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Oskaloosa to Turn on the Lights Tomorrow

OSKALOOSA — Oskaloosa Main Street is excited to announce, ‘Turn on the Lights!’ to take place in downtown Oskaloosa on Saturday, November 23. Bring your family and friends to the square for the Oskaloosa City Band to kick off the event at 5:30 pm. Join us as building facades around the city square illuminate with over 300,000 colorful light bulbs at 6 pm, all from a flip of a switch by the Citizen of the Year, Russ Van Renterghem.

The annual Painting with Lights raffle drawing will begin immediately following. Stick around to see if you are the lucky winner of one of this year’s raffle prizes. Only 8 tickets will be drawn this year. Each of the 8 prizes are of $1,000 value.
There is no cost to attend the event. Make sure to grab some cookies, hot cocoa, and a picture with Santa and friends. Step in line for a horse drawn-wagon ride around the square, provided by Mahaska Drug. Free will donations are welcome. All proceeds go to maintenance and installation of the Painting with Lights display.
Don’t worry about dinner! Food trucks will be on the East side of the square November 23, from 5-7pm.
The Painting with Lights Display will be on from 4:45pm-11:00pm every night through January 5, 2025.
To learn more about Oskaloosa’s holiday events, please visit www.mahaskachamber.org/calendar.

Updates to Pella Middle School Knife Attack on Wednesday

PELLA — On Wednesday, November 20, 2024, at 7:41 a.m., the Pella Police Department was alerted to a situation involving a student at Pella Middle School who was reportedly armed with a knife. Officers quickly responded to the scene. Law enforcement officers secured the area within two minutes and placed one juvenile into custody at 7:43 a.m. The juvenile was held in the custody of officers until he was transported to the Pella Police Department at 7:58 a.m. 

An investigation revealed that a 14-year-old male student at Pella Middle School brought a large kitchen knife to the school and attacked three students in the cafeteria. The male student first attacked a student, striking her in the neck and back several times with the knife. He then lunged with the knife to strike a second student but was unsuccessful; he then successfully struck a third student, striking her with the knife in the arm. Two students sustained minor laceration-type injuries but did not require medical transport. Personnel from the Pella Community Ambulance were on-site and treated the injured students. Pella Middle School staff reunited the victims and several other students with their parents.  

Juvenile referrals for the 14-year-old male offender were filed with the juvenile court for the following crimes: 

  • Three counts of Attempt to Commit Murder, a Class B Felony 
  • Two counts of Willful Injury, a Class D Felony 
  • One count of Assault with Intent to Inflict a Serious Injury, an Aggravated Misdemeanor One count of Possession of a Dangerous Weapon by a Minor, a Serious Misdemeanor 

The investigation into this matter is ongoing. Any students or parents with information are asked to contact the Pella Police Department. 

Duct-taped banana sells for $6.2 million at art auction

NEW YORK (AP) — A piece of conceptual art consisting of a simple banana, duct-taped to a wall, sold for $6.2 million at an auction in New York on Wednesday, with the winning bid coming from a prominent cryptocurrency entrepreneur.

“Comedian,” by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, was a phenomenon when it debuted in 2019 at Art Basel Miami Beach, as festivalgoers tried to make out whether the single yellow piece of fruit affixed to a white wall with silver duct tape was a joke or cheeky commentary on questionable standards among art collectors. At one point, another artist took the banana off the wall and ate it.

The piece attracted so much attention that it had to be withdrawn from view. But three editions sold for between $120,000 and $150,000, according to the gallery handling sales at the time.

Five years later, Justin Sun, founder of cryptocurrency platform TRON, has now paid more than 40 times that higher price point at the Sotheby’s auction. Or, more accurately, Sun purchased a certificate of authenticity that gives him the authority to duct-tape a banana to a wall and call it “Comedian.”

