February 9, 2012

Governor adds more counties to disaster list

Governor Chet Culver today doubled the number of counties under a state disaster proclamation. He added 14 counties to the list so there are now 28 counties covered by the state disaster declarations due to storms and flooding. The counties added today are: Buena Vista, Butler, Clay, Davis, Emmet, Hamilton, Howard, Jefferson, Lee, O’Brien, Osceola, Palo Alto, Van Buren and Webster.

The proclamation allows state resources to be deployed to help individuals who need assistance and reside in the affected counties. Governor Culver had already issued disaster proclamations for Cherokee, Decatur, Franklin, Hancock, Mahaska, Marion, Monroe, Polk, Ringgold, Sioux, Taylor, Union, Warren and Wright counties.

The disaster proclamations authorize the implementation of the State Individual Assistance Grant Program to assist eligible residents of those counties. People impacted by recent flooding are urged to contact their county emergency management coordinators to report damages so the state is aware of the needs of each county.

DHS fined for miscalculating Food Assistance Program benefits

The federal government is fining Iowa’s Department of Human Services around $200,000 for miscalculating “Food Assistance Program” benefits at a rate higher than the national average. The state figured wrong on nearly six-and-a-half percent of the benefits which are handed out in the form of an electronic card.

The national average error rate for the program that used to be known as “food stamps” was just over four percent. D-H-S spokesman, Roger Munns, blames the high rate of mistakes in part on the state’s budget crunch, and the resulting layoffs in the department.

[Read more...]

Missing statue of Hans Christian Andersen returned in Elk Horn

The solid bronze bust of famed Danish storyteller Hans Christian Andersen that was stolen last week is back at its home in western Iowa. Lisa Riggs, manager of the Danish Windmill in Elk Horn, says the statue was brought to her house late last night.

She says the people who claimed to have found the bust returned it, though the Shelby County Sheriff’s office is conducting an investigation into the theft. The bust was discovered missing last Thursday from the south side of the Danish Windmill, and Riggs says it sustained some damage.

The damage was mainly limited to the mounting points for the bust of Andersen, which was valued at more than $10,000. Riggs says if the statue could talk, he’d probably have an interesting tale to tell, once more. “The famous author would have told the story of the adventure,” Riggs says. “He wrote so many fun stories and he was a traveler himself.”

The statue of Andersen was commissioned and created by Becky Eckstrom and her artist husband, Tom Rosborough, of Des Moines, a little more than 30 years ago. It was made possible thanks to $4,000 which was raised through bake sales, flea markets and other means. The children in the community even had a lemonade sale to raise funds for the project. Riggs says the bronze bust is being kept in a safe place for now and will be returned to its base when the repairs are made and the investigation into its theft is complete.

By Ric Hanson, KJAN, Atlantic

Congressman says progress is being made on Medicare reforms

Congressman Bruce Braley says “very good progress” is being made on reform plans that he says will ultimately increase the payments Iowa hospitals and doctors get for providing care to elderly patients. For decades Medicare, the government-paid health care program for the nation’s elderly, has paid Iowa health care providers less than those located in the nation’s large urban centers.

“Taking into account of all the challenges that are faced with putting together comprehensive studies and a national summit, I feel like we’re making very good progress on moving the ball forward on all of the components of what we negotiated with the administration and Secretary Sebelius,” Braley says.

Braley,a Democrat from Waterloo, met this morning with U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. Sebelius announced she’s commissioned the first of two Institute of Medicine studies to chart a plan for basing Medicare reimbursement rates on the quality of care rather than where the care is provided.

Braley is also pressing to get Iowans on a new, 15-member national board that’s charged with evaluating what services Medicare pays for, and how to cut costs. Braley suggests the Iowans could show the country’s urban health centers how to do things more economically.

“We’re going to be working very hard to try to identify people, hopefully from Iowa, for the Independent Payment Advisory Board who have a deep understanding of how these inequities existed for so long and making sure that we’re placing great emphasis on getting the best quality care for the lowest possible cost,” Braley says. “And Iowans have demonstrated a strong leadership role in making that happen.”

