May 22, 2012

Nutrition specialist says school food rules could do more

Schools across the state will need to follow new health guidelines for food purchased in vending machines, a la carte lines, and in-school fundraisers starting this July. They prohibit the sale of high fat and calorie items like soda and candy during the day. I.S.U.  extension nutrition specialist,  Ruth Litchfield, says the ban should also include sports drinks, flavored waters and caffeinated beverages.

Latte bars, cappuccino bars, coffee bars…these would all be allowed and these products are all very high in fat and sugar and calories. That was not the original intent of this legislation,” Litchfield told a legislative review panel Tuesday. The Iowa Dietetic Association is urging state lawmakers to ban the sale of sports drinks and coffee drinks in K-12 schools. The association’s president is Lois Stillman.

“It really does affect the ability to focus and learn when you are hyper,” Still said. “We have enough attention deficit problems, so why have these available for kids to grab and during the day?” Carol Greta is an attorney for the Iowa Board of Education, which set the new rules.

“Nobody has the high moral ground here. Everyone agrees that kids need to be ingesting better nutritional value,” Greta said. But, Greta told the panel the state board made a conscious decision not to enact too many restrictions. If the rules are too strict, Greta explained, it’ll. will only encourage kids to leave campus to buy junk food elsewhere.

The Administrative Rules and Review committee declined to delay the rules but recommended the full legislature consider the issue next session.

Changes in withholding tables having an impact on tax returns

Some Iowans getting unpleasant calls from their tax preparers this year due to changes in federal tax law last year. Instead of getting a refund or breaking even, a number of us are finding we owe a few thousand dollars in federal taxes. Jeff Strawhacker, a CPA in West Des Moines, explains what tax changes are catching people by surprise.

“The primary one is the withholding tables, which were revised last spring, 2009,” Strawhacker says. “What that did, it lessened the amount of taxes being taken out of people’s paychecks and has caused some people to have some larger-than-expected liabilities or smaller-than-expected refunds this year.” For Iowans who find themselves writing big checks to the U.S. government, he says to take a close look at your withholding and make changes now for the rest of 2010.

“If you’re already at zero allowances, you can check the box and ask your employer to have additional withholding taken out of your paycheck,” Strawhacker says. “Even if you’re married, you can request to have taxes withheld at the single rate, or, the third option, you can always make quarterly estimates to the government.”

While some Iowans may celebrate when they get a fat refund check, Strawhacker says he’d rather not see his clients go that route. “A big refund is nothing more than an interest-free loan to the government,” he says. “You’re giving them your money throughout the year. They’re not paying you any interest and they’re just returning it to you at the end of the year. I would rather see people have that money in their pocket throughout the year using it for whatever they need to, come down to the end of the year, either have a small payment or maybe just a smaller refund.”

For Iowans who still haven’t finished their federal returns, Strawhacker reminds them they can apply for an extension, but he notes, it’s only an extension on filing your return, not on paying. You’ll still need to send off a check for what you likely owe. The federal tax deadline day is Thursday.

Students escape injury in Audubon County bus accident

No one was hurt when a semi-truck collided with a school bus from the Audubon Community School District on Tuesday afternoon. The accident happened about three miles southwest of Gray. The Audubon County Sheriff’s Department says the Bluebird bus carrying five students had stopped at the intersection of Eagle Avenue and 150th Street just prior to the crash.

When the bus driver, 81-year-old Marvin Leroy Nielsen of Audubon, pulled out into the intersection at around 4 P.M., he failed to see an approaching eastbound semi driven by 63-year-old Rudy Anton Anthofer, Junior, from Audubon. Anthofer tried to take evasive action while crossing a bridge located just west of the intersection, but the school bus continued to turn onto 150th Street and the vehicles collided.

Nielsen was charged with Failure to Yield upon making a left turn. The bus sustained six-thousand dollars damage during the crash, while the damage to the 1994 Peterbilt semi owned by Lawrence Handlos, was estimated at 10-thousand dollars.

By Ric Hanson, KJAN, Atlantic

School districts make cuts, raise taxes to meet budget

School districts across the state are moving ahead with cuts or tax increases to make up for shortfalls as they prepare new budgets. The state’s two largest public school districts are cutting between four and seven percent of their fulltime teaching positions — however their cuts are for different reasons. Cedar Rapids is the second largest district and has seen enrollment drop by about 500 students to around 17,000.

Superintendent Dave Benson says the flood of 2008 coupled with the bad economy are the reasons for declining enrollment. Benson says cutting sixty full-time teaching positions is necessary to save the district about five million dollars. “Periodically you simply have to do this or your expenses for faculty will get away from you and you can’t balance your budget,” Benson says.

Benson says most cuts will come through retirements or resignations — but 23 teachers will receive layoff notices in the coming weeks.

“We’re trying to adjust our faculty size to reflect the educational program needed for the students for next year and hopefully we will get some of those students back as the flood recovery process goes on, Benson says. The state’s largest school district in Des Moines voted Tuesday to cut 251 positions — including 173 teachers.

Des Moines school officials say they have to make the cuts because of an 11-million dollar shortfall in state funding. The district had been looking at the possibility of cutting 350 jobs, but were able to lower that number after better than expected revenue projections. The Ankeny school board voted Monday to raise property taxes by $2.51 per $1,000 of assessed valuation to deal with state budget cuts. Ankeny officials say they will also look for ways to make cuts in the budget.

