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Saturday, January 27
by
Sam Garchik
on Sat 27 Jan 2007 08:13 AM CST
Message from Ed Fallon
By Ed Fallon Over the past week, the work that Lynn, Carol and I have focused on includes organizational restructuring, constituent service (more on this next week), candidate recruitment and legislative action. In this week’s update, I want to talk about the latter – specifically, a bill setting up a system for voluntary public-financing of elections. The bill – sometimes called the Voter-Owned Iowa Clean Elections act, or VOICE – is under consideration by the House State Government Committee. VOICE provides qualifying candidates, i.e., those who agree to limit their spending and reject contributions from private sources, with a set amount of public funds to run for office. Supporters feel it will help restore the principle of “one person, one vote,†reduce the influence of special-interest money, and restore public confidence in government and elections. Nine states now offer some form of this law. In Maine, after four election cycles, 84% of Maine’s lawmakers were elected without a penny from a PAC, lobbyist or big donor. In Arizona, nine of eleven statewide office holders, including the governor, were elected using that state’s clean-election system. The bill before the Iowa House State Government Committee is based on these states’ laws. It funds the system in part with a 1% sales tax on political advertising, a voluntary $5 check-off on Iowans’ state tax returns, and a tax deduction of up to $200 in personal contributions to Iowa’s clean-election fund. For those of us who want to take a bite out of big money, Monday, January 29th is an important day at the Statehouse. Former Iowa Congressman Berkley Bedell will be there to push for state and federal campaign finance reform. If you can get off work, even if just for the noon rally, it would be great to have a strong public showing. Monday’s activities start at 11:00 in room 118 for a briefing on the proposed legislation and a discussion on how to be an effective citizen lobbyist. At noon, there will be a rally featuring Berkley Bedell. From 12:30 until 3:00, participants will have time to lobby their representatives and senators. That evening, between 5:30 and 7:30, a reception is planned at the Iowa CCI office (Forest Avenue and M L King Blvd in Des Moines). Please be a part of this effort! Campaign finance reform was THE central issue in my campaign for governor last year. Last Saturday in Iowa City, I heard it resonate powerfully in John Edwards’ presidential campaign (the loudest ovation from the crowd of 700 came after Edwards announced his support for voluntary public-financing of elections). This year, Iowa has a real opportunity to become the 10th state in the nation to enact a clean-election law. Come to the Statehouse next Monday. That may not be possible for a lot of you, but you can still weigh-in with an e-mail or phone call to your legislators. To find out your state representative and senator, go to http://www.legis.state.ia.us/FindLeg/. For a complete list of legislators, go to http://www3.legis.state.ia.us/ga/legislators.do?. To contact a lawmaker by e-mail, use the following formula: FirstName.LastName@legis.state.ia.us. To reach a lawmaker by phone between Monday and Thursday, call (515) 281-3371 for Senators and (515) 281-3221 for Representatives. Thanks! Ed Fallon UPCOMING EVENTS Saturday, January 27 Rally to Oppose Escalating the War in Iraq Hy-Vee Hall at the Iowa Events Center, Des Moines, 12:00 – 2:00 pm The rally will be preceded at 11:30 by a march from Nollen Plaza to the Events Center Contact Vern Naffier at (515) 964-1353 or joycevernhn@juno.com Saturday, January 27 Local Foods & More Community Market Cooperative Information meeting and membership drive Carroll Rec Center Activities Room, 2:00 – 5:00 pm Contact Denise Webber at (712) 830-1125 or organic_homestead@yahoo.com Sunday, January 28 Event discussing the war in Iraq with Berkley Bedell DMACC Urban Campus auditorium, Des Moines, 7:00 pm Contact Chet Guinn at (515) 282-8054 Monday, January 29 Clean election lobby day at the Iowa Statehouse (see above) Tuesday, January 30 Ed Fallon and Berkley Bedell on the Jan Mickelson show (1040 AM), 9:00 am Ed Fallon and Berkley Bedell on J. Michael McCoy’s show (98.3 FM), 1:00 pm Saturday, February 3 Iowa Network for Community-supported Agriculture annual meeting Marshalltown Community College, Dejarden Hall, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm All-Iowa potluck from 11:30 am until 1:00 pm Contact (641) 751-2851 or stevensmith@growinca.org to register Friday, January 26
by
Caroline Vernon
on Fri 26 Jan 2007 06:06 PM CST
By Caroline Vernon Progressive Action for the Common Good (PACG) has reserved a passenger van to transport Quad City activists to Des Moines next Monday, January 29th. We will be joining other progressive activists across Iowa in order to lobby our state legislators on the importance of clean elections and public financing of campaigns. Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement (ICCI) is the main organizer of this event and has already laid a lot of groundwork around this issue. This is a price-less (pun intended) opportunity to make a difference in the fight to reclaim our democracy. Monday's Agenda:We will leave from the NE corner of the Northpark Mall parking lot
