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View Article  Iowa School Board Overturns Committee Recommendation, Bans Book; Anti-bullying Workshop in Ames in January (GLBT)
Iowa School Board Overturns Committee Recommendation, Bans Book (GLBT)

The North Scott Press

by Bill Tubbs
  
The United Methodist Church defrocked the Rev. Irene Elizabeth Stroud on a 7-6 vote for being honest about her sexual orientation....The church's decision appears to be, at best, an effort to achieve unity by sacrificing reality and truth.

[That] very week, the networks, who flooded the airwaves all fall with half-truths disguised as political ads, rejected as "too controversial" a 30-second commercial of the United Church of Christ which showed a bouncer standing guard outside a church and choosing whom to allow into services. Among those rejected are people of color and a same-sex couple.

Just when you think all the issues are national, the school board of the Pleasant Valley [Iowa] School District sent shudders through academia with a 4-3 vote to overturn a committee's recommendation that it is OK to continue using the book, "The Misfits" by James Howe, in an elementary classroom. Parents protested when they learned that Linda Goetz, a sixth-grade teacher at Bridgeview Elementary in LeClaire, was reading the book aloud in an effort to curb name-calling. Their objection? One of the characters is gay.

(click here to read the entire story)



Iowa Department of Education Hosts Conference on Bullying and Harassment


"Bullying in Our  Schools: Power and Empowerment"


The GLBT Youth in Iowa Schools Task Force is one of several sponsors of this conference which will take  place on Thursday, January 27, 2005, at the Scheman Conference Center  in Ames.

This conference is designed to help school teams (including youth and community) create plans to prevent bullying and harassment  against all students, including those that are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT).  

Sessions will help team members learn what works, how to effectively intervene when bullying happens, and how to recognize the many forms that bullying can take.  A special strand is being offered for middle school and high school youth team members, in addition to a strand to address bullying/harassment against diverse  populations (GLBT students, students of color, students with  disabilities, religious minorities).

Click here for more information and to register your team

Brad Clark
Project Director,
GLBT Youth in Iowa Schools Task Force
PO Box 1797
Des Moines, IA  50306-1797

Contact Brad here:
Send an e-mail

Click here for more contact info:
www.iowasafeschools.org


Join your fellow Iowans in the fight to take back the media for ordinary citizens.  Click here to join RapidResponse - Iowa.


View Article  Pederson Elected Head of Iowa Democratic Party
Pederson Elected Head of Iowa Democratic Party

Waterloo/Cedar Falls Courier

DES MOINES (AP) -- The Iowa Democratic Party chose Lt. Gov. Sally Pederson Saturday as its new leader. Pederson becomes chairwoman immediately.... The Democratic State Central Committee convened to replace Des Moines lawyer Gordon Fischer, who is stepping down from the post.

[Pederson] is expected to face huge challenges, the foremost of which is preserving Iowa's first-in-the-nation precinct caucuses. A party commission is studying the primary calendar.

Losing those caucuses would deal a blow to both parties, which have used the national attention drawn by the Iowa Caucuses to build party operations that are among the best organized and financed in the nation.

She will also face bitter feelings that linger after Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry lost the state, while some of the party's state candidates successfully defeated Republicans for legislative seats. Some Democrats were unhappy about how money allocated to Iowa from the Democratic National Committee was spent.

The Central Committee also chose Rob Tully of Des Moines as first vice chairman and Sara Swisher of Iowa City as second vice chairwoman. Jim Hutter of Ames is the committee secretary and Ken Sagar of Des Moines is treasurer.

(Click here to read the complete article.)


View Article  Recycle 'Til You Drop!
Recycle 'Til You Drop!

Waste Commissions In Your Area
 
There once was a girl name' of ANN
Who'd recycle every jar, every can
'cycling cartons and boxes
And papers and watches
Such a good little example this girl name' of Ann

Did you know the recycled cardboard that your cereal comes in used only 1/4 the energy to make and also only created 1/2 the pollution as a newly made box? 

Besides decreased energy use and pollution reduction, another advantage is the resultant pride knowing you are contributing to the welfare of your community and state. It can also be a chance to create a family project at home or with your friends.  See who can recycle the most as well as purchase recycled items. List items that you find are made by recycling means. This can be something we ALL can work on every day of our lives.

From a recycled garden in Davenport on North Carey Avenue above 53rd Street, to a Davenport resident winning a car for her years of recycling, IOWANS are doing their part to make our state a cleaner state.        

So what can recycling do for you and what can you do for recycling?  Park benches, rugs, goggles and fiber for filling ski jackets are just a few items that can be made from recycled plastics.  Used aluminum and steel have each found a second life as bikes, cookware, and cars.  