The piece attracted heavy attention at the busy auction at Sotheby’s, with attendees in the crowded room holding up phones to take photos as two handlers wearing white gloves stood at both sides of the banana.

Bidding started at $800,000 and within minutes shot up to $2 million, then $3 million, then $4 million, and higher, as the auctioneer, Oliver Barker, joked “Don’t let it slip away.”

“Don’t miss this opportunity,” Barker said. “These are words I’ve never thought I’d say: Five million dollars for a banana.”

The final hammer price announced in the room was $5.2 million, which didn’t include the about $1 million in auction house fees, paid by the buyer.

In a statement, Sun said the piece “represents a cultural phenomenon that bridges the worlds of art, memes, and the cryptocurrency community.” But he said the latest version of “Comedian” won’t last long.

“Additionally, in the coming days, I will personally eat the banana as part of this unique artistic experience, honoring its place in both art history and popular culture,” Sun said.

Sotheby’s calls Cattelan “among Contemporary Art’s most brilliant provocateurs.”

“He has persistently disrupted the art world’s status quo in meaningful, irreverent, and often controversial ways,” the auction house said in a description of “Comedian.”

The sale came a day after a painting by the Belgian surrealist René Magritte sold for $121.2 million, a record for the artist, at a separate auction.

“The Empire of Light,” an eerie nighttime streetscape below a pale blue daytime sky, sold Tuesday as part of Christie’s sale of the collection of interior designer Mica Ertegun, who died last year at age 97.

The sale lifts Magritte into the ranks of artists whose works have gone for more than $100 million at auction. Magritte is the 16th member of the club, which also includes Leonardo da Vinci, Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol, according to the market analyst firm Artprice.

“The Empire of Light,” executed in 1954, was one of 17 versions of the same scene that Magritte painted in oil. Marc Porter, chairman of Christie’s Americas, called the sale “a historic moment in our saleroom.”

The $121.2 million price included the auction house’s fees. The buyer was a telephone bidder whose identity was not disclosed.

Turkey price trims Thanksgiving meal cost, but not to pre-pandemic levels

WEST DES MOINES — This year, the American Farm Bureau Federation reports the average cost of a Thanksgiving meal for 10 is $58.08, a 5% decrease from last year.

Turkey, the centerpiece of America’s Thanksgiving table, accounts for 44% of the total survey cost. Despite highly pathogenic avian influenza contributing to the lowest turkey inventory since 1985, demand for turkey has also decreased, according to an American Farm Bureau market intel. With demand falling, turkey prices dropped to $1.68 per pound, bringing the cost of a 16-pound bird to $25.67—6% less than in 2023.

Other notable price changes from the survey include a 14% drop in the cost of a gallon of whole milk and a 14.3% decrease in the price for three pounds of sweet potatoes. However, some items saw increases. Price tags on a 14-ounce package of cubed stuffing mix and a dozen dinner rolls are up roughly 8%.

While the decline in this year’s Thanksgiving meal costs offers some relief to Americans, this year’s meal is still 19% more expensive than the pre-pandemic levels of 2019.

“When considering these costs, it’s important to remember farmers aren’t necessarily benefiting from higher food prices at the grocery store,” says Dr. Christopher Pudenz, Iowa Farm Bureau’s economics and research manager. “Farmers receive only 16 cents of every food dollar spent and are also battling inflationary pressures on inputs like machinery and fertilizer.”

These pressures are evident in net farm income, which is projected by USDA’s Economic Research Service to lower by at least 23% in 2024 compared to 2022. This strain on farmers is rippling through the broader economy, particularly in Iowa, where businesses and communities rely on agriculture.

Between Jan. 1 and Sept. 10, 2024, 23 agriculture-related businesses in Iowa announced layoffs, affecting nearly 4,100 workers. An analysis commissioned by the Iowa Farm Bureau estimates job losses could climb to 11,400 statewide as the impact of reduced farm income spreads. The same analysis projects a $1.5 billion decline in value-added economic activity and a $100 million decrease in state and local tax revenue.

