TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

Ottumwa City Council Approves New Collective Bargaining Agreement with Police Union

By Sam Parsons

The Ottumwa City Council met last night and approved a new Collective Bargaining Agreement with the Ottumwa Police Union. The previous CBA had been set to expire at the end of this month.

The new CBA outlines a new pay structure for officers and communication specialists. Officers will now be paid based on a 9-step salary structure with pay increasing annually, for the first 8 years of employment, by increasing amounts. The highest salaried officers will see an increase of 6% each year. Communication specialists, meanwhile, received a market adjustment of $2 per hour starting next month with pay increases by 6% every year moving forward.

Other highlights of the new CBA include expanded holiday time (from 88 hours per year to 132), the addition of a section for K9 officers, and some language adjustments.

The Ottumwa City Council will hold its next regular meeting on June 20.

Oskaloosa City Council Making Change to City Zoning Code

By Sam Parsons

The Oskaloosa City Council met last night and they recognized the awarding of a 2023 Brownfields EPA Grant to the city of Oskaloosa in the amount of $300,000. This grant brings the total amount of assessment grants received by the city to over $1,000,000 since 2014. The assessment grants do not require a local match and are 100% federally funded by the EPA.

The council also passed the first reading of an ordinance amending the city’s zoning code, changing the “Downtown Residential” land use type to “Mixed Use Residential,” and allowing the type to be used in all business districts. The new arrangement allows for developments that have mixed use, such as a proposed 3-story building with commercial/office/retail on the ground floor, indoor parking on the lower level, and residential apartments on the upper floors. The ordinance was passed by the council unanimously.

Mother fatally shot by neighbor after dispute over playing children, sheriff says

OCALA, Fla. (AP) — A Florida mother was fatally shot through the front door of her neighbor’s home while her 9-year-old son stood next to her, a violent culmination of what police said was a 2½-year feud.

Ajike Owens, 35, was fatally shot after going to the Ocala apartment of her neighbor, who earlier had yelled at Owens’ children as they played nearby and threw a pair of skates that hit one of them, Marion County Sheriff Billy Woods said at a news conference Monday.

Deputies responding to a trespassing call at the apartment Friday night found Owens suffering from gunshot wounds. The mother of four was taken to a nearby hospital, where she died. Ocala is about 70 miles (110 kilometers) northwest of Orlando.

“I wish our shooter would have called us instead of taking actions into her own hands,” Woods said. “I wish Ms. Owens would have called us in the hopes we could have never gotten to the point at which we are here today.”

Since January 2021, Woods said, deputies responded at least a half-dozen times in connection with the feuding between Owens and the woman who shot her. The sheriff’s office hasn’t arrested or identified the shooter.

Woods said detectives are working with the State Attorney’s Office and must investigate possible self-defense claims before they can move forward with any possible criminal charges.

The sheriff pointed out that because of Florida’s “stand your ground” law, he can’t legally make an arrest unless he can prove the shooter did not act in self-defense.

Before the shooting, Owens’ children had been playing in a field near the shooter’s apartment. When Owens later confronted the woman at her apartment, an argument ensued, and the woman shot Owens through the front door, according to police.

Civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, who is representing Owens’ family, said in a statement that the shooter had been yelling racial slurs at the children before the confrontation with their mother. Owens and her children are Black.

The sheriff’s office hasn’t confirmed there were slurs uttered or said whether race was a factor in the shooting.

Woods also said they haven’t interviewed Owens’ children, who witnessed the shooting, because investigators first want child therapists to work with them. Most of the information the deputies have is coming from the shooter, Woods said.

“There was a lot of aggressiveness from both of them, back and forth,” Wood said the shooter told investigators. “Whether it be banging on the doors, banging on the walls and threats being made. And then at that moment is when Ms. Owens was shot through the door.”

Woods was joined at his news conference by community leaders and a local attorney retained by the family, Anthony Thomas. Their singular message was a call for patience while the sheriff’s office conducted its investigation.

During a vigil with the family later Monday, Thomas said the sheriff had promised him the most professional service that he and his deputies could provide, and Thomas plans to hold the agency to that.

During the same gathering, Owens’ mother, Pamela Dias, said that she was seeking justice for her daughter and her grandchildren.