Every county in IOWA should have a WASTE COMMISSION. Check out your government listings. Here in SCOTT COUNTY you can go to
www.wastecom.com to find more information. Or you can contact them at WASTE COMMISSION OF SCOTT COUNTY/PO BOX 563 BUFFALO, IOWA 52728/(563) 381-1300/ or FAX 381-1301...Love, Peace, Happy Holidays.... Please, remember to CPR: CONSERVE, PARTICIPATE, & RECYCLE. 

View Article  Race for DNC Chair Heats Up as Iowa’s First-in-the-nation Status Comes under Fire
Race for DNC Chair Heats Up as Iowa’s First-in-the-nation Status Comes under Fire


Clinton war-room veteran Simon Rosenberg built his [centrist] New Democrat Network into a formidable political operation with the help of financial backers in New York. Now he’s considering a dark-horse run for chair of the Democratic National Committee.

NewYorkMetro.com


But according to the Associated Press, a New Democrat victory would put the first-in-the-nation status of both Iowa and New Hampshire at risk.

"Iowa and New Hampshire should not go first in the primary calendar, and we need to create a system that allows other states to have equal footing," said Rosenberg…..  "I have no problem with Iowa and New Hampshire being part of the early states, but their days as the sole arbiters of who our nominee is should come to an end," he said Friday.

The Democratic National Committee formed a 40-member panel a week ago to study whether to shake up the dominance that Iowa and New Hampshire hold in presidential nominations.

MercuryNews.com


However, two Iowans on the 40-member commission believe Iowa’s status is safe.

Des Moines lawyer Roxanne Conlin, a former Iowa Democratic Party chairman and the party's 1982 candidate for governor, says Iowa has earned the status through years of hard work.  Des Moines lawyer and Democratic activist Jerry Crawford says Iowa activists have an edge in the debate because the caucuses have proven to be a positive force for the party.

WOI-TV.com



View Article  Iowa Jobs Fall in November
Iowa Jobs Fall in November

Iowa Policy Project

Recovery Pace Lags Three Years After Recession

MOUNT VERNON, Iowa (Dec. 16, 2004) -- Iowa's nonfarm jobs dropped by 1,500 in November after a slow four-month climb, while the state's unemployment rate fell slightly to 4.7 percent as 4,000 people left the state's labor market.

The November numbers showed 1,455,100 nonfarm jobs, down from the 12-month high of 1,456,600 posted the month before, but up 10,100 from a year earlier. The number is up 2,900 from November 2001, at the end of the last recession, and down 19,100 from the March 2001 start of that recession.

Despite that context, Iowa Workforce Development Director Richard Running claimed in the agency's monthly report that Iowa "remains in a recovery mode" three years after the 2001 recession.

"That's overstating things a bit," said Peter Fisher, research director at the nonpartisan Iowa Policy Project. "Iowa has spent a lot of these three years lagging well behind any meaningful recovery pace from the recession.

"Even now, we are still over 19,000 jobs behind the more pertinent measure - where Iowa stood at the start of the recession. That number shows what kind of ground we need to make up."

Fisher noted Iowa would have to gain nearly 1,600 nonfarm jobs per month  over a year just to get back to where the state stood at the start of the 2001 recession. That compares with an average nonfarm job growth of 842 per month over the past 12 months.

"Over the next 12 months, we need to do almost twice as well as we did during the past 12 months," Fisher said. "We need a much stronger recovery than we've seen if the economy is going to offer sufficient job opportunities for Iowans still out of work or just entering the workforce.”

The 2,900-job growth since the 2001 recession also lags far behind the pace of the recovery from the 1990s recession. At the comparable 36-month mark following the March 1991 end of that recession, Iowa had gained 70,200 jobs.

Iowa's nonfarm job numbers hovered between 1,444,200 (June) and 1,456,600 (October) through the year.

The 12-month increase in jobs includes a 1,100 net increase in manufacturing, following a downturn in that sector in 2003. Financial activities with a 4,600 increase, education and health services at 4,200 and construction at 1,800 had the largest gains.

The only major declines cited by IWD came in government, 2,300, and information, 800.

Key numbers from Thursday's release:

--  Iowa's unemployment rate stood at 4.7 percent, down slightly from 4.8 percent in October but up slightly from 4.6 percent in November 2003.

--  Iowa's nonfarm jobs stood at 1,455,100 in November, down from 1,456,600 in October and up 10,100 jobs, from 1,445,000, in November 2003.

--  Iowa's labor force stood at 1,631,600 in November, with 4,000 fewer people working or looking for work than in October. The number is up significantly, however, from the 1,603,000 labor force figure in November 2003.

