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Wednesday, January 12

Iowa Supreme Court to Hear Oral Argument Friday in Lesbian Civil Union Dissolution Case
by
Linda Thieman
on Wed 12 Jan 2005 04:19 PM CST
Iowa Supreme Court to Hear Oral Argument Friday in Lesbian Civil Union Dissolution Case
Lambda Legal
What: Oral arguments in Alons et al v. Iowa District Court for Woodbury County.
When: Friday, January 14, at 9 a.m.
Where: Iowa Supreme Court, 1111 East Court Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa.
[Observers and supporters are welcome, but please no protesting and no signs.]
We will
urge the court to recognize that disapproval of gay couples doesn't
give these groups or individuals the right to interfere in other
people's personal lives.
(Des Moines, January 11, 2005)
-- In oral argument set for Friday, January 14, at 9 a.m. at the Iowa
Supreme Court, Lambda Legal and local organizations will fend off an
attack by antigay groups who seek to overturn a local court order
granting two Sioux City women's request to terminate their civil union.
"We will
urge the court to recognize that disapproval of gay couples doesn't
give these groups or individuals the right to interfere in other
people's personal lives," said Camilla Taylor, Staff Attorney in Lambda
Legal's Midwest Regional Office, who will argue the case on Friday.
"A judge
in his rightful authority has already addressed this matter. Iowa
judges regularly resolve a wide range of matters between couples who
live together, regardless of the status of their relationship or
whether they're married. A handful of legislators and others have
tried to insinuate themselves into this particular case because this
time it involves two lesbians."
The two
women filed papers to dissolve their civil union in August of 2003. The
judge in their case noted that he was simply resolving a legal matter
between a couple as the state's courts routinely do.
In
February of 2004, a group of state legislators, a congressman and a
northwest Iowa church filed a petition to be heard by the Iowa State
Supreme Court. They filed a lawsuit asserting that the judge, Jeffrey
Neary in the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County, lacked authority
to declare the rights of the two women and terminate their civil union,
and they asked the state high court to hear their case.
Lambda
Legal filed a friend-of-the-court brief last June, signed by the Iowa
Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU and the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender Community Center of Central Iowa, that urged the court to
throw the case out. The brief argued that none of the parties involved
in the challenge have legal standing to interfere in the case because
they aren't harmed in any way by Judge Neary's decision. The brief also
pointed out that Iowa law permits a court to terminate a civil union,
so that the members of the couple can move on with their lives with
certainty about their legal rights, plan financially and start new
families.
Friday's
oral argument will focus on whether these anti-gay groups and inviduals
have the right to interfere with the trial court's authority to provide
necessary relief to this lesbian couple. In November, Iowans voted to retain Judge Neary, despite aggressive efforts by antigay groups to unseat him.
Lambda
Legal is a national organization committed to achieving full
recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals,
transgender people and those with HIV through impact litigation,
education, and public policy work.

The Condition of the State
by
Chad Thompson
on Wed 12 Jan 2005 01:19 PM CST
The Condition of the State
Governor Vilsack laid out his priorities for this session in his Condition of the State address yesterday. (Excerpts were published by the Des Moines Register today.)
Here are
the main topics Gov. Vilsack discussed (the full version of the speech,
which is rather unfriendly to cut-and-paste excerpts is here):
Education
We
should begin by helping parents so they can be their child's first and
best teacher. Several years ago this General Assembly had the foresight
to fund community empowerment areas. The concept was to integrate and
coordinate our early-child efforts. We should invest more in
empowerment. We can expand home visitation and parent education
programs. And we can increase the tools and knowledge available to
parents so they can create even more stimulating environments for their
children at home.
The
second step requires us to recognize that most of the parents of these
young children work. Many Iowa families struggle in finding and paying
for quality child care. We need to expand financial assistance so
parents can afford quality care and create a rating system that will
allow us to identify and define quality care. If we know what quality
is, if parents know where they can find it in their community and they
can afford it, they will make the right choice for their children.
The
third step in this process involves access to preschool. It forms the
foundation for a great start to learning once school begins. Let this
be the General Assembly that challenges schools, Head Start,
faith-based efforts, private providers to expand access to preschool so
we reach the day that every child in our state has access to quality
preschool.
