It’s back to school time. The new school year starts Monday (8/23) in several districts in the No Coast Network listening area, including Oskaloosa, Pella, EBF and Montezuma. Sigourney’s new school year starts Wednesday (8/25(. Drivers are reminded to watch out for children on their way to school every morning and afternoon…..and also to stop for school buses when the bus has its stop sign extended.
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Grassley, Sand to visit Oskaloosa this week
A couple of state political figures will be in Oskaloosa this week. US Senator Chuck Grassley will hold a question and answer session Tuesday afternoon (8/24) at 2:15 at Smokey Row Coffee in Oskaloosa. Then on Thursday (8/26), Iowa State Auditor Rob Sand will hold a town hall. That will be from 10 to 11am in City Square Park on the corner of First Avenue East and South First Street.
Florida Georgia Line Cancel Tour
Florida Georgia Line fans aren’t going to be seeing them live this year as planned. The duo just announced they have canceled their “I Love My Country” tour due to the continued spread of the coronavirus thanks to the Delta variant.
“While we’ve been able to see some of y’all at shows recently, everyone’s continued safety has been weighing heavy on us,” they share on Instagram. “We’re so bummed to have to cancel this tour, but we know in our hearts that we still have to make sure we’re keeping our fans and crew safe. We love y’all and can’t wait to be back out when the time is right.
The tour, featuring special guests Russell Dickerson and Lauren Alaina, was due to kick off September 24th in Atlanta. Ticketholders will automatically get refunds.
This day in Country Music History
- Today in 1952, Kitty Wells became the first woman to reach #1 on the Billboard country chart with “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels.”
- Today in 1969, Johnny Cash climbed to #1 on the Billboard country chart with “A Boy Named Sue.”
- Today in 1975, Glen Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy” rides to #1 on the Billboard country chart.
- Today in 1977, Linda Ronstadt’s “Simple Dreams” album was released.
- Today in 1980, Eddie Rabbitt parked himself at #1 on the Billboard country singles chart with “Drivin’ My Life Away.”
- Today in 2003, Trace Adkins joined the Grand Ole Opry, officially inducted by Ronnie Milsap and Lorrie Morgan. On his big night, he performed “Chrome,” “Hot Mama” and “Then They Do.”
- Today in 2004, the Pocahontas Village Board in Illinois voted to rename the town’s Pocahontas Community Park as Gretchen Wilson Park.
- Today in 2011, Pistol Annies’ debut album, “Hell On Heels,” was released.
- Today in 2012, Ronnie Dunn raises more than $313,000 for the West Texas Rehabilitation Center during an annual benefit at the Abilene Civic Center.
- Today in 2014, Martina McBride and Michelle Branch joined Billy Ray Cyrus, Dave Stewart and Mary Lambert at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles for a concert observing the 50th anniversary of The Beatles’ iconic appearance at the venue.
- Today in 2015, Justin Moore was certified as an Arkansas Traveler by governor Asa Hutchinson during a concert at the Bank of the Ozarks Arena in Hot Springs.
- Today in 2016, Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro christened the Charlie and Hazel Daniels Veterans and Military Families Center.
- Today in 2016, EA Sports released the “Madden NFL 17” video game. Featured music includes Jason Aldean’s “Lights Come On,” plus country tracks by Blake Shelton, High Valley and Brantley Gilbert.
- Today in 2017, Lee Brice announced his partnership with American Born Whiskey.
- Today in 2017, Little Big Town’s single, “Better Man,” was certified gold and platinum. The same day, Justin Moore received a gold album from the RIAA for “Off The Beaten Path” and platinum awards for “Justin Moore” and “Outlaws Like Me.”
- Today in 2017, Luke Bryan’s “Light It Up” hit the airwaves.
Governor’s office accused of violating open records law
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds’ office is illegally delaying the release of public records related to its $26 million, no-bid coronavirus testing contract, a pair of new lawsuits contend.
Reynolds and her office’s public records custodian, attorney Michael Boal, are the latest officials to be accused of violating open records laws by a Utah-based company investigating testing programs in several states.
