May 16, 2012

Iowa Farm Bureau may change stand on mandatory ethanol use

The Iowa Farm Bureau’s president says it’s likely delegates to the organization’s convention will reconsider backing a bid to require that all gas pumps in Iowa dispense fuels that are blended with corn-based ethanol. Craig Lang says delegates debated the issue yesterday (Tuesday).
“Our membership said choice is best,” Lang says. “We believe that we can grow the ethanol industry in such a way that…we can do that with incentives and a carrot instead of a stick, forcing people to go to the pump and not having a choice of something without ethanol is really not our philosophy.”

Lang, who raises corn on his farm near Brooklyn, was surprised delegates rejected the ethanol-only mandate. “But it’s not final until Thursday. Some delegates may get together and come back and say ‘Hey, we maybe we need a mandate,’” Lang says. “But until mandate is in our policy book, as leaders we can’t go to the legislature and say ‘You’ve got to force all Iowans to…have ethanol in their gas tank.’” Yesterday, U.S. Senator Charles Grassley chided Republicans in the state Senate for failing to back a state law that would require all retailers to ensure their gas pumps dispense an ethanol-blended fuel. He’s mystified that Farm Bureau delegates voted not to back the idea.

Grassley says he attended two Farm Bureau county conventions and there was “overwhelming” support for the concept, and Grassley believed it would be easily adopted at the state convention. With the recent onset of three-dollar gasoline, Grassley predicts the ethanol issue will be debated in the 2006 Legislative session. Grassley says when Hurricane Katrina hit and disrupted the supply of gasoline in America, it brings the problem into focus.

Republican Congressman Jim Nussle has pledged to back an ethanol-only rule for Iowa gas pumps if he’s elected governor. Nussle says no one likes mandates, but there’s already a foreign oil mandate in America. “To be a little parochial about this, and maybe people think it’s selfish or it’s too much government intrusion, I think it’s promoting Iowa, promoting American energy as opposed to going over and having to defend our oil supplies around the world,” Nussle says.

Nussle says it’s making a choice between foreign sources of oil and American-grown energy like ethanol. Nussle is also calling for a national energy summit in Iowa. “Anytime you can promote Iowa energy and promote Iowa as being the renewable (energy) capital of the world I think it’s worth doing it,” Nussle says. Nussle hopes the summit would set out goals for the nation to achieve.

Waterloo man charged with soliciting sex on Internet

Cedar Falls police have arrested a man on charges of looking for love in the wrong place.Officials say 20-year-old Lucas Linsey of Waterloo tried to solicit sex from an assumed 15-year-old girl over the Internet. He’s facing a felony charge of enticing away a minor. Police say Linsey had been communicating with the girl for several months in a chat room, then arranged to meet her for the purpose of having sex. Linsey was taken into custody on Tuesday. He’s being held in the Black Hawk County Jail.

More tests underway on skeleton of baby found in Audubon County

Authorities have released more information about human remains found earlier this month in western Iowa’s Audubon County. The State Medical Examiner has identified the skeletal remains found earlier this month in Audubon County as those of a full-term infant.

Forensic tests show the age as ranging from birth to one-month in age. The child’s skeleton was found by trappers checking trap lines about four miles southeast of Kimballton in southeastern Audubon County on November Eighth.

Audubon County Sheriff Todd Johnson says there are indications that the death did not happen at the location where the baby was found. Law enforcement and the State Medical Examiner are still trying to determine how long the remains were at the site.

Two arrested for questioning in death of Davenport man

Two Davenport police detectives are now in Virginia to question two Davenport men who were captured near Richmond on Monday night. They’re wanted in connection with the disappearance of another Davenport man last week. 37-year-old Charles Nixon vanished last Friday and a large amount of blood was found in his room by a housemate.

