CALLING ON IT TO STAND UP TO BIG OIL AND PROTECT OUR TROOPS BY KEEPING THE RENEWABLE FUEL STANDARD STRONG

WASHINGTON, DC - The largest progressive group of veterans in America, VoteVets.org, today was joined by Congressman Bruce Braley in delivering over 110,000 petition signatures (including over 1000 signatures from Iowans) to EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, calling on the agency to protect the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS).  The EPA comment period on the issue is coming to a close, and the agency is expected to announce a decision soon on the future of the RFS.  The petition was delivered in a meeting with EPA Senior Staff.

"The 110,000 people that voiced their opinion on the critical importance of the Renewable Fuel Standard deserve to be heard," Braley said. "The RFS improves our economy and contributes to our energy independence?and the EPA needs to understand that Americans don't support their misguided attempt to alter a law that's working so well."

"This issue is clear cut," said Jon Soltz, Iraq War Veteran, and Chairman of VoteVets.org.  "The less dependent on oil we are, the lower the prices become worldwide.  Our enemies often benefit from the rising prices of oil - even those we do not buy oil from - and use those dollars against us and our troops.  This is an issue of protecting our men and women in uniform, and the EPA must do its part to ensure America's dependence on oil is decreased, not increased.  Ethanol is a key part of making that happen.  Now is the time for the EPA to stand up to big oil, and stand up for our troops."

Of the 112,812 signatures collected, over 35,000 were from veterans and military family members.  More than 1,060 comments were from Iowans, including over 320 Iowa veterans and military family members.

The facts back up those who signed the petition.  Although the United States often does not directly buy oil from hostile nations, like Iran, America's dependence on oil drives up demand, and prices of oil on the world market, which benefits all oil-rich nations.  Those oil dollars allowed Iran, for instance, to produce and ship Explosively Formed Penetrators (EFPs) to Iraqi insurgents, who used them to target our troops.1

Additionally, the U.S. Department of Energy estimates for every one billion gallons of ethanol produced, 10,000 to 20,000 jobs are added to our domestic economy.2 According to the Iowa Corn Growers Association, the ethanol Industry supports around 55,000 jobs in Iowa, and accounts for $5.4 billion of Iowa's GDP.3 Gutting the RFS would threaten the development of next generation biofuels, including cellulosic ethanol plants in Iowa scheduled to start operation next year.  Rather than using kernels of corn, these advanced plants will make the fuel from the "biomass" of various low-value plant material including corn stalks and wood chips.

Founded in 2006,  and backed by over 360,000 supporters, the mission of VoteVets.org is to use public issue campaigns and direct outreach to lawmakers to ensure that troops abroad have what they need to complete their missions, and receive the care they deserve when they get home. VoteVets.org also recognizes veterans as a vital part of the fabric of our country and will work to protect veterans' interests in their day-to-day lives. VoteVets.org is committed to the destruction of terror networks around the world - with force when necessary - to protect America.  While non-partisan, the group is the largest progressive organization of veterans in America.

Sources:

1 http://www.cbsnews.com/news/

2 http://www.growthenergy.org/

3 http://www.iowacorn.org/en/

 


 

PAID FOR BY VOTEVETS ACTION FUND

Boys and Girls Clubs to Receive LEGO® Mindstorms® Sets at Iowa and Illinois Presentations

IA/IL QUAD-CITIES - On Wed., Jan. 29, 2014, in presentations on both sides of the river, the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Mississippi Valley (BGCMV) will receive LEGO® Mindstorms® sets, which contain the essentials for designing and building robots. Young people who are BGCMV members will be able to use these sets during after-school hours at the Davenport and Moline Clubs.
"The Mindstorms® sets are being donated to the Boys and Girls Clubs by employees representing John Deere and Case New Holland (CNH), and we thank them for their incredible generosity," said Tim Tolliver, Chief Professional Officer of the Boys and Girls Clubs of the Mississippi Valley.

The sets are being presented through an initiative of National Instruments, a provider of test, measurement, and embedded systems for engineers and scientists, and the Iowa Governor's STEM Advisory Council. STEM is an acronym for Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics, and the Council works with business, policy and education leaders from across the state to better position Iowa's young people and the state's economy for future success.

