ST. PAUL, Minn. – The Minnesota Wild are moving their primary minor league team to Iowa.
The Wild made the long-anticipated announcement Thursday that their American Hockey League affiliate will relocate from Houston to Des Moines, starting n…
ST. PAUL, Minn. – The Minnesota Wild are moving their primary minor league team to Iowa.
The Wild made the long-anticipated announcement Thursday that their American Hockey League affiliate will relocate from Houston to Des Moines, starting n…
Authorities in Iowa are investigating allegations that high school students repeatedly hit one of their classmates in the head with footballs.
The teenager and his grandmother filed a lawsuit last week saying the attack in October at Bedford High School in southwest Iowa resulted in severe brain injuries and permanent disabilities.
Iowa Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Jessica Lown said Tuesday that the agency has launched a criminal investigation. An agent will turn over information to a prosecutor, who will decide whether to file charges.
The lawsuit filed Friday in federal court in Des Moines alleges that school administrators didn’t do enough to protect the boy from repeated bullying.
Bedford Superintendent Joe Drake says student safety is a priority and the school investigates all reports of bullying or harassment.
An Iowa teenager is suing his school district and several administrators because he says they didn’t do enough to protect him from bullying and an assault that left him permanently disabled.
The teen and his grandmother filed the lawsuit Friday in federal court in Des Moines contending he was subjected to persistent bullying by other students at his Bedford high school. They say it culminated in last October’s attack, in which two students pelted him in the head with footballs, leaving him with severe brain injuries that required surgery to remove a blood clot and with permanent disabilities.
The boy is no longer in the hospital.
Bedford Superintendent Joe Drake said in a statement he hasn’t seen the lawsuit, but that bullying isn’t tolerated and all reported incidents are investigated.
In a bold move, the NCAA has planned to announce today that starting in 2016, all collegiate sports will each move to a year-round season. “We have been secretly extending the schedules for years, usually by a few days or weeks at a time,” says a senior administrative official with the league. “We figured we would just go for it and make it year round.” While details are sketchy, the early information shows how the major sports will see some dramatic changes over the next three years. Basketball Basketball will move to “Amazing April” in 2014, “Marvelous May” in 2015, and make the final jump to “Spectacular September” in 2016. “We were worried we would have to compete with the end of baseball, but when we heard that they were moving that to January to meet with their elongated schedule, we were relieved,” says an NCAA marketer. “What do you think of ‘Spectacular September?’ I came up with that, but was voted down for ‘Sexy September’ as that is when Sports Illustrated is moving their ‘Swimsuit Edition‘ and we didn’t want to compete with that. We are really thinking this through.” Football Football will move to a playoff schedule to finally clear the debate against the current bowl game picture. “We are still going to play our bowl game schedule as it stands today, but we have added an additional playoff picture of all division teams in a single elimination tournament. This will give us about 8 months of playoff games, culminating in the championship game in August,” say a senior secretary with the NCAA regional office in Des Moines, Iowa. “Granted, this will cause some issues for teams who are in training for the new season during these months, but this won’t be a problem for the lesser programs who can’t win playoff games and for Ohio State who will still be ineligible. Naturally, the entire state of Florida, Oklahoma, and that team in Utah are worried. But I think if we give them a bigger ‘tattoo allowance’ they may be mollified.” Hockey Hockey will move to playoffs every 3 months to try to make the sport interesting. Baseball Baseball will follow the new schedule being adopted by Major League Baseball for their “season that never sleeps” with a “best of 13” series finals in January. Like the NCAA, MLB is excited for the changes. For instance, a representative for Ballpark Hotdogs is thrilled with the new season schedule. “We have been asked to supply an estimated 3B – yes, billion – more wieners to the parks to keep up with the growing demand and enhanced schedule. With Opening Day happening simultaneously during the league playoffs, it means we sometimes will have a double-header, for say . . . The National League Championship, while those same two teams also play their Opening Day game for the next season. Pretty exciting if you ask me. Now we just have to make sure our mustard supplier can handle it.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
By The Huffington Post News Editors
WASHINGTON — Immigration reform that includes a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants may not be the bogeyman many Republicans think it is, GOP strategist Ed Gillespie and pollster John McLaughlin said Wednesday, based on focus groups with conservatives in Iowa and South Carolina.
Resurgent Republic, a GOP group led by Gillespie, released information on Thursday from focus groups conducted earlier this month in Greenville, S.C., and Des Moines, Iowa. In Des Moines, they talked to self-identified conservatives who caucused last year. In Greenville, they spoke to Republicans who voted in the past two GOP primaries.
Republican voters in the group seemed open to learning more about immigration policy. When they hear the concept of a pathway to citizenship explained, they don’t necessarily oppose it. And if immigration reform is going to happen, they would rather it be under the leadership of fellow conservatives such as Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), than President Barack Obama.
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By The Huffington Post News Editors
DES MOINES, Iowa — Rapper Tone Loc has collapsed on stage while performing in Iowa.
