Mary Iva Gittens Knouse Charity Trust Supports Children Residing at Christian Care


Rock Island, IL - The Mary Iva Gittens Knouse Charity Trust provided a generous $1,500 grant to help Christian Care provide therapeutic services to children who arrive at its Domestic Violence Shelter with their mothers.  Christian Care's Awakening Children to Empowerment (ACE) Program will allow children to receive the mental and emotional support, nurturing, and positive affirmation through the counseling they need to heal from their trauma and face the future in safety and hope

 

RAUCH FAMILY FOUNDATION 1, INC. SUPPORTS CHRISTIAN CARE


Rock Island - The Rauch Family Foundation 1, Inc. has awarded a $1,000 grant to Christian Care to help support its Community Meal Site Program. This contribution will enable Christian Care to continue serving nutritious meals to its residents?homeless men and abused women and children?and needy members of the community who visit their meal site daily. Because of supporters like the Rauch Family Foundation, Christian Care is also able to augment the 60,000 meals they serve annually with spiritual and emotional nourishment and a wide array of resources and services.


Christian Care is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization operating two facilities?a domestic violence shelter for abused women and children and a rescue mission for homeless men. It serves homeless individuals, victims of domestic violence, veterans, men and women coming out of prison, and those with mental illnesses.

Christian Care's community meal site is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner on weekdays Monday through Friday, and for breakfast and dinner on Saturday and Sunday. Breakfast is served at 6:30 a.m., lunch at 12:15 p.m., and dinner at 6:30 p.m. If you know of someone in need, call Christian Care's crisis hotline any hour of the day at (309) 788-2273 or visit online at christiancareqc.org.
Amana– SQUAWK! The Amazing Bird Show is coming to the Old Creamery Theatre on Saturday, October 3, 2015 at 1:00 pm on the Main Stage for one show only!

These feathered professionals have more going for them than just their good looks. No boring lectures here, these birds will amaze you with their unusual talents such as painting, mind reading, performing card tricks, solving math problems and so much more.

'Squawk! The Amazing Bird Show' has been on "America's Got Talent," "the Late Show with David Letterman,' and "Animal Planet's Petstar."  These talented funny birds are sure to WOW all ages! The show is quick-paced and loved by all ages. 

Tickets: $22 for adults or $15 for students and children. Season tickets are not valid for this special event. Call the box office for tickets and information 319-622-6262 or visit us online at www.oldcreamery.com.

The Old Creamery Theatre is a not-for-profit professional theatre founded in 1971 in Garrison, Iowa. In 2015, the company will be celebrating 44 years of bringing live, professional theatre to the people of Iowa and the Midwest

CHICAGO - Governor Bruce Rauner took action today on the following bills:

Bill No.: HB 372

An Act Concerning Local Government

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

 

Bill No.: HB 3593

An Act Concerning Education

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediate

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USDA Extends Dairy Margin Protection Program Deadline

WASHINGTON, Sept. 22, 2015 - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced that the deadline to enroll for the dairy Margin Protection Program for coverage in 2016 has been extended until Nov. 20, 2015.  The voluntary program, established by the 2014 Farm Bill, provides financial assistance to participating farmers when the margin - the difference between the price of milk and feed costs - falls below the coverage level selected by the farmer.

"The fall harvest is a busy time of the year for agriculture, so this extension will ensure that dairy producers have more time to make their choices," said Vilsack. "We encourage all operations to examine the protections offered by this program, because despite the very best forecasts, markets can change."

Vilsack encouraged producers to use the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Agency Service (FSA) online Web resource at www.fsa.usda.gov/mpptool to calculate the best levels of coverage for their dairy operation. The secure website can be accessed via computer, smartphone or tablet.

He also reminds producers that were enrolled in 2015 that they need to make a coverage election for 2016 and pay the $100 administration fee. Although any unpaid premium balances for 2015 must be paid in full by the enrollment deadline to remain eligible for higher coverage levels in 2016, premiums for 2016 are not due until Sept. 1, 2016. Also, producers can work with milk marketing companies to remit premiums on their behalf.

To enroll in the Margin Protection Program for Dairy, contact your local FSA county office.  To find your local FSA county office, visit http://offices.usda.gov.

Payments under the program may be reduced by a certain percentage due to a sequester order required by Congress and issued pursuant to the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.  Should a payment reduction be necessary, FSA will reduce the payment by the required amount.