The presentations will be held at two locations on Wed., January 29, 2014. The public is welcome to attend both events:
From 2 - 2:30 p.m., a Mindstorms® set will be presented by a CNH representative to the Davenport Club, located at the First Presbyterian Church, 1702 Iowa St., Davenport, IA. Presenters will include Tim Tolliver; Tylor Svitak, CNH; Kristine Bullock, SE Iowa STEM Manager; and Liz Zimmerman, Program Director of the Davenport Boys & Girls Club.
From 3:30 - 4 p.m., a second Mindstorms® set will be presented by a John Deere representative to the Moline Club, located at 406 7th St., Moline, IL. Presenters will include Tim Tolliver; Kristen Schaeffer, John Deere; Kristine Bullock, SE Iowa STEM Manager; and Liz Zimmerman.
Since its introduction in 1998, the LEGO® Mindstorms® build-and-program robotics tool set has become the best-selling product in the LEGO Group's history.
Case New Holland is a maker of agricultural and construction equipment, while John Deere manufactures agricultural, construction and forestry equipment. Both companies operate on a global level and have a strong presence in the American Midwest.
Learning By Doing
"The LEGO® Mindstorms® sets are already extremely popular, and their popularity is bound to increase even more, with new movies like RoboCop and The LEGO Movie coming up," Tolliver said. "Our kids will have a lot of fun building these robots. Plus, they will gain self-confidence and valuable skills. That is why CNH and John Deere are providing kids with these sets: to help them to develop the skills that will make them the engineers of the future. We are especially pleased that Tyler Svitak and Kristen Schaffer chose to make these LEGO kits available to our club kids."
The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Mississippi Valley, as a chartered member of Boys and Girls Clubs of America, is a tax-exempt organization, duly qualified under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and contributions are tax-deductible in accordance with Federal law.
For more information on the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Mississippi Valley, please call (309) 757-5777 or visit www.bgcmv.org
-- # --

 

· Recapping January 21 - 27, 2014

· Cities & Schedule for: January 28 - February 2, 2014

· Campaign Analysis: Why did the Des Moines Register ignore its own polling data when declaring an inevitable nominee?

SCHEDULE: January 28th - February 2nd

After an aggressive trek across Eastern Iowa the Jonathan Narcisse for Governor campaign will shift its focus to Western Iowa beginning today.

On Tuesday (Jan 28) the campaign kicks off a three-day western Iowa trek starting in Mason City. From there it is onto Algona, Emmetsburg, Spencer, Storm Lake and Sioux City.

On Wednesday (Jan 29) the campaign will begin in Sioux City and then visit Council Bluffs, Red Oak, Shenandoah, Clarinda, Atlantic, Harlan, Denison and Carroll.

On Thursday (Jan 30), the Narcisse for Iowa Governor team will start in Fort Dodge and then onto Webster City, Boone, Perry, Adel, Winterset,  Indianola and Carlisle.

The campaign will take a break for the weekend in order for Narcisse to participate in the celebration of his mother's 80th birthday before returning to Eastern Iowa and Waterloo on February 3rd.

RECAPPING: January 20th - 27th Campaign Trail

Monday, January 20th

Narcisse launched his campaign in Cedar Rapids with a call for an unrelenting campaign to end poverty in Iowa. "We have the means now we must have the will," stated Narcisse. Following the presentation Narcisse visited his Cedar Rapids office which will open in February.

Narcisse then stopped in Iowa City for an interview with the Iowa City Press Citizen, in Newton for an interview with the Newton Daily News and concluded the day in Des Moines with an interview on WHO 1040 AM's Simon Conway.

Throughout the day Narcisse stressed his day one actions:

1. Empower a process to protect Iowa's public pension systems especially following a recent ruling by a federal judge. "The men and women who ran into burning buildings, made our streets safe, taught our children, plowed our streets must know that we will honor our word to them. Our public pensions in Iowa must be honored, actuarially sound, sustainable and most of all be protected from a political class in Iowa that has raided, without replenishing, other funds such as the Senior Living Trust and the Tobacco Trust" stated Narcisse.

2. Order the head of the Division of Criminal Investigation to return with a plan in 30 days to begin forensic audits of state and local governments. "As a member of the Des Moines School Board we had a contractor who billed us for time that didn't exist, who billed us for things like bottled water and cell phones. In other governments we have evidence of bid rigging, embezzlement and graft. Iowa's taxpayers deserve efficient, honest and frugal government and this measure will not only shed light on past practices but it will put in place protections to restore integrity to governance in Iowa," stated Narcisse.

