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View Article  Peace Rally in Burlington, Iowa, March 19th
Peace Rally in Burlington, Iowa, March 19th

United for Peace and Justice


Saturday, March 19th 2005 2 P.M.
Burlington, IA USA


There will be an opening prayer by a member of the clergy. He will then announce that, all during this peace rally, the names, faces, age, and home town of every American soldier who has already died for us in Iraq will be projected on a large screen. One name and face every three seconds. By then the total American military dead in Iraq will be over 1,500, so it will take one hour and fifteen minutes to show every one of them. This will take place while our planned program on how and why to end the Iraq war is presented. After the planned program ends, there will be an open microphone for any to make brief comments comment. We will also announce the date of our next monthly meeting and invite all to attend.


Prior to the March 19th peace rally, a petition to [George W.] Bush will be circulated. All signed petitions are to be brought to the March 19th peace rally. A copy of this petition is being emailed to every peace group listed on the United for Peace and Justice website asking them to also circulate it and send the signed petitions to [Geroge W.] Bush at the White House right after March 19, 2005. Here is what the petition says:

PETITION TO [George W.] BUSH.

We, the undersigned, respectfully ask [George W.] Bush to publicly make the following pledge. We believe there has already been far too much death and destruction. It is time to bring this war to an end.

I, George W. Bush, pledge to halt U.S. Military actions immediately and move all U.S. troops to the borders of Iraq and bring them home as soon as possible. We have no long-term interest in a military presence in Iraq. All Iraqi businesses, including oil, will return to Iraqi ownership. We promise to pay for war damages and will help in peaceful ways to create an Iraq where freedom and justice prevail.

~~~~~~~~

In addition to the petition which will help advertise this event from now until March 19th, we will run a series of newspaper ads, one each day for 30 days, the last two to be half page ads the day before and the day of the March 19 peace rally. We will also run at least 50 thirty second commercials, plus there will be numerous press release and news stories and letters to the editor.


Location:

Burlington, Iowa riverfront at the Port of Burlington Building right on the Mississippi River 400 Front Street Burlington IA 52601

United for Peace and Justice

RSVP

Contact:
Dick Distelhorst

319-753-1148



   Click here to receive action alerts from Rapid Response - Iowa

View Article  QC Library Patrons Favor Warning Signs About Patriot Act
QC Library Patrons Favor Warning Signs About Patriot Act

QC Times

By Tory Brecht

Bettendorf public library director Faye Clow faced what she called a "terrible choice" recently when asked by the Quad-Cities chapter of the Iowa Civil Liberties Union to put up warning signs near library materials.

Specifically, the signs would warn about provisions of the USAPatriot Act that would allow records of books and other materials borrowed by patrons to be obtained by federal agents and forbidding librarians from informing the borrowers if their records were being monitored.

"We have people lobbying on the national level against parts of the Patriot Act," [Clow] said, referring to the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom.

"I think people should be aware," said Aaron Brinson, a 17-year-old Pleasant Valley High School student. "They should know what they check out can be looked at."

...Bettendorf's Dawn McKinney, 40, thinks it's important to raise awareness.  "People in general need to be made aware of how much access the government has to their lives," she said.  "It's a little disturbing because I don't know who decides what is justifiable cause to look at materials."

(click here to read the entire story)


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View Article  Getting The State Budget In Order
Getting The State Budget In Order


The Des Moines Register ran an article today detailing the Iowa House GOP budget outlay.



Iowa's cigarette tax won't be raised if House Republicans get their way.

House GOP leaders released a $4.8 billion state spending plan for the 2006 budget year that they said covers the rising cost of Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for the poor.

The plan, in addition to containing an $82 million school aid increase, sets aside an extra $40 million for targeted education programs.

