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Parents, 6-year-old girl fatally shot in tent at Iowa park

By AMY FORLITI

The Associated Press – A 9-year-old boy who was camping at an Iowa state park with his parents and 6-year-old sister survived a shooting that killed the rest of his family.

The Iowa Department of Public Safety identified the victims as Tyler Schmidt, 42; his 42-year-old wife, Sarah Schmidt; and their 6-year-old daughter, Lula Schmidt, all of Cedar Falls, Iowa. Their bodies were found in their tent early Friday at the Maquoketa Caves State Park Campground, about 180 miles (290 kilometers) east of Des Moines.

Authorities said the suspected gunman, 23-year-old Anthony Sherwin, was found dead Friday in a wooded area of the park with a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Mitch Mortvedt, assistant director of the Department of Public Safety’s division of criminal investigation, told The Associated Press on Saturday that the motive for the attack was still unknown.

“We don’t know what led up to this, what precipitated it,” he said, adding that so far, “the investigation has not revealed any early interaction between the Schmidt family and him.”

Adam Morehouse, Sarah Schmidt’s brother, said the family had no connection to Sherwin and he believed it was a “completely random act.”

Cedar Falls Mayor Rob Green, who said he is a neighbor of the Schmidts, posted on Facebook on Friday that the couple’s 9-year-old son, Arlo, “survived the attack, and is safe.” The post did not say whether Arlo was in the tent or even at the campsite when the shootings happened, and the mayor told the AP he didn’t have those details.

Morehouse confirmed Arlo was on the family’s camping trip, but said he did not know exactly where the boy was at the time of the shooting or know specifics about how it unfolded.

“He is with family and he is OK, but I have not had any interaction with him,” Morehouse said Saturday. “As far as I know, he was uninjured physically.”

By Saturday evening, more than $75,000 had flowed into a GoFundMe page created for Arlo. The page, organized by a cousin, Beth Shapiro, said: “Arlo is a strong boy, surrounded by family and friends who are supporting him as best we can.” The page says the fund will help Arlo now, and help fund his future education.

The killings prompted the evacuation of the park and campground, including a children’s summer camp. After the evacuations, Sherwin was the only person unaccounted for, Mortvedt said.

He said that during the course of the investigation, authorities learned Sherwin was armed and “that of course heightened our awareness.” Iowa allows people with permits to carry firearms virtually anywhere in the state. Officials did not say if Sherwin had a permit and provided no information about the firearm used to kill the Schmidts.

The Des Moines Register reported that Sherwin was from La Vista, Nebraska. La Vista Police Chief Bob Lausten told the newspaper that Sherwin lived in an apartment complex with his parents and had no history of criminal conduct.

Felicia Coe, 35, of Des Moines, was at the campground Friday morning with her boyfriend and his two sons, ages 11 and 16. She said the 16-year-old went out early to go running, and she was talking with someone at the park at about 6:30 a.m. when two park rangers dressed in helmets, vests and carrying what looked like automatic rifles told them to leave the campground.

More law enforcement and an ambulance showed up as Coe went to find her boyfriend’s teenage son.

At the time, Coe did not know what happened. But she recalls seeing a little boy standing near the paramedics.

“He was in his pajamas. I distinctly remember he had one blue tennis shoe,” she said. She later saw a picture of the Schmidt family online and said she recognized the boy she saw as Arlo.

“He’s got this really cute, floppy-curly, moppy, strawberry-blond hair that’s really distinguishable,” Coe said. “He was in these super cute little pajamas, like a cotton T-shirt and shorts that matched. … He was just standing there. He wasn’t crying. He wasn’t distraught. But he also wasn’t being comforted. He was just standing there by himself.”

She said the campers got little information about what happened and she began piecing it together on the drive home.

“It’s hard to be so grateful that it wasn’t your family, when you know that another family, is just being ripped apart — multiple families,” she said.

