Oct 05

Old I-74 bridge won’t go out with a bang

Deconstructing the twin spans that carried I-74 over the Mississippi River is going to be a seven-year job. Big blasts are not planned to be part of the process.

KWQC and WQAD have news stories, neither of which I can embed, about the contractor’s decision not to have the main part of the bridges imploded. Part of the Illinois side was torn down starting in 2017 to make way for the new I-74 bridge. Now, according to the stories, demolition will continue until mid-2024.

The WQAD video report also notes that pieces of the bridge will not be available for sale, but will go to area museums.

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Oct 03

Algona, Lu Verne consolidation approved

The final assimilation of what used to be the shared but unmerged Corwith-Wesley-Lu Verne schools into Algona will happen next year.

Voters last month overwhelmingly approved the merger of Algona and Lu Verne, KICD radio reports. The latter had officially gained nearly all of the old Corwith-Wesley district in 2015 and has been a K-5 school since 2018. The new district, 45% of the size of Rhode Island, will span from Whittemore to Wesley and County Road A42 to County Road C20. Lu Verne is the only town outside of Algona with a school — for now.

Starting July 1, 2023, Algona will be Iowa’s largest single-high-school consolidated district by area, only barely smaller than the two-high-school Western Dubuque district, and also barely smaller than MVAOCOU, the largest single-high-school but not consolidated area. (There’s a four-way logjam at around 550 square miles.) The third-largest consolidated district will be Southeast Valley, which also goes into effect then.

I still think it should’ve been renamed South Kossuth.

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Sep 30

Radio interference

Daily Iowan, October 4, 1927:

Radio audience protests silence of station WSUI

Broadcast games cut receipts at field says council

Protests from radio listeners in Iowa and other middle-western states have been flooding WSUI, the university radio station, during the last few days, following the decision of the university athletic council to prohibit broadcasting of football games from Iowa Field.

Action was taken by the council last week, according to reports, because it was claimed that broadcasting of the games plays havoc with the gate receipts. Persons find it cheaper and more convenient to tune in on the game than attend, it is said.

When announcement was made Thursday that WSUI would be silent during the Iowa-Monmouth contest Saturday afternoon, letters, telegrams and long-distance calls began to pour in to the station and to the athletic department. Following the game, an even greater number of pleas for broadcasting have been received.

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Sep 28

Tama Lincoln Highway bridge contract to be let


June 17, 2022: The slab edge on the north rail of the Lincoln Highway bridge (under the letters) shows severe wear and is one of the areas slated to get work done.

The Iowa DOT is playing a role in the restoration of Tama’s Lincoln Highway bridge — not in the work itself, but in getting a contractor.

In March, the city of Tama shifted the third round of bidding from the local to state level (as a federal-aid swap application). The first round came in above expectations (and was invalidated), and the second had no bidders, as a Marshalltown Times-Republican article at the time explained. The need to have major work on the bridge was known eight years ago but it took this long to raise the money. Rehabilitation is included in the Oct. 18 collection of Iowa DOT letting plans.

The documentation picks out specific areas of the bridge, including the “AY” on the south side, for repair. The plans are from the city of Tama and engineering firms Shuck-Britson of Des Moines and Snyder & Associates of Cedar Rapids. If you look at the end of the file, there’s something you might not expect: A reproduction of the original construction document shows a concrete bridge without “Lincoln Highway” spelled out in the railings. I have not been able to find any specific mention of the letters being incorporated into the design in newspapers of the time.

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Sep 26

Rockwell lost its newspaper

The continuing decline of rural newspapers is creating conflicts with state regulations.

The last edition of the Rockwell Pioneer-Enterprise was September 8. The Iowa Newspaper Association website listed its circulation at 174 — and a mailing address in Buffalo Center. The paper’s website is combined with the Sheffield Press, about 6 miles south but just across the Franklin County line.

Information for the Sheffield Press is not available on the INA website. The Press‘ website hasn’t posted anything in the news section since mid-June and in the sports section a full year ago. The most recent obituary as of Sunday is Aug. 31. Its sporadically updated Facebook page is headlining the retirement of Jack Zimmerman, who started at that paper in 1957 at the age of 17.

The closure of the Pioneer-Enterprise leaves only two papers in Cerro Gordo County: the Globe Gazette and the Clear Lake Mirror Reporter. KGLO-AM has a story about the county supervisors officially voting to move forward with publishing notices in two papers. According to Iowa Code Chapter 349, counties with a population above 15,000 should be doing it in three.

Wait a second — this affects Tama County too! Tama County has only had two newspapers since May 2020, and with a population just above 15,000 it’s supposed to have three official newspapers as well. The third option could be the Sun-Courier as it is the merged Gladbrook-Reinbeck paper, and technically its office is in Tama, but it’s not officially a Tama County newspaper. Iowa Code is very detailed about having more papers than needed, and even three-newspaper communities, but doesn’t cover how to handle the opposite situation. The concept of a newspaper nominally being of one community but having no local presence is something that didn’t come up until the 21st century.

In Tama County government, the auditor is required to “[p]ublish all proposed ordinances and all amendments in the manner required by the Code of Iowa, as amended, and by the ordinances of Tama County in at least one newspaper having general circulation within the county.” The board of supervisors approved the North Tama Telegraph and Tama-Toledo News-Chronicle as official county publications on May 26, 2020, after the old nameplates went defunct. (The county only keeps one year of minutes active online, and changed its Web address to tamacounty.iowa.gov earlier this year, but I got it through the Wayback Machine.)

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Sep 23

Wisconsin sets expiration dates on license plates

In 2017, Wisconsin ran out of license plates. But instead of re-resetting its alphanumeric cycle, it moved to a seven-character AAA0000 style, and let the old plates stick around. (See this Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel story.) Although the base design goes back to 1986, some minor tweaks and color scheme changes mean that the plates on the road today are mid-2000 and later. (I was wrong in a statement I made in the 2017 blog post, since the 1986-2000 plates have been replaced at least once.)

