January 27, 2012

State saw some unusual late night tornadoes this year

Iowa’s tornado season is over for 2011 and forecasters say it was a fairly typical season in many ways, with a few surprises. National Weather Service meteorologist Brad Small says an even 50 tornadoes were confirmed in Iowa over the past year.

“Fifty is right about normal for the number of tornadoes in a season,” Small says. “The 30-year average is 47, so it’s really typical for a tornado season. They were clustered in three different primary events in March, April and another one in May.” He says most of this year’s twisters hit between 9 and 10 P.M.

“Tornadoes typically occur during peak heating of the day which is the late afternoon and early evening hours,” Small says. “We also had some tornadoes late in the night and early in the morning in July, not too many but that also occurs infrequently.”

A total of 20 twisters hit on a single day, April 9th, the day the Monona County town of Mapleton was hit, destroying about a hundred homes and businesses over 15 blocks. This year, no deaths were reported statewide from tornadoes but 16 people were hurt, 14 of them in the Mapleton tornado.

The average path cut by a tornado this year was three miles long but one tornado went nearly 30 miles. While Small says tornado season is essentially over for the year, tornadoes can hit during any month. “The chances are certainly diminishing and we’re all but over,” Small says. “You remember back in 2005, we had a tornado outbreak in November but we’re several weeks past that point. They hit Woodward and Stratford.”

Typically, he says temperatures need to at least be in the 60s with a dew point in the 50s for tornadoes to form. The last tornado of this year’s season was reported on July 11th. It marks the earliest cessation of tornado activity in the state since reliable records started being kept in 1980.

Cedar Rapids police still searching for shooter in Saturday homicide

No arrests have been made after a fatal shooting late Saturday night in Cedar Rapids. Police spokesperson Sergeant Cristy Hamblin says it happened in a neighborhood a short distance away from the police station.

Officers arrived to find 30-year-old Andre Herron had been shot in the street. Herron was later pronounced dead at Mercy Hospital. Few details about the case are being released, but officers are interviewing witnesses and neighbors who heard gunshots.

“We’ve talked to several people and we’re looking at a lot of different pieces of evidence, but at this time we haven’t made an arrest,” Hamblin said. “We’re working very hard to find the people who are responsible for this.” Hamblin said it doesn’t appear the shooting was “random,” though the motive remains unclear.

Cause of fire at Hull city offices not known

Smoke around the Hull city offices.

Investigators are still searching for the cause of Saturday’s fire that swept through the city office building in the northwest Iowa town of Hull.

 The Sioux County Sheriff’s Office reports that about 11:15 A.M., they received a report of a fire in progress at 1133 Maple Street in Hull, the address of the Hull City Offices.

Upon arrival on the fire scene, the Hull Fire Department found the structure was fully involved in fire. Three other fire departments assisted to get the fire under control, which took about two hours.

The building suffered extensive damage. Authorities say that the cause of the fire is undetermined at this time and the State Fire Marshal’s office will be assisting the Hull Fire Department in conducting the investigation.

By Scott Van Aartsen, KIWA, Sheldon

Fire crews working at Hull city offices.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Photos courtesy of the Sioux County Sheriff.

Branstad considers new steps to protect elderly, kids from sexual predators (audio)

Governor Branstad.

Governor Branstad is considering new steps to protect nursing home residents from a fellow patient with a criminal history of being sexually aggressive.

About a year ago a judge ordered the transfer of an 83-year-old man being held in the state prison unit for sexual predators into a nursing home in Pomeroy. That man is now accused of assaulting a 95-year-old woman in the nursing home.    

“We think it’s important that these things not happen in the future,” Branstad says, “and want to determine what is the most appropriate changes we need to make in terms of our laws, rules and procedures to prevent these kind of things from occurring.”

Branstad is criticizing a top aide to former Governor Chet Culver for failing to ensure the nursing home had a written plan to deal with the convicted criminal who had been ordered into the private facility. Branstad says he may ask legislators to pass a bill to deal with the situation if the “working group” reviewing the case believes laws must be changed.