The $40 million increase is about $100 million less than Gov. Tom Vilsack wants for an array of education initiatives: teacher pay, preschool and child care, school sharing incentives, and state support for the community colleges and state universities.

Conspicuously absent from the GOP plan is the 80-cents-per-pack cigarette tax increase recommended by Vilsack, a Democrat. The current tax is 36 cents a pack.

Setting a state budget that doesn't require any tax increase "is good news for taxpayers," said Rep. Bill Dix of Shell Rock, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. An overall spending increase of 4 percent "ought to be enough."

...

Democratic legislative leaders heaped criticism on the Republican plan.

"It is based on deception and broken promises," said House Minority Leader Pat Murphy of Dubuque. He accused the GOP of reneging on promises to improve teacher quality and creating the illusion of a balanced budget while tapping cash reserves.

During the last four years, the Legislature has borrowed heavily from other funds in order to balance the state's general operating budget. Rather than repay all the money, the House GOP plan calls for writing off about $1 billion owed to a tobacco endowment and other funds.



What's missing from all of this is what has been alluded to this week, notably in David Yepsen's column:  the state is not building a firm financial footing on which to operate.

To be honest, this probably won't be settled one way or another until the Legislative deadlock is somehow broken - or we start having honest discussions about what the state's "priorities" are rather than having Stuart Iverson decide for the entire state what our "priorities" are.

The truth here is that Medicaid assistance is being slashed at the Federal level, and we're going to have to pick up the tab - and find creative ways to do so other than draining every cash reserve we can find and reducing educational funding, law enforcement funding, and nearly everything else.  Draining funding from a program that promised a certain service (like draining the Senior Living Trust Fund as Tom Vilsack's budget proposed) without 'killing' the program is about as dishonest as it gets in legislative terms.

John Drury was right the other day in this column:  Iowans need to have a serious dialogue about what we expect out of our government, and how we're going to pay for it.

The insistance by the Legislative GOP leadership that we're somehow "meeting Iowa's priorities" is a sham.  Maybe if we repeat it enough we might begin to believe it - or maybe not.  Iowans deserve more from our state government.  In 2005, we're not getting it.

View Article  Iowa to Face Federal Budget Cuts
Iowa to Face Federal Budget Cuts

Iowa Fiscal Partnership

Analysis: Bush Budget Whacks Iowa Services

New report projects Iowa cuts of nearly $580 million in federal spending

MOUNT VERNON, Iowa – A new report reveals sweeping cuts in services for Iowa in the budget proposed by [George W.] Bush.
 
A Washington budget watchdog group, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP), reports that Iowans would see cuts in federal grants in aid of more than $577 million from 2006 through 2010, including $178 million in 2010 alone.

"The administration is hiding the effects of its budget proposals as no administration has done in over 15 years," said David Osterberg, executive director of the nonpartisan Iowa Policy Project. "It's pretty hard for Iowans and other Americans to battle back on cuts the administration won't detail. Fortunately, this new report gives Iowans a better idea of what they're facing – and information they can use to talk to their representatives in Congress."

While the proposed budget details the cuts only for 2006, the CBPP analysis uses further information provided to congressional committees to make estimates of future cuts in several areas.

This is the first time since 1989 that an administration's budget has not provided information about the proposed funding levels for individual discretionary programs in years beyond the first year.

Nationally, [Bush's] budget would cut $214 billion in domestic "discretionary" spending in the five years. However, only the first $18 billion of those proposed cuts – cuts that would occur in 2006 – are identified by the administration.

"The pain in the budget comes mostly after 2006, with the cuts growing deeper with each passing year," said Sharon Parrott, CBPP director of welfare reform and income and the report’s lead author.

Among the Iowa cuts:
 
-- $3.7 million in 2010 in the supplemental nutrition program for women, infants and children (WIC), $5.1 million over the 2006-2010 period and a projected loss in number of recipients of 5,600.

