February 9, 2012

Radio Iowa News Director on the road with Governor Vilsack

Governor Tom Vilsack’s flying into New Hampshire tonight (Tuesday) and will campaign there tomorrow and Thursday. Radio Iowa’s O. Kay Henderson has just landed in New Hampshire this afternoon to cover Vilsack’s latest venture in presidential politics.

Tom Vilsack is on the last leg of his eight-year run as Iowa’s Governor, but he’s now more openly embarking on a White House run with this trip to New Hampshire. Mark Halperin, the political director for ABC News, says Vilsack could be a good fit for New Hampshire.

“He does well talking to people directly. He doesn’t have airs about him which is important because he can show up at events in New Hampshire, just like in Iowa, and find five people in a living room rather than the maybe 35 you were expecting,” Halperin says. “I think people in New Hampshire care a lot about issues and Governor Vilsack can handle himself on issues.”

The list of potential Democratic presidential candidates is long and many candidates have made repeated trips to New Hampshire. “He’s not so far behind he can’t catch up, but if he’s serious about this he’s going to have to get on some more airplanes and get to New Hampshire much more than he has so far,” Halperin says.

A Des Moines Register poll of likely Iowa Caucus-goers found Vilsack in fourth place among potential presidential candidates, behind John Edwards, Hillary Clinton and John Kerry. There has been no credible poll of likely New Hampshire primary voters at this early stage.

Halperin says the level of interest in the 2008 presidential race is incredibly high in New Hampshire. “There are probably more activists in New Hampshire interested at this stage than, I think, in Iowa. Outside the hard-core activists in Iowa, I think most people think there should be a decent interval between elections,” Halperin says. He gauges politics as more of a “full-time sport” in New Hampshire.

Most of the population in New Hampshire is concentrated in the southern part of the state, according to Halperin, so that population base reads the same newspaper and watches the same television station. “It’s a smaller, more compact and I think more activist community in both parties,” Halperin says.

Dorothy Solomon, chair of the Carroll County New Hampshire Democratic Party, lives in the rural “north country” part of the state. She says Democrats in her part of the state are looking for a candidate who opposes the war in Iraq and proposes a way to provide “universal” health care to all Americans. “These are the things that we’re interested in up here,” Solomon says. “What they do down south could be somewhat different.”

Ray Buckley, a leading Democrat in Manchester who runs the staff for Democrats in the New Hampshire Senate, says the New Hampshire primary is vastly different from the Iowa Caucuses. “It’s a much more personal decision versus in the caucuses where you very much have to publicly declare who you support,” Buckley says.

Another big factor Vilsack must consider is the large number of registered Independent voters in New Hampshire who vote in the presidential primary — Buckley says those Independents can swing the election. “So that you’re not only going after the hard-core Democrat voters but you’re also going into the couple hundred thousand who consider themselves Independents,” Buckley says.

During conversations with Radio Iowa, a few New Hampshire party insiders suggested Governor Vilsack may face questions about the effort to change the schedule of events in the presidential campaign and a perception that Iowa Democratic leaders abandoned a long-standing alliance with New Hampshire that has kept Iowa the first caucus state and New Hampshire the first primary state.

ABC’s Halperin calls it the “frayed solidarity” in the two states’ effort to retain “first-in-the-nation” status for their electoral contests. “But I don’t think people will necessarily hold that against Governor Vilsack,” Halperin says. “Surprisingly, to my mind, outside the (political) elite there isn’t very much thought about the other state.”

Dorothy Solomon, that northern New Hampshire activist, agrees that most New Hampshire voters could care less. “Unless you’re really are an activist, I don’t know that they are that much informed as to what Iowa did or didn’t do,” she says.

Governor Vilsack is due to speak at an eight o’clock “politics and eggs” breakfast in Bedford, New Hampshire Wednesday morning, the first of five public appearances Vilsack will make in New Hampshire over the next two days.

Transportation Commission approves 2007 road plan with delayed projects

The Iowa Transportation Commission approved a 374-million-dollar road construction plan for 2007 today (Tuesday) with some shuffling of projects. Department of Transportation Planner John Ranney says three things altered the budget for the plan.

Ranney says declining federal revenue of 12-million dollars, 38-point-five million dollars in projects already pushed back from last year, and increasing construction costs in the amount of 68-million dollars. He says that increased the cost of the 2007 plan by 118 million dollars.

Ranney says contractors face a problem familiar to everyone in rising construction costs. He says fuel costs are a significant portion of the construction costs, and the higher petroleum prices upped the cost of construction.

Ranney says they shuffled around some projects to make up for the increase costs. Ranney says 24 projects, mostly bridge repair and pavement preservation, will be delayed.

Ranney says several projects will get done in 2007, including completing the Iowa 60 corridor in northwest Iowa in 2007, Des Moines to Burlington corridor in 2008, Interstate 235 in Des Moines in 2007. It targets 154 million for the interstates, 90-million for pavement preservation, 35 million for bridge projects, and 15 million dollars for safety projects.

Ranney says the projects are evaluated each month and if costs change, the plans can be altered. To see the 2007 construction plan, surf to the Iowa D-O-T’s website at the link below.