3. Opt out of No Child Left Behind and Common Core. "Perhaps the single greatest failure of Iowa's political leaders this past decade has been the failure to end our Public School System's thralldom to No Child Left Behind. No Child Left Behind has wrought havoc and desolation on our public schools. It has perverted the delivery of education in Iowa and it has harmed our communities, our good schools, our dedicated and outstanding teachers, and, most of all, harmed the educating of our students. Common Core mandated curriculum and unfunded testing is on the horizon in Iowa, too. Iowans are more than capable of establishing their own standards. The only responsible thing for the next governor of Iowa to do is opt out of the Common Core, too," stated Narcisse.

Tuesday, January 21st

Narcisse started the day with interviews with the Marshalltown Times Republican and KFJB/KXIA News Director Chuck Schockley. From there he visited Grundy Center, Waterloo and Dubuque.

In Waterloo he met with the Courier, KWWL, KBOL and KBBG. Narcisse hosted various radio shows on KBBG for more than a decade. Narcisse also attended the Black Hawk County caucus where all the county's precincts met at the union hall. Bruce Braley was the keynote speaker.

From Waterloo, Narcisse went to Dubuque where he experienced one of Iowa's hidden treasures - Turkey and Dressing sandwiches at the party's post caucus celebration at Happy's Place. He demonstrated profound gubernatorial restraint limiting himself to only four of the treats.

Wednesday, January 22nd

Narcisse started the day with an interview with the Dubuque Telegraph Herald and then spent the rest of the morning visiting past local allies he made there while conducting Statewide Education, Health and Justice hearings. Narcisse has also been the keynote speaker at several Dubuque gatherings such as the Martin Luther King Annual Celebrations and the NAACP Annual Banquet.

Narcisse concluded his Dubuque visit by stopping at Cremer's Grocery Store. A video of his conversation with the owner of the local establishment is on NarcisseForGovernor.com.

Narcisse then stopped in Davenport where he published for more than a decade. While there he was interviewed by the Quad City Times and secured his eastern Iowa staging location for distribution of campaign materials and to host key staff and volunteer meetings.

Narcisse then stopped in Wapello and enjoyed wall-eye fish at Johnny B's. He spoke with the owner and a waitress at the establishment about their concerns for Iowa. The videos are available on NarcisseForGovernor.com.

Narcisse then spent the rest of the evening in Burlington reconnecting with supporters there.

Thursday, January 23rd

Narcisse started the day with an interview with the Fort Madison Daily Democrat. He then stopped in Burlington where he was interviewed by the Burlington Hawkeye and the Mike Savage Show on FM KQ92 radio.

His next stop was in Fairfield where he was interviewed on KRUU's Generation whY with Andrew Tint and then he met with past supporters and allies in the community.

He concluded the day with a stop in Oskaloosa where he was interviewed by the Osky News.

Friday, January 24th

Narcisse focused on campaign maintenance including hiring two additional staffers bringing his campaign paid staff to five. He also secured the services of Community CPA based in Des Moines to oversee all financial operations and campaign reporting under the direction of Dr. Billy W. Young, his campaign treasurer.

Saturday, January 25th

Narcisse visited supporters in Mahaska and Keokuk counties. He also toured a county bridge that was purported to cost several hundreds of thousands to replace by county officials, but ended up costing less than $25,000 to repair by the owner of the property the bridge is on. The owner paid for the repairs to avoid costly delays by the bridge being removed with no alternatives available. It took him a week to fix it and it is considered one of the best and safest bridges of its kind, in the county. Narcisse received a tour of the bridge from the property owner's son-in-law.

Monday, January 27th

Narcisse had a light schedule Monday visiting Pella, Oskaloosa and Knoxville before returning home for campaign staff meetings.

While on the trip he had interviews at the Pella Chronicle, the Oskaloosa Herald, KBOE 104.9 FM/740 AM in Oskaloosa and the Knoxville Journal Express.

Campaign Analysis: Why did the Des Moines Register ignore its own polling data when declaring an inevitable nominee?

Words from Narcisse

Attached is a photo of the Iowa Poll released by the Des Moines Register on December 16th.

