January 28, 2012

U-I research shows school buses among safest transportation

Researchers at the University of Iowa have published a study showing that school buses are among the safest forms of transportation on the road. Corinne Peek-Asa co-authored the report which involved the evaluation of crash data in Iowa between 2002 and 2005.

She says previous studies have only focused on high-impact collisions involving school buses. "There’s much less research that looks at crash involvement of buses," Peek-Asa said. "That gap has sort of left the public feeling like buses may be very dangerous, because what they hear about is those catastrophic crashes."

The U-I researchers compared school bus mileage data to crash, injury and fatality reports. On average, there were 13 injuries and only one fatality per 100 million bus miles traveled. Peek-Asa says they also found injuries were five times less likely in school bus crashes compared to other vehicles. The study shows most of the accidents involving school buses were caused by other motorists.

"They tend to happen when someone is following the bus too closely, trying to pass the bus or trying to turn left in front of the bus," Peek-Asa said. In addition, the person most likely to be injured on the bus – is the school bus driver. Peek-Asa credits the seats for keeping students relatively safe.

"Because the seats are built really high and have a lot of padding on them, unless you’re going really fast, you’re not going to hit anything with enough velocity to cause severe or fatal injury," Peek-Asa said.

The U-I study appears in the March issue of the journal Accident Analysis and Prevention. 

Sex offender to be released from prison, but movements will be monitored

A 50-year-old man imprisoned on a sex abuse charge will get an early release from prison, but state officials say he’ll have to wear an electronic bracelet on his ankle so his movements can be monitored.

Michael McGill was arrested at Valley West Mall in West Des Moines last April for grabbing a 21-year-old man. McGill was charged with assault with intent to commit sex abuse and he’s spent eight months in prison. McGill is eligible for early release due to good behavior behind bars and he’ll be released this Saturday, but Fred Scaletta of the Iowa Department of Corrections says McGill be transferred to the Fort Des Moines Correctional Center — a halfway house — and will be forced to wear that bracelet monitor.

"With the ankle bracelet, if there was any attempt to move away from that facility to any amount of distance we would know that very, very quickly," Scaletta says.

McGill was sentenced to two years in prison and the Department of Corrections asked a judge to declare him a sexually-violent predator so he could be held beyond his sentence, but a psychologist determined McGill did not meet the criteria. While McGill is being released from prison, authorities may "supervise" his movements for the next 10 years, according to Scaletta.

 

Ferentz will take no disciplinary action toward Adrian Clayborn

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz says he is not going to take disciplinary action against defensive end Adrian Clayborn. The native of St. Louis has been accused of punching a cab driver during an incident in January.

Ferentz says, "Sometimes you have enough evidence in front of you where you’re pretty sure something has to be done, and sometimes you don’t. And it is as simple as that," Ferentz says.

Ferentz says he’s not sure what happened in this case, but says Clayborn has been an exemplary student and player and he says based on what he knows, he’s not going to take any action.

Ferentz says Clayborn is practicing with the team. He says Clayborn is in good standing with an asterisk next to it, and until something else comes forward in the process, he will act on it accordingly. 

Iowa football opens Spring drills

The Iowa football team opens spring drills with high hopes for next season. The Hawks won six of their final seven games last season, including a blowout of South Carolina in the Outback Bowl to finish with a record of 9-4.

Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz says the outcome of the game was good as was the way the team conducted itself in heading up to the game. He says the extra practice was good for all the players, especially the younger one.

Ferentz says while a number of key players return there were several key losses as well. He says there are a lot of questions in the spring and spring ball will help answer some of those questions. Ferentz says injury and surgery in the off season will keep a few regulars from taking part in contact.

Four starters won’t have any contact, including A.J. Edds and Tony Moeaki and both safeties Tyler Sash and Brett Greenwood are also out. Ferentz says that’s a lot of players to have out, but it also gives the other players more exposure and practice.

Iowa opens the season September fifth at home against Northern Iowa.