The Margin Protection Program for Dairy was made possible through the 2014 Farm Bill, which builds on historic economic gains in rural America over the past six years, while achieving meaningful reform and billions of dollars in savings for the taxpayer. Since enactment, USDA has made significant progress to implement each provision of this critical legislation, including providing disaster relief to farmers and ranchers; strengthening risk management tools; expanding access to rural credit; funding critical research; establishing innovative public-private conservation partnerships; developing new markets for rural-made products; and investing in infrastructure, housing and community facilities to help improve quality of life in rural America. For more information, visit www.usda.gov/farmbill.

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USDA Commits $2.5 Million to Expand New Farmer Education

Training Will also Help Returning Service Members, Underserved, and Urban Producers

PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 22, 2015 - Agriculture Deputy Secretary Krysta Harden today announced that $2.5 million in grants is now available for projects to educate new and underserved farmers about more than 20 U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farm Service Agency programs that can provide financial, disaster or technical assistance to the agricultural community.

The grants will be awarded to nonprofits and public higher education institutions that develop proposals to improve farmer education on topics such as financial training, value-added production, recordkeeping, property inheritance, and crop production practices.

"We want to partner with nonprofits, colleges and universities who share USDA's priority of helping more Americans enter farming as a profession, whether they are new or underserved farmers, returning Service members, minorities, women, and urban producers or those who sell their crops locally," said Harden.

USDA will conduct four evaluation periods to review applications, with the deadlines of Nov. 20, 2015, Jan. 22, 2015, Mar. 18, 2016, and May 27, 2016. Awards between $20,000 and $100,000 per applicant will be available. To learn more about the funding solicitation and the related Farm Service Agency programs, details can be found at www.grants.gov with the reference number USDA-FSA-CA-2015-001.  For nonprofits and public institutions of higher education that are considering participation, an online informational session will be conducted on Sept. 28, 2015.  Additional information is posted on the Web at www.fsa.usda.gov/outreach.

This funding builds on historic investments made in rural America over the past six years and supports programs enacted by the 2014 Farm Bill, which achieved meaningful reform and billions of dollars in savings for the taxpayer. Since enactment, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has progressively implemented each provision of this critical legislation, including providing disaster relief to farmers and ranchers; strengthening risk management tools; expanding access to rural credit; funding critical research; establishing innovative public-private conservation partnerships; developing new markets for rural-made products; and investing in infrastructure, housing and community facilities to help improve quality of life in rural America. For more information, visit www.usda.gov/farmbill.

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'A Bale of Turtles' educates on words describing animal groups: nouns of assembly

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa - Readers may have heard of a gaggle of geese, but what about a skulk of foxes or a gam of whales? In a playful and informative way, author and former English teacher Lee Clancey introduces readers to nouns of assembly: the words that describe an animal group. Her new book, "A Bale of Turtles" (published by Archway Publishing), illustrated by Mary Rothermel, entertains while educating young readers on some lesser used words.

Imaginative rhymes and fun illustrations give young children new and thought-provoking words with which to describe animal groups. With society and social media geared toward fewer words and characters - such as with the advent of Twitter's 140-character limit ­- Clancey felt compelled to share little-known information she had collected over a number of years.

"A Bale of Turtles" takes readers beneath the sea, across the land and up in the air as Clancey teaches about all types of animals, from exotic to commonplace, from the farm to the city, wild to domestic and large to small.

 

An excerpt from "A Bale of Turtles":

 

"The names of animal groups

Are funny and alive.

Just like a swarm of busy bees

In a bustling, buzzing hive!"

 

"A Bale of Turtles"

By Lee Clancey and Mary Rothermel

Hardcover | 8.5 x 11 in | 38 pages | ISBN 9781480820470

Softcover | 8.5 x 11 in | 38 pages | ISBN 9781480820463

E-Book | 38 pages | ISBN 9781480820456

Available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble

 

About the Author

Lee Clancey is a former teacher, business owner and politician who is now retired. She and her husband, Jay, have three grown sons, and she wrote "A Bale of Turtles" for her grandchildren.

 

About the Illustrator

Mary Rothermel is a working artist living in Seattle and specializing in oil paintings and landscapes. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Washington, has exhibited her work nationally and has completed numerous commissions. She often collaborates with her husband and fellow artist, Tom Northington.