The Des Moines Register (http://dmreg.co/ZAFc0j) reports that Loc, whose real name is Anthony T. Smith, collapsed after finishing a song during a Saturday night concert in Des Moines. Three of the newspaper’s workers who were at the show said people attended to Loc for several minutes before fans were asked to leave.
An Iowa police officer has rescued an unconscious driver by pulling him from his burning car.
Urbandale police spokesman Randy Peterson said Tuesday that Officer Zac McDowell wasn’t injured Sunday night when he saved 18-year-old Ian Waseskuk (wa-SEHS‘-kuh). The officer’s dashboard camera shows McDowell opening the car’s passenger door, reaching in and grabbing Waseskuk to pull him away from the flames.
Police say Waseskuk was driving in circles, doing “doughnuts,” in a church parking lot across from his home in suburban Des Moines when his car hit an air conditioning unit.
Peterson says Waseskuk will be charged with misdemeanor reckless driving when he leaves Mercy Hospital in Des Moines. Hospital spokesman Gregg Lagan (LAY’-guhn) says Waseskuk is in fair but stable condition.
Filed under: Consumer Ally, Travel
A Greyhound bus passenger who was left outside a locked bus station in sub-zero temperatures for a layover is petitioning the bus service to stop exposing its passengers to the elements.
Ankur Singh said that last month he was traveling by bus from Illinois to Minnesota, and his itinerary included an early-morning, five-hour layover in Des Moines, Iowa. The bus arrived in Des Moines and dropped the passengers off at 4 a.m., but the bus terminal didn’t open its doors until 5 a.m. That meant Singh and about 10 other passengers were forced to wait outside for an hour in frigid Midwestern temperatures in the dead of winter. Singh said that with the windchill, it was minus 17 degrees that morning.
In the wake of the incident, Singh took to the internet, posting a petition to Change.org titled “Greyhound: Don’t Put Customers at Risk for Hypothermia and Frostbite.” As of this writing, it’s garnered more than 88,000 signatures.
The good news is that it doesn’t appear that any of the stranded passengers actually got frostbite or hypothermia. Singh says he survived by putting on all the clothes in his bag. He also says that when an older woman waiting with them started “shaking uncontrollably,” another man gave her his jacket. Giving those conditions, it’s easy to see how the layover could have ended in disaster.
“It’s mind-boggling to me that they could even think of doing something like that,” Singh told us.
Perhaps most troubling is that Greyhound didn’t give any kind of warning about the outdoor layover on their tickets. Singh says passengers weren’t informed until after they’d boarded the bus.
The good news is that the petition seems to have caught Greyhound’s attention. Singh says he spoke with a media relations director from the company who informed him that the company was speaking with the partner carriers who owned the Des Moines station.
“I just want to make sure they solve it nationwide and not just at the [Des Moines] station,” he says.
In the meantime, though, there’s the issue of Greyhound failing to warn customers of the outdoor layovers in advance. Singh says that topic didn’t come up during his conversation, and Greyhound did not respond to our request for comment.
Matt Brownell is the consumer and retail reporter for DailyFinance. You can reach him at Matt.Brownell@teamaol.com, and follow him on Twitter at @Brownellorama.
Photo Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Filed under: Company News, Media
By RYAN NAKASHIMA
LOS ANGELES (AP) – Time Warner Inc. (TWX) said Wednesday that it will spin off the magazine unit behind Time, Sports Illustrated and People into a separate, publicly traded company by the end of the year.
CEO Jeff Bewkes said in a statement Wednesday that the decision to split off the Time Inc. magazine company will give Time Warner “strategic clarity” and enable it to focus on its TV networks including TNT, HBO and CNN, and its Warner Bros. studio, which produces movies and TV shows.
He said the move would create value for shareholders, similar to the company’s previous spin-offs of Time Warner Cable (TWC) and AOL (AOL).
In recent weeks, Time Warner had been in talks to combine all of Meredith’s magazines with Time Inc.’s lifestyle titles such as People, InStyle and Real Simple. But talks broke down over a value for the combined company and over which magazines from Time Inc. would be included in the mix, according to a person familiar with the matter. The person was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Meredith said Wednesday that it respected Time Warner‘s decision and hoped to work with it on future opportunities. Meredith publishes magazines aimed at women such as Better Homes and Gardens, Fitness and Family Circle.
Time Warner shares rose 79 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $56.25 in after-hours trading following the announcement, after closing up 41 cents at $55.46. Shares of Des Moines, Iowa-based Meredith fell 80 cents, or 2 percent, to $39.50 in after-hours trading after closing down 86 cents at $40.30.
Analysts have estimated that the Time Inc. division is worth around $2.5 billion.
Time Warner said the spin-off would be tax-free to its shareholders.
The move completes the years-long unwinding of a media and telecoms giant formed in 2001 when America Online, an Internet access company, used $147 billion worth of inflated stock to buy Time Warner, in what has been regarded as the worst corporate merger of all time.
Expected company synergies never materialized. Over the years, Time Warner moved to spin off the cable TV hookup business as well as AOL in order to focus on its profitable and growing TV and movie businesses.
