February 9, 2012

ISU basketball team stuck in Chicago by weather

The Iowa State basketball team is staying in Chicago longer than originally planned. After losing to fifth ranked Duke 86-65 last night the Cyclones were unable to bus back to Ames because of a winter storm. Coach Greg McDermott says the team remains at the hotel and may not even be able to get a practice in.

McDermott says he doesn’t know if they will be able to practice today, but are trying to arrange transportation to get back and get to practice. McDermott says they will try to find something for the players to do. He says they will get out of the hotel and maybe go to a movie and then will watch film of the game last night and of the upcoming game.

Iowa State is scheduled to host North Dakota State on Saturday afternoon and McDermott says there are no plans to postpone that game. He says they plan to get on the road as soon as they can. McDermott says the weather is not good in Chicago right now.

Mediacom reaches 1 year agreement with Sinclair

Mediacom Cable customers in the Des Moines and Cedar Rapids markets will continue to receive programming from Sinclair Broadcasting for at least one more year without interruption. A retransmission agreement between Mediacom and Sinclair was set to expire at midnight Friday, but the two sides have agreed on a new 12-month contract. Mediacom spokesperson Phyllis Peters says her company wanted a longer term deal, but Sinclair signed similar one-year agreements with other cable providers.

“That was at Sinclair’s choosing and I think it has to do with some of the distribution rights of Sinclair from Fox Network and when some of that is up for renewal,” Peters said. “So, it’s one year, but that’s the best we could get.” Additional terms of the agreement were not disclosed, but Peters says Mediacom will be paying a higher price to carry the Sinclair stations and that cost will be passed on to customers.

“The owners of the stations want a bigger price and, above them, the owners of the network programming want more money,” Peters said. But, we don’t disclose what those dollars and cents are. We just work as hard as we can to hold down the costs in other areas because programming is the hard one that we have less control over.” If a deal had not been reached, Mediacom customers would have lost Fox stations – KDSM in Des Moines and KFXA in Cedar Rapids – as well as KGAN, a CBS affiliate, in Cedar Rapids.

Three years ago, viewers lost those stations for a month because of a similar dispute over retransmission fees. Peters says “something needs to be done” about rising programming prices. “Lawmakers in Washington, D.C. realize that the retransmission consent process is broken and there are some reforms that are needed,” Peters said.

“Consumers are the ones paying the cost of this, so we really hope that some of the issues that were brought up – not just by Mediacom, but by other companies too – are reviewed and the current rules get some review and possibly some changes.”

Iowa National Guard will send ag team to Afghanistan

Members of the Iowa National Guard will be part of a federal program that will go to Afghanistan in the fall of this year to provided expertise in farming. Iowa Guard spokesman, Major Mike Wunn, says it’s called am Agribusiness Development Team.

Wunn says soldiers or airmen with an agriculture background are put on the team and that team works with local farmers, village elders, agribusinesses to try to bring some stability and support to the agricultural sector in Afghanistan. Wunn says the teams are usually around 60 soldiers.

He says there are two components to the teams, with the ag-related component, and there is also a security force that would go out into the countryside with the teams. Wunn says the National Guard Bureau started the program in 2007 and several other states have already sent soldier teams over.

Wunn says the Iowa team will follow up a team from California, which help with things like developing a livestock slaughter facility and livestock vaccination programs. He says the Iowa team will figure out what needs to be done when they get there. He says once the team gets to the country, they will finish up on the previous team’s work, but will also do a needs assessment of things that need to be done based on their expertise.

Wunn says they will look for soldiers with ag experience, and will also ask for volunteers with ag experience who would like to be a part of the team. The team will undergo some training and then leave for Afghanistan in the fall.

Homeless shelters staying open longer with cold weather

The cold snap is prompting some homeless shelters in Iowa to remain open around the clock. A few shelters close during the day to reduce staffing demands and encourage residents to look for employment. But David Rainey, director of the Salvation Army’s three shelters in Waterloo, says when it’s this cold, they keep the doors open all hours of the day.

Rainey says their beds have been full for months, so they haven’t noticed any increase demand due of the weather. “The trend the last three to four months is that our shelter has been running full because of the economy,” he says. “So it’s not so much the weather, it’s just people are out of work and with no job or no income they can’t make rent payments or housing notes or things of that nature.”

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Humane Society says high snow poses challenges with pets

Parts of northwest Iowa have 34-inches of snow on the ground with drifts that are much higher. It’s causing all sorts of challenges — including for pet owners. Pam Wiese, spokeswoman for the Humane Society in Omaha/Council Bluffs, says dog owners need to keep a closer eye on their pets when the dog is left outside.

Wiese says, “We’ve had several reports of strays that have gotten out of people’s yards and the way they’re getting out is they’re simply walking up a snowdrift and hopping the fence.” Wiese says some drifts are so high, they’re at fence lines and clever dogs have no problem getting out of the yard.

She says, “The level of the snow is so high and it’s so cold that it’s frozen and they can actually walk on it.” Wiese says Iowans who have dogs, and other pets, need to watch them if they’re being let loose in a fenced yard for a bathroom break. Weise says, “If you’re letting your dog out and you have huge drifts in your back yard and you have a fence, it’s a good idea to make sure that they’re not going to go right over the fence.”

A temporary fix until the snow melts is to use a chain to keep your animal tethered. Earlier this week, a freezing dog was found in a driveway in Omaha. The animal was revived and is being cared for by the Humane Society.

Travel conditions not good over much of the state

The DOT road conditions map showing purple or "difficult" travel on most roadways.

The DOT road conditions map showing purple or "difficult" travel on most roadways as of 11:30 today.

Iowa Department of Transportation spokesperson Dena Gray-Fisher says they are asking people to stay off the roadways in many areas of the state. Gray-Fisher says no travel is advised in all of western Iowa, parts of central, parts of north central and the corridor of south central Iowa. There are many areas where the roadways are partially closed in western Iowa.

Dozen of accidents have added to the problems. That includes an accident and cattle roundup on Interstate-29 in the southbound lanes from Sloan to Whiting in western Iowa. She says a semi jackknifed and ended up in the ditch and the cattle got loose and were running around on the interstate. Gray-Fisher says the cattle have been rounded up.

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One person dies in Pottawattmie County accident

One person was killed in a collision between a dump truck and a semi early this morning on Interstate 80 in southwest Iowa’s Pottawattamie County. The Iowa State Patrol says the driver of the dump truck, 52-year-old Lloyd Houston, of Walnut, died at the scene.

The driver of the semi, 33-year-old Clinton Robinson, of Council Bluffs was not hurt in the crash, which happened on eastbound I-80 at around 3:30 A.M., about two-miles west of the Avoca exit.

Authorites say the accident was weather-related, but no other details have been released.

By Ric Hanson, KJAN, Atlantic