May 21, 2012

Drug court project dropped due to budget cuts

A pilot project to give kids on drugs special attention when they get in trouble with the law is being cancelled due to state budget cuts. Paul Stageberg, at the Criminal and Juvenile Justice Planning Division, says kids in the drug court program have been getting extra drug abuse treatment, plus, they have to check in with authorities every week.

“A kid who’s entering juvenile probation isn’t going to see a judge every week,” Stageberg says. “The increased attention is to help them get their lives back on track.” Five Iowa counties were experimenting with juvenile drug courts. The Department of Human Services says a study showed the program wasn’t achieving its goal of keeping kids out of trouble long-term.

Stageberg says the study showed kids bounced right back into the justice system once they were released from the program. He says, “While the study showed that the kids who went into juvenile drug court did receive a fair amount of treatment, they did not show reduced recidivism after they left the juvenile drug court.” Stageberg says the study was done early on and changes in the program might show better results now. The program will be eliminated to save a half-million dollars.

Braley says he’s pleased with latest healthcare bill

Congressman Bruce Braley, a Democrat from Waterloo, says he is pleased with the latest version of health care reform introduced Thursday in the U.S. House. Braley was heavily involved in putting the bill together and says it has all the items that the president requested.

Braley says the Congressional Budget Office estimates the bill would provide coverage to 96% of all Americans under the 900-billion dollar threshold of the president.

He says the bill would also not increase the deficit and says estimates are it would reduce the deficit by 30-billion dollars over the first ten years, up from six billion in the previous bill. Braley says he was pleased to get several of his amendments into the bill.

He says the one that took the most work was the Medicare agreement that changes the formula to “eliminate the inequity in how physicians and hospitals are reimbursed based on geographic differences.”

Braley says the bill also includes a prescription drug improvement. Braley says he got an amendment in the bill that allows the Secretary of Health and Human Services to negotiate with insurance companies on the price of drugs for seniors. Braley says he expects the Medicare provision will make it through without any trouble.

Braley says he expects there to be some “major obstacles” on a lot issues in the rules committee and possibly on the floor, but he says the Democratic leadership fully supports the Medicare provision. The bill would be financed with a combination of Medicare cuts and an income tax surcharge on people making over $500,000 annually.

Pheasant season opens Saturday with plenty of cover for birds

Pheasant rooster along a fence.

Pheasant rooster along a fence.

Iowa’s pheasant hunting season opens this weekend with predictions that hunters will have a hard time spotting birds. Todd Bogenschutz with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources says preseason counts of pheasants are behind last year’s near record low figures.

Hunters could face additional difficulties this weekend because birds have so much cover.

“It’s going to be challenge this opener with the amount of crops we have standing,” Bogenschutz said. Monday’s crop report showed only 12% of the corn and 47% of the soybeans in the state had been harvested.

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