February 9, 2012

Grassley, Conlin differ on Bush-era tax cuts

Republican Senator Chuck Grassley says now is not the time to raise taxes on anyone, while Roxanne Conlin — Grassley’s Democratic opponent — accuses Grassley of siding with the upper class.

When congress returns to Washington next week, Democrats and Republicans will debate a proposal to extend most of the Bush-era tax cuts. The Obama Administration supports such a move and may propose other tax cuts for investment in “clean energy” and for businesses that hire new workers. But Senator Grassley says he and fellow Republicans will oppose the package because it would raise taxes on American households that have annual incomes above a quarter of a million dollars.

“This is going to be a major issue when we get back, probably a couple of weeks of the September session are going to be devoted to taxes and all 41 Republicans are of the position that we should not increase taxes during a recession,” Grassley says, “that it would be the very worst thing that we could do.”

Democrats say 98 percent of Americans would retain their tax cut under the Obama plan and income taxes would only go up for American couples who earn more than $250,000 annually or for individual Americans with an annual income of $200,000 or more. Democrat Roxanne Conlin, Grassley’s November opponent, says the middle class needs to keep its tax cuts.

“Congress should let the Bush tax cuts remain for 98 percent of the American people,” Conlin says. “But for those at the very top, those families earning more than $250,000 a year, a tiny tax increase of three percent will not hurt them and will help us by beginning to get the federal deficit under control.”

About 18,000 Iowa households — amounting to about 1.3 percent of all taxpayers in Iowa — would pay higher taxes under Obama’s plan. Grassley says raising taxes on anyone during a recession is unacceptable.

“It’s going to be very detrimental to the economy,” Grassley says.

The tax increase on those top earners would “depress” the economy, according to Grassley. ”Fifty percent of the income — not 50 percent of the small businesses — 50 percent of the income over $200,000 comes from small business,” Grassley says. “Small business operates on cash flow. When you tax that cash flow to a greater extent as it will be done if you follow the president’s wishes, it’s going to take that money out of expansion and the creation of jobs in small business.”

Conlin rejects that argument. “Less than two percent of the returns reporting more than $250,000 worth of income have any business income on them at all — none, zero, zip,” Conlin says.

Grassley predicts all 41 Republican senators will be united on this point, however, along with a handful of Democrats who say they want to extend all the Bush-era tax cuts. 

Conlin says deficit reduction is crucial and the tax proposal Democrats are advancing would help cut the deficit by $800 billion. ”It is the height of hypocrisy to scream about the deficit when what we’re trying to do is extend unemployment insurance to people who out of work and then say, ‘But my friends making $250,000 a year or a million dollars a year or a billion dollars a year should not have to endure the horror of a three percent raise in their taxes,’” Conlin says. “I think that’s absurd.”

Roxanne and James Conlin are among the American couples with an annual income above $250,000 and it’s likely Senator Grassley and his wife are as well, although Grassley’s campaign would not confirm that. Grassley’s base senate salary is $174,000 and Barbara Grassley is listed as a “full-time” employee at a Washington, D.C. lobbying firm, with duties ranging from crafting legislative strategy to message development and organizing client conferences. Both Grassleys are also eligible for Social Security benefits.

Iowa writers needed to pen chapters for online murder-mystery

Chris Draper

Wanna-be Iowa authors can take part in a year-long writing contest where a dozen chapters will be written by a dozen undiscovered writers.

Published author and Des Moines English professor John Domini wrote the first chapter — it’s available online. Anyone can pick up the story and write the next chapter, submit it and the winner will be posted online, too. It’ll go on like that for the next year until the 13 chapters are assembled into one book late in 2011. An editorial board will choose the winning chapters each month — and each author will get $100.

Chris Draper, a mechanical engineer in Des Moines by day, is the one who launched what’s being called the Modern Dickens Project. It’s named for Victorian-era author Charles Dickens, known for classic novels like “Oliver Twist” and “A Tale of Two Cities.” Both were revealed a chapter a month to an eager public, and that’s what the Iowa non-profit intends to do, too.

“The idea originally came from trying to figure out how to get more people involved in writing, how we get more people an opportunity to get their statement, their story,” Draper says, “some way to really give them an opportunity to tell a tale that’s uniquely theirs.” Draper says Chapter One introduces a wide cast of characters and sets the stage for creative writers to take the storyline and run.

“What we started with is a very fast-paced opening into a potential murder-mystery where we have a gay wedding that’s going to be taking place here in Des Moines, Iowa,” Draper says. “We’re left with one of the brides, on the night before the wedding, is dead and we have no idea who did it.” He says the author of the first chapter, John Domini, launches the book with a flourish, and now it’s up to Iowans to carry the storyline forward.

“John’s left a lot of strings for a lot of people to put their take and put their statement into this book,” Draper says. “We’re very excited when people go to moderndickens.org to read and to see what they feel from it, what they take away and what they’re able to contribute.”

