January 27, 2012

Help is available to deal with the stress of flooding

As the floodwaters in western Iowa remain high, so do the stress levels on residents. Karen Hyatt, an emergency mental health specialist with the state, says most people might know they are stressed, but don’t take advantage of professional help that is available.

“It’s not easy for people to ask for any kind of emotional assistance, or anxiety control, we’re just not geared that way,” Hyatt says, “people are more apt to say their neighbor needs help.” Hyatt works with special crisis counseling teams from the Iowa Department of Human Services that visited western Iowa residents before the major floodwaters hit.

Now that things are in full flood mode, she says you can call the Iowa Concern Hotline and get help is you’re feeling stressed.

Hyatt says the 24-hour number is 800-447-1985, and it has also been designated as the state disaster rumor control hotline. While she says it’s important to deal with the stress, it’s also important to not go too far the other way and not take the threat seriously.

Hyatt says the projections say the flooding could last 60 to 90 days and sometimes people become complacent and don’t continue adhering to safety plans because nothing has been happening. Hyatt says people need to realize that the range of emotions they are feeling in this situation is normal, and it’s important to find ways to cope, and to seek help if you feel overwhelmed.

Author tries to figure out Jody Huisentruit’s disappearance

A new book explores the 1995 disappearance of Mason City television news anchor Jodi Huisentruit. Author Beth Bednar also worked as an anchor for a TV station in Austin, Minnesota, and knew Huisentruit as a colleague in the market. Bednar’s book, “Dead Air,” explores the possibilites of what may have happened to Huisentruit nearly 16 years ago.

“One of the persistent theories is that she was just taken by a stalker,” Bednar says. “Now, that is a possibility as a young woman on television, there are a few, shall we say, weirdos in the audience and that happens to anyone who’s ever spent any time on television.”

In the book, Bednar says she also explored the relationships Huisentruit had with several people. “Statistically speaking, it is most likely when a person disappears or is killed that, unfortunately, it’s a person close to her or someone who has made acquaintance with her,” Bednar says. “I looked into those possibilities as well.”

Bednar believes Huisentruit knew the person or persons who abducted her early on the morning of June 27th, 1995, as she prepared to leave for work. Bednar doesn’t believe it was a random event and thinks it is most likely it was a person Huisentruit knew or had at least met in the days before her disappearance.

Bednar will sign copies of her book today at Borders Books in Ames. A portion of the proceeds from the book will be donated to three foundations honoring Huisentruit’s memory. Learn more at: www.bethbednar.com

By Bob Fisher, KRIB, Mason City

Senators snap, point fingers, pray for clarity

Friday was the 166th day of the this year’s Iowa legislative session and there were fits of temper and finger-pointing as senators began their day. 

Republicans complained about the way Democrats had scuttled the GOP’s bid to stage a sort of sleep-in at the statehouse until the state budget stalemate gets resolved. Senator Mark Chelgren, a Republican from Ottumwa, also complained about inaction on issues like gay marriage and abortion.

[Read more...]

Palin documentary to premiere in Pella

A film about former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin will premiere in Iowa on Tuesday at the historic Pella Opera House

Stephen Bannon is the writer and director of the documentary, which he has titled “The Undefeated”.

“This woman has been denigrated by people not just from the left, but also the intelligentsia of the Republican Party as being ‘Caribou Barbie’, as being a bimbo, as being an airhead,” Bannon says. “And you cannot come out of this film and see the empirical evidence I kind of lay out there — because I went to Harvard Business School and this is kind of laid out there as a Harvard Business School case — that she is a woman of extraordinary accomplishments.”

Palin has been invited, but Bannon cannot say whether Palin will be in Pella Tuesday night.

“We’re looking forward to showing it to Iowans for the first time and we’re real excited and, look, I’d love for Governor Palin to be there,” Bannon says. “If she’s there, great. If not, we’re going to have a fantastic time.”

Bannon and his production team scouted over 100 locations in the state before selecting the restored opera house in Pella.

