February 9, 2012

State tax incentives approved for Deere & Co. project in Waterloo

Deere logoThe Iowa Department of Economic Development has approved tax incentives to help Deere and Company modernize a plant in Waterloo. Deere spokesperson Ken Golden says the foundry currently employs 470 people and the state’s assistance requires a minum of  295 jobs to be retained.
 
 ”A company like John Deere certainly has options when it decides whether it should modernize a plant or perhaps replace that plant…whether it be through outsourcing or building elsewhere,” Golden told Radio Iowa.
 
The John Deere Foundry in Waterloo opened in 1972. The plant produces castings for a host of agricultural equipment. Golden says the tax incentives from the state were key to the $100 million plant improvement project. The tax credits for the project amount to nearly $15 million.
 
 ”Iowa wanted to keep these jobs and we wanted to make sure that it made sense for us, from a total business sense, to keep them in Waterloo,” Golden said.
The modernization work will take place over the next 4 to 5 years. Golden says the project will improve the plant’s manufacturing capacity and flexibility. Deere employs around 12,700 Iowans around the state.

 

 

 

$2.3 million in Vision Iowa grants awarded to five cities

vision iowa logoThe Vision Iowa Board today awarded grants worth more than $2.3 million to five communities. The largest grant of $2 million will help finance an $11 million project in Council Bluffs. The River’s Edge Park will include an amphitheater, trails, a beach and various plantings. The park will be located along the Missouri River and will be set at the end of a pedestrian bridge connecting Iowa with Nebraska.
 
Much smaller grants were awarded to four other cities. Those projects involve new aquatic centers for the towns of Sanborn and George, an outdoor sports and recreation complex in West Union and a redesign of downtown Kalona.
 
The Vision Iowa Board meeting took place in Grinnell.
 
 

Governor says he’ll do whatever is needed to help state schools in conference realignment

Iowa governor Chet Culver says he is not jumping into the debate over conference realignment. There is speculation that several members of the Big 12 could be jumping to the Big Ten and Pac Ten which raises the possibility that Iowa State could be left without a conference. Culver told the Des Moines Register that he viewed the issue worthy of his involvement.

Culver says he was asked a simple question ‘Will you help if asked?’, and Culver answered yes. He says that’s the extent of his involvement. Culver says he has spoken to the athletic directors at the two schools and said he offered to help them in any way, as he says he is a “huge fan” of both schools and wants them to win in any realignment plan.

Culver says he doesn’t want to see Iowa’s schools hurt by the actions of others. Culver says he will not get involved until he is asked. He says that was the case when Governor Mark Warner got involved with Culver’s alma-mater Virginia Tech. Culver says his involvement is to “fight for Iowa, fighting for the State of Iowa.”

Several outlets are reporting that Nebraska could announce a move to the Big Ten in the next few days.

Iowa Democratic Party chair resigns to focus on treatment for tumor (audio)

The chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party announced his resignation today in an emotional meeting with reporters. Michael Kiernan says a personal health issue made him decided to step down. “I noticed in late January, a lump below my right ear,” Kiernan explained, “after a battery of tests I have been diagnosed with a tumor in the deep lobe of my saliva gland. I will be treated at the University of Iowa Hospitals.”

The 35-year-old Kiernan says he won’t know his long-term prognosis until he has more treatment. “It’s a road that I have to now get on to find out exactly, I don’t know all the details, I know that it will require surgery. I have had several positive signs that it is not cancer, but until they do the surgery, I will not know for sure,” Kiernan says.

A number of high-level staff members have left the governor’s office and his campaign operation in recent months. His chief of staff, campaign manager, communications director and press secretary have all left within the past two months. Kiernan says that’s why he decided to go against the governor’s advice and reveal the nature of his illness.

“Because of the speculation of the people (who) have left the campaign for various in the past…another person stepping aside without an explanation, just couldn’t happen,” Kiernan said. He says he understands the nature of politics, but says “people are quick to judge without the facts much of the time.”

Kiernan says he would rather stay in the fight, but has to step down to focus on his family and personal health. He says it has been a “great honor” to lead the Democratic Party. Kiernan’s successor will be chosen Thursday evening.

Kiernan was elected to the position in February of 2009. Kiernan ran Governor Culver’s campaign for Secretary of State before serving two terms as an at-large Councilman in Des Moines. He was born and raised in Madison County, Iowa, and is married to WHO-TV anchor Erin Kiernan.

Listen to Michael Kiernan’s entire remarks here:
Kiernan news conference 5:46 MP3

State employees begin food drive (video)

Around 500 state employees used their lunch hour today  to help raise money for the Food Bank of Iowa. The event on the State Capitol grounds in Des Moines included raffles and a dunk tank – offering workers a chance to sink directors of several agencies.

Department of Corrections Director John Baldwin is chair of this year’s State Employee Food Drive which runs through June 18. Baldwin says last year’s drive was great success. “Off the top of my head, I don’t recall, but it was in the hundreds-of-thousands of pounds (of food) and somewhere around $50,000 to $80,000 of actual money. We filled many trailers with food,” Baldwin said.

Over the next week-and-a-half, state employees will hold various fundraisers in their offices. Baldwin says some agencies come up with creative ideas. “I know the Department of Agriculture has created an ugly desk ornament. It mysteriously appears on your desk and then you have to pay a couple dollars to make it go away,” Baldwin said.

Other agencies allow employees to donate a few dollars to wear jeans to work. The Food Bank of Iowa serves 285 agencies, such as soup kitchens and homeless shelters, in 42 Iowa counties.

Organizers are out checking route for RAGBRAI

Organizers of the statewide bicycle ride known as RAGBRAI are riding the route themselves this week to make sure everything’s ready next month’s big event, which draws riders from around the world. RAGBRAI director T.J. Juskiewicz says it’s the annual route inspection ride to survey things like traffic patterns and other elements that might have an impact on the many thousands of cyclists.

He says they’ll make a report on things that might cause problems for the riders and inform county engineers to see if they can repair any of those hazards.

Juskiewicz says a group of local riders usually will take part in each leg of the inspection ride. He says they had about 75 people ride with them on the first day since it was a Sunday, but usually about a dozen people ride the route each day.

Juskiewicz says problems found during their inspection ride won’t mean a change in the route. He says if there’s something major like a bridge being washed out, they’ll have to adjust, but even after the flooding in 2008, organizers didn’t need to change the route.

Juskiewicz and about ten others are riding the route today from Clear Lake to Charles City after riding through the rain Tuesday from Algona. For more information about RAGBRAI and to follow Juskiewicz’s blog while traveling the inspection route this week, visit: “www.ragbrai.com“.

By Bob Fisher, KRIB, Mason City

Branstad promises to be bulwark against labor bills

Terry Branstad talks with a suppoter at campaign stop in Ames.

Terry Branstad talks with a supporter at campaign stop in Ames.

Former Governor Terry Branstad promises to be a bulwark against key pieces of union-backed legislation if he’s elected to a fifth term as governor.

Branstad won the Republican Party’s 2010 nomination for governor in Tuesday’s voting and today at noon he spoke in Ames at the Iowa Association of Business and Industry’s annual convention.

“I know, having been to some of your meetings over the last few years, you’ve been fighting a defensive battle trying to stop these job-killing labor bills. Prevailing wage — a bill that I vetoed in 1984 — nine states have repealed it.  No state has passed it since that time,” Branstad said, pounding on the podium for emphasis.  “And yet they came within one vote of passing it through the House of Representatives.” 

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