“My daughter, my grandchildren’s mother, was shot and killed with her 9-year-old son standing next to her,” Dias said. “She had no weapon. She posed no imminent threat to anyone.”

Number of calls to Iowa Concern Hotline increasing

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

The Iowa Concern Hotline has seen a nearly 25% increase in calls over the past 12 months.

Anyone in Iowa may call the hotline, but the round-the-clock service is primarily meant to answer questions about farm and agribusiness finances. Tammy Jacobs oversees the hotline for Iowa State University Extension.

“We see a lot of issues between husband and wife, if it’s a partnership within the family, there’s issues with the partnership in the family,” Jacobs said. “so we hear a lot about the relationship issues but after we’re talking to the people, it really stems from those financial concerns.”

The conversations are kept confidential. Trained people answer the calls and make referrals to services that might help. An attorney is available to provide free legal education. The conversations are kept confidential. Jacobs said it appears commodity prices are creating stress, especially among family farming operations.

“We really hear a lot about the succession,” she said, “and how…they’re weary and fearful about losing that farm that’s been around in the family for so long which can really be a huge stress on an individual to try to make sure that they’re doing everything they can do in order to make sure farming enterprise and continue that legacy.”

Last year’s launch of the nationwide 988 suicide hotline hasn’t really impacted the number of calls to the Iowa Concern Hotline according to Jacobs. “We tout ourselves as being more stress counseling,” she said.

The Iowa Concern Hotline was launched in 1985, during the Farm Crisis. It was originally called the Rural Concern Hotline, but the name was changed to Iowa Concern Hotline after the floods of 1993 to indicate it’s not just for farmers. In the past 12 months, the Iowa Concern Hotline fielded 6483 calls, compared to the 4912 calls it received from May 1, 2021 to May 31, 2022.

Ottumwa Man and Woman Convicted for Filing Hundreds of False Tax Returns and Fraudulently Obtaining Unemployment Insurance Benefits Payments

DES MOINES, IA – An Ottumwa man and woman were convicted of conspiring to defraud  the Internal Revenue Service by filing hundreds of fraudulent tax returns and of defrauding  applicants out of unemployment insurance benefits and the Iowa Workforce Development out of  benefits payments. 

On May 22, 2023, Thein Maung, 47, pleaded guilty to 49 fraud and tax charges. On June 2,  2023, a federal jury convicted Phyo Mi, 21, of 16 fraud charges. According to court documents and  evidence presented at Mi’s four-day trial, Maung and Mi ran a fraudulent tax-preparation business  out of their family’s Ottumwa home. In exchange for a cash fee, Maung and Mi prepared and filed their customers’ tax returns. Maung and Mi primarily catered to immigrants and refugees who  worked at meat-packing facilities in Iowa and who had little or no ability to read, write, or speak  English.  

Without their customers’ knowledge or approval, Maung and Mi included on their  customers’ federal tax returns, schedules, and forms, fraudulent items, such as false claims for  residential energy credits, business-expense deductions, or moving-expense deductions for members  of the United States Armed Forces. The effect of Maung and Mi including fraudulent items on the  tax documents was to increase the refunds their clients received and increase Maung and Mi’s  customer base. In all, from 2018 to 2022, Maung and Mi caused over 1600 tax returns to be filed  from their Ottumwa residence. The fraudulent tax returns claimed over $3.5 million in residential  energy credits. 

From 2018 to 2022, Maung and Mi received approximately over $200,000 in cash fees from  their customers. In addition, on their customers’ returns, Maung and Mi sometimes directed portions  of the fraudulent refunds be sent to financial institution accounts accessible to Maung and Mi. 

Maung and Mi also offered to help customers apply for unemployment benefits from Iowa  Workforce Development. Without their customers’ knowledge or approval, Maung and Mi  submitted materials to Iowa Workforce Development directing that their customers’ benefits  payments be sent to financial institution accounts that Maung and Mi had access to. From  October 2020 through March 2021, Maung and Mi directed nearly $100,000 in fraudulent unemployment insurance benefits payments be sent from Iowa Workforce Development to their  accounts, instead of to the eligible claimants. 