He says this book project was envisioned as a way to showcase new writers from across the Hawkeye State, but he says being an Iowan isn’t mandatory.

“There’s no restriction on where the author’s actually based currently,” Draper says. “Our requirement is that the story has to speak to Iowa. It has to be something where, when you read it, you say, ‘You know what? That is Iowa, that is the feel of Iowa.’”

Learn more about the contest and read the first chapter at www.moderndickens.org.

Iowa college boosting enrollment with help from new womens wrestling program

Waldorf College, teetering on bankruptcy a year ago at this time, is reporting more students this fall. Officials at the Forest City college are boosting enrollment with some innovative recruiting.

Waldorf recently became the first college in Iowa to add a wrestling program for women. Tyler Brandt coaches both the mens and womens wrestling teams at Waldorf. “There are (womens wrestling) programs in North Dakota and Oklahoma. We really felt like Iowa was the right place to start a womens program and we wanted to be at the forefront of that,” Brandt said.

Brandt started recruiting women wrestlers in mid-summer. “Our goal for the first semester this year was to have 10 women in the program,” Brandt said. “Right now, we have seven signed and we’re working diligently to get those last three.” The Waldorf women wrestlers’ first meet is next month in Arizona.

Brandt is hoping to triple the size of the squad by next season. “We now have over 50 (wrestlers) on the mens side and our goal, after a full year of recruiting, is 40 on the womens,” Brandt said.

Waldorf’s fall enrollment, with a little help from the emerging women’s wrestling program, is at 640 students. That’s nearly 100 more student than last fall. Only 60 colleges offer women’s wrestling nationwide.

Waldorf was founded in 1903. The college was affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church until last year, when the governing association sold Waldorf to Mayes Education – owner of Columbia Southern University, an on-line school based in Orange Beach, Alabama.

Radio Iowa High School Football Poll 9/6/10

Class 4A
1. Iowa City High (2-0), LW #1 @ Iowa City West
2. Dowling Catholic (3-0), LW #2 vs Urbandale @ Waukee
3. Cedar Rapids Xavier (2-0), LW #3 vs Dubuque Hempstead
4. Ankeny (3-0), LW #4 @ S.E Polk
5. Cedar Falls (2-0), LW #5 vs CR Prairie
6. Linn-Mar (Marion) (2-0), LW #6 vs Dubuque Wahlert
7. Cedar Rapids Washington (2-0), LW #7 vs CR Kennedy
8. Bettendorf (2-0), LW #8 vs #10 Assumption
9. Fort Dodge (2-0), LW #9 @ Sioux City North
10.Davenport Assumption (2-0), LW #10 @ #8 Bettendorf

Class 3A
1. Williamsburg (2-0), LW #2 @ Mount Vernon
2. Harlan (1-1), LW #1 vs Glenwood
3. Pella (2-0), LW #4 vs Chariton
4. Clear Lake (2-0), LW #5 vs Nevada
5. Union (LaPorte City) (2-0), LW #7 @ Center Point-Urbana
6. Grinnell (2-0), LW #8 vs Washington
7. Ballard (Huxley) (2-0), LW #9 vs Webster City
8. Fairfield (2-0), LW #10 @ Mount Pleasant
9. Marion (2-0), LW (X) vs Western Dubuque
10.Solon (1-1), LW #3 @ Benton

Class 2A
1. Iowa City Regina (2-0), LW #1 @ Wilton
2. North Fayette (2-0), LW #2 vs Dyersville Beckman
3. Western Christian (Hull) (2-0), LW #4 @ Spirit Lake
4. Sioux Center (2-0), LW #9 vs Unity Christian
5. Pella Christian (2-0), LW #5 vs Bondurant-Farrar
6. Carroll Kuemper (2-0), LW #6 vs East Sac County
7. Albia (2-0), LW #7 vs Central Lee
8. Sigourney-Keota (2-0), LW #8 vs WB/Notre Dame
9. Fort Dodge St. Edmond (2-0), LW #10 @ North Polk
10.New Hampton (1-1), LW #3 @ Denver

Class 1A
1. Council Bluffs St. Albert (2-0), LW #6 @ Clarinda Academy
2. West Lyon (1-1), LW #1 @ Alta-Aurelia
3. HMS (Hartley) (2-0), LW #3 @ Sibley-Ocheyedan
4. West Branch (2-0), LW #4 vs Alburnett
5. Emmetsburg (2-0), LW #5 vs Sioux Central
6. Turkey Valley (2-0), LW #6 vs Northeast (Goose Lake)
7. Aplington-Parkersburg (2-0), LW #7 vs Saint Ansgar
8. Treynor (2-0), LW #8 @ Underwood
9. Logan-Magnolia (2-0), LW #9 vs Underwood
10.Woodward-Granger (2-0), LW #10 @ Hudson