The American Farm Bureau’s annual Thanksgiving dinner survey, conducted from Nov. 1-7, offers a snapshot of current grocery prices. Farm Bureau volunteers from all 50 states compile data on traditional Thanksgiving items, including frozen pie crusts, pumpkin pie mix, whipping cream, dinner rolls, fresh cranberries, whole milk, frozen peas, sweet potatoes, and stuffing. For those planning a larger feast, an expanded menu—including boneless ham, russet potatoes, and frozen green beans—brings the cost up to $77.34.

For more details on this year’s survey, visit www.fb.org.

Iowa’s busiest deer seasons are almost here

DES MOINES — Iowa’s most popular deer hunting seasons are just around the corner, when roughly 100,000 hunters take to the timber for the long-awaited gun seasons.

Iowa’s first gun season is Dec. 7-11. Second gun season is Dec. 14-22.

Last year, hunters reported around 60,000 deer during these two seasons, which is more than half of the total deer harvested for all seasons, and wildlife experts are forecasting a similar harvest.

So far this fall, youth, disabled hunter, early muzzleloader and archery hunters have reported more than 25,000 deer through the harvest reporting system, which is about the five-year average.

“We’ve had a strong harvest in Eastern Iowa, but the declining populations in Western Iowa has impacted hunting opportunity and led to an overall lower harvest,” said Jace Elliott, state deer biologist with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR). The 2024 harvest to date is about six percent behind the 2023 harvest.

Archery season got off to a slow start due to summer temperatures extending into early October but harvest has been strong as the calendar turned to November. The long-range forecast calls for above normal temperatures extending into middle December.

“More hunters participate in cooler temperatures,” Elliott said. “Cold weather puts deer on their feet and hunters in the woods.”

The gun seasons have been traditionally associated with groups of hunters walking through the timber, pushing deer towards other members of the hunting group, but results of the recently completed deer hunter survey found that gun season hunters are divided evenly in how they pursue the deer.

About half participate in traditional deer drives, while the other half prefer to hunt from stationary position. The deer hunter survey found that overall, 80 percent of respondents indicated they are satisfied with the overall deer hunting experience, citing the social aspect of the hunting groups and the opportunity to put deer meat in the freezer as two reasons they hunt.

Main beam antler measurement

This is the second year the Iowa DNR is requiring hunters to include the main beam antler measurement when reporting their deer.

“Last year, for the first time, we could estimate the percentage of yearling bucks as part of the harvest based on the antler measurement. There was a strong variation across counties in Iowa where some counties had 50 percent of their harvest consisting of yearling bucks, compared to other counties where they were 20 percent,” Elliott said.

Statewide, yearling bucks made up 38 percent of the total buck harvest.

Hemorrhagic disease

Iowa experienced another outbreak of hemorrhagic disease with 93 counties reporting deer mortality. Hemorrhagic disease tends to affect deer in Iowa between late summer and early fall, though outbreak severity can vary from year to year. Hunters and landowners may discover multiple deer carcasses on a property, specifically near a water source, during these months as a result of hemorrhagic disease.

There is no effective treatment or known prevention for wild deer.

“Central Iowa has been the most impacted to date, with Guthrie County reporting the highest deer mortality,” Elliott said. Western Iowa from Lyon County to Monona County have also reported high deer mortality, along with a few Eastern Iowa counties.

“The disease doesn’t impact counties equally, and local deer harvest often lags slightly following outbreaks due to loss of opportunity,” he said. “Populations often recover a few years following the disease, however, in Western Iowa, it may take more time due to an already limited population. As we continue to monitor the effects of this year’s outbreak on county deer populations, hunters in some areas may see responsive regulatory changes in the next hunting season. However, hunters should always remember that the decision to pull a trigger is their own and populations are sensitive to doe harvest.”