Green, the Cedar Falls mayor, said Sarah Schmidt worked at the city’s Public Library, which was closed Saturday.

“Like many of you just hearing the news, I’m devastated,” Green wrote on Facebook. “I knew Sarah well, and she & her family were regular walkers here in the Sartori Park neighborhood. I was working with her this week on a public library tech presentation for 7/26.”

Morehouse said Tyler Schmidt’s parents live in the Cedar Falls area, and Sarah Schmidt’s family members are scattered around the country, but were heading to Iowa. He said Tyler and Sarah lived in Lawrence, Kansas, for a time, where Sarah worked at the University of Kansas. Tyler was an IT software engineer. At one point, he said, Sarah worked on a project about monarch butterflies, and the couple were huge Kansas Jayhawks fans.

In 2018, the Schmidts moved to Cedar Falls and had been active in the community ever since, Morehouse said. He said they loved the outdoors, and just got four pairs of snowshoes for Christmas.

“The best way to describe all four of them was the quintessential Midwestern family. They gave everybody everything they possibly could. They loved family … They enjoyed the outdoors, enjoyed the hiking — and this is just a question mark of ‘Why that campground and that campsite on that night?’”

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Forliti reported from Minneapolis.

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An earlier version of this article misspelled Lula Schmidt’s first name.

Iowa’s Unemployment Rate Drops to Pre-Pandemic Rate of 2.6 Percent in June

DES MOINES, IOWA – Iowa’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped to 2.6 percent in June – down from 2.7 percent in May and back to its pre-pandemic level. Iowa establishments added 5,100 jobs in June as the Labor Force Participation Rate also increased to 67.8 percent, up from 67.6 percent last month. The U.S. unemployment rate remained at 3.6 percent in June.

The total number of working Iowans increased to 1,665,500 in June – a figure 8,200 higher than May and 57,900 higher than one year ago. The number of unemployed Iowans decreased to 43,900 in June from 46,800 in May.

“Iowa’s continued unemployment rate decline is proof yet again that our state’s efforts to focus on reemployment are successful and that our state is resilient and strong,” said Gov. Reynolds. “We’ve created an environment where employers want to hire and move past the challenges of the past two years, and where more employable Iowans are eagerly joining the workforce. I’m proud of how far we’ve come and I’m optimistic about the future of Iowa’s workforce.”

“The progress in June speaks for itself. Iowa has reached an important milestone by returning to an unemployment level not seen since before the pandemic,” said Beth Townsend, Director of Iowa Workforce Development. “The efforts to bring Iowans back into the workforce with promising new careers is paying off, but we’re not done yet. We remain focused on removing barriers and helping to fill the 89,000 open jobs across the state.”

Seasonally Adjusted Nonfarm Employment


June’s gain of 5,100 jobs lifted total nonfarm employment to 1,572,800, and was the third consecutive increase with 10,400 jobs added since March. Total nonfarm is now up 42,100 jobs over the past year. Services (both government and private industries) were responsible for most of the movement. Growth in private industries were primarily within accommodations and food services and related to increased summer foot traffic; government gained 2,700 jobs due mostly to local administrations adding jobs to handle seasonal summer jobs. Overall, government rests up 7,200 jobs versus last June.

Leisure and hospitality added the most private sector jobs in June (+2,000), resulting from accommodations and food service industry hires heavily influenced by seasonal gains in recreational camps. Arts, entertainment, and recreational industries scaled back in June following gains in each of the prior two months. Manufacturing added 700 jobs with hiring being nearly split between durable and nondurable goods factories. Manufacturing has now added jobs in seven consecutive months with 11,700 jobs gained during that span. All other jobs gains were relatively small and included other services (+300) and construction (+200). Sector losses were highest in information services (-400) followed by professional and business services (-200), financial activities (-100) and natural resources and mining (-100).

