February 9, 2012

Iowa among leaders in wind energy production

A new report from the American Wind Energy Association shows Iowa is an industry leader. 

The report’s authors analyzed the wind energy market for 2009 and found Iowa was the number one state in the nation in the percentage of electricity that comes from wind power. According to the report, Iowa gets 14 percent of its power from wind turbines. 

Iowa also leads in the “highest number of jobs in the manufacturing sector.” There are plants in Iowa which make the blades for the turbines and the towers that hold those blades in the air.

The American Wind Energy Association ranks Texas as the state with the highest capacity for wind energy production and the largest number of so-called wind farms. But with the number of wind turbines that were installed in Iowa last year, Iowa now ranks second — ahead of California — in terms of capacity for wind energy production.

Governor signs corporate campaign contribution bill into law

Governor Culver has signed legislation to regulate how corporations can contribute to candidates in races for the state legislature and other statewide offices. A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision lifted the nationwide ban on corporate campaign contributions which had earlier been banned. Governor Culver says he disagrees with the decision.

“I believe that the influence of corporate money in politics is too great,” Culver says. “That said, it is the law of the land in this country.” The court ruling allows corporations to run ads on the radio, T.V. and in newspapers on behalf of a candidate. The bill the governor signed into law requires public disclosure of corporate contributions to individual candidates, so when you hear an ad for a candidate, you may hear an announcer say the ad was brought to you by a company or corporation.

The governor says the new requirements will help Iowans find out who is trying to influence elections. “It’s not the sexist issue in the process, perhaps, but arguably it’s the most important,” Culver says. The bill’s sponsors say Iowa is one of the first states in the country to regulate corporate giving in the wake of the supreme court ruling and this new state law could draw a court challenge.

Under the new requirements in Iowa, candidates will be required to list their corporate donors just as they have been disclosing the names of individuals who make campaign contributions and the amount of the donation.

ISU experts says more schools will offer students laptops to catch up with technology

An Iowa State University expert in educational leadership says he expects the number of school districts that offer students individual laptops for use to continue to increase. Scott Milepost of I.S.U. held a conference Wednesday for the 13 out of over 340 school districts that now provide laptops to students. He expects more districts to add computers to catch up with technology use in the every day world.

McLeod says most of the work we are doing in our “new information economy” requires some kind of computer, and there has been a disconnect between doing things with pencil and paper and on the computer. He says the driving force for school districts to give students laptops to use is the need to prepare them better when they leave high school.

McLeod is an associate professor of educational leadership and policy studies. He says students with a laptop learn faster how to use the devices. He says once the kids get the computers in their hands on a regular basis, they can do a lot more than they ever have. He says they learn from the software tools and are able to do more complex work at younger ages.

Computer classes are taught in schools, but McLeod says it often focuses on the basic software, and overlooks some of the extended uses of the computer. “You can see the impact of what we call the social media… these interconnected media, on-line video, and social networking, and on-line communities and so on, that are very robust and powerful these days,” McLeod says. “None of that is getting taught in computer aps classes, I guarantee it.”

While some might think the social media is for time outside the classroom, McLoed says those media are being used by businesses that want to connect with today’s consumers and sell their products. Students who know how they work will have an advantage. Most of the schools that now offer laptops to students are smaller, and McLeod says that size is sort of an advantage for them. He says it is partly a cost issue for bigger districts, and he says smaller districts have less “institutional inertia” to overcome to make changes and try new things.

Many teachers did not start out their careers with computers as part of what they used for teaching. McLeod says those teachers who are open to change will do better with the computer. He says it’s a question of whether the teachers are willing to be adaptive and learn new skills, or whether they want to continue tweaking things they’ve always done. “And that seems to be the critical divide, and it’s less of an age oriented issue than it is an adaptability and learner focused issue,” McLeod explains.

McLeod says a time will come when kids don’t pick up new school books, they pick up their laptops with the books already on them.

“There will be a day when we look backwards and say wasn’t it silly in this digital age, it took so long to get these digital tools into the hands of our kids,” McLeod says.

