Grassley Honored as 'Champion for Children' for Leadership on Juvenile Justice Reform

 

WASHINGTON - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley received the Champion for Children Award by the Campaign for Fair Sentencing of Youth for his leadership on juvenile justice reform. The group commended Grassley for his work to eliminate life without parole sentences for crimes committed as children.

"It's an honor to receive recognition from advocates who truly understand and care about preserving fairness for youth who encounter the criminal justice system.  They are dedicated to giving a voice to this cause and ensuring balance in sentencing for juveniles," Grassley said.

Grassley led months of negotiations to craft the bipartisan Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act, which advanced by a strong 15-5 vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee in October. The bill includes a provision to make federal inmates who committed crimes as juveniles eligible for parole after they've served 20 years of their sentence. The provision is consistent with Supreme Court rulings that juveniles who receive life sentences must have the opportunity for parole.

The bill also allows nonviolent juveniles tried as juveniles in federal court to obtain sealing or expungement of their convictions in certain circumstances and limits the use of solitary confinement for juveniles held in federal prisons.

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Iowan to Testify before Judiciary Committee on International Adoptions

Hearing before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary On

"National Adoption Month: Stories of Success and Meeting the Challenges of International Adoptions"

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Dirksen Senate Office Building, Room 226

10:00 a.m.

Panel I

The Honorable Michelle Bond

Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Consular Affairs

United States Department of State, Washington, DC

Panel II

 

Dr. Rick Wilkerson, Spencer, IA

Ms. Christine Hutchins, Cambridge, VT

Ms. Katie Horton, Alexandria, VA

 Ms. Nicole Craig, Green Bay, WI

 

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Rock Island, IL: Due to circumstances beyond the library's control, the Quad City Jewish Heritage presentation with Dr. Art Pitz at the Rock Island Main Library on Wednesday evening has been cancelled. No rescheduling date is available at this time.

For more the most recent updates on library programs, visit the library's online branch at www.rockislandlibrary.org, call 309-732-READ, or follow the library on Facebook or Twitter.

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Winner to be announced during Nov. 18 reception at Figge

Who: The media is invited to a reception to recognize 6 Scott and Rock Island County high school students who competed in the 2016 Village in Bloom bald eagle sculpture competition sponsored by Alcoa. Photo and interview opportunities will be available.

What: The reception will feature a display of all of the sculptures, light refreshments and a short presentation during which the winner will be announced. The winning sculpture will be molded, cast and finished by Isabel Bloom artisans as a fundraiser for the festival.

When: Wed. Nov. 18, 6-7:30 pm. A short presentation will begin at 6:30 pm.

Where: Figge Art Museum, 225 W. 2nd St., Davenport.

Background: This is the 2nd sculpture competition for Village in Bloom, and the first sponsored by Alcoa. The 4th annual Village in Bloom Arts Festival will be held Sat. May 7, 2016. Founded to honor legendary artists Isabel and John Bloom, it features fine art, performing artists, free activities for children and families, and exhibits of Isabel and John Bloom's artwork.

High School Artists:

Payton Howard, Sherrard High School, 12th grade

Ariel Scott, UTHS, 11th grade

Reilly Moeller, Davenport Central High School, 12th grade

Lauren Amato, Davenport Central High School, 10th grade

Bailee Perion, Rock Island High School,10th grade

Amy VanFossen, Home School (Bettendorf) 12th grade
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By Nathaniel Sillin

When is a bonus not a bonus? When you fail to think about what that extra income will mean to your overall finances.

I don't mean to spoil the fun. Bonuses, particularly if they recognize your great performance during the year, are rewarding in a number of ways beyond money. It means your work is being noticed and you might rise higher in the organization - always a good thing.

However, in many organizations, bonus compensation has developed and transformed to a new entity, very different from how it was a generation ago. So before you book your dream trip to an exotic beachfront resort, take a closer look.

According to human resources and management consulting firm Aon Hewitt, (http://www.aon.com/human-capital-consulting/), some 90 percent of employers have either implemented or are considering something called "variable pay systems" that mean a greater reliance on "incentives, bonuses and cash awards," to reward high-performing employees.

Employers are signing on because it helps them slow the growth of overall payroll, which is the biggest fixed cost in any business. It also offers a way to boost performance among workers at all levels.

