Violation of No-Contact Order

At approximately 6:00pm on July 21st, the Henry County Sheriff’s Office attempted to conduct a traffic stop in the 2600-grid of Perkins Road. The vehicle was observed to have no registration plates, and the driver was identified and known not to possess a valid driver’s license. The driver and passenger also have an active No-Contact Order.

The vehicle then accelerated away from the Sheriff’s Office vehicles, and was followed to the back of a property in the 2500-grid of Perkins Road. The passenger then was taken into custody.

As a result, Samantha Sammons, 33, of Salem, was arrested for Violation of a No-Contact Order, a simple misdemeanor; two counts of Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, simple misdemeanor; and two counts of Possession of a Controlled Substance 3rd or Subsequent Offense, D Felony.

This incident is still under investigation.

*A criminal charge is merely an accusation, and the defendant are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty*

Pamela Scott

Pamela Sue Scott, 67, of Salem, passed away on Sunday, July 23, 2023, at the Southeast Iowa Regional Hospice House in West Burlington surrounded by her loving family.

Pamela’s family will host a celebration of her life on Saturday, July 29, 2023, beginning at 2 p.m. at her home in Salem.  Cremation has been entrusted to the care of Murphy Funeral Home of Mt. Pleasant.

Online condolences may be sent to the family at www.murphyfuneralandmonuments.com

Murphy Funeral Home of Mt. Pleasant, is caring for her arrangements.

 

Henry County Board of Supervisors Public Hearing for Rezoning

The Henry County Board of Supervisors met on Tuesday, July 25th to discuss the rezoning of a part of Southeast section 7 center township from agricultural to industrial. There was a public hearing held, and Joe Buffington provided his insight as part of the Planning and Zoning commission.

The rezoning would allow a cement plant to be built in this area. There was plenty of debate between the two sides of residents, with one side arguing that there is not enough industrial infrastructure in the town of Mount Pleasant and that this is progress for the town. The other side believes that this should not even be considered, given that there are residents and homeowners in this same area.

Mitchell Taylor, an attorney representing an “undisclosed resident” believes that the original site plan failed to follow the rules of the county ordinance, as it did not provide dimensions and was different than the site plan proposed at a later date. Darin Stater, the county attorney, agreed with Joe Buffington that the site plan was correctly presented and believes that the board of supervisors could legally move forward.

As the supervisors deliberated, they discussed the potential of going “back to scratch” which entails the original site plan being republished and fixed. While there were three options brought forth, the supervisors ultimately chose to go back to scratch. It is now up to the owner to provide an improved site plan for this to move forward.

It is important to note that this is the first rezoning since moving to an electronic application, and so much of the difficulty stems from that.

Railroad Crossings in Mt. Pleasant Expected Completion Date

While driving around Mt. Pleasant, you may find yourself having to take a detour over certain crossings at the railroad tracks. Broadway, Cherry, and White are all open and you can drive through those crossings as usual. Meanwhile, Adams, Lincoln, and Main are all closed off. We expect this work to be completed Wednesday or Thursday per Public Works.

Special Session Discusses IW Property and Revenue Purpose Statement

There was a special Mount Pleasant Community School Board meeting on July 24th to discuss two important matters.

The first one, which many are aware of, is the decision to purchase property from Iowa Wesleyan and use it for the school district. There are three main properties that were discussed, and it seems at this moment as if two of them are available. The practice field just south of Maple Leaf and the Central Campus, including the parking lot, have had bids from the MPCSD. 1.25 million dollars is the purchase price for the two bids. The Central Campus includes Howe Student Activity Center and Ruble Arena, the Student Union, Old Main, Pioneer Hall, University Chapel, and the P.E.O Memorial Building.

An expert estimated that the gym, walking track, and offices alone would cost upwards of 15 million dollars. The board sees their long-term goal an believes this opportunity is “too good to pass up.”

Discussion was had over the Willis Wrestling Facility, however, a better offer from a different entity was accepted. Members of the school board deliberated on this subject, with one stating that they have no issue with adding a backup offer for the wrestling facility. A different member then chimed in saying “I don’t see it as a deal breaker” as they think the board should be more focused on the other two properties. The board decided to move forward with the practice field and central campus.

