May 21, 2012

State Fair looking forward to new exhibition center

As the 2008 Iowa State Fair prepares to open its gates later this week, the foundation that raises money for the fair is looking forward to a major new project. The Iowa State Fair Blue Ribbon Foundation’s executive director, John Putney, says the Agriculture Exhibition Center will include a multi-purpose arena that should be ready by 2010.

"We’ll be able to have a lot of different events in there. Horse shows, livestock shows, trade shows, perhaps even a rodeo," Putney says. Putney says the new arena will be an improvement over the current livestock pavilion.

"We have the opportunity to have the Pergeron Horse Show here in 2010, you know you can only get so many of those six-horse hitches in that small pavilion," Putney says. He says the new arena will be able to accommodate many more hitches than four or five.

Des Moines-based insurance company, The Principal Financial Group, has donated one million dollars toward the center. Principal will pay $250,000 installments each year for the next four years. Businessman Bruce Rastetter and Mid-American Energy Company have also provided one million-dollar gifts for the project. Governor Chet Culver has also designated 11-million dollars in state money for the new exhibition center.

 

Grassley says American Cancer Society wasting money in ads targeting him

Anerucan Cancer Society ad in the DM Register. Half-page ads in today’s Des Moines Register and the Cedar Rapids Gazette urge Iowans to call a toll-free number to convince Senator Chuck Grassley to support legislation for tighter F.D.A. regulation of tobacco products.

The only wrinkle is, Grassley says he’s already made up his mind to support the bill.

 "They’re wasting their money because I’ve already voted for a program similar to that so I don’t know why they’re bothering to run the ad," Greassley says, "I’ve had three delegations coming out to Washington to talk to me about it and I’ve had two or three different phone calls, so they’re wasting their money when I’ve already told them I was going to vote for the bill."

The ads, paid for by the American Cancer Society’s Cancer Action Network, feature a group of smiling children standing beside a giant smoldering cigarette and say: "Each day the Senate delays, 4,000 more children targeted by Big Tobacco smoke their first cigarette." The proposal would give the F-D-A the authority to crack down on marketing tobacco to kids. Grassley says he’s already sold on the idea and wonders why the American Cancer Society would shell out big bucks for half-page ads.

Grassley says, "They oughta’ spend their money on cancer research instead of spending it on an ad, wasting their money." Iowa’s other U.S. Senator, Tom Harkin, was not mentioned in the ad as Harkin’s already voted for the bill in committee and is a co-sponsor. Grassley isn’t on that particular panel so he’s not technically on record, as yet.

Peggy Huppert, Iowa director of government relations for the American Cancer Society, says the ads will be running in the Des Moines and Cedar Rapids papers several times this week and next week. Huppert says they had several goals in mind with the ad campaign.

Huppert says: "We have been trying to get Senator Grassley to co-sponsor this bill. We also have a concern about not adding amendments. We’re concerned about having enough votes to prevent a filibuster. Finally, President Bush has threatened to veto this bill so we’re concerned about getting senators to commit to overriding a veto." Before Radio Iowa questioned Grassley on the issue, Huppert says Grassley had not voiced support for the measure.

"Senator Grassley has not committed to any of those things," Huppert says, "so that’s why we’re doing this, to up the level of commitment." When Huppert was read a transcript of Grassley’s direct quotes on the issue, she said, "That’s certainly good news." Huppert says the ads in the two Iowa papers will cost the non-profit agency a combined $48,000. 

Iowa looks for new start with new football season

Iowa football coach Kirk Ferentz says the Hawkeyes view this season as a new start. After four consecutive January bowl games the Hawks have stumbled the past two seasons and are coming off a 6-6 record in 2007 that included a stunning loss at home to Western Michigan in the season finale that kept them out of a bowl game for the first time since 2000.

Ferentz says the past is the past, whether its doing something good or doing something bad. Ferentz says they faced a different dilema in 2002 and 2004 when they won Big Ten Championships, but still had to move on. Ferentz says you don’t forget your past, but you have to move on.

Ferentz calls this a young but experienced team and says the work began when recruiting ended. He says he hopes the team is judged on what they do, and he’s excited about what is ahead. Improvement begins with an offense that finished lasst in the Big Ten and a running game that ranked tenth in the conference.

Ferentz says they have enough experience and if everyone improves as much as they should, then they should have a good offensive team. He says you have to play good defense to win a championship, but you also have to be able to throw and run the ball.

Not only are the Hawkeyes out to regain their winning ways this season they also hope to improve an image which has been damaged by off the field problems. Ferentz says the best thing they can do is do what they are supposed to do on the field and in the classroom. He says with the off the field and on the field problems, they’ve been pretty firm in the way they’ve handled it.

Junior quarterback Jake Christensen believes the Hawks can keep their off the field problems from becoming a distraction. He says it’s hard to read things every day about the team when you’re trying to improve the image of the team. Christensen says it’s disheartening to see continued incidents, but they are not going to let it affect them.

Christensen believes added experience will help the offense become more productive. He says will all the guys back there’s no where to go but up.

Christensen says he expects to be more consistent this season. He says he didn’t play as well as he should have last year, and says there’s nothing wrong with that as it was a learning experience.

Iowa opens on August 30th at home against Maine. 

Special Legislative session could wait on federal flood relief

A leading statehouse Democrat says inaction in Washington, D.C. on flood relief could delay plans for a special legislative session in Des Moines. On Friday, congress recessed for a five-week break without approving billions of dollars in emergency disaster aid.

