February 9, 2012

Fire Marshal says upgrade your smoke detector

Clive Fire Marshal Tony Collins speaks about new smoke detectors.

Clive Fire Marshal Tony Collins speaks about new smoke detectors.

Public safety officials are encouraging Iowans who have old smoke alarms to replace the devices with new, dual sensor detectors.

State Fire Marshal Ray Reynolds says smoke detectors should be replaced every ten years and Iowans should consider equipping their homes with the latest in smoke detector technology.

“You don’t still operate the 1975 technology in your T.V. or 1975 car, you got a newer model,” Reynolds said. “So, the dual sensor provides optimum protection. If you have a working smoke detector in your home, that’s the priority for us – but as you go to replace those detectors, you should replace them with the dual sensor detector.”

Clive Fire Marshal Tony Collins says the new smoke alarms are capable of detecting different types of fires.

“A slow, smoldering fire such as a cigarette in a bed or seat cushion can be detected by ionization type detectors. For flare-up type fires with flames such as a cooking fire, there’s photoelectric type detectors. Now, these are combined into one smoke alarm,” Collins said. Iowa enacted a new requirement on April 1 that newly-constructed homes and apartments be equipped with dual sensor smoke detectors.

Collins and Reynolds made their comments this week at a press conference at the Clive Fire Department. Reynolds said smoke detectors are credited with saving at least 22 lives in Iowa this year. Nine Iowans have died in structure fires since January 1 and at least five of those deaths occurred in a home without a working smoke detector.

DNR offers water quality workshops

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources is offering a series of volunteer water quality monitoring workshops around the state the is summer. Jackie Gautsch is one of the coordinators for the IOWATER program. She says anybody who wants to sign up can come to a workshop and learn all about water quality.

Gautsch says once you get certified you are given equipment and can take measurements, and you get an I-D and password to go on-line and submit your measurements to the database. Gautsch says the workshop teaches several ways to test water quality.

There is a chemical assessment that tests for dissolved oxygen, a test for P-H, a nutrient test and a test for salt. She says they also do a physical assessment that can tell how wide the stream is and how fast it is flowing. They also learn to do a habitat assessment to see how the water may accommodate wildlife needs. Gautsch says this is the tent year for the workshops.

The dates and locations vary each summer depending on where they haven’t been, or where they have more demand for volunteers to help with watershed improvement projects. The locations for the workshops include Ankeny on May 26th and 27th, Ogden on June 2nd and 3rd, Webster City on June 26th, Council Bluffs on July 24th, Bellevue on August 21st and Toledo on August 28th.

You can register on line at www.iowater.net.

Postal carriers pick up food donations

Letter carriers across Iowa will be delivering the mail today but they’ll also be picking up our donations of food for the Stamp Out Hunger campaign. Mark Drusch, a letter carrier from Webster City, says post offices nationwide are taking part in the effort to help those in need.

Drusch says, “This is our 18th year of the food drive and this year will put us over the one-billion pound mark as far as the food we’d collected and delivered to local food banks around the country.” Drusch has been a letter carrier for 16 of those 18 years and he says the effort continues to grow every year. He attributes the success to very generous donations from the public. All people realize, Drusch says, the need is much larger this year, given the economy.

He says a USDA report shows it was the largest-ever increase in the number of people needing help from last year to this year, people who live in “food insecure households.” Drusch explains how easy it is for Iowans to lend a hand in the food collection campaign. Just leave non-perishable food items in a bag near their mailbox and letter carriers will pick them up and take them to places like Upper Des Moines Opportunity, agencies that distribute the food to pantries in several locations.

For more information, contact your local post office or visit: “www.helpstampouthunger.com“.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City

Branstad back on the trail today

Terry Branstad and wife Chris greeting people prior to the IBNA debate.

Terry Branstad and wife Chris greeting people prior to the IBNA debate May 1.

Former Governor Terry Branstad will return to the campaign trail today, just a couple of days after his doctors put a new stent in his heart. 

Doug Gross, a Des Moines lawyer who was the Republican Party’s 2002 nominee for governor, was Branstad’s chief of staff for four years. ”He’s a happy warrior,” Gross says. “This is a tough guy who loves the campaign trail.” 

Branstad, a candidate for the Repubican Party’s 2010 nomination for governor, is scheduled to appear in Marion at 10 o’clock, then Branstad and his family will visit Pella during the town’s “Tulip Time” festival. 

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