-- $38.1 million in 2010 in elementary and secondary education, including education for the disadvantaged, impact aid, school improvement funding, and special education, $108.7 million in total projected cuts for 2006-2010.

-- $12.5 million in 2010 for vocational and adult education, $57.6 million in total projected cuts for 2006-2010.

-- $3.1 million in 2010 for low-income energy assistance, $4.1 million in total projected cuts for 2006-2010.

-- $9.1 million in 2010 for children and family services, including Head Start, services for abused and neglected children, and other children's programs, $26.2 million in total projected cuts for 2006-2010.

-- A loss of rental assistance vouchers for 3,800 families in 2010.

-- $23.2 million in 2010 in [Bush's] proposed "Strengthening America's Communities" initiative, $100.7 million in total projected cuts for 2006-2010.

"These cuts will be a new burden on the people in Iowa who can least afford to bear them," said Charles Bruner, executive director of the Child & Family Policy Center in Des Moines. "It is important for Iowans and all Americans to understand that the proposed cuts in these services do not provide deficit reduction. Instead, they will shift costs to state and local governments, and will be used to help pay for tax cuts that are primarily benefiting the wealthiest Americans."

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

The new analysis by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, "Large Cuts to a Wide Range of Programs are Obscured in the Administration’s Budget," is available at the Center’s website: www.cbpp.org.

The Iowa Policy Project and the Child & Family Policy Center will make federal budget information available in the coming months through their joint initiative, the Iowa Fiscal Partnership, which is on the web at www.iowafiscal.org.

View Article  Action Alert: Attend a Public Meeting and Tell Senator Grassley to Protect Medicaid
Action Alert:  Attend a Public Meeting and Tell Senator Grassley to Protect Medicaid

Iowa Citizen Action Network
 
Attend an Open Public Meeting and Tell Sen. Grassley to protect Medicaid from $45 billion cuts proposed in [George W.] Bush's budget. Sen. Grassley has scheduled numerous community meetings this week. Check the list of locations at the end of this post to see which meeting you can attend! If you are unable to attend one of there forums, please call or write Sen. Grassley to make your voice heard and help save Medicaid.
 
As Chair of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Grassley is one of the most important elected officials who can defend Medicaid from $45 billion in cuts
proposed by Bush.  These proposed program cuts are a direct result of the tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans.  
 
SEN. GRASSLEY NEEDS TO HEAR FROM YOU while he is in Iowa this week and before the House and Senate propose their own budgets on March 7.  Tell him that cuts to Medicaid will be devastating to your family, your community, and the state of Iowa.  

Below are some talking points to help you make your case and a list of public meetings.  The most important thing for Sen. Grassley to hear is that Medicaid is a lifeline and that those who participate have no other options if services are cut.  And as always, send us an e-mail telling us you attended the meeting or made a phone call.
 
Contact Matt Russell, Iowa Citizen Action Network's health care organizer at (515) 277-2077 to learn more and to get more involved in this campaign. Additional information is available at ICAN.
 
Talking Points

1. For Medicaid participants: Medicaid is important to me and my family because…(tell your story - how does Medicaid improve your family’s well being and what hardships would result if services were lost)
 
2. For providers, professionals, and local officials: Medicaid is important to my community, my hospital, my clients because…(give concrete examples)
 
“Cuts in Medicaid shift costs to providers, to people with private insurance, to other programs, and to Iowa’s most vulnerable populations:  seniors, children, people with disabilities.”
 
3. Bush has proposed a budget that would take more than $380 million of Medicaid funding from Iowa over the next 10 years.  These cuts will hurt me, my family, my hospital, my community, etc.
 
4. Iowa is already struggling to pay the current state share of Medicaid costs.  $380 million dollars of additional federal cuts over the next 10 years will devastate Iowa’s state budget.  It’s going to make it that much harder for the state to provide necessary health care to our most vulnerable Iowans: children, seniors, people with disabilities.
 