Over the past twelve months, leisure and hospitality added the most jobs (+15,100), mostly from within accommodations and food services (+14,000). Manufacturing continues to bolster payrolls and now rests 8,300 jobs higher than June 2021. Hiring within non-durable goods plants has outpaced durable goods slightly. Annual job losses are light and limited to just health care and social assistance (-700), administrative help and support services (-500), and finance and insurance (-300).

Employment and Unemployment in Iowa, Seasonally Adjusted Data
Change from
June May June May June
2022 2022 2021 2022 2021
Civilian labor force 1,709,400 1,704,100 1,682,800 5,300 26,600
Unemployment 43,900 46,800 75,300 -2,900 -31,400
Unemployment rate 2.6% 2.7% 4.5% -0.1 -1.9
Employment 1,665,500 1,657,300 1,607,600 8,200 57,900
Labor Force Participation Rate 67.8% 67.6% 67.2% 0.2 0.6
U.S. unemployment rate 3.6% 3.6% 5.9% 0.0 -2.3
Nonfarm Employment in Iowa, Seasonally Adjusted Data
Total Nonfarm Employment 1,572,800 1,567,700 1,530,700 5,100 42,100
Mining 2,200 2,300 2,300 -100 -100
Construction 79,600 79,400 77,400 200 2,200
Manufacturing 225,500 224,800 217,200 700 8,300
Trade, transportation and utilities 312,900 312,900 307,000 0 5,900
Information 18,900 19,300 18,700 -400 200
Financial activities 109,200 109,300 108,900 -100 300
Professional and business services 140,500 140,700 139,500 -200 1,000
Education and health services 225,000 225,000 225,100 0 -100
Leisure and hospitality 142,100 140,100 127,000 2,000 15,100
Other services 56,300 56,000 54,200 300 2,100
Government 260,600 257,900 253,400 2,700 7,200
 (above data subject to revision)

 

Unemployment Insurance Claims for Iowa
% Change from
June May June May June
2022 2022 2021 2022 2021
Initial claims 6,420 5,566 9,595 15.3% -33.1%
Continued claims
     Benefit recipients 8,889 9,398 22,066 -5.4% -59.7%
     Weeks paid 29,043 24,244 82,559 19.8% -64.8%
     Amount paid $12,478,779 $11,155,734 $30,673,186 11.9% -59.3%

 

Visit www.iowalmi.gov for more information about current and historical data, labor force data, nonfarm employment, hours and earnings, and jobless benefits by county.

MEDIA ALERT: Local data for June 2022 will be posted to the IWD website on Tuesday, July 26, 2022.  Statewide data for July 2022 will be released on Thursday, August 18, 2022 at 9 a.m.

35th Annual Sweet Corn Serenade Happening on Thursday

The Sweet Corn Serenade makes its return this week in Oskaloosa for its 35th year.

Some of the highlights for this year include craft and other vendors as well as food trucks set up in the square for the entirety of the event (noon-9pm). At 4pm, the sweet corn, burgers, pie, and all of the traditional favorites will be served.

The Mahaska Chamber is partnering with Mahaska County Farm Bureau for kids’ activities, which include a “Count the Corn Scavenger Hunt,” a coloring contest, and more.

There will also be a bags tournament with a $10 entry fee per player. The tournament will run from 5pm-9pm with a 64 person player limit.

Live music will be available starting at 3pm with Cody Wayne leading off. Royce Johns is the next name on the lineup, and the Oskaloosa City Band will perform to cap off the night.

The 35th Annual Sweet Corn Serenade will take place this Thursday in downtown Oskaloosa from noon to 9pm and you can find more information on the Mahaska Chamber Website at mahaskachamber.org.

Carter & DeJong Top Southern Iowa Fair Races

By Jerry Mackey:

Oskaloosa, Iowa: The 2022 Southern Iowa Fair hosted the 4th annual Caleb Hammond Memorial races on Tuesday, July 19th with a packed grandstand enjoying an action packed night of racing which hosted a season high 91 race teams.

