May 16, 2012

Deadline nears for Medicare prescription drug sign up

Just hours remain ’til tonight’s (Monday’s) midnight deadline to sign up for Medicare’s new prescription drug benefit that’s now available to the nation’s senior citizens. Thousands of Iowans have waited ’til the last minute, but not Irene Mathis of Cedar Rapids. A social worker at the assisted living center where Mathis lives helped her sort through the paperwork in January. “She worked on that computer quite a little while to figure out what I should be on,” Mathis says. Elderly Iowans like Mathis have over 40 different prescription drugs plans from which to choose.

Officials says it’s important to register by tonight’s deadline, as those who sign up late will be penalized and won’t get the full prescription drug benefit. Under current law, people who wait until December to enroll will have just over two-dollars per month added to their monthly premium. That amount would rise annually.

Linda Dearinger of the Heritage Agency on Aging says every senior should sign up. “Even if you’re not taking medication, this is insurance and we buy insurance to protect us from what we think might occur in the future,” Dearinger says. The best way to sign up if you haven’t yet done so is to call 1-800-MEDICARE. That number is answered 24-hours-a-day and the government has hired thousands of extra workers to answer last minute questions before tonight’s midnight deadline.

Oelwein man injured in home explosion

An Oelwein man is recovering from injuries he received in an explosion and fire from a home improvement accident. Jeff Walker was in the process of using a can of spray paint on the shower stall in his basement last night (Sunday) when the knob broke off the paint can and it continued to spray.

The fumes from the paint were then ignited by the pilot light of the water heater. The fumes exploded, burning Walker’s hands. He was taken to the Oelwein hospital for treatment. The fire was confined to the basement of the home.

Protests go off without problems in Marshalltown

A central Iowa city with a large Latino population was the setting for another large pro-immigrant demonstration over the weekend. While the group protested proposed federal legislation on immigration outside the Marshall County Courthouse in Marshalltown, counter-protesters held their own rally nearby. Marshalltown Police Chief Lon Walker says there were no violent incidents but there were some officers approached by citizens.

Chief Walker says “Several people were questioning the police department (about) why we’re allowing this. I think the answer is because this country allows freedom of speech on both sides. We’ve got First Amendment rights and both sides are being allowed to exercise that.”

Walker says some locals have asked him why his officers aren’t questioning the immigrants about their citizenship. Walker says “My answer is very clear that the way the federal law reads now, local law enforcement has absolutely no authority to enforce immigration law. Only federal immigration authorities can do that. So we are not allowed to ask anybody for a green card or to prove citizenship or a legal status in this country.”

A group of Marshalltown residents has formed “Latinos en Accion de CCI” which is opposing federal legislation on immigration. Sam Carbajal is the group’s spokesman and addressed the crowd. Carbajal said he wanted to show “my gratitude to the great Constitution of the United States of America that consecrates the right of freedom of speech for all human beings and to the authorities of Marshalltown who granted us permission to gather peacefully.”

Across the street from the courthouse, other Marshalltown residents were united against illegal immigration. This man did not give his name but did give his reason for being there. He says “It’s not race motivated for me at all. If I were to go and steal bread from HyVee, I would go to jail because I broke the law to feed my family. Why should they be able to cross the border and break the law to feed theirs? They’re not any different that what I am so they should follow the laws of our country too.”

Three Southwest Iowans charged with animal neglect

Three southwest Iowan were arrested and a fourth person was put in protective custody after a weekend raid at a home in rural Montgomery County. Sheriff’s officials says 83 cats, 79 dogs and various other creatures were seized from a home near Stanton, early Friday morning.

The animals, and an 85-year old woman were living in what Sheriff Tony Updegrove described as “unbelievably deplorable” conditions. The conditions were so bad, rescue workers and investigators were forced to wear protective masks while gathering evidence at the scene.

Arrested at the home were Linda and Cheryl Lillie, and Robert Eirhart, of rural Stanton. The trio face 176-counts of animal neglect. All three faced similar charges after a raid four-years ago. They avoided prosecution though, by relinquishing custody of the animals.