In Western Iowa, the DNR has taken steps to recover the deer herd by reducing or eliminating county specific antlerless only deer licenses, and adding six counties to the list where hunters in the first gun season are limited to bucks only.

“We’ve had almost 2,000 dead deer reported across the state with nearly 900 entries coming through the new online reporting option,” Elliott said.

The DNR rolled out a webpage that allowed Iowans to report finding dead deer to provide a better picture of the extent that hemorrhagic disease has impacted the deer in a given year. Go to https://www.iowadnr.gov/Hunting/Deer-Hunting/Deer-Health then click on Seasonal Diseases.

Identifying hemorrhagic disease is pretty straightforward: mortalities occur between July and September, sometimes later during unseasonably warm weather; more than one deer carcass is found, and carcasses are found near a water source.

Authorities Investigating Pella Middle School Stabbing

By Sam Parsons

Authorities are continuing to investigate an assault that took place in the Pella Middle School cafeteria yesterday morning.

The Pella Police Department says that before school began, around 7:41am yesterday, a 14-year-old student at Pella Middle School used a knife to assault multiple students in the cafeteria. Two female juvenile students sustained minor laceration-type injuries but did not require medical transport. Pella Ambulance personnel were on-site to treat the injured students and assist with reunifying them with their parents.

The 14-year-old suspect is now in custody, and the injuries sustained by the two victims did not require medical transport. Classes at Pella Middle School were canceled for the day.

Pella Police Chief Shane McSheehy said that the incident remains under investigation and that the police department was working with the Marion County Attorney on appropriate charges. He added that it was too soon to tell whether the juvenile would be charged as an adult.

Jersey Mike’s sandwich chain is acquired by private equity firm Blackstone for $8 billion

NEW YORK (AP) — Jersey Mike’s, the quickly expanding sandwich chain, is being acquired by asset management giant Blackstone.

In the transaction announced Tuesday, private equity funds managed by Blackstone will be used to acquire majority ownership of Jersey Mike’s. The deal is “intended to help enable Jersey Mike’s to accelerate its expansion across and beyond the U.S. market,” the companies said, as well as aid ongoing technological investments.

Blackstone and Jersey Mike’s did not immediately disclose financial terms in their Tuesday announcement. But a source familiar with the matter confirmed to The Associated Press that the transaction would value Jersey Mike’s at around $8 billion, a figure previously reported by The Wall Street Journal.

The acquisition of the private company is expected to close in early 2025, subject to regulatory approvals and other closing conditions. Under terms of the agreement, Jersey Mike’s founder and CEO Peter Cancro will continue to lead the business and maintains a “significant equity stake” in the chain, the companies said.

“We believe we are still in the early innings of Jersey Mike’s growth story and that Blackstone is the right partner to help us reach even greater heights,” Cancro said in a prepared statement — adding that Blackstone “has helped drive the success of some of the most iconic franchise businesses globally.”

Jersey Mike’s roots date back to 1956, with a Point Pleasant, New Jersey storefront location that was originally called Mike’s Subs. In 1975, Cancro, then a 17-year-old high school senior who had worked there since he was 14, bought the operation with the help of his football coach.

The chain has expanded rapidly over the last decade, more than tripling its locations from 857 stores in 2014, to more than 2,800 this year, according to Technomic, a restaurant consulting company.

Jersey Mike’s posted sales of $3.3 billion in 2023, up 25% from the prior year, according to Technomic. It’s the 30th largest chain in the U.S. based on annual sales.

Its aggressive growth has helped Jersey Mike’s take market share from rivals like Subway, which has been struggling with a glut of aging stores. Last year, Subway was acquired by Roark Capital, a private equity firm with expertise in restaurant management. Roark also owns Inspire Brands, which houses two other Jersey Mike’s rivals: Jimmy John’s and Arby’s.

Tuesday’s agreement with Jersey Mike’s follows a series of similar investments from Blackstone. Just earlier this year, the private equity firm acquired Tropical Smoothie Cafe in a deal that it said would also aid the chain’s expansion.