The Midstate Machine Stock Car main event took the green flag with 20 drivers in contention for the $1,000 winners share of the over $17,000 total purse. Nathan Wood took the lead early but was never able to move away from the pack as the lead group of cars swelled to five drivers battling it out for the front. As the the laps wound down Cayden Carter found the extreme low side of the ½ mile to his liking, and was able to get around Wood and race to the win. Carter has been driving a car owned by Michael Petersen and the combination has proven very successful. Carter stated in victory lane, “slower is better.” Carter was referring to the slick track which did not require a strong motor to be competitive. Wood crossed under the checkers in second ahead of Derrick Agee and Damon Murty.

The Oskaloosa Quality Rentals Sportmods also paid $1,000 to the winner on Tuesday night. The large payout brought many of the best Sportmod drivers to the Southern Iowa Speedway. When the checkers flew it was 17 year old track regular Maguire DeJong pulling his #30M machine into victory lane. DeJong took the lead on lap number four from Brayton Carter and went on to lead the remainder of the 16 lap feature. Following the interview in victory lane DeJong invited all the kids in the grandstands to follow him to the concession stands where DeJong treated all the kids to free candy. Carter finished second ahead of Logan Anderson and Carter VanDenBerg.

29 Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks signed in on Tuesday night making for an action packed feature race. Luke Ramsey led the field for several laps before 10th starting Eric Stanton was able to get to the front and take over the top spot. Stanton went on to race to the checkers first ahead of Dustin Griffiths and Trevor Tanner.

Season long point leader, Terry Bickford, was not to be denied on Tuesday night as he raced to the win in the Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compact class. Nate Chandler led for several laps before Bickford was able to move into the lead with two laps remaining. Chandler finished second ahead of Seth Meinders.

Ben Woods continued his mastery of the SIS ½ mile by winning the Clow Valve Company non-wing sprint car feature race. Wood took the lead in the main event just past the midway from Doug Sylvester and went on to record the win.

Season Championship racing will be held at the Southern Iowa Speedway on Wednesday, July 27th with hot laps taking to the track at 7:15 pm.

Caleb Hammond Memorial Southern Iowa Speedway Tuesday, July 19

Feature Results (top Five)

MidState Machine Stock Cars

  1. 1X Cayden Carter-Oskaloosa
  2. 52 Nathan Wood-Sigourney
  3. 14 Derrick Agee-Moberly, MO
  4. 99D Damon Murty-Chelsea
  5. 74 Brock Haines-Fairfield

Osklaloosa Quality Rentals Sportmods

  1. 30M Maguire DeJong-Montezuma
  2. 01 Brayton Carter-Oskaloosa
  3. 53 Logan Anderson-Eddyville
  4. 7V Carer VanDenberg-Oskaloosa
  5. 198 Sam Wieben-Dysart

Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks

  1. 7B Eric Stanton-Carlisle
  2. 10G Dustin Griffiths-Hedrick
  3. 33T Trevor Tanner-Knoxville
  4. 1R Rick VanDusseldorp-Oskaloosa
  5. 73 Aaron Martin-Delta

Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts

  1. 63B Terry Bickford-Shannon City
  2. 22 Nathan Chandler-Norway
  3. 16 Seth Meinders-Ottumwa
  4. 2M Matt Moore-Ottumwa
  5. 0 Bob Hayes-New Sharon

Clow Valve Company Non-Wing Sprints

  1. 11B Ben Woods-Newton
  2. 12 Doug Sylvester-Ottumwa
  3. 25 Kelly Graham-Hedrick
  4. 17 Steve Pumphrey-Fairfield
  5. T4 Tyler Graves-Chariton

Ukraine, Russia set to sign deal on resuming grain exports

ISTANBUL (AP) — Russia and Ukraine were expected to sign separate agreements with Turkey and the United Nations on Friday that would allow Ukraine to resume grain shipments to world markets and Russia to export grain and fertilizers, ending a standoff that threatened world food security while the two countries are at war in Ukraine.

