May 22, 2012

Northwest Iowa couple SBA Persons of the Year

Rob and Tara Lynn Hach

Rob and Tara Lynn Hach

The husband-and-wife owners of a wind energy company in northwest Iowa are being named Iowa’s Small Business Persons of the Year by the U.S. Small Business Administration.

Rob and Tara Lynn Hach opened their venture in the town of Alta  near Storm Lake in 2002 and now have 27 employees at offices in three states. Rob Hach explains what they do.

“We travel around the country and we’re even going international to test for wind in order to determine whether or not a wind farm is feasible for the generation of electricity,” Hach says. The company is called Anemometry Specialists. Anemometry is the study of wind. The 34-year-old Hach says it’s a big honor to win the award from the S.B.A. and he says they’ve worked hard to get where they are.

“We’ve had some really nice growth over the last five years,” Hach says. “We were even able to grow in the recession last year. We have a very family-friendly environment. Our crews, our technicians are on the road and we try to make sure they’re home for their Christmas pageant, for their son or daughter’s birthdays. We care a lot for our employees.” Since wind energy is what the company’s all about, you’d think the headquarters would have a giant wind turbine out back that powers the operation. Well, not exactly, Hach says.

“No turbine is powering the building,” he says. “We have a couple little ones inside the building but there are approximately 500 turbines north and south of us. So you go out the door and see three different wind farms around our building.” Wind is a family affair for the Hachs. He says his father first got the wind energy bug during the oil crisis of the mid 1970s.

Hach has five siblings and three of them are also involved in harnessing the wind. Anemometry Specialists has offices in Iowa, Texas and New Mexico with plans to expand into the Northwest and Northeastern U.S. in the coming months. The Hachs will represent Iowa at the National Small Business Week ceremonies in Washington, D.C., in May, where they will compete for the National Award.

UNI set to practice in St. Louis for Friday’s game

UNI coach Ben Jacobson addresses send off rally as players look on.

UNI coach Ben Jacobson addresses send off rally as players look on.

The U.N.I. basketball team will practice later today in St. Louis as they get ready for tomorrow night’s Midwest Regional semifinal round contest against Michigan State.

The Panthers have been the talk of the nation ever since they beat top ranked Kansas in last Saturday’s second round but junior guard Kwadzo Ahelegbe says it is time to focus on the next challenge.

Ahelegbe says you have to stay focused because they have to face the Spartans in the next game as he says Michigan State doesn’t care who they are, so they have to be ready to play the game. The Panthers hope to continue a run of success in St. Louis where they have won the last two Missouri Valley Conference tournaments.

He says they love St. Louis and with native Anthony James, they know a lot about the town. Ahelegbe says playing there won’t help them jump higher or shoot better, but it does give them a mental boost. The first game on Friday night in the Edward Jones Dome will pit Tennessee against Ohio State.

By Elwin Huffman KOEL Oelwein

UNI basketball success brings attention to Cedar Falls campus

Northern Iowa’s success in the NCAA Mens Basketball Tournament has brought unprecedented attention on the school with 13,000 students in Cedar Falls. The Panthers are one of 16 teams left in the field and will face Michigan State Friday night in Saint Louis. Noreen Hermansen, Vice-President of the U.N.I. Foundation, says she’s hearing from alumni around the world.

“I’ve had phone calls and text messages from people in Germany, Japan and Korea,” Hermansen said. Former U.N.I. Basketball Coach Eldon Miller, who now lives in North Carolina, told Hermansen he “can’t believe” how many calls he’s fielded. It’s doubtful the added exposure will lead to a boost in admissions at U.N.I., but Hermansen says the free national press doesn’t hurt.

“I don’t think there’s any way you can put a dollar amount on it,” Hermansen said. “We could never have the kind of money to get this kind of exposure. It’s just a real positive experience for everybody.” Hermansen spoke with Radio Iowa Wednesday after attending a pep rally for the basketball team. Around 1,200 people attended the rally on the U.N.I. campus.

Culver predicts Obama popularity to soar with health care reform accomplished

Governor Chet Culver is en route to Iowa City to attend President Obama’s speech early this afternoon.  Culver, a Democrat who is seeking a second term this year, says he “absolutely” wants Obama back to Iowa later this year to help him campaign for reelection.

“I think President Obama has just achieved an historic accomplishment, something that presidents for generations have tried to do, and that’s health care reform,” Culver says.  “I think when Iowans, when Americans hear the real story about what this means to hard-working families in this state and this country, he’s going to become even more popular.” 

[Read more...]

