May 21, 2012

Fire damages Waterloo group home

Authorities are investigating a fire that heavily damaged a Waterloo-area group home, displacing nearly a dozen people with intellectual disabilities. Firefighters from four area departments were called to the scene Wednesday afternoon in Evansdale.

Chris Sparks, is executive director of Exceptional Persons Incorporated, which has run the home for about 20 years. He says the home was empty when the fire broke out. The 10 residents and one staff member normally at the home were away at day jobs or programs.

The fire gutted half of the one-story structure; the other half sustained smoke and water damage. Sparks says everyone displaced by the fire spent the night in a hotel, but they won’t be homeless for long. He says there are a number of other residential facilities in the area. The state fire marshal is expected to be at the scene today to investigate the cause.

 

Cedar Falls police take another look at 35-year-old murder case

Cedar Falls police are marking the anniversary of the city’s only unsolved murder by re-examining the case. Thirty-five years ago, Dennis Clougherty was shot to death while hitch-hiking from Madison, Wisconsin.

The 23-year-old University of Wisconsin graduate student was attempting to get to Wyoming to retrieve his repaired motorcycle, when he was killed. Authorities know Clougherty stopped for dinner at an Independence café and made it to Waterloo the night before his death. His body was found in a ditch on the morning of August 13th, 1974, near a busy intersection on the western edge of Cedar Falls.

The motive for Clougherty’s death has never been determined. Police say they’ re-examining the cold case, hoping someone will come forward with a potential lead. New technologies could then help investigators solved the crime.

 

Council Bluffs man shot by sister dies

 A Council Bluffs man who was shot by his sister over the weekend has died. A spokesman for the Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, Nebraska, says 34-year-old Chad Brannen died from a gunshot wound to the head Wednesday morning. Officials with the Mills County Sheriff’s Department say Brannen was confronted by a friend Sunday morning, about having a .22-caliber Ruger handgun inside the friend’s home. Brannen handed the gun to his sister, told her it was loaded with blanks, and asked her to shoot him. Authorities say when 31-year-old Elizabeth Brannen pointed the gun at her brother and pulled the trigger, a live round discharged from the weapon and hit her brother in the forehead. The shooting happened at a home south of Council Bluffs. Elizabeth Brannen was charged afterwards with reckless use of a firearm causing serious injury. Mills County Attorney Marci McClellan says Brannen’s sister may face a second, less serious felony charge of involuntary manslaughter, depending on the results of Chad Brannen’s autopsy. Elizabeth Brannen was released from jail earlier this week on pre-trial supervision.  

 

South Dakota clinic sued by Iowans

A South Dakota urology clinic being sued by five Iowans says 16 of its patients tested positive for hepatitis but didn’t it get from other patients. Health officials warned patients in April that there was a risk of infection because some medical equipment at Siouxland Urology Center in Dakota Dunes was being reused.

Five former patients from Iowa filed a class-action lawsuit against the clinic and recently filed an amended complaint. The clinic this week said it reported to the South Dakota Health Department the results of 3,900 tests done since the disclosure.

It says 16 people tested positive for hepatitis, which is the normal occurrence rate. Another 12 people disclosed they had the disease before being treated.

 

Braley: Grassley has done a "disservice" to seniors

Congressman Bruce Braley, a Democrat, is denouncing Republican Senator Chuck Grassley’s assertion that the public has "every right to fear" a portion of a health care reform plan that critics say would "pull the plug on grandma."

"I won’t name people in congress or people in Washington, but there’s some people who think it’s a terrible problem that grandma’s laying in the hospital bed with tubes in her and think that there ought to be some government policy that enters into that," Grassley told a crowd in Winterset Wednesday. "I’m just on the opposite."

Braley says Grassley has done a "disservice" to Iowa seniors.

"I was shocked, quite frankly, that anybody engaged in bipartisan negotiations on health care reform would reinforce this ridiculous claim that the House bill that I voted on in committee would somehow promote pulling the plug on grandma," Braley says. "It was a ridiculous assertion. It’s been debunked by every credible organization, including conservative Republican senators who introduced the provision in the Senate Health Committee."

Democrats in the state legislature last night pointed out Grassley’s grandson, Republican State Representative Pat Grassley, voted for a bill that called on the Iowa Department of Public Health to develop an end-of-life counseling program for terminally-ill patients. Grandpa Grassley told a crowd in Winterset yesterday that those decisions should be made by families and their clergy and government should not be involved.

"You know, I don’t have any problem with things like living wills, but they should be done within the family," Senator Grassley said. "We should not have a government program that determines you’re going to pull the plug on grandma."

Braley says Grassley’s statements should send a signal to the Democratic senator who is leading closed-door negotiations with Grassley and a handful of others, trying to come up with a compromise on health care reform.

"I certainly think it’s a wake-up call for him and President Obama that if one of your principle negotiators on the other side is reinforcing these myths about health care reform, you may have your work cut out for you," Braley says.

According to Braley, the whole point of a living will is to inform health care providers how you wish to be treated if you become terminally ill before you become so ill you’re unable to express them.

"And Senator Grassley’s comment that you should just keep that within the family really is a disservice to those people who end up struggling with those issues in the hospital or in hospice care," Braley says.

Braley is a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee which drafted and endorsed its own version of health care reform a couple of weeks ago.

 

Rants: national health care reform would cost Iowans millions

A Republican candidate for governor is attacking President Obama, Governor Culver and Democrats in congress over the issue of health care. Chris Rants of Sioux City says Iowa taxpayers would see a $630 million increase in state spending under if a health care reform bill that’s passed a U.S. Senate committee becomes law.

“Congress is out-of-touch if they think states like Iowa can afford that kind of a cost increase,” Rants says.

According to Rants, “all the outrage being expressed” at town hall meetings this August may be obscuring “important details” like the cost to state government.

“Governor Culver, frankly, ought to be going to these town hall meetings and telling congress, ‘Iowa can’t afford it,’ because there’s no way our government can take a 60 percent increase in the Medicaid program,” Rants says.

Rants cites an analysis which concludes the plan that passed the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee would let almost 336-thousand more Iowa adults enroll in Medicaid. That’s where he gets that $630 million number.

“We currently spend as part of our state match a billion dollars on the Medicaid program. It’s a huge cost for state government, so this represents a 60 percent increase,” Rants says.

The federal government has traditionally paid for about two-thirds of the cost of Medicaid. Rants argues that if the federal government takes on more spending, in general, with health care reform, the feds may choose to reduce their support of Medicaid, forcing states to shoulder a greater share of the costs.

 

Int’l Video Game Hall of Fame in Ottumwa

The video gaming industry is worth billions of dollars and a southeast Iowa town wants to cash in on everything from the latest games all the way back to Pac Man. Ottumwa Mayor Dale Uehling will be helping unveil plans today for what will be called the International Video Game Hall of Fame and Museum.

"We’re very hopeful that we can become the video gaming capitol of the world," the mayor says.

 The facility is still in the planning stages but he says some enthusiasts foresee the interactive museum and global video game top score registry as being a $30 to 50 million investment.

"We need to get a comprehensive study done on exactly what is needed," the mayor says, which includes the option of taking several buildings downtown to devote to this proposal or perhaps a new facility is what would work best.

A steering committee of more than 35 people includes representatives from city, county and state governments, as well as Ottumwa merchants and citizens. The mayor says it’s still very much a work in progress, with much exciting potential.

"Part of this will depend on what is the attraction going to be?" Uehling says. "We visualize that we would have international competition here as a part of this so we need something that’s going to have some capacity."

More information will be revealed on the proposed facility at 1 p.m. today at the Bridge View Center in Ottumwa.