McLeod says the number of districts that provide laptops to students is expected to jump to 35-40 next year. He says the Spirit Lake district will be largest of the schools when it provides laptops. The schools that currently provide the laptops are: AHST (Avoca); BCLUW; Bedford, CAM; Cardinal (Eldon), Central City, Mount Ayr, Newell-Fonda, Sidney, Sigourney, South Hamilton, United and Van Meter.

Central Iowa storm packed hurricane force winds

Building damaged by the storm.

Building damaged by the storm.

The storm that blew through Jasper, Marion and Poweshiek Counties Tuesday was somewhat like a hurricane.

The worst damage, on the west side of Grinnell, included shingles and siding ripped off homes and farm buildings and power poles that were knocked to the ground.

National Weather Service Meteorologist Aubry Wilkins was part of a survey team that toured the three counties. She says wind gusts in Grinnell likely hit 95 to 105 miles per hour, which is like that of a category 2 hurricane.

[Read more...]

Cedar Rapids cops go undercover at Happy Hour Health Spa

Two women who work and live at the “Happy Hour Health Spa” in Cedar Rapids face criminal charges. 

Cedar Rapids police went undercover, solicited sex and found drugs in the Happy Hour Health Spa. Forty-three-year-old Roxanne Hayes was charged with posession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia. Thirty-four-year-old Marie Yancey was charged with marijuana posession and with prostitution. The two women list the business as their home address.

Cedar Rapids police say they’re in the midst of an on-going effort to crack down on prostitution in Cedar Rapids. In February, Cedar Rapids police conducted an undercover sting operation on a city street that led to the arrest of five men.

Trucking industry urges veto of bill allowing heavier trucks

The trucking industry is urging Governor Culver to veto a bill that would let heavier trucks drive on county roads in Iowa. Under current rules, trucks driving on a county road may weigh no more than 80,000 pounds. The bill would raise that limit to 96,000 pounds, if the truck is equipped with one or two more axles.

Brenda Neville, president of the Iowa Motor Truck Association says: “This heavier equipment on these non-Interstate roads, which typically are the roads that are in the worst condition — especially after the winter we just had, we do have some concerns about the possibility of the damage these trucks could do to these non-Interstate roads and bridges.”

The trucking association’s biggest complaint, though, is that these heavier trucks may be driven by someone who doesn’t have a commercial driver’s license if the truck is a farm vehicle. Neville says that means someone could drive a huge truck on a gravel road or county blacktop without the proper training in how to handle that truck, the kind of training required for a commercial drivers license.

“Our priority as an industry is always safety and there are some definite concerns,” Neville says. Neville’s group also cites a state rule which allows farmer-operated trucks with “special plates” to exceed weight limits by 25%. That means trucks with those “special plates” could carry up to 120,000 pounds — that’s 40,000 pounds more than the federal weight-limit for trucks that operate on the nation’s Interstate highways.

Neville says this bill passed in the closing hours of the 2010 legislative session and she calls it “ill-conceived.” “Our main concern is the fact that they are not requiring the drivers of this larger equipment to have a C.D.L. — a commercial drivers license,” Neville says. “And that was something that we proposed and really pushed very hard and, in the legislation that was passed, that was not included. It was stripped out of it.”

Farm groups have lobbied for allowing heavier loads on county roads, arguing there’s already an exemption which allows trucks hauling livestock to carry a heavier load. There’s an exemption, too, for trucks hauling construction materials, like asphalt or concrete.

Sioux City pork plant to close early

A pork processing plant in Sioux City is closing this week — a week-and-a-half earlier than originally announced. More than 1,400 people who work at the John Morrell Plant were told in January that the plant would shut down on April 20th.

A spokesperson for Smithfield Foods, which owns the plant, says workers will be paid through the 20th. John Morrell is one of Sioux City’s largest employers and the closure will have a wide ranging impact other businesses, including health care services.

Siouxland Community Health Center C.E.O. Michelle Stephan says they serve over 1,000 patients that utilize insurance provided through John Morrell. She says those unemployed individuals can remain patients and qualify for a sliding fee scale. “Instead of having insurance reimburse for their services, they would pay a portion of their $20 copay if they qualify for the lowest slide,” Stephan said. “So, our reimbursement for those individuals has greatly decreased.”

[Read more...]