More outrage expressed over IASB scandal

Members of the board that oversees the Iowa Association of School Boards say they’re outraged and grief-stricken by the scandal that now surrounds the organization. Two audits are being conducted to see if taxpayer dollars were misspent and the group’s executive director has been placed on paid leave after questions were raised about her salary.

Russ Wiesley of Waukee, president of the association’s board of directors, testified Wednesday before the Legislature’s Government Oversight Committee. “We are going to work hard to get this fixed,” Wiesley told legislators. “We are going to work hard to regain the trust of our members in the field, and we’re going to work really hard to regain your trust and understanding of our organization.”

Bill Morain of Lamoni, the board’s treasurer, said board members are as dismayed as the rest of the public to learn about the sudden salary increases and inappropriate credit card purchases by top executives. According to Morain, the board of directors was reluctant to micromanage its new executive director.

“Looking back we recognize that we could have exercised greater oversight during the transition between management teams,” he said, reading from prepared remarks. “But none of us could have envisioned that such an appalling level of misconduct was even a remote possibility.”

Legislators have expressed outrage and one even used salty language to describe their disgust with the way the Iowa Association of School Boards had been managed. Morain told legislators he, too, shared their frustration. “Anger because people we trusted with the management of our 64-year-old service organization let us down and erected such a barrier to information that it took months of painful disentanglement to tear down this wall,” Morain said.

According to the board’s recently-hired attorney, executive director Maxine Kilcrease remains on paid leave until they can determine if she can be charged with “moral turpitude.”  Some lawmakers have questioned why she’s still drawing a salary, but the attorney says firing Kilcrease prematurely would force the Iowa Association of School Boards to pay her salary for the remainder of her three year contract.

The Legislature’s Government Oversight Committee has voted to seek subpoena power to compel Kilcrease to testify at a committee hearing. The Iowa Association of School board is governed by group of local school board members elected from districts across the state. The non-profit board continues to defend its various for-profit offshoots, saying most were created at the request of local school districts.

Blemond Klemme teacher faces sexual exploitation charge

A teacher in north-central Iowa is facing charges. A 33-year-old Belmond Klemme High School teacher was arrested Wednesday afternoon for sexual exploitation by a school employee. Jody Lynn Barrus was arrested after an investigation the Wright County Sheriff’s Office began last week at the request of the Belmond Klemme School District.

Barrus turned herself into authorities and was processed in the Wright County Jail in Clarion. She has posted bond and will have an initial appearance on the charge next week.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City

Regents talk savings, retirement, athletic funding

The board the governs the three state universities discussed several budget issues during a meeting via telephone Wednesday, including a directive to find more savings between the campuses of the University of Iowa, Iowa State University and the University of Northern Iowa.

Regents president David Miles says the schools have already done a lot to trim their budgets to save in the wake of a cut in state aid, and they now need to find more cost savings between the schools. He listed four areas, including the hiring and training of employees.

Miles says they need to examine employee benefits to find policies that hinder efficiencies and cost savings. Secondly they need to review employee training to see if they can save through shared training, and they also need to review employee wellness to see if they can save by sharing.

Miles says they also need to look at facilities. He says they should look at system wide contracts for equipment, “Green Cleaning Products and Services” and savings that may occur by reducing health risks; inventory levels that might be reduced if offsite storage can be secured, and finally electronic bids that move them more towards paperless systems.

Miles also asked them to look at information technology and the possibility of sharing software licenses, e-mail systems and web management. The fourth area is purchasing. This includes cell phones, printing and insurance coverage. The regents approved Miles’ directive for the schools to examine these items.

The regents also approved the early retirement incentive plan for the University of Iowa. Regent Ruth Harkin said she did not like the plan. Harkin says she’s concerned that there should be parallel programs for each of the schools and she said the U-I program is still “too rich” in its incentives. Regent Michael Garnter said he agreed with Harkin. But regent president David Miles defended the plan.

Miles says Harkin and Garner’s arguments are sound, but says he does not believe the retirement incentive plans need to be identical and should instead be tuned to each campus. The plan passed with Harkin, Gartner and regent Craig Lang all voting against it.

The regents passed a resolution on funding for the athletic departments at U.N.I. and Iowa State. Miles read the resolution. Miles says it asks the universities to assess the feasibility of and make plans that would over time eliminate the general fund subsidies for college athletics.

The resolution asks U.N.I. and I.S.U. to report on the feasibility of operating without budget support by the regent’s September meeting. The University of Iowa already has moved away from taking general fund money for its athletic department’s operation.