Iowa
Housing Programs Will Help Iowa Recovery
(TNS) – With more than 5,000 homes impacted by recent natural disasters – primarily flooding in Northwest Iowa and tornadoes in Southwest Iowa – state leaders Thursday announced new programs designed to assist Iowans coping with the aftermath.
The programs, from both the state and federal governments, will supply grants, loans and other financial assistance to Iowans whose homes have been damaged or destroyed by the tornadoes and floods.
More than 5,000 homes in Iowa have been impacted by the natural disasters, including roughly 2,000 that have been destroyed, Gov. Kim Reynolds said during a news conference at the Iowa Capitol.
Reynolds said the figures are expected to increase, and that housing has become a top concern in the communities that were hit hardest by the disasters. Iowa, like much of the country, faced a housing shortage even before the recent storms displaced thousands of Iowans.
Many of those Iowans want to stay in their communities, Reynolds said. For that to happen, more housing will be needed.
“We have been developing plans for the state’s immediate and long-term recovery for one of the most urgent needs that we’ve heard at every single stop, almost, that we’ve been at, and that is housing,” Reynolds said.
She described new state programs she said were designed “to address this need for not only temporary housing, but for plans to get permanent housing in place as soon as possible.”
Reynolds highlighted three state and federal programs in particular.
Major General Stephen Osborn , Adjutant General of the Iowa National Guard , provides an update on the state’s natural disaster recovery efforts during a news conference at the Capitol in Des Moines on Thursday.
Housing assistance
The State Disaster Recovery New Housing Grant will provide $50,000 grants to developers who build single-family homes, duplexes and town homes in Iowa counties that fall under the federal disaster declaration.
As of Thursday afternoon, 23 counties were included in that declaration, with Woodbury County being the most recent addition. Reynolds and other state leaders said they expected more counties to be added.
That program is being funded with $10 million of federal pandemic relief assistance funding, the governor’s office said.
The Disaster Recovery Housing Assistance program provides forgivable, five-year loans up to $50,000 for housing recovery needs not covered by insurance or federal assistance. The program is not new – it was established by the Iowa Legislature in 2021, but never funded. The governor’s office said a $6.5 million transfer of state funds will now fund it.
This program is available to impacted Iowans in any of the counties under state disaster proclamations. A list of counties with an active state disaster declaration can be found on the state homeland security department’s website at homelandsecurity.iowa.gov.
Reynolds said the state also will designate for sale to disaster-impacted Iowans five homes newly constructed by the state’s Homes for Iowa program – under which homes are constructed by prison inmates – that are scheduled to be available within the next roughly four months. Each home is 1,200 square feet, features three bedrooms and two bathrooms, and costs $95,000.
Applications for those new programs can be submitted starting Monday at iowagrants.gov.
State working with feds
The state also has applied for federal approval to use a Federal Emergency Management Agency program that traditionally has been used by Southern states in hurricane recovery efforts, Reynolds said.
The program provides temporary housing in impacted communities while displaced residents work toward a more permanent housing solution. Under the program, Iowans in need would be eligible for six-month placements trailers, recreational vehicles or mobile homes.
Iowa has submitted an application to use the program here; a state official said the early signals from the federal government appear to indicate the state will be approved for the program.
A similar FEMA program would provide housing for up to 18 months. The state also has submitted an application for that program.
“The idea is that we work with those survivors, put them into a safe, sound situation, where, as the governor noted, they can work on their long-term housing,” Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management Director John Benson said during the news conference. “Some of that will occur relatively quickly if they’re refurnishing their home, have to refurbish it, (that will take) a couple of months. Others will take longer. That’s why we want to work on the long-term housing one with FEMA to get out to that 18 months.”
Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management Director John Benson provides an update on the state’s natural disaster recovery efforts during a news conference at the Capitol in Des Moines on Thursday.
New farmer assistance
Reynolds also announced a new program that will reimburse one year of interest paid on federal loans to farmers who are recovering from property damage and losses caused by the severe weather.
Briefings on what the state is doing to help Iowans, businesses and communities recover from the natural disasters were given at Thursday’s news conference by leaders of the state departments on transportation, education, inspections, insurance, health and human services, and natural resources and the Iowa National Guard .
Some examples:
* The Iowa National Guard has deployed 10 high-water clearing vehicles to assist with transportation of people, equipment and supplies in flooded communities.
* The Iowa Department of Transportation has deployed nearly 100 trucks and other pieces of equipment to assist with the removal of debris and other damaged materials.
* The Iowa Department of Education is working with schools that were damaged to help them be ready for the start of the new school year in late August.
* The Iowa Health and Human Services Department is helping recruit volunteers through Volunteer Iowa for cleanup efforts and is preparing to provide behavioral health services in impacted communities.
Reynolds described the response and recovery assistance efforts as a “whole of government effort” that includes federal, state and local action. She in particular praised local government and emergency response officials, some of whom are facing serious disaster recovery issues of their own.
“Iowans are special people. They continue to look out for the needs of others before they take care of themselves,” Reynolds said. “We’re making progress. We know we still have a long way to go. But we’re determined to get there.”
Iowans interested in the various state and federal assistance programs designed to help them recover from recent natural disasters can start at two websites: disasterrecovery.iowa.gov for state assistance and disasterassistance.gov for federal assistance. State grant applications can be submitted at iowagrants.gov.
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©2024 Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier (Waterloo, Iowa)
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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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