Matthew Harrigan, an analyst with Wunderlich Securities, said shareholders have wanted the spin-off of the challenged magazine business for some time, mainly because the rise of Internet advertising has steadily eroded ad revenue from print publications.
Investors had come to see the magazine business as a drag on revenues and profits. According to the Publishers Information Bureau, U.S. magazine advertising revenue fell 3 percent in 2012 to $21 billion.
“Investors like pure plays and some instances where there are genuine synergies,” he said. “I think they concluded it was a bit of an odd duck.”
The person said …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
Frontier Airlines Provides Travelers with Flexibility Due to Winter Storm
Airline allows passengers to change travel plans and waives change fees for travel to, from or through the Midwest, New Jersey and Pennsylvania
DENVER–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Due to the expected impact of a winter storm, Frontier Airlines has enacted guidelines for travel to, from or through Allentown, Bismarck, Cedar Rapids, Chicago (Midway), Cleveland, Dayton, Des Moines, Detroit, Fargo, Grand Rapids, Harrisburg, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, Sioux Falls, Trenton and Washington D.C. This policy applies to customers scheduled to travel March 5-6, 2013, who purchased tickets on or before March 5, 2013.
Customers may make one itinerary change. Rules and restrictions regarding standard change fees, advance purchase, day or time applications, blackouts, and minimum or maximum stay requirements have been waived. Origin and destination cities must remain the same. Changes must be made by midnight, March 6, 2013. Travel to/from Allentown, Bismarck, Cedar Rapids, Chicago (Midway), Cleveland, Dayton, Des Moines, Detroit, Fargo, Grand Rapids, Harrisburg, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, Sioux Falls, Trenton and Washington D.C. must be completed by March 14, 2013. If customers would like to reschedule their travel after March 14, 2013, any difference in fares will be collected.
For more information or to check the status of a flight, please visit FlyFrontier.com.
About Frontier Airlines
Frontier Airlines is a wholly owned subsidiary of Republic Airways Holdings, Inc. (NAS: RJET) , an airline holding company that also owns Chautauqua Airlines, Republic Airlines and Shuttle America. Currently in its 19th year of operations, Frontier offers service to more than 80 destinations in the United States, Mexico, Costa Rica, Jamaica and the Dominican Republic. The airline employs 4,500 aviation professionals, operating from its hub at Denver International Airport. For in-depth information on Frontier Airlines and to book tickets, visit FlyFrontier.com.
Frontier Airlines
Kate O’Malley, 720-374-4560
media@flyfrontier.com
KEYWORDS: United States North America Colorado Indiana
INDUSTRY KEYWORDS:
The article Frontier Airlines Provides Travelers with Flexibility Due to Winter Storm originally appeared on Fool.com.
Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
By Tim Brugger, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
India-based IT services provider Infosys has recently announced plans to add approximately 200 jobs at its operations in Cobb County, Ga., just outside Atlanta, this fiscal year. Infosys also said it expects the need for additional hiring in the region “in the next couple of years.”
Gautam Thakkar, vice president and unit head of enterprise services for Infosys’ Business Process Outsourcing unit, said, “It is critical for Infosys to create global hubs of talent, and the Southeast is a key U.S. region with a number of our important clients.”
In addition to its Cobb County, Metro Atlanta facility, BPO maintains a delivery center in Des Moines, Iowa, as one of its 19 U.S. locations.
The article Infosys Adds 200 Jobs in Atlanta Area originally appeared on Fool.com.
Fool contributor Tim Brugger and The Motley Fool have no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools don’t all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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DES MOINES, Iowa, Feb. 10 (UPI) — Bacon beckoned at the 2013 Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival in Des Moines, Iowa, that saw lots of homemade costumes along with a glut of bacon treats.
Iowa investigators have subpoenaed phone and email records in an attempt to unravel the mystery behind a winning $14.3 million lottery ticket that was withdrawn after the winner refused to be identified, the agent overseeing the wide-ranging inquiry told The Associated Press.
Patrick Townsend, special-agent-in-charge with the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, said investigators remain unable to identify the person who bought the Hot Lotto ticket in December 2010 at a Des Moines gas station. The purchase set in motion a bizarre series of events that has fascinated Iowans and generated worldwide attention.
A New York lawyer claiming to represent the winning trust waited until minutes before the one-year deadline to claim the prize on Dec. 29, 2011, then withdrew the claim weeks later rather than explain how he wound up with the ticket.
“I wish I could tell you it was solved. It is intriguing and has a lot of twists and turns,” Townsend said in a phone interview Monday. “This is not a normal or typical case. It has some different aspects to it. We’ve definitely taken the time to look at a lot of those things and see where the leads take us.”
Iowa Lottery CEO Terry Rich has said the case appears to be the only time in lottery history when someone has stepped forward with a winning ticket before walking away from the jackpot. Iowa DCI launched an investigation a year ago into whether a crime was committed in the purchase or possession of the ticket.
Townsend said that agents under his supervision are still actively working the case. Most recently, he said they have issued subpoenas for phone and email records as they “try to connect the dots to a couple more leads.”