Grow Iowa Values Fund
With
the investments made in the Values Fund we have supported thousands of
good-paying jobs in the life sciences, information solutions, and
advanced manufacturing. We have allowed our state to gain a national
reputation as a leader in biotechnology and insurance, and we also
enabled our state to be among the nation's leaders in per-capita income
growth - all by working together.
Property Tax Reform
Last
month I talked to you about a program to make Iowa more competitive,
that focused on our income tax structure. Today, I want to visit with
you about our property-tax structure. Everybody in this building knows
that property taxes are too high. Everybody in this building knows that
the current property-tax system unfairly penalizes commercial and
industrial interests that make it more difficult for us to develop and
expand our economy. Everyone knows that the current structure does not
reward efficiency.
Let's
deal with the current inequities in our system by adjusting the
rollback and creating a workable and reasonable limitation on future
property-tax increases. But let us not stop with that temporary fix.
Let us go to the next step. Let us complete the work that began
[decades ago]. Let us put in motion a process that allows us to
restructure government. A government at every level and at all levels
that is more autonomous, but also more efficient. A government that
provides better service, at less cost.
Health Care
For
several years, the lieutenant governor and I have urged the General
Assembly to expand health-care security to tens of thousands of Iowans
who suffer from mental Illness or substance abuse. Our health-care
system will never be transformed until such time as mental-health
parity and substance-abuse parity become part of our health-care
system. We have waited a long time. It is time to make parity the law
of this state.
But
we can not stop with that. We must recognize that affordability and
accessibility also threaten access to health-care security for many
Iowans. An underfunded Medicaid budget prevents us from providing vital
services to vulnerable Iowans: Children, people with disabilities and
seniors on fixed incomes. Unreasonably high and unpredictably high
increases in medical-malpractice Insurance make it difficult to provide
access to doctors in critical areas in high-risk specialties. The lack
of emphasis on efficiency and electronic medical recordkeeping makes it
more difficult for us to avoid costly medical errors that cost us in
lives and in money.
All in all, Gov. Vilsack's priority list seems fair, but there are several other things that were notably missing. Here's a quick top-of-my-head list:
Agricultural Zoning Policy
The
Legislature for years has let this topic sit on the back burner -
mostly because of the Republican majority barring discussions of
agriculture policy from even coming to the floor.
Land Use Policy and DNR Funding
In my
mind, these two things go hand-in-hand, but Iowa is not making the
effort to take a serious look at environmental issues - water quality
comes to mind.
What Does "Iowa Values" Mean?
Gov. Vilsack discussed two things in his speech that seemed to be "assumed":
1) Expansion of gambling is inevitable - and the only way we can bolster economic growth.
2)
The current structure of the "Grow Iowa Values Fund" is
untouchable. Of considerable concern: that the Values Fund
(as it stands) is worth bonding - again, backed by expanding gambling
in the State.
Both
assumptions, truthfully - are wrong. Gambling should not be the
cornerstone of economic development plans in 2004, just as gambling
should not have been the "Silver Bullet" in the 1980s.
The Values Fund also needs to be re-worked to not simply be "corporate
welfare" to lure companies to build in West Des Moines - we need to
encourage local small businesses and projects right here in Iowa, in
city and small towns alike.
The State Budget
The Register pointed out an interesting comment:
"The
immediate concern," said Senate Co-President Jeff Lamberti, a
Republican from Ankeny, "is when you start the session $200 million to
$300 million in the hole, how do you fund what is laid out" in the
governor's speech?
There is
something here to be pointed out - no matter what proposals are on
board, the biggest issue of this Legislature is likely going to be the
budget - and how to grow revenues by that $200 million to $300 million.
As it
stands, the budget is running as slim as tight as it can, given
the priorities of funding education, a Medicaid program that is facing
increased health care costs and more than likely a serious cut in
Federal aid, and public safety initiatives.
Advice To Democrats
Granted,
this is from a two-bit blog writer, but in this session, Democrats
cannot afford to lose sight of important priorities in the spirit of
"get-along-ism". The activists and voters worked to give you a
modicum of power in the Legislature for a reason.
