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Coronavirus update

Checking the numbers, 464 Iowans have now died from coronavirus, with one new death in Mahaska County and one in Jasper County.  And 17,661 people have tested positive for COVID-19.

Also, Crystal Heights Care Center in Oskaloosa is reporting that two more residents have died for a total of six who have died of COVID-19 since an outbreak was declared earlier this month.  All told, 48 residents and 13 employees at Crystal Heights have tested positive for coronavirus.  All Crystal Heights residents who have tested positive for coronavirus are being quarantined.

And a coronavirus outbreak has also been declared at Vista Woods Care Center in Ottumwa, with 13 residents testing positive for the virus.  Iowa considers it an outbreak when three or more coronavirus cases are found at a long-term care facility.

Osky school board to discuss summer sports

The Oskaloosa School Board is holding a special meeting Tuesday (5/26) to consider holding summer sports seasons.  Last week, Governor Reynolds gave the go-ahead for baseball and softball to be played in Iowa this year.  The Board is also scheduled to discuss personnel contracts, resignations and transfers.  Tuesday’s Oskaloosa School Board meeting starts at 5pm in the George Daily Auditorium Board Room.

Eddyville Cargill plant receives state grant

The Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA) Board approved an award that will help create 14 new jobs at Eddyville’s Cargill plant. Linda Crookham-Hansen presented the project to the board Friday (5/22).

“Cargill in Monroe County, or Eddyville, will be making a $233 million investment.”

The expansion will include production facility construction, new bioprocessing and fermentation machinery and equipment, research and development and improvements to wastewater treatment capacity.

“They’re seeking $6 million: $4 million of investment tax credits and $2 million of sales, service and tax refunds.”

The Economic Development Authority Board awarded Cargill the tax benefits on the promise of the creation of the jobs at the wage of $17.46/hour.

Four more die in Mahaska County from coronavirus

Four Mahaska County residents have died over the long weekend from coronavirus.  38 new cases have also been reported in the County, nearly doubling Mahaska County’s total for a pandemic total of 85.  Crystal Heights Care Center in Oskaloosa is reporting that two more residents have died for a total of six. And in all, 48 residents and 13 employees at Crystal Heights have tested positive for COVID-19.  All Crystal Heights residents who have tested positive for coronavirus are being quarantined.

Wapello County is reporting an additional 55 coronavirus cases, with one death from the weekend.  Two Monroe County residents and one from Jasper County have also died from COVID-19.  As of Tuesday morning (5/26), 461 Iowans have died from coronavirus, with 17,628 people testing positive.

Remember, you can hear Governor Kim Reynolds’ daily coronavirus press briefing live every weekday morning at 11 on the No Coast Network.

Morgan Wallen Arrested In Nashville

Looks like Morgan Wallen had a bit too much fun over the Memorial Day weekend. The singer was arrested in Nashville Saturday, and charged with public intoxication and disorderly conduct.

It all started when Morgan was kicked out of Kid Rock’s bar on Lower Broadway for “kicking glass items.” He then got into verbal fights with folks on the street, and while he cops in the area gave him “several opportunities to walk away” he refused, so they arrested him because he was “a danger to himself and the public.”

He later took to social media to “clear the air,” noting, “I went out downtown last night with a few old friends. After a couple bar stops, we were horse-playing with each other. We didn’t mean any harm, and we want to say sorry to any bar staff or anyone that was affected.”

He added, “Thank you to the local authorities for being so professional and doing their job with class.” He is due in court on the misdemeanor charges in July.

 

School administrators prep for three fall semester scenarios

BY 

Iowa school districts face a July 1st deadline for submitting “Return to Learn” plans to the state.

Districts must describe how they’ll help students catch up and advance once school resumes in the fall. Algona Superintendent Joe Carter says districts must have a plan for classroom instruction, for distancing learning and for a hybrid of the two.

“We don’t know what August will be like at this time,” Carter says, “but we want to have plans in place so we’re best prepared for all of those things.”

Carter’s district has been collecting data about distance learning during the closing weeks of this school year.

“We want to see: What are we able to effectively do? What aren’t we able to effectively do? What’s that look like? And use this really as an opportunity to build upon for that continual learning plan,” he says.

Carter and his staff have determined 10 percent of students in the Algona district do not have reliable internet access.

“Sixty percent of our households still had two parents going every day to work,” Carter says. “If there’s a young child involved in at-home education, there’s certainly a dynamic there that is difficult.”

Every district must get state approval of its plan for “continuous learning” in an emergency, like a COVID-19 outbreak, when students cannot gather in a school building. Attendance must be taken and grades handed out in that scenario, according to an Iowa Department of Education document. Schools this past spring were allowed to conduct voluntary distance learning.

(By Brian Wilson, KLGA, Algona)

Congressman King says scrutiny is welcomed

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The five candidates competing in the GOP Primary in Iowa’s 4th congressional district are quarreling about their conservative credentials and their ability to win the district in November.

Incumbent Steve King, who’s seeking a 10th term, said this weekend that he was warned soon after his narrow 2018 win that he was going to be “broadsided” by “a coup” from within the GOP

“I”m happy to have all of this scrutiny,” King said during an online forum hosted by Story County Republicans. “…I think the people that are going to the polls are going to be real pleased with the job that I have been doing.”