“We’re trying to link communication to some specific people who we think might be part of this,” he said. “… If we knew who bought the ticket, then we’d be a lot further down the road.”
Townsend said investigators have surveillance footage from the gas station showing the purchase but want to “exhaust all leads” before releasing it to ask for the public’s help. He said divulging the video could invite false claims and expose some key details, such as how the person was dressed and paid for the ticket.
Crawford Shaw, the 77-year-old lawyer from Bedford, N.Y. who has been the public face of the mystery, again declined Tuesday to say how he obtained the ticket. Shaw signed the ticket on behalf of Hexham Investments Trust, claiming he was its sole trustee. He shipped the ticket by FedEx one day before the deadline to a Des Moines law firm, which he retained to represent him. Its attorneys stunned Lottery officials by showing up to claim the ticket with less than two hours to spare.
Lottery officials said they would not pay the jackpot until they were satisfied the ticket was legally claimed. They wanted the names of everyone who had possessed the ticket before Shaw.
Shaw claimed he was representing an attorney for a person who purchased the ticket and wished to remain anonymous and that he didn’t know the winner’s identity. He told Lottery officials the trust’s proceeds would go to a corporation in Belize, a country known as a tax haven.
Lottery officials rejected an offer by Shaw to give the jackpot to charity before he withdrew the claim to avoid “further controversy.” Officials have said the layers of secrecy could be a way for someone who stole the ticket or was prohibited from playing to claim a prize. Iowa law prohibits employees and contractors of the lottery, their relatives and anyone under 21 from playing, although officials have said the buyer appears to be of legal age.
Townsend said investigators have been in contact with law enforcement in at least one foreign country during the investigation, declining to elaborate. But Shaw claimed Tuesday they have not been in touch with him.
“I don’t think there’s anything more to tell,” Shaw said. “As far as I’m concerned, the thing is completed.”
He then hung up.
The payout for the prize would have been $7.5 million in cash, or $10.3 million over 25 years, after taxes. The mystery produced one positive side effect. Iowa Lottery officials had a “Mystery Millionaire” promotion with its share of the unclaimed jackpot, giving away a $1 million prize at the state fair in August. A recently-retired Des Moines police officer won the prize, saying he would use it to help his family during retirement.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
The followers of a meditation practice that has roots in ancient India say it’s simple: Close your eyes, silently repeat a mantra and relax. But a dispute among rivals for control over its teaching is anything but peaceful, featuring personal attacks, aggressive lawyering and accusations of improper business practices.
The feud pits the Iowa nonprofit that has taught transcendental meditation for decades against Thom Knoles, a former associate who left and built his own group of followers. The outcome could decide whether the Fairfield, Iowa-based Maharishi Foundation will continue to control the teaching of U.S. transcendental meditation — or whether rivals can market similar services and its benefits without obtaining a license from the group.
The sides are fighting for customers and to protect their own reputations in a federal court case over whether the foundation can enforce its trademark rights and claims of false advertising against Knoles and other teachers of his rival Vedic Meditation. With high stakes, the litigation over a technique that supporters say can reduce stress and blood pressure is getting tense.
To the foundation, Knoles and his followers are using the credibility and positive image associated with its technique to promote themselves and mislead customers. To Knoles’ backers, the foundation is unfairly seeking a monopoly on a technique that’s existed thousands of years.
Supporters of transcendental meditation — which involves closing one’s eyes twice daily for 20 minutes while silently thinking to reduce stress and promote health — are being warned to choose sides carefully.
“Once you’ve formally burned your bridges, however, I’m afraid there’ll be nothing more I or anyone can do to help you,” a foundation supporter wrote in 2011, advising a businessman to reconsider his commitment to Knoles, in an email included in court records.
Supporters say the technique originated with the Vedas, sacred Hindu texts. Its modern incarnation was developed in India in the 1950s by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, who later spread the technique worldwide and became spiritual guru to celebrities such as the Beatles.
Maharishi founded a university that settled in Fairfield in the 1970s. His backers manage the foundation, which teaches classes to thousands of students annually and owns trademarks for Transcendental Meditation and its TM nickname. The foundation reported $7.2 million in 2010 revenue but spent more than that advancing its mission.
Knoles, an Australia native, was a teacher in the movement 25 years. In court documents, he claims he was personally trained by the Maharishi, who died in 2008, and taught with the support of his groups. He cut ties in 1997 and has taught independently since — against the foundation’s wishes.
Knoles started using the term Vedic Meditation to refer to his style. Knoles and his son offer instructional services through a company called The Veda Center, which states on its website it’s not affiliated with the foundation.
The foundation argues that disclaimer isn’t enough. Its lawyers have claimed that Knoles and his backers mislead customers by implying that scientific studies have found a range of health benefits for Vedic Meditation. They say studies finding benefits such as reduced risk of heart disease were done on the foundation’s proprietary technique and not Knoles’ offshoot.
“We don’t think somebody else can say, ‘Hey, I’ve got a shop over here, too and we can use those 600 studies to show what I’m doing is right’,” said foundation lawyer Mark Zaiger. “Almost every single one of those studies was done on subjects that received training from certified TM trainers.”
