May 16, 2012

Masha Hamilton, author, speaks in DM

A reporter turned novelist will talk about her career and her fiction Monday night in Des Moines. Masha (MOSH’-uh) Hamilton says she was working as a journalist in Moscow, covering the collapse of Communism, when she realized she wanted to do a different kind of writing. "I began to dream fictional stories," Hamilton says, and that’s when she left journalism as a fulltime job. She’s returned from time to time, doing some reporting from Afghanistan and just last year gathering background for a novel while doing some reporting from northeastern Kenya, near the border with Somalia, telling about victims of drought and famine. Hamilton’s a veteran of the reporting business and was working in the Middle East when Iowa native and journalist Terry Andersen was kidnapped in Lebanon in 1985.

Her second novel, "Staircase of a Thousand Steps," goes into what drives journalists to want to report on dangerous situations. "The adrenaline rush." Hamilton says, "the feeling that you’re part of something larger than yourself — that you’re stepping onto a stage, but you’re not exactly completely an observer, you’re a little bit of a participant too." She says there are many factors that go into it including a commitment to the story and to the news itself. She says there were plenty of times she herself felt afraid, while reporting on trouble spots overseas.

"There are times when I’ve been afraid," Hamilton says. "I certainly put a wall around my heart, so that I wouldn’t feel fear, or even get too upset when I witnessed situations of violence." She says doing anything else would have taken her "out of the story" and made her less of a competent reporter. She says writing about much of that in her last book was a kind of healing process. Hamilton’s worked the war zones of the Middle East into her fiction, and her new book, "The Camel Bookmobile," is based on true events in northern Africa. She’ll talk about it tonight at Des Moines’ new downtown Central Library.

Baseball size hail reported with tornadoes

At least five western Iowa counties reported tornado touchdowns over the weekend, but the largest amount of damage is reported from a twister that hit around 3 A.M. Sunday near Atlantic. Karl Jungbluth, meteorologist at the National Weather Service, says the tornado’s path was about seven miles long and up to a half-mile wide.

Jungbluth says: "It touched down with minor damage right on the Cass-Montgomery county border and basically went up Highway 71. The most severe damage occurred about two miles into Cass County, or a couple miles south of the small town of Lyman." He says the tornado packed winds as strong as 130-miles an hour, which tore up several farmsteads in the area around Lyman.

Jungbluth says there were a couple of big dual transmission power poles that collapsed and a farm service business was destroyed, grain bins were demolished and the truck service building was heavily damaged. Several other farmsteads report damage around Grant and Stanton. More damage from likely tornadoes is also reported in Fremont, Pottawattamie and Mills counties. Jungbluth says southwest Iowa’s Union County was hit with hail early Sunday, some of the biggest hailstones that have hit Iowa in some time.

He says a line of storms hit near Afton, just east of Creston, with wind-driven baseball-sized hail that dented siding and smashed windows in houses and vehicles. No serious injuries were reported during the storms in Iowa, though Jungbluth says one person was reportedly hurt during the clean-up phase following the Atlantic-area tornado.  

State roads in Western Iowa closed by storm damage, flooding

Iowa Department of Transportation spokesperson, Dena Gray-Fisher, says drivers in some areas of the state are looking for detours today. Gray-Fisher says storm damage downs powers lines blocking roads, and there has also been flooding. She says the damage is in western Iowa in Fremont, Harrison, Lucas, Montgomery and Page counties.

Gray-Fisher says they have crews working to fix downed power lines. Gray-Fisher says motorists should not take any chances trying to get through a blocked roadway. Gray-Fisher says you should turn around if you see water over the roadway, or the roadway is already barricaded. She says it can be very dangerous to enter a roadway that’s covered with water.

The state roads that’re currently closed include: In Harrison County, I-29 southbound and northbound roadways, (approximately two miles north of the U.S. 30/I-29 interchange in the Missouri Valley area, Harrison County); in Lucas County U.S. 34 at Lucas, U.S. 65 south of Lucas; in Montgomery County, U.S. 71 between Grant and Lyman, due to downed power poles (Montgomery and Cass counties), U.S. 34 in Red Oak, just west of Iowa 48, the flood gates are across the road, Iowa 48 in Elliott; in Page County, U.S. 59 north of Shenandoah; Iowa 48 in Shenandoah. 

Health Department prepares regulations to test kids for lead poisoning

The Iowa Department of Public Health is working on regulations for a new law that will require kids to have their blood tested for lead prior to age six and before they can enter elementary school. Rita Gergely, chief of the bureau of lead poisoning prevention, says it’s important to catch potential lead poisoning early.

