May 16, 2012

Bettendorf continues state soccer tradition

It would not be a boy’s state soccer tournament if it did not include Bettendorf. The Bulldogs have appeared in every state tournament and take an 18-1 mark into tonight’s opening round matchup against Ankeny.

Long-time coach Ben Pennington says this trip is especially rewarding as they return three starters from last year’s team. He says they have a bunch of new varsity players who have lifted weights and worked on their speed and agility. Pennington says it has been a very relaxed year that’s been fun.

Pennington says the team is not made up of great soccer players but great athletes. He says some of the best athletes don’t specialize and he says that’s why they have a talented soccer team. Pennington says over half of his starters don’t touch a soccer ball until the season starts.

Bettendorf has played in every state tournament. Pennington started coaching in 1982 and he says in his 14th year they started the state tournament and his team has been to all 12. Pennington says they came close to missing a couple of tournaments, but have managed to always make it in.

Auditor says report shows mismanagement at Workforce Development

Governor Tom Vilsack Thursday ordered the release of dozens of pages of documents from an internal investigation into the state agency that was supposed to be monitoring a central Iowa job training program where managers were paid excessive salaries.

State Auditor Dave Vaudt says the documents show a troubling pattern of mismanagement in the Iowa Workforce Development agency. “If you take a look at the report that was issued, there is a lot of abuse by IWD management and personnel in the proper payroll procedures and a lot of it related to promotions, hiring people, pay increases, retention bonuses,” Vaudt says. “That’s a disturbing thought considering the fact that a lot of the issues at CIETC, which was being monitored by IWD, also had to deal with salaries and bonuses.”

The governor’s staff on Wednesday tried to keep the report secret, but the governor ordered its release yesterday. The governor has not read the reports, which were compiled at his request in April. Vaudt says that’s unfortunate. “I think we should all take an interest,” Vaudt says. “As soon as I found out the report was being released, that was my first intent was to get a copy and read through (it) and see what it had to say because I think it helps us better understand the situation and what actions need to be taken…over the next few months.”

The documents released yesterday reveal favoritism in hiring practices within the state Workforce Development Agency and concludes some state workers were paid improper bonuses.

However, Vaudt says there were really no huge surprises in the documents. The auditor says the reports “clearly” show top managers in the Workforce Development agency knew about the excessive salaries and their chief reaction was to try to cover it all up.

Local, state and federal investigations continue into the Central Iowa Employment and Training Consortium and so far six people connected to the pay scandal have been fired, including the director, deputy director and a top administrator of the Iowa Workforce Development agency.

Third profile of Democrat Governor candidates: Fallon

Today, Radio Iowa offers the third of three profiles of the leading Democrats in the race for governor. Forty-eight-year-old Ed Fallon has spent a good bit of his life moving around. Fallon’s the son of a career military man who moved his family around the country to various posts.

Fallon enrolled in college in Vermont, but left to experience Europe. Fallon returned to the U.S. and wound up in Iowa — his wife’s home — and completed his education, switching from the study of music to earn a degree in religion from Drake. The Fallon’s settled in an inner-city neighborhood in Des Moines and 14 years ago Fallon ousted a long-time state legislator, winning a seat in the Iowa House that he’s held ever since.

A few years ago Fallon helped found a group called “One Thousand Friends of Iowa.” It has the goal of redeveloping inner cities by stopping the tide of concrete rolling over farmland as crop ground is converted to suburban landscapes. For the past two years, Fallon has been traveling the state, meeting Iowans one-by-one and asking for their vote to be Iowa’s next governor.

Fallon has never accepted contributions from lobbyists or political action committees and campaign finance reform is one of his campaign promises. “Iowa is home to some of the richest farmland and most genuine, hard-working people in the world and prosperity and justice ought to be every person’s birthright, and yet state government is off course,” Fallon says. “Special interests with deep pockets have essentially turned elections into auctions and they’ve essentially turned the state budget into their own private feeding trough.”

Fallon’s biggest budget complaint is over the Iowa Values Fund which so far has handed out about 130-million dollars in grants to businesses. Fallon calls it corporate welfare, and he suggests “throwing” state taxpayer dollars at companies — like the 24-million dollars the state gave Maytag in the past decade — is a waste. “We have to be honest with ourselves. There’s only so much we can do to tinker with a free-market economy,” Fallon says.

Fallon calls for redirecting state efforts toward helping small businesses. He also pledges to repeal millions of dollars worth of state tax-breaks approved over the past decade and redirect the money to K-through-12 schools as well as Iowa, Iowa State and U-N-I which are partially supported by state taxdollars. “Education is absolutely essential,” Fallon says, lamenting the 62 percent jump in tuition at the state colleges over the past four years. “We have been underfunding education significantly.”

Fallon has raised the ire of fellow Democrats in the past. Fallon backed Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader in 2000, a decision Fallon says in hindsight he regrets. Fallon also has a penchant for pressing nerves, sponsoring reams of bills during his tenure as a legislator including one that would have cut the pay of coaches at the state-supported universities.