Paul Huntsman, chairman of the board of the Salt Lake Tribune newspaper, launched Jittai to seek public records related to Test Utah and similar programs in Nebraska, Iowa and Tennessee. He is funding the requests and vowing to make public the findings, saying he wants to know how well the programs worked and whether public funds were used for private gain.
Suzette Rasmussen, an attorney for Jittai who previously served as chief records officer for former Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, filed two nearly identical lawsuits this week in Polk County against Reynolds and Boal. They allege that Reynolds’ office for more than five months has refused to “timely and meaningfully respond” to records requests related to the Test Iowa program.
In two separate requests, Rasmussen in March asked the governor’s office for correspondence related to Nomi Health, a Utah startup that was selected to run the program.
The lawsuits say Boal requested on July 20 that she provide particular search terms to look for records electronically, and Rasmussen responded the same day.
“Governor Reynolds and Boal have knowingly refused to make the records available for Rasmussen for examination and copying,” the petitions state.
The lawsuits ask a judge to order the pair to comply with the open records law, enjoin them from future violations for one year, assess damages and award attorneys’ fees.
The lawsuits also ask the court to order Reynolds’ and Boal’s removal from office if they are found to have engaged in a prior open records law violation for which damages are assessed.
Iowa law says courts “shall issue an order removing a person from office” for a second such violation, but it’s unclear whether that would apply to Reynolds. The Iowa Constitution gives lawmakers, not the courts, the power to impeach and remove the governor for misconduct.
The governor’s spokesman had no immediate comment.
Rasmussen has filed other lawsuits seeking records from Utah Gov. Spencer Cox’s office, Nebraska’s state epidemiologist and the Iowa Department of Public Health.
Rasmussen said Thursday that she and her clients are investigating how the testing contracts were signed, the validity of the testing and the “unprecedented use of political connections and political power in pushing these projects forward.”
Reynolds has said that she decided to copy Utah’s drive-thru testing program after receiving a tip from Iowa-born actor Ashton Kutcher, who was friends with a software executive working on it.
Iowa signed an emergency $26 million contract with Nomi Health in April 2020 to obtain 540,000 coronavirus tests, which were produced by Utah-based Co-Diagnostics. Utah tech firms Domo and Qualtrics also worked on parts of the program, which has since changed to at-home testing and currently faces a backlog for kits.
Nomi Health has been paid more than $35 million in all, according to Iowa’s online checkbook.
The lawsuits against Reynolds comes as the governor’s office has faced increasing criticism for tightly controlling information during the pandemic and refusing to acknowledge or fulfill many open records requests. Randy Evans, director of the Iowa Freedom of Information Council, said recently the state’s compliance with the law is the worst he has seen in 50 years as an Iowa journalist.
The case Rasmussen filed last month against Iowa’s health department and records custodian Sarah Ekstrand seeks correspondence between department director Kelly Garcia and officials in Utah, Nebraska and Tennessee related to the testing programs.
Ekstrand told Rasmussen in April that she anticipated having the requested fulfilled in five days, but no records had been released by late July, according to the lawsuit.
The health department’s former longtime spokeswoman, Polly Carver Kimm, has filed a wrongful termination lawsuit alleging that the governor’s office pushed her out for releasing public information and data requested by news outlets. State lawyers representing the governor and her spokesman have argued in that case that the open records law is not a “well-recognized” public policy and therefore gives no legal protections to at-will employees who fulfill requests.
Report: Taliban killed minorities, fueling Afghans’ fears
By AHMAD SEIR, TAMEEM AKHGAR and DAVID RISING
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Reports of targeted killings in areas overrun by the Taliban mounted Friday, fueling fears that they will return Afghanistan to the repressive rule they imposed when they were last in power, even as they urged imams to push a message of unity at Friday’s prayers.
Terrified that the new de facto rulers would commit such abuses, thousands have raced to Kabul’s airport and to border crossings, desperate to flee following the Taliban’s stunning blitz through the country. Others have taken to the streets to protest the takeover — acts of defiance that Taliban fighters have violently suppressed.
The Taliban say they have become more moderate since they last ruled Afghanistan in the 1990s and have pledged to restore security and forgive those who fought them in the 20 years since a U.S.-led invasion. Ahead of Friday prayers, leaders urged imams to use sermons to appeal for unity and urge people not to flee the country.
