DES MOINES - Today, the Des Moines Airport Authority Board delayed making a decision on a contract with Pro-Tec Fire Services for firefighting services at Des Moines International Airport.

 

Currently, the Iowa Air National Guard provides firefighting and EMS services at Des Moines International Airport through highly trained state employees who are part of the Iowa Department of Public Defense. On September 30, 2014, these services will end due to a change in the mission tasking of the Air National Guard airbase at the airport. As a result, the Des Moines Airport Authority Board must find another way to provide firefighting services at the airport.

 

"The Airport Authority Board is considering hiring a for-profit company that will provide only minimal emergency services. The Airport Authority's Request for Proposal included staffing requirements that are insufficient to meet OSHA requirements and National Fire Protection Association staffing and interior firefighting safety standards," said AFSCME Iowa Council 61 President Danny Homan.

 

"The company that the Airport Authority Board is considering, Pro-Tec Fire Services, has a troubled history. According to reports in The Times (Trenton, New Jersey), Pro-Tec did not issue notifications when equipment was out of service, fell behind on training, paid low wages, and had high employee turnover at Trenton Mercer Airport in New Jersey. Pro-Tec also paid low wages at the MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Illinois, according to the Belleville News-Democrat," added Homan.

 

"The firefighters/medics currently at Des Moines International Airport have saved lives by responding to medical emergencies at the airport. The airport has a huge footprint of over 2,600 acres. The Des Moines Fire Department cannot guarantee that they will be able to respond to fire and medical emergencies at the airport in an adequate time frame. Outsourcing fire and EMS services at the airport would put lives at risk," added Homan.

 

"The current firefighters/medics at the Airport have extensive training in crash fire and rescue and in emergency medical response. The Des Moines Airport Authority Board should recognize that these firefighters/medics' training and experience are an asset that should be utilized," added Homan.

 

"Des Moines International Airport has recently experienced great growth in the number of passengers it serves. As the airport grows, it should not lose its commitment to safety. We call on the Airport Authority Board to reject the proposed contract with Pro-Tec Fire Services at their next meeting. The Airport Authority should instead pursue a course that maintains current services using the current well-trained firefighters/medics as public employees," added Homan.

 

###

 

BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON PRO-TEC FIRE SERVICES FROM NEWSPAPER REPORTS:

 

Pro-Tec did not issue notifications when equipment was out of service. The Times (Trenton, NJ) reported in May 2000 that "Another issue about Pro-Tec has come to the fore in recent interviews: whether notices to airmen (NOTAMs) were issued as required by FAA regulations when fire trucks were out of commission. West, who has worked at Trenton Mercer for two years, said that NOTAMs need only be issued if 24 hours pass and no replacement vehicle is in place. But FAA rules state that a NOTAM must be issued immediately if a truck is out of service, even if only for a few hours for something as simple as an oil change, Peters said. The airport should also temporarily reduce its index, which refers to what size aircraft can be handled by firefighters at the airport. According to Russer, to avoid needing a NOTAM, chemicals for firefighting were transferred to another truck to maintain the ability to handle emergencies. But the truck had no equipment to dispense the chemicals. Barlow, who said he performed mechanical work when he worked for Pro-Tec in the mid-'90s, said trucks were regularly out of commission at the time, yet no NOTAMs were issued. The former Pro-Tec fire official who spoke anonymously said there may have been times when NOTAMs should have been issued and were not. The issue is a gray area, he said." [The Times (Trenton, NJ), 5/13/2000]

Pro-Tec promised additional training to get a contract renewal. The Times (Trenton, NJ) reported in June 2001 that "[County Administrator John] Ricci said the bid won by Pro-Tec, the lowest of three submitted, required that the firefighters get the additional training." [The Times (Trenton, NJ), 6/8/2001]

But when airport officials followed up, the training had not been completed. The Times (Trenton, NJ) reported in June 2001 that "airport officials found some employees were deficient when they asked them for their credentials, he [Ricci] said." [The Times (Trenton, NJ), 6/8/2001]

At Trenton Mercer Airport, Pro-Tec paid low wages and was ending health benefits. In April 2000, The Times (Trenton, NJ) reported in April 2000 that "Board members were upset to hear Skinner and Russer talk about an hourly salary of $7.97, with the company pulling all medical benefits on March 1, although few employees companywide used them." [The Times (Trenton, NJ), 4/26/2000]

At Trenton Mercer Airport, there was 75 percent turnover in five years and equipment was in poor condition. In April 2000, The Times (Trenton, NJ) reported that "also, they were upset to hear from West of 75 percent turnover in personnel since 1995, and that the larger of two fire trucks, built around 1984, needed work on a broken turret, which directs foam on a fire." [The Times (Trenton, NJ), 4/26/2000]

In 2001, Pro-Tec paid employees in Illinois low wages. The Belleville News-Democrat reported in February 2001 that "currently, firefighters [employed by Pro-Tec Fire Services at MidAmerica St. Louis Airport] earn $8.09 an hour, while captains earn $8.99 an hour." [Belleville News-Democrat, 2/28/2001]

Des Moines, January 14, 2014? On Wednesday, January 15, 2014, at 10 a.m., in the House Chambers of the Iowa State Capitol, Chief Justice Mark Cady of the Iowa Supreme Court will address a joint convention of the General Assembly on the State of the Judiciary.

