May 21, 2012

Majority of flooded CR businesses open, but still face struggles

A new study shows about 75% of the nearly 600 Cedar Rapids’ businesses affected by last year’s flooding have reopened. The Director of the Kirkwood Community College Small Business Development Center, Al Beach, says the numbers are encouraging — but he says many businesses are saddled with debt and are not back to they way they were before the flood.

Beach says Cedar Rapids is about 15% ahead of the national average when compared to other cities that recovered from disasters.

"We’re encouraged that we beat the national average when it comes to the number that are able to open and stay open but that does not mean that they’re having an easy time of it," Beach says, "we just can’t stress too much that our downtown businesses that were flooded are still continuing to hurt."

Beach says recovering will take several more years. Beach says: "We are not looking at this as something in our rearview mirror but rather is still ahead of us. We have several years yet of a constricted economy and a debt burden on our small businesses here that’s going to require more aid and more hand holding by the entities like us that provide counseling."

Beach says the report shows more than 50 businesses have moved out of the city or will not reopen. 

Omaha man dies after train accident

Authorities in southwestern Iowa say an Omaha man has died from injuries he suffered earlier this week when the truck he was driving was hit by a train. Pottawattamie County Sheriff Jeff Danker says Everett Veasley died Thursday afternoon at an Omaha Hospital.

The 62-year-old was flown to the hospital after the dump truck he was driving was struck by a Union Pacific train Monday afternoon near Crescent. Officials say Veasley had been attempting to cross an intersection near Interstate 29 when the accident occurred. The railroad crossing signals and traffic control devices were functioning at the time.

Danker said his deputies weren’t able to speak with Veasley before he died and they don’t know why he didn’t hear or see the train coming.  

UNI baseball team enters key conference series

The UNI baseball team will be on the road in Missouri Valley Conference play this weekend to battle Creighton in a three game series. It begins with a single game on Friday night.

UNI coach Rick Heller says one thing good about this series is they are playing two games at Rosenblatt Stadium, the site of the NCAA College World Series. Creighton is 7-2 in the Valley while the Panthers have struggled to a 2-7 mark. Heller says they need to turn things around quickly to have a chance to make the conference tournament.

The teams will also play single games on Saturday and Sunday.

 

Spring important to Upper Iowa’s new coach

Spring football is even more important for a new coach and that is the situation at Upper Iowa where Tom Shea has taken over after spending the past two seasons as the head coach at Dakota State. Shea is using this spring to install his system and evaluate talent.

He says they need to get the team familiar with the terminology and schemes they will be using and the coaches need to evaluate the talent they have to work with. Shea is installing his version of the "spread" on offense but says defensively there won’t be as many changes.

Shea says the defensive coordinator was on the staff last year and promoted, so there won’t be the changes they have on offense. Shea says turning a program around begins with attitude. He says the success he has had involved getting the kids feeling good about themselves and having fun at it. Shea says when you have fun, you work harder.

The Peacocks were 2-9 a year ago and Shea says improvement will not be easy in a Northern Sun Conference that continues to get better.

Iowa looking closer at athletic budget to cut costs

Iowa athletic director Gary Barta has told coaches and administrators to trim their budgets for the upcoming year but says no sports will be cut. The move is being made ahead of an anticipated drop in revenue.

Iowa football coach Kirk Ferentz says everyone in the department is being asked to be fiscally responsible as he says if there is something they can do, they will do it.

Many of the cuts may come from travel expenses. Ferentz they will look at bus trips versus flying to games.

 

Habitat for Humanity houses going up in Shenandoah

As the weather gets warmer, dozens of new homes are being built across Iowa through the efforts of Habitat for Humanity. Jesse Mattes just moved into a Habitat home in Shenandoah with his wife and three children.

"It’s a godsend," Mattes says. "We’ve been in trailers, we’ve been in apartments, as cheapest a rent as we could find. This is just great. This is a wonderful home and it fits us perfectly. We’re just so happy to be here."

Through volunteer labor and donations of money and materials, Habitat builds and rehabilitates houses with the homeowner’s help. The homeowners’ monthly mortgage payments are used to build more Habitat houses.

Mattes was laid off from his job in Clarinda last month and says he and his wife were persistent in applying for help. He says it took a month before they were selected and whenever a form was sent, they’d fill it out and send it right back that same day. Habitat for Humanity board member Marilyn Hoskins says this is about the fastest a home has been completed.

Construction began in August and the family moved into it in March. Hoskins says many volunteers and workers helped make the home a reality. Hoskins says state prison inmates made all of the kitchen cabinets and all of the exterior and interior walls. It was usually a four-weekend project but with the pre-fabricated walls, the shell was complete within half a day. Hoskins says she appreciates the city working with the organization on projects.

"We have more Habitat houses in Shenandoah because the city is so easy to deal with," Hoskins says. "They know the value of putting a home in an empty lot and they work with us to make that happen." Hoskins says the board is accepting applications for the next home they hope to build by the end of next year. For more information, visit the Habitat website .

 

Hy-Vee recalls pistachios

An Iowa based grocery store chain is recalling packages of pistachios. Hy-Vee, which has it’s corporate headquarters in West Des Moines, is voluntarily recalling 16-ounce packages and 1.5-ounce tubes of Hy-Vee pistachios.

A press release states the recall is related to pistachios distributed by California-based Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella Incorporated. Setton is recalling the nuts due to a potential salmonella contamination. Hy-Vee says there have been no reported cases of illness related to the recall. Hy-Vee has 225 grocery stores in seven Midwestern states.