The other pressing issue was the discussion over the renewal of the Revenue Purpose Statement. The RPS governs how the one-cent sales tax can be spent by a school district. This is a statewide sales tax that is currently due to expire in 2049. The current MPCSD RPS expires in 2031, and there will now be a vote on September 12th, 2023, to renew this statement until 2049.

This is not an increase in taxes, rather it just allows the school district to spend this fund, typically around $2,000,000 a year, how they decide is best. The Revenue Purpose Statement will stay in effect until 2031 regardless of the outcome of the vote in the fall.

KILJ will continue to provide updates to this developing story and will keep Southeast Iowa informed.

Iowa Crop Progress and Condition Report July 17th-23rd

Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig commented today on the Iowa Crop Progress and Condition Report released by the USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service. The report is released weekly April through November. Additionally, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship provides a weather summary each week during this time.

“Despite dry conditions, the below average temperatures over the past week provided moisture-stressed crops some relief,” said Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig. “Though the entire state remains abnormally dry or in some level of drought, and the hottest stretch of July is forecasted this week, initial August outlooks are showing some chances for cooler and wetter conditions.”

The weekly report is also available on the USDA’s website at nass.usda.gov.

Crop Report

Another dry, but relatively cool week left Iowa farmers with 6.3 days suitable for fieldwork during the week ending July 23, 2023, according to the USDA, National Agricultural Statistics Service. Field activities included cutting hay and harvesting oats. Some reports were received of farmers applying insecticides and fungicides. Persistent dry weather has raised concerns regarding crop conditions.

Topsoil moisture condition rated 13 percent very short, 42 percent short, 43 percent adequate and 2 percent surplus. Subsoil moisture condition rated 17 percent very short, 46 percent short, 36 percent adequate and 1 percent surplus.

Corn silking hit 79 percent this week, 6 days ahead of last year and 3 days ahead of normal. Nineteen percent of the corn crop has reached the dough stage, 5 days ahead of last year and 4 days ahead of the 5-year average. Some reports were received of corn starting to dent. Corn condition rated 63 percent good to excellent. Eighty-one percent of soybeans were blooming, 1 week ahead of last year and 5 days ahead of the average. Soybeans setting pods reached 35 percent, 2 days ahead of last year and 1 day ahead of the 5-year average. Soybean condition remained steady at 58 percent good to excellent. Ninety-three percent of oats were turning color, 11 days ahead of last year and 4 days ahead of normal. Oats harvested for grain reached 36 percent, 1 day ahead of last year and 1 day ahead the five-year average. Oat condition remained 51 percent good to excellent.

The State’s second cutting of alfalfa hay reached 86 percent complete, 6 days ahead of both last year and the average. The State’s third cutting of alfalfa hay reached 20 percent complete, 12 days ahead of last year and 11 days ahead of the 5-year average. Hay condition dropped to 37 percent good to excellent. Pasture condition fell to 24 percent good to excellent. Pasture and hay growth remain slow and below average, resulting in supplemental feeding of livestock.

Weather Summary
Provided by Justin Glisan, Ph.D., State Climatologist, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship

Unseasonably cool conditions continued over Iowa through the reporting period with negative temperature departures in the four to six-degree range across the state; the statewide average temperature was 69.3 degrees, 5.5 degrees below normal. The southwest corner of Iowa experienced three days of widespread and near-normal rainfall with much of north-central and east-central Iowa reporting departures of an inch or more below average. Weekend storms also brought measurable totals to the northeast corner.

Canadian wildfire smoke persisted through Sunday (16th) evening as westerly winds helped shift the flow. Afternoon highs held in the upper 70s with low 80s across much of southern Iowa. Showers and scattered thunderstorms fired over the southwestern half of the state during the early morning hours on Monday (17th) and Tuesday (18th). The first wave of thunderstorms brought several reports of hail through southern Iowa with Malvern (Mills County) reporting up to 1.50-inch hailstones; one-inch hail was observed from Lorimor (Union County) to Oskaloosa (Mahaska County). There were also multiple narrow swaths of rainfall totals above 0.30 inch over southwestern Iowa with 0.32 inch in Council Bluffs (Pottawattamie County) to 0.85 inch in Missouri Valley (Harrison County). The second round of showers clipped the southwest corner with lighter rainfall totals at a handful of stations ranging from 0.06 inch in Lamoni (Decatur County) to 0.16 inch at Hastings (Mills County). Additional showers formed over the afternoon and evening hours on Wednesday (19th) with totals at several stations under 0.10 inch.