What do one-time bonuses or a conversion to a variable-pay system mean for you? Potentially, this could result in changes to your tax situation, the overall value of your employer- and government-based benefits and therefore, your long-term financial picture. Here are some questions to ask:

What kind of bonus is it? Make sure you understand whether a bonus is a one-time award or a shift to an ongoing bonus system. This is a money and a career question. If you are going to be evaluated under new benchmarks and measurements for work you've done every day, you should fully understand these new guidelines and how you can maximize them in your best interest.

Get qualified advice. A one-time bonus or a long-term change in the way you're being compensated is an important financial event. Consider speaking with a qualified financial planner or tax expert about any bonus news you receive and see how they think you should handle the money. Keep in mind that the Internal Revenue Service generally considers bonuses as supplemental wages that can be taxed at a higher rate. Check IRS Publication 15 for more detail. Keep in mind that your salary level - not extra money you get from bonuses or other incentives - provides the basis for calculating your employee benefits and what a lender might offer for mortgages or other credit. In some cases, it might be better to save or invest that bonus than to spend it outright.

Ask questions. Read any paperwork that accompanies your bonus information, write down questions and take them to your employer's designated human resource representative or manager directly.

Be practical, but don't forget the fun. Consider treating your bonus like your paycheck - evaluate what essential needs should to be addressed first and figure out what you can spend for fun.

Make a change if you need to. As more employers adopt variable pay and performance grading systems, consider issues beyond the money. For example, if you are doing work you love, will meeting new performance targets change how you feel about your job? Are you ready to take on the challenges of a workplace where you're graded and evaluated in a different way than you are used to? In some environments, new employee compensation methods can be liberating and financially rewarding; in others, it can make it tougher to stay. See where you stand, and if changing jobs might be worthwhile, consider looking for a better opportunity (http://www.practicalmoneyskills.com/personalfinance/lifeevents/work/landingjob.php).

Bottom line: The way workers are being paid is changing. It's important to understand how one-time or annual bonuses might affect your long-term finances.

The Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Stores of Iowa are launching their thirty-fifth annual Cent-A-Gallon Day for Camp Courageous on Wednesday, November 25, 2015.  One-cent out of every gallon of petroleum product sold on the day before Thanksgiving by participating marketers will go to Camp Courageous.
Camp Courageous is a year-round recreation and respite care facility for individuals with disabilities. Run on donations, over 7,000 are served annually.
On this day, participating Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Stores will give thanks by contributing one-cent from every gallon of petroleum product to Camp Courageous.  "The day before Thanksgiving was picked 35 years ago," according to Charlie Becker, the camp's executive director, "because both Camp Courageous and the Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Stores felt we have an awful lot to be thankful for and it was the perfect time to give thanks for all our blessings."
Posters will be displayed in the windows of participating Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Stores to distinguish them as participants. The Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Stores of Iowa encourage everyone to join with their local petroleum marketer to give thanks this Thanksgiving, by helping Camp Courageous on the day before.
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We are encouraging the media throughout the state to once again get involved with their local petroleum marketer and convenience stores by pumping gas or cleaning windows on Cent-A-Gallon Day. This gives the customer, an advertiser (or potential advertiser), and families in need, a good feeling about your interest in helping over 7,000 individuals with disabilities that come to camp each year. Thank you for your consideration.

Camp Courageous™ is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization run on donations.
PO Box 418, 12007 190th St, Monticello IA 52310-0418 • 319-465-5916
Rock Island County State's Attorney John McGehee will hold a press conference to announce he's running for re-election to a second term at 11:00 a.m. on Monday, November 16, 2015.

McGehee, who was first elected as state's attorney in 2012, will make his announcement to the media and supporters at 11:00 a.m. in the Rock Island County Office Building (2nd floor County Board Conference Room), 1504-3rd Ave, Rock Island.

FORT DODGE, Iowa - Iowa Central laid claim to its second consecutive NJCAA Division I Men's Cross Country Championship Saturday on its home course in Fort Dodge. The Tritons topped the team standings thanks to five runners finishing in the top 20.