The Polk County machine, aided by Polk County media, has been promoting the narrative of the inevitability of Sen. Jack Hatch, as the democratic nominee to challenge Governor Branstad. Even on the day the poll was released a Register columnist named Sen. Hatch the only viable candidate left in the race despite Bob Krause outperforming Hatch.

Jack Hatch has been a colleague of mine, he introduced me in 2005 when I ran for the Des Moines School Board and he was quoted earlier this month in the Register as saying I'm a man of courage and conviction.

If Jack Hatch defeats me on June 3rd I will be honored to support his candidacy against Gov. Branstad. Defeating our five term incumbent is task one regardless who the party's nominee is. The facts, however, do not support the assertion that Sen. Hatch has already secured the nomination. This race is far from over!

Senator Hatch, after spending nearly $200,000 and running for governor since May of 2013, achieved very little name recognition statewide according to the Des Moines Register's Iowa Poll. He failed to outpoll Bob Krause in the Iowa Poll despite Krause raising no money.

These facts are according to the Register's own Iowa Poll. A poll that the Register and Register columnists continue to ignore.

Jack Hatch is a good guy but he is not a political juggernaut. The facts are I was elected in a much more diverse and larger district than he was. I especially dominated blue collar Democratic districts despite running against established and prominent local Democrats.

I have better statewide name recognition than Senator Hatch has and I've proven I can get votes in every county and nearly every precinct in Iowa, while he hasn't. His only campaign outside of Polk County resulted in a severe thrashing from political newcomer Connie McBurney in their 1996 Congressional contest showdown.

Since the 2010 election, I've completed two 99 county tours, engaged tens of thousands of Iowans at a very popular booth location in the Varied Industries Building at the Iowa State Fair across from the Iowa Lottery and the restrooms. Through our gas card drawing and candy stations we built a massive statewide email distribution list.

It's no event I would wish on even my opponent, but my name recognition grew in a significant and positive ways after my wedding balloon crash in San Diego, for a moment, the nation and world's biggest story and one that continues to air to this date.

While defeating Sen. Hatch is not guaranteed, the facts - especially the Iowa Poll - savage the narrative of the Polk County Political Machine. A machine that has too often forced losing candidates upon the rest of Iowa Democrats resulting in Republican victories that have often hurt the broader ticket.

All we ask during this primary campaign is the media report the story and not manipulate it, or worse, manufacture it. And while this will be challenging to Polk County media, especially a Des Moines Register that has already proven it will ignore its own scientific data, we trust the rest of Iowa's media and political leaders outside Polk County will be fair and objective during this primary campaign.

For more information visit www.NarcisseForGovernor.com

Email: info@narcisseforgovernor.com

Contact Campaign Scheduler Paul Smith at 515-991-8516.

Contact Jonathan Narcisse directly at 515-770-1218 or NarcisseForGovernor@gmail.com.

Moline, Illinois (February 8, 2014) - Columbia College Chicago and HawkPocket Productions is holding open auditions for a short Film "The Same" on February 8 and February 9 at Playcrafters Barn Theater, 4950 35th Avenue, Moline, IL from 12:00pm - 5:00pm.  Actors will receive travel or milage reimbursement, on set meals, credit, copies, lots of fun, professionalism and a chance to work with film students from an internationally ranked program.  Filming will take place February 28, March 1 and March 2, 2014 in Bettendorf, IA.
Who:  Columbia College and HawkPocket Productions
What:  Open Casting Call
When:  February 8 and February 9
Where:  Playcrafters Barn Theater, 4950 35th Avenue, Moline, IL, 61265
Synopsis:  Emily is a young high school girl who is bullied about her weight by a classmate named Morgan. With the help of her protective sister, Sarah, she finds the motivation for her bully's actions and the beginning of a solution for the two to co-exsist.
Call:

Ms. White, female, 50's - supporting, Caucasian.  The quirky gym teacher.

Mr. Byrne, male, mid-late 40's - supporting, tall, athletic, well built.  Morgan's father.

Mrs. Byrne, female, mid-late 40's - supporting, tall, frail.  Morgan's mother.

EXTRAS - male and female, high school age, all body types and ethnicities

For more information contact:
Ana Loes
-end-


CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (Jan. 27, 2014) - Matthew Purl of Davenport has been named to the Fall 2013 Dean's List at Mount Mercy University. Purl is studying Biology at Mount Mercy. Students with a semester grade point average of 3.60 or better, and who are graded (letter grade, not pass/fail) for six or more semester hours, are eligible for inclusion on the Dean's List.