Knoles argues the two forms of meditation are essentially one in the same, which the foundation disputes.
In legal demand letters, foundation lawyers have accused Knoles of exaggerating his credentials. One vowed to make public his misrepresentations if Knoles did not take steps to further disassociate his teachings from TM.
But Knoles declined and largely defended his biography. His attorney said he did learn under the Maharishi, was personally awarded an honorary doctorate by him, and had become “an acclaimed teacher of yoga” by age 20.
Oddly enough, the foundation hasn’t sued Knoles, for strategic reasons Zaiger said were confidential. Instead, it filed a lawsuit in 2011 against The Meditation House, an Iowa corporation owned by life coach Jules Green, who promotes Vedic Meditation on her website.
The lawsuit seeks an order preventing Green from mentioning transcendental meditation studies in her advertising, to notify customers that there is no evidence of benefits for Vedic Meditation and to pay damages for false advertising and trademark infringement.
Green is fighting the lawsuit, saying the technique cannot be controlled by a single foundation.
“I think it is incorrect, and contrary to the principles of the Vedic tradition, and does not seem to me to be the sort of thing a not-for-profit organization with spiritual goals should be doing,” she said.
Green’s attorney has argued the lawsuit is really a way for the foundation to gather evidence on Knoles. Its lawyers last month subpoenaed two California teachers who learned under Knoles, directing them to testify.
Knoles then filed paperwork to join the case last week, arguing the foundation’s trademarks are “generic and invalid” and have been used to violate U.S. antitrust laws. He’s seeking an order requiring the foundation to stop accusing him of false advertising.
Zaiger said the foundation would file a detailed response this week, saying it is simply trying to enforce its trademarks like any business would.
Jeffrey Harty, a Des Moines lawyer who has taught trademark law at University of Iowa, said the case was not the “garden variety” trademark dispute and that the “real fighting issues” appear to be false advertising claims involving statements that Vedic Meditation is the same or similar to the method taught by the Maharishi and was the subject of studies cited in promotional materials. The foundation will have to prove those statements are false and deceive consumers in order to prevail, he said.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
Authorities on Friday were investigating the death of a woman whose body was found in a western Iowa farmhouse during the search for a man suspected of kidnapping another woman days after he got out of prison.
Sac County Sheriff Ken McClure said an area resident called 911 Thursday morning to report encountering a 21-year-old woman trying to run from a vehicle about a half-mile from the farmhouse in Early, a town 100 miles northwest of Des Moines.
The woman told investigators that Kirk Riley Levin, a 21-year-old acquaintance who got out of prison on Tuesday after serving time for burglary, showed up at her home in Storm Lake and asked for a ride to the farmhouse, about 15 miles away. She said he assaulted her and told her she was being kidnapped, and that she escaped and went to seek help, McClure said.
Officers found Levin hiding in a barn and arrested him Thursday. They also found the body of another woman at the farmhouse whose death is suspicious, McClure said. An autopsy was scheduled for Friday to determine the cause of death.
Levin remained jailed Friday on preliminary charges of assault with intent to commit sexual assault, assault while participating in a felony, and third-degree kidnapping. His case hadn’t been entered into the online court database as of Friday afternoon, and it wasn’t clear if he had an attorney yet.
Levin was released New Year’s Day from the prison in Mount Pleasant after serving a little more than two years of a five-year sentence for third-degree burglary, Iowa Department of Corrections spokesman Fred Scaletta said. Iowa prison terms are frequently reduced if inmates stay out of trouble while incarcerated.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News
When his drought-stricken Nebraska farm was blanketed with several inches of snow, Tom Schwarz welcomed the moisture. But it wasn’t nearly enough.
He had hoped for a wet, snowy winter. Instead, he’s watched with worry as the sky spits mostly flakes that don’t stick.
“I just shudder to think what it’s going to be if we don’t get snow,” Schwarz said. “A friend told me it would take 150 inches of snow to get us back to normal precipitation.”
Despite getting some big storms last month, much of the U.S. is still desperate for relief from the nation’s longest dry spell in decades. And experts say it will take an absurd amount of snow to ease the woes of farmers and ranchers.
The same fears haunt firefighters, water utilities and many communities across the country.
Winter storms have dropped more than 15 inches of snow on parts of the Midwest and East in recent weeks. But climatologists say it would take at least 8 feet of snow — and likely far more — to return the soil to its pre-drought condition in time for spring planting. A foot of snow is roughly equal to an inch of water, depending on density.
Many areas are begging for moisture after a summer that caused water levels to fall to near-record lows on lakes Michigan and Huron. The Mississippi River has declined so much that barge traffic south of St. Louis could soon come to a halt. Out West, firefighters worry that a lack of snow will leave forests and fields like tinder come spring, risking a repeat of the wildfires that burned some 9.2 million acres in 2012.
Scores of cities that have already enacted water restrictions are thinking about what they will do in 2013 if heavy snows and spring rains don’t materialize.
For a while, it seemed no snow would come. Midwestern cities including Chicago, Milwaukee and Des Moines, Iowa, had their latest snows on record. How much would it take to make things right?
