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Keep up-to-date with Fox News Radio, Radio Iowa, Brownfield & the Iowa Agribusiness Networks!
(Clarinda, IA) Page County Attorney, James L. Varley’s office has issued a report Page County District Court outcomes for the week of February 9th. Among the cases heard before the Judge, was that of:
41-year-old Bobbi Jo Christiansen, of Blanchard, who appeared by counsel and pled guilty to Operating While Under the Influence, 1st Offense. She was sentenced to 30 days of incarceration, with all but 2 days suspended and fined $1,250. Christiansen was placed on probation for 1 year and as a condition of probation must obtain a drug/alcohol evaluation and successfully complete the Drinking Driver’s School. She was ordered to pay court costs, surcharges and court-appointed attorney fees.
31-year-old Farrin Nicole Stretch, of Bellevue, Nebraska, appeared by counsel and plead guilty to Operating While Under the Influence, 1st Offense. She was sentenced to 30 days of incarceration with 28 days suspended. Stretch was fined $1,250 and placed on probation for 1 year. As a condition of probation, she is to obtain a drug/alcohol evaluation and attend and successfully complete the Drinking Driver’s School. Farrin Stretch was ordered to pay court costs, surcharges and court appointed attorney fees.
And, 60-year-old Terry Jay Warner, of Clarinda, Iowa, appeared by counsel and pled guilty to Reckless Use of Fire/Explosives/Destructive Devices. He was sentenced to 60 days of incarceration, suspended, and placed on probation for 1 year. Warner was ordered to pay court costs, a fine of $430 and court-appointed attorney fees. Terry Warner also pled guilty to another charge of Reckless Use of Fire/Explosives/Destructive Devices. The defendant was sentenced to 60 days of incarceration, suspended and placed on probation for 1 year. The sentence imposed will run concurrently with the previous sentence. Defendant was fined $430 and ordered to pay court costs and court-appointed attorney fees.
“All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.”
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa City school board has approved a three-million-dollar short-term loan for expenses as it looks to a long-term plan to trim costs. District Superintendent Matt Degner is proposing cutting five full-time staff positions in the district’s middle schools through attrition. “The next step of the conversation is to really start to set those overall budget priorities, board priorities, and then: how do we achieve those goals through our staffing plan?,” he says.
The district would save an estimated 500-thousand dollars by reducing middle school staff. Degner is proposing reducing up to 23 teachers total through attrition, along with two administrators.
Board member Jayne Finch says the district should take a deeper look at possible cuts to the district’s administration. “We are in a crisis. It’s not because we don’t like administrators or think that they aren’t important. It’s because we’re in a crisis and we want to find savings wherever we can, because we know that it is important to keep that funding in the classroom,” she says.
The cost cutting plan comes after ten million dollars was transferred from the district’s health insurance fund to its general fund without the board’s initial approval. The board retroactively approved the transfer in January.
DES MOINES – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is offering workshops around the state to teach the skills needed to hunt, field dress and cook wild turkey to participants who have little to no wild turkey hunting experience. The workshops will be offered in Council Bluffs, Indianola, Massena, Marble Rock, Sioux City, Solon and Vinton from mid-March through early April. Workshops are designed using hands-on techniques to teach basic wild turkey hunting strategies, such as proper equipment, where to hunt, safe shooting practices, and how to field dress, butcher and cook the bird.
“For those interested in the challenge of wild turkey hunting as a means of sourcing their own protein, this program provides the opportunity to learn the skills and knowledge it takes to do it all yourself,” said Jamie Cook, Hunter Education coordinator with the Iowa DNR. For information on cost, workshop time and location, and to begin the registration process, go to https://servicedesk.gooutdoorsiowa.com/EventManager/EventsHome.aspx
Early registration is encouraged as space is limited. Programs are provided through a partnership with the Iowa DNR, the Iowa Hunter Education Instructor Association, the National Wild Turkey Federation and other local partners. It is part of a national effort to recruit, retain and reactivate hunters due to the overall decline in hunting and outdoor recreation.
(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he’s “deeply saddened” to learn four Iowa-based Army Reservists were killed in Kuwait on Sunday by an Iranian drone, including a West Des Moines native, but Grassley says the mission of Operation Epic Fury remains clear. Grassley, a Republican, rejects arguments that President Trump should have better articulated to the American people why the U-S was launching large-scale military strikes on Iran. “Most of the criticism here in Washington is that he should have talked more about it ahead of time,” Grassley says, “but I think he didn’t want to detract from what he was hoping would be a successful diplomatic negotiation — that fell through.”