The Sioux City school board just approved a one-percent sales tax increase. Other districts, such as Newton, have closed buildings to save money.

“Nightmare” of coach’s slaying recounted as man sentenced for crime

A 24-year-old northeast Iowa man will spend the rest of his life in prison for murdering a popular high school football coach. A jury convicted Mark Becker of first degree murder in early March and a judge today handed down the mandatory sentence of life in prison late this morning.  

Becker shot Aplington-Parkersburg coach Ed Thomas to death last June in the school’s weight training room. The Becker and Thomas families were in the courtroom for today’s sentencing and seven members of the Thomas family made “victim impact statements.”

Todd Thomas, the son of the slain coach, was first to speak, saying his father had tried to help Becker kick his drug habit. Thomas broke down, saying it was hard not to be angry that his children will not get to know their grandfather. His brother, Aaron Thomas, talked directly to Becker, saying he sees the “hurt” in the eyes of so many in Parkersburg, including the nearly two dozen A-P students who witnessed the shooting.

[Read more...]

Postville mayor says community still recovering from immigration raid

The mayor of Postville says his community is still recovering from what happened at the town’s kosher meat packing plant nearly two years ago. In May of 2008 nearly 400 people were rounded up in an immigration raid at the Agriprocessors plant in Postville. Postville Mayor Leigh Rekow was in Des Moines Tuesday to celebrate the plant’s rebirth under a new name — Agri Star — and new management.

“As a city we are still dealing with some of the negative issues of the past,” Rekow said. “…Agri Star and its success play a large part in our recovery.” Rekow admits there was some concern that the Agriprocessors plant would not reopen after that raid and the fraud charges filed against the plant’s former manager.

But a Canadian-based company bought the plant eight months ago and spent nearly seven-and-a-half million dollars modernizing the facility, which has been processing kosher chicken and turkey under the “Agri Star” label. In the past two weeks beef production has resumed at the plant and there are 560 people on the payroll today.

“When the other plant closed we were left with a huge amount of empty houses, unpaid taxes, water bills that were owed, heating, electricity, but with the plant opening all these people have hope again,” Rekow said. “And our community has been very positive that we will survive and we will get back to where we were and maybe even be better.”

Agri Star C.E.O. Hershey Friedman says he meets regularly with the mayor and other city officials to build “trust” with the residents of Postville. Friedman says it made sense to keep production in Postville rather than build a new plant elsewhere because people who have expertise in kosher processing have made Postville their home.

“There’s a community in Postville which had been there,” Friedman says. “…There are managers and staffing that had stayed on even after the demise of the previous ownership, so we had the personnel to be able to do a quick start.” According to Friedman, there’s a shortage of American-produced kosher meat and the market is “more than ready to accept” products under the Agri Star brand. According to the mayor of Postville, Friedman has done more than just modernize the plant.

“I mean, it was a challenge because of the reputation, the raid, mistreatment of some of the workers,” Rekow said. “And when (Friedman) bought it, he just became straightforward and said, ‘This is what I’m going to do: the workers are going to be treated good. They will be safe…and we’ll pay a fair wage,’ so it has worked out real well and we’re real happy right now.”

About 35 students have enrolled in the town’s high school in the past two weeks because their parents got jobs at the plant when the beef production line started operating. As word spreads about new jobs at the plant, people have started traveling to Postville, looking for work and putting new strains on the support networks for the poor. The mayor acknowledges the upheaval surrounding the packing plant has been too much for some Postville residents.

“You’ll always have a certain amount of people that don’t accept change. They want things to be the way they were and in this day and age that cannot happen,” Rekow said. “We need to move forward. We have good community leaders that have stepped forward and have done a lot of good things to help Postville progress and we’re moving forward.” Before the raid in 2008, there were about 2,8oo people living in Postville.

A year later, the mayor estimates the population was down by about a thousand. Today — another year later — the population has begun to rebound.

Discount bus service adding a Des Moines to Chicago route

The Chicago-based Megabus company plans to start offering twice daily service from Des Moines to Chicago — with some seats offered for one dollar. C.E.O. Dale Moser says they’ll start the service in May. Moser says you book all the tickets on-line and you can search for the dates you want to travel. He says the earlier you book your trip, the better your chances of getting a one dollar seat. Moser says they try to offer a better deal for travel.

He says the pricing works its way up incrementally after all the one dollar seats are sold. Moser says taking their bus is still more economical than alternatives to Chicago, such as the train, flying or using another bus system. Moser says they began the company in April of 2006 with the idea of providing service to hub cities, but there was a void in Iowa.

Moser says they’ve been getting a number of inquiries via the internet from Iowa about the service asking them to expand to Iowa. Moser says they offer amenities that other bus services don’t Moser says they offer double-decker touring buses on established routes, free wi-fi access, plug ins for power to cellphones, laptops and I-pods.

They also offer reclining seats, air conditioning and occasional movies on flat screens, and all the buses are A-D-A equipped. Buses will leave Des Moines to Chicago beginning on May 4th at ten in the morning and at five in the evening seven days a week. For more information go to www.megabus.com.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City