February 9, 2012

Culver: new dam for Lake Delhi could be hydroelectric

Governor Chet Culver is backing a proposal to convert the former Lake Delhi Dam into a modern hydroelectric facility. Water topped the dam over the weekend, destroying earthen portions of it and washing out a county road.

“I hope we can consider looking at a new 21st century hydroelectric dam that could help our state in terms of our focus on renewable energy and maybe allow those folks living in Delaware County and there at the Lake to provide their own power because of the new hydroelectric dam,” Culver said. [Read more...]

Northeast Iowans continue fight with floods

Home and business owners around northeast Iowa are cleaning up after record rainfall last week and the fallout from the Lake Delhi Dam burst. Flooding along the Maquoketa River invaded up to 30 homes and 20 businesses in Monticello.

Bobby Tuetken, owner of the Blue Inn, was hoping sandbags and pumps would save his business – but he learned the battle would be lost early this morning. “About three o’clock in the morning, my brother and nephew were out here and knew that we were pumping just to pump…it wasn’t keeping up so we got ourselves out just to be safe,” Tuetken said.

Beds, carpeting and furniture inside the Blue Inn are now ruined. Tuetken says he’s been too busy to think about a damage estimate. “I’m sure it’s going to be pushing $100,000 plus, but it’s hard to say. I haven’t had time to play with a calculator yet, I’m just cleaning,” Tuetken said.

The early estimate on damage to Monticello’s water treatment plant is $4,000. The plant quit working on Saturday when it went under water. Monticello Public Works Director Dana Edwards is asking for help from residents who are hooked into the plant. Customers are being told to conserve water as everthing sent down the drain is pumped into the river.

In Maquoketa, it appears sandbagging efforts saved that city’s wastewater treatment and municipal utility plants. The river crested at a record 35.26 feet in Maquoketa this morning.

The Wapsipinicon River is expected to crest at 25.9 feet in Anamosa sometime overnight. That level would be close to the record of 26.18 feet set in 2008. No serious flooding is expected in Anamosa, according to Brenda Leonard, Jones County’s Emergency Management Coordinator.

(by KCRG-TV)

“Long-range, highway-speed” electric vehicles

The C-E-O of an Ames company that’s managing the assembly and sale of electric vehicles says the company’s station wagons, trucks and cargo vans are “full-size” and can go fast enough to break the posted speed limits on the state’s highways.

EnVision Motor Company announced today that it will ship electric vehicles assembled at a facility in New York to a plant in Webster City. Workers in Webster City will finish the vehicles by installing the electric drive train.  EnVision president and C.E.O. Thomas Gleisner says these electric vehicles can reach a top speed of about 85 miles an hour.

“They’re long-range, highway-speed, full-size, fully-crash-tested vehicles,” he says.  “Just like any other car, they just don’t burn gas.”

These Electric Mobile Cars — EMC’s — can go about 200 miles on a charge, depending on how fast you drive, how much weight the vehicle is carrying and how much the vehicle has to battle wind friction.

“Most people drive an average of 36 miles a day,” Gleisner says.  “If our car achieves a 200-mile range, the majority of drivers can go anywhere he or she wants to go.”

Gleisner’s company, EnVision, is the U.S. distributor of these European-designed vehicles. The completed vehicle will roll off the assembly line at Auto Manufacturing Systems in Webster City, an already-existing plant.

“Webster City seems like it’s the community that can make about anything,” Gleisner says.  “The manufacturing base there has a proven track record of making quality goods and having a great workforce and I just think that it’s the perfect spot to do the assembly on our vehicles and then to add the manufacturing for any accessories or toppers for our trucks or bike racks or anything that would go along with our vehicles.” 

More than 300 workers will be added at the plant to work on the assembly of the vehicles, a welcome employment boost in Webster City as 850 workers will lose their jobs when the Electrox plant shuts down next year.

Davis County making first appearance in baseball tourney

Davis County makes a first ever appearance in the state high school baseball tournament tonight when the third-ranked Mustangs take on PCM Monroe in a class 2A quarterfinal.

“The kids are very upbeat, very happy with what they’ve got accomplished so far,” Davis County coach Todd White says.  “But they’re still hungry and they’re still wanting to play some more baseball.”

