May 22, 2012

Harkin says more inspections not regulation needed for child labor

As the trial of the former C.E.O. of a Postville meatpacker gets underway in Waterloo involving 83 alleged child labor law violations, Iowa Senator Tom Harkin says more government regulation of child labor likely isn’t the answer. Harkin, a Democrat, chairs the U.S. Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

“Whether or not our labor committee needs to do something remains to be seen,” Harkin says. “We’ve already been working with different agencies of government to beef up their inspection processes and procedures. We just weren’t getting enough inspections and enough oversight. That’s what this begs for. Whether or not it requires any new legislation, I’m not sure.”

The former Agriprocessors plant in Postville was the subject of a federal immigration raid in May of 2008 that netted nearly 400 arrests. As a way to fight illegal immigration, some Senate Democrats propose requiring all workers to carry a national identification card. Harkin is uncertain if he would support the idea.

“That might have some merit,” Harkin says. “I’d have to know more about how do you get the I-D card? What’s it based on? That type of thing. Does that mean, everyone in America now has to have an I.D. card?” Reports say a draft of the measure would require every worker in the nation to carry the card within six years. It would be embedded with a host of personal information, including fingerprints.

Harkin says it raises a red flag in his mind about civil liberties. “If it was used for employment verification, that’s one thing,” Harkin says, “but if it’s some kind of a national I.D. card where every single person in America has to carry an I.D. card, well, that’s something else again, isn’t it?”

UNI students cut energy use in “unplugged” challenge

Students who live in the nine residence halls on the University of Northern Iowa campus in Cedar Falls reduced their energy use by 15% for one week in April. Nine students in the U.N.I. Honors Program organized the “U.N.I. Unplugged” event which ended on Earth Day. Jessica Moon is director of the program.

“Our results actually surprised us,” Moon said. “The students were hoping to see a 10% reduction. That was the goal they set for themselves.” The week-long event was actually a competition. Students in one residence hall, Shull Hall, reduced their energy use by 24%. Second place went to Hageman Hall with an energy use decrease of 22%.

The amount of energy saved was calculated through work with the U.N.I. Department of Residence by comparing each residence hall during the week of competition to a previous control week. “I know some of the residence halls turned out all the lights in the hallways so they could reduce energy that way,” Moon said. “They had hall secretaries using a small table lamp instead of an overhead light. They had students who were unplugging their refrigerators for the duration of the competition.”

Students in Shull and Hageman Hall received more than $1,600 worth of prizes from local businesses. But, Moon is hoping all students on campus will continue to change their energy habits. “The idea was to have a contest to have a fun way to highlight some of these issues, but it was really about the educational campaign…at the root of the students’ project,” Moon said.

Learn more about the project here:  www.uni.edu/unplugged

Photo courtesy of UNI.

Iowan at center of age discrimination debate testifies in D.C.

An Iowan who is at the center of a national debate about age discrimination testified Wednesday at a hearing in the U.S. capitol.

In 2004 Jack Gross filed a lawsuit against Farm Bureau’s FBL Financial after his pay was cut and his duties were assigned to a younger colleague. A jury sided with Gross, but in 2009 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Gross hadn’t proven his age was the sole determining factor in his demotion. Gross is among those urging congress to pass a bill to address that ruling. 

“I’m here to tell you about the rollercoaster ride that I’ve been on,” Gross said yesterday at the opening of a House subcommittee hearing. “I ask that you remember my story is being duplicated millions of times across this country and ask you to envision the millions who are depending on your actions standing behind me in spirit.  I know they are.”

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Injured marine returns home to Davenport

An injured Marine from Davenport is back home. Lance Corporal Edward Lyons was severely hurt and lost his left hand in an explosion last November in Afghanistan. He spent months at Walter Reed Army Hospital.

He’ll return there after a month at home. When Lyons landed yesterday at Quad-City International Airport, the 20-year-old Marine received a hero’s welcome from family, friends and the public. Then Patriot Guard motorcycle riders escorted Lyons from the airport to his family’s home in Davenport. Students from Madison Elementary School, which Lyons once attended, lined the street next to the school, held signs and cheered as the procession went by.

By Phil Roberts, Davenport

Harkin wants limits on ATM fees

Senator Tom Harkin is pressing for new federal limits on the fees charged for using an “automatic teller machine” or A.T.M. “How often have you gone to an A.T.M. machine to access your own cash from your own credit union or your own bank and they charge you a couple bucks?” Harkin asks. “…We’ve seen it as high as $5 in some parts of the country.”

Harkin, a Democrat, says the actual cost of processing an A.T.M. transaction is about 36 cents, while the Federal Reserve reports the average A.T.M. fee for a transaction is $2.66. “That doesn’t seem right to me and it doesn’t seem right to a lot of consumers,” Harkin says. “It’s unfair for people to pay that much to access their own cash.”

Harkin suggests there be a 50-cent limit on A.T.M. fees for consumers who’re withdrawing cash from their own accounts. Harkin says that “restores some balance” for consumers. “Quite frankly things have tipped so far in favor of big banks in this country and so far from consumers, we often don’t even know what a reasonable balance looks like anymore,” Harkin says.

A.T.M. fees were forbidden in Iowa until 2002 when federal banking regulators overruled the state law, opening the door to A.T.M. fees here. Six months after that change, national banks had collected five-million dollars in fees from Iowans who were using A.T.M.s

Google expert says there are many ways for businesses to go green

The “Green Energy Czar” for Google says there are many steps that both large and small businesses can take to save energy and become greener. Bill Weihl was one of the keynote speakers at the Technology Association of Iowa’s “Heartland GreenUp Symposium and Expo” in Des Moines Wednesday.

Weihl told Radio Iowa one step businesses can take is to look at the age of their equipment — and the way it operates. Weihl says most businesses that run a small data center can do simple things like buying new highly-efficient servers, as well as looking at how the data center is cooled. He says one of the most inefficient areas of most data centers is the cooling infrastructure.

Weihl says the hot air coming off the servers is often recirculated over and over through the cooling system, increasing the cost to cool things down. He says they’ve found some simple ways to improve the cooling. He says in some of their smaller facilities, they went out and bought meat locker curtains and hung them over the racks to separate the hot aisles from the cold aisles so the hot and cold air doesn’t mix.

Weihl says that can give you a very quick payback. He says there are other ways to handle larger server areas that will also give you a payback. Weihl says getting new equipment may cost you money now, but will save you money in the long run. “Buying a more efficient server with a very efficient power supply will probably pay back in six months or so. So even if you have a one year time frame in thinking about your expenses, that’s well worth the extra expense up front in terms of what it will save you down the road,” Weihl explains.

He says most UPS. (uninterrupted power supply) systems are very inefficient, and putting money into a new more efficient UPS will save you more money in the long run. Weihl says he’s seen a big change in the attitudes of companies in the last two or three years toward becoming greener. But, he says companies are still bucking some old ways as there is often a split in the capitol budget needed to make improvements and the operating budget.

Weihl says if you are going to save money on buying new equipment, you have to move money from one budget department to another, and he says that type of movement is often discouraged by the way the budgeting system is set up. Weihl says Google operates on what’s called a “total cost of ownership” philosophy that allows the company to purchase new equipment if it will help save money in operating costs over time.