“An amount nobody would wish on their worst enemy,” said David Pearson, a National Weather Service hydrologist in Omaha, Neb. “It’s so out of this world it wouldn’t make much scientific sense (to guess). It would take a record-breaking snowfall for the season to get us back on track.”
That’s why Schwarz is worried about his 750 acres near Lexington in south-central Nebraska. To save his corn last summer, he pulled water from deep wells and other sources in his irrigation district, but the alfalfa he couldn’t irrigate died, something he’s never had happen before.
The soil was so dry he didn’t even try to sow winter wheat, a crop that’s planted in the fall and goes dormant over winter, relying on snow as a protective blanket.
“If we don’t get snow, we’d better get rain this spring or we’re done,” Schwarz said.
The 150 inches — more than 12 feet — isn’t likely to materialize. That would be about four times the average winter snowfall in Chicago, a city famous for its storms. Schwarz’s area usually gets about 29.5 inches of snow during the winter. As of Dec. 27, it had just 6.5 inches.
Even if a massive storm developed, the temperature would have to be right for farmers to benefit. If snow melts on frozen ground, the water will run off into rivers and streams, instead of being absorbing into the soil.
Runoff would be welcome in Sioux Falls, S.D., which was among countless communities that clamped down on water use last summer as rivers and lakes that supply power plants and households grew shallower.
South Dakota‘s biggest city imposed its first water restrictions since 2003 as the Big Sioux River, which recharges its aquifers, dropped. Homeowners were limited to watering lawns once a week. Washing outdoor surfaces like sidewalks, driveways and parking lots was banned.
“This is the driest year in our town’s history since the early 1950s,” Mayor Mike Huether said as 2012 drew to a close.
With just 5 inches of snow and some rain so far this winter, the conservation efforts will back in place next year “unless we get one heck of a snowfall and bust this drought,” Huether said.
Western states rely on snow and ice that accumulate in the mountains during the winter for as much as 80 percent of their freshwater for the year, according to the Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service. The melting snowpack replenishes streams, rivers and reservoirs and provides water for cities and crops.
A deep snowpack also can make the wildfire season more manageable by wetting forests and fields.
Tom O’Connor, the rural fire chief in Divide, Colo., would relish that after enduring what the governor called the state’s worst wildfire season ever in 2012.
O’Connor’s volunteer department responded to more than 80 calls in June, compared with the usual 30 calls. Three-fourths of the calls were related to wildfires.
The fires came after Colorado got one of its smallest snowpacks in years — by some accounts tying 2002 as the lowest snow buildup in the 45 years that records have been kept.
Still, climatologists caution that it’s too early in the winter to give up hope.
“We could be singing a different tune this winter if a storm system cooperates,” said Dave Robinson, a Rutgers University geography professor who’s also the New Jersey state climatologist. “Sometimes you get what you wish for.”
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Associated Press writers Scott Bauer in Madison, Wis.; Matt Volz in Helena, Mont.; and Mead Gruver, Cheyenne, Wyo., contributed to this report.
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The first widespread snowstorm of the season plodded across the Midwest on Thursday, as whiteout conditions sent drivers sliding over slick roads and some travelers were forced to scramble for alternate ways to get to their holiday destinations.
The storm, which dumped a foot of snow in parts of Iowa and more than 19 inches in Wisconsin’s state capital, was part of a system that began in the Rockies earlier in the week before trekking into the Midwest. It was expected to move across the Great Lakes overnight before moving into Canada.
The storm led airlines to cancel about 1,000 flights ahead of the Christmas holiday — relatively few compared to past big storms, though the number was climbing.
Most of the canceled flights were at Chicago’s O’Hare and Midway international airports. Aviation officials said Thursday night more than 350 flights had been canceled at O’Hare and more than 150 at Midway. Many people at O’Hare were taking the cancellations in stride and the normally busy airport was much quieter than normal Thursday evening.
Aprielle Kugler said she was considering taking a bus to Des Moines on Friday morning to visit her boyfriend after she had two flights canceled out of O’Hare. Sitting on top of her luggage, the 18-year-old from Wisconsin said her mom shoveled more than a foot of snow out of the family’s driveway that morning to drive her to Chicago for her flight.
“It’s so ridiculous, it’s funny now,” Kugler said.
The storm made travel difficult from Kansas to Wisconsin, forcing road closures, including a 120-mile stretch of Interstate 35 from Ames, Iowa through Albert Lea, Minn. Iowa and Wisconsin activated National Guard troops to help rescue stranded drivers.
In Iowa, two people were killed and seven injured in a 25-vehicle pileup. Drivers were blinded by blowing snow and didn’t see vehicles that had slowed or stopped on Interstate 35 about 60 miles north of Des Moines, state police said. A chain reaction of crashes involving semitrailers and passenger cars closed down a section of the highway.
“It’s time to listen to warnings and get off the road,” said Iowa State Patrol Col. David Garrison.