Thursday (20th) was the ideal day of the week with daytime highs in the upper 70s and low 80s under brilliant sapphire skies. Partly cloudy conditions were reported in central Iowa, though the sun broke out as the evening wore on. Winds were no stronger than a baby’s breath into Friday (21st) morning with lows in the upper 50s to mid-60s. Afternoon conditions were near seasonal with mid-level clouds transiting the sky. Daytime temperatures were a repeat of the previous day with puffy cumulus dotting the sky. Stars were visible for much of Iowa into Saturday (22nd) morning though foggy conditions developed in northwestern Iowa. Westerly winds and low to mid-80s were observed throughout the day as mostly sunny skies reigned. The week ended with isolated thunderstorms crossing the Minnesota border into northern Iowa through the evening hours, dissipating just southwest of Jack Creek in Emmet County; additional thunderstorms developed in eastern Iowa overnight into Sunday (23rd) with a pocket of heavier rainfall in Cedar County, though amounts quickly decreased towards the Weber neighborhood in western Coralville (Johnson County). Several counties in northeast Iowa also saw widespread totals in the 0.10- to 0.50-inch range.

Weekly rain totals ranged from no accumulation across a large northwest-to-southeast swath of Iowa to 1.50 inches in Adair (Adair County). The statewide weekly average precipitation was 0.18 inch; the normal is 0.99 inch. Sioux City Airport (Woodbury County) reported the week’s high temperature of 89 degrees on the 22nd, four degrees above normal. Fayette (Fayette County) and Vinton (Benton County) reported the week’s low temperature of 48 degrees on the 18th, on average 12 degrees below normal.

Final Policy for Free and Reduced School Lunch

The Iowa Department of Education, Bureau of Nutrition and Health Services, has finalized its policy for free and reduced price meals for students unable to pay the full price of meals served under the National School Lunch Program, School Breakfast Program, Special Milk Program and the Afterschool Care Snack Program.

 

State and Local school officials have adopted the following family size and income criteria for determining eligibility:

 

INCOME ELIGIBILITY GUIDELINES (Effective 7-1-2023)

Household Size

Free Meals

Reduced Price Meals

  Yearly Monthly Twice a Month Every two weeks Weekly Yearly Monthly Twice a Month Every two weeks Weekly
1 18,954 1,580 790 729 365 26,973 2,248 1,124 1,038 519
2 25,636 2,137 1,069 986 493 36,482 3,041 1,521 1,404 702
3 32,318 2,694 1,347 1,243 622 45,991 3,833 1,917 1,769 885
4 39,000 3,250 1,625 1,500 750 55,500 4,625 2,313 2,135 1,068
5 45,682 3,807 1,904 1,757 879 65,009 5,418 2,709 2,501 1,251
6 52,364 4,364 2,182 2,014 1,007 74,518 6,210 3,105 2,867 1,434
7 59,046 4,921 2,461 2,271 1,136 84,027 7,003 3,502 3,232 1,616
8 65,728 5,478 2,739 2,528 1,264 93,536 7,795 3,898 3,598 1,799
For each

additional

family

member add:

6,682 557 279 257 129 9,509 793 397 366 183

Households may be eligible for free or reduced-price meal benefits one of four ways

  1. Households whose income is at or below the levels shown are eligible for reduced price meals or free meals, if they complete an application for free and reduced price school meals/milk. Households may complete one application listing all children and return it to your student’s school. When completing an application, only the last four digits of the social security number of the household’s primary wage earner or another adult household member is needed.
  2. Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) households, students receiving benefits under the Family Investment Program (FIP) and students in a few specific Medicaid programs are eligible for free or reduced price meals. Most students from SNAP and FIP households will be qualified for free meals automatically. These households will receive a letter from their student’s schools notifying them of their benefits. Households that receive a letter from the school need to do nothing more for their student(s) to receive free or reduced price meals. No further application is necessary. If any students were not listed on the notice of eligibility, the household should contact the school to have free or reduced price meal benefits extended to them. If you feel you would qualify for free meal benefits and received notification qualifying for reduced price benefits, complete an application for free and reduced price meals. Households must contact the school if they choose to decline meal benefits.
  3. Some SNAP and FIP households will receive a letter from the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) which will qualify the children listed on the letter for free meals. Parents must take this letter to the student’s school to receive free meals.
  4. SNAP or FIP households receiving benefits that do not receive a letter from DHHS must complete an application with the abbreviated information as indicated on the application and instructions, for their students to receive free meals. When the application lists an assistance program’s case number for any household member, eligibility for free benefits is extended to all students in a household.

