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New Air Ambulance in Southwest Iowa to Serve Iowa and Northwest Missouri

The LifeNet helicopter is coming to the new Clarinda Regional Health Center. The hospital opened this year. Photo from January 2012.

An air ambulance coming to southwest Iowa will also serve northwest Missouri when the program starts in September.

LifeNet helicopter will be based at the new Clarinda Regional Health Center and will serve a 40 mile radius including the Missouri towns of Rock Pork, Marville and Mound City.  It will overlap services already provided from St Joseph.

Clarinda Regional Heath Center in southwest Iowa, along with Mercy Medical Center in Des Moines and Air Methods LifeNet made the joint announcement Thursday.

It will transport patients to hospitals in Des Moines, Omaha and Lincoln in Nebraska and St. Joseph, Mo.

“From our perspective, a Clarinda-based flight program is a win-win for patients and for area hospitals who already utilize our services,” state Air Methods’ Senior Vice President, Ed Rupert said.  “Clarinda is geographically located between Omaha, Des Moines and St. Joseph, Mo, so from a flight time scenario we felt there was an opportunity to serve this region better.”

The air ambulance will operate 24-hours-a-day, 7-days-a-week.  Mercy-Des Moines will staff the air ambulance’s medical crew, and will be hiring 11 new flight paramedics and flight nurses who will be based in Clarinda.  Air methods will hire four pilots and a mechanic to operate this new service.

 

Clarinda is roughly 70 miles from St Joseph on US Highway 71 in southwest Iowa.


$240-million Powerball Winner In Iowa

A single winning ticket was sold in Iowa for the 240-million-dollar Powerball jackpot. Last night’s big drawing boasts a one-time cash value of nearly 160-million bucks. The amount soared to almost a quarter billion dollars after there was no winner in last Saturday’s drawing. The lucky numbers this time around are: 7, 10, 14, 33, 57 and the Powerball Number 18.

 

County Committee Nomination Period About to Open

The nomination period for local Farm Service Agency county committees will begin Friday (June 15). Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack is urging all farmers and ranchers to participate in this year’s county committee elections by nominating candidates by the August 1st deadline. Vilsack says county committees are a vital link between the farm community and USDA. He says they provide a voice to landowners, farmers and ranchers so they have an opportunity for their opinions and ideas to be heard. The FSA county committees don’t approve or deny farm operating loans – but they do make decisions on disaster and conservation programs, emergency programs, commodity price support loan programs and other agricultural issues.

Those who participate or cooperate in an FSA-administered program and are eligible to vote in a county committee election are eligible to serve on an FSA county committee. They must also reside in the local administrative area in which they are a candidate. Organizations that represent minorities and women can nominate candidates. Farmers and ranchers may nominate themselves or others. An eligible individual must sign the nomination form to become a candidate. The forms for the 2012 election must be postmarked or received by the close of business on August 1st. The FSA-669A form and other information is available online at www dot fsa dot usda dot gov slash elections (www.fsa.usda.gov/elections).

The elections will take place in the fall – with ballots mailed to eligible voters beginning November 5th. Voted ballots will be due back to the local county office by December 3rd. Newly elected committee members and alternates take office on January 1st and will serve three-year terms. Each committee consists of three to 11 members. Currently about 77-hundred farmers and ranchers serve on FSA county committees nationwide.

Mild Winter Boosts Iowa’s Pheasant Population

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – Iowa should see an increase in its pheasant population this year, thanks to the mild winter and warm spring.

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources says its nesting forecast predicts the population will increase by more than 40 percent.

Wildlife biologist Todd Bogenschutz says it would be the first statewide increase in more than six years.

He says the pheasants will be able to expand and reoccupy grassland habitats where they’ve been depleted by five severe winters.

Bogenschutz says a roadside survey in August is the best gauge of the pheasant population. He says during the past 50 years there have been weather conditions similar to this year about six times, and the average increase in pheasant populations during those years was 42 percent.

 

USDA Accepting Applications for Rural Development Grant

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says USDA is offering grants to help organizations start cooperatives, expand existing ones or help develop business opportunities in rural areas. He says cooperative enterprises often lead economic growth and job creation in rural areas. Rural Cooperative Development Grants are being offered to non-profit corporations and institutions of higher education. The one-year grants of up to 175-thousand dollars can be used for feasibility studies, creation and implementation of business plans and to help businesses develop new markets for their products and services.

USDA is now accepting applications for these grants. The deadline for applications is August 6th and the grant period should begin no earlier than October 1st of this year and no later than January 1st of 2013. USDA may award up to 5.8-million dollars in grants. USDA is also offering nearly 2.37-million dollars in grants though the Rural Business Opportunity Grant. This program promotes sustainable economic development in rural communities and regions with exceptional needs. Applications for these grants are also due August 6th. Those interested in either grant can contact a USDA Rural Development State Office for more information.

Funding Crunch Cuts Bus Service To Elwood

Lack of funding has forced Saint Joseph Transit to reduce service to Elwood.

Instead of offering weekly service, the system will provide “on demand” service to and from Elwood.

Passengers will have to call at least 24 hours before their trip to arrange a pickup time.