Freshman Andrew Ronoh crossed the finish line first for the Tritons with a time of 24 minutes, 11.7 seconds, which was good enough for fourth place overall. Coming in second for Iowa Central was sophomore Cody Baele in ninth place finish with a time of 25:24.0. Fellow sophomore Denzel Fogg followed Baele at 25:38.0, which put him 12th.

Rounding out the top five for the Tritons were Ashenafi Hatte and Alex Jackson. The freshmen duo posted times of 25:50.5 and 25:52.2, respectively, to place 15th and 16th.

Central Arizona freshman Golbert Kigen was the first harrier to finish the men's 8k race. Kigen's time of 23:55.20 is the best finish by an NJCAA runner at the national meet since 2010 when Central Arizona's Henry Leilei posted a time of 23:39.0 to top the leaderboard.

Iowa Western sophomore Slyvester Barus was the national runner-up with a time of 24:01.2. Finishing third overall was freshman Festus Lagat of Gillette (Wyo.) who clocked in at 24:05.1.

Iowa Central's dominating performance vaulted them 20 points in front of Central Arizona in the final team standings. The Tritons posted 56 team points to 86 from the Vaqueros. South Plains (Texas) came in third with 88.

About the NJCAA
Since 1938, the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) has served as the governing body of two-year college athletics, offering athletic and academic opportunities to college students. The NJCAA is the second-largest national intercollegiate athletic organization in the United States with over 500 member schools in 43 states. Each year nearly 60,000 student-athletes compete in one of 28 different sports and the organization sponsors 48 national championship events and seven football bowl games. NJCAA Headquarters has been located in Colorado Springs, Colorado, since 1985. For more information visitwww.njcaa.org.

Gov. Branstad, Lt. Gov. Reynolds issue statement in wake of attacks in Paris

(DES MOINES) -Gov. Branstad and Lt. Gov. Reynolds issued statements and offered condolences to the people of France in the wake of terrrorist attacks yesterday in Paris.

"On behalf of the state of Iowa, I offer my sincerest sympathies to the French people.  Iowa shares many historical connections to France and these despicable attacks are an assault to the freedoms and liberties both our nations so deeply cherish.  My thoughts and prayers are with the families at this very difficult time," said Branstad.

Lt. Gov. Reynolds continued by saying, "Iowans, and Americans across the country are in mourning today.  My heartfelt prayers are with the families who are suffering from these senseless acts of terrorism perpetrated by radical jihadists on peaceful Parisians and felt around the world.  We must stand shoulder to shoulder with France, our closest ally in rooting out this evil from the civilized world."

###

Prepared Floor Statement by Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee

On Paris Attacks and Syrian Refugees

Monday, November 16, 2015

 

Mr. President, I want to express my deepest sympathies to the people of Paris and all those affected by Friday's terrible attacks by Islamic extremists.  As we all know, hundreds of innocent people were killed or injured in the attacks, including at least one American citizen.  No one should face such horrific violence when attending soccer games or concerts, or simply carrying on their daily lives.  On behalf of Iowans, I stand with the people of France.  I offer our support in recovering from and responding to these attacks.

Unfortunately, there is fear that similar attacks could soon take place on U.S. soil.  There is even a video ISIS released earlier today threatening to attack America.  Moreover, if we follow the administration's announced plans to bring in thousands of new Syrian refugees, we could very well be letting in similar extremists who want to harm Americans.  That is because it appears that at least one of the ISIS terrorists in Paris had recently registered as a Syrian refugee in Greece.  Until last Friday, he appeared to all the world to be no different from any of the other thousands of people fleeing the chaos in Syria.  But this could happen here too.

The number one responsibility of the U.S. federal government is to protect the homeland and to secure the country against all threats.  We must do all we can to prevent a Paris-style attack from happening here.

But under the administration's proposed plan, we may not be able to stop such an attack.  We cannot tell who, among the thousands of Syrian refugees the administration wishes to resettle here, are terrorists.  One particularly alarming statement to this effect came from the Director of the FBI, James Comey.  In a hearing before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs on October 8th of this year, Director Comey said, "there are certain gaps . . . in the data available to us" in screening Syrian refugees.  This data, which includes fingerprints, background, or biographic information, is crucial for an adequate screening of potential refugees entering the United States.  Director Comey continued in that hearing saying, "There is risk associated with bringing anybody in from the outside, but especially from a conflict zone like that."