Iowa is
sliding. Important issues are being pandered to, underfunded, or
just plain ignored. We're looking especially to Senate Democrats
to turn their leadership role into a "can do" Legislature that engages
the electorate and speaks to their concerns. This state party
must become the voice of Iowa - of our hopes and a beacon to the
future.
Playing it safe will not lead to a full Democratic majority in 2006 - getting things done for all Iowans will.
Post your thoughts below - and what you would like to see out of this new legislative session.

Howard Dean to Run for DNC Chair
by
Linda Thieman
on Wed 12 Jan 2005 02:08 AM CST
Howard Dean to Run for DNC Chair
by Gov. Howard Dean, M.D.
As I
have traveled across our country, I have talked to thousands of people
who are working for change in their own communities about the power of
politics to make a difference in their own lives and in the lives of
others. Every group I have spoken to, I encouraged them to stand up for
what they believe and to get involved in the electoral process --
because the only sure way to make a difference is to step up and run
for office yourself.
Today, I'm announcing my candidacy for the Chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee.
The
Democratic Party needs a vibrant, forward-thinking, long-term presence
in every single state and we must be willing to contest every race at
every level. We will only win when we show up and fight for the issues
important to all of us.
Another
integral part of our strategy must be cultivating the party's
grassroots. Our long term success depends on all of us taking an active
role in our party and in the political process, by volunteering, going
door to door and taking the Democratic message into every community,
and by organizing at the local level. After all, new ideas and new
leaders don't come from consultants; they come from communities.
As
important as organization is, it alone can no longer win us elections.
Offering a new choice means making Democrats the party of reform --
reforming America's financial situation, reforming our electoral
process, reforming health care, reforming education and putting
morality back in our foreign policy. The Democratic Party will not win
elections or build a lasting majority solely by changing its rhetoric,
nor will we win by adopting the other side's positions. We must say
what we mean -- and mean real change when we say it.
But most
of all, together, we have to rebuild the American community. We will
never succeed by treating our nation as a collection of separate
regions or separate groups. There are no red states or blues states,
only American states. And we must talk to the people in all of these
states as members of one community.
That
word -- 'values' -- has lately become a codeword for appeasement of the
right-wing fringe. But when political calculations make us soften our
opposition to bigotry, or sign on to policies that add to the burden of
ordinary Americans, we have abandoned our true values.
We
cannot let that happen. And we cannot just mouth the words. Our party
must speak plainly and our agenda must clearly reflect the socially
progressive, fiscally responsible values that bring our party -- and
the vast majority of Americans -- together.
All of
this will require both national perspective and local experience. I
know what it's like to lead hands-on at the state level and I know what
it's like to run for national office.
With
your help, this past election season, Democracy for America, already
started creating the kind of organization the Democratic Party can be.
This past election cycle, we endorsed over 100 candidates at all levels
of government -- from school board to U.S. Senate. We contributed
almost a million dollars to nearly 750 candidates around the country
and raised millions of dollars for many more candidates.
Together,
we helped elect a Democratic governor in Montana, a Democratic mayor of
Salt Lake County, Utah and an African American woman to the bench in
Alabama. Fifteen of the candidates we endorsed had never run for office
before -- and won.
I also
have experience building and managing a local party organization. My
career started as Democratic Party chair in Chittenden County, Vermont.
I then ran successful campaigns: for state legislature, lieutenant
governor and then governor. In my 11-year tenure as governor, I
balanced the state's budget every year.
I served
as chair of both the National Governors' Association and the Democratic
Governors' Association (DGA). And as chair of the DGA, I helped recruit
nearly 20 governors that won -- even in states like Alabama, Georgia,
North Carolina, South Carolina and Mississippi.
All of
these experiences have only reaffirmed what I know to be true. There is
only one party that speaks to the hopes and dreams of all Americans. It
is the party you have already given so much to. It is the Democratic
Party.
We can win elections only by standing up for what we believe.
Thank you and I look forward to listening to your concerns in the weeks ahead.
Governor Howard Dean, M.D.
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