“This guilty verdict brings Phyo Mi and Thein Maung to justice. They created and  implemented this massive energy credit and false deduction scheme to fund their greed at the  expense of trusting taxpayers,” said Special Agent in Charge Thomas F. Murdock of the IRS  Criminal Investigation St. Louis Field Office. “This conviction should serve as notice that we will  vigorously prosecute those criminals who engage in any form of tax fraud.” 

Sentencings for both Maung and Mi are scheduled for September 27, 2023, in Des Moines,  before Chief United States District Court Judge Stephanie M. Rose. 

United States Attorney Richard D. Westphal of the Southern District of Iowa made the  announcement. 

The investigation was conducted by Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation and the  Ottumwa Police Department. Assistant United States Attorneys Kyle Essley and Laura Roan prosecuted the case. 

Mahaska County Board of Supervisors Approves 28E Agreement for Southern Iowa Mental Health

By Sam Parsons

The Mahaska County Board of Supervisors met yesterday and approved a 28E agreement between the county and Southern Iowa Mental Health. The agreement involves 13 counties cooperating as a region to provide mental health and disability services to south central Iowa. Supervisor Steve Wanders said that the agreement has involved 14 counties in the past, but is otherwise similar to past agreements with the county. County attorney Andrew Ritland said that the agreement was above water, but advised the board that pending legislation at the governor’s office would make it so that the Southern Iowa Mental Health board cannot be majority represented by members of county boards of supervisors.

The board also discussed some road projects with County Engineer Andrew McGuire. McGuire said that the condition of 230th and Lynn Avenue needs to be addressed. McGuire said that a contractor suggested a complete reclamation project for the road, which would be a more intensive project but would result in higher longevity for the road. The issue with that proposal, according to McGuire, would be the funding, since it would be a more cost-heavy approach and would constitute construction, rather than maintenance, which would introduce more red tape. Ultimately, however, the board directed McGuire to move forward with the complete reclamation project idea.

The next regular meeting with the Mahaska County Board of Supervisors will be held on June 19.

Honeybee health blooms at federal facilities across the country

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — While judges, lawyers and support staff at the federal courthouse in Concord, New Hampshire, keep the American justice system buzzing, thousands of humble honeybees on the building’s roof are playing their part in a more important task — feeding the world.

The Warren B. Rudman courthouse is one of several federal facilities around the country participating in the General Services Administration’s Pollinator Initiative, a government program aimed at assessing and promoting the health of bees and other pollinators, which are critical to life on Earth.

“Anybody who eats food needs bees,” said Noah Wilson-Rich, co-founder, CEO and chief scientific officer of the Boston-based Best Bees company, which contracts with the government to take care of the honeybee hives at the New Hampshire courthouse and at some other federal buildings.

Bees help pollinate the fruits and vegetables that sustain humans, he said. They pollinate hay and alfalfa, which feed cattle that provide the meat we eat. And they promote the health of plants that, through photosynthesis, give us clean air to breathe.

Yet the busy insects that contribute an estimated $25 billion to the U.S. economy annually are under threat from diseases, agricultural chemicals and habitat loss that kill about half of all honeybee hives annually. Without human intervention, including beekeepers creating new hives, the world could experience a bee extinction that would lead to global hunger and economic collapse, Wilson-Rich said.

The pollinator program is part of the federal government’s commitment to promoting sustainability, which includes reducing greenhouse gas emissions and promoting climate resilient infrastructure, said David Johnson, the General Services Administration’s sustainability program manager for New England.

The administration’s program started last year with hives at 11 sites.

Some of those sites are no longer in the program. Hives placed at the National Archives building in Waltham, Massachusetts, last year did not survive the winter.

Since then, other sites were added. Two hives, each home to thousands of bees, were placed on the roof of the Rudman building in March.

The program is collecting data to find out whether the honeybees, which can fly 3 to 5 miles (5 to 8 kilometers) from the roof in their quest for pollen, can help the health of not just the plants on the roof, but also of the flora in the entire area, Johnson said.

“Honeybees are actually very opportunistic,” he said. “They will feed on a lot of different types of plants.”

The program can help identify the plants and landscapes beneficial to pollinators and help the government make more informed decisions about what trees and flowers to plant on building grounds.