Abortion rights has been an issue in this race, a Fallon has stressed to many crowds that he has been a consistent supporter of abortion rights. This is what he said during an interview with Radio Iowa in March after South Dakota’s governor signed a bill banning most abortions in that state. “When you go out to buy a new car, you look under the hood and it’s really important for people considering which candidate they want to support to look at our track records, check under our hoods, see what we’ve done, not just what we’re saying we’re going to do, but see what we’ve done. See what we’ve stood for in the past,” Fallon said.

Fallon is often classified as a liberal, but he holds conservative views on some issues. For example, Fallon has consistently voted against legalized gambling in the state.

Governor not sure about eminent domain bill

Governor Tom Vilsack says he can see both sides of the argument over a bill that would curb local governments’ ability to seize land for economic development projects. Vilsack must take action by the end of the day on the bills passed by the 2006 Iowa Legislature, and the governor says he’s “struggling” over his decision on that particular bill.

Vilsack says there are “deep concerns” about the need to protect private property owners, but the bill may not have been written as well as it should have been because legislators delayed the effective date of the bill to October 1st to ensure the city of Clinton could use its power to seize private property for an A-D-M plant expansion.

“There are other projects around the state that are cropping up that might be negatively impacted so you have an interesting balance between job growth, which everybody supports, and restricting the power of government, which a lot of people support, so I’m struggling with that,” Vilsack says. “I just haven’t made up my mind yet.”

Vilsack is getting a lot of e-mail about the bill and has consulted with city and county officials as well as real estate experts and developers. “It’s just a really difficult balancing act,” Vilsack says. “We talked to legislators about this, about the necessity of making sure that as its crafted it doesn’t necessarily strangle job growth and development. That’s basically the issue.”

Despite those misgivings, Vilsack says he can’t decide whether to approve or veto the bill. “I really don’t know what I’m going to do. Obviously I’ve got to make a decision,” Vilsack says. “I just want to convey to everyone it’s not an easy decision.” The League of Cities and the 17 largest chambers of commerce in Iowa oppose the bill.

The Republican Speaker of the Iowa House has issued an on-line alert to his backers, asking them to e-mail Vilsack and urge the governor to sign the bill. House Speaker Christopher Rants says Iowa governments will subject “private property owners to…duck-and-cover, dark-of-night takeover” of their homes and businesses if the bill doesn’t become law.

Survey shows good news for Iowa’s economy

It’s a perfect time to go job-hunting in Iowa, according to Creighton University’s latest statewide economic survey. Creighton economist Ernie Goss says the May numbers are looking great, especially for new graduates who are searching for their first jobs, and for other folks too.

Goss says “The Iowa economy continues to move along at a very good pace. The overall index was up again for the month of May.” Creighton surveys business leaders and supply managers every month in Iowa and eight other Midwestern states.

Goss says the results from those respondents in the Hawkeye State are very promising. Goss says manufacturing in Iowa is doing about as well as any other state in the region. He says even the agricultural machinery manufacturing sector is doing very well despite farm income being down. With Memorial Day behind us, Goss says many employers in Iowa are looking ahead to the summer months — and they’re hiring temporary and permanent help. He says the job market looks to be the best for recent high school and college graduates in a long time.

Goss says the employment index is the strongest they’ve seen in more than ten years, which he says will benefit new graduates, those looking for summer jobs and those who are switching companies. He predicts one dark cloud on the horizon though — as energy prices and interest rates remain high, that will “take its toll” on a variety of businesses by the end of summer. Triple-A says the current average price for a gallon of self-service unleaded gas in Iowa costs two-69 — compared to a dollar-97 one year ago.

Northwestern researcher studies parisitic worms

A researcher at Northwestern College in Orange City has won a 200-thousand dollar grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to continue his research on drugs that help get rid of parasitic worms.

Ralph Davis has been researching nematodes or roundworms, for 25 years. Davis says the worms infect pigs and cattle and sheep around the world and also infect people. He says a worm called asceris infects one-and-half-billion people worldwide.

Davis says he’s trying to help drug companies develop new drugs to treat the worms as the worms adapt to the old drugs. He says there are some very useful drugs, but there already some outbreaks of resistance to the drugs, particularly in veterinary medicine. Davis, who is an associate professor of biology, focuses on the nervous system of the worms.

Davis says he uses neurophysiological techniques to hook fine electrodes up to the nerve and muscle cells of the nematodes and then he tries to determine how the drugs impact the nervous systems of the worms. Davis says his research is part of the very early stages of finding ways to improve drugs.

Davis says it takes an average of 15 years to bring a drug from initial discovery to the store shelf and he says it can cost millions of dollars. Davis says the worms get into the intestinal tracts of humans and animals and can consume up to one third of the food the host eats — leading malnutrition.