Gergely says lead can cause learning disabilities with children. She says children might appear to be fine at two or three years old, but could have irreversible damage that’s discovered when they get to school. Gergely says young children often don’t show any symptoms of the lead poisoning. Gergely says a large number of kids are already tested. She says 65 to 70 percent of children are now tested before the age of six.

Gergely says the testing is already required for children who’re covered by Medicaid and other medical providers know that lead poisoning is a problem statewide, and are testing children. Gergely says the lead test simply requires taking some blood from the child and could be incorporated with other health checks.

Gergely says they hope that the lead testing is incorporated into the "well child" check-ups like it is for Medicaid, so a child would be tested at the age of one and two years initially, instead of at the age of five when they start school. Paint in older homes is the biggest source of lead poisoning for kids.

Gergely says it’s not a great of a problem in the areas where there are new homes. But, she says there are new concerns about children’s jewelry imported from China that includes lead paint and creates a new risk. Gergely says the madatory lead testing begins in the summer of 2008.

Meth treatment the topic of conference

Health officials from Iowa and across the region who focus on treating the effects of methamphetamine are gathering for a summit today and tomorrow in Nebraska. Dianne Lowe is helping organize the Midwest Methamphetamine Conference in Lincoln and says there will be a number of presentations ranging from prevention programs to community costs.

Lowe says: "The focus on this conference is the social consequences of meth with a specific focus on public health. We want to emphasize that public health is a partner in addressing this issue and we want to be brought to the table. We want to be part of it. We have things to contribute." Lowe says there will be an emphasis on the Native American population in Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota and Nebraska but they will also discuss how meth affects others.

She says, "Low-income people, minority populations, it’s affecting everybody, rural populations, the Native American populations. A lot of it is coming in from super labs in Mexico so we have some Mexican Americans that’s being affected, some large populations, so it’s really everybody." Lowe says they will also discuss what actually makes up the drug. She is hoping that once people see the drugs ingredients, they will never give it a try.

Lowe says ,"If the average person sat down and drank a bottle of Drano, it would kill them. But this is part of what’s in meth. It’s ridiculous what they put in it. It’s car batteries, it’s lye, it’s the anhydrous ammonia, it’s industrial cleansers." The two-day conference opens this morning at the Embassy Suites in downtown Lincoln. It is open to the public. For more information, call 402-471-0881.

Tornadoes hit several counties

Storms rumbled through western Iowa over the weekend, packing high winds, hail, heavy rain and tornadoes. Twisters were reported in Mills, Fremont, Pottawattamie and Montgomery counties on Saturday, while hail of well over three-quarters of an inch in diameter was reported in Harrison County. A roof was torn off of a building near Macedonia in Montgomery County. Tornado sirens also sounded Sunday morning in Cass County where Sheriff Bill Sage says there’s major devastation.

Sage says just before three A.M., authorities received a call from a farm located just north of the Cass-Montgomery County line. The owner of the farm , Kent Muller, said his farm service and grain elevator business had been hit by a twister or high winds. Four nearby farmsteads also sustained considerable damage. Further north, near Lyman, a high power line hung low to the road after two sets of metal power poles were brought down by the storm.

The National Weather Service says a tornado packing winds of 120-to-130-miles per hour created a path of destruction seven-miles long and up to a half-mile wide at some locations. The Weather Service says an area between Cumberland and Anita sustained straight-line winds of 70-to-90-miles per hour, resulting in downed trees and damage to outbuildings or storage sheds. Those living near Anita are convinced a tornado caused the damage.

In addition, Sheriff Sage says rainfall amounting to over five-inches in the Griswold area created severe flooding and some tense moments for emergency personnel. Sage says the Griswold Police Chief and a sheriff’s deputy had to rescue someone who had tried to cross the swiftly moving water. The rising water forced the evacuation of 30 residents to a community center until late Sunday afternoon. Northeast of Griswold, the town Atlantic was not immune from flooding, as the Troublesome Creek lived up to its name when its waters merged with the East Nishnabotna to create low-land flooding that forced the evacuation of at least one residence. The only reported casualty of the storms was a person who suffered chest juries when he fell 15-feet while trying to repair a roof.

By late Sunday afternoon, over four and a-half inches of rain had fallen in Atlantic, while off to the north, in Audubon County, over six-inches of rain was reported. Additional rain late Sunday night threatened to add one-to two-more inches to the already saturated soil.

Sean Bentler murder trial begins today

The murder trial of a former Van Buren County man begins today in southeast Iowa. Twenty-two-year-old Sean Bentler of Quincy, Illinois, formerly of Bonaparte, is charged in the murders of his parents and his three teenage sisters in their Bonaparte home last October.

Bentler’s fate will be determined by Judge Michael Mullins as Bentler waived his right to a jury trial earlier this year. The trial’s expected to last five days.