May 22, 2012

Division II Northern Sun Conference looking at expansion

Conference expansion has moved beyond the Big Ten and Pac Ten and made its way into the division two ranks. The 14 member Northern Sun Conference, which includes the Upper Iowa University, is considering adding two new members. Minot State of North Dakota and the University of Sioux Falls have applied for membership in the league.

While a BCS conference may expand to help produce a better television package Upper Iowa athletic director David Miller says there are also advantages to expansion at division two as well. Miller says it would allow them to go to division play, which would help them save some money in travel costs, something he says is important at their level.

Miller says a larger conference can also help alleviate scheduling difficulties by having regional games, as he says other conferences are looking at expanding for the same reason.

Miller is not against expanding the Northern Sun but he wants to make sure the right schools are added. He says he wants to look at areas where they don’t already have schools, such as Nebraska, where they could court Nebraska Kearney or Chadron State. Miller says adding such schools would be a feather in their cap.

Miller believes 16 teams is the maximum and going beyond that would be harmful in the long run. He says it becomes a scheduling nightmare going beyond the 16 team league, while an 8 team, 12 team or 16 team league is a good thing.

A decision on Minot State and Sioux Falls is expected this fall.

Retired soldiers will help fill gaps during the upcoming Iowa Guard deployment

The Iowa National Guard will send 2,800 soldiers to Afghanistan this fall and that deployment could make it difficult to respond to disasters here at home. To increase the number of boots on the ground, the Iowa Guard is now recruiting retired service men and women to serve as its eyes and ears in local communities.

Major Russ Bossard says that’s one of the reasons they’re now recruiting retired members to serve as emergency awareness contacts during disasters. “With deploying such a large number of soldiers it reduces our capabilities,” Brossard says, “one of our challenges dealing with domestic operations is getting an accurate picture of exactly what’s happening out in the communities and seeing what their needs are and where we can plug the holes and support that community in their time of need.”

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Authorities warn about scam surrounding care packages for soldiers

Authorities are warning western Iowans about a possible scam involving donations for care packages said to be destined for soldiers serving overseas. Pottawattamie County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Sergeant Dwayne Ritchie says the incidents were reported last week in Underwood, northeast of Council Bluffs.

Ritchie says two men were going door-to-door, showing people military I-Ds and asking residents to provide care packages or cash for service members in Iraq and elsewhere in the world. Ritchie says the military does conduct such fundraisers and other such events to support the troops, but not in the way the men in question were doing it.

The military’s Office of Special Investigations says care package campaigns are done, but service members are not allowed to solicit care packages or money in that way, door-to-door. He says the men went to City Hall in Underwood to inquire about a permit to solicit door-to-door, but didn’t get the required permit.

Ritchie says, “Once the city clerk told them they would have to have a permit to do this, they left town.” If you suspect members of the military, or those claiming to be servicemen, are conducting unauthorized solicitations, contact your local law enforcement agency.

By Ric Hanson, KJAN, Atlantic

Grinnell College president concerned about giving feds “monopoly control” over student loans

President Obama is expected to sign legislation overhauling the nation’s financial system this week. The new law is designed to prevent a repeat of the 2008 banking industry meltdown. It will also set up a single federal agency to regulate private student loans.

Consumers have complained about predatory loan practices and no enforcement. However, Grinnell College President Russell Osgood says he’s not convinced the new law will effectively regulate private student loans. “We all watched when Katrina happened and the federal agency in charge dropped the ball and look what happened, people died. Now, I don’t think people are going to die, but I am concerned about giving monopoly control over something as important as student loans to a single agency,” Osgood said. 

Osgood says, if the new system doesn’t work, the country should go back to having multiple loan providers. “I think we should go back to a system of licensing probably more than one loan originator,” Osgood said. “I think maybe the problem with the old system is that we had too many licensed and too little regulation.”

Osgood made his comments on the Iowa Public Radio program, The Exchange.