Ukrainian and Russian military delegations reached a tentative agreement last week on a U.N. plan that would enable Ukraine to export 22 million tons of desperately needed grain and other agricultural products that have been stuck in Black Sea ports due to the war.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan planned to take part in a signing ceremony in Istanbul. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Ukraine’s infrastructure minister, Oleksandr Kubrakov, were the expected signatories, according to their governments.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukraine’s president, said Ukraine and Russia would sign separate agreements.

“Ukraine does not sign any documents with Russia,” Podolyak wrote on Twitter, adding that his country would sign an agreement with Turkey and the U.N., with Russia signing a separate “mirror agreement.”

Ukraine is one of the world’s largest exporters of wheat, corn and sunflower oil, but Russia’s invasion of the country and naval blockade of its ports have halted shipments. Some grain is being transported through Europe by rail, road and river, but the prices of vital commodities like wheat and barley have soared during the nearly five-month war.

The deal makes provisions for the safe passage of ships. It foresees the establishment of a control center in Istanbul, to be staffed by U.N., Turkish, Russian and Ukrainian officials, to run and coordinate the process, Turkish officials have said. Ships would undergo inspections to ensure they are not carrying weapons.

Podolyak insisted that no Russian ship would escort vessels and that there would be no Russian representative present at Ukrainian ports. Ukraine also plans an immediate military response “in case of provocations,” he said.

Guterres first raised the critical need to get Ukraine’s agricultural production and Russia’s grain and fertilizer back into world markets in late April during meetings with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv.

He proposed a package deal in early June amid fears that the war was endangering food supplies for many developing nations and could worsen hunger for up to 181 million people.

Russian and Ukrainian officials have blamed each other for the blocked grain shipments. Moscow accused Ukraine of failing to remove sea mines at the ports to allow safe shipping and insisted on its right to check incoming ships for weapons. Ukraine has argued that Russia’s port blockade and launching of missiles from the Black Sea made any shipments unviable.

Ukraine has sought international guarantees that the Kremlin wouldn’t use the safe corridors to attack the Black Sea port of Odesa. Ukrainian authorities have also accused Russia of stealing grain from eastern Ukraine and deliberately shelling Ukrainian fields to set them on fire.

On Thursday evening, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry appeared to lay out Kyiv’s conditions for backing the plan.

Ukraine’s delegation “will support only those decisions that will guarantee the security of the southern regions of Ukraine, the strong position of the armed forces of Ukraine in the Black Sea and the safe export of Ukrainian agricultural products to world markets,” the spokesperson, Oleh Nikolenko, told reporters.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Ned Price said the U.S. welcomes the agreement in principle. “But what we’re focusing on now is holding Russia accountable for implementing this agreement and for enabling Ukrainian grain to get to world markets. It has been for far too long that Russia has enacted this blockade,” Price said.

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Follow AP’s coverage of the Russia-Ukraine war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Planned Parenthood employees in Iowa, four other states form a union

BY 

RADIO IOWA – Employees who work at 28 Planned Parenthood clinics five states, including Iowa, have voted to form a union.

According to the National Labor Relations Board, over 90% of workers who voted supported the move. Ashley Schmidt who works Planned Parenthood facilities in Nebraska and western Iowa spoke during an online news conference.

“As we move forward into what will be a very challenging time, having a union will make sure all of our voices are heard,” she said. “We will start pushing right away to get our first contract.”

There are about 435 frontline employees at Planned Parenthood of North Central States facilities in Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota and the Dakotas. They are joining the Service Employees International Union, which has about two million members nationwide, many of whom work in health care. April Clark, who has worked for Planned Parenthood in Iowa for a decade, said negotiations will address employee burni-out by making sure there are adequate staffing levels.

“We’ve been working on unionization for a long time, but the work is just beginning,” she says. “Now we begin the process of bargaining for a contract: for a seat at the table for front line workers, for fair wages, better benefits.”