 

Chief Justice Cady will recognize the critical role of the cooperation and support from Governor Branstad and the Iowa Legislature in helping make the Iowa court system the best, most advanced, and the most responsive court system in the nation. The chief justice will highlight the progress the Iowa Judicial Branch has made in the last year on its priorities of protecting Iowa's children, providing full-time access to justice, operating an efficient and full service court system, providing faster and less costly resolution of legal disputes, continuing openness and transparency of the courts, and providing fair and impartial justice for all.

 

Live video will be streamed on the Iowa Legislature website beginning at 10:00 a.m. To stream the video, go to  https://www.legis.iowa.gov/chambers

 

Members of the media may obtain advance copies of the speech January 15, 2014, at 8:30 a.m., in the supreme court courtroom at the Capitol. The message will be posted on the Iowa Judicial Branch website www.iowacourts.gov at 10:45 a.m.

 

# # #

PELLA, IA (01/14/2014)(readMedia)-- The following students were named to the fall 2013 Central College dean's list:

Angela Allgood of Muscatine, majoring in business management, is the daughter of Jeff and Janet Allgood

Laura Callan of Clinton, majoring in art, is the daughter of Michael and Laurie Callan

Miranda Ebeling of Muscatine, majoring in athletic training, is the daughter of Scott and Carol Ebeling

Hannah Gettes of Clinton, majoring in communication studies, is the daughter of Eric and Lori Gettes

Tiffany Nguyen of Davenport, majoring in International studies-Latin American, is the daughter of Nathan and Minh Kimbrough

Austin O'Brien of Bettendorf, majoring in exercise science, is the son of Robert and Beth O'Brien

Ashley Ramker of Davenport, majoring in psychology, is the daughter of Michael and Linda Ramker

Abbey Strajack of Davenport, majoring in elemetary education, is the daughter of Michael and Leslie Strajack

Julie Wunder of Muscatine, majoring in athletic training, is the daughter of John Wunder

The honor is awarded to full-time students who achieve a 3.5 grade point average or higher on a 4.0 scale while taking 12 or more graded credit hours for the semester.

Central College is a residential liberal arts college dedicated to the education of 1,500 undergraduate students. Guided by its ecumenical Christian tradition, the college community engages in vigorous, free, open inquiry in pursuit of academic excellence. Founded in 1853, the college is affiliated with the Reformed Church in America and NCAA Division III athletics.

Central is a recognized leader in study abroad as a result of its international, residential programs. Central College is located in Pella, Iowa, a thriving community of 10,000 two minutes from the state's largest lake and 40 minutes southwest of Des Moines. Please visit the college website at www.central.edu.

WEST DES MOINES, IOWA - January 14, 2014 - Iowa Farm Bureau Federation (IFBF) members will continue to work to advance Iowa's water quality and soil conservation efforts, protect property taxpayers, and improve Iowa's road and bridge infrastructure in the 2014 legislative session.

A strong push to continue to improve soil and water quality is one of several priorities identified by IFBF members.  "It's very important to maintain the momentum we have already seen for these voluntary conservation efforts by Iowa farmers through the Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy," said Craig Hill, IFBF president.  "The strong demand last fall for water quality and soil conservation funds which were allocated during the 2013 legislative session clearly shows that farmers are stepping up to reduce nutrient loss and improve the soil for generations to come."

In 2013 the Legislature allocated on-going and one-time money to implement the Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy, and the majority of that money has been allocated.  Iowa Farm Bureau will seek an additional $10 million in one-time funding to continue these new efforts in crop management and watershed projects.  In addition, Farm Bureau will advocate for one-time funds to help address the $18.5 million backlog of conservation cost-share projects to reduce soil loss, where demand has significantly outpaced cost-share funding, as well as one-time money to help close Iowa's remaining ag drainage wells.  "Allocating one-time funding for these important conservation projects is an ideal use for the state's ending fund balance," Hill said.

Ensuring that property taxpayers' contributions to the mental health system remain limited and controlled will be another emphasis for Farm Bureau during the 2014 legislative session.  As a result of previous mental health reform legislation, the current funding formula for property taxes is set to expire, and will need to be addressed this session.

Farm Bureau members will also advocate for increased funding for Iowa's roads and bridges, many of which are deteriorating and in need of repair or rebuilding.  Studies have shown that an additional $215 million per year is needed to meet the critical needs of Iowa's aging roads and bridges.  "Our delegates have strongly supported policy which says that any additional revenue for transportation infrastructure should be generated from the state's fuel tax," Hill said.  "Increasing the state fuel tax, which has not been increased since 1989, would ensure that the users of the roads, including out-of-state motorists, are paying directly for infrastructure repairs."

An increase in the user fee would also reduce pressure on Iowa's property taxpayers.  In fiscal year 2013, rural property owners paid over $153 million in property taxes to their local roads and bridges.  Additionally, with no other alternatives to pay for the needed repairs, more and more local governments are turning to bonding as an alternative source of revenue, with this debt being financed by local property taxpayers.  "This is a disturbing trend that we have seen throughout the state, and it will only continue into the future until the fuel tax is increased to cover road and bridge funding needs," Hill said.

Farm Bureau will also push for a continued commitment to agricultural research that adds value to ag products, aids the environment, increases farm efficiency, and improves health and safety.  In order to accomplish that, Farm Bureau will work to increase state funding for the Iowa State University (ISU) Ag Experiment Station and other ISU research programs.