--  The nonfarm job total is 27,200 short of the 47,000 promised to be created from June 2003 to November 2004 under the federal "Jobs and Growth" tax cut.

Three years after the end of the 2001 recession:

--  Iowa has 2,900 more jobs.

--  Iowa's unemployment rate is up a full percentage point, to 4.7 percent from 3.7 percent.

View Article  Iowa Budget Crisis: Cuts, Costs Hitting Cities, Counties
Iowa Budget Crisis: Cuts, Costs Hitting Cities, Counties

Iowa Fiscal Partnership  

Report Shows State Policy Squeezing Local Government Services

DES MOINES, Iowa (Dec. 15, 2004) -- State budget shortfalls and higher costs that hit Iowa cities and counties over the last four years have compromised basic services while driving local taxes up and fund balances down, a new study reports.

The report, the fourth in a series from the Iowa Fiscal Partnership about the impact of Iowa's budget crisis, illustrates a dilemma increasingly faced by local government officials: how to meet residents' demand for services with fewer or restricted means to pay for it.

"Short-sighted state policy is putting local policy-makers in an impossible situation," said Peter Fisher, research director of the Iowa Policy Project and co-author of the report for the Iowa Fiscal Partnership. "As our report illustrates, when the economy contracts, people demand more services – at the same time that the state is cutting back, property values are stagnant and costs are rising. In this climate, local officials are asked to do more with less.
    
"Like the state, local officials are turning to one-time sources of money for ongoing services, and they can't do that year after year."

The report noted:

--  State support for local governments has fallen by 42 percent, $119 million, since FY2001.

--  All but two of Iowa’s 99 counties have reached or exceeded their general fund property tax levy limit, with 17 using their authority to go higher due to unusual circumstances. Only one county did that in FY2001.

--  The percentage of cities at their general fund levy limit has gone from 71 percent in FY2001 to 78 percent in FY2005.

--  Health insurance costs have increased for local governments just as they have for private employers. From FY2001 to FY04, the cost for county health premiums rose by 78.4 percent. Local governments have increasingly used special levies to finance the added costs. On average, about three-fourths of the increase in overall city property tax rates is due to employee benefit levies.

--  Despite an increasing use of local-option sales taxes, this has not solved local governments' financial problems.

--  The property tax base has not grown to keep pace with either higher costs or cuts in state support. This primarily is due to the state's system of rollbacks, which has effectively reduced residential valuation to less than half of its market value, and to the system of valuing agricultural property based on productivity rather than market value.

"Our findings have critical implications for the coming debate on property tax reform in the Legislature," said Victor Elias, senior associate at the Child & Family Policy Center and a co-author of the report. "We have a combination of limits on tax rates and slow growth in valuation. This has clearly constrained the ability of cities and counties to finance services."

The Iowa Fiscal Partnership (IFP) is a joint initiative of two nonprofit policy research organizations, the Iowa Policy Project in Mount Vernon and the Child & Family Policy Center in Des Moines. Reports from the IFP are available on the web at www.iowafiscal.org.

The first three reports in the current IFP series on the state budget crisis are available at that site. They include an overview comparing Iowa's handling of its fiscal challenges to efforts of other states; an analysis of the impact of the budget crisis on education; and an analysis of the impact on human services.

View Article  Asthma Danger To Rural Children
Asthma Danger To Rural Children

IOWA Public Radio

December 12, 2004

Children living close to large factory hog farms have a higher than normal incidence of ASTHMA than children who do not live in such areas.  Those children living close to factory farms that use antibiotics on the swine incur the highest rate of ASTHMA.   This information was reported on IOWA Public Radio Friday, December 10th and is from a study in part by Dr. James A. Merchant.  Dr. Merchant is Dean of the University of IOWA College of Public Health in IOWA City. The College of Public Health at the U of I teaches and publishes research on causes of rural illness and prevention as well as environmental health policy.  They also have published information on "Cancer In IOWA", the "IOWA Birth Defects Registry Annual Report" and "Environmental Health Science Research".                                                               
Connections between use of pesticides and prostate cancer are laid out in their 2004 College of Public Health Research Publication.  On page 16 entitled "All in a Day's Work" it states:   "In IOWA individual farm holders have 27% increased risk of prostate cancer, while commercial pesticide applicators have a 41% increased risk."


(See: www.public-health.uiowa.edu/news/pubs)

(Also see: www.ehsrc.org and www.aghealth.org)


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First responders to biased, imbalanced or factually inaccurate media coverage


Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


Air America

*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


The Counterpoint

*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


National

FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


Media Matters for America

*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media