Truck driver Roy Savage, 42, of Missoula, Mont., left the Twin Cities area of Minnesota late Thursday morning and headed south on Interstate 35. He said roads were clean and dry with a little wind, but as he got closer to the Iowa border winds picked up and road conditions went from dry to snow-packed. He decided to pull over at a truck stop.
Savage said driving in the snow is “no big deal. But when it gets to this point where the winds are this strong and conditions are not safe, it’s definitely best to pull over and wait it out.”
Along with Thursday’s fatal accident in Iowa, the storm was blamed for traffic deaths in Nebraska, Kansas and Wisconsin. In southeastern Utah, a woman who tried to walk for help after her car became stuck in snow died Tuesday night.
On the southern edge of the storm system, tornadoes destroyed several homes in Arkansas and peeled the roofs from buildings, toppled trucks and blew down oak trees and limbs in Alabama.
The heavy, wet snow made some unplowed streets in Des Moines nearly impossible to navigate in anything other than a four-wheel drive vehicle. Even streets that had been plowed were snow-packed and slippery.
Airlines were waiving fees for customers impacted by the storm who wanted to change their flights. They were monitoring the storm throughout the night to determine if more cancellations would be necessary on Friday.
The cancellations were getting a lot of attention because the storm came just a few days before Christmas. But Daniel Baker, CEO of flight tracking service FlightAware.com, called it “a relatively minor event in the overall scheme of things.”
By comparison, airlines canceled more than 13,000 flights over a two-day period during a February 2011 snowstorm that hit the Midwest. And more than 20,000 flights were canceled during Superstorm Sandy.
Before the storm, several cities in the Midwest had broken records for the number of consecutive days without measurable snow.
In Madison, Wis., where more than 19 inches of snow fell, college student Elle Knutson stayed in her apartment most of the day Thursday. The University of Wisconsin at Madison canceled final exams in anticipation of the storm.
Knutson, 21, a senior, went outside for about 10 minutes, walking to a friend’s apartment to drop something off.
“It was awful,” she said.
In the Des Moines suburb of Urbandale, Kristin Isenhart, 38, said her three kids, ages 9, 5 and 3, were asking about going outside to play after school was canceled for the day.
“They are thrilled that it snowed,” she said. “They’ve asked several times to go outside, and I might bundle them up and let them go.”
As far as the region’s drought, meteorologists said the storm wouldn’t make much of a dent. It takes a foot or more of snow to equal an inch of water, said Brian Fuchs, a climatologist at the National Drought Mitigation Center.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people lost power in Arkansas, Iowa and Nebraska as heavy snow and strong winds pulled down lines. Smaller outages were reported in Alabama, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Illinois and Louisiana.
“The roads have been so bad our crews have not been able to respond to them,” said Justin Foss, a spokesman for Alliant Energy, which had 13,000 customers without power in central Iowa. “We have giant four-wheel-drive trucks with chains on them, so when we can’t get there it’s pretty rough.”
Blake Landau, a cook serving eggs, roast beef sandwiches and chili to hungry snowplow drivers at Newton’s Paradise Cafe in downtown Waterloo, Iowa, said he has always liked it when it snows on his birthday. He turned 27 on Thursday.
“It’s kind of one of those things where it’s leading up to Christmas time,” Landau said. “We don’t know when we get our first snowfall, and I hope we get it by my birthday. It’s nice to have a nice snowy Christmas.”
Source: Fox US News
The first widespread snowstorm of the season plodded across the Midwestern heartland on Thursday, as whiteout conditions sent drivers sliding over slick roads and some travelers were forced to scramble for alternate ways to get to their holiday destinations.
The storm led airlines to cancel about 1,000 flights ahead of the Christmas holiday — relatively few compared to past big storms, though the number was climbing.
In Iowa, two people were killed and seven injured in a 25-vehicle pileup. Drivers were blinded by blowing snow and didn’t see vehicles that had slowed or stopped on Interstate 35 about 60 miles north of Des Moines, state police said. A chain reaction of crashes involving semitrailers and passenger cars closed down a section of the highway.
The storm, which dumped more than 19 inches (482 millimeters) in Wisconsin state capital, was part of a system that began in the west earlier in the week before trekking into the Midwest. It was expected to move across the Great Lakes overnight before moving into Canada.
Most of the canceled flights were at Chicago’s O’Hare and Midway international airports. Aviation officials said Thursday night more than 350 flights had been canceled at O’Hare and more than 150 at Midway. Many people at O’Hare were taking the cancellations in stride and the normally busy airport was much quieter than normal Thursday evening.
The storm made travel difficult from Kansas to Wisconsin, forcing road closures, including a 120-mile (193-kilometer) stretch of Interstate 35 from Ames, Iowa through Albert Lea, Minnesota. Iowa and Wisconsin activated National Guard troops to help rescue stranded drivers.
Along with Thursday’s fatal accident in Iowa, the storm was blamed for traffic deaths in Nebraska, Kansas and Wisconsin. In southeastern Utah, a woman who tried to walk for help after her car became stuck in snow died Tuesday night.
On the southern edge of the storm system, tornadoes destroyed several homes in Arkansas and peeled the roofs from buildings, toppled trucks and blew down oak trees and limbs Alabama.