- 30 -

About Iowa Farm Bureau

The Iowa Farm Bureau Federation is a grassroots, statewide organization dedicated to helping farm families prosper and improve their quality of life.  More than 153,000 families in Iowa are Farm Bureau members, working together to achieve economic growth, educational improvement, and environmental quality in their communities.  For more information about Farm Bureau and agriculture, visit the online media center at www.iowafarmbureau.com.

SCOTT EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS CENTER (SECC) BOARD
Board Room, 1st Floor, Scott County Administrative Center, 600 West Fourth Street, Davenport, Iowa
JANUARY 16, 2014 at 3:30 p.m.
MEETING AGENDA
1. Roll Call: Frieden, Gallagher, Gluba, Minard, and O'Boyle.
Ex officio members: Bruemmer, Frederiksen, Malin, and Ploehn
2. Pledge of Allegiance
3. Approval of Minutes
4. Election of Officers
A. Vice Chair
B. Secretary/Treasurer
5. Approval of Temporary Increase of 1.0 FTE in the Public Safety Dispatcher
Classification for an Upcoming Retirement
6. Director Search Update
7. Interim Director's Report
8. Next meeting date - February 20, 2014 at 3:30 p.m.
9. Adjourn
For previous meeting Minutes, please visit our website at www.secc911.com.

Liberals who oppose efforts to prevent voter fraud claim that there is no fraud ? or at least not any that involves voting in person at the polls.

But New York City's watchdog Department of Investigations has just provided the latest evidence of how easy it is to commit voter fraud that is almost undetectable.

DOI undercover agents showed up at 63 polling places last fall and pretended to be voters who should have been turned away by election officials; the agents assumed the names of individuals who had died or moved out of town, or who were sitting in jail. In 61 instances, or 97 percent of the time, the testers were allowed to vote. Those who did vote cast only a write-in vote for a "John Test" so as to not affect the outcome of any contest. DOI published its findings two weeks ago in a searing 70-page report accusing the city's Board of Elections of incompetence, waste, nepotism, and lax procedures.

The Board of Elections, which has a $750 million annual budget and a workforce of 350 people, reacted in classic bureaucratic fashion, which prompted one city paper to deride it as "a 21st-century survivor of Boss Tweed-style politics." The Board approved a resolution referring the DOI's investigators for prosecution. It also asked the state's attorney general to determine whether DOI had violated the civil rights of voters who had moved or are felons, and it sent a letter of complaint to Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Normally, I wouldn't think de Blasio would give the BOE the time of day, but New York's new mayor has long been a close ally of former leaders of ACORN, the now-disgraced "community organizing" group that saw its employees convicted of voter-registration fraud all over the country during and after the 2008 election.

Greg Soumas, president of New York's BOE, offered a justification for calling in the prosecutors: "If something was done in an untoward fashion, it was only done by DOI. We (are) unaware of any color of authority on the part of (DOI) to vote in the identity of any person other than themselves ? and our reading of the election law is that such an act constitutes a felony."

The Board is bipartisan, and all but two of its members voted with Soumas. The sole exceptions were Democrat Jose Araujo, who abstained because the DOI report implicated him in hiring his wife and sister-and-law for Board jobs, and Republican Simon Shamoun.

Good-government groups are gobsmacked at Soumas's refusal to smell the stench of corruption in his patronage-riddled empire.

"They should focus not on assigning blame to others, but on taking responsibility for solving the problems themselves," Dick Dadey of the watchdog group Citizens Union told the Daily News. "It's a case of the Board of Elections passing the buck."

DOI officials respond that the use of undercover agents is routine in anti-corruption probes and that people should carefully read the 70-page report they've filed before criticizing it. They are surprised how little media attention their report has received.

You'd think more media outlets would have been interested, because the sloppiness revealed in the DOI report is mind-boggling.

Young undercover agents were able to vote using the names of people three times their age, people who in fact were dead. In one example, a 24-year female agent gave the name of someone who had died in 2012 at age 87; the workers at the Manhattan polling site gave her a ballot, no questions asked.

Even the two cases where poll workers turned away an investigator raise eyebrows. In the first case, a poll worker on Staten Island walked outside with the undercover investigator who had just been refused a ballot; the "voter" was advised to go to the polling place near where he used to live and "play dumb" in order to vote. In the second case, the investigator was stopped from voting only because the felon whose name he was using was the son of the election official at the polling place.

Shooting the messenger has been a typical reaction in other states when people have demonstrated just how easy it is to commit voter fraud.

Guerrilla videographer James O'Keefe had three of his assistants visit precincts during New Hampshire's January 2012 presidential primary. They asked poll workers whether their books listed the names of several voters, all deceased individuals still listed on voter-registration rolls. Poll workers handed out 10 ballots, never once asking for a photo ID.

O'Keefe's team immediately gave back the ballots, unmarked, to precinct workers. Debbie Lane, a ballot inspector at one of the Manchester polling sites, later said: "I wasn't sure what I was allowed to do. ...  I can't tell someone not to vote, I suppose."

The only precinct in which O'Keefe or his crew did not obtain a ballot was one in which the local precinct officer had personally known the dead "voter."

New Hampshire's Democratic Gov. John Lynch sputtered when asked about O'Keefe's video, and he condemned the effort to test the election system even though no actual votes were cast.

"They should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, if in fact they're found guilty of some criminal act," he roared.

But cooler heads eventually prevailed, and the GOP Legislature later approved a voter-ID bill, with enough votes to override the governor's veto. Despite an exhaustive and intrusive investigation, no charges were filed against any of O'Keefe's associates.

