May 16, 2012

Firefighters get special training in Ames

Firefighters from across the state got a rescue refresher course this weekend at the Fire Service Training Bureau at Iowa State University in Ames. Bureau chief Randy Novak says they held classes in several areas. Novak says they conducted classes in confined space rescue, tractor rollover/combine rescue, high angle rope rescue, grain bin rescue,and standard vehicle extrication.

Novak says today’s firefighters need more diverse training for the things they encounter. He says over the last 10 years the fire service has seen a high expectation to provide more skilled training for firefighters. Novak says cars have more airbags and specialized systems that require special training, as does farm equipment.

Novak says this complicates the rescuer’s efforts and they need the technical skills and knowledge to deal with the specialized autos and tractors and combines. Novak says it’s not simply a matter of pulling someone out of an overturned tractor or combine, the rescuers need to know how to work the hydraulic systems, how to lift a piece of equipment off of someone.

Novak says firefighters have to put in a lot of training to meet the demands of the job. Novak says the skill level, whether it’s fighting fires, or doing rescues is highly refined. Novak says 90-percent of Iowa’s firefighters are volunteers.

 

Several wounded in drive-by shooting in Sioux City

Several people were wounded in a drive-by shooting in Sioux City early Sunday. Two people are jailed. 20-year-old Jordan Thomas faces four felony counts and 17-year-old Mario Thomas is held on drug charges.

Three people were hospitalized and two were later released. One remains in the hospital for treatment of gunshot wounds. Police don’t believe the people who were hit by the bullets were the intended targets. It’s the second drive-by shooting in Sioux City in two weeks. 

Audio: Tom Beightol report. :30 MP3

Des Moines police search for identity of accident victim

Des Moines police are asking for the public’s help in identifying the victim of a weekend crash. A car and a bicycle collided Saturday afternoon on the capitol city’s east side. The cyclist had severe head injuries, several broken bones and had to have surgery that night at a Des Moines hospital. He’s still in a coma.

Police say the man carried no identification, he’s in his 30s and is Hispanic. So far, no one’s called to report him missing. At the time of the accident, police say the victim had a blood-alcohol level more than four-times the legal limit. The driver of the car wasn’t charged in relation to the wreck, but officers say 31-year-old Tilso Suarez Picon of Des Moines had no insurance and no driver’s license.

 


Audio: Radio Iowa’s Matt Kelley reports. :35 MP3

Man stabbed to death in Sioux City, suspect in jail

One suspect is in custody after a deadly weekend knife fight in Sioux City. Police arrested a Nebraska man following a stabbing outside a Sioux City bar early Saturday morning.

The victim is Sean Blair of Sioux City. The suspect is Skyler Morris of Macy, Nebraska, who’s now charged with first-degree murder and is being held in the Woodbury County Jail. It’s the city’s second fatal stabbing in three weeks. 

Audio: Tom Beightol report. :26 MP3

UNI men win MVC track title

The University of Northern Iowa men’s track and field team won the State Farm Missouri Valley Conference Outdoor Championship at Drake Stadium, scoring 229.5 points. The Panther women finished less than 12 points behind defending champion Wichita State for second place.

Throughout the three-day meet, the Panthers earned a combined 16 titles. Junior Rachel Jansen was named MVC Most Outstanding Outdoor Female Field Athlete and Most Valuable Female Athlete, scoring the most points on the women’s side. She won the shot put and the discus and finished second in the hammer throw, earning 28 team points.

Junior Terrence Reid and freshman Cory Goos were named co-winners of the MVC Most Outstanding Male Track Athlete award. Reid won both the 400 and 200-meter dashes and anchored the winning 4x100m relay team. Goos won the 400 meter hurdles and led off the winning 4x400m relay for the Panthers.   

Cash rent prices for land go up with grain prices

Farmers aren’t the only ones benefiting from high grain prices, an Iowa State University Extension survey shows average cash rent prices have gone up too. Extension economist William Edwards conducted the survey.  Williams says looking at each county, the average cash rent went from $137 an acre to $150 an acre, or an increase of 10 percent.

Williams says it’s easy to pinpoint the reason for the increase. "I don’t think there’s any question but what the price of corn and soybeans since last September, October have been a major factor in pushing cash rents higher," Williams says. He says yields have increased too, but the majority of the increase has to be attributed to increased grain prices. Williams says the variation in rents across the state was larger than normal, as agreements set by the September deadline for terminating or revising lease contracts didn’t see as much increase or stayed the same.

On the other hand, he says farms that changed hands or where landlords and tenants renegotiated after the grain prices went up, those rents were quite a bit higher. Williams says that gave them a two-tiered rental structure with the variation around the averages was quite a bit more than usual.

Williams says tenants should be able to absorb the increase in rent, although it’s not the only cost increase they face. He says crop costs, the cost of seed,fertilizer and fuel, is quite a bit higher this year. While that takes some of the edge off profits, Williams says the grain price still leave "considerable profit potential." Williams cautions the 10-percent increase cited in the survey is just an average, and landlords can’t expect to automatically raise their rents.

Williams says the rent depends on a lot of individual factors, such as the demand for corn and beans in individual communities. He says they encourage landlords to look at things like the corn suitability rating, and the yields in the last few years. Williams says the increase in rent prices will be good for communities where the land owners are still in the area. You can seen the complete report at the Ag Decision Make website .

 

 

Program helps blind learn to fish

About 30 blind or visually-impaired Iowans will learn how to fish later this week at Big Creek State Park near Polk City, an effort to hook them on a new hobby while helping the Whiterock Conservancy. Luke Wright, an Americorps volunteer, is coordinating the effort along with a group from the Izaak Walton League.

Wright says: "We’ve got 15 volunteers coming from them. Of course, they’re all expert fishermen and they’re going to assist in any way they can. We’re also going to do some clean-up projects and build some birdhouses and duck houses to donate to Whiterock as well." He says all of the fish that are caught will be put to use as a food source for a program that’s reintroducing a rare bird to central Iowa.

Wright says they’ll go to Save Our Avian Resources which is setting up an osprey program. The fish will be put on ice and fed to the birds as needed. He says this is a first-time effort that has much promise.

Wright says, "I think it’s covering a lot of bases and it’s a win-win from start to finish. Giving these blind people an opportunity to go out and do something they wouldn’t normally have a chance to do is kind of a nice twist. It’ll be just a great event." The event is scheduled for Saturday, May 19th.