Founded in 1928, Mount Mercy University offers students a personal, practical and faith-inspired education that distinctly blends professional career preparation and liberal arts with a strong curriculum grounded in leadership and service. Located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Mount Mercy University is sponsored by the Sisters of Mercy and a member of the Conference for Mercy Higher Education.

In more than 80 years, Mount Mercy has grown in size and reputation, adapting to meet the changing educational needs of the Cedar Rapids community. Mount Mercy offers baccalaureate and graduate education to nearly 1,800 traditional, transfer, adult and graduate students. Popular undergraduate majors include business, nursing, criminal justice, education and social work. Graduate programs are offered in business, education, nursing, and marriage and family therapy. For more information on Mount Mercy, visit www.mtmercy.edu

Located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Mount Mercy University is the regional Catholic, Mercy University that promises students of diverse backgrounds, ages and faiths a challenging, practical education that inspires them to discover knowledge, build community and lead courageous lives. Mount Mercy offers baccalaureate and graduate education to nearly 1,800 enrolled students and uniquely blends liberal arts education with professional preparation.

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MOLINE, Ill. (January 27, 2014) - Goaltender Thomas Heemskerk and defenseman Nicholas Rioux have returned to the Quad City Mallards from the American Hockey League and goaltender Nick Niedert has been waived, the Mallards announced today.

Heemskerk, 23, rejoins the Mallards from the AHL's Worcester Sharks, with whom Heemskerk signed a professional tryout agreement on January 15.  The 6' 0", 210-pound Chilliwack, British Columbia native served as back-up in a half dozen games without seeing any action for the Sharks.  With the Mallards, Heemskerk has suffered just one regulation loss this season, going 9-1-4 in 15 games.  Heemskerk ranks second in the Central Hockey League in goals against average (2.45) and save percentage (.920).  He is unbeaten in regulation in his last five CHL games, a stretch during which he has posted a 4-0-1 record, a 1.57 goals against average, a .944 save percentage and two shutouts.

His tour with the Sharks was Heemskerk's third AHL call-up this season.  The third year netminder joined the Iowa Wild for a pair of stints as a back-up earlier in the campaign.  Heemskerk is no stranger to Worcester, having seen action for the Sharks each of the last two seasons.  Over two games last year with the San Jose Sharks' top affiliate, Heemskerk turned aside 27 of the 29 shots he faced in 67 minutes, turning in a 1.79 goals against average and a .931 save percentage.  In four games with Worcester in 2011-12, he went 0-1-0 with a 2.14 goals against average and a .921 save percentage.

Heemskerk spent the bulk of his first two seasons in the ECHL.  Last year he went 14-17-3 with a 3.10 goals against average and a .906 save percentage in 38 games with the San Francisco Bulls.  Heemskerk began his professional career in 2011-12 with the ECHL's Stockton Thunder, for whom he posted a record of 13-12-0 along with a 3.27 goals against average and a .893 save percentage in 25 games.

Rioux, 27, comes back to the Mallards after a second successive stint with Iowa.  The Riviere-du-Loup, Quebec, product was first signed to a P.T.O. by the Wild on January 6, briefly returned to the Mallards last Monday and last Tuesday was called up to Iowa for a second time.  In all, he played six games for the Wild during which he went without a point and registered a plus/minus rating of +1.

Rioux has scored twice and totaled 12 points while posting a plus/minus of +11 in 28 games with the Mallards this season.

Rioux joined the Mallards after spending last year with the CHL's Bloomington Blaze, for whom he scored seven goals and totaled 27 points while turning in a plus/minus rating of +3.  The 6' 1", 205-pound blue liner played in each of the Blaze's 66 regular season games and, before moving up to Iowa, had missed just a single CHL game over his first three professional campaigns.

This season is Rioux's second under Mallards coach and general manager Terry Ruskowski.  Rioux first skated for Ruskowski as a rookie with the CHL's Rio Grande Valley Killer Bees in 2011-12.  Rioux scored five times, produced 21 points and posted a plus/minus rating of +5 in 65 games with the Killer Bees.