Later in 2012, in Washington, D.C., one of O'Keefe's assistants was able to obtain Attorney General Eric Holder's ballot even though Holder is 62 years old and bears no resemblance to the 22-year-old white man who obtained it merely by asking if Eric Holder was on the rolls.

But the Department of Justice, which is suing Texas to block that state's photo-ID law, dismissed the Holder ballot incident as "manufactured." The irony was lost on the DOJ that Holder, a staunch opponent of voter-ID laws, himself could have been disenfranchised by a white man because Washington, D.C., has no voter-ID law. Polls consistently show that more than 70 percent of Americans ? including clear majorities of African-Americans and Hispanics ? support such laws.

Liberals who oppose ballot-security measures claim that there are few prosecutions for voter fraud, which they take to mean that fraud doesn't happen. But as the New York DOI report demonstrates, it is comically easy, given the sloppy-voter registration records often kept in America, to commit voter fraud in person. (A 2012 study by the Pew Research Center found that nationwide, at least 1.8 million deceased voters still are registered to vote.) And unless someone confesses, in-person voter fraud is very difficult to detect ? or stop.

New York's Gothamist news service reported last September that four poll workers in Brooklyn reported they believed people were trying to vote in the name of other registered voters. Police officers observed the problems but did nothing because voter fraud isn't under the police department's purview.

What the DOI investigators were able to do was eerily similar to actual fraud that has occurred in New York before. In 1984, Brooklyn's Democratic district attorney, Elizabeth Holtzman, released a state grand-jury report on a successful 14-year conspiracy that cast thousands of fraudulent votes in local, state and congressional elections. Just like the DOI undercover operatives, the conspirators cast votes at precincts in the names of dead, moved and bogus voters. The grand jury recommended voter ID, a basic election-integrity measure that New York steadfastly has refused to implement.

In states where non-photo ID is required, it's also all too easy to manufacture records that allow people to vote. In 2012, the son of Congressman Jim Moran, the Democrat who represents Virginia's Washington suburbs, had to resign as field director for his father's campaign after it became clear that he had encouraged voter fraud. Patrick Moran was caught advising an O'Keefe videographer on how to commit in-person voter fraud. The scheme involved using a personal computer to forge utility bills that would satisfy Virginia's voter-ID law and then relying on the assistance of Democratic lawyers stationed at the polls to make sure the fraudulent votes were counted. Last year, Virginia tightened its voter-ID law and ruled that showing a utility bill was no longer sufficient to obtain a ballot.

Given that someone who is dead, is in jail, or has moved isn't likely to complain if someone votes in his name, how do we know that voter fraud at the polls isn't a problem? An ounce of prevention ? in the form of voter ID and better training of poll workers ? should be among the minimum precautions taken to prevent an electoral miscarriage or meltdown in a close race.

After all, even a small number of votes can have sweeping consequences. Al Franken's 312-vote victory in 2008 over Minnesota U.S. Sen. Norm Coleman gave Democrats a filibuster-proof Senate majority of 60 votes, which allowed them to pass Obamacare. Months after the Obamacare vote, a conservative group called Minnesota Majority finished comparing criminal records with voting rolls and identified 1,099 felons ? all ineligible to vote ? who had voted in the Franken-Coleman race. Fox News random interviews with 10 of those felons found that nine had voted for Franken, backing up national academic studies that show felons tend to vote strongly for Democrats.

Minnesota Majority took its findings to prosecutors across the state, but very few showed any interest in pursuing the issue. Some did, though, and 177 people have been convicted as of mid 2012 ? not just "accused" but actually convicted ? of voting fraudulently in the Senate race. Probably the only reason the number of convictions isn't higher is that the standard for convicting someone of voter fraud in Minnesota is that the person must have been both ineligible and must have "knowingly" voted unlawfully. Anyone accused of fraud is apt to get off by claiming he didn't know he'd done anything wrong.

Given that we now know for certain how easy it is to commit undetectable voter fraud and how serious the consequences can be, it's truly bizarre to have officials at the New York City Board of Elections and elsewhere savage those who shine a light on the fact that their modus operandi invites fraud. One might even think that they're covering up their incompetence or that they don't want to pay attention to what crimes could be occurring behind the curtains at their polling places. Or both.

John Fund is a national-affairs columnist for National Review Online. Along with Hans von Spakovsky, he is the author of Who's Counting: How Fraudsters and Bureaucrats Put Your Vote at Risk?.

DAVENPORT?Waste Commission of Scott County facilities will be closed on Monday, Jan. 20 in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Normal hours of operation will resume on Tuesday, Jan. 21. Facilities closed include :

·    Scott Area Recycling Center, 5640 Carey Avenue, Davenport
·    Scott Area Landfill, 11555 110th Avenue, Davenport
·    Scott Area Household Hazardous Material Facilities, Davenport
·    Electronic Demanufacturing Facility, 1048 East 59th Street, Davenport

Waste Commission of Scott County is an inter-governmental agency whose mission is to provide environmentally sound and economically feasible solid waste management for Scott County. For more information about the Commission, please call (563) 381-1300 or visit www.wastecom.com.

Branstad proposes veterans jobs plan, connecting Iowans through increased broadband access, freezing tuition at Regent universities, anti-bullying legislation and increased job training

(DES MOINES) -  Gov. Terry E. Branstad today delivers his 2014 Condition of the State Address, "Iowa is Working," with a focused legislative agenda: A veterans jobs plan, Home Base Iowa; connecting Iowans through increased broadband access; reducing student debt by freezing tuition at Regent universities; protecting Iowa's children through anti-bullying legislation; and increased access to apprenticeships and job training for Iowa students and workers.

