January 28, 2012

Security tightened at Webster City Electrolux plant

Security is being tightened at Hamilton County’s largest employer, a factory that will close in the coming months. Workers at Electrolux Home Products in Webster City began seeing security guards and airport-style metal detectors when they arrived for work on Tuesday.

In addition, their lunch boxes and backpacks are being inspected. A company spokesman says the security measures are to protect the employees. There have been no threats reported. Security cameras will also be added around the factory.

Last Friday, Electrolux announced it’s closing the washer-drier factory in early 2011, along with another plant in Jefferson. Some 850 jobs will be lost. The production is being shifted to Mexico.

Contributed by Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City

DNR officer works to stem decline of rattlesnake

D.N.R. officer Burt Walters with a rattle snake.

D.N.R. officer Burt Walters

A state conservation officer has spent more than two decades tracking a reptile that most Iowans would choose to avoid.

Burt Walters with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources says the timber rattlesnake population in the state has dropped by 50% since the 1980s.

He blames a combination of factors including loss of habitat, urban development and people who are killing the snakes or taking them as pets.

Walters says the rattlesnake isn’t as dangerous or aggressive as most people think. “The rattlesnake is primarily a docile snake actually,” Walters said. “If you’re not looking for them, you’ll probably walk right by them and they’ll never rattle or bother you.”

[Read more...]

Cedar Rapids organization celebrates milestone in flood recovery

A volunteer grassroots organization in Cedar Rapids is celebrating a major milestone as it continues to help people move back into their home after they were forced out by last year’s flood. Homeowners, organizers, and supporters of the non-profit group, “Block by Block” gathered in the middle of a street in the northwest part of Cedar Rapids Tuesday and celebrated the first rebuilding of an entire block.

The program started in July and brings together religious groups and private donors, along with some tax dollars. Reverend Clint Twedt-Ball is the director of the program. Twedt-Ball says they are on the street and meet with people every other week and the people get to know them and trust them.

“And so, we have been able to get into homes where people really needed help, but they hadn’t been willing to ask for it, because they didn’t want to ask a stranger to help,” Twedt-Ball says. Bishop Julius Trimble of the United Methodist Church in Iowa says it’s a program that is working.

“It’s happening one house at a time, one family at a time and no one seems to be concerned about one person getting the credit for the progress, so we’re just happy to be one of the partners in this block by block,” Trimble says. Trimble says it’s more than just rebuilding homes.

He says the long-term goal is for it to continue to be a thriving community where people of all incomes, all faiths and races can live, and the things that came out of the flooding can be a long-term benefit in terms of collaboration. Volunteers have donated about four thousand hours of labor to Block by Block’s efforts. Representatives from the group say they hope to completely restore eight blocks by the end of the year.

Film Office “a complete mess”

Legislative Oversight Committee hears phoned-in testimony of Deputy Attorney General.

Legislative Oversight Committee hears phoned-in testimony of Deputy Attorney General.

The attorney general’s chief of staff says investigators have found the state’s film office was a “complete mess.” 

Governor Culver suspended the state’s film tax credit program last month and fired the director of the film office.  Eric Tabor, chief of staff for the state’s attorney general, says the state may challenge some of the $32 million worth of film tax credits already awarded.

“Clearly, this is a very important, complicated and difficult matter,” Tabor said by phone during testimony yesterday before the Legislature’s Government Oversight Committee. [Read more...]

Legislators question progress on campus sexual misconduct policies

Representatives from the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa at Legislative Oversight Committee hearing.

Representatives from the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa at Legislative Oversight Committee hearing.

Legislators are expressing some frustration with the three state universities over progress in addressing sexual misconduct on the campuses.

An alleged rape on the University of Iowa campus involving two former Hawkeye football players in October, 2007, prompted a review of sexual misconduct polices at all the three “state schools” — the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa.

Representative Wayne Ford, a Democrat from Des Moines, asked officials from the three state universities a question during a statehouse hearing on Tuesday.

“Because we’ve been nationally-known for some various assault cases dealing with the athletic department — we know what cases we’re talking about — what would you say to the people listening now who’s going to send their daughters or sons to a Board of Regents school?  What’s the climate now?  What can you tell them?” Ford asked. “Because the only time we hear about that is when somebody gets raped and we see it on t.v.”

[Read more...]

King, Latham criticize Democrat health care reform plan

The two Republicans from Iowa who serve in congress went to the floor of the U.S. House today (Tuesday), joining other Republicans in delivering one-minute speeches criticizing the health care reform plans Democrats are pushing. Congressman Steve King, a Republican from Kiron, disputed the idea there are 47 million uninsured Americans.

“When you subtract from 47 (million) illegal aliens and immigrants and those qualify under their employer and those who make over $75,000 a year and those who qualify for government programs, you’re down to 12.1 million, not 47 (million),” King said. “That’s less than four percent of the population. They seek to overhaul 100% of the health insurance industry in America…to what? To reduce that number of uninsured from four percent down to something like, perhaps, two.”

On Monday, the top Democrat in the U.S. Senate said the health care plan that would emerge will include a so-called “public option” to compete with private insurance, but states would be allowed to “opt out” if state-level policymakers decide there is adequate insurance competition in their state. King lambasted that.

“They give us an opt out,” King said. “Well, here’s what I’ll opt out of: I’ll opt out of funding abortions; I’ll opt out of funding illegals; I’ll opt out of lawsuit abuse, tax increases and Medicare cuts.” Over an hour later, Congressman Tom Latham, a Republican from Ames, had his turn at the microphone.

“As millions go without health insurance and costs skyrocket, I strongly believe we need common sense reforms (and) that all American families can have access to affordable health coverage,” Latham said. “But the plan should not be financed by raiding the Medicare program and shifting costs onto the backs of our seniors.” Medicare is the government-run health care program for elderly Americans.

“Seniors are being asked to shoulder the burden, while getting virtually none of the benefits,” Latham said. “H.R. 3200 cuts Medicare by a total of $500 billion over the next 10 years. This includes cuts to hospitals…and home health care services.” H.R. 32-hundred is the health care reform plan which cleared the House Energy and Commerce Committee this summer. Three different House committee have drafted health care plans.

Two Senate committees have approved health care reform packages as well. Democratic Congressional leaders are now trying to merge the plans into a bill that can pass both the House and the Senate.

County official blames state and federal government for Electrolux loss

The Hamilton County Supervisors discussed the future closing of the Electrolux plant at their meeting today. Electrolux officials announced last Friday that they would close their washer and dryer facilities in Webster City and Jefferson in early 2011 and move the production to Mexico. Supervisor David Young, a Republican from Stanhope, said he is surprised at how little reaction the announcement is drawing.

Young says the county, state and country are seeing the “gutting of middle class jobs” and no one seems to be “jumping up and down and hollering.” Young says local and county governments have been accountable and have reserves to cover down budget times, but he says state and federal leaders have not been accountable.

“Someone needs to stand up and say to our state and national leaders, ‘no more of this’…everyone talks about this inevitability, I’m disgusted with that talk. This didn’t have to happen, this was allowed to happen over a long period of time,” Young says. Young says the supervisors will continue looking for new businesses, but he says there has to be a change of climate at the state and federal level to allow businesses to operate and make a profit. The move of the plants to Mexico will result in the loss of 850 jobs.

Contributed by Pat Power, KQWC, Webster City