(near Sears) at 8:00am. This van seats 12. We have 6 open seats available and will be stopping at the Perkins restaturant in Iowa City to pick up a couple more folks so if you live in the QC area or in Iowa City and would like to join us, please contact Caroline ASAP to reserve a
seat: 563-676-7580,
carolina1961@gmail.com. Others from the QC area will also be carpooling to Des Moines. Please wear a green shirt (representing money) and if possible, bring a dozen or more home-made cookies along. Currently, lobbyists are allowed to spend a maximum of $2.99 on each legislator so we would like to bring home-made cookies to share, to represent home-made elections. If you are willing to contribute goodies for the cause please let me know. If you are unable to attend, but would be willing to bake some cookies, that would be terrific! Finally, to help defray some of the cost of renting the bus, we are asking for a $10 donation from each participant. Once we get to the Capitol, we will debrief at 11am to go over our talking points and the day's activities. At noon, we will participate in a rally and press conference. Former Congressman Berkley Bedell, Ed Fallon, Pam Yoakum, and Mike Connelly will all speak to the importance of voter-owned clean elections. From 12:30 to 3pm, we will all have an opportunity to lobby each of our state reps on this issue. We will then plan to leave Des Moines promptly by 3:15pm so we can return home in time for dinner, around 6pm.CCI is expecting an estimated turnout of
close to 150 activists from around the state. I am hopeful that we can fill the remaining seats in the van. We
expect to have a bill number to lobby around by next week.
Caroline Vernon 563-676-7580 carolina1961@gmail.com For more information on why this issue is so important, please read the following: Are Political Action Committees trying to use money to influence OUR legislature?
Iowans shouldn't have to wonder.
The Clean Elections Act would provide a limited amount of public financing for candidates
who: Pledge to not raise any private money for their campaigns.
Freeing candidates from the money chase and allowing them to spend all their campaign time talking with voters.
Creating a fair playing field by reducing the need to raise large amounts of money to win.
Giving
more Iowans the chance to run for office – regardless of their access
to big money or their willingness to accept PAC contributions.
Creating
a system where Iowans won't have to wonder if big contributions are
influencing votes at the capitol with their campaign contributions.
The Clean Elections Act = Voter Owned Iowa Clean Elections
$3 million for a team running for governor and lieutenant governor.
by
Sam Garchik
on Fri 26 Jan 2007 02:23 PM CST
The People Have Spoken - Quad Cities Peace March on Saturday
By Cathy Bolkcom, Progressive Action for the Common Good Mark your calendars and please circulate! Concerned citizens from all around the Quad Cities will be coming together to engage in a Peace March in solidarity with the National March in Washington DC. The purpose of which is to remind our elected officials that the majority of Americans want the US out of Iraq and to encourage them to do everything within their power to bring our troops home and end this war. We will be gathering at Third Missionary Baptist Church at 14th & Main at noon and the march will commence at 1pm. We will walk in silent reverence in honor of the dead and in gratitude to the sacrifices made by our troops (to a drum beat) reflecting 3 waves of a uniform message: Citizens at the front of the march will carry signs that say "The People Have Spoken", the second group will carry signs that say, "No More Troops," and the 3rd group will carry signs that say, "End the War Now." We will end up at Congressman Braley's Davenport office(about a 16 blockwalk downhill) where we will read a "citizens declaration" to all of our elected officials (Durbin, Obama, Hare, Grassley, Harkin, and Braley). We will be making arrangements to leave cars downtown and run people upthe hill...so there will be car parking at the beginning and at the endof the march so that people can get a ride back up to their cars at the endof the march. We are still working on some of the logistics of this event (stay tuned), but could use your help making signs that reflect theabove messages. Some folks have volunteered to start working on them fromhome and we will be making more during the PACG Council meeting the previous Thursday (Jan 25th, 6:30pm at the Unitarian church). Please join us! We will need to make a lot of signs as we hope to have hundreds of citizensparticipate. Meanwhile, please spread the word far and wide! If you have any questions and/or can volunteer to donate poster board (1/2 size), markers, and your time, please contact Caroline at 563-676-7580, carolina1961@gmail.com. Also, please let me know if you can start making sign from home. Thanks for all you do! Thanks, Cathy Bolkcom Progressive Action for the Common Good hm 563-289-4155 www.qcprogressiveaction.org Tuesday, January 23