Highlights:

Sound Budgeting Principles

  • Gov. Branstad's FY15 budget spends 91% of authorized capacity, 8% below the requirement by law.

The Home Base Iowa Act

  • The Home Base Iowa Act would fully exempt military pensions from state income tax, putting Iowa on more equal footing with states such as Florida and Texas, and our Midwestern neighbors such as Illinois, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
  • Governor Branstad is calling on the State Board of Education to create a uniform policy granting automatic in-state tuition to veterans, their spouses, and their dependents at Iowa's community colleges.  The Regents universities already have such a policy in place.
  • The Home Base Iowa Act will direct each of Iowa's occupational licensing boards to adopt rules allowing credit for military training and experience in the licensing process.

The Connect Every Iowan Act

  • The Connect Every Iowan Act contains a targeted, time-limited, and geographically-limited tax incentive to encourage build-out of ultra-high speed internet capabilities. Broadband equipment and infrastructure installed or constructed in unserved or underserved areas between the act's effective date and December 31, 2018 would be exempt from property tax under the bill.
  • The Connect Every Iowan Act moves toward ICN 2.0, repurposing the Iowa Communications Network to allow private providers to purchase.

Reducing Student Debt

  • In 2013, Gov. Branstad proposed and signed the first tuition freeze at Regent universities in 30 years.
  • This year, Gov. Branstad is calling on the Legislature to again freeze tuition at Regent universities.

The Bully-Free Iowa Act of 2014

  • The Bully-Free Iowa Act of 2014 empowers parents by creating a parental notification requirement, directing schools to inform parents if their child is involved in a bullying incident.
  • The Bully-Free Iowa Act of 2014 gives schools the discretion to respond to bullying that takes place off of school grounds if two conditions are met.

The Iowa Apprenticeship and Job Training Act

  • Apprenticeships allow students to earn while they learn, rather than taking on significant student debt.  They provide the apprentice with focused, hands-on training and a paycheck from day one.
  • Nationwide, there are registered apprenticeships for more than 1,000 occupations, with programs impacting 250,000 employers and approximately 450,000 apprentices. In Iowa in FY13, there were 662 registered apprenticeship programs, and over 8,100 registered apprentices.
  • With over $7.5 billion in capital investments incentivized by the Iowa Economic Development Authority, demand for a skilled workforce has increased all across our state.
  • The Governor's apprenticeship bill proposes to triple funding for apprenticeships under the existing 260F worker training program.

The Governor's Condition of the State Address, as prepared for delivery, is as follows:

Madam Lieutenant Governor, Madam President, Mr. Speaker, Leaders, justices, judges, legislators, elected officials, distinguished guests, family, friends and fellow Iowans, good morning.

I offer a special welcome this morning to new Representatives Brian Meyer and Stan Gustafson and new Senator Julian Garrett. I look forward to working with you and all members of the General Assembly.

I stand here today honored to be serving as your Governor, humbled by the opportunity and eager to meet the challenges we face.

I am pleased to report on the condition of our state.

Over the past year, we have come together as families, as communities, as Iowans, putting our differences aside to move Iowa forward.

Because of our hard work last legislative session, Iowa's economy, educational system and health are moving forward.

Iowans have proved time and time again, when working with one another rather than against one another, we can overcome any challenge.

For example, the International Olympic Committee last year took action to eliminate wrestling from the Olympics.

More than 25,000 people joined us through an online petition to keep Olympic wrestling, the entire Iowa Congressional delegation joined us and more than 30 other governors came together joining me in a letter to the IOC to keep wrestling. And together, we kept wrestling in the Olympics and the Olympic dreams of Iowa wrestlers alive.

My friends, Iowa faces another challenge where we can come together again and rally around what is best for our state.  The EPA has proposed reducing the level of biofuels outlined in the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS).

If this rule is adopted, it would be a devastating setback to the agriculture sector of the Iowa economy.

The proposed rule comes at a time when our state continues to implement new pioneering policies encouraging growth and innovation in the renewable energy sector.

In a partnership with Iowa State University, we launched the "Fueling Our Future" program last October, which will bring Iowa to the forefront in the use of E30 fuel.

This new program is a reflection of the importance of further advancing the renewable fuels industry, and how the RFS is helping to create important Iowa jobs.

The RFS has led to a cleaner environment, opened the markets for Iowa corn and soybeans and reduced our nation's dependence on foreign oil.  Thousands of Americans are coming together to support the RFS.

We will be holding a public hearing later this month to give Iowans the opportunity to voice their concerns with the EPA's proposal. Lt. Governor Reynolds and I are pleased the entire Iowa Congressional Delegation and Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey have agreed to co-host this important forum.

Today, I call on the General Assembly, as its first order of business, in bipartisan fashion, to pass a resolution in support of maintaining a robust Renewable Fuels Standard.

Whether it is our sense of community that saved wrestling or collaboration in support of agriculture and renewable fuel, Iowans come together.

It is this sense of community and collaboration that defines us as Iowans.  And it should again shape our approach to governing this year.

As we've demonstrated before, we should again attack our problems with the same common sense and seriousness as Iowans across our state:

-          working hard,

-          working together, and

-          working to make things better than we found them.

To me, this is the Iowa Dream. That dream of opportunity and prosperity which can become a reality for every Iowan willing to work for it.

