At-Large (Vote for 3):
Blair Carney 119
Amanda Bireline 118
Lindsay Dinkla 121
W-IN 13
CAM CSD
Director At-Large: Cara Murphy 2
Director District – North : Adam Akers 2
Director District – South: Mallory Armstrong 2
Nodaway Valley CSD
Director At-Large (Vote for 2):
Daniel Schilling 398
Mary Dodson 307
Kristen Jensen 524
Director District 1: Adam Woosley 649 (4 W-IN)
Orient-Macksburg CSD:
Director At-Large (Vote for 2):
Bo Geidel 41
Alex Maeder 54
(4 W-IN)
West Central Valley CSD
Director District 3: Mike Dickson 117 (3 W-IN)
Director District 4: Ashley E. Miller 118
Director District 6: Dustin Foster 125 (1 W-IN)
Director District 7: Jeff Dudley 133 (2 W-IN)
DMACC Director District 3:
Trish Roberts (Total Adair County votes): 235 (4 W-IN)
SWCC Director District 1:
Jane Ernst (Total Adair County votes): 728 (3 W-IN)
IWCC Bond issue (Public Measure SE):
YES 2 NO 0
(Updated 11/6/25)
CITY ELECTIONS (** denotes winner[s])
City of Atlantic:
Mayor – (Vote for 1)
Rob Clausen 1,418
Write-In 31
City Council – Ward 2 (Vote for 1)
Jim Behrens (I) 154
Write-In 1
City Council – At Large (Vote for 1)
Jeremy Butler 1,363
Write-In 20
City Council – Ward 5 (vote for 1)
Dana Halder 302
Write-In 7
City of Anita:
City Council – (Vote for 3)
Kevin Littleton 73
Eyon Steffensen 124**
John Knutson 123**
Sara L. Sisler 37
Shelli Hogueison 84
Deanna Andrews 85**
Kim Miller 49
Mark Harris 42
Write-In 2
City of Cumberland
Mayor – (Vote for 1)
Rachel McCann 42
Write-In 4
City Council – (Vote for 3)
Randall Anderson, Jr. 29
Matthew Dolch 40
Tatiana Thielen 28
Write-in 24
City Council – To Fill a Vacancy (Vote for 1)
Dori A. Borras 34
Write-In 5
City of Griswold:
Mayor – (Vote for 1)
Brad Rhine 166
Write-In 4
City Council – (Vote for 2)
Kevin Farr 48
Nick Demanett 84**
Jesse Doty 51
Jim Ridlen 83**
Troy Nicklaus 71
City of Lewis:
City Council – (Vote for 2)
Russell Miller 97**
Betty Auten 109**
Jim Triller 58
David Raymond 53
City of Marne:
City Council – (Vote for 2)
Kyle Frederiksen 15
Angela Redler 16**
Aaron Williams 19**
Write-ins 6 scattered
City of Massena:
Mayor – (Vote for 1)
No Candidate filed [55 Write-in votes]
City Council – (Vote for 2)
Doug Venteicher 89
Jackson Bissel 83
City of Wiota:
Mayor – To Fill a Vacancy – (Vote for 1)
Bryon Armstrong
City Council – (Vote for 3)
Jenna Grossman
Charles Bechtold
(No candidate filed)
SCHOOL ELECTIONS:
Atlantic Community School District:
School Director/At Large (Vote for 2)
Jordan Zarbano 629
Justin Williams 994
Josh McClaren (I) 1,029**
Chet Meneely 1,086**
CAM Community School District:
North District Director – (Vote for 1)
Adam Akers 417
Write-In 8
South District Director – (Vote for 1)
Mallory Armstrong 402
Write-In 16
At-Large Director – (Vote for 1)
Cara Murphy (I) 418
Write-In 19
Griswold Community School District:
Director/District 3 – (Vote for 1)
Christian VanScyoc 84 (includes patrons in Montgomery County)
Write-In 3
Director/District 4 – (Vote for 1)
Keyla Wyman 108
Write-In 1
At-Large Director – (Vote for 2)
Robert Peterson 299
Aaron Houser 233
Write-In 5
DMACC Director/District 3 – (Vote for 1)
Trish Roberts 0
Write-In 0
AHSTW Community School District:
Director/At-Large – (Vote for 1)
Adam C. Long 2
Director/District 1 – (Vote for 1)
Angie Grote 2
Director/District 4 – (Vote for 1)
Preston Eugene Krohn 2
Exira-Elk Horn/Kimballton Community School District:
At-Large Director – (Vote for 3)
Anna Schleimer
Nick Fredericksen
Eric Konecne
Deboard King
Beth Larsen
Emily Paulsen
Abby Rasmussen
Director/At-Large (To fill a vacancy) – Vote for 1
Anthony L. Hough
Cally Lee Christensen
IWCC Director/District 4 (Vote for 1)
Chris Blake 2,226
Write-In 14
IWCC Director/District 9 – (Vote for 1)
Randy Pash 2
PUBLIC MEASURES:
Iowa Western Community College GO Bond Public Measure – SE
Authorizing the issuance of General Obligation Bonds in an amount not to exceed $55,000,000 to defray the cost of constructing, furnishing, and equipping a new Career and Technical Education facility for automotive/diesel mechanic, commercial drivers’ license, and logistics programming; to expand, improve, remodel, repair, furnish and equip existing buildings for expanded programming including HVAC, plumbing, welding, electrical, and construction technology for credit and non-credit programming?