. For the latest news, follow @ArchwayPub on Twitter and "Like" us at

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CHICAGO - Governor Bruce Rauner announced he has made appointments to the Illinois Gaming Board, the Illinois Workforce Investment Board and the Executive Ethics Commission.

 

 

Name: Teresa H. Bartels

Position: Member - Executive Ethics Commission

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Teresa Bartels to the Illinois Executive Ethics Commission. She brings an extensive background in non-profit work to the board.

Currently, Bartels serves as President of the Gateway for Cancer Research in Schaumburg, which is a member of the Cancer Treatment Centers of America. In this role, Bartels leads a team of 14 to raise funds and grant money for cancer clinical trials. She also owns her own strategic consulting company, Hallbart Consulting, LLC, where she provides leadership training and coaching to organizations and individuals. Her previous experience includes four years at United Way Worldwide and more than 16 years at Complete Business Services of Illinois and Minnesota.

Bartels sits on the Newman University Board of Trustees, the United Way Worldwide International Donor Assisted Giving Advisory Board, the United Way of Lake County Women's Leadership Council, and the University Center of Lake County Founding Board.

Bartels earned a bachelor's degree in public relations from Northern Arizona University and a master's degree in organizational leadership from Dominican University. She lives in Mundelein.

 

Name: Ryan Ruskin

Position: Member - Executive Ethics Commission

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has appointed Ryan Ruskin to the Illinois Executive Ethics Commission. He brings more than 20 years of private sector experience to the commission.

Ruskin is currently the President and COO of The Ruskin Group, a packaging supplies company. This family-owned manufacturing business has been in operation for more than 120 years. Ruskin also worked as the Executive Vice President for Sterling Packaging where he was responsible for general management of the folding carton packaging company. His other experience includes consulting for A.T. Kearney.

Ruskin is dedicated to the Chicago area and sits on many boards including the Heartland Alliance, the Field Museum, the Chicago Botanic Garden and the Chicago Humanities Festival.

Ruskin earned a bachelor's degree in history from Princeton University and an MBA from Northwestern University. He lives in Chicago.

 

 

 

Name: Lee A. Gould

Position: Member - Illinois Gaming Board

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has reappointed Lee Gould to the Illinois Gaming Board. He has served on the board since 2011 and brings close to 20 years of legal experience to the position.

Currently, Gould is a managing member of Gould & Pakter Associates, LLC, where he has worked since 2004. He renders and provides financial and litigation consulting services to clients. His areas of concentration include forensic accounting and analysis, financial damages determinations, and business valuations. He has previously worked for Russell Novak & Company, LLP and Rome Associates, LLC, where he was a partner.

Gould is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners and the American Bar Association. He is a former board member and past chairperson of the Illinois CPA Society, as well as the former president and current board member of the CPA Endowment Fund of Illinois.

Gould is a graduate of the University of Illinois and earned his law degree from Loyola University of Chicago. He lives in Chicago.

 

 

Name: Grover C. Webb

Position: Member - Illinois Workforce Investment Board

 

Governor Bruce Rauner has reappointed Grover Webb to the Illinois Workforce Investment Board. Webb has served on the board since 2010.

Webb is a self-employed partner of Tanglefoot Ranch in Simpson, Illinois. He has run the day-to-day operations of the livestock and grain farm for most of his life. He honorably served in the U.S. Navy Reserves from 1967-1970.

Webb is incredibly engaged in his community and sits on a number of boards and councils. He is a member of the University of Illinois Dixon Springs Ag Center Advisory Board, the Main Street Golconda Board and the Pope-Hardin Farm Bureau Board. He also serves as Chairman of the Bay Creek Conservancy District.

Webb earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Illinois.