The seeds of that dream have been planted with our work over the past three years. But now we must cultivate that dream of opportunity - of a great job and a great place to raise a family - so that it can grow and flourish.

The simple truth is we Iowans are a people of faith, of tenacity who each year plant the seeds of our livelihood with the devout belief that with hard work and the grace of God we will reap a bountiful harvest.

Today it is my duty and honor to report to you on the condition of our state.  And I am here to tell you, with great pride: the State of Iowa is working.

With more Iowans going to work each and every day, the current unemployment rate stands at 4.4 percent: Iowa is working and our citizens are working toward their Iowa Dream.

With personal incomes growing: Iowa is working.

With schools and students improving their performance and their standing compared to other states around the nation: Iowa is working.

The Federal government has been paralyzed by partisanship leading to cliffs, ceilings, sequesters and shutdown, Iowa leaders have done the opposite; we have come together to work on behalf of Iowans.

We put aside our political differences, to achieve common sense compromise in cutting taxes, improving education and modernizing health care in our state: All evidence that Iowa is working.

Three years ago, like many other states, Iowa faced serious budget challenges. The path to prosperity was grim. Yet the charge to us was clear: restore predictability and stability to the state to get our fiscal house in order.

Working together, we have done just that.

We have passed two biennial budgets that restore predictability to the state budget.

These are budgets that hard-working Iowa taxpayers can depend on, budgets that work for Iowans by prioritizing education, economic development and job training.

Today, Iowa's rainy day and economic emergency funds are full and we are fortunate to have a healthy budget surplus. Iowa is working.

We have taken a similar common sense approach to health care in our state by working to improve the health of Iowans, bringing more doctors to Iowa and providing better care for low-income Iowans.

Since announcing the Healthiest State Initiative, Iowa has improved from 19th to 9th in Well-Being.

During this address last year, students from Des Moines University (DMU) joined us in seeking increased support for a public-private partnership that would encourage more doctors to move to rural Iowa.

Today, the private sector, rural communities and the state are coming together to ensure more doctors will be coming to underserved communities.

These students will benefit from this partnership and our state will benefit from their commitment. As doctors they will work to improve the health of our citizens and as valuable members of rural Iowa their work will help bring jobs to our communities.

Thank you, DMU students, for joining us again this year.

The Iowa Health and Wellness Plan is now in place. Thousands of Iowans are now receiving more than just access, they are getting health care designed to get them healthier.

The Iowa Health and Wellness Plan is using health risk assessments and physicals to empower Iowans to take ownership of their own health. On top of that, more Iowans are receiving private insurance than ever before.

Iowans living longer, healthier lives will improve the health of our state, our economy and our families.

We may not have always agreed on the path to these policies, but we can all resoundingly agree on this: Our plan was designed by Iowans, not out of touch bureaucrats in Washington, DC., and it is going to make Iowans healthier.  Iowa is working.

Three years ago, more than 100,000 Iowans were out of work. Jobs were hard to come by and investment in our state was inadequate.

We refocused our economic development efforts by changing our approach. Together, we created the Iowa Partnership for Economic Progress.

This public-private partnership is reaping dividends for our economy with more investments and more jobs for Iowans.

In the last three years, Iowa has seen 7.5 billion dollars in new capital investment, and I am pleased to report that since taking office, over 130,000 new jobs have been created in this state.

Perhaps the best example of our state's turnaround and of our policies working for middle-class families is seen in Lee County, which had the highest unemployment rate in the state when I took office in 2011.

Iowans in Lee County are getting back to work, thanks in part to the largest on-shore purchase of wind turbines in history and a multi-billion dollar, world-class fertilizer plant bringing much needed jobs and investment to the area.

Thanks to these projects, unemployment in Lee County has dropped by 40 percent, and many southeast Iowans are back to work!

To help Iowans keep more of their hard-earned money, and to help employers invest and grow in Iowa, you passed and I signed into law the largest property tax cut in Iowa history!

This historic measure will provide more than 4.4 billion dollars in tax relief, slashing taxes for middle class families and encouraging businesses to grow.

Middle class families are working hard every day to achieve their version of the Iowa dream and providing this much needed tax relief will help them achieve it.

Improving education in our state is imperative to improving our jobs outlook, our economic outlook and the outlook for the Iowa Dream itself.

Together, we have taken steps to help keep our best teachers in classrooms, increase school choice and better equip our students for college and the workforce.  We have begun to reform Iowa's education system, and we can expect Iowa schools to pull away from the middle of the pack and reclaim preeminence in student achievement as measured against the rest of the United States.

The demands of both college and the workforce have changed.

In the 21st century, the skills needed to succeed and compete globally include science, technology, engineering and math. Through the STEM advisory council led by Lt. Governor Kim Reynolds and Vermeer CEO, Mary Andringa, about 60,000 additional students are expected to have access to innovative STEM-focused opportunities this school year.

Today, students across Iowa are learning to build robots and solve complex math problems, preparing them for the jobs of tomorrow. In the gallery are students from Des Moines East High School and Greenwood Elementary School. Please join me in welcoming them to their Capitol.

We have worked together and invested in students, teachers and schools.

We have worked together and invested in the health and well-being of our state.

We have worked together and invested in middle-class families, main street businesses and our communities.

I am proud of what we have been able to accomplish working together.  The results of our work will have a positive impact in the lives of many Iowans.

However, there is still much more work to be done. Together, let's make this another successful and productive session.

