February 9, 2012

Iowa Games in need of officials

If you can call balls and strikes the Iowa Games will put you to work. The summer sports festival is looking for volunteers to serve as officials for all of the events that will be held during three weekends this month.

Iowa Games executive director Jim Hallihan it’s tough to get volunteers during the year when officials are doing games in season and getting paid. He says volunteer officials may get a t-shirt or meal, but they are really appreciated.

He says without volunteers the event would not exist. Hallihan says they have some volunteers who work all weekend, and with a staff of only 4, he says the volunteers run the event.

Competition begins this weekend. The main weekend, which includes the opening ceremonies, is July 15th through the 18th.

Bugs noted for their mythical “brain eating” flourish in wet weather

After the wettest June on record for Iowa and a rainy July so far, a pesky insect that usually lives outdoors is finding its way into the homes of many Iowans. Entomologist Phil Pelleteri says the bugs known as earwigs have what appears to be big pinchers on their tails, but in reality, he says they’re relatively harmless.

Earwigs are having a good year in the lush weather, tiny nocturnal creatures he says don’t do much during the day but often spend their evenings chomping on flowers. Other than gobbling up our landscaping, Pelleteri says earwigs don’t do much harm. Even if you keep your house spotless, he says they’ll find their way in — but he notes, earwigs aren’t really good indoor bugs.

“If they get in the house, the good news is they won’t breed indoors, they won’t hurt anything, they just kind of freak people out,” he says. He suggests you caulk water faucets, door frames and windows so the bugs don’t squeeze inside. Pelleteri says there is a way to avoid getting the bugs in your house, but it’s more practical perhaps for Arizonans, not Iowans.

“I always tease people, if you make your back yard a sand box, you will not have earwigs,” he says. “Basically, if you like to grow plants and whether you water them or Mother Nature does, those lush conditions with mulch and whatnot are exactly what earwigs like to have.”

He say the name “earwig” comes from a rumor that the bugs can crawl into your ears, lay eggs and eat your brains. Relax, Pelleteri says, the rumor is false.

Flash flooding a concern now with more rain expected

Emergency managers say flash flooding has become a big concern in parts of central and southeastern Iowa. Scott Bullock of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says of heavy rains are now the biggest threat.

“When you get four inches of rain and the soil’s already saturated that four-inch rain just runs right off. It’s not just in the river but in the downtown communities, in the streets and in the houses with basements,” Bullock says. Some communities in the Ottumwa area received three to four inches of rain over the past couple of days.

Bullock says a fast downpour can threaten neighborhoods that might not be close to a river. He says if you get four inches of rain and you’re on high ground in your backyard, that’s still a lot of rain that’s going to be coming down in the basement. Bullock says officials are now keeping an eye on water levels in Van Buren County downstream of Ottumwa. But he says he doesn’t expect a “crisis” in the area any time soon. Rain is in the forecast off and on for the next couple of days.

Three workers injured in wall collapse in Le Mars

Three workers were injured today when part of the wall in a building in Le Mars collapsed.

Wells’ Dairy has hired a Le Mars construction company to remodel the building, to make it the new location of the “Blue Bunny” Ice Cream Parlor. Wells’ spokesman Dave Smetter says the accident happened shortly before noon.

“As workers were in the second level attaching structural beams for a new roof something occured the caused the top portion of the north wall to collapse and thus some of the timbers that were supporting that wall to fall into the second floor,” Smetter says.

There four people in the building at the time of the collapse; three were injured. One worker was buried under debris and rescued by Le Mars Fire Rescue, then taken out of the building on a stretcher that was lowered to the ground by a fire department ladder truck.  Fire fighters helped the two other injured workers out of the damaged structure. One lane of the street in front of the building in downtown Le Mars is blocked off with yellow police tape. 

The Wells’ Dairy was founded in 1913 and its “Blue Bunny” brand of ice cream was first marketed in 1935.  Le Mars claims the title of “Ice Cream Capitol of the World” as more ice cream is produced in Le Mars by a single company than in any other city in the world. The Wells’ Dairy opened its museum and visitors center in 2000.  

Reporting by Joanne Glamm, KLEM, Le Mars.

(This story was updated at 3:17 p.m.)

Bondurant teen dies in car accident

A central Iowa teen died in a one-car crash this morning near Des Moines. The Polk County Sheriff’s office says a car driven by 18-year-old Timothy Harnett of Bondurant went out of control about 4 A.M. northeast of Des Moines, hit a ditch and rolled at least once, ending up on the passenger side.

Harnett was pronounced dead at the scene. Two passengers, both 17-year-olds, survived with minor injuries. A newspaper carrier spotted the wreckage about 20 minutes later and called 9-1-1. The cause of the crash is still unknown.

Toxicology results won’t be available for a few weeks.

Iowa’s top election official says GOP has “momentum” (AUDIO)

Secretary of State Michael Mauro discusses voter registration numbers.

Secretary of State Michael Mauro discusses voter registration numbers.

The state’s top election official says the roughly 100,000 voter registration edge Iowa Democrats held in January has nearly been cut in half. 

Secretary of State Michael Mauro says thousands of Iowans who were “no party” or Democratic voters switched to register as Republicans so they could vote in June’s Primary Election. 

“As of July 1, there are just over 55,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans. One month prior to that Democrats maintained an advantage of over 100,000,” Mauro said late this morning during a statehouse news conference.  “…These are significant numbers and I don’t intend to suggest otherwise.” 

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Gambling up for a vote again in 20 Iowa counties this fall

Many Iowans living in counties where casinos are located are already getting campaign calls about gambling referendums which will appear on ballots in November. Iowa law requires a re-vote in 2010 on casino gambling in counties which have casinos, as well as those which have passed referendums in the past but haven’t yet won a state license. That means there’ll be gambling referendums in 20 Iowa counties in November.

Wes Ehrecke of the Iowa Gaming Association says the existing casino operators don’t want to leave anything to chance in 2010. “We’re less than five months from the general election where this ballot question will be on the back of the ballot,” he says. In past years, casinos have spent millions of dollars on campaigns in Iowa counties holding gambling referendums.

In 2002, gambling referendums passed by wide margins. “I believe the closest vote was 63 percent,” he says. “I believe the highest was 81 percent and the average was 74.” Casino interests failed this year to get the legislature to remove the requirement that county voters continue to pass gambling referendums every eight years.

Voters in Lyon County approved a gambling referendum in 2008 and won a casino license this spring, but state law still requires a re-vote in Lyon County. If it fails, a provision in state law would let the casino in Larchwood open and operate for nine years, giving the casino operators a chance to place another gambling referendum before Lyon County voters and win its approval.