The 31-year old Niedert, who signed with the Mallards for the second time this season when Heemskerk departed for Worcester, made his debut for the club on January 17 in Wichita, making eight saves and giving up two goals after entering what proved to a 7-1 Mallard loss to the Thunder at the beginning of the third period.  Niedert has spent most of the season with the Danville Dashers of the Federal Hockey League while also tending goal in one ECHL game for the Utah Grizzlies this year.  The.  The 5' 8", 185-pound native of Hudson, Iowa, has gone 3-9-1 with a 5.05 goals against average and a .874 save percentage in 13 games with the Dashers.

Niedert played for five teams in four leagues last season- the Gwinnett Gladiators and Reading Royals of the ECHL, the Bloomington Blaze of the CHL, the August RiverHawks of the Southern Professional Hockey League and the Danbury Whalers of the FHL.  Over the course of his nine-year career, Niedert has played for 23 teams in nine different leagues after competing for five teams over three seasons of junior hockey.  He first wore the Mallards' colors during the club's 2011 training camp.

The Mallards next play at home Friday night at 7:05 p.m. against the Tulsa Oilers.  Friday is another $1 Dog/$1 Beer Night presented by 97X.  $1 hot dogs and beers will be available at iWireless Center concession stands during each of the Mallards' 11 Friday night home games this season.

Tickets for Friday night's game and all Mallards regular season home games can be purchased at the iWireless Center ticket office, Ticketmaster outlets, through ticketmaster.com or through Ticketmaster charge-by-phone toll free at 1-800-745-3000.  The ticket office is open weekdays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and on game days from 10:00 a.m. until the start of the second period.

THIS WEEK
Friday, January 31, 7:05 p.m.
iWireless Center, Moline
Tulsa Oilers vs. Quad City Mallards

Saturday, February 1, 7:05 p.m.

Independence Events Center, Independence
Quad City Mallards vs. Missouri Mavericks

LAST WEEK
Thursday, January 23
Quad City 4 Brampton 1

 

Friday, January 24

Quad City 3 Brampton 0

Sunday, January 26
Brampton 4 Quad City 3 (OT)

Quad City
18-9-8, 44 points
6th place
Coach: Terry Ruskowski

Tulsa
19-21-3, 41 points

7th place
Coach: Bruce Ramsay

Missouri

24-11-2, 50 points
3rd place
Coach: Scott Hillman

QUACK TRACKS
Last Week
The Mallards went 2-0-1 in Brampton last weekend.  The Mallards came up just short in their bid to win each of their six regular season road games against the Beast, finishing 5-0-1 at the Powerade Centre after falling in overtime Sunday.

 

Rebound

The Mallards earned five of six available points in Brampton after having gone 0-2-2 in their prior four games.

Tight
The Mallards are just one point behind the fifth place Beast, on whom they have seven games in hand.

 

Playing the Percentages
The Mallards, who have played fewer games (35) than any other CHL club, have the league's fourth best winning percentage (.629).

Balance

While the Mallards rank in the top half of the league in goal scoring- fifth at 3.3 goals per game- no Mallard ranks in the top 20 in the CHL in point scoring.

 

On the Road
In the wake of their successes in Brampton, the Mallards are now 7-1-1 in their last nine road games.

Trouble at Home

The Mallards have gone without a win (0-2-2) in their last four home games- their longest home winless streak this year.

Blanked
Ty Rimmer made 35 saves while shutting out the Beast last Friday. Rimmer came close to posting shutouts on back-to-back nights, stopping 69 of 70 shots over the first two games of the Mallards' series in Brampton.  Last Thursday he held the Beast off the scoreboard until Rob Collins scored with just two minutes and seven seconds left in the third period.  Last Friday's blanking of Brampton was also the second of rookie Rimmer's career- he registered his first shutout on December 13 when he stopped 48 shots in a 2-0 win over the Rush in Rapid City- and the Mallards' fourth this season.  Rimmer posted a 1.63 goals against average and a .954 save percentage over the Mallards' three games in Brampton.

 

Workin' Overtime
The Mallards are 1-3 in games deciding in overtime.  Each of those four sudden death decisions came against Brampton.  The Mallards- who have gone 1-5 in shootouts- are 2-8 in games that last longer than 60 minutes.

500
Mallard captain Darren McMillan Friday night played his five hundredth career game.  Now in his ninth season, the Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, native has scored 35 goals, picked up 148 assists and totaled 183 points over the course of his career.  McMillan has now played 243 games for the Mallards over the last five seasons.