While it’s evident a commander-in-chief wouldn’t want to offer advance notice to enemies about a looming attack by going public, Grassley says the signs were clear. “He did continually move American military capabilities into the area,” Grassley says. “He did talk about the fact that there could be destructive action taken, but I don’t think he wanted to emphasize it to too great of an extent to think that he was interfering with the negotiations that are going on.” Grassley says he and his wife are praying for the loved ones of the American soldiers who’ve been killed, but he adds, the president has made it known why this operation is underway. “The administration has stated its objective for these military operations against Iran,” he says, “like destroying Iran’s missiles, annihilate its navy, cripple its terrorist proxies, and prevent the gaining of nuclear weapons.”
Grassley says he attended a classified briefing on Epic Fury on Tuesday, while as Senate president pro-tem, he says Trump did as required and sent him written notification within 48 hours of taking military action.
(Des Moines, IA) – Officials with the non-profit Preservation Iowa organization, say they have designated 6 properties in Iowa for 2026 Most Endangered Designations. Among them is the Holliwell Covered Bridge in Madison County, and the Riverton Chautauqua Pavilion, in Fremont County. The other properties are:
Preservation Iowa’s Most Endangered Property program began in 1995 and was implemented to educate Iowans about the special buildings and historic sites that are slowly and that are “gradually slipping away from us,” according to a news release from the organization. Over the past 30 years, Preservation Iowa has designated over 200 archaeological sites, commercial buildings, homes, churches, landscapes and a variety of other properties in over 70 Iowa counties.
The Most Endangered Properties program helps to bring to the public’s attention the risks to a designated historic property and introduces owners of an endangered property to preservation advocacy and resources that can help preserve their historic property. Additionally, there have been interest groups who have been able to use the designation as a mechanism to leverage other financial resources to restore and preserve properties. For more information about the Most Endangered Program, check out Preservation Iowa’s website at www.preservationiowa.org or contact Preservation Iowa at info@preservationiowa.org.
#1 Holliwell Covered Bridge, Madison County
Spanning the Middle River near Winterset, the Holliwell Covered Bridge is one of five remaining original covered bridges in Madison County. The bridge was completed in 1880 by Harvey P. Jones and George K. Foster at a time when timber truss bridges were practical and economical in areas where wood was plentiful. Having a roof and sides slowed the deterioration of the timber framework extending its lifetime. At 110 feet, the Holliwell Bridge is the longest of the extant Madison County covered bridges. It remains in its original location and carried vehicular traffic until the mid-1980s. The bridge was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. Today, the Holliwell Bridge is a reminder of an era of wooden bridges before the widespread use of iron. Madison County’s famous covered bridges, including the Holliwell, draw thousands of tourists each year. The Holliwell Bridge was also a filming location for the 1995 film The Bridges of Madison County.
Lacking substantial maintenance since the mid-1990s, the bridge’s structural integrity has become compromised. Preservation Iowa says the deteriorating truss members are causing the bridge to lean, and decay and erosion are taking its toll on the bridge’s roof, floor beam supports and abutments. Without repair, the bridge will likely have to be closed to the public within the next 10 years. The covered bridges are owned by Madison County and maintained by the Secondary Roads Department which is responsible for the upkeep of over 220 bridges leaving limited resources for the maintenance of a non-vehicular bridge. Over the past few years, the County has sought to find alternative funding for repairs to the bridge but has not yet been successful.
#4 Riverton Chautauqua Pavilion, Fremont County
The 12 sided pavilion sits atop a hill in the City Park at Riverton. The open air structure was completed in 1897 and intended to provide a stage for encampments of the newly founded Patriots of America. William Harvey founded the populist organization to advocate for returning to the free coining of silver and support political candidates favorable to that cause. Harvey is said to have put up $500 toward the Riverton pavilion’s construction. He reportedly chose Riverton because Fremont County had the greatest number of Patriots of America lodges of any county in the U.S. Yearly encampments of the fraternal organization were held in Riverton between 1897-1901. The order died out shortly thereafter.
Since then, the pavilion has hosted Chautauqua shows, Sunday School and church services, school graduations, May Day services and other community events. The pavilion was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.The Riverton Hometown Pride group has lately taken an active role in preserving the pavilion. They received a Paint Iowa Beautiful grant in 2024 and a State Historical Society of Iowa Field Services grant to hire a consultant to evaluate the needs of the structure. That evaluation showed that there is much more that needs to be done to preserve this piece of local and U.S. history.