But many Afghans are skeptical, fearing that the Taliban will erase the gains, especially for women, achieved in the past two decades. Reports of abuses are growing, and an Amnesty International report provided more evidence Friday that undercut the Taliban’s claims they have changed.
The rights group said that its researchers spoke to eyewitnesses in Ghazni province who recounted how the Taliban killed nine ethnic Hazara men in the village of Mundarakht on July 4-6. It said six of the men were shot, and three were tortured to death. Hazaras are Shiite Muslims who were previously persecuted by the Taliban and who made major gains in education and social status in recent years.
The brutality of the killings was “a reminder of the Taliban’s past record, and a horrifying indicator of what Taliban rule may bring,” said Agnes Callamard, the head of Amnesty International.
The rights group warned that many more killings may have gone unreported because the Taliban cut cellphone services in many areas they’ve captured to prevent images from being published.
Separately, Reporters without Borders expressed alarm at the news that Taliban fighters killed the family member of an Afghan journalist working for German broadcaster Deutsche Welle on Wednesday.
“Sadly, this confirms our worst fears,” said Katja Gloger of the press freedom group’s German section. “The brutal action of the Taliban show that the lives of independent media workers in Afghanistan are in acute danger.”
Meanwhile, a Norway-based private intelligence group that provides information to the U.N. said it obtained evidence that the Taliban have rounded up Afghans on a blacklist of people they believe worked in key roles with the previous Afghan administration or with U.S.-led forces. A report from RHIPTO Norwegian Center for Global Analyses that was obtained by The Associated Press included a copy of one of the letters.
In an email to the AP, Christian Nellemann, the group’s executive director, said the organization knew about several threat letters sent to Afghans, including a man who was taken from his Kabul apartment this week by the Taliban.
“We had access to hard copies of concrete letters issued and stamped by the Taliban Military Commission to this effect,” he said.
The AP could not independently verify the claims made by the group.
Under the Taliban’s previous rule, women were largely confined to their homes, television and music were banned, and public executions were held regularly. Fearing a return to those days, thousands have tried to flee the country, braving checkpoints manned by Taliban fighters to rush to Kabul’s airport.
Mohammad Naim, who has been among the crowd at the airport for four days trying to escape, said he had to put his children on the roof of a car on the first day to save them from being crushed by the mass of people. He saw other children killed who were unable to get out of the way.
Naim, who said he had been an interpreter for U.S. forces, urged others not to the come to airport.
“It is a very, very crazy situation right now and I hope the situation gets better because I saw kids dying, it is very terrible,” he said.
The United States is struggling to pick up the pace of evacuations it is running from Afghanistan, where thousands of Americans and their Afghan allies may be in need of escape.
Dozens of other flights have already brought hundreds more Western nationals and Afghan workers to Europe and elsewhere.
But continued chaos at the airport has hindered flights. Spain’s Defense Minister Margarita Robles said Friday that its military transport planes are leaving Kabul partly empty in the tumult.
“Nobody’s in control of the situation,” Robles told Spanish public radio RNE.
Getting to the facility is also a major challenge. Germany was sending two helicopters to Kabul to help bring small numbers of people from elsewhere in the city to the airport, officials said. Australia’s prime minister said that his country’s citizens who live outside Kabul have not been able to be evacuated.
As concerns mount about what a Taliban government will look like, the group’s leaders are meeting with some officials from previous Afghan administrations.
An Afghan official familiar with those talks indicated nothing would come of them before the last U.S. troops leave, currently planned for Aug. 31.
The Taliban’s lead negotiator, Anas Haqqani, has said the group agreed with the U.S. to “do nothing” until after that date, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give information to the media. The Taliban have said they want an inclusive government, but, as with their other promises, it was not clear if they would make good on that.
In addition to concerns about Taliban abuses, officials have warned that Afghanistan’s already weakened economy could crumble further without the massive international aid that sustained the toppled Western-backed government. The U.N. says there are dire food shortages and experts said the country was severely in need of cash with much of the government’s funds abroad frozen.
After the Taliban overran Kabul the market used by many in the capital to exchange money was closed down.