300
Vladimir Nikiforov yesterday played his three hundredth career game.  Nikiforov has recorded 62 goals, 113 assists, and 175 points over five professional seasons.  Nikiforov returned to the United States with the Mallards this season after playing in Russia with Lokomotiv Yaroslavl last year.  Before heading across the Atlantic, he spent his first three professional campaigns skating for six teams in four leagues.

First

Forward Justin Fox yesterday scored his first Mallard goal since joining the team January 15.

Rapid Fire

Mike Stinziani scored eight seconds into the second period Friday night.  That goal was the Mallards' fastest from the start of a period this season.

Leading the Way
Linemates Jeff Lee (1-4-5) and Thomas Frazee (2-2-4) recorded at least a point apiece in each of the Mallards' three games in Brampton and were the club's top two point scorers in the series.

Leaders
Lee is tied for tenth in +/- (+15)...Mike Hellyer is tied for fourth in game winning goals (5)...Among rookies, Frazee is tied for third in points (24) and assists (15) and ranks fifth in goals (9)...Thomas Heemskerk ranks second in goals against average (2.45) and save percentage (.920)...Rimmer ranks eighth in goals against average (2.82) and save percentage (.910).

 

Milestones
Jim McKenzie has recorded 98 career assists... McMillan has collected 97 career CHL assists.

Special Teams
While the Mallards rank last in the CHL in power play efficiency (10.9 percent), they have scored on the man advantage in each of their last two games.  Benjamin Dieude-Fauvel Friday night halted the Mallards' 0-for-21 power play drought; Matt Duffy's third period 5-on-3 goal forced yesterday's game to overtime.  The Mallards went 12-for-12 on the penalty kill in their three games in Brampton.  The Mallards rank sixth in penalty killing (82.8 percent) and third in shorthanded goals (6).

Head to Head

The Mallards and Oilers have split their first two meetings.  The Mallards routed Tulsa 9-3 November 30 at the iWireless Center before falling to the Oilers on the road 5-2 on December 20.  Tulsa's Adam Pleskach (0-5-5) and Ben Gordon 1-4-5) are the top point producers in the season series.  Gergo Nagy (1-3-4) and Frazee (0-4-4) have been the most productive Mallards over the first two games between the clubs.  The Mallards and Oilers will conclude their four-game season series February 21 in Tulsa.  All-time, the Mallards have gone 7-6-0 overall against Oilers and have gone 5-3-0 at home against Tulsa...After playing just one of their first 36 games against Missouri, the Mallards will play nine of their final 30 tilts against the Mavericks.  The Mavs won the season series opener 5-4 in a shootout on November 27 at the Independence Events Center.  Since entering the CHL in 2010, the Mallards have gone 14-12-3 against the Mavericks and have posted a record of 9-6-1 in Independence.

Ins and Outs
Heemskerk returned to the Mallards today from the American Hockey League's Worcester Sharks after signing a professional tryout agreement with Worcester January 15...Defenseman Nicholas Rioux rejoined the Mallards today from the AHL's Iowa Wild after signing a PTO with Iowa last Tuesday...Goaltender Nick Niedert was waived today...Forward Nikiforov (upper body injury) returned to the active roster from seven day injured reserve last Tuesday.  Both Nikiforov and defenseman Duffy (illness) returned to action last Thursday after missing the Mallards' prior game January 17 in Wichita.

 

NEXT HOME GAME
Friday, January 31, 7:05 p.m.- Mallards vs. Tulsa Oilers
$1 Dog/$1 Beer Friday Presented by 97X
This Friday is another $1 Dog/$1 Beer Night presented by 97X. $1 hot dogs and $1 beers are available at iWireless Center concession stands during each of the Mallards' 11 Friday night home games this season.

Mallards Bud Light Ice Girls/Kavanaugh's Hilltop Bar/MetroLINK
Mallards Bud Light Ice Girls this Friday will be on hand to meet fans at Kavanaugh's Hilltop Bar in Rock Island starting at 5:30 p.m. and then will ride MetroLINK with fans to Friday night's game at the iWireless Center.