By mid-May, King had raised about $330,000, but had just $32,000 left in his campaign. Challenger Randy Feenstra of Hull, a state senator, raised $925,000 and had nearly four times as much money as King left for the campaign’s closing weeks.

Feenstra has been endorsed by the National Rifle Association, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Right-to-Life Committee as well as well-known Iowa Republicans like former Governor Terry Branstad and Bob Vander Plaats, president of The Family Leader.

“You need to be an effective conservative leader,” Feenstra said during Saturday’s forum. “I’ve proven it.”

Jeremy Taylor of Sioux City, a former state legislator and former county supervisor, raised about $165,000 and had $24,000 left in mid-May.

“Most of my funding comes from former Steve King supporters,” Taylor said during the Story County GOP forum, “about 80%.”

Bret Richards, the former mayor of Irwin, said he is primarily self-funding his campaign and put 73,000 miles on his van.

“Before the pandemic, I was door-knocking,” Richards said. “After the pandemic, it’s been social media — name recognition that way.”

Steve Reeder, a businessman from Arnolds Park, filed paperwork indicating a negative balance in his campaign account on May 13th. Reeder said he didn’t “chase the big money” or King’s former donors.

“I’m not beholden to any special interest groups or PACS,” Reeder said Saturday. “I’m beholden to the people of Iowa.”

Crystal Heights Care Center Covid-19 Outbreak Update

As reported in a press release issued by the care center dated May 23rd, the number of COVID-19 positive employee sat Crystal Heights has reached 8.  The total number of COVID-19 positive residents is now 41.  There have been 3 additional deaths of COVID-19 positive residents, bringing the total deaths to 4. Due to privacy regulations, Crystal Heights is not able to share more information about these individuals.

All residents who have tested positive will remain in isolation for at least 14 days and all staff is being screened at the beginning and end of their shift for signs and symptoms of COVID-19.   Crystal Heights continues to monitor it’s residents’ health and well-being and states the center is doing everything it can to ensure we stop the spread of this within it’s facility including activation of it’s emergency response procedures.

NASA astronauts go back to the future with capsule launch

By MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — It’s back to the future as NASA astronauts launch again from the U.S. — aboard a retro-style “Right Stuff” capsule.

Make no mistake: This is not your father’s — or grandfather’s — capsule.

SpaceX’s Dragon crew capsule outshines NASA’s old Apollo spacecraft in virtually every way. The Dragon’s clean lines and minimalist interior, with touchscreens instead of a mess of switches and knobs, make even the space shuttles seem yesteryear.

This fresh take on a vintage look will be on full display Wednesday when SpaceX plans to launch NASA astronauts Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken to the International Space Station — a first for a private company.

It will be the first astronaut launch from Florida since Atlantis closed out the space shuttle program in 2011, and the first American-made capsule to carry people into orbit since the Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket — with the crew capsule atop — will soar from the same pad used for both of those earlier missions.

Russia’s workhorse Soyuz capsules, still in use after a half-century plus, have kept NASA astronauts flying to the space station. While reliable, the Soyuz looks dated compared with the snappy Dragon.

“We want it to not only be as safe and reliable as you’d expect from the most advanced spacecraft in the world … we also want it to look amazing and look beautiful,” said Benji Reed, a SpaceX mission director.

SpaceX and Boeing, NASA’s other commercial crew provider, opted for capsules from the start.

Another early competitor, Sierra Nevada Corp., proposed a small space plane for astronauts, but did not make the final cut. NASA has since hired the company to haul space station supplies aboard its mini shuttle starting as soon as next year.

There was no need for another flying machine like the shuttle, which was built to haul hefty satellites and space station parts, said retired NASA manager Steve Payne.

“What we’re trying to do now is just taxi service up and down, and you don’t need the huge semi anymore. You can use a sedan,” Payne told The Associated Press.

“Yes, wings are nice. They give you more options as to where to land and a little more control,” said Payne, a former Navy fighter pilot. “But they’re not absolutely necessary. And since we’re trying to make this inexpensive and reusable and as simple as we can make it so that it’s cost effective, capsules work.”

SpaceX based its crew capsule on its long-running reusable cargo capsule, also named Dragon and ending space station missions with old-fashioned splashdowns.

The two astronauts were deeply involved in the new capsule’s development over the past five years. In true test flight fashion, they offered suggestions and tweaked here and there, to benefit not just themselves but future crews.

“Our goal through this entire process is to not turn the spacecraft into Bob and Doug’s excellent machine, with a bunch of things that only Doug likes or only Bob likes,” Behnken said.

Although the full automated Dragon has four seats lined up in a row, only the center two will be occupied for this especially risky test flight. A test dummy soloed on last year’s Dragon crew capsule debut.

This Dragon now has a name, courtesy of its crew. Hurley and Behnken promise to reveal it on launch day, one of many traditions they’re setting into motion as NASA’s commercial crew program finally takes wing.

The practice hearkens back to NASA’s early days: Project Mercury’s John Glenn became the first American to circle the Earth aboard Friendship 7; Gemini 3′s Gus Grissom and John Young sailed into orbit aboard Molly Brown; and Apollo 11′s Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins flew to the moon aboard Columbia.

“We have to save some suspense for the mission itself,” Behnken said. “We’ve got something for you to look forward to on launch day.”

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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