Related web sites:
More info on D-O-T road plan

Senator Grassley pleased no charges coming for Rove

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he’s relieved at today’s (Tuesday) decision that special prosecutors will pursue -no- charges against senior White House aide Karl Rove in the probe into a C-I-A leak.

Grassley says “I’m very happy that he’s not being charged in any way because if he were being charged, it would be a major political problem for the White House and maybe yet more negative impact upon the election coming up.”

Rove has testified five times before a grand jury in the leak case and Grassley says he’s always been upfront. Grassley says “He’s been very open and cooperative with the grand jury and you see under those circumstances that he had nothing to hide and I think this exonerates him and lends credibility to everything he’s said over the last two years in regard to that matter.”

Lewis “Scooter” Libby was indicted in the C-I-A case. Libby was Vice President Cheney’s former chief of staff.

Fatal explosion at Middletown ammo plant called an "accident"

Military officials this afternoon called a deadly explosion at the Army Ammunition Plant in Middletown an accident. Allen Marshall, a spokesman with the Joint Munitions Command, says it happened minutes after ten Monday morning. He says it caused extensive damage to two buildings on the line and two people missing in the explosion are presumed dead.

The two missing today were the only people scheduled to be working in that part of the plant at the time. The families of the people missing have been notified, but Marshall can’t say how long it will take to make a positive I.D. of what remains they can find after the explosion. The two were employees of American Ordnance, a contractor that’s doing much of the work at the plant. That contractor reportedly has 800 people currently working at the plant.

Marshall can’t say how many people were working at the plant at the time, and says they operate there different shifts. The plant, which is more than 19-thousand square feet in size, has five production lines in all. Line One was heavily damaged in the explosion Monday morning.

Operations are going on, he says, except in the area affected by the explosion. American Ordnance reportedly won a fifteen-Million-dollar contract this spring to produce howitzer ammunition at the plant, and is also reportedly producing armor and tank ammo.

Marshall says a thorough investigation will be done, and the Joint Munitions Command will be joined by members of the Army Combat Readiness Center, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and specialists from the Joint Munitions Command who are likely to spend months to determine the cause of the accident.

Governor Vilsack to spend Wed, Thurs. in New Hampshire

Governor Tom Vilsack will soon enter a major testing ground for presidential hopefuls — New Hampshire, the state that holds the nation’s first presidential primary. Vilsack’s spending much of today (Tuesday) in Washington, D.C. where he’ll speak at a “Take Back America” conference along with other potential presidential candidates like Hillary Clinton and John Kerry.

On Wednesday and Thursday, Vilsack will be in New Hampshire to appear at several events, including a Flag Day gala in Manchester, New Hampshire. It isn’t Vilsack’s first appearance in the Granite State. Vilsack helped New Hampshire Governor John Lynch campaign back in 2004 and Vilsack delivered a speech last Labor Day to a gathering of Democrats in Hampton Falls, New Hampshire, but Vilsack delivered it by phone.

Dan Gearino, a reporter for Lee Newspapers in Iowa, was there as the event’s host held a telephone receiver up to a microphone. “You could hear the call waiting clicking on the governor’s phone as he was being broadcast to this crowd of a lot of folks outside somebody’s home. It was this weird, kind of surreal moment,” Gearino says. “Despite all the kind of strange elements of it, the governor went over really well.”

Vilsack got a huge round of applause and people told Gearino afterwards that they were “really impressed” with what Vilsack had to say. New Hampshire’s governor and “quite a few” prominent New Hampshire Democrats were in the crowd, according to Gearino. “It was about as successful a non-event as a potential candidate could have, I guess,” Gearino says.

Vilsack canceled his flight to New Hampshire that weekend in order to oversee preparations here for the arrival of people being flown to Iowa from the hurricane-ravaged Gulf Coast. But a few days later, Iowa ended up getting just one plane carrying 18 evacuees.

Gearino writes for Lee Enterprises newspapers in Iowa, including the Quad City Times, the Mason City Globe-Gazette, the Muscatine Journal, the Waterloo Courier and the Sioux City Journal. Coincidentally, Gearino worked for a newspaper in southwestern New Hampshire from 2001 to 2004, but did not cover Vilsack’s appearances with John Lynch, the Democrat who was elected New Hampshire’s governor in 2004.

Iowa woman run over, killed by police on California beach

An Iowa woman died after being run over by police while sunning on a beach in Oxnard, California. The officers had stopped on a sand berm to watch a swimmer the officers thought was in distress.

When the officers saw the swimmer was fine, they drove over the berm and the woman’s head. The victim was identified as 49-year-old Cindy Conolly of Sioux City. A police commander says the officers did not immediately realize they had run over the woman and continued driving. A witness called for help.

An official with the Ventura County coroner’s office says Conolly was in town for her son’s wedding.

Former Valeria clerk sentenced for theft

The former city clerk in the small central Iowa town of Valeria is sentenced to ten years in prison for stealing from her employer. The theft was discovered after an audit was conducted by the Jasper County Auditor.

The report found nearly 18-thousand dollars that was identified as improper disbursements and undeposited collections including improper checks written to the city clerk, and over 500-dollars to the mayor, who was sharing a house with the city clerk Sheryl Jaber, who is accused of taking the money.

The audit shows Jaber issued 50 checks to herself and three more checks to the mayor for more than 400 dollars.