The older plates, depending on their exposure to the elements, are peeling apart, and some of them look really bad. (I’ve never seen a 1997-2002 Iowa plate peeled like that.) Something had to be done, and the Wisconsin Legislature reimposed a 10-year rolling deadline. The administrator of the Wisconsin DMV said the state has 3 million active plates more than a decade old, so those will be in line for replacement over the next year or so. By the end of 2027 six-character plates will be history in the Badger State.

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Sep 21

Walcott could lose half its school grades

The Davenport school district is considering changes to the grade configuration in Walcott.

KWQC and WQAD both reported last week that the K-8 school there could become a middle school for grades 5-8 or 6-8. Younger students would go to Buffalo or Blue Grass. Walcott is Davenport’s only K-8 school this year; others are K-6. A full accounting of options given at a July school board meeting can be found in this long PDF.

Enrollment in the Davenport district, which extends from I-74 to Walcott and Blue Grass, dropped 10% in the 2010s, and a change in state law last year lifted previous restrictions on open enrollment out.

It wouldn’t count as a closure for Walcott, but it would be a loss nonetheless.

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Sep 19

Manitowoc gives US 151 a trim


September 14, 2015: The now-former north end of US 151.

There are those who see the above point in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, and see the light at the end of the tunnel, or a long-neck at the end of a long ride. No longer. Not the elevator, the sign. US 151 has been truncated to I-43 on the southwest side of Manitowoc.

There is a two-part, or perhaps one-and-a-half-part, explanation. First, the city is turning 8th and 10th streets, which have carried US 10 north of downtown, into two-way streets. A Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter* story from a year ago said the change would be ready this September. The city has a PDF explainer with maps — and a historic highway photo Dale Sanderson would love. Taking US 10 off that segment, however, means creating a convoluted route for US 10 to get past the downtown area across the Manitowoc River to the S.S. Badger, a ferry that crosses Lake Michigan. Without going into more detail, I’ll just say that the line for the ferry will now have a very awkward turn in the middle of it.


September 14, 2015: Note “East”, not “End”, and the badge on the Badger.

That, itself, would not require changing 151, which is where the other part comes in. The city of Manitowoc has been begging the state of Wisconsin to fix the streets (and 100-year-old infrastructure underneath) that carry US 151 from I-43 to downtown. As recently as two years ago, the timetable for that was 2037, but it’s now been “sped up” to … 2029, according to this HTR story. As part of the changes to US 10, US 151 is being truncated and its route through the city is becoming an extension of WI 42. This might, in my speculation, reduce some of the non-local traffic on it. Taking this highway segment completely off the state rolls, however, would put the entire burden of the multimillion-dollar reconstruction on the city — like US 6/Broadway in Council Bluffs — and the city can’t afford that.

Since 151 is merely being truncated, not rerouted, I still have traveled the entire route. But on 10, this change ruins my clinch for both Wisconsin and the route west of Lake Michigan to West Fargo, North Dakota. It looks like I have an excuse to ride the S.S. Badger some time in the future.

*The HTR is one of 11 Wisconsin newspapers under the Gannett-Gatehouse merger that, as of May, is being printed in Peoria, four hours away.

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Sep 16

Iowa stumps the smart set again

Monday’s “Jeopardy!” started the show’s 39th season. It has a new, extended, and varying opening, with images of prominent champions (starting with Amy Schneider) and the studio audience.

One thing, however, remains the same: Iowa remains largely a mystery to the contestants. This calendar year has not been kind.

On the Road Again, for $1200:

An uphill bike race is held annually in Burlington, Iowa, on this alley seen here, named for a type of critter.

The image was of Burlington’s Snake Alley, and no one buzzed in. The contestants immediately went on to not answer the next clue, about I-10.

At least Tuesday’s group was successful in the football category (NFL opening weekend), unlike some in the past, earning gratitude from host Ken Jennings.

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Sep 14

Another one bites the truss

A century-plus-old pony truss bridge in Carroll County has reached the end of its useful life. Its birth was one of the inspirations for standardization in Iowa construction.

KCIM-AM reports that the Carroll County supervisors plan to replace the Storm Creek bridge on Phoenix Avenue between Carroll and Lidderdale this fiscal year. The supervisors estimate the cost at $465,000, a jump from their last similar project. It cost about $2000 to build in 1913.

This was in the Carroll County supervisors’ minutes of December 27, 1912, printed in the Carroll Times on January 31, 1913: “After examining the bids on file the Board on motion awarded the contract of furnishing all material and construction of both wood and steel bridges for the year 1913 to the Standard Bridge Co., of Omaha, this being the lowest bidder as per plans and specifications on file in the auditor’s office.” One of the other bidders was the Marsh Engineering Co., known for its concrete arch bridges.

This bridge is significant enough that the Iowa DOT has a page about it, which provided a clue to finding the passage above. The page goes into detail about the bridge’s significance, and here’s a key passage: “The plans submitted to Carroll County in the spring of 1913 represented the prototypes for ISHC’s pony trusses: experimental designs that soon became the basis for the ISHC X-Series standards.” Pony truss bridges bloomed all across the state over the next 30 years, and this one helped lead the way.

The bridge contract had one non-highway consequence: a marriage. Miss Florence Marean, “a wide awake and ambitious young lady [who] will make good in any community in which she desires,” married the foreman of the bridge builders. “He is working for the Standard Bridge Company putting in bridges over the big ditch in the Storm Creek drain.” They were expected to settle in Nebraska, the Carroll Times said on October 2, 1913.

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