February 9, 2012

Iowa’s 2010 Caucuses set for a Saturday

The leaders of Iowa’s two major political parties have joined forces to announce Democrats and Republicans will hold their 2010 Iowa Caucuses on January 23, a Saturday.

Iowa Republican Party executive director Jeff Boeyink says both parties are doing this for one simple reason.

"We want to maximize participation in the Caucuses," he says. "And even though we know there are complications on any date that you pick, the idea was that a Saturday afternoon was probably just about as available on peoples’ schedule as just about anything."

The 2008 Caucuses were held on a Thursday night. The 2010 Iowa Caucuses will start at one o’clock on a Saturday afternoon.

"We’re trying to make ourselves convenient. We want to remove as many barriers to participation as possible," Boeyink says. "Having it on a Saturday afternoon, one of the things we also talked about was the opportunity to have more youth involved."

Basketball games, band concerts, play practices and other school activities often clog up the nighttime schedules for high schoolers during the week, but Iowa Democratic Party executive director Norman Sterzenbach says Saturdays are often free.

"The whole point of this discussion was to figure out ways that we could increase participation in both the Democratic and Republican Party Caucuses," Sterzenbach says. "Saturday afternoon is always talked about as one of those days that Iowans may have more flexibility in their schedule and maybe more able to make a party function, like a Caucus."

The State Central Committees of both political parties endorsed the date for the 2010 Caucuses — the first time in modern history that either party has held the events on a Saturday. For those who practice Judaism, the Sabbath begins at nightfall on Friday and ends Saturday night. Sterzenbach says every day of the week has some sort of challenge associated with it.

"We’re open to ideas, always, on how we can involve more people in the process," Sterzenbach says. "The idea here is not to exclude anyone for any reason."

Both Democrats and Republicans saw record turn-out for the 2008 Iowa Caucuses. In 2010, however, caucus-goers won’t be discussing potential presidential candidates and such "off-year" Caucuses typically attract far fewer participants. Sterzenbach says they’d love to have everyone who attended the 2008 Caucuses show up in January, but it’s unlikely.

"That may be unrealistic without the draw of the presidential campaigns," Sterzenbach says. "But certainly we would like everyone who has participated in the past to come out and be part of their local county activities."

Boeyink says Republicans feel the same way.

"We’ll see how it works," Boeyink says. "…This is just an opportunity in 2010 to try something a little different."

Both men say the decision to hold the 2010 Caucuses on a Saturday has no bearing on the date of the 2012 Caucuses when it’s likely Iowa Republicans will to be choosing from among an array of presidential candidates and Iowa Democrats will be endorsing Barack Obama’s reelection effort.

"This is only about 2010," Sterzenbach says. "Any discussions for 2012 will involve the Democratic National Committee as well as the Iowa Democratic Party."

The Iowa Republican Party’s executive director agrees.

"This decision is a stand-alone," Boeyink says. "2012 decisions will have to be made based on working with our counterparts at the Iowa Democratic Party and us working with our folks at the Republican National Committee."

 

Bike group says ban on farm-to-market roads not the answer

The leader of the Iowa Bicycle Coalition says an effort to ban bikes from farm to market roads isn’t the right way to try and improve safety. The Citizens for Safety Coalition of Iowa has begun to collect signatures for a petition asking Iowa lawmakers to place a question on the 2010 ballot to ban bicyclists from those roads. (see related story here.)

Mark Wyatt, executive director of the Iowa Bicycle Coalition says a ban won’t accomplish anything. Wyatt says safety needs to be emphasized, "but banning bicycles I don’t think accomplishes that." He says there are a lot of tools to make roadways safer for both motorist and bicyclists, and those tools need to be implemented.

Wyatt says existing laws provide a framework for sharing the road safely and there are other things that can be done. "It starts with roadway design changes, improved signage, better enforcement, education programs and awareness building, I think that really makes a difference, but a bike ban isn’t the answer to any of those tools that the governments have to address roadway safety," Wyatt says.

Wyatt says banning bikes would make a negative impact on the economy and health of Iowans. He says the recent economic study of the week-long RAGBRAI bike ride showed a $24-million impact in the state, and he says there are many charity and tourism fundraisers that depend on bicycling.

Healthwise, he says a study has shown a relationship between high rates of bicycling and a healthier population. Wyatt says bicycling can help lower rates of diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity.

For more information on biking in Iowa, see the Iowa Bicycle Coalition website.

Larchwood representative says South Dakota overreacting to casino plan

A consultant’s report finds most income for a proposed casino in Lyon County, Iowa, would come from residents of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, about six miles away. The report says the casino would make about $55-million a year, draw $18-million from South Dakota’s video lottery and contribute about $14-million in taxes to Iowa.

Jeff Gallagher, of Larchwood, heads the Lyon County Riverboat Foundation and says people in South Dakota shouldn’t overreact to the report. "That’s really a misleading thing," Gallagher says. "Yeah, they’re predicting a 55-million dollar income to the casino but that money’s going to be spent on wages and products and all kinds of things, most of which are going to come out of South Dakota, eventually."

In a Radio Iowa story on Monday, South Dakota developers said they’d consider building a casino on their side of the border to "counter" whatever might be built in Iowa. Gallagher says he sees the proposed casino as economic development for the entire region, not just for northwest Iowa.

"Everybody’s gotta’ do what’s in their own best interest," Gallagher says. "I don’t know exactly what they can do, I mean, we don’t throw up a road block every time they build a new store in Sioux Falls and say ‘We’re not going to go shop there.’" Gallagher says the Iowa casino promoters anticipate many of the benefits will flow to the South Dakota side of the border.