YES 2,001 NO 872
Public Measure DH: A $22.5 million general obligation bond for improvement and expansion projects at Washington Elementary, Schuler Elementary, Atlantic Middle School, and Atlantic High School.
YES 1,438 NO 618
Public Measure DI: An $18.5 million sales tax revenue bond to construct a new multipurpose activity center at Atlantic High School. YES 771 NO 1,276
Public Measure DG: A Revenue Purpose Statement (RPS) to continue using statewide sales tax (SAVE) funds for projects like building upgrades, technology, and infrastructure.
YES 1,383 NO 579
(Spencer, Iowa) – A head-on crash west of Spencer in Clay County, Tuesday morning, resulted in one fatality and two people, including a child, injured. The Iowa State Patrol reports the accident happened on Clay County Road B-24, west of 190th Avenue, at around 7:20-a.m.
Officials say a 2017 Chevy SUV driven by 35-year-old Ryan Cundiff, of Spencer, was westbound on B-24 when it crossed the center line and collided with an eastbound 2014 GMC Acadia driven by 20-year-old Gabriel Campbell, of Hartley. Cundiff – who was not wearing a seat belt – died at the scene. Campbell, and a 5-year-old child were injured and transported by ambulance to the hospital in Spencer.
(Radio Iowa) – If you’ve ever seen one of those big orange snowplows carving a path through the drifts and thought, “That’s the job for me!,” now is your time. The Iowa D-O-T is in need of several hundred snowplow drivers for the upcoming winter season, which could be upon us faster than you’d expect. Craig Bargfrede, the D-O-T’s winter operations administrator, says the agency needs to hire a lot of bodies, pronto.
“From a statewide perspective,” Bargfrede says, “we have just over 600 open winter seasonal positions that are used to augment our full-time staff during winter operations.” One qualification is having a C-D-L, or a commercial driver’s license, and Bargfrede says it’s a demanding job to maneuver those snowplows when an Iowa blizzard is blowing.
It’s not just like hopping in a truck and away you go. There’s a lot of moving parts. There’s a lot of things to be observing and paying attention to while you’re in the cab,” Bargfrede says, “not only the traffic around you, but monitoring your spreader control, monitoring everything going around that plow.” The job of snowplow driver is critically important to Iowa’s transportation infrastructure, and while it can be highly challenging, Bargfrede says it also has its rewards. 
“It can be kind of a tense situation at times, but yet at the end of the day, it’s one that we say can be very gratifying,” Bargfrede says, “and the fact that you’re helping the traveling public get around to their destinations in a safe manner.” New hires will start at 22-dollars an hour, while returning workers will make 23-50, and Bargfrede says they’re especially low on drivers in one region of the state.
“Specifically in the Des Moines/central Iowa area, we still have a number of openings that we’re trying to fill, and yes, we’d be looking at trying to fill those as soon as possible,” Bargfrede says. “You never know when Mother Nature is going to decide to start teasing us or treating us with the white snow, so we need those folks ready to go.” The D-O-T is holding an open house-style hiring event to recruit temporary snowplow drivers on Thursday from 5 to 7 P-M at the agency’s Des Moines North Garage in Des Moines.
(Carroll County, Iowa) – An Audubon County man who was wanted on a South Dakota warrant associated with a shooting death, has died from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound. According to the Carroll County Sheriff’s Office, first responders were dispatched at approximately 9:15-a.m. to a field near the intersection of 300th Street and Mahogany Avenue following a report of a suicidal male in possession of a firearm. The man – who was identified as 58-year-old Lance Allen Meaike, of Audubon, was found deceased near his vehicle upon their arrival at the scene.
The South Dakota Attorney’s Office has confirmed Meaike was wanted on a felony charges of first-degree manslaughter and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, in connection with the June 12th shooting death in Lawrence County, S.D., of 59-year-old Larry Petersen, of Audubon. Authorities previously said the incident occurred as part of an altercation at a cabin outside Lead, S.D.
An investigation determined a fight broke out that evening between four men from Iowa and Nebraska who were staying together as a group of UTV riders. During the altercation, a single round from a .9-mm handgun discharged, striking 59-year-old Larry Petersen, of Audubon. Petersen was transported to Monument Health Lead-Deadwood Hospital, where he later died from his wounds.
(Radio Iowa) – Republican Congressman Zach Nunn says it’s up to a handful of Democrats in the Senate to end the federal government shutdown. “There is no reason for this shutdown. The only people who have a say in whether they want to come back to open up the government are about six Senate Democrats and we’ve seen them peel off in ones and twos, but here we are at a point now where families are actually deciding if they’re going to fill up their car with gas, be able to fill up their refrigerator with food or whether they’re going to go broke,” Nunn said. “Nobody here, nobody in Iowa wants to see that — Republican or Democrat.” Nunn says Republicans are willing to consider a one-year extension of the tax credits for Americans who buy health insurance on the Affordable Care Act Marketplace, but not until the shutdown ends.