Iowa Senate Democratic Leader Mike Gronstal of Council Bluffs says it would be premature to reconvene the legislature before they know how much money the federal government has earmarked for Iowa."So I think we want to work with Chuck Grassley, we want to work with Tom Harkin to get a good handle on what might be possible there," Gronstal says.

"Whether we can have that answer by the middle of September certainly remains to be seen." At issue is whether the state will be required to provide matching funds in order to qualify for some of the federal disaster grants.

"It would be kind of messy if we agreed up front we’re going to come up with the resources to cover 25 percent when it’s possible the feds would agree they’re going to cover 90 percent," Gronstal says. "I think that would be kind of messy for us and a mistake."

Governor Culver has said he’s considering calling lawmakers back to Des Moines for a special legislative session in early September, but Gronstal may ask Culver to postpone that if they’re still waiting for word from the feds. Gronstal was recently at the National Conference of State Legislatures meeting in New Orleans and he toured the ninth ward that was swamped by Hurricane Katrina.

"Three years later they are still just devastated in those neighborhoods," Gronstal says, "Just one or two houses on a block that are occupied, and then unoccupied, wrecked houses and vacant lots." Gronstal wants state officials to do what they can to ensure "rational" decisions about which flooded-out properties in Iowa should be abandoned and eligible for a government buy-out.

"Helping people with information’s almost as important as helping them with cash or with some sort of grant or loan because I look down there in New Orleans and it’s like three years later and nothing’s happening," Gronstal says. 

Pedestrian bridge between Omaha and Council Bluffs nearing completion

The pedestrian bridge over the Missouri River between Omaha and Council Bluffs will open to foot traffic a month or two earlier than planned. Project director Larry Foster says the design and construction companies worked together on the bridge.

Foster says, "One of the results of that approach is sometimes they just get it done quicker and that has been the case here." Foster says they’re way ahead of schedule on the span. He says, "There is still quite a bit of work to do, of course, but it does look like it will be able to open significantly before the November 30th deadline."

They’re now shooting for a ribbon-cutting at the end of September. Foster says it’s just called "the pedestrian bridge" for now, but that will likely change. "There is no name that has been established for it yet," Foster says. "That process would be something by agreement that’s mutually set and determined by both cities."

As for the landings, on the Nebraska side, there will be a plaza that’s still being built, while on the Iowa side, pedestrians will walk through a nature habitat to a park.  

Iowa Little League champs down Kansas

The Urbandale Little League team representing Iowa in the Indianapolis Midwest regional tournament moved their record in pool play to 2-1 with a 8-3 win over Kansas on Monday.

Trae Cropp hit a homer for Urbandale in the win, while Jonathan Eide pitched all six innings and struck out eight with no walks.

Urbandale plays their final pool play game today at 7:30 against Nebraska. Nebraska is 0-2 in pool play. The top four teams in the pool move on to the semifinals and play for a trip to the Little League World Series.

Democrats Greenwald, Hubler weigh in on energy debate with Latham, King

The two Democrats running against Iowa’s two Republican congressmen are striking back in the ongoing debate about U.S. energy policy.

Becky Greenwald, a Democrat from Perry, is running against Congressman Tom Latham of Ames who has said he’s "embarrassed" congress recessed without passing an energy bill. Greenwald suggests Latham should be embarrassed by his fellow Republicans who are staging a sort of sit-in in the U.S. House of Representatives. "I just look at it more as an election year prank and we have serious work that needs to be done and compromising and discussion that needs to happen and not be trying to pull stunts to garner attention," Greenwald says.

Greenwald would support drilling for oil along a greater expanse of the U.S. coastline if oil companies prove they’ve fully explored the 68 million acres of ocean ground they’ve already been awarded leases to tap for oil.  "When you think about it, that’s two times the physical size of the state of Iowa and so I’d like to understand why we don’t make use of those lands and that offshore drilling that’s already available," she says.

If she’s elected to congress, Greenwald says she’ll back greater federal support of alternative energy industries like wind energy, which she says puts Iowans to work in good-paying jobs that cannot be outsourced. "We absolutely need a comprehensive energy policy that’s going to take us into the next several decades," she says. "We need to be addressing it from all angles."

Congressman King is one of the Republicans giving speeches to tourists in the closed-for-business House in a bid to pressure Democrats to reconvene in special session for an energy debate. Rob Hubler, the Democrat from Council Bluffs who’s running against King, says King’s stunt it "too little, too late."

"What we’re suffer under with $4 gas or close to it is a lack of a comprehensive energy policy both on the part of Republicans and Democrats…(who) bickered and argued and fought back and forth over it," Hubler says, "and now we are suffering the consequences of it."

Hubler accuses King of grandstanding rather than working to find a "real" resolution. "This is another example of how it is better to go before the camera and try to make some kind of a show out of something," Hubler says.

Hubler opposes drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, something King supports, as Hubler says there’s a less than six-month supply of oil there and that wouldn’t dramatically reduce the price of gasoline. "I think we need to have a comprehensive approach. We need to understand that we have gotten to where we are because of bickering and because of arguing and because of a lack of congress — Republicans and Democrats — to really look at the future and say, ‘What do we need to be doing?,’" Hubler says. "We need to be looking at alternative, green answers. We need to get nuclear power onto the discussion table."

With countries like Germany getting most of their electricity from nuclear power, Hubler says it’s time for the U.S. to reassess the improved safety records of nuclear plants since it’s been about 30 years since the high-profile accidents at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl.