February 9, 2012

Rosenfels ignores Favre speculation, prepares to be Vikes QB

Sage Rosenfels is trying to learn a new system and avoid speculation on Brett Favre at the same time. The Maquoketa native and former Iowa State quarterback is competing for the starting job in Minnesota after being traded to the Vikings from the Houston Texans. There is a chance that Favre may come out of retirement, again, and sign with the Vikings for the upcoming season.

Rosenfels says there’s only so many things he can control in life and he can’t control what Favre does. He says he just keeps working to learn the offense. Rosenfels says it’s never discussed by players as it’s not something they can control.

Rosenfels is entering his ninth season in the NFL and is happy to be closer to home. He says being back in the midwest is great, as his parents can now drive to see him. Before he says they had to take flights to see him in Miami or Houston. And he says it’s a good team with several veterans back from the team that went 10-6 last year.

Rosenfels is competing with Tavares Jackson for the starting job. He says Jackson can help him with certain things in the offense and he can help Jackson with other things. Rosenfels says the competition can only help the football team. 

North Tama’s Stokes claims another track title

At the state high school track meet North Tama’s Sarah Stokes claimed her second title in as many days a set another record in the process. After winning the 400 on Thursday in record fashion Stokes won the 400 hurdles this morning with a time of 1:02.14.

Stoke says she did a lot better than she thought she would. Stokes says her coach told her to run on the edge, but run in control and that’s what she did.

Stokes has two more events on Saturday, the 800 and the 1,500. She says she wants to run a good time and try to win the 800, and she says with the competition in the 1,500, she hopes to get a personal record.

Whitney Westrum ran the anchor leg as Waukee won the girls 4A four by 200 relay. Westrum says she’s excited to see what they can do in their other races. Waukee won the race while starting out in lane number eight. She says it’s tough because you don’t see anyone in lane 8.

 

Iowa basketball team heads overseas shorthanded

Iowa basketball coach Todd Lickliter won’t have much depth to work with when the Hawkeyes play four games in Italy and Greece beginning this weekend. Incoming freshman cannot take part in summer trips and with four players leaving the program at the end of last season the roster only has seven players.

Two of the defections were Jake Kelly and Jeff Peterson so the Hawks are without an experienced point guard.  Lickliter says the players that remain in the program have worked hard and they want to compete.

He says the players don’t like where they are at, and want to do something about it. With only two reserves the Hawks will need to avoid foul trouble. He says they may play some zone as they have a lot of minutes to play.

Lickliter says it will be a good test to see if his team can play smart basketball. He says they are learning how to complement each other and the techniques, and now need to play the game fully alert.

Iowa’s first game is Sunday in Rome. 

Schools get state money to create playground shade

It’s usually wise to avoid “shady” deals, but eight Iowa school districts are getting grants to build sun shade structures to shield students from the midday rays. The grants came through the Iowa Department of Public Health, where spokeswoman Jolene Carver says kids need to learn early about the potential hazards of too much sunshine.

“A lot of the school grounds have taken shade off of the playgrounds and then they put the kids out to play for recess over the noon hour, which is not the best time of day to be out,” Carver says. “We’ve put money out available, it’s federal and state funds that are helping do this.”

Carver is coordinator of the state health department’s skin cancer control program. Each school district got $4,000, for a total of $32,000 being spent on the structures statewide. Carver says each school is choosing the type of shade-provider that’ll work best during recess or other outdoor activities.

“Some are putting hard structures in place, like gazebos,” Carver says. There are also picnic shelter-type structures that are open with just columns and a roof. Other schools are planning to use more temporary structures that are basically canvas awnings supported by metal poles. They can be taken down during stormy and winter weather.

Carver says skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in Iowa and in the United States and these structures will offer kids protection from the sun. “We need to protect our skin, no matter what age,” Carver says. “Our children need to be taught how to take care of their skin for their lifetimes to reduce their risk of developing skin cancer.”

She says eight Iowa school districts applied for the funds and all eight got the money. Carver says the program will likely be offered again next year. The schools that got the grants this year are: Sidney Community School District – Elementary School; Mt. Ayr Community Schools – Ringgold County Child Care; Keokuk Community School District – George Washington School; Northeast Community School District – Goose Lake; Mormon Trail Community School – Humeston; North Mahaska Early Childhood Education Center – New Sharon; St. Ansgar Community Schools; and St. Mary’s School – Storm Lake.

Culver signs bill responding to Atalissa bunkhouse

Governor Culver has signed a bill into law which addresses some of the issues surrounding the state-ordered closure of an eastern Iowa "bunkhouse" for mentally disabled men who were working at a meatpacking plant.

"People with disabilities are, first and foremost, people who should be treated with the dignity and respect they deserve," Culver says. "While we can’t change the past, we can do all we can to ensure that situation like that of Atalissa never happen again."

This past February state officials moved 21 malnourished men who were living in an old schoolhouse in Atalissa to other facilities after investigators found the fire code violations in the home — and discovered space heaters were the only source of heat in the schoolhouse.

"If there could ever be any silver lining from this terrible experience, it is that the men from Atalissa can serve to teach us all a valuable lesson about the inherent value of every person and the need for vigilance in protecting people’s rights," Culver says.

Iowa Department of Elder Affairs director John McCalley says this new state law will require unlicensed group home like the one in Atalissa which house disabled Iowans to register with the state.

"This is a practical step forward," McCalley says. "It gives us something to build on should we need to in the future, but does not overreach in the government’s authority."

McCalley is leading a task force that’s still reviewing the Atalissa case, and he says they may have more recommendations for the 2010 legislature as they may learn more once documents from the criminal investigations on the state and federal level are made public. As a result of the bill the governor signed into law today, more group homes for disabled Iowans will likely be subject to state inspection.

"We have come a long way in our society in the types of things that individuals can do in the workplace, the services that available for individuals to live independently," McCalley says, "and what existed in Atalissa is just absolutely the wrong this for this day and age."

Corn cob pen prepared by Mark McCalley for bill signing. McCalley’s brother Mark, who has Down’s Syndrome, made Governor Culver a pen to use for signing the bill today.

 Mark wasn’t at the bill signing ceremony, however as he was, at that time, riding the bus to his job at a Wal-Mart in Waterloo.

"It is made out of a corn cob, actually, so it’s very Iowa," McCalley said of his brother’s handiwork. The governor joked: "It’s renewable."

McCalley then handed Culver the pen: "If you would please, use it for signing at least one stroke on the bill." Culver used Mark McCalley’s corn cob pen first, then used about a dozen others to sign the individual letters of his name on the bill and another document that’s given to the secretary of state.

Then, as previous governors have done, Culver handed out the pens to those who’d come to watch him sign the bill. Culver, though, kept the corn cob pen.

Click on the audio link below listen to all of today’s bill signing ceremony.

AUDIO: bill signing ceremony…MP3 8 min

Deadly Sioux City fire blamed on child playing with matches

Investigators say a child playing with matches sparked a deadly fire in Sioux City. Authorities say the fire on May 9th started in a sofa and spread throughout the house.

Firefighters rescued 27-year-old Chonburi Louangrath from the second-floor of the home, but she died two days later at a hospital. Two other people were in the house, a child and a man escaped the fire.

One dead in Clayton County crash

A deadly crash in northeast Iowa is under investigation. One person has died in a rollover accident in Clayton County. It happened shortly after 4 P.M. Thursday on Highway 3, just east of Edgewood.

A Volkswagen Beetle left the road, went out of control, and entered a ditch. The car then rolled into a field. The driver, who has not yet been identified, was aircared to St. Luke’s Hospital in Cedar Rapids, where they died from the injuries.