 

Eligibility from the previous year will continue within the same school for up to 30 operating days into the new school year. When the carryover period ends, unless the household is notified that their students are directly certified or the household submits an application that is approved, the students must pay full price for school meals and the school will not send a reminder or a notice of expired eligibility. An application cannot be approved unless complete eligibility information is submitted. Applications may be submitted at any time during the year. If a family member becomes unemployed the family should contact the school to complete an application. Households notified of their student’s eligibility must contact the school if the household chooses to decline the free meal benefits.

 

Foster children are eligible for free meal benefits. Some foster students will be qualified for free meals automatically through the state direct certification process. Their host family will receive notification of these benefits. Families that receive this notification from the school need to do nothing more for their foster students to receive free meals. If a family has foster students living with them and does not receive notification and wishes to apply for such meals, instructions for making application for such students are contained on the application form. A foster student may be included as a member of the foster family if the foster family chooses to also apply for benefits for other students. Including students in foster care as household members may help other students in the household qualify for benefits. If the foster family is not eligible for free or reduced price meal benefits, it does not prevent a foster student from receiving benefits. Special Supplement Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) participants may be eligible for free or reduced price meals based on a completed application.

 

When known by the school, households will be notified of any child eligible for free meals if the children are enrolled in the Head Start/Even Start program or are considered homeless, migrant or runaway. If any children are not listed on the notice of eligibility, contact the school for assistance in receiving benefits. If households are dissatisfied with the application approval done by the officials, they may make a formal appeal either orally or in writing to the school’s designated hearing official. The policy statement on file at the school contains an outline of the hearing procedure. School officials may verify the information in the application, and that deliberate misrepresentation of information may subject the applicant to prosecution under applicable state and federal criminal statutes. Households should contact their local school for additional information.

 

There will be no discrimination against individuals with Limited English Proficiency (LEP) in the school meal programs.

 

Nondiscrimination Statement: This explains what to do if you believe you have been treated unfairly.

In accordance with federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, this institution is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation), disability, age, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity.

Program information may be made available in languages other than English. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication to obtain program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language), should contact the responsible state or local agency that administers the program or USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339.

To file a program discrimination complaint, a Complainant should complete a Form AD-3027, USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form which can be obtained online at: https://www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/documents/USDA-OASCR%20P-Complaint-Form-0508-0002-508-11-28-17Fax2Mail.pdf, from any USDA office, by calling (866) 632-9992, or by writing a letter addressed to USDA. The letter must contain the complainant’s name, address, telephone number, and a written description of the alleged discriminatory action in sufficient detail to inform the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights (ASCR) about the nature and date of an alleged civil rights violation. The completed AD-3027 form or letter must be submitted to USDA by:

  1. mail:
    U.S. Department of Agriculture
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights
    1400 Independence Avenue, SW
    Washington, D.C. 20250-9410; or
  2. fax: (833) 256-1665 or (202) 690-7442; or
  3. email: program.intake@usda.gov

This institution is an equal opportunity provider.

 

Declaración de no Discriminación del Departamento de Agricultura de los Estados Unidos

 

Iowa Nondiscrimination Notice.  “It is the policy of this CNP provider not to discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or religion in its programs, activities, or employment practices as required by the Iowa Code section 216.6, 216.7, and 216.9.  If you have questions or grievances related to compliance with this policy by this CNP Provider, please contact the Iowa Civil Rights Commission, Grimes State Office building, 400 E. 14th St. Des Moines, IA 50319-1004; phone number 515-281-4121, 800-457-4416; website: https://icrc.iowa.gov/.”