The Mustangs displayed outstanding pitching depth in posting a 33-1 record to this point and White hopes thst is a factor this week.

“That’s one of the strengths of our team,” White says. “…If everybody stays healthy, we should have plenty of arms.”

It has been six days since the Mustangs clinched a state tournament berth but White is not concerned about the lengthy layoff.

“I think we’ll definitely be ready,” White says.

Electric vehicles to be assembled in Webster City

An Ames company plans to open a plant in Webster City, employing 300 or more people to assemble electric vehicles. 

Officials of EnVision Motor Company say the plan is to produce up to 2500 electric vehicles at a new assembly plant on the east side of Webster City. EnVision was formed to combine foreign made car bodies with American made electrical parts. The vehicles are designed to get more than 200 miles on a single battery charge.

The electric cars are expected to sell for between $32,000 and $37,000. 

The new Webster City assembly plant is scheduled to produce 50 cars a week for the first three months. The cars will be sent to a nationwide network of roughly 200 dealers, including one to be located in Des Moines. 

EnVision Motor Company president and CEO Thomas Gleisner calls the vehicles the “first-family” of high-speed, 100 percent electric vehicles.  Gleisner recorded a brief video on the company’s website. ”Drive green.  Drive clean,” Gleisner said, reciting a company slogan.

The news by EnVision is a welcome one to the Webster City area. Last October, Electrolux executives announced they would close the washer and dryer plant in Webster City early next year, shifting  production to Juarez, Mexico.  About 850 people will lose their jobs.

(Reporting by Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City)

Clean-up will be costly after dam break, Maquoketa braces for flood crest

The clean-up associated with this weekend’s Lake Delhi dam break is going to be enormous. Tom McCarthy, an environmental specialist at the Iowa DNR, says a number of chemicals washed into the river when the northeast Iowa dam burst.

“(We) saw a lot petroleum products coming down, a lot of sheen,” McCarthy says. “Propane tanks were venting. We’ve had tremendous washing of the farm fields.  We’ve lost a lot of the fertilizer.”

McCarthy was at the dam Saturday when it began to collapse.  “It was sweeping trees below that berm cut, sweeping those trees away,” he says. “Boats were going through. It was just like someone pulled the plug on a bath tub. It really started to go.”

McCarthy says between 250 and 300 homes were damaged in the Lake Delhi area when the dam failed.

City officials and volunteers in Maquoketa stacked sandbags on the city’s north side on Sunday. The Maquoketa River is expected to crest there later today at 11 feet above flood stage. The focus is protecting Maquoketa’s wastewater facility, electric plant and water treatment facility. Lyn Medinger, Jackson County’s emergency management coordinator, says more sandbags were added over the weekend as the crest forecast changed when the Lake Delhi Dam failed.

“Right now, we’re just fighting the clock,” Medinger says. “We’ve got a couple of low-lying areas that we need to sandbag.”

The crest is expected around 35 feet, well over flood stage of 24 feet. Medinger says the predicted crest for the river changed when the Lake Delhi Dam failed on Saturday. ”When we got our initial forecast of 34.8 (feet), we were good,” he says. “We (ran) a model when the dam broke up at Lake Delhi, now it’s giving us (an additional) two to three feet. They (re-ran) the model — we’re going to be sitting at 35. Right now our levee that protects that is right at 35.”

Medinger says a number of homes in Jackson County have been flooded along the river and some residents have been evacuated, but the most extensive damage in the county has been to surrounding crops. The river is expected to crest in Maquoketa at 1 p.m. today.

Crash near Iowa City kills four

Four people died Sunday in a single-car wreck near Iowa City. It happened at 8 o’clock in the morning just east of Iowa City on what’s known as Local Road.

According to the Iowa State Patrol, a 2009 Nisson was westbound and missed a curve. It went into the north ditch and rolled several times.

Killed were: 27-year-old Heather Althiser of Onalaska, Wisconsin; 27-year-old Rebecca Frea of Iowa City; 27-year-old Jason Onsgard of Iowa City; and 26-year-old Joseph Vinopal Jr. of LaCrosse, Wisconsin.

Troopers say Frea, Onsgard and Vinopal were ejected. Only Althiser was wearing a seatbelt. It has not been determined who was driving the car. The accident remains under investigation.

By Phil Roberts, Davenport