Iowa
Iowa River Power staff bring back the brunch and steaks at the Highlander Hotel in March
The former staff of a cherished local restaurant has found a new home.
Displaced employees from the Iowa River Power Restaurant, which closed late last year, are partnering with the Highlander Hotel to help operate the Supper Club, with plans to offer IRP’s famous Sunday brunch and many of its other classic eats.
Highlander owner Angela Harrington connected with former IRP owner Danise Petsel after her two-decade run ended in 2023 to channel her expertise to recreate a historic supper club.
Harrington took over at the Highlander Hotel in 2019 as it struggled to gain a foothold in Johnson County. She quickly piloted a $10 million renovation and a return to prominence, anchored by a retro hotel vibe with luxurious amenities.
But, something was missing even as the hotel hosted a grand re-opening in late 2023. It needed that extra touch, that special feeling only a well-thought-out meal can provide.
Inspired by her knowledge and sustained success in the restaurant industry as well as her familiarity with the Johnson County clientele, Harrington reached out to Petsel, hoping to revive the legendary flavors of Iowa River Power.
The two hit it off almost immediately.
Petsel jokes that their partnership works because Harrington loves doing what Petsel hates and vice versa. Harrington said the pair might “need a reality TV show because we’re both quite colorful and very outspoken.”
But for Petsel, who opened the Iowa River Power Restaurant in 2002, the most important part of the transition has been keeping the staff together and making memories with community members.
“I have so many regular clientele who I’ve not only done their weddings, but their baby showers and funerals,” Petsel said. “It will be nice to have a huge space where we can see all of the people that we’ve known and we’ve grown up with and made beautiful memories with. And I feel the staff is my main reason. I just wanted to keep them all together.”
More: Behind the scenes of the Iowa River Power saga: Business frustrated with looming closure, building owner
IRP staff will lead ‘Supper Club’ integration
The Highlander is equipped with a large Supper Club space and nearly ready-to-rock kitchen perfect for accommodating large crowds, said Petsel, who plans to revive Iowa River Power’s vaunted brunches that averaged 800 people on Sunday mornings.
“The ballroom will be beautiful for the brunch and we can do the exact same brunch. We’ll just have a lot more space to do it,” Petsel said.
The Highlander will also provide dinner service Thursday through Sunday, offering many of the same items that guests at Iowa River Power enjoyed — including staples like steak and seafood. Petsel is bringing the head chef and all of her IRP cooks to the Highlander. Many of the wait staff will also join her.
The hotel will provide food service throughout the week, but adding Petsel and her team means Harrington has more flexibility and can accommodate more events.
“I’m just tickled and frankly, I’m grateful because I really am trying to get good at the hotel operation and I’m just so grateful to have somebody who does (food service) so much better than me and with all of that experience,” Harrington said. “Take that piece, I’m just over the moon.”
Dinner guests do not need to stay at the Highlander to dine at the Supper Club.
Brunch service begins on Sunday, March 24, and will also be offered on Easter Sunday. Complimentary breakfast will continue for hotel guests Monday to Friday.
Regular dinner service begins Thursday, April 4.
From August: A retro vibe: Iowa City’s historic Highlander Hotel reveals 90-room, $10 million renovations
What happened to the Iowa River Power restaurant
After 22 years at the corner of First Avenue and Fifth Street in Coralville, Petsel and her Iowa River Power team were notified last summer that they would be forced to close. The building owner, Randy Ward, the founder of Coralville-based Randy’s Flooring, wanted to renovate.
Both Petsel and Ward seemed frustrated with the condition of the building and agreed that it required repairs, though neither could agree how the repairs would be made.
Petsel said Ward had not properly communicated how the renovations would impact the restaurant. IRP closed its doors on Nov. 26, just after Thanksgiving.
“It’s crazy to me because you know what, I think I’ve been a tenant that has never bothered him,” Petsel told the Press-Citizen last August. “I pay for things that he never handled. I had to pay for them. We’ve always been friendly, but obviously not friends because you don’t [do this to] your friends.”
More: Iowa River Power Restaurant set to close, cites owner’s plans to renovate
Ryan Hansen covers local government and crime for the Press-Citizen. He can be reached at rhansen@press-citizen.com or on X, formerly known as Twitter, @ryanhansen01.
Iowa
Semi-truck crash causes Iowa power outage impacting hundreds
TAMA COUNTY, Iowa — A pair of power outages left more than 700 people without power in Tama County Friday afternoon.
Alliant Energy says the larger outage, just north of Garwin, was caused by a semi-truck striking one of their power poles. That outages impacted 690 customers as of 5 p.m. Friday.
The smaller outage impacted roughly 36 people in Tama. The outage was caused by equipment needing repairs.
Alliant says crews are on site and working to fix both outages.
Iowa
Iowa Great Lakes businessman Butch Parks dies at 81
SPIRIT LAKE, Iowa (KTIV) – The Iowa Great Lakes community is remembering Leo “Butch” Parks, a longtime lakes-area businessman and founder of Parks Marina.
He died Tuesday, Jan. 6, at the age of 81.
Parks established the marina on East Lake Okoboji in 1983, growing it from a small fishing boat operation into a business with marinas, sales, service, rentals, storage, and popular destinations like the Barefoot Bar.
Parks and his wife, Debbie, also owned Okoboji Boat Works for 23 years.
Funeral services are set for Friday, Jan. 16, at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Spirit Lake. It will be followed by a celebration of life at Snapper’s restaurant in Okoboji that evening.
Want to get the latest news and weather from Siouxland’s News Source? Follow these links to download our KTIV News app and our First Alert Weather app.
Copyright 2026 KTIV. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Iowa woman accused of pandering for prostitution and harassment after incidents at Casey’s and a daycare
AURELIA, Iowa (KTIV) – A Northwest Iowa woman is facing charges of harassment and pandering for prostitution after two incidents took place in December 2025.
Forty-seven-year-old Kristal Miller of Odebolt was taken into custody on an arrest warrant and faces three charges: one count of pandering for prostitution and two counts of first-degree harassment, according to court documents.
The charges stem from two separate incidents that took place on Thursday, Dec. 18. 2025.
According to court documents, at 6:15 a.m., Miller reportedly went to the Casey’s General Store, located at 100 Pearl St. in Aurelia. Documents state Miller approached an employee and customers, requesting money from them.
Authorities state Miller claimed she was wanted by the FBI and told people, if anyone called the police, “she would kill them.”
During this encounter, she also allegedly asked an employee to remove the string from her hooded sweatshirt. Documents state when the employee refused this request, she threatened to strangle them.
That same day at 7 a.m., Miller reportedly approached a female employee outside an Aurelia daycare and asked them for money.
Court documents stated Miller suggested the unnamed employee leave her boyfriend. Miller reportedly told the employee, if she did, then she and Miller would both be paid.
Authorities say when she was told no by the employee, Miller became upset and started yelling at them.
Miller also allegedly threatened to “steal her car” and ”take her away to her guys to start a new life.”
She was booked into the Cherokee County Jail on a cash-only bond of $5,000. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled in Cherokee for Friday, Jan. 9, at 10 a.m.
Want to get the latest news and weather from Siouxland’s News Source? Follow these links to download our KTIV News app and our First Alert Weather app.
Copyright 2026 KTIV. All rights reserved.
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