by
Sam Garchik
on Tue 23 Jan 2007 07:56 AM CST
DFA State of the Union Response Party Procedures By DFA Thank you for hosting a State of the Union Response Party! Whether you have 3 people or 50 people signed up, your event is critical to providing a response to the President's speech. Earlier today, we sent out an e-mail to our national list encouraging members to sign up to your event. Now, here is the information you will need for your event: BEFORE THE SPEECH Call in number: (888) 346-3950 DURING THE SPEECH Bingo Card: Bingo Word List: AFTER THE SPEECH Tomorrow we will send out an e-mail introducing DFA's 2007 Plan to Move America Forward. When you receive it, we suggest you download and print out at least one copy to have available at your party. Thank you for everything you are doing to move America forward, Charles Chamberlain Thursday, January 18
by
Sam Garchik
on Thu 18 Jan 2007 09:00 AM CST
FAIR! to Host 2nd Annual Budget Teach-In
By Karen Kubby FAIR! will host its second annual budget teach-in on Saturday, January 20 from 10am to noon in Emma J. Harvat Hall in City Hall, located at 410 E. Washington Street in Iowa City. Iowa City Mayor Pro-tem Regenia Bailey and Iowa City City Council member Amy Correia will outline the proposed budget in a user-friendly way and lead a conversation about a progressive perspective on budget content and process. FAIR! is a progressive voice for local politics in Johnson County. FAIR! works to build sustainable, livable, and humane communities. Its actions are based on the values of fairness, justice, equity and transparent government. FAIR! activates the community through education, local electoral politics, and participation in public policy lobbying and debate. The budget teach-in is an attempt at making the Iowa City proposed budget more accessible to the general public. It is hoped that this session will prepare people to make comment to the City Council during the council's budget proceedings. Refreshments will be served. For more information, please contact Garry Klein at 354-2600. Monday, January 15
by
Sam Garchik
on Mon 15 Jan 2007 07:13 AM CST
Rapid Response Minimum Wage Update
By Rapid Response Here's the House vote on H.R. 2 Steve King voted 'No". Although Tom Latham voted "Yes", read what Iowa City blogger, John Deeth, has to say about his vote: "Tom Latham, with one eye on Dr. Spencer in the rear view mirrow, is a yes. We wouldn't have seen THAT last year. But some things never change, you can always count on Steve King to do the wrong thing." ************************************************************************************************** Minimum Wage Increase: Debunking Conservative Misinformation "Minimum wage increase will hurt small businesses. Another common argument against raising the minimum wage is that it will put an undue burden on small U.S. businesses. But an April 2004 study by the Fiscal Policy Institute found that, between 1998 and 2001, the number of small businesses (defined as those with fewer than 50 employees) grew twice as quickly in states with higher minimum wages. EPI has attempted to explain this phenomenon by pointing to "[n]ew economic models," which recognize that employers in low-wage labor markets "may be able to absorb some of the costs of a wage increase through higher productivity, lower recruiting and training costs, decreased absenteeism, and increased worker morale." This may also help explain why most small business owners (three out of four, according to a March 2006 Gallup poll) believe a higher minimum wage would have no effect on them." ************************************************************************************************* Also, the wage increase might not apply to some of our territories, which is troubling. And that's some action you can take. ************************************************************************************* Ames Tribune: news@amestrib.com Burlington Hawkeye: http://www.thehawkeye.com/forms/letters.html (online form only) CR Gazette: editorial@gazettecommunications.com Decorah Newspapers: news@decorahnewspapers.com DM Register: letters@dmreg.com Daily Iowan: daily-iowan@uiowa.edu Fort Dodge Messenger: editor@messengernews.net IA State Daily: aforbes@iastate.edu Mar'town Times Republican: news@timesrepublican.com Mason City Globe: news@globegazette.com Mt. Vernon-Lisbon Sun: news@mtvernonlisbonsun.com Muscatine Journal: comments@muscatinejournal.com Ottumwa Courier: news@ottumwacourier.com Press-Citizen: opinion@press-citizen.com West Liberty Index: index@Lcom.net Wilton-Durant Advocate News: adnews@netins.net Omaha World Herald: pulse@owh.com Sioux City Journal: larrymyhre@siouxcityjournal.com Tri-County Times: results@tricountytimes.com W'loo/Cedar Falls Courier: wcfcourier@aol.com West Branch Times: rob@westbranchtimes.com Iowa Newspaper Assoc.: http://www.inanews.com/about/findaniowanewspaper.php Saturday, January 6