This year, let's continue to work to overcome the obstacles that stand in the way of our citizens as they seek the Iowa Dream.

Skyrocketing college costs have made reaching the Iowa Dream unattainable for too many. Those who do pursue higher education are often strapped with massive amounts of student debt that they spend decades paying off.

We've taken steps to ease this burden.  Last year, we provided historic financial support for our community colleges.

We increased the Iowa Tuition Grant for those who attend private colleges.  We provided targeted support for high achievers entering the teaching profession, and providing rural health care.

And last year, the budget that you passed, and I signed, provided Regent universities with the necessary resources to freeze tuition for the first time in 30 years.

This year, my budget proposes another investment in key tuition assistance programs so we can continue the fight against escalating student debt.

This year, I am submitting a budget to once again freeze tuition for Iowa students at Regent institutions.

We need to reinforce with our students that if they borrow, they need to borrow only enough to pay the bills.  The University of Northern Iowa is requiring all students receiving loans to participate in financial literacy programs.

And it is working!

Last year, student debt at the University of Northern Iowa decreased by eight percent!

Today, I am calling on members of the Iowa Legislature to join me in working to reduce costs to make college affordable and reduce the amount of debt incurred by Iowa students and their families.

What if more students could earn while they learn?  Apprenticeships allow just that opportunity by providing focused and streamlined training.

One of the positive outgrowths of the historic capital investments made throughout our state is increased demand for jobs.  Apprenticeship programs allow us to quickly and effectively train workers to meet this demand.

The budget I propose to you today triples support for apprenticeship programs. These programs strengthen our middle class, our businesses and our economy. Together we can further build the pipeline of skilled workers. Together we can ensure our workers have the skills they need to fill the jobs they want.

But we need to do more if Iowa is going to remain a national and global competitor. This means we need to be connected. Iowans are now interacting differently.

Interacting differently with businesses, with their government and with each other.

Through technology, we can connect our dreams to reality. Technology will improve educational instruction and make new resources available for our students.  It can connect businesses to new customers and new markets.  It can connect you to your dream job.

Technology connects the entrepreneur without a dime in her pocket to the billion dollar idea in her dreams.

We've had great success in Iowa in the tech sector.  We are home to data centers with household names like Google, Microsoft, and Facebook.  We have thriving tech startup communities in Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, and elsewhere, all with entrepreneurs looking to create the next Dwolla, Pinterest or WebFilings.

Cedar Falls has become a Gigabit City, and three Iowa communities have distinguished themselves as Connected Communities.  Yet as a state, we need to do better.

In September, I announced our initiative to Connect Every Iowan, with the goal of making Iowa the Most Connected State in the Midwest.  I charged the STEM Advisory Council's Broadband Committee with developing recommendations for our consideration.

Today, I propose The Connect Every Iowan Act, with incentives to encourage access, adoption and use of broadband technology by businesses and individuals.

My plan includes programs that will train workers for 21st century careers in information and communications technology.

My plan also calls for moving to ICN 2.0, repurposing the Iowa Communications Network so it can partner with the private sector to provide connectivity in underserved areas of our state.

Together, we can use broadband technology to grow the Iowa Dream throughout our state, especially in rural areas.  As our connection speeds increase, so does the pace of our economic progress, so does our ability to grow jobs, and so does our ability to turn the Iowa Dream into reality.

To keep the Iowa Dream alive, we must keep rural Iowa vibrant and working. As I visit communities throughout our state during my annual 99 county tour, this vibrancy is seen, felt and heard.

From the enjoyment experienced at Watermelon Day in Stanhope, the Bell Tower Festival in Jefferson, and at the Swamp-Fox Festival in Marion. To the early morning farmers markets, and the Rotary Clubs at Noon, day-to-day life reflects our shared Iowa values.

Yet, some of the schools and public buildings which used to be the source of that pride are now empty shells dotting the landscapes of our communities. Once filled with the hustle and bustle of schoolchildren and their teachers, these are more than just abandoned buildings.  They hold a part of our childhood.  They hold a part of us.

Instead of letting these treasures stand empty, let's turn them into the economic centers of our communities.  Let's once again make them part of our daily lives.

We will submit legislation to provide tax incentives to repurpose abandoned schools and public buildings.

Let's turn what used to be our centers of education into centers of commerce.  Let's repurpose the crumbling structures with renewed investment, and reinforce the foundation with new jobs.

As we repurpose our schools of yesterday, let's also refocus on our students of today.

Sadly, for some children in Iowa, the bully they face makes every day feel more like a nightmare.

As they consider whether they can continue to take abuse from the bully, they don't know where to turn.  Even if they turn to school officials, our laws have tied their hands.

Imagine being that child.

Imagine being unable to escape, as the bully relentlessly pursues them online, in a form accessible 24/7. Imagine how bleak it must be.  Imagine how lonely it must feel.

This session, we can let our children know they are not alone. I call on both houses and both parties to support the Bully Free Iowa Act of 2014.

We can take action to empower students and their parents.

We can untie the hands of schools to allow them to better address cyberbullying.

And we can get educators the training they need to respond effectively to bullying.

As we take action to protect our children from bullies, let us also commit to honoring and better serving the men and women that protect our liberties and rights every day.

This session, the centerpiece of my agenda is Home Base Iowa. It is a bipartisan jobs plan focusing on recruiting service members to Iowa and matching them with good, high paying careers.

Here today in the gallery we are joined by members of the Iowa National Guard and veterans organizations. They have served our country and our state with dignity and honor.