Davenport police Captain Dave Struckman says samples of the blood are being tested. Struckman says it’s definitely evidence of someone being injured at the scene based on the amount of blood. Nixon’s vehicle was also missing and Struckman says other evidence indicated someone may not have left the house voluntarily. 35-year-old William Smith and 50-year-old Steven Dietz were tracked to a home in Yale, Virginia, and after a stakeout, were taken into custody following a brief car chase. The car they were captured in belonged to Nixon.

Captain Struckman says it’s a high priority case but the blood analysis and other elements in the investigation take time. He says “This isn’t C-S-I. We aren’t able to go from the scene right to the station and pull up on a computer a picture of the person the blood came from. We are at the mercy of the laboratories. We have to get the evidence collected properly, have it submitted through the proper channels, then wait for them to do the analysis.”

Smith, Dietz and Nixon are all wanted on various warrants in Iowa. A badly burned body was found Saturday near Mount Vernon, Illinois, which police are investigating.

Boswell, Grassley shocked by resignation of Congressman

Congressman Leonard Boswell says he’s “shocked” by the resignation of a fellow congressman who admitted to taking nearly two-and-a-half million dollars in bribes from defense contractors. Boswell served on the House Select Committee on Intelligence with California Republican Congressman Randy “Duke” Cunningham. “It’s a very sad thing for me because he really was an American hero,” Boswell says.

Boswell is a decorated Vietnam veteran who flew helicopter rescue missions. Cunningham was a pilot in the Navy. “He succumbed to something we should never do,” Boswell says. “I don’t know why.” Boswell, a Democrat from Des Moines, says he had no inkling Cunningham was taking bribes in exchange for promoting certain contractors’ weapons systems for the Defense Department.

Iowa Senator Charles Grassley has been a long-time critic of wasteful spending in the Pentagon, and Grassley says he had no clue this kind of corruption was occurring in the halls of Congress. “Considering (Cunningham’s) religious background and things of that nature, it’s a complete surprise to me,” Grassley says.

Grassley’s also shocked by the “magnitude” of the bribes. Cunningham, for example, lived rent-free in a yacht owned by a defense contractor and he’s admitted to taking thousands upon thousands of dollars to buy homes, a Rolls Royce and leather furniture. “He ought to know what he was doing was wrong,” Grassley says.

Grassley says he never thought a member of congress would be paid so much to steer contracts to certain companies. “I had a free pancake here at the Farm Bureau and I’m smart enough to know that there are limits on what members of congress can take and they’re pretty stiff limits,” Grassley said this (Wednesday) morning during an interview at the Iowa Farm Bureau convention in Des Moines. “It’s hardly worth even accepting anything.”

Bond issue fails in Independence

Independence voters have rejected a plan to build a new high school — for the third time. The 12-point-seven million dollar bond issue was defeated Tuesday when it failed to get the required 60-percent majority of the votes. Results show 15-hundred-51 voters — or 51-percent — said “yes” to the measure, while 14-hundred-51 voters — or 49-percent — said “no.” A second issue, which would have allowed school officials to raise property tax levies in the district, received only 49-percent voter approval. Similar bond issues have been defeated in Independence each of the past two years.

Hawkeyes face N-C State in ACC/Big Ten challenge

The 14th ranked Iowa Hawkeyes play host to North Carolina State tonight as part of the ACC/Big Ten Challenge. The Wolfpack are 5-0 and ranked 24th. Hawkeye coach Steve Alford says this is a difficult matchup for his team. Alford says, “Sometimes certain systems give certain systems problems and this is a system that on occasion has given us problems. Northwestern has a similar system so we’ve had some problems with them at times.”

Alford says N-C State will have a size advantage as the smallest guy in the lineup is six-four or six-five. He says it’s the tallest team they play and that presents some matchup problems. Alford says the Wolfpack run an offense that is very similar to Northwestern’s and will work for layups. He says it’s all out of the same Princeton type mode, but he says defensively they don’t do the same things that Northwestern does.
The Hawkeyes are 4-1.