5. Mr. Grassley you’re going to have a lot of influence in securing the funding for Medicaid because of your leadership role in the Senate Finance Committee.  We’re relying on you to protect Iowans who rely on Medicaid for vital health care services.
 
We have many crucial opportunities to speak with Sen. Grassley in person during the week of Feb. 21 when he is in Iowa.  If you are unable to attend any of the following, it is important that you call or write Sen. Grassley in Washington:
 
Sen. Chuck Grassley
135 Hart Senate Bldg., Washington, DC  20510-1501
Ph. 202-224-3744
or click here to send an e-mail
 
SENATOR GRASSLEY’S OPEN PUBLIC MEETINGS THIS WEEK
 
Wednesday February 23
 7:30-8:30am
Jasper County Town Meeting
Jasper County Courthouse
Multipurpose Room
Basement
101 1st Street North
Newton
 
9:30-10:30am
Marshall County Town Meeting
Marshall County Courthouse
3rd Floor
Meeting Room 1
1 East Main Street
Marshalltown
 
4:15-5:15pm
Wapello County Town Meeting
Ottumwa City Hall
City Council Chambers
105 East 3rd Street
Ottumwa
 
Thursday February 24
 
7:30-8:30am
Davis County Town Meeting
Mutchler Community Center
900 East North Street
Bloomfield
 
9:30-10:30am
Van Buren County Town Meeting
Village Cup and Cakes
Meeting Room
202 Main Street
Keosauqua
 
11:45am-12:45pm
Jefferson County Town Meeting
Jefferson County Courthouse
3rd Floor Conference Room
51 East Briggs Avenue
Fairfield
 
1:30-2:30pm
Henry County Town Meeting
Henry County Courthouse
Law Library
2nd floor
100 East Washington Street
Mount Pleasant
 
3:45-4:45pm
Lee County Town Meeting
Fort Madison City Hall
City Council Chambers
811 Avenue E
Fort Madison
 
Friday February 25
 
7:30-8:30am
Des Moines County Town Meeting
Southeastern Community College
West Burlington Campus (Southwest Corner of Campus) Building 400, Room 406
1500 West Agency Road  
West Burlington
 
9:30-10:30am
Louisa County Town Meeting
Louisa County Courthouse
Courtroom
2nd Floor
117 South Main Street
Wapello
 
 

View Article  COUNTERPOINT EXTRA: Props to Media Matters for America

Counterpoint Extra:  Props to Media Matters for America

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. 

by Iowa's Ted Remington


Before resuming normal Counterpoint activity, I just want to take a moment to publicly thank David Brock and the good folks at Media Matters for America for having my back concerning Mark Hyman's attack on me. Not only did Media Matters do a stellar job in pointing out the distortions and falsehoods concerning me, but they thoroughly debunked Hyman's smears of other college teachers he committed in the same commentary.

More importantly, MMFA is taking a leading role in keeping the heat on Sinclair Broadcasting, particularly in their participation in Sinclair Action, a group of progressive organizations that are working to educate people on the reality of Sinclair's business and "journalistic" practices. They've just revamped their website, and it looks great. I highly recommend that everyone take a look and take action.

Finally, thanks to the posters to [the Counterpoint], anonymous and otherwise, for the words of encouragement. They are truly appreciated!

Cheers,

Ted


Listen to Ted talk with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Michael Papantonios on Air America Radio's weekly program, Ring of Fire aired February 12.


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View Article  Pella Chronicle Publisher orders "From the Left" Column Scrapped
  Pella Chronicle Publisher Orders “From the Left” Column Scrapped

The Des Moines Register
 
By Rekha Basu 

Mike Corum, who writes the From the Left column for the weekly Pella Chronicle, stopped by to welcome the new publisher [Sandy Selvy] to the community from Ottumwa. It wasn't until later that day that Corum understood why she seemed disengaged.

The publisher's first official act related to the newsroom was calling up the editor and ordering him to scrap Corum's column.

The editor, Hal Hatfield, refused, and resigned in protest.  He thinks the publisher's move is a nod to conservative advertising and business interests.

But Selvy denies that either is the case. She says the paper doesn't have enough local content, and that "no one cares about what Mike thinks about Bush and what's going on in the war."

(click here to read the entire story)


If you would like to write a letter to the editor expressing your views about the decision to limit dissent in this central Iowa community, write, call or fax your thoughts to: 

The Pella Chronicle

Phone: 641-628-3882
FAX: 641-628-3905

E-mail Sandy Selvy 

E-mail The Register: 


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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.


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