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Writer Dan Helpingstine will appear at the Davenport, Iowa Barnes and Noble at 320 West Kimberly Road on October 17 from 1-3pm to sign his historical book on the John Kennedy assassination. The book is entitled Dallas Forever Changed - The Legacy of November 1963. The book has been released by Pelican Publishing.
Unlike other works on the assassination, Dallas Forever Changed does advance any theories on who assassinated President Kennedy. Instead the book deals with the historical after effects of the crime.
For over 50 years, Dallas endured a tragic legacy that left it labeled as the "City of Hate." Immediately after the assassination, community leaders looked to find a candidate to oppose the local Congressman Bruce Alger because it was thought that Alger contributed to the city having a violent political image. He was defeated in 1964 and never held political office again. The city also did other things in an attempt to distance itself from the assassination.
However, the city could not help but embrace the legacy of the assassination. Visitors were often allowed to visit the Texas Theatre, the place where Lee Oswald was arrested. Tours of key assassination sites are offered by private guides. On one visit to Dallas, the author was shown a red business card by a taxi driver. In the middle of the card had the title, "The Lady in Red." Jean Hill stood within 30 feet of the motorcade when the president was shot. She can be easily identified because she wore a red coat.
The official version has Lee Oswald shooting from the sixth floor of the Texas School Book Depository Building. That sixth floor now houses The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza. Many city leaders decided one way to deal with history is take ownership of it in a way. The Sixth Floor Museum has artifacts and films of November 22, 1963 and also documents political and social events at that time.
The ongoing controversies regarding President Kennedy's assassination will never fully allow Dallas to divorce itself from the event. The struggles of Dallas symbolize how the country as a whole has had a difficult time coping with a tragic occurrence that changed history.
Branstad encourages public engagement in reforming Iowa criminal justice practices
(Des Moines) - Public meeting dates for the Governor's Working Group on Justice Policy Reform today were announced after Gov. Terry Branstad announced the formation of the group at the Iowa Summit on Justice and Disparities on August 28, 2015.  The summit was organized by the Iowa-Nebraska State Conference of Branches for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
The purpose of the working group is to research and make policy recommendations related to reforms in Iowa criminal justice practices. The group will consist of a core group of experts on justice polices, and have the access to all state agencies and resources for information and assistance.
The public meeting dates are as follows:
Thursday, September 24, 2015
1:00
G9, Robert Ray Conference Room at the Iowa Capitol
Topic:  Mental health/drug courts and jury pool selection 

Wednesday, September 30, 2015
1:00
G9, Robert Ray Conference Room at the Iowa Capitol
Topic:  Juvenile records and prison/jail phone rates

Thursday, October 15, 2015
1:00
G9, Robert Ray Conference Room at the Iowa Capitol
Topic:  Subgroup updates and open discussion with public 

Thursday, October 29, 2015
1:00
G9, Robert Ray Conference Room at the Iowa Capitol
Topic:  Review of subgroup proposals and final strategy recommendations
The members of the working group are as follows:
-Adam Gregg - State Public Defender
-Dr. Roxann Ryan - Commissioner of Public Safety
-Betty Andrews - NAACP's Representative
-David Boyd - State Court Administrator
-Alan Ostergren - County Attorney's Representative
-Kevin McCarthy - Attorney General's Representative
-Jerry Bartruff - Director of the Department of Corrections
-John Hodges - Chair, Iowa Board of Parole
The working group members will set aside three hours for each meeting.  The meetings could end before the conclusion of the three hours allocated if there are not further comments from the public, stakeholders or working group members.
The Governor's Working Group on Justice Policy Reform will present a written report to the governor, stakeholders, and the public in November, so that the Iowa Legislature can consider these recommendations in the 2016 legislative session.
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Grassley Pressing for Details about Discipline Disparity between Whistleblowers and Supervisors who Retaliated

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, is pressing for answers about what appears to be an unusually low number of FBI employees disciplined for retaliating against whistleblowers.  In contrast, whistleblowers are often disciplined as reprisal for reporting wrongdoing.

Grassley said that the difference in the number of disciplinary actions points to a long standing double standard between high-ranking officials and other employees that has been a part of the culture at the FBI for years.   Grassley added that the disparity suggests that the FBI favors employees who retaliated against whistleblowers more than the whistleblowers themselves.

In a letter sent this week to FBI Director James Comey, Grassley noted that since 2004, the FBI has disciplined only five employees for retaliatory conduct, and no individual has been punished for such retaliatory conduct since 2012. Grassley contrasted those figures to the much higher number of employees who have claimed they suffered reprisal for reporting wrongdoing at the Bureau.

"This discrepancy merits continued oversight over the FBI's discipline of those who retaliate against whistleblowers, because punishing such retaliators is necessary to change the culture of the Bureau and to send a clear message that retaliation will not be tolerated," Grassley wrote to Comey.