Iowa Congressman Zach Nunn (R-Ankeny) (RI file photo)
“What we shouldn’t expect is that one party, in fact six people, take the entire government hostage to deal with something that starts in 2026,” Nunn said, “when we have people for the last 40 days are worried about whether they’re going to get their SNAP benefits, WIC or the assistance that they need from the federal government.” Nunn uses the word “catastrophic” to describe the shutdown. “This is the reason that we’ve seen guys like Senator Fetterman says Democrats can’t get their [expletive] together. It’s the reason that we’ve seen the largest federal unions, whether they’re air traffic controllers or the Teamsters all come out and say: ‘Open up the government, let’s pass a clean C.R. and then let’s get down to the important work of doing policy for the American people.”
Nunn, who lives in Ankeny, represents Iowa’s third congressional district. He spoke with reporters following a meeting at a farm co-op in Carlisle.
SIOUX CITY, Iowa – Officials with the Iowa Department of Corrections report 24-year-old Tyronn Lou Mallory, who was convicted of Willful Injury – Causing Serious Injury, Going Armed with Intent, and Reckless Use of a Firearm with Serious Injury in Woodbury County, failed to report back to the Sioux City Residential Treatment Facility as required on Sunday, Nov. 2, 2025.

Tyronn Lou Mallory
Mallory is described as being an American Indian or Alaska native. He stands 6-feet 2-inches tall and weighs 212-pounds. Mallory was admitted to the work release facility on Oct. 15, 2025. Persons with information on Mallory’s whereabouts should contact local police.
For more information on the state’s work release program, please see Iowa Code 904.901-904.910.
(Atlantic, Iowa) – For more than two decades, a simple box filled with food has meant something extraordinary to families in Cass County, hope, comfort, and the chance to share Christmas dinner together. This holiday season, Atlantic Rising, in partnership with Hy-Vee, is once again leading the beloved Christmas Box Program, continuing a tradition that began more than 20 years ago with West Central Community Action. What started as a small effort to brighten the holidays has grown into one of Atlantic’s cherished community projects. A project that proves the spirit of giving is alive and well. Kelsey Beschorner, Atlantic Rising Treasurer/Secretary, says “Every box we deliver represents more than a meal. It’s a reminder that our community cares. For some families, it’s the difference between going without and gathering around the table together.”
Last year, Atlantic Rising members and volunteers delivered boxes of Christmas dinners to 140 individuals and families across Cass County. But this year, with rising costs and continued challenges, the need is expected to grow significantly. Beschorner says “We’re already seeing an increase in need. Our goal is to make sure that no one in our community goes without this Christmas, but we can’t do it alone.”

Christmas Box assembly line in 2024 (Courtesy Kelsey Beschorner)
To make the program possible, Atlantic Rising raises funds through fundraisers including a super fun event, Glow BINGO, that was hosted in July. The event brought laughter, light, and generosity together for one important cause; ensuring that everyone can experience the joy of Christmas dinner. According to Beschorner, “Glow BINGO was so much fun, but what really shines is the kindness of those who came out to support the event. The money raised goes straight into curating boxes that will fill homes with warmth and good food.”
On Thursday, December 11th, Atlantic Rising members and local volunteers will gather once again to pack and deliver boxes filled with all the essentials for a festive Christmas meal. Kelsey Beschorner says “Atlantic Rising is proud to carry on this tradition. With Hy-Vee’s partnership and the incredible support of our community, we’re not just delivering food; we’re delivering hope.”
If you’d like to help make the holidays brighter for a local family, you can nominate a family or individual, volunteer to help, or make a donation to the Christmas Box Program. Contact Atlantic Rising at 712-243-3017 or chamber@atlanticiowa.com.
(Radio Iowa) – The dean of the College of Agriculture at Cornell University is one of the two finalists to replace Iowa State University President Wendy Wintersteen, who is retiring. Benjamin Houlton is a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and global development at Cornell. Houlton co-founded a company that works with landowners to remove carbon dioxide from the soil and he directs a 100-acre project on carbon sequestration. This is how he introduced himself as Cornell’s Dean of Agriculture.
“For the past 15 years, I have built a program focused on global environmental sustainability and most recently been thinking about how we can deploy carbon capture in working lands — that is farmlands and ranching land — to catalyze negative emissions and help produce food in a way that is more resistant to climate change as well as more nutritious.” 
Houlton was born and raised in Wisconsin and earned a degree in water chemistry from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, a masters in environmental engineering science from Syracuse and a doctorate from Princeton in ecology and evolutionary biology. He previously served on the faculty at the University of California – Davis before his appointment at Cornell in 2020. Iowa State, Cornell and U-C-Davis are all land-grant universities.
Houlton will visit the I-S-U campus tomorrow (Wednesday) and participate in public forum late Wednesday afternoon. The name of the other finalist for I-S-U’s presidency will be released tomorrow (Wednesday) morning — and that person will be on the Ames campus on Thursday.