Underscoring the difficulties the Taliban will face in returning the country to normal life, trader Aminullah Amin said Friday that it would stay closed for the time being. There was just too much uncertainty surrounding exchange rates, how the Taliban might regulate the market, and the possibility of looting.
“We have not decided to reopen the markets yet,” he said.
___
Akhgar reported from Istanbul, Rising from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, Frank Jordans in Berlin, Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Kathy Gannon in Islamabad, and Rod McGurk in Canberra, Australia, contributed to this report.
Grinnell College to require students to be fully vaccinated for fall semester
BY RADIO IOWA CONTRIBUTOR
RADIO IOWA – Grinnell College President Anne Harris says the school has decided to require students to be vaccinated this fall.
“We did so after much, much, thinking. Much consultation with legal counsel. We believe we are in compliance with House File 889 — which is the prohibition of a vaccine passport bill,” Harris says. Harris says they don’t require public disclosure of a student’s vaccine status, so they can comply with the state law.
She believes Grinnell College is the only higher education institution in the state that will require vaccinations — and says it sends a message to students. “I want you to know you’ll be living with a student population that is 99 percent vaccinated,” according to Harris. “And I think that is going to matter a lot for the school staying open, for the college staying open, I think that is going to mean a lot for the community health of the town of Grinnell.”
Harris says the vaccination requirement is one of the key steps they are taking. “We’re combining that with masking in our buildings — and those two things very effectively should really cut down on transmission,” Harris says. Harris says you will not be required to show you are vaccinated to visit the Grinnell College campus.
(By Chris Varney, KGRN, Grinnell)
Johnson appointed to Ottumwa City Council
The Ottumwa City Council has filled a vacancy on the council. Rick Johnson was appointed at Tuesday’s (8/17) council meeting to replace Skip Stevens, who resigned on August 1 for health reasons. Neither Johnson, nor a second candidate, interviewed with the council before the council made their choice. Johnson will be on the Ottumwa City Council until early January, when Stevens’ term expires. This council seat will be on the November ballot.
Coronavirus update
One person from Marion County has died from coronavirus over the past week. That’s one of 16 new deaths reported Wednesday (8/18) by the Iowa Department of Public Health. The state’s death total for the pandemic now stands at 6226. The number of positive COVID-19 tests in Iowa continues to rise. As of Wednesday, another 5697 Iowans have tested positive for a pandemic total of 392,970. 81 new positive tests have been reported in Marion County, 79 in Wapello County, 67 in Jasper County, 35 in Mahaska County, 24 in Poweshiek County, 20 in Keokuk County and eleven new positive COVID-19 tests in Monroe County.
The number of people in Iowa hospitalized with COVID-19 has risen over the past week. As of Wednesday afternoon (8/18), 396 Iowans were hospitalized with coronavirus—that’s 41 more than last week. Seven people in Jasper County are hospitalized with COVID-19, with three in Marion County, two in both Mahaska and Wapello Counties, one each in Poweshiek and Monroe Counties and none in Keokuk County. There are also 99 people in Iowa in the intensive care unit with coronavirus—down four from last week.
ACM Awards To Stream Exclusively On Amazon Prime In 2022
After being dropped by CBS this year, the ACM Awards have found a new home but it’s not on any network.
The Academy of Country Music just announced that the 57th Academy of Country Music Awards will livestream on Amazon Prime in 2022. They will now be the first ever major award show to be been streamed exclusively.
“We are thrilled that the Academy of Country Music Awards are first to take this giant step toward the future of awards shows with Amazon Prime Video,” Damon Whiteside, CEO of the Academy of Country Music, shares. “This partnership, which reinforces our position as an innovative, progressive awards show, will deliver the broadest possible audience and, simultaneously, deliver massive value to our artists whose music lives inside this ecosystem, enabling fans to discover and stream music as they watch.”
So far no date for next year’s ACMs have been announced.
- ONE MORE THING! ACM just announced that those attending Wednesday’s ACM Honors at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville will have to show proof of full vaccination or a negative COVID test witin 48 hours of attending. The same goes for Tuesday’s ACM Party for a Cause at Ascend Amphitheater. Masks are being encouraged for both shows.
Source: ACM
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