Report: Iowa’s childcare pilot program boosted kids enrolled, wages for workers

By Bob Fisher (Radio Iowa)

A new report shows a state pilot program raised the number of children who could enroll in childcare services in select communities, which improved wages and benefits for local childcare workers.

The “Iowa Childcare Solutions Fund: A Model for Closing the Childcare Gap” report analyzed the effect the Childcare Solutions Fund had in pilot communities, matching private investments from businesses and individuals with state funding.

Iowa Women’s Foundation president and CEO Deann Cook says she’s proud to see a public-private partnership successfully address this issue.

“These are funds that were raised with private investment in local areas, local communities, and then matched with state dollars,” Cook says. “It was really the merger of those public and private dollars that created an investment fund into the childcare workforce, and it’s really made a difference.”

In Cerro Gordo County, a two-dollars-an-hour wage supplement program was started to address a workforce issue, but Cook says each area taking part in the program has its own unique way to address the childcare shortage.

“They’re doing all slightly different things. What Iowa Women’s Foundation has found is there’s a local ‘secret sauce,’ we can’t impose any solution across the state,” she says. “It has to really be driven from the ground up. All of them are being invested in childcare workforce wages, some in retention bonuses, some in a higher increased hourly wage. They have the freedom to do that.”

Now that the pilot program has shown positive results, Cook says state leaders will need to look into the next steps on how to address the childcare crisis statewide.

“That’s exactly why we did the report, to determine how successful these communities in our pilot program were and determine if it’s worth pursuing and replicating across the state,” Cook says. “What the report is telling us is just in this pilot program, it increased 22 childcare slots per 1,000 children in each pilot community. That statistic alone would tell you, it’s definitely worth considering how public and private dollars can merge together to make a difference in childcare.”

The report shows that if the pilot program was expanded statewide, it would create 8,000 new jobs, enable 5,000 more parents and guardians to join the workforce, add 11,000 new childcare slots, and increase Iowa’s gross domestic product by $13-billion.

Mahaska Health Welcomes Dr. Roger Harvey to their Infectious Disease Team

OSKALOOSA — Mahaska Health has announced the addition of Roger Harvey, DO, a board-certified and Fellowship trained Infectious Disease specialist, to its expert team of physicians. With over 35 years of experience in infectious disease medicine, the last 20 years serving in Des Moines, Iowa, Dr. Harvey’s vast knowledge and dedication to patient-focused care make him a valuable addition to the medical team and community.

Dr. Harvey earned his medical degree at the University of Osteopathic Medicine and Health Sciences in Des Moines, IA, completed his residency at the Western Reserve Care System in Youngstown, OH, and completed his fellowship at Wayne State University’s Detroit Medical Center. His extensive experience includes leading investigational trials and maintaining a collaborative, team-based approach to care.

“Dr. Harvey’s arrival further strengthens our ability to provide comprehensive, compassionate care close to home,” said Matthew Gritters, MD, Mahaska Health Emergency Services Medical Director. “His commitment to clear communication and making sure patients feel confident in their treatment aligns perfectly with our mission. We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Harvey to our team and know he will make a significant impact on the health of our community.”

Oskaloosa School Board Rejects Land Swap Proposal with City of Oskaloosa

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa Community School Board held a special meeting last night to formally approve a letter rejecting a land swap proposal from the city of Oskaloosa.

The proposal, which was made during a joint public work session on September 10, would have swapped over 90 acres of land north of Oskaloosa High School, with the land going to the city to be used to build housing. The board approved a letter from Osky superintendent Mike Fisher, which cited “substantial community input” in its decision to decline the proposal.

The letter also stated that the district would be withdrawing their city annexation request, adding that they would resubmit at a later date to request city annexation of a portion of the high school campus that includes the baseball field, tennis courts, and practice fields.

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