The union contract will cover nurses, pharmacists and other staff who work at clinics in the five states. Union organizing has increased during the pandemic. The number of petitions with the National Labor Board seeking a vote on union membership has jumped 58% over the last nine months.

Miller: Legislation can help prevent fentanyl overdoses

DES MOINES — Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller called on legislators to pass bills to prevent fentanyl-related deaths.

“We know that many of the overdose deaths are accidental, often because people are unaware they’ve ingested a dose of fentanyl,” Miller said. “We have tools available that could reduce these deaths, but we must first change Iowa’s laws.”

In 2021, 258 Iowans died of opioid overdoses, an increase of 21% over 2020, according to preliminary data from the Iowa Department of Public Health. About 83% of those deaths involved fentanyl or other synthetic narcotics.

“The stories are tragic,” Miller said. “Iowans are being poisoned.” In January, Miller warned Iowans about the increase in overdoses connected to fentanyl.

Story County Sheriff Paul Fitzgerald, who serves as chairman of the Central Iowa Drug Task Force, has seen the dangers of fentanyl use in Iowa first-hand. His office and the drug task force have encountered 10 overdose cases, three of which were fatal. All three of the individuals who died were exposed to fentanyl.

“We at Story County Sheriff’s Office and the Central Iowa Drug Task Force strongly support the efforts of what you are doing,” Fitzgerald said during a press conference on Thursday. “This will save lives.”

Miller plans to propose the following bills that would:

Legalize fentanyl test strips. These are small strips of paper that can detect the presence of fentanyl in pills, powder, or injectables. Under Iowa Code 124.414, the strips are considered drug paraphernalia and are illegal.

Several states, including Wisconsin and Georgia, have recently decriminalized the test strips.

The Iowa Department of Public Safety and other agencies are seizing large amounts of pills that contain fentanyl. These counterfeit pills, known as M30s, resemble prescription opioids or other medication. Without test strips or other equipment, it is impossible to tell whether the pills contain fentanyl.

In addition, Iowa law enforcement agencies are detecting fentanyl in other drugs, including heroin, methamphetamine, and cocaine.

“Test strips are inexpensive and easy to use, and most important, they can save lives,” Miller said. “In public health, we know that harm reduction works.”

The American Medical Association and other health groups have supported legalizing the test strips as well as increasing naloxone access.

Increase access to naloxone. The drug, also known by the trademarked name Narcan, can reverse overdoses and prevent death. Use of naloxone has soared in Iowa: In fiscal year 2021, emergency medical services administered 3,106 doses, an increase of 50% from FY2018, according to the Iowa Department of Public Health.

Iowa pharmacists can dispense naloxone without a prescription to Iowans, and kits are free  through a local community-based pharmacy or Iowa’s Tele-Naloxone program. Demand, however, has been relatively low, with about 3,000 kits distributed since July 2020. Healthcare providers say that Iowans may be unwilling to obtain naloxone through pharmacies because of fear and stigma.

Other states have allowed secondary distribution of naloxone, so that community groups can dispense the drug directly to the public. Iowa’s pharmacy rules, however, prohibit secondary distribution of prescribed medications.

Miller supports a bill allowing “entities in position to assist” — such as nonprofits, businesses, or other organizations — to apply to the state to receive a supply of naloxone to distribute to the public. These entities would not collect identifying information for the state’s prescription drug monitoring program.

Miller also plans to propose ideas to lawmakers on how they can use money from settlements his office has secured from major opioid manufacturers and distributors. The settlement funds must be used in ways to abate the opioid crisis, such as supporting prevention, treatment, and recovery.

