May 21, 2012

Grassley to vote “no” on Senate Finance Committee health care bill

After months of work helping to craft a health care reform bill, Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley says he’ll vote “no” today when the bill goes before the Senate Finance Committee. Grassley, a Republican, is expected to be in the minority. One thing Grassley opposes in the legislation is the stipulation that virtually all Americans would need to carry health insurance or face a fine.

“There’s a penalty for people that don’t have health insurance,” Grassley says. “That fine would be paid to the Internal Revenue Service. It’s like a tax. In fact, I guess you could call it a penalty tax, that a family would have to pay $1,500 and an individual would have to pay $750.”

Critics charge it’s nonsensical to fine people who can’t afford to pay for health insurance, since it’s likely they already dropped health insurance because of the expense. On a philosophical basis, Grassley says he’s against the idea of forcing people to buy health insurance.

“The federal government has never mandated, ever, that you’ve gotta’ purchase such-and-such, anything, in other words, in America, you’re free to buy whatever you want to buy whenever you want to buy it,” Grassley says. “In this particular instance, for the first time, the government is saying you’ve got to have health insurance.”

The overall plan would cost 829-billion dollars over ten years. Grassley expects it to pass in the committee’s vote and that it may even pass the full Senate. Earlier this month, Democratic Iowa Senator Tom Harkin vowed a health care reform plan would be on President Obama’s desk before Christmas. Grassley was asked if he sees that statement as likely.

“If the Democrats stick together in the Senate, and they’ve got 60, they can produce a bill,” Grassley says. “Now, will they stick together? I don’t know. There seems to be seven or eight (senators) that are looking around for changes to be made before they can support it and who knows? Maybe those changes they want to make could bring us around to getting some Republican ideas adopted, like tort reform.” Another thing Grassley says he’d like to see in the bill is medical malpractice reform, which he says could save more money than any other proposals in the measure.

Corn and soybean prices go against price trend

Corn and soybean prices have been defying conventional harvest time trends by going up despite projections for a record crop. The manager of Iowa City’s Gringer Elevator says the crops are bucking the trend because they’re still in the fields. Terry Trenkamp says soybeans will stay in the fields until things dry out a little.

Trenkamp says everyone has stopped harvesting soybeans because you can’t harvest them when it’s too wet, and some have switched over to corn, because you can still harvest it when it is a little wetter. Trenkamp says farmers will have to wait to bring the beans in if it stays wet. He says the worst thing would be wet, damp weather and then snow, as it is hard to combine beans with snow on the ground.

Both corn and bean prices were up Monday on the Chicago Board of Trade.

Schools reporting large number of students out with flu

Several schools in the state are reporting 10% or more of their students absent because of the flu. Doctor Tony Carter is with St. Luke’s Hospital in Cedar Rapids. He says that all of the flu cases the hospital is seeing are H1N1 related and that the seasonal flu season has not started.

The Centers for Disease Control reports that most H1N1 cases are mild, but children seem to be suffering the most extreme effects from the new virus. Nationwide, H1N1 is blamed for 76 child deaths. Given the concerns over H1N1, Doctor Carter says it’s critical for parents to keep their children out of school until they’ve completely recovered.

“They shouldn’t be at school with a fever and they’re still basically infectious if they have a cough,” Carter said. Many parents struggle deciding if their child is sick enough to stay home. Angela Ulferts is a nurse at Cedar Rapids Prairie High School. “We like students to stay home fever-free for 24 hours, without any fever reducing medication,” Ulferts said.

Doctor Carter says children with H1N1 symptoms may take up to seven days to recover from the illness. There have been four H1N1 related deaths in Iowa this year. All of the victims were adults. Local public health agencies around the state are being supplied with the H1N1 vaccine. The first, small batch of vaccine arrived in the state last week. State health officials say they expect more doses of the H1N1 vaccine this week.

Contributed by Chris Earl, KCRG-TV, Cedar Rapids

“Branstad 2010″ has campaign manager

Former Governor Terry Branstad hasn’t officially announced yet that he’ll seek a fifth term as governor, but he now has a campaign manager.

Jeff Boeyink has resigned from his job as executive director of the Republican Party of Iowa to lead the “Terry Branstad 2010 Committee.”  Richard Schwarm of Lake Mills, Branstad’s ex-law partner and an organizer of the Branstad 2010 effort, announced Boeyink’s hiring this morning.

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Lickliter says team can compete in the Big Ten

Iowa basketball coach Todd Lickliter believes the Hawkeyes have enough talent to compete in the Big Ten. The Hawks were 15-17 in Lickliter’s second season at the helm but top scorer Jake Kelly and point guard Jeff Peterson were two of four players that left the program at the end of last season.

Lickliter says he won’t predict and won’t sell a team short. He says they will just try to get better every day and will compete in the league. Iowa will be expected to finish at or near the bottom of the Big Ten race but Lickliter feels the Hawks are better than that. Lickliter says that’s why they play the games, to find out how they will compete against the other teams.

There is only one senior on the roster but Lickliter says the program is headed in the right direction. “It’s not wishful, I believe, I think we’ve turned the corner, I am excited, I like where we are going,” Lickliter says. He says no one is happy with where they have been and they won’t be happy until they are competing for championships.

Iowa opens the season at home on November 15th against Texas-San Antonio.

ISU coach says team is improving, needs to continue

Iowa State coach Paul Rhoads says while the Cyclones are improving there is no such thing as a moral victory. ISU nearly upset 16th ranked Kansas before falling 41-36 and the Cyclones return home this weekend to host Baylor in their annual homecoming contest. Rhoads says they’d love to be nothing more than to be 5-1 right now, but are plays away from being that. He says the goal and expectations are to improve as a football team.

The Cyclones piled up more than 500 yards of total offense and Rhoads says it was the best performance by far from the offense. He says the team continues to grasp more and more of what it is they are doing and how it is they are supposed to do it. Rhoads says they have advanced from a good running game and a simple passing game to a more advanced passing game as the offense has grown.

The defense gave more than 440 yards of passing at Kansas and improvement on that side of the ball is needed for the Cyclones to take the next step. Rhoads says Kansas has one of the best quarterback-reciever combinations in the country, but the yards they gave up shows they still need to grow on defense.

Rhoads says the Cyclones need a better pass rush and the secondary needs to close off the passing lanes. He says they have to understand concepts that go along with pass rush better. He says they have to locate receivers with their eyes and shut off what he calls “windows.”

Mark Becker waives right to speedy trial

The attorney for a man accused in the shooting death of an Iowa high school football coach has waived his client’s right to a speedy trial. Mark Becker is charged with first-degree murder for the June 24th death of Aplington-Parkersburg teacher and coach Ed Thomas. Becker’s attorney has filed a motion in Butler County Court waiving a request for a speedy trial, meaning the trial be held within 90 days.

That 90 day count was suspended while a judge heard arguments about Becker’s competency. The judge ruled Becker is competent to stand trial, which started the clock again on the original 90 days. Becker’s attorney is now requesting the trial be held sometime before January 30.