May 22, 2012

Senator Harkin defends Culver

Senator Tom Harkin is offering up a defense for incumbent Governor Chet Culver. Culver, a Democrat, is facing an uphill battle for reelection against Terry Branstad, the Republican who served as Iowa’s governor for four terms.

“I’ve been reading Terry Branstad’s campaign statements. I’m kind of scratching my head. I’ve never heard of a politician running for governor on a platform of taking the state backward by a couple of decades. I’ve never heard of a politician so proud to be yesterday’s man. I’ve come to believe that Terry Branstad’s favorite day of the year is November 7th,” Harkin said this past weekend.

“That’s the day you turn your clock back.” Harkin made that statement on Saturday at the Iowa Democratic Party’s state convention, about an hour before Chet Culver addressed the delegates. Harkin was first elected to congress in 1974 and is currently serving in his fifth term in the U.S. Senate.

Harkin uses the word “retread” to describe Branstad, who served six years in the state legislature, four years as lieutenant governor and 16 years as governor, but left his job as president of Des Moines University to run for a fifth term as governor. “And the problem with retreads is that they have a tendency to blow out and cause a lot of wrecks,” Harkin said. “That’s why I always buy premium tires and that’s why I’m betting on our high-performance, all-weather, steel-belted, Kevlar-reinforced Governor Chet Culver this year.”

Harkin praised Culver for pursuing what Harkin described as a “progressive” agenda, signing an increase in Iowa’s minimum wage and providing state grants to expanding companies in the renewable fuels industry. Branstad campaign spokesman says Democrats like Harkin seem “fixated” on the past.

Tim Albrecht, Branstad’s communications director, says the former governor is offering a “positive vision for the future” and Democrats are worried because Branstad has a track record of success.

Names released for three found dead in Calhoun County

The identities of the three people found dead in a rural farmhouse in Calhoun County are being released, though many questions in the case remain. The victims are identified as 19-year-old Paige Gallo of Council Bluffs, 20-year-old Heather Campbell of Urbandale and 20-year-old Luke Schleisman of Lake City.

Their bodies were found inside the farm residence on Friday morning by the Calhoun County Sheriff’s Department after a 911 call was received of a disturbance at the rural residence near Lake City. There have been no arrests made. Autopsies on the three bodies were performed on Saturday.

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Need remains high at food bank

The executive director of the Food Bank of Iowa says a large food and fund raising drive by state employees is happening at a critical time. Carey Miller says the effort that began last week and runs through this Friday will raise tens-of-thousand of dollars and hundreds-of-thousands of pounds of food for needy Iowans.

“What’s so critical is we have a little more (demand) this year because the need is so great,” Miller said. “Families are struggling to put food on the table.” The Food Bank of Iowa serves 285 agencies such as homeless shelters, food pantries and soup kitchens in 42 counties. Miller says those agencies are busy all year round.

“But, right now we kind of have a special time of the year when kids are getting out of school and don’t have access to school breakfast and lunch,” Miller said. “So, families that are struggling now have to find a way to put additional meals on the table at home.” The demand for food assistance in the state has been on the rise the last few years.

“We’ve seen a 30-percent increase in people accessing emergency food and that’s the largest jump that we’ve seen in a long time,” Miller said. That 30% increase was recorded in an Iowa Hunger Study conducted late last year compared to a report from 2005.

Roundtable meetings to focus on healthcare impact on businesses

While the federal health care reform legislation has been law for months now, some Iowa business owners still aren’t sure how they’ll be impacted, as parts of it take effect over years. A series of small business roundtable meetings in Iowa start today, hosted by the Main Street Alliance, where Sue Dinsdale is spokeswoman.

She says many Iowa business owners are “unsure and curious” about what the new law means for them. The presentation offers a detailed explanation of the health care reform package and offers resources to learn more about how they’ll be affected. Dinsdale says the roundtable meetings will cover a range of topics.

They’ll address how the reforms are designed to “stem these off-the-chart rate increases businesses have been seeing,” in addition to helping business owners understand and calculate their new tax credits. The Main Street Alliance has more than 550 members statewide. Dinsdale says three meetings are already scheduled, with more in the works.

The first meeting is tonight at the The Haunted Bookshop in Iowa City at 7 P.M., with the second meeting Thursday at 5:30 P.M. at the Waterloo Public Library. A third roundtable talk is slated for July 13th in Des Moines, with others being planned in Ames and in Franklin County.

Learn more at: “www.iowacan.org“.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City