Class A
1. Madrid (2-0), LW #1 @ Corning
2. Mason City Newman (3-0), LW #2 vs GMG
3. North Tama (2-0), LW #3 @ East Buchanan
4. WACO (2-0), LW #6 @ Lone Tree
5. Clay Central-Everly (2-0), LW #7 vs Northwood-Kensett
6. LeMars Gehlen (1-1), LW #8 vs West Hancock
7. Bedford (1-1), LW #5 vs S.E. Warren
8. Montezuma (2-0), LW #10 @ BGM
9. Lisbon (1-1), LW #9 vs Belle Plaine
10.Rockford (3-0), LW (X) vs Valley (Elgin)

Eight-man
1. Lenox (2-0), LW #1 @ Murray
2. Armstrong-Ringsted (2-0), LW #2 @ CWL
3. Northeast Hamilton (3-0), LW #3 vs Clarksville
4. Preston (3-0), LW #4 @ Springville
5. Graettinger-Terril (2-0), LW #5 @ #9 North Sentral Kossuth
6. Moravia (2-0), LW (X) vs Seymour
7. Tripoli (2-0), LW #9 vs Ventura
8. Janesville (2-0), LW #10 @ WCLT
9. North Sentral Kossuth (1-1), LW #6 VS #5 Graettinger-Terril
10.West Bend-Mallard (2-0), LW (X) @ Harris-Lake Park

Thicke wants to promote “rebuilding” top soil

Francis Thicke

The Democrat who’s running to be Iowa’s next ag secretary says if he’s elected, he’ll promote new farming methods that “rebuild” the state’s top soil.  Francis Thicke operates a 450 acre farm near Fairfield and manages a herd of 80 dairy cows.

“Since we started farming in Iowa, we’ve lost about half our top soil to erosion and we’ve lost half of that black carbon organic matter to oxidation from crop production, so you might say we’ve depleted our ecological capital by our farming methods,” Thicke says.  “But we can farm in ways that will rebuild our soils and that are environmentally and ecologically sound.” 

Thicke has planted 200 acres of his farm with grass and clover, for his cattle to graze.  He’s split each of those into small “paddocks” and most are just two or three acres. ”I have 60 paddocks and so after each milking twice a day the cows go to a new pasture and they move around much like the bison did on the prairie and so now I’m rebuilding my soils,” Thicke says. “The soils when I moved to that farm about 15 years ago, in some places all the top soil was gone and deep gullies were there, so now we’re rebuilding it.”

Thicke and his wife run an organic dairy, processing milk, yogurt and cheese on their farm near Fairfield and selling it under the “Radiance Dairy” brand.  Thicke is the Democrat challenging Republican Bill Northey, Iowa’s current ag secretary, on November’s ballot.

Recycling grocery bags presents potential health problem

Iowans who like “going green” with reusable grocery bags may be helping the environment, but those cloth bags may present a potential health problem. A study by the Country Living Association shows if not used properly, the bags can be a haven for bacteria.

Cindy Brison, a food and nutrition extension educator, says you have to be careful how you use the bags. “Paper goods are fine in there, all different sorts of dry goods but if you start taking home any sort of raw meat, it’s really important you have them in another plastic bag just to keep any juices from getting out,” Brison says.

“If you do happen to get any juices of out from chicken or beef or anything like it, you can try to take them home and hand wash them with soap and water,” she says.

Brison says if you use a washing machine, it may destroy the recyclable bags. Also, let them air dry and don’t use the drier. She says you may want to designate bags for certain uses to prevent cross-contamination.

She says, “So maybe you have one bag just for fruits and vegetables and one bag that you use strictly for fresh meats, then you won’t have any problems with things going back and forth.” Brison says it’s also important to store these bags properly between trips so they don’t get dirty.

“I fold them back up and put them all inside one bag and place them in an area that is clean,” she says. “Either hang them inside your door so you can take them as you go or put them in the back, in the corner of my van where I know it is going to be clean and nothing else is going to get on them. I’m not going to put anything else on top of them.”

She says to avoid storing the bags in your trunk as it could be an atmosphere for bacteria to grow. Brison says to designate one reusable bag for chemical products, like soaps and cleaners. You don’t want to risk the danger of having a container leak and then later using that bag for fresh produce.

New Alcoholic Beverages Division Administrator works to set division back on course

Iowa Alcoholic Beverages Division Administrator, Stephen Larson

The new Iowa Alcoholic Beverages Division (A.B.D.) administrator, Stephen Larson, has been on the job for four months and says he had worked to set the division back on course.

 Former administrator Lynn Walding was not reappointed, and it was later revealed Walding had spent thousands of dollars on things like artwork and had authorized a one-million dollar payment to a contractor remodeling the agency’s warehouse, long before the work was done. There were also some questions raised about personnel.

Larson had previously worked for the state treasurer and says he used the experienced he gained there and applied it to the A-B-D. “Prior to when I came in, there was a lack of discipline in regards to process, and that range in all kinds of different arenas,” Larson says.

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