Gallagher says: "I expect that of the 400 to 500 people that work there, 300 to 400 are going to live in Sioux Falls, so they’re going to buy their groceries, they’re going to buy their clothes, they’re going to buy everything. All the money that they earn from that casino, they’re going to spend in Sioux Falls. That’s what we expect."

Earlier this month, the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission said it would accept applications for new casinos. The Lyon County group will take its formal application to the panel in October.

 

Perfect game highlights Boone’s win over Chariton

Blaine Reutter tossed a five-inning perfect game as second rated Boone cruised past Chariton 12-0 in a class 3A quarterfinal round game. Reutter says there’s no way he could have thrown a perfect game without his teammates, who he says made the plays to keep him in it. He struck out 7 of the 15 batters he faced. Boone is now 36-4.

Boone opened the scoring with two runs in the second inning and led 3-0 before blowing the game open with nine runs in the top of the fifth. They finished the game with 10 hits. Reutter’s perfect game was not secured until Boone shortstop Josh Frank made a sparkling play on a slow roller off the bat of Chariton’s Dustin Harberts. Reutter says he had confidence that Frank would make the play.

The loss ends a late season run by Chariton which finished the season with a record of 15-18. Chariton coach Chris Basinger says he thought they would have a 20-win team coming in, but things didn’t go that way after an injury to their top pitcher. He says he’s happy they got hot at the right time at the end of the season and feels the future is bright for the program. 

Cedar Rapids warehouse fire could smolder for days

Firefighters in Cedar Rapids say a fire at a large, vacant warehouse could continue to smolder for days. They first arrived on the scene in the 1600 block of 3rd Street Southeast just after six o’clock this morning. Large bales of cardboard were burning inside the brick structure, but firefighters were ordered out of the building.

Cedar Rapids Fire Department spokesman Greg Buelow says the building was vacated and deemed "structurally unsound" after last summer’s floods. "Really, there’s no point of putting a firefighter inside there to try and extinguish a fire from the interior when it’s been deemed structurally unsound by a structural engineer," Buelow said.

The fire spread to the second and third floors of the warehouse. For now, firefighters are attacking the blaze from the outside – which will make it difficult to fully extinguish anytime soon. Buelow says a demolition crew might be called in to take down one of the structure’s walls. "That way we can see what we’re doing and get water on what’s still burning," Buelow said.

No injuries have been reported and no residents have been evacuated. "At this point, there’s no danger to any of the surrounding area," Buelow said. "The fire is confined, but it’s stubborn. Everybody would just like for it to be out at this point." An exact cause for the fire has not been determined, but Buelow says it is considered suspicious because the building was vacant and did not have electricity.

The property has not been occupied since last summer’s flood, but was most recently used by Linn Star Transfer as a distribution center for appliances. 

Grassley votes "NO" on Sotomayor nomination

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley voted against the nomination of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor this morning in the Senate Judiciary Committee. It’s the first time in nearly 29 years Grassley’s voted "no" on a nominee for the nation’s high court. Grassley says he’s not convinced Sotomayor will be impartial and he’s concerned about her "wild-eyed" statements on race.

Grassley, a Republican, says he "made a mistake" some 20 years ago when he voted for the nomination of Justice David Souter, who’s now stepping down. Grassley says Souter was the only one of the 12 justices for whom he’s voted who "turned out differently from what I anticipated."

"(Souter) talked about the Supreme Court needing to fill vacuums in the law if Congress hadn’t acted," Grassley says. "Well, you know how our system of government works. The legislature makes laws, the Supreme Court interprets the laws and the Constitution, and filling a vacuum because Congress hasn’t acted, is legislating."

Souter is retiring and Sotomayor is expected to fill his seat, as her confirmation is all but certain in the full Senate. Grassley says he saw some of Souter’s legal philosophies in Sotomayor during the confirmation hearings. "I asked her about that and I got a lot of gobbledygook along the same lines of what the Supreme Court’s supposed to do or not do and I see myself voting for another Souter if I vote for her," Grassley says. "I’m not going to make that mistake again."

In an interview on Monday, Iowa native and Nebraska U.S. Senator Mike Johanns said Sotomayor’s comments about being a "wise Latina" are a concern to him, adding, "that’s not what being a judge is about." Grassley, too, says he has concerns about Sotomayor’s comments regarding her ethnic background.

"She tried to overcome a lot of the speeches and wild-eyed statements she made when she was trying to change her tune as the nominee," Grassley says. "I kinda’ felt like it was a ‘confirmation conversion’ and a matter of expediency to look more like a judge and less like a legislator or a political ideologue." Sotomayor is considered a virtual lock to be confirmed by the full Senate next week as the first Hispanic justice on the Supreme Court.

Iowa Democratic Party Chairman Michael Kiernan issued a statement Monday saying: "By voting ‘no,’ Senator Grassley signals he’s out of touch with Iowans and more interested in pleasing Republican Senators on the Judiciary Committee than his constituents back home. Judge Sotomayor is a down-to-earth person who has approached the bench from the real world, not an ivory tower."

Sotomayor was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee on a 13-6 vote. 

Des Moines man dies from ATV accident injuries

A Des Moines man is dead from injuries sustained in an ATV accident in north-central Iowa. The Cerro Gordo County Sheriff’s Department was called about 4:25 Sunday morning to a rural area near Rock Falls.

They say 41-year-old Mathew Wade Harvey was eastbound on a road when he struck the rear end of a parked vehicle owned by 24-year-old Kellie Ferden of Plymouth.

Harvey was airlifted to Mercy Medical Center-North Iowa in Mason City where he died Monday afternoon. The accident remains under investigation by the Cerro Gordo County Sheriff’s Department.