January 28, 2012

About 7,000 more Iowans to qualify for food assistance

More Iowans will be eligible for government food assistance next month, but the federal funding for that food aid comes with a catch.

Last spring, the Iowa Legislature raised the income eligibility limits for what used to be called food stamps.  Experts say up to 7,000 more Iowans would qualify, but for the state to get the additional federal dollars for that food assistance, the state must promote the benefits of a healthy marriage.

Nancy Freudenberg, a compliance officer for the Department of Human Services, says the agency has created a flyer about marriage that will be mailed out with letters notifying applicants they’ve qualified for food stamps.

“Some states really actually like did classes and went all out for promoting marriage and it was never our intent to do that because we weren’t in the business of promoting marriage,” she says. “We were just looking at it as a way to access food assistance benefits.”

The flyer cites a variety of statistics, noting that spouses in a healthy marriage are less likely to drink heavily or use marijuana and their children achieve higher academic and economic success.  “We know there’s people who are food insecure so any way that we can reach people, whether it’s through this brochure that wouldn’t normally apply,” Freudenberg says. “You know, if they pick up this brochure and think, ‘Oh, I didn’t realize I could be eligible,’ — you know, hey, why not?”

The cost of the flyer was covered by federal funding.  Last month there were more than 350,000 Iowans receiving government food assistance.

Iowa artist illustrates book about WWI “Christmas Truce”

The latest book illustrated by an Iowa artist features a unique war-time Christmas story. The book chronicles what’s been called the “Christmas Truce” where soldiers from Germany and Britain stopped their fighting on the front lines during World War One to celebrate the holiday together.

“It’s an amazing story. It’s a true story,” says artist Gary Kelley of Cedar Falls. They just decided, spontaneously, to stop fighting on Christmas and have a party with each other.”

[Read more...]

“Cost containment” key goal for new Medicaid manager

The man who’ll be in charge of managing the state’s Medicaid program says “cost containment” will be his chief goal. Chuck Palmer, the former Iowa Department of Human Services director, will be in charge of the program as Governor-elect Terry Branstad has asked Palmer to do another turn as director of the agency.

“We have to have a Medicaid program and we have to meet federal regulations, so we’ll see what we can do,” Palmer says.

Rooting out more fraud, getting better deals on prescription drugs, focusing more on preventive care and working with other states on collaborative projects could be the best options for containing costs in the future according to Palmer.

“I think each state will, if you will, come up with some ideas and we need to share and borrow from each other,” Palmer says. “We’re all in the same boat and we’re all struggling with the same issues.” 

Governor-elect Branstad says the Medicaid program is the “scariest” part of the state budget because of double-digit increases in the budget for the program due to rising health care costs and a rising number of Iowans who enrolled in the program during the recession. About 380,000 Iowans are currently getting health care benefits through Medicaid, which provides government-paid health coverage for the poor and the disabled.

Storm system to move out of Iowa by late afternoon

The storm system which has dumped as much as nine inches of snow on some portions of the state should move out of the state by late this afternoon. 

“We do have a few locations that have reached nine (inches of snow),” says Rod Donovan, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. “Mason City is one of those areas. We do have some unconfirmed reports of nine towards the Waverly area and then several reports of basically six-to-eight inches from that Mason City down through Waterloo area.”

The storm that’s dumped all that snow got “hung up” between a strong weather system that’s over the southern Plains and another system that’s on the east coast.  Donovan says later this afternoon the system will move out of southeast Iowa, headed for the lower Ohio Valley.

“That arctic high pressure over the state of Minnesota right now will continue to push down into the state of Iowa and gradually shove everything to the south and east,” Donovan says.

The National Weather Service issue a winter weather advisory for the entire state, but nothing more as high winds were not part of this storm. ”This snow has been very fluffy snow and quite powdery and if we had had any winds whatsoever this would have been a snow prone to blowing and drifting,” Donovan says. “A lot of the winds right now are out of the northeast, at about five to 10 miles an hour, so we’re seeing very little of that.” 

Donovan says travel conditions should improve overnight, as there’s no more snow in the forecast and the winds aren’t expected to rise either.

“It’s a little bit of a nuisance with snow-covered roads, otherwise it’s about as gentle a snowfall as we can get,” Donovan says.

At mid-morning, there were no flights being delayed because of weather at airports in Cedar Rapids, Des Moines, Sioux City or Omaha.

Minnesota teen pleading not guilty to slaying two Iowa convenience store clerks

The Minnesota teenager accused of shooting two northern Iowa convenience store clerks to death is pleading not guilty.  

The public defender who’s representing 17-year-old Micheal Richard Swanson has entered a written plea in Humboldt County of not guilty. 

Swanson faces charges of first degree murder and first degree robbery in connection with the incidents in Algona and Humboldt where two convenience store clerks, Vicky Bowman Hall and Shiela Myers, were robbed, shot and killed back on November 15.

The teenager from Saint Louis Park, Minnesota earlier had entered a written plea of not guilty in Kossuth County. Swanson remains isolated in the Kossuth County Jail in Algona on a bond of $1 million. Charles Kenville of Fort Dodge is Swanson’s court-appointed attorney. Swanson will be tried as an adult.

(Reporting by Chuck Shockley, KLGA, Algona)

Radio Iowa’s top stories of 2010 (AUDIO)

Radio Iowa has compiled a list of the top stories of 2010.

The chief justice of the Iowa Supreme Court and two other justices were booted off the bench in the retention election in November, fallout from the high court’s 2009 ruling that paved the way for same-sex marriage in Iowa.

The concrete dam that formed Lake Delhi in Delaware County collapsed in flooding in July, wiping out 300 houses downstream and leaving 900 lakefront homes with no lake.

Hiawatha native and Army Staff Sergeant Sal Guinta was awarded the Medal of Honor in a White House ceremony for his bravery in battle in Afghanistan. Also, 2800 Iowa National Guard troops shipped out for a year of duty in Afghanistan, the largest Iowa Guard deployment since World War II.

In sports, the year began with the Iowa Hawkeyes beating Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl. UNI upset number-one Kansas in the NCAA basketball tourney, and “The Mayor” returned to Ames as former Cyclone Fred Hoiberg became the new basketball coach at Iowa State.

Listen to those stories, and others, in our three-minute reports by clicking on the following links:

Iowa soldiers’ wish? To more easily phone home

Colonel Ben Correl

Soldiers deployed during the holidays used to have to wait for letters from home to hear from relatives, but technology has improved that capability.

 Colonel Ben Corell commands some 2,800 soldiers from the Iowa National Guard who are on active duty in Afghanistan and while they have the latest technology, Corell says availability is a problem depending on your location.

“As our soldiers move over to the forward operating areas out in the different provinces — the farther you get away from a big installation — the less capability you have,” he says.

[Read more...]