by
Sam Garchik
on Sat 06 Jan 2007 03:57 PM CST
Prairie Progressive's 2006 Honor Roll
By Prairie Dog Viivi Shirley, mayor of Perry, serves a mostly rural population of 8,000, more than a quarter or which is Latino. Somehow the fear of immigrants has passed her by: “I don’t care whether these people are legal or illegal because when you look at their determination, the guts, the courage and stamina, the belief in something better and what they endured to get here – my gosh, now we are saying we don’t want these people?” The Iowa House passed unanimously a bill to create a prescription drug database which threatened to invade the privacy of thousands of innocent Iowans. Although touted as a way to improve services for patients, the bill drew an unusual amount of hungry looks from law enforcement folks. Enter State Senator Jack Hatch, who insisted that access to data for law enforcement should only be allowed with probable cause in specific c investigations of specific c individuals. In other words, No Fishing Allowed. Thanks largely to Hatch, HF 722 contains no references to law enforcement, with only the prescribing doctor and the dispensing pharmacist allowed access to the database. In addition – with help from the American Civil Liberties of Iowa – an advisory council was charged with “ensuring that patient confidentiality, best interests, and civil liberties are at all times protected and preserved.” Alice Weick, a soft-spoken registered nurse of 31 years at Tax increment financing is a handy governmental mechanism for diverting taxes from public infrastructure, like schools and services, to rebates for businesses. Peter Fisher of the Five U.S. District Judge Robert Pratt ruled that taxpayer funding of Denise O’Brien defied mainstream predictions by handily winning the Democratic nomination for Secretary of Agriculture, then managed to come within 2% of winning the general election despite a well-funded smear campaign by the Iowa Farm Bureau. Jeff Strottman, Health and Safety Committee head of AFSCME 12, held University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics accountable after several violations involving mishandling of blood. Trish Nelson, activist jack-of-all-trades, was a quiet but powerful force in many grassroots efforts, including Iowans for Better Local TV, Democracy for David vs. Goliath: He kept the faith, stayed on message, and rode the tide to an astonishing victory over Jim Leach. Congressman-elect Dave Loebsack made the most of being in the right time and the right place while not shying away from support for a single-payer health care system, re-writing US trade agreements harmful to workers and communities, and getting the hell out of David vs. Goliath, Part II: Rare is the pair that makes Prairie Dog’s Honor Roll two consecutive years, but the daring duo of Gary Sanders and Wally Taylor deserves it. The two were victorious in keeping Iowa City from becoming even more complicit in supporting the Wal-Mart juggernaut that destroys small-town culture, exploits low-wage workers, relies on taxpayers to provide health coverage for its employees in the form of Medicaid, contributes to our national deficit through its massive trade with China, ad nauseam. Thanks to their legal skill and a knack for public relations, Wal-Mart will not be building a David vs. Goliath, Part III: No one gave her a chance a year ago, but Elesha Gayman knocked off a long-term incumbent in Prophet of the Year: “Some people are…afraid to bring in a business model. But at the end of the day it’s the economic formula that will make us great. And that’s the most important thing to get right. And that’s what all these activities are really focused on, is to get that right.” --Teresa Wahlert, Board of Regents ( Most tortured metaphor of 2006: “Many of those people [who opposed Wal-Mart’s purchase of public property in Most tortured metaphor of all time: “They overplayed their hand….the goodwill bank hasn’t run dry, but it’s been bruised.” —State Senator Mike Gronstal” From the January 2006 issue of the Prairie Progressive, |
Iowa Sites Child & Family Policy Center - Iowa Genetic Engineering Action Network Iowa Citizen Action Network - ICAN Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement Iowa Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO Iowa Physicians for Social Responsibility Iowa Public Interest Research Group Midwest Environmental Justice Advocates Progressive Action for the Common Good Progressive Coalition of Central Iowa QCAD (Quad-Citians Affirming Diversity - GLBT) Iowa Blogs The Deprogrammer (Quad Cities) Iowa True Blue (Gordon Fischer's Blog) Iowa Voters for Open and Transparent Elections Political FalloutFight Iowa Rapid Response Network - Iowa
Iowans for Better Local TV
Air America
The Counterpoint
National FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
Media Matters for America
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