A dispatcher at the Montgomery County Sheriff’s office said today they’ve received numerous calls from people wanting to adopt the animals, but it will be several days before they will be made available, because they were covered in feces and various insects, and are in the process of being cleaned-up and their health evaluated.

Decision on rain forest location delayed

A decision was -supposed- to come today (Monday) on which Iowa city would host that multi-million-dollar rain forest project. Organizers now say the decision likely won’t come until early June. David Oman, executive director of the Environmental Project, says the board is looking at new data from the four hopeful cities.

Oman says more information has come in from each of the four just last Wednesday and it’s still being reviewed. Another problem is that many of the board members are traveling all over the country and world and can’t all seem to get in one place at one time to vote. Oman says while many people are calling it a rain forest, there are a wealth of other elements to the project. He says it includes a big water element, like an aquarium, wetlands, prairie exhibits, galleries, a botanical facility, a science center, a learning center, an IMAX theater and more.

Oman was asked what the final city will receive with the project. He says it’ll be a 21st century learning center and a destination attraction that’ll bring people in, along with the economic benefit of perhaps a million visitors. Four finalists are in the running for the project: Grinnell, Pella, Tiffin and Riverside.

Iowa Guard spokesman says they’re for border patrol

Iowa National Guard units were placed on border patrols four years ago and a spokesman says they’re ready to serve again if the president calls. President Bush is scheduled to speak to the nation tonight (Monday) about immigration issues and Bush is expected to pledge to send thousands of National Guard troops to stop the tide of illegal immigration across the U.S./Mexico border.

Lieutenant Colonel Greg Hapgood, a spokesman for the Iowa National Guard, says a few hundred Iowa Guard soldiers were dispatched to border patrols after the September 11th attacks. In 2002 and 2003, some of Iowa’s part-time soldiers were placed on active duty and given security assignments. About three-hundred-50 were sent to patrol the U.S. border with Canada.

Hapgood says any Iowa National Guard soldier could perform border patrols. “What a soldier needs to perform this mission well is just, first of all, the basic set of soldiering skills…but also after they’re mobilized they’d receive very specific mission tasks,” Hapgood says. There are about two-hundred Guard soldiers from other states deployed along the two-thousand-mile U.S./Mexico border today.

Bush is scheduled to outline his plans tonight (Monday) during a seven o’clock (Iowa time) speech to the nation. The Iowa National Guard currently has about 11-hundred soldiers on active duty. About seven-thousand more could be called up, but Hapgood says they’ve heard received no word from the Pentagon about which soldiers may be called up for border duty.

Newton track will feature safety wall

One thing that’s still going strong in Newton is construction on the Iowa Speedway. The racetrack that’s taking shape will include a state-of-the-art SAFER barrier. The name stands for “Steel and Foam Energy Reduction,” a design for the track’s outside wall that can cut the odds of serious injuries in a crash.

Dean Sicking is director of the Midwest Roadside Safety Facility, and is credited with devising the “SAFER Barrier.” The barrier absorbs a third to one-half the energy of an impact with the wall, holding down the amount of damage to the car body and minimizing the force of the crash upon the car and the g-load of that crash on the driver.

Sicking says the Iowa Speedway is being built with the SAFER barrier incorporated in its design. “Newton is our first guinea pig,” Sicking says. All the racetracks where the SAFER barrier’s been installed so far were already built with conventional concrete barriers and the SAFER system was added to its face. Newton will be the first built without any concrete behind the SAFER barrier.

NASCAR racer Dale Earnhardt died after his racecar hit a wall while he was going 150 miles an hour during the Daytona 500 race five years ago. Sicking was asked if his SAFER barrier’s part of the reason there hasn’t been a similar race-driver death since that one. Sicking says he thinks “without a doubt there’s been a half a dozen crashes where there would have been a high probability of a serious injury or fatality, where the drivers more or less walked away.”

He says there have been a few concussions but no serious injuries in any NASCAR crashes since the SAFER barrier was added to tracks, and he’s pretty sure that without it, there would have been fatalities.

Related web sites:
More info on SAFER wall technology