“We had so many different sites that we analyzed from corn fields to old barns to beautiful old town squares, but we wanted something that was really emblematic of the values of ‘The Undefeated’,” Bannon says. “The Opera House has had its ups and downs over the years…It’s kind of weathered through and there’s nothing more ‘Undefeated’ than the Pella Opera House and that’s why we wanted to hold it there.” 

Bannon’s film focuses on Palin’s rise from obscurity, her tenure as a mayor and as governor of Alaska. The film will be shown in Pella at 5 p.m. and Bannon says if there’s enough interest, there may be a second showing later Tuesday night.  The documentary will be released nationally on July 15.

Special effort on the water highlights new alcohol limit

Boaters on Iowa’s lakes and rivers will notice more law enforcement officers patrolling the waterways this weekend. Susan Stocker, boating law administrator with the Iowa D.N.R., says the Operation Dry Water campaign is designed to draw attention to the dangers of mixing alcohol with boating.

The effort involves D.N.R. conservation officers, sheriff’s deputies, local police officers and the Iowa State Patrol. Iowa will have a new lower blood alcohol limit (BAC) for boaters beginning July 1. The current level of .10 BAC will become .08 BAC, which is the same level for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated. Stocker says too many boating fatalities in Iowa can be blamed on drunk operators.

“Over 50% of our fatalities involve alcohol,” Stocker said. Last year, 35 people were arrested for boating while intoxicated (BWI) in Iowa. Stocker believes drunken boating is even more dangerous than driving a car while intoxicated.

“When you’re operating a boat while intoxicated, you also have to compete with the effects of the wind, the glare from the sun and the water movement – which enhances the effects of alcohol on an operator,” Stocker said.

The top four bodies of water for BWI arrests in 2010 were the Okoboji lakes chain, the Missouri River, Saylorville Lake and the Mississippi River.

Western Iowans urged to report flood damage

State officials are urging western Iowans who have flood damage to report an estimate of that damage. Lucinda Robertson, spokeswoman for Iowa’s Emergency Management division, says the information collected will help determine the state’s eligibility for federal disaster aid.

“This is not an application for assistance,” Robertson says. “It’s just a way to help counties and state government get a picture of the status of the damages that are out there right now and we might be able to use this to request federal aid, if it’s warranted.”

Robertson says the state has opened a hotline to collect information for a preliminary damage report. “This information that is being gathered by the hotline might help assist the state in the preparation of a request for federal disaster aid,” Robertson says. “So what they’re doing is collecting information to help us get a picture of current damage that is out there to homes and businesses.”

Western Iowans can report the severity of flood damage to their home or business by calling the Iowa Concern Hotline at 1-800-447-1985. The hotline is staffed 24 hours a day.

Travel delay doesn’t dampen attitude of Camp Hope kids

A group of Russian children on their way to Iowa in hopes of finding a new home finally arrived Thursday after three days spent at the airport in Washington, D.C. with weather delays.

Camp Hope director Anne Nieland says the trip to the U.S. is an adventure in itself, and all the delay added to the experience.

Nieland says to get here and be hit with weather delays, the kids got a true American experience right off the bat. Nieland says the children will participate in a variety of activities throughout the week as part of Camp Hope, and this camp could literally change their lives.

She says this is another camp, but it just so happens with this camp they are hoping to find a forever family that they join to live in America forever. Though the visit got off to a rocky start with the flight delays, Nieland says the eight orphans from northwestern Russia have quickly adapted.

Nieland says when she saw the kids get off the plane Thursday she thought there was no way they’ve just been through five days of travel as they looked good and were ready to meet their host families. The local families will take care of the kids that range in age from seven to 13 throughout their stay.

Nieland says the families don’t necessarily have to adopt the kids, they can host the child and enjoy the child. She says that’s one way to give back to the community. If they do want to adopt the child, they start the process here and then go over to Russia and complete the process and bring the child home. In the past 11 years, Camp Hope has been directly responsible for finding homes for more than 180 older Russian orphans.

You can find out more about Camp Hope on-line at:www.camphope.net.