“At least I think there should be a notification of all the people that reside in those facilities and their families,” Branstad says. “But I think we also need to look at whether or not those are the appropriate placement locations in the first place.”

Branstad is also visiting with members of the board that governs Iowa, Iowa State and U.N.I. to ensure allegations of sex abuse within the schools’ athletic departments are handled appropriately. Branstad says the “tragic situation” at Penn State has made “everyone very sensitive” to the topic.

“We need to be extremely careful to make sure whether it’s in a nursing home or a university campus or whether it’s in a day care or grade school or wherever it is that we’re doing as much as we can to protect the well-being of our citizens,” Branstad says, “especially children and elderly who are particularly vulnerable to sexual predators.”

Reports indicate former Penn State coach Joe Paterno did not notify police, but told a superior at the university when one of his assistant coaches reported witnessing another coach assaulting a boy.

AUDIO of Branstad’s weekly news conference.

Mission of Mercy organizers already planning for next event

Organizers of the latest free dental clinic known as the “Iowa Mission of Mercy” (I-MOM) say it went very well and they are planning on holding another event next year. The clinic was held the weekend before Thanksgiving in Sioux City. Area dentist Dick Hettinger says they provided free dental care that exceeded one-million dollars in value in the two-day clinic.

Hettinger says they had a little over 900 people treated on Friday and a little over 700 on Saturday. He says they were surprised they had so many people come out on Saturday as the weather turned bad with freezing drizzle that made travel difficult. Dr. Hettinger says nearly 1,200 dentists, dental hygienists, dental assistants and others volunteered to help. He says things went well without any major problems.

Hettinger says there wasn’t anything dramatically out of the ordinary for the treatment they gave. He did mention one man who was helping clean up who had twelve teeth removed the day before and was very thankful he had been able to get it done. Hettinger says it’s obvious the need continues, and they plan to hold a fifth event.

Hettinger says they are already beginning plans and will go to the east side of the state next year. He says they are not ready to announce the town yet, but will try to hold it early in the year to avoid weather problems. The first three I-MOM events before Sioux City were held in Waterloo, Newton, and Cedar Rapids.

Beloit man dies in farm accident

A man from far northwest Iowa has died as the result of injuries he sustained in a farm accident on Friday afternoon. The Lyon County Sheriff’s Office reports 64-year-old Dennis Gardner, a life-long resident of Beloit, was working at a farm site when he lost control of the tractor he was driving and it rolled over.

Gardner was pronounced dead at the scene, from injuries he received in the accident. Beloit is a little more than a mile south of Canton, South Dakota, and just across the Big Sioux River in Lyon County, Iowa.

By Scott Van Aartsen, KIWA, Sheldon

UNI to discuss decline of bee population

A panel discussion about the decline in the world’s honeybee population is set to take place this week at the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls. State Apiarist Andrew Joseph will be one of the panelists. He says the last several years have been difficult on Iowa’s bee industry.

“We have heavy pest and parasite populations in our hives and we just haven’t had good seasons for honey production and pollination,” Joseph said. “We’ve had sick, stressed and struggling bees and what that equals is low honey yields, poor pollination and high death rates in (bee) colonies.”

There are between 1,500 to 2,000 Iowans involved in beekeeping – from the hobby level to commercial producers. Joseph says they maintain up to 35,000 colonies which are critical to agricultural pollination. “We are largely responsible for millions of dollars worth of crop pollination in Iowa. Not so much corn and soybeans, of course, but fruits and vegetables…the value these provide really adds up and with struggling pollinators, those crops can pay a price as well,” Joseph said.

The biggest parasitic enemy of bees is the Varroa mite, which has plagued the industry since the 1990s. Joseph and the other panelists are also concerned with the phenomena known as Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) which has puzzled researchers and killed off a large portion of the honeybee population worldwide. CCD first appeared in 2006.

“There’s a beekeeper in one part of Iowa that lost over 5,000 colonies of bees (from CCD) just this past spring,” Joseph said. “So it’s very much still a real concern for beekeepers.” The panel discussion on the U.N.I. campus will follow the showing of the film “The Vanishing of the Bees,” scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Center for Energy and Environmental Education auditorium.

The event is free and open to the public.