Each of the 15 members of that new board would serve six year terms, after they win confirmation to the post in the U.S. Senate. The board will have broad powers and it will be hard for the president or congress to make changes in the board’s recommendations.

“History Detectives” focuses on Mount Pleasant man’s history

A woman who works with the “special collections” at Iowa Wesleyan College in Mount Pleasant was featured in last night’s ”History Detectives” program on public television stations across the country. Joy Conwell helped the show’s producers track down some history about Henry Clay Dean, a minister who lived in Mount Pleasant for 16 years.

Dean was one of the leading critics of the American Civil War, part of the “Peace Democrats” who were labeled the “Copperheads” by their Republican opponents.

“He was often referred to as ‘Dirty Shirt Dean’. He had kind of an aversion to cleanliness. He was an absolute genius.  He was a lawyer, a Methodist Episcopal minister, an educator,” Conwell says.  “But he was very much outspoken concerning the Lincoln policies on how the Civil War was being handled. He would be considered in his time similar to the peace activists during the Vietnam War era.” 

One of Dean’s descendants handed over a cane decorated with a coiled copperhead snake to the producers of the P.B.S. program, and the “History Detectives” revealed in last night’s program that the cane was Dean’s, given to him by his “rebel friends” according to an article in a Michigan newspaper.

Dean was a renowned orator, attracting huge crowds for his speeches. Mark Twain devoted a whole chapter of “Life on the Mississippi” to describing a Dean speech and the crowd’s reaction. Dean helped found the institution now known as Iowa Wesleyan College, where Conwell works.  

 ”He suffered a house fire,” Conwell says. “He was known as a great reader and he had over 3000 books and when his library burned, his collection was so great, that the actual burning was reported in The New York Times.”

A restaurant now sits on the ground where Dean’s house once stood in Mount Pleasant. ”And when the ‘History Detectives’ were here, we all went and saw Kentucky Fried Chicken,” Conwell says, with a laugh.

Henry Clay Dean once served as the chaplain of the U.S. Senate and he was a speaker at the 1864 Democratic National Convention. ”He was very much a mover and a shaker,” Conwell says. 

According to one account, the entire southern Iowa town of Corydon was in a local church for one of Dean’s speeches when Jesse James robbed the town’s bank. James was so enraged at being upstaged by Dean that James went to the church and taunted the crowd with the bags that held the $6000 he’d stolen.

Henry Clay Dean left Mount Pleasant in 1871 and moved to Missouri, settling on an 800-acre farm he called “Rebel’s Cove.”  The farm is now part of a conservation area known as Rebel’s Cove.  Descendants of Henry Clay Dean plan a reunion in Queen City, Missouri, on July 24 and 25.

Photo courtesy of Keith Dinsmore, Henry Clay Dean descendent

Cedar Rapids police search for information on woman killed in accident

Cedar Rapids police are trying to find out more information about a woman who was killed in an accident on the northeast side of the city just before 4 a.m. last Friday. Police say 29-year-old Heather Mitchell of Marion was struck by a vehicle driven by 33-year-old Matthew Beltramea of Anamosa.

Beltramea initially drove away from the scene, but told police he knew he had hit something and returned to the scene from work after hearing sirens.  Police say Beltramea was not impaired and has not been charged at this time.

Police are asking for help in determining where Mitchell was before the accident, so they can help piece together what happened.

Body of missing boater recovered on West Lake Okoboji

The Dickinson County Sheriff’s Department says the body of a missing boater was recovered from West Lake Okoboji at approximately 1:00 p.m. Monday. Thirty-year-old Chad Lenz from Carroll reportedly jumped into the lake near Pike’s Point Sunday around 1:30 p-m. to grab some clothing that had blown off the boat.

Lenz went under water and did not come back up. He was not wearing a life jacket at the time.