The heavy, wet snow made some unplowed streets in Des Moines nearly impossible to navigate in anything other than a four-wheel drive vehicle. Even streets that had been plowed were snow-packed and slippery.
In Chicago, commuters began Thursday with heavy fog and cold, driving rain. By early evening, high winds and sleet that was expected to turn to snow were making visibility difficult on roadways.
Airlines were waiving fees for customers impacted by the storm who wanted to change their flights. They were monitoring the storm throughout the night to determine if more cancellations would be necessary on Friday.
The cancellations were getting a lot of attention because the storm came just a few days before Christmas. But Daniel Baker, CEO of flight tracking service FlightAware.com called it “a relatively minor event in the overall scheme of things.”
By comparison, airlines canceled more than 13,000 flights over a two-day period during a February 2011 snowstorm that hit the Midwest. And more than 20,000 flights were canceled during Superstorm Sandy.
Before the storm, several cities in the Midwest had broken records for the number of consecutive days without measurable snow.
In Madison, Wisconsin, where more than 19 inches (482 millimeters) of snow fell, Plaza Tavern manager Erica DeRosa was busy shoveling the sidewalk to prepare for Thursday’s lunch crowd.
“This is like shoveling wet cement,” she said. “But it is super pretty out.”
Source: Fox US News
An Iowa couple who won a $202 million Powerball jackpot in September is donating $3 million to their son’s high school for a new football stadium — but the gift comes with a catch.
The facility visitor’s locker must be painted pink.
The Bondurant-Farrar school district accepted the $3 million donation from Brian and Mary Lohse on Monday, The Des Moines Register reported (http://dmreg.co/V4NrBG ). The couple from the Des Moines suburb of Bondurant requested only that the new stadium be completed before the fall 2014 football season — their oldest son’s senior year — and that the visiting team’s locker room be painted pink.
“I was sort of half joking and half not, I suppose, but they said they’d do it,” Mary Lohse said of her scheme, inspired by the University of Iowa visitor’s locker room, which is also painted pink.
“It’s supposed to put them in a certain soft frame of mind,” Mary Lohse said. “It will certainly give all the players something to talk about.”
The Lohse family has requested the stadium not be named for them. The Lohses’ hope the stadium will be a community project and that local residents and groups will make other contributions.
Planning for the stadium has already begun. Local architects SVPA are handling the design. The stadium will include an academic wing and a fine arts auditorium.
“It not only gives us the opportunity to accelerate the stadium project, but to advance other plans for projects within the district as well,” school board President Kristin Swift said.
The $3 million for the stadium will be released in three, $1 million increments.
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Information from: The Des Moines Register, http://www.desmoinesregister.com
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A 115-year-old Iowa woman has died less than two weeks after inheriting the title of world’s oldest person, her family said Monday.
Dina Manfredini, who lived at the Bishop Drumm Retirement Center in Johnston, died Monday morning, according to her granddaughter Lori Logli. Logli said Manfredini had been suffering from a fever.
Guinness World Records confirmed Manfredini inherited the title of world’s oldest living person less than two weeks ago. Besse Cooper of Georgia previously held the title at age 116.
Logli said her grandmother was known as a great cook who baked Italian bread every Sunday for her family, and meticulously made pasta by hand. She called Manfredini a hard worker.
“She was active her whole life,” Logli said. “She was a very giving person.”
Logli said Manfredini also looked very young for her age. She had salt-and-pepper hair until she was about 110 years old.
“She could not believe that she was as old as she was,” she said with a small laugh. “When we would tell her she would just shake her head in disbelief. She’d say, ‘Oh, I’m an old lady.”‘
Robert Young, a senior consultant of gerontology for Guinness, said a Japanese man, Jiroemon Kimura, is believed to now hold the title. He was born on April 19, 1897, which makes him just 15 days younger than Manfredini. Young said Kimura, of Kyotango in Kyoto, also is believed to be the second-oldest man in documented history.
Officials have confirmed Kimura’s age, and now are checking in with the retirement home where he lives. They expect to announce his title shortly.
Manfredini was born on April 4, 1897, in Italy, according to Guinness officials. She moved to the United States in 1920 and settled in Des Moines with her husband.
Young said that on Dec. 13, Manfredini became No. 10 on the list of world’s longest-living people. She also has the designation of the world’s longest-living immigrant because of her move to the U.S.
Logli said Manfredini was primarily a homemaker and mother. She had four children, seven grandchildren and more than a dozen great-grandchildren. She later cleaned houses until she was 90 and lived independently until she was 110 years old.
Young said Manfredini is the only verified Italian person to reach age 115 in documented history.
“We are fortunate to have had her this long in our lives as a mother and grandmother. She truly was a special gift from God and touched a lot of lives. She will always be remembered as a great cook, baker, and gardener,” the family’s statement said.
Manfredini’s brief reign is not the shortest. Emma Tillman of East Hartford, Connecticut, held the title of world’s oldest living person for just four days in 2007. She was 114.
Source: Fox US News