May 16, 2012

Heavy rains fill in lakes left low by long drought

Parts of southwest Iowa have endured more than six years of drought conditions, but Marc Roberg with the Department of Natural Resources says lakes in Union County have been refilled by recent rainstorms.

Three Mile Lake has water over the cement partitions of the boat ramp, the handicapped fishing pier and the boat jetties. Roberg says water’s so high that if you’re out in a boat you have to watch out for things that normally would be sticking out of the water.

Roberg says Twelve Mile Lake, a reservoir five miles east of Creston, also is full. It was ten feet low a couple ago, he says, and all the boat ramps are usable. The water’s a bit muddy but Roberg says that’s to be expected. While Twelve Mile Lake is just right for boating, he says the water’s really higher than park operators would like at Three Mile Lake and Green Valley, a popular park for camping.

Green Valley Lake is a couple feet higher than normal, he says, and nearby near Mitchell Marsh on the north end of Summit Lake, the roadway had a foot of water flowing across it. Roberg says, "There are carp swimming over the top of the road." Waterways designed with spillways are looking good, he says, and some ponds without overflow designs have water running over the dams. While it may be tempting for boaters and anglers to get out and test the waters, Roberg says the flooding makes that a risky plan.

The water temperatures are about 60-degrees, he points out, cold enough that if you fell in you’d suffer hypothermia pretty quickly. It’s even more important this time of year to wear life jackets. The DNR website has links to Union County lakes and other recreational waterways.  

Sister’s call for help part of Bentler murder trial

A murder victim was heard on a 9-1-1 tape in court Monday, identifying her brother as the assailant, then screaming as the line went dead. Twenty-three-year-old Shawn Bentler, of Quincy, Illinois, is on trial in Van Buren County for the slayings last fall of his parents and three teenage sisters at their home in Bonaparte.

In the chilling tape, which you’re about to hear, 14-year-old Shayne Bentler had called dispatchers, saying her brother Shawn was about to do "something," but didn’t have the chance to specify.

Some of the Bentler’s relatives covered their ears in the courtroom as the tape was played, saying later, they don’t want to believe it was Shawn who killed the other five members of his family. Prosecutors say one motive may’ve been money, as Bentler would have seen a sizable financial benefit from their deaths.

Waterloo power plant approved amid concerns

A public hearing on a controversial power plant project drew an overflow crowd to the Waterloo city council chambers Monday evening for a meeting that lasted nearly six hours. Most of the residents who filled the room oppose the project. They voiced concerns about health issues related to potential emission levels and expressed fear that carbon dioxide generated by the plant would harm the environment.

Project supporters touted the economic benefits such a plant would bring to the Cedar Valley — among them one-hundred new jobs and two million dollars in local taxes. In the end, the city council unanimously approved the project. The action clears the way for the city to annex 340-acres of land northeast of Waterloo.

It also allows L-S Power to build the proposed one-point-three billion dollar, 750-megawatt coal-fired Elk Run Energy Station on 260-acres of rezoned land. L-S Power must get approval from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources and the Iowa Utilities Board before moving the project forward.

The company hopes to begin construction in 2008, and have the plant operational by 2012. When it’s finished, the Elk Run Energy Station will be capable of producing electricity for 500,000 homes.

Audio: Elwin Huffman report. :57 MP3

Grassley says Kanasas Governor’s complaints about National Guard are legitimate

New criticism of the Iraq war is emerging as Kansas residents complain too few National Guard troops are around to help in the aftermath of last weekend’s killer tornadoes. Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says the complaints are “legitimate,” as he says more Guard members are being used in Iraq now than at any time since World War Two.

Grassley says: “The only response that I know is a decision that’s already been made that we increase our U.S. Army by 65,000. We’re in the process of doing that so that at future times, there should be less of a strain on the National Guard.” Grassley says the military is stepping up its recruiting efforts in order to put more troops into the “regular” army, so citizen-soldiers from the various states won’t have to bear such a heavy burden.

Grassley says: “Originally, I thought that we were headed towards 92,000 additional U.S. Army people when it was first proposed about seven-eight months ago. But I guess now we’ve settled on the figure of 65,000 U.S. Army additional people. That would be full-term military people so that the National Guard would not be called upon.”

Grassley says the military has its reasons for lowering the projected number of needed new troops and he denies it’s because it’s difficult to lure in new recruits. Grassley says, “No, I don’t think so. I think it’s a reassessment of what the need would be — 65,000 now being considered satisfactory as opposed to the original 92,000.”

President Bush is expected to visit parts of storm-ravaged Kansas Wednesday and will hear from that state’s governor about the lack of National Guard equipment, as so much of it is in Iraq. 

Crop report says planting still behind schedule

The latest Iowa Crops and Weather report says Iowa’s stormy springtime has farmers behind on their work. It was sunny and warm at the start of last week, and that helped many get their planting done.

But the summary by Iowa Ag Secretary Bill Northey finds corn and oat planting a week behind last year’s progress on this date, and the weekend’s heavy rain already is blamed for eroding cropland and washing out some of the newly-planted seed.

Some fields will have to be replanted after the flooding rains, and some of the farmers are also out surveying livestock buildings torn up by weekend winds.

 

 

Afton police chief warns of scams after storms

The weekend’s tornadoes and straight-line winds damaged homes and farm buildings in parts of Iowa. Afton Police Chief John Coulter warned residents planning repairs to watch out for scams. He recommends before people agree to any kind of repair work they see that their insurance company or adjuster will approve it.

People coming into the community should have a door-to-door sales permit, and the chief says people should call City Hall or the Law Enforcement Center and have them checked out.

Coulter says his community requires anybody offering their services door-to-door to have a permit, and residents should insist on seeing it. They should be willing to produce the permit, he says, and the city’s happy to check them out and make sure they have insurance.  

Man accused of assaulting wife dies

A man accused of assaulting his wife over the weekend died Monday, before he could be charged with a crime.  Police in a Des Moines suburb say 40-year-old Shawn Williams stabbed his wife and threw her to the ground Saturday in the parking lot of a Menards store in Clive.

He drove off but officers who caught up with him said they thought he’d taken some drug so they brought the man to Broadlawns Hospital. About the time he was declared ready to be checked out and police were planning to take him for booking at the Polk County jail, doctors told the officers Williams had died of a heart attack. His wife was hospitalized with injuries doctors say are not life-threatening.

Audio: Radio Iowa’s Stella Shaffer reports. :30 MP3