February 9, 2012

Grinnell set to open baseball tourney

The Grinnell College baseball team opens the Midwest Conference Tournament Friday morning in Monmouth, Illinois by taking on Ripon College. The Pioneers advanced to the tournament for the first time since 2001 by finishing second in the South Division.

Grinnell coach Tim Hollibaugh says once you get into the tournament, the team the executes the best is the team that will win. He says getting to the conference tournament is a great step for the program, and he hopes the team is mentally prepared for the pressure of playing in the tournament.

Hollibaugh feels Ripon is the heavy favorite to win the tournament. He says Ripon is the best team in the conference by far, but he says you don’t win based on your record. Hollibaugh says they have to make some plays and get some hits. St. Norbert and Monmouth meet in the other first round game.

Iowa opens Big Ten softball tourney against Indiana

The Iowa softball team opens the Big Ten tournament tomorrow morning in Evanston, Illinois when the Hawkeyes face Indiana. Iowa is the third seed and coach Gayle Blevins says her team will need to contend with one of the BigTen’s top players in the Hoosiers’ Mariangee Bogoda. She finished sixth in the conference in hitting, second in home runs and is Indiana’s top pitcher.

Blevins says Bogoda has probably been the conference player of the week at least four different times as a pitcher and leadoff hitter. Blevins says they had trouble with her on defense, but were able to hit her.

The teams split a regular season doubleheader. Regular season champion Northwestern is hosting the tournament but the host school has not always fared well in the past. She says though Northwestern is playing well right now.
Iowa is 39-19 on the season.

William Penn waits out rain for baseball tourney

The William Penn baseball team is waiting out the rain in Joliet, Illinois, today at an NAIA region tournament. The Statesmen opened the tournament on Wednesday with an 8-2 win over Purdue-North Central and are scheduled to play host St. Francis this evening if the weather cooperates.

All of the games have been delayed due to steady rain and Penn coach Mike Laird says if all the games are postponed the tournament could put a strain on pitching staffs. He says they have a lot of seniors who have picked up the pace in pitching, and while they don’t dominate, he says they know how to pitch.

Lairs says St. Francis is well coached, but is not a big power hitting team. He says they play great defense and get their bunts down. Grand View and Iowa Wesleyan also have had games delayed at the tournament.

Ames, N-A-D-C officials say animal waste properly treated

Administrators from the City of Ames and the National Animal Disease Center say miscommunication and misinformation led to reports that potentially dangerous animal waste from disease testing was dumped into the Ames wastewater treatment system.

Ames City Manager Steve Schainker says employees of the N-A-D-C brought it to the city’s attention that protein substances called prion were being released into the system. Schainker says the city immediately met with the center’s administrators.

Schainker says the N-A-D-C assured the city that the procedures to destroy the prions before they are released are consistent with scientific research. Schainker says they were also told that there is no way the prions can be transmitted to humans.

Schainker says they’re satisfied with what the N-A-D-C has told them, but will follow up on the claims to be sure. Schainker says, “The City of Ames and the N-A-D-C agree that because this matter involves important issues of health and safety, our citizens and employees must be assured that these concerns are taken seriously, assessed quickly, and addressed immediately as appropriate.”

Schainker says the staffs of the city and N-A-D-C will conduct an independent review of the allegations. Schainker says the review will have four goals, with the first being to identify the accepted method for effectively destroying prions. He says secondly they will be asked to assess the concerns raised regarding the N-A-D-C’s current and past methods for destruction of prions. Third, they will determine the risk posed to humans and the environment form the current as well as previous destruction of methods for prions.

Caird Rexroad Junior of the Agricultural Research Service addressed some of what he says was wrong information reported on the process. Rexroad says no animal parts are flushed into the system. Rexroad says all solid waste, animal carcasses and tissues, are incinerated. Rexroad says the thing that’s at issue is the liquid waste from the animals, such as feces and urine.

Rexroad says liquid waste is not pumped directly into the wastewater system. Rexroad says the liquid waste goes into a treatment tank, and no liquid waste can leave the plant until it is treated. Rexroad says the liquid waste is treated with heat the “with scientific research assures us effectively deactivates the prions.” The E-P-A raised concerns that the N-A-D-C was only treating the liquid waste with bleach.

Rexroad says there are other methods to deactivate the prions, but he says the N-A-D-C chose this way because of its effectiveness. He says, “Science indicates that the process that we use at N-A-D-C to ensure liquid waste is safe, deactivates 999-point-999 percent of the prions. In fact that scientific study was conducted for one minute, we treat our wastestream for 30 minutes.”
Rexroad says the testing involves chronic wasting disease, and scrapie disease, but “Mad Cow” testing is not taking place as the center yet.