A bus will pick them up as close to their home or business as possible. Full fare will cost $1.50 each way. Full fare monthly passes will cost $40, plus 50-cent per trip for pickup service. The change goes into effect July 2nd.

No Hunger Summer Kicks Off Monday

The Second Harvest No Hunger Summer will kick off Monday in St Joseph.

The program helps feed kids through the summer during weekdays at two cafe sites in St Joseph. 

One site is at the Bode Sports Complex and the other site is at the Woodson Chapel.

The summertime should be a time in a child’s life when they are enjoying being out of school, but for more than 6,000 students in the St. Joseph School District receiving Free and Reduced Lunch, it means missing meals,” said Tamara Grubb, COO, Second Harvest. “No Hunger Summer is one part of a continuing effort by our organization to expand access to nutritious food.”

The meals are for children 18 and under. Adults can eat for $2. The program starts Monday and runs until Wednesday, August 15th.

The sites will be open from 11:30am until 1:00pm.

Diocese Ordered Into Arbitration Over Sexual Misconduct Settlement


KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A judge has ordered the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph into arbitration over a 2008 settlement with people who alleged they were abused by priests.

Lawyers for 42 of the 47 plaintiffs who settled their claims against the diocese for $10 million demanded arbitration last year.

They say the diocese had not lived up to requirements in the settlement in its handling of two priests who are accused of sexual misconduct.

The Rev. Shawn Ratigan is scheduled for trial in August on federal child pornography charges. And the Rev. Michael Tierney faces civil lawsuits alleging that he abused the plaintiffs.

Ratigan has pleaded not guilty and Tierney has denied any wrongdoing.

Prosecutor Dwight Scroggins: Non-Support Cases Up, But Not Unusual


Many of you in viewing the mug shots here have commented about what appears to be a large number of detainees charged with non-support. Prosecuting Attorney Dwight Scroggins tells us the caseload for his Child Support Division is not unusually high.

“We’re a little bit up over last year,” Scroggins said in an interview. “But we’ve had years where we’ve had this many during the first half.

“My guess would be that by the end of 2012, it will all be fairly similar to what it’s been in the past.”

Scroggins says his office changed the way it handles child-support cases a little over ten years ago, taking over the entire operation, and having workers specialize in particular kinds of activity like wage withholding, out-of-state claims and the like.

In other jurisdictions, case workers in a state office handles much of the work, and only refers cases that require court appearances or filings. Scroggins says his way of doing business is much faster and yields better results. For example, when his office is alerted that a parent involved in a child-support case has a new job, the turnaround on wage-witholding filings is much quicker.

“That goes to our withholding specialist, who will have the withholding order done, signed and in the mail the same day in which we get the alert,” Scroggins said. “I would say on average that’s probably a two to three-week process in most offices.”

Scroggins says when a parent is late with child support, his specialists can simply walk across the office to the enforcement division to begin criminal proceedings. It takes a lot longer for state child-support offices to refer the case to a prosecutor.

“That process takes a couple of weeks to go from that state worker to the prosecutor’s office,” Scroggins said, “and, it may be another two or three weeks before the charge is ever filed.”

“In our office, the girl on one side of our office says ‘this guy didn’t pay this month, and we need to do something.’ She’ll send that over to the enforcement side, and we will be having that reviewed by a prosecutor within two days of passage of the non-payment timeline.”

The numbers are impressive. Scroggins says his “Henry Ford approach” to child-support generates about 13-point-five million dollars per year in otherwise non-voluntary payments. He says they turn between 60 and 63 percent of their caseload into paying cases. Jurisdictions under the old system are closer to 40 percent.

According to Rebecca Woelfel at the Missouri Department of Social Services, there are five counties in the state in which the PA’s office does most of the work. They are Audrain, Buchanan, Butler, Clay and Montgomery counties.

Woelfel provided some numbers for comparison.

As of May 31, 2012, here are the caseloads for those counties:
Audrain: 1403
Buchanan: 5485
Butler: 2654
Clay: 7480
Montgomery: 610

The collections for State Fiscal Year 2011 are:
Audrain $2,520,889
Buchanan $13,411,760
Butler $4,134,818
Clay $23,102,362
Montgomery $1,285,808
Statewide $664,136,608

Scroggins says those numbers only represent cases with collection problems.

“The only cases we have are cases in which we have had a collection problem. That 13.5 million dollars is just a portion of the overall child support that’s paid in Buchanan County. The rest of it is paid by non-custodial parents who are supporting their children, who are making the effort to pay on their own.”

Kansas Winter Wheat Harvest More Than Half Finished

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) – The Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service says the state’s winter wheat harvest has passed the halfway mark.

The agency reports 53 percent of the crop had been cut by Sunday. That’s more than two weeks ahead of normal. Typically, only about 2 percent of the wheat has been harvested at this point in the season.

Farmers in southern parts of the state are the furthest along. The harvest is 84 percent complete in southeastern Kansas, and 82 percent complete in south-central portions.

Things are moving more slowly in northwestern Kansas. The agency says only 2 percent of the crop had been harvested by Sunday, even though more than half the wheat has matured.

 

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