ON THE AIR
Fox Sports Radio 1230 is the radio home of Mallards Hockey Presented by Genesis Power Sports Performance.  Mallards games broadcast on AM 1230 also stream live online at www.wfxn.net.  A limited number of Mallards games- including this Saturday's tilt- will not air on Fox Sports Radio 1230 due to conflicts with University of Illinois basketball and football and Green Bay Packer football.  Free audio webcasts of games that do not air on AM 1230 are available at myqcmallards.com.  CHL-TV pay-per-view video webcasts of all Mallards games are also available at myqcmallards.com.  For a full Mallards broadcast/webcast schedule, go to

TICKETS
Single Game Tickets
Single game tickets for all Mallards regular season contests are now available.  Fans can contact the Mallards at (309) 277-1364 or info@myqcmallards.com for more information about tickets.  Single game tickets are also available at the i wireless Center box office, at Ticketmaster outlets, through www.ticketmaster.com or through Ticketmaster charge-by-phone toll free.  The box office is open weekdays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. and on game days from 10:00 a.m. until the start of the second period.

Group Tickets
Groups of at least ten receive savings off the walk-up price and a host of group benefits.  Mallards group tickets are a great fit for youth organizations, friends, co-workers, family groups, religious groups, school functions and business events.  For more group ticket information, fans can contact the Mallards at (309) 277-1364 or info@myqcmallards.com.

-### Quad City Mallards ### -

Monday, January 27, 2014

Senator Chuck Grassley made the following statement after seeing text of provisions he championed in the farm and nutrition bill.

"It appears the payment limit and actively engaged reforms, which Congress overwhelming approved, have been watered down to the point they will likely have little to no effect.  It's bad for agriculture, it's bad for taxpayers who are worried about the debt, it's bad for our credibility with trading partners, and it's bad for the future of farm programs.

"Getting the farm program back to its original intent was supported by a majority of both the House and the Senate.  It's one of the few areas where Republicans and Democrats have come together.  Yet, a select few are allowing the farm program to be exploited by putting wealthy, so-called farmers ahead of small- and medium-sized farms and young and beginning farmers.  This is an example of why Congress has a 12 percent approval rating."

JOIN MALLARDS FOR "TIP-A-MALLARD" AT BIER STUBE

IN MOLINE AND LECLAIRE WEDNESDAY NIGHT!



MALLARDS WAIT TABLES TO BENEFIT WOUNDED WARRIOR PROJECT

The Mallards will welcome fans to Tip-A-Mallard this Wednesday night at the Bier Stube in both Moline and LeClaire. Mallards players will act as waiters at both locations from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. and all tips they earn will be donated to the Wounded Warrior Project.

Featuring Keynote Presentation by Debi Durham, Director, Iowa Economic Development Authority

Thursday, February 13, 2014

9:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.

Isle Conference Center

Isle of Capri Hotel

1800 Isle Parkway, Bettendorf, IA 52722

Discover trends and best practices in economic development at the upcoming Scott County Economic Development Summit featuring a luncheon and keynote presentation by Debi Durham.

Track 1: Regional Economic Development

Coopatition: Building trust and encouraging partnerships

Moderator: Liz Tallman, Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce

Hear best practices to encourage regional economic growth and cooperation, featuring examples from regional metropolitan areas similar to the Quad Cities. Panelists will discuss benefits of regional cooperation in terms of economic growth, and share their personal insight and knowledge during this interactive conversation.

Featuring Ernie Goss, PhD - Creighton University Economist, Jeff Rossate - Deloitte Consulting, Mark Norman, Senior Director of Business Attraction - Greater Omaha Regional Economic Development Partnership, and Larry Burkhardt, Executive Vice President - Fox Cities Regional Partnership.

Track 2: Economic Development in Rural Scott County

The Next Generation of Economic Development

Moderator: Timothy Huey, Scott County Planning Director

Learn trends that touch the next generation of economic development in rural communities. Gain insight to attract businesses and encourage entrepreneurs. Learn about how to assemble the resources necessary to transform your community, the role of historic preservation, how to cultivate and grow entrepreneurs, and the importance of central place economic development in stabilizing rural economies from this panel of experts.

Featuring David Swenson, Iowa State University Economist, Ed Raber, Director - Washington Economic Development  Group, Dan Beenken, Director -UNI Small Business Development Center and Advance Iowa, Sheila Hlas, Director, and Bill Daily, Belle Plaine City Administrator, and Board Member - Belle Plaine Community Development Corporation.

Register at QuadCitiesChamber.com or by calling 563.823.2676. Cost: $15, includes lunch.

Presented by:  Quad Cities Chamber and Scott County

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