Best Bees tests the plant DNA in the honey to get an idea of the plant diversity and health in the area, Wilson-Rich said, and they have found that bees that forage on a more diverse diet seem to have better survival and productivity outcomes.

Other federal facilities with hives include the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services headquarters in Baltimore; the federal courthouse in Hammond, Indiana; the Federal Archives Records Center in Chicago; and the Denver Federal Center.

The federal government isn’t alone in its efforts to save the bees. The hives placed at federal sites are part of a wider network of about 1,000 hives at home gardens, businesses and institutions nationwide that combined can help determine what’s helping the bees, what’s hurting them and why.

The General Services Administration’s Pollinator Initiative is also looking to identify ways to keep the bee population healthy and vibrant and model those lessons at other properties — both government and private sector — said Amber Levofsky, the senior program advisor for the administration’s Center for Urban Development.

“The goal of this initiative was really aimed at gathering location-based data at facilities to help update directives and policies to help facilities managers to really target pollinator protection and habitat management regionally,” she said.

And there is one other benefit to the government honeybee program that’s already come to fruition: The excess honey that’s produced is donated to area food banks.

Iowa Democrats approve mail-in system for 2024 Caucuses

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

Iowa Democratic Party leaders have unanimously approved a plan to hold Caucuses on the same night as Iowa Republicans, but have Iowa Democrats use a mail in card to express their presidential preference.

The plan is being presented to the Democratic National Committee, which has already already voted to deny Iowa Democrats the first go at voting in the 2024 presidential campaign. Iowa Democratic Party chair Rita Hart says the new schedule of early voting states is still in flux, however, and the mail-in plan offers new flexibility.

Iowa GOP chairman Jeff Kaufmann says the mail-in idea is “a charade” and will do nothing to ensure both parties retain first-in-the-nation status for their Caucuses. Republican Governor Kim Reynolds has signed a law that makes it illegal to use a mail-in system for the presidential delegate selection that starts with the Caucuses, but Iowa Democratic Party chair Hart says Democrats are “united in conducting the most inclusive Caucuses in history” with mail-in participation.

Helping Hands Quilt Group Donates Quilts to Patients at Mahaska Health

OSKALOOSA — The Helping Hands Quilt Group in Oskaloosa recently donated many beautiful handmade quilts to Mahaska Health. The quilts will be gifted to patients of the Serenity Hospice House, Cancer Care & Infusion Center, Emergency Services, and Inpatient Care.

“We are so grateful for the generous donation of quilts from the Helping Hands Quilt Group,” shared Sally Blake, RN, Cancer Care & Infusion Center, Mahaska Health. “Our patients are delighted to receive a quilt from Helping Hands! We know it brings them much comfort when they need it most.”

The Helping Hands Quilt Group is a group who work together once a month to sew quilts for local charities. They have been donating quilts to Mahaska Health for over 10 years.

“We enjoy knowing that each patient starting cancer treatment at Mahaska Health has their own quilt to take home,” shared Linda Binns, President of the Helping Hands Quilt Group. “It is our way of showing them that we care and that they are not alone.”

Mahaska Health is so grateful for all that Helping Hands Quilters do for our community.

Man Dies in Fishing Accident at Rock Creek State Park

KELLOGG – An overnight fishing accident on Sunday resulted in the death of a man at Rock Creek State Park, according to local authorities.

The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office reports that at 12:06am on Sunday, the Jasper County Sheriff’s Dispatch received a 911 call in which someone reported hearing a male subject yelling for help near the west side boat ramp of Rock Creek State Park in Jasper County.

An Iowa DNR officer arrived on scene and found an unresponsive male patient. The officer then requested medical assistance, to which Kellogg Fire/EMS, Newton Fire/EMS, the Poweshiek County Sheriff’s Office, and the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office responded to assist. Mercy One Helicopter was also requested and landed at the scene.

Unfortunately, medical intervention was unsuccessful and the subject was pronounced dead at the scene. The subject was identified as Larry D. Conner, age 76, of Marshalltown.

Authorities say that the initial investigation indicates that the two subjects were fishing together when one of the subjects fell off the dock and into the water. The second subject called for help and was able to get the first subject out of the water. 

The investigation remains active with the Jasper County Medical Examiner and the Iowa Office of the State Medical Examiner assisting. No other information has been released at this time.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.