Governor signs bill expanding unemployment benefits

Governor Chet Culver has signed a bill into law that will expand unemployment benefits for many Iowans who’ve lost their job. Laid-off workers who’re training for a new job will be eligible for 26 more weeks of unemployment benefits.

The governor says state unemployment figures released this week highlight the need. "More than 82,000 Iowans are unemployed — 22,000 more than just 12 months ago," Culver said. "Eighty-two of our 99 counties have seen an increase in unemployment. Eleven…counties have unemployment rates right at or below 10 percent."

The new law also speeds up the process for collecting unemployment benefits. It means Iowans who’ve lost their jobs in this quarter won’t have to wait until the next quarter of the business year before they receive an unemployment check.

"This will actually help the economy recover by getting benefits out more quickly to more people," Culver says.

The State of Iowa will receive up to $71 million  in federal funds to pay for the expanded benefits for the next three years. Republicans wanted to limit the expanded benefits to that three year period, arguing business taxes may have to go up in three years to cover the extra benefits, but Democrats overruled them and in the end all the Republicans in the Senate and most Republicans in the House voted for the plan.

Governor Culver signed the bill into law during a ceremony in the statehouse on Wednesday afternoon.

Privately, Culver signed 11 other bills into law, including one which changes the name of the Department of Elder Affairs to the Department on Aging. The department’s director says they’ll use the acronym D-A when referencing the agency. During House debate of the bill, one legislator said he would be offended if the Department on Aging went by D.O.A. the common acronym for "Dead on Arrival." The story gained national attention and prompted "Saturday Night Live" writers to include a joke about it during the NBC program’s March 8th show.

It’s "Kick Butts Day"

Teenage anti-smoking activists in Iowa are spreading the word today about how smoking kills as part of the 14th annual Kick Butts Day. Danny McGoldrick, vice president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, says the young Iowans are finding all sorts of creative ways to relay their message.

Across Iowa today, kids are holding carnivals, trivia games, information sessions and even mock funerals for the Marlboro man. Some students planned to set up mock-cemeteries with tombstones and crosses, representing the four-thousand Iowans who die every year from tobacco-related diseases.

McGoldrick says today’s events are part of a national effort to support solutions proven to reduce youth smoking, including funding smoking prevention programs, increasing cigarette taxes and smoke-free air laws.

"About 19-percent of kids in Iowa are still smokers and that’s 19-percent too many," McGoldrick says. "We’ve made progress over the last ten years but it’s leveled out over the last few. Tobacco companies are still spending 13-billion dollars a year on marketing, much of that directed to our kids."

Nationwide, he says studies find one person dies every 72-seconds from tobacco use and the tobacco industry addicts more than one-thousand youth every day. He says almost 90-percent of adults who are or were smokers say they started smoking by the time they were 18.

He encourages people to visit the group’s website "www.tobaccofreekids.org" and learn more about Kick Butts Day and learn how to take action in Iowa and in Washington D.C.

McGoldrick says the F.D.A. needs more power to regulate tobacco products, which he says kill 400-thousand people a year, yet are exempt from regulation. 

NWS says five tornadoes touched down Monday

The National Weather Service has determined that a total of five tornadoes touched Monday in western Iowa. Meteorologist Jeff Johnson helped survey some of the damage. He says an E-F-2 tornado struck just west of Missouri Valley in Harrison County, while two E-F-0s hit Montgomery County and two more E-F 0′s landed in Cass County.

The tornado that touched down in Missouri Valley destroyed a 100-year-old home and is blamed for a train derailment that sent 54 empty grain cars off the track. "An EF2 is a little bit stronger of course, with wind speeds of 111 to 135 miles-per-hour," Johnson said. "An E-F 0 has wind speeds of 85 miles-per-hour or less."

No one was injured in the storms. Most of the damage was to farm buildings and trees. This was Iowa’s first tornado event of 2009. Last year, there 105 tornadoes that hit the state. Only nine of them were rated E-F-2 or higher. "If you get above EF3, that’s very rare," Johnson said. "Last year, we only had one, the EF5 in Parkersburg – which was an extremely rare event."