Rexroad could not say why the E-P-A did not understand the waste treatment method being used at the N-A-D-C. He says, “I think its…There’s a lot of communication issues.” Schainker and Rexroad say they’ll put together a panel of experts to conduct the review of the process.

Schainker says he doesn’t think the public has anything to worry about. He says “I can’t say we’re concerned right now” Schainker says they do take it seriously and will examine the allegations thoroughly. Schainker says it could take up to three months for the panel to complete its work.

Congressman calls for review of procedures at N-A-D-C

The Iowa congressman who represents Ames and has lobbied congress to spend more money on the National Animal Disease Center in Ames says he’s “deeply concerned” by a report indicating fluids from diseased animals examined at the center have been flushed down the drain.

Congressman Tom Latham says he wants to “make sure that things are done correctly” at the center. Two “whistleblower” employees at the National Animal Disease Center say after autopsies have been done on diseased animals, left-over fluids are bleached, then flushed right down the drain into the city’s wastewater system. The lab conducts autopsies on animals suspected of having ailments like foot and mouth disease and Mad Cow disease.

Some material from the bodies of animals with Mad Cow contains prions — proteins that are thought to transmit the disease. While the lab was bleaching the liquid waste to get rid of contaminants, that process doesn’t kill prions. Latham says there should be “full disclosure of what threat, if any, has been posed to the environment.”

“My largest concern, obviously, is the health and safety of the citizens to make sure there is no contamination of the water supply,” Latham says. Latham’s also asking the U-S-D-A’s Investigator General to “immediately and fully investigate.” Latham says he wants to make sure everything’s being done in a proper manner.

“Anytime that there are any of kind of accusations like this that affect health and safety I want to make sure that we do everything that we can to see what happened and if there is any cause for alarm,” he says. Latham says at this point, know one knows whether there is any threat to water supplies. The materials flushed down the drain ended up in the Ames waste water treatment facility where the water and whatever is in it are put through a cleansing process, then it’s eventually discharged into the Skunk River.

Latham has been a champion of federal funding for the National Animal Health Center in Ames, and congress recently set aside 462-million dollars to modernize the facilities. Latham plans to talk with top administrators “as soon as possible” about his concerns.

Accident keeps bridge closed near Sabula

A bridge over the Mississippi River was closed by a wreck this morning. The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office Public Information Officer Mark Pape says the bridge between Sabula and Savanna, Illinois, wasn’t damaged. Pape says actually, the Savanna-Sabula Bridge isn’t closed, but the causeway on Highway 64 leading to the bridge was closed, while they cleaned up a semi accident.

Traffic between Iowa and Illinois was re-routed to bridges at Clinton and Dubuque. Surrounded by lakes and the Mississippi river, “Sabula is Iowa’s only island city,” Pape says. The causeway winds through all the waterways to that river bridge. The semi went through a guardrail and was hanging over the edge of the causeway over the river.

Rescuers pulled the driver out and sent him by boat to an ambulance that took him to a hospital in Clinton. Then they brought in a crane to drag the truck back onto solid ground. With tongue slightly in cheek, Pape says it could have been worse, as the semi was loaded with peat moss. “There could have been plutonium or something,” he says, “then the bridge would have been closed for, like, the half-life’s fifty-thousand years.”

After the wreck officials said the bridge might be open at noon. By noon, that’s not what Pape was saying. He admits, “It could be God knows when.” But with no damage to the bridge, he said the river crossing could re-open by four P.M.

Fallon says water quality "seriously impaired"

Democratic candidate Ed Fallon says Iowa’s water quality is “seriously impaired” and he’d make cleaning it up a top priority if he’s elected governor.

“So many Iowans and so many visitors to Iowa benefit from hunting, fishing, canoeing, boating (and) other forms of recreation that are tremendous components of our economy,” Fallon says. “If we don’t address water quality it will become a significant quality-of-life detriment.” It will take a targeted and committed approach to clean-up years worth of pollution according to Fallon.

Fallon, a frequent canoer, says construction site laws regarding erosion need to be enforced to prevent soil run-off because he’s seen soil “pouring” into streams following a storm.

Fallon also backs giving county and city officials the authority to block construction of livestock confinements if there are fears manure run-off would contaminate nearby waterways. “This is not just a rural issue,” Fallon says. “This is an urban issue as well.”

Fallon unveiled his plan today (Thursday) at Clear Lake State Park. Fallon says the millions lawmakers set aside this year to tackle water quality projects is just the beginning. Fallon backs creation of more “buffer strips” where grasses and trees are planted along streams adjacent to farm fields as a means of preventing erosion and fertilizer run-off.