Please join me in thanking them for their service.

Theodore Roosevelt once said, "A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country is good enough to be given a square deal afterwards."

In November, I announced the Home Base Iowa initiative to recruit veterans to Iowa, because I believe Iowa can offer our nation's veterans something even greater than a square deal.  We can offer them a better opportunity to live the Iowa Dream.  We can give them the best life America has to offer.

Joining me in this endeavor are two men who have served their country, two men who share my uncompromising passion for honoring our veterans.

Please join me in recognizing the Co-Chairs of Home Base Iowa, Congressman Leonard Boswell, and Bob Myers, CEO of Casey's General Stores.  Thank you both for your continued service.

We want our veterans to know that in Iowa, if you dream it - you can achieve it.  In Iowa, you can find a home you can afford.

In Iowa, you can find a good paying job.  In Iowa, you can send your kids to a good school and they can play in a safe neighborhood.

And in Iowa, we honor our veterans - not only with words and ceremonies; but with action.

Today, I call on the legislature to pass the Home Base Iowa Act.  Join me in telling veterans that we will no longer tax their military pensions.

Let's increase support for the Military Homeownership Assistance Program, which provides up to $5,000 in down payment or closing cost assistance.

Let's give veterans credit for their military training and experience as they pursue occupational licensure in our state.

And let's make Iowa the destination for veterans to continue their education.  Already, the University of Iowa has been named the 6th best university for veterans by U.S. News and World Report.  But we can do even better.

I will be asking the State Board of Education to join the Regents institutions by passing rules giving veterans, their spouses, and their dependents automatic in-state tuition at our community colleges.

I will also be convening stakeholders from the Regents, community colleges, and private colleges to develop consistent policies to provide veterans academic credit for their military training and experience.

Our veterans have risked their lives defending our freedom.  To show our gratitude, let's make Iowa the leader in respect, support and opportunity for veterans.

Ladies and gentlemen, Iowa is working.

Our state is open to new ideas, open to honest dialogue and open to more business. Iowa is working.

Our efforts are making a difference in the lives of everyday families as they pursue their Iowa dreams.

Our schools are getting better, our communities are coming together and our government is working. But that success tells me that we have an even greater opportunity.

An opportunity to build upon what is great about our state and our people, so that we are competitive now, and in the future.

With those significant accomplishments passed, the opportunity to do even more is at hand.

Iowa is working. The Iowa dream is here to be realized. But I believe we can - and we must - dream even bigger.

As we look to the future, our path is not dictated. We have opportunities not seen in other states or other parts of the world. To be true to our constituents, and ourselves, we must dream big.

We must dream of an Iowa that is competitive with any other place in the world. An Iowa where it is easier to build a business. To build your ideas. To support a family.

We must dream of an Iowa where a world class education is not a dream, but a reality for every Iowa child. An Iowa that embraces the simple goal that every child should be ready to compete in a 21st century marketplace.

We must dream of an Iowa that continually asks the question, how can government better serve people? An Iowa that uses technology for greater transparency and accountability for the taxpayers.

Now is not the time to shy away from the challenges and the opportunities. Now is the time to embrace them, to be bold, to move Iowa forward, to increase the competitiveness of our state and its people today and for years to come.

Iowa is working. But there is more work to be done to realize the Iowa Dream. Let's show everyone we are up to the challenge.

Thank you. God bless you. And God bless the people of Iowa.

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January 14, 2014

Since the first TRICARE Service Center opened in the mid 1990's, we've seen a shift in how you get information. With today's technology, anything you can do at a TRICARE Service Center can be done online or over the phone. Consequently, walk-in service ends at TRICARE Service Centers in the U.S. by April 1, 2014. Because our overseas areas are unique, walk-in service at TRICARE Service Centers in all overseas areas will continue. This change does not affect any TRICARE benefits or health care services.

For more detailed information and updates go to www.tricare.mil/TSC.

Read the Department of Defense article www.defense.gov/News/NewsArticle.aspx?ID=121473.

PORT BYRON, IL - The Nick Teddy Foundation is pleased to announce its third annual "Nick Teddy Fight Against Ewing's Sarcoma 5K." The event starts at 9:00 AM on Sat., September 13, 2014, and offers a fun day for participants and their families. The "Nick Teddy 5k" includes races, kid's games, food and entertainment, and a silent auction and raffle.

This annual family event is held in memory of Nicholas Theodore Strub, a native of Port Byron, Ill., a 2000 graduate of Riverdale High School, and a 2004 Alumnus of Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. Nick fought a courageous battle against the pediatric cancer, Ewing's sarcoma, for more than 5-years, until he died at age 29.

Proceeds from the "Nick Teddy 5k" will benefit the Liddy Shriver Sarcoma Initiative (www.sarcomahelp.org), which works to award sarcoma research grants to expert investigators around the world. Several area children currently are affected by this disease. In 2013, the event registered more than 400 runners and raised over $25,000. $20,000 was donated to be used exclusively for Ewing's sarcoma research. Half of the remaining proceeds was disbursed to a local Ewing's patient to help defray family costs of travel and lodging during treatment, and half was held in reserve to assist other area patients as needed.

Photos and interviews are available for 5k preview stories. You can find us online at: Nick Teddy Foundation (http://www.NickTeddy.org), on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/NickTeddyOrg) and on Twitter (http://www.twitter.com/NickTeddyOrg).

Race Director/Contact: Holly Larson
309-798-3081 / foundation@nickteddy.org

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