Grassley held a hearing on March 4, 2015 about whistleblower retaliation at the FBI.  The hearing brought to light a Government Accountability Office report that the Justice Department had dismissed a large number of otherwise valid reprisal complaints from the FBI based on technicalities.  Many of these cases were thrown out because FBI employees had reported wrongdoing to their direct supervisors, which curiously does not "count" as a protected disclosure under the Justice Department's current regulations.

A copy of the letter can be found here.

NOTICE OF COMMITTEE HEARING

The Senate Committee on the Judiciary has scheduled a hearing of the Subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interest entitled "Oversight of the Administration's FY 2016 Refugee Resettlement Program: Fiscal and Security Implications" for Thursday October 1, 2015 at 2:00 p.m., in Room 226 of the Dirksen Senate Office Building.

By order of the Chairman.

Bipartisan Group of Senators File Legislative Fix to Ensure Inspectors General Have Access to All Agency Records

WASHINGTON - United States Senators Ron Johnson, Claire McCaskill, Chuck Grassley, Joni Ernst, Tammy Baldwin, Tom Carper, John Cornyn, James Lankford, Susan Collins, Kelly Ayotte, Mark Kirk, and Barbara Mikulski filed a bipartisan substitute amendment to S. 579, the Inspector General Empowerment Act of 2015. The new language includes a provision addressing an opinion from the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel, which allows the Justice Department, and potentially other agencies, to deny access to records sought by the Inspector General.

The Inspector General Act of 1978 authorizes each Inspector General to access "all records" in their agency's possession in the conduct of an oversight investigation or audit.  However, on July 20, 2015, the Office of Legal Counsel issued an opinion arguing that other provisions generally restricting the "disclosure" of certain kinds of information override the "all records" provision of the Inspector General Act.  The Office of Legal Counsel reached this conclusion despite clear and recent language enacted in response to the controversy over these very access issues. The Department of Justice's fiscal year 2015 Appropriations Act prohibited the agency from denying the Inspector General timely access to records.  The only exception was for any "express" limitation in the Inspector General Act.

The July Office of Legal Counsel opinion requires the Inspector General to obtain agency permission to access certain documents in the ordinary course of its oversight work, and reverses the presumption of the Inspector General Act that inspectors general have unfettered access to any and all information they deem necessary for effective oversight.  The broad opinion also left open the door for other agencies to rely on it to deny their inspectors general access to documents.

The opinion was met with swift opposition from Congress.  Senate leaders on the Judiciary Committee and Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, and House leaders on the Committee on the Judiciary and Committee on Oversight and Government Reform sent a letter to the Department rejecting the opinion's interpretation of the Inspector General Act and pressed the Obama administration to provide legislative language that would ensure inspectors general receive unfettered access to all agency documents. The Chairman and Ranking Member of the Commerce, Justice and Science Appropriations Subcommittee also sent a letter to the Justice Department saying that the Office of Legal Counsel's interpretation of Section 218 was completely wrong and counter to Congress's clear intent.

As a result of discussions with the inspectors general community, the Justice Department, and others, the bipartisan group of Senators have agreed on legislative language to ensure inspectors general are able to access all agency documents.  The substitute amendment amends the bipartisan S. 579, the Inspector General Empowerment Act, which was reported unanimously out of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee earlier this year, by adding the agreed upon language on inspector general access to documents. S. 579 provides some much-needed authorities for inspectors general to ensure they can perform their watchdog responsibilities in an efficient and independent manner.

Chairman Johnson said, "I am pleased that a bipartisan group of senators came together to make clear once again that inspectors general must have unfettered access to all agency documents. I am committed to working with my colleagues to pass this commonsense bill through the Senate to ensure that all inspectors general have the authority and the statutorily mandated independence they need to perform their watchdog responsibilities."

Chairman Grassley said, "The Justice Department opinion is contrary to the law and to the reason Congress created inspectors general - an independent overseer of the executive branch.  We couldn't have been more clear last year to ensure inspectors general received access to all documents, but the law seems to have been ignored.   The action we're taking with this new legislation leaves no room for misinterpretation."

Senator McCaskill said, "This legislation would help address a troubling decision by the Justice Department that undermines our watchdogs' ability to exercise critical oversight. Inspectors General are the eyes and ears of the public, helping to guard against the waste and abuse of their tax dollars, but they can't do that job effectively without access to agency documents?so I'm pleased to work with a bipartisan group of my colleagues to help restore that access."

 

A copy of the substitute amendment is here.

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