INTERIM DIRECTOR OF TEACHING AND LEARNING BEGINS IN AUGUST

OSKALOOSA, IOWA — Oskaloosa Community Schools will have a new curriculum leader this fall as
Johanna Cooper is appointed the Interim Director of Teaching and Learning. This position replaces the
curriculum director position held by Angie Hanson with a title change to encompass expanded
responsibilities. Cooper was approved by the Oskaloosa Board of Education in a special meeting on
Wednesday, July 20.
Cooper is currently a part-time prevention specialist at YSS in Ames and will begin working in Oskaloosa
in August. Her background includes state, national, and international experience. Cooper’s educational
background includes serving as an elementary school principal in Ankeny and an Instructional
Coordinator in Texas. She’s also been a Head of School in Thailand and worked as an Academic Director
in Durango, Mexico. Her international experience includes serving on the Abu Dhabi Educational
Council in the United Arab Emirates.
“This is a great opportunity for me,” says Cooper. “I’m really excited to start working and getting to
know the community and the teachers. I want to learn what the students and teachers are hungry for
and work with them to build a curriculum that will impact every student.”
Her top goals in her interim year are to continue to build upon the great things the students and staff
are already working on. She strives to provide strong curriculum leadership and deliver expertise to
grow the district. She will continue to provide professional development for teachers and build strong
professional learning communities (PLCs) within the school.
“I want to give teachers the tools to implement the best curriculum we can in the schools,” notes
Cooper. “I want to work with teachers to be innovative. I want teachers to take risks. Students want
different types of learning, so I want to ensure teachers are connecting with the students and students
are getting what they are asking for.”
“We are excited to have Johanna’s background and experience as part of the Oskaloosa Community
Schools,” says Mike Fisher, superintendent. “We are eager to see how her knowledge and experience
will continue to enhance the Osky school environment to provide high academic achievement for all
kids.”
Cooper was born and raised in Puerto Rico, where her parents still reside. She earned her Bachelor of
Science degree in Psychology from the University of Puerto Rico and her Masters of Education in Public
School Administration at Texas A&M University. She is currently working on her Doctorate in Education
at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign studying Educational Policy: Diversity, Equity, and
Inclusion. She has two children, a senior at Iowa State University and a sophomore at Ames High

School. Her fiancé has been part of the Oskaloosa for the past seventeen years . She is fluent in Spanish
and speaks Arabic. When she is not working, she enjoys traveling, reading, and cheering for the
Houston Astros baseball team.

Jan. 6 panel probes Trump’s 187 minutes as Capitol attacked

By LISA MASCARO, MARY CLARE JALONICK and FARNOUSH AMIRI

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Jan. 6 committee will hold its final hearing of the summer the way the series began — vividly making the case that Donald Trump’s lies about a stolen election fueled the grisly U.S. Capitol attack, which he did nothing to stop but instead “gleefully” watched on television at the White House.

Thursday’s prime-time hearing will dive into the 187 minutes that Trump failed to act on Jan. 6, 2021, despite pleas for help from aides, allies and even his family. The panel intends to show how the defeated president’s attempt to overturn Joe Biden’s election victory has left the United States facing enduring questions about the resiliency of its democracy.

“A profound moment of reckoning for America,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., a member of the committee.

With live testimony from two former White House aides, and excerpts from its trove of more than 1,000 interviews, the nearly two-hour session will add a closing chapter to the past six weeks of hearings that at times have captivated the nation.

Returning to prime time for the first time since the series of hearings began, the panel aims to show just how close the United States came to what one retired federal judge testifying this summer called a constitutional crisis.

The events of Jan. 6 will be outlined “minute by minute,” said the panel’s vice chair, Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.

“You will hear that Donald Trump never picked up the phone that day to order his administration to help,” Cheney said.

“He did not call the military. His Secretary of Defense received no order. He did not call his Attorney General. He did not talk to the Department of Homeland Security,” Cheney said. “Mike Pence did all of those things; Donald Trump did not.”

Testifying Thursday will be former White House aides who had close proximity to power.

Matt Pottinger, who was deputy national security adviser, and Sarah Matthews, then press aide, both submitted their resignations on Jan. 6, 2021, after what they saw that day. Trump has dismissed the hearings on social media and regarded much of the testimony as fake.

Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., the chairman of the committee, is isolating after testing positive for COVID-19 and will attend by video. Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va., a former Naval officer who will lead the session with Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., who flew combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, said she expects the testimony from the White House aides will “just be really compelling.”

“These are people who believed in the work they were doing, but didn’t believe in the stolen election,” Luria said.

The White House aides were not alone in calling it quits that day. The panel is expected to provide a tally of the Trump administration aides and even Cabinet members who resigned after Trump failed to call off the attack. Some Cabinet members were so alarmed they discussed invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office.

As the panel continues to collect evidence and prepares to issue a preliminary report of findings, it has amassed the most substantial public record to date of what led up to Americans attacking the seat of democracy.

While the committee cannot make criminal charges, the Justice Department is monitoring its work.

So far, more than 840 people have been charged with federal crimes related to the Capitol riot. Over 330 of them have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeanors. Of the more than 200 defendants to be sentenced, approximately 100 received terms of imprisonment.

What remains uncertain is whether Trump or the former president’s top allies will face serious charges. No former president has ever been federally prosecuted by the Justice Department.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said Wednesday that Jan. 6 is “the most wide-ranging investigation and the most important investigation that the Justice Department has ever entered into.”

“We have to get this right,” Garland said. “For people who are concerned, as I think every American should be, we have to do two things: We have to hold accountable every person who is criminally responsible for trying to overturn a legitimate election, and we must do it in a way filled with integrity and professionalism.”

In delving into the timeline, the panel aims to show what happened between the time Trump left the stage at his “Stop the Steal” rally shortly after 1:10 p.m., after telling supporters to march to the Capitol, and some three hours later, when he issued a video address from the Rose Garden in which he told the rioters to “go home” but also praised them as “very special.”

It also expects to produce additional evidence about Trump’s confrontation with Secret Service agents who refused to drive him to the Capitol — a witness account that the security detail has disputed.

Five people died that day as Trump supporters battled the police in gory hand-to-hand combat to storm the Capitol. One officer has testified about how she was “slipping in other people’s blood” as they tried to hold back the mob. One Trump supporter was shot and killed by police.

“The president didn’t do very much but gleefully watch television during this time frame,” Kinzinger said.

Not only did Trump refuse to tell the mob to leave the Capitol, he did not call other parts of the government for backup and gave no order to deploy the National Guard, Cheney said.

This despite countless pleas from Trump’s aides and allies, including his daughter Ivanka Trump and Fox News host Sean Hannity, according to previous testimony and text messages the committee has obtained.

“You will hear that leaders on Capitol Hill begged the president for help,” Cheney has said, including House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, who she said indicated he was “‘scared’ and called multiple members of President Trump’s family after he could not persuade the President himself.”

The panel has said its investigation is ongoing and other hearings are possible. It expects to compile a preliminary report this fall, and a final report by the end of this session of Congress.

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Follow AP’s coverage of the Jan. 6 committee hearings at https://apnews.com/hub/capitol-siege.

Median sale price of Iowa homes hit record $230,000 in June

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RADIO IOWA – The median price for a home sold in Iowa last month hit a record high, while the number of home sales is dropping according to the Iowa Association of Realtors.

The median price for an Iowa home sold in June was a record $230,000. That’s about 12% more expensive than the median price for Iowa homes sold in June of 2021. Homes placed on the market sold in an average of 27 days last month. That’s 18% faster than in June of last year.

In the first six months of this year, there’s been a more than 4% drop in the number homes sold in the state. In June, 4734 home sales were completed. The Iowa Association of Realtors monthly report shows the number of homes available for sale is slowly increasing after a record low in May.

Iowa Association of Realtors president Byron Menke says increased mortgage rates and sky-high home prices are affecting housing markets throughout the country, but if inventory continues to rise, home prices may stabilize.

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