Significant repairs to the pavilion were done as a community bicentennial project in 1976. In more recent years, moisture and lack of regular maintenance has led to deterioration of the roof and supporting cedar posts
(Radio Iowa) – The Iowa House has passed a bill that would forbid ALL Iowa colleges, universities and community colleges from hiring students from China, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, Venezuela or Syria who are in the U.S. on a temporary H-one-B Visa. Those countries are considered foreign adversaries of the United States. Republican Representative Skyler Wheeler of Hull says it’s about national security, preventing espionage, and protecting sensitive research. “Aligning with broader U.S. concerns over foreign influence in academia,” Wheeler said, “while prioritizing American or allied talent.” The policy would take effect July 1st.
Representative Timi Brown-Powers, a Democrat from Waterloo, says it will affect hundreds of students, teachers, professors and researchers in Iowa’s public and private colleges, including 300 at the University of Iowa, over 100 at Iowa State University and 16 at U-N-I. “This has, really, the potential to make it very difficult to hire research professors and graduate students that do teaching at all three of our Regent (universities),” Brown-Powers said. Wheeler says U.S. universities are for Americans first. “Do you really believe we should have members of the Chinese Communist Party teaching economics or political science or government in our Regents universities? Do you really believe that we should individuals from Russia or Iran influencing future voters in this country?” Wheeler asked. “I do not.”
The bill passed on a 68-to-27 vote and now goes to the Senate.
(Guthrie Center, IA) – Mark your calendars for Saturday, March 28! Panorama Elementary School in Panora will be the site for the 10th annual Guthrie County STEM Festival coordinated by staff at the Guthrie County Extension Office. “Building Your Future in STEM” is the theme for this interactive event designed for hand-on learning activities for children of all ages. A planning committee has been working on the details since late January. About twenty booths of STEM exhibitors will be on hand to work with students from pre-school through 6th grade. Parents or adults who will be bringing students are also encouraged to make the rounds of exhibitor tables. The event is free starting at 9:00 am and running until 12:00 pm.
“STEM is a very important discussion right now in Iowa and across the nation as employers are searching for qualified candidates to fill many open positions in the workforce. Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics are critically important work skills no matter what your job is. This is true in all career areas, from medical to technology, to agriculture to manufacturing. STEM is an attempt to increase knowledge of what businesses do in their specific fields, and how we can help students think about the skills they will need to become part of that future workforce”, according to Casey Wenstrand, the STEM Manager in the Southwest Region of the Iowa Governor’s STEM Program.
Exhibitors attending this event are AC/GC FFA, Panorama FFA, Guthrie County Farm Bureau, Guthrie County REC, Iowa Trust and Savings Bank, Raccoon Valley Radio, Iowa Corn Growers, POET Biorefining, Guthrie State Bank, Guthrie Hospital, Panora Fiber, Iowa Motor Truck Association, Guthrie County Master Gardeners, Blender Bike, Iowa Soil and Water, Guthrie County Cattlemen, Quick Photography, and Dallas County Hospital-Panora Clinic.
Questions regarding the event may be directed to the Guthrie County Extension Office at 641.747.2276.
(Creston, IA) – Police in Creston say a woman was arrested Feb. 26th at her residence. Authorities report 65-year-old Kathleen Janelle Portwood, of Creston, was arrested at around 10:15-p.m., and charged with Animal at Large. Portwood was released from custody at the scene, on a Promise to Appear in court.
(Radio Iowa) – March came in like a lamb, but State Climatologist Justin Glisten says as we move from winter to spring it could bring just about anything. “We can see all types of weather. We can see severe weather, we can see snowfall. We’ve had it all. So as a transition month, who knows, it’s a flip of the coin sometimes,” Glisan says. Glisan says March could help improve some of the dry conditions across the state. “As a state, we typically see slightly under two inches, that’s the 30 year average. And this varies from two-point-three inches in southeast Iowa, all the way up to one-point-six inches in northwest Iowa. So the wetter part of the state is the southern, southeastern (areas),” Glisan says.
Glisan says there is some optimism March could be wetter than normal. “If you look at the short-term outlooks getting into first half of March and even the full March outlook from the Climate Prediction Center, we are showing higher probabilities of warmer and wetter conditions possible,” he says.
April, May and June are generally the wettest months of the year in Iowa.