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View Article  IOWA COUNTIES & THE DNR MASTER MATRIX by Molly Regan
IOWA COUNTIES & THE DNR MASTER MATRIX

by Molly Regan

Good news for those of us in the IOWA counties that choose to retain the Department Of Natural Resources’ (DNR) MASTER MATRIX system.  This Master Matrix is “a scoring system that can be used to evaluate the siting of permitted confinement feeding operations” according to information at www.iowadnr.com.  This questionnaire is for animal confinement owners as well as smaller farmers who raise a certain number of cattle, hogs, or chickens.  They need to indicate how creating or expanding their business will impact the surrounding COMMUNITY, THE WATER, AND THE AIR.

THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS in each IOWA county has until January 31st, 2005, to choose whether or not to continue (or in some cases take up) the requirement that the Master Matrix be used for building permits.  For example, if a company wants to build a 30,000 chicken production facility in Scott County (whose Board Of Supervisors APPROVED for the THIRD YEAR in a row the Master Matrix), it would need to fill it out in that county.  

One of the questions on the Master Matrix is as follows: “ Groundwater monitoring wells installed near manure storage structure, and applicant agrees to provide data to the department.”  If these monitoring wells will indeed be in place, then a score of 15 can be divided under the Air, the Water, and/or the Community sections.  44 questions with a total of 880 possible points are on the questionnaire.  At least one half of the total must be reached for approval.

Use of this system is of the utmost importance if counties want to have any say as to whether or not confined animal feeding operations (CAFO’s) operate or upgrade within their boundaries.  The DNR still has the final say, but at least with this Master Matrix, each county can still have input on new or expanding operations.   For the smaller farmer, some may have to fill out the paperwork if their expansion goes beyond a certain number of animal units.

Of utmost concern is AIR POLLUTION caused by these facilities.  Even a 500-head hog operation can create much HYDROGEN SULFIDE and AMONIA.  Both of these, if too concentrated, can cause damage to humans.  According to DR. KAY KIMBALL in his (yes, it is a man) book ‘CHEMICAL BRAIN INJURY,’ too much exposure to these toxins can cause memory loss, imbalance, reproductive problems, unconsciousness, and even death.  Dr. Kimball has researched this area for over 20 years, and his book explains in depth the consequences of living near or working in an environment which produces harmful bi-products.

Check with your local Board of Supervisors to see if your county is part of the process.  Encourage them to do so. We all need to be involved with this, even if you live in an urban area.  Three years ago, I spoke in front of the Clinton & Scott Counties Boards, and I believe it helped encourage them to each go with the Matrix.  

For more information go to: www.iowadnr.com or contact your local Board of Supervisors…..And don’t forget: CPR/Conserve, Participate, Recycle

View Article  The Counterpoint: Everyone's Vote Must Count (Even Hyman's)

 

Everyone's Vote Must Count (Even Hyman's)

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

On a hot summer night in 1964 outside of Philadelphia, Mississippi, three young men died defending Americans’ right to vote. They weren’t soldiers. They were three civil rights workers, two white and one black, who were helping register African Americans to vote. They were brutally gunned down by members of the KKK.

In his latest commentary, Mark Hyman discusses voter disenfranchisement. Choosing to focus solely on the disenfranchisement of overseas members of the military, he claims cryptically that many charges of voter disenfranchisement in recent elections are “urban legends.” (Has anyone suggested alligators living in city sewers are chomping up butterfly ballots?)

Hyman is right on two important counts: yes, there have been problems with absentee ballots from service members overseas being counted in time, and yes, there needs to be something done about it (although electronic balloting, Hyman’s suggested solution, without a paper trail is a recipe for disaster).

But Hyman leaves out a few important facts. For one, government studies have shown that the problems in collecting military ballots come largely from one source: the Pentagon itself, which has been lax in instituting changes in mail delivery that would help solve the problem. Because Hyman doesn’t want to blame the military brass for problems of enlistee disenfranchisement, he doesn’t mention this.

Furthermore, as shameful as it is that not all members of the military have had their votes counted, it’s not the sole or even primary problem when taking on the issue of voter disenfranchisement. Despite his assertion that other charges of disenfranchisement are urban legends (we’re guessing he’s referring to claims of the disenfranchisement of African Americans—call it a hunch), there’s evidence aplenty that voter disenfranchisement is widespread in the civilian world as well.

And one doesn’t need to take the word of politically motivated pundits or interest groups. The government itself has conducted studies on disenfranchisement in the 2000 election, and found unequivocal evidence that it happened, and that it happened primarily to the working poor and minorities. A congressional investigation found that across the nation, districts with lower household incomes and/or high minority populations had disproportionately high numbers of uncounted ballots compared to wealthier, whiter districts.

The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights found that in Florida, a wildly disproportionate number of discounted ballots were cast by African Americans. Moreover, there was substantial evidence that the Florida state government illegally struck the names of thousands of black voters from the rolls. This is particularly chilling; military disenfranchisement seems to be the product of simple mismanagement of the Pentagon itself, while the events in Florida (given that the governor and secretary of state in Florida had, to say the very least, a vested interest in the outcome of the vote) suggest the possibility of purposeful voter suppression.

For democracy to work, we need to know free and open elections, the lynchpin of that democracy, are carried out properly. Every vote needs to count, from the National Guard member serving in Iraq to the retired nurse living in Broward County, Florida. There’s no room in a democracy for claims that it’s more important to count some people’s votes than it is to count those of others.

This is a particularly important value to reassert now. Only last week, a former KKK member was charged with murdering of those three young civil rights workers on that dark Mississippi road more than 40 years ago. As surely as the soldiers who hit Omaha Beach fought and died to protect democratic freedoms, so did Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner, and James Chaney. We owe it to everyone who has given their lives to protect our freedoms to make sure everyone’s vote is counted.

And that’s The Counterpoint.


From Iowa Rapid Response:  You can help fight media conglomerate Sinclair Broadcasting right here in  Iowa by contacting the following Iowa Sinclair Affiliates.  Let them know you want fair and balanced news and commentary.

Cedar Rapids, Waterloo, Dubuque:  KGAN Channel 2
  e-mail address:  kgan@kgan.com
  Ph.  800-642-6140 toll free or 319-395-9060

Ames, Des Moines:  KDSM Fox 17
  e-mail address:  comments@kdsm17.com
  Ph: 515-287-1717 or FAX:  515-287-0064

If you live in these broadcast areas, watch Mark Hyman's "The Point" tonight at the end of the 10:00 news.  Then visit http://www.sinclairaction.com/


Mark Hyman

Resources:

Click here for a list of KGAN Advertisers

If you live in the central Iowa broadcast area, watch  your nightly KDSM newscast for advertisers, then  click here to post

For a complete list of Iowa newspapers, click here .

For a list of Sinclair owned and/or operated stations click here.

If you’re looking for some ideas for responding to “The Point,” visit "The Counterpoint"


Click here to sign up for action alerts from  RapidResponse - Iowa.

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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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*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


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