Director Comey has also previously acknowledged that despite a large pool of data on Iraqi refugees, our past program for admitting refugees from Iraq inadvertently allowed into our country "a number of people who were of serious concern, including two that were charged when we found their fingerprints on improvised explosive devices from Iraq."  Our ability to screen individuals from war-torn Syria is extremely limited by comparison.

Several states' governors have recognized this difficulty and have accordingly moved to suspend cooperation with the administration in settling Syrian refugees in their states until these security concerns are addressed.

I share such concerns for protecting our country against terrorists who have clearly infiltrated the Syrian refugee population.  I recently wrote a letter to the leaders of the Senate Appropriations Committee.  In that letter, I asked that taxpayer funds be used effectively to properly and securely screen refugees entering the United States.  I also requested in the letter that, as part of the appropriations legislation before the committee, it require a comprehensive plan on how security will be achieved.  I requested this be a condition for any funding for refugee resettlement for Syrian refugees.

I said then, and emphasize now, that not one dollar should be expended until stringent parameters for vetting these refugees are established.

I would also suggest to President Obama that he reconsider his plans to admit Syrian refugees until the dust settles and we get to the bottom of the Paris attacks.  We need to analyze what happened.  We need to figure out how we can better screen these refugees and ensure that terrorists among them are not evading proper screenings.  We need a time-out before we press forward.

I stress that the United States remains an extremely generous country.  This year alone, we will allow 75,000 refugees fleeing persecution around the world to enter our country.  But we have to set our own citizens' security as our top priority.   I call on Congress to act to ensure that this administration certifies that the most stringent security standards are in place before allowing any more of the Syrian refugees into this country.  It's our responsibility to do everything we can to prevent Friday's attacks from happening here.

I yield the floor.

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American-led global NGO offers creative solutions to greatest humanitarian crisis since WWII
(CHICAGO, IL., 11/13/15) - Syrian Forum USA announced its official launch today, with its first US office opening in Chicago, Illinois. Syrian Forum USA is the US affiliate ofSyrian Forum (SF) which launched in Istanbul, Turkey, four years ago.
SF is a world leading Syrian NGO offering humanitarian aid assistance to displaced Syrians, job training and placement, studies and reports on the Syrian situation, as well as advocacy. It is headquartered in Turkey, the closest logistical satellite to Syria and the country with the largest number of Syrian refugees in dire need of services (two million).It is operating with full-time staff on the ground in Syria; and recently, its European affiliate, SF Austria, launched in Vienna, to assist with the out-pour of refugees into Europe.
The US launch hopes to connect hundreds of thousands of Syrian-Americans and other concerned citizens to SF's established work helping refugees in Syria, Turkey, and Europe. Since 2013, it has ran $40 million worth of development projects, aid and development, affecting 16 million beneficiaries directly and indirectly. SF's aid projects include clean water, sanitation, agriculture, rehabilitation of schools and clinics, and good governance training to local municipalities operating in the absence of a national government. These projects have helped create a multitude of much needed local jobs.
SEE:  http://us.syrianforum.org for more information
SF is headed by Ghassan Hitto as its CEO, formerly the first prime minister of the Syrian interim government of the Syrian Opposition. Mr. Hitto, a longtime Dallas-based community leader and activist, joined by other Syrian-American activists including Chicago's M. Yaser Tabbara, a Chicago human rights lawyer, wished to bring their expertise in building and developing non-profit institutions to develop SF into a sustainable platform for offering solutions to the most dire humanitarian crisis since World War II.
The numbers are staggering. 7.6 million Syrians are internally displaced refugees. 4 million refugees are in five neighboring host countries. Tens of thousands of refugees have recently fled into Europe. 15 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance. 3 million children are permanently out of school. Hundreds of thousands have been killed and more have been injured.
"We cannot continue to offer band-aid solutions to a gaping wound," Mr. Ghassan Hitto, Syrian Forum's CEO said recently at a speech in Washington DC. "Syrian Forum seeks to hand refugees the fishing rod, and not just the fish. We train them on new skills, and help them find new jobs where they can help their families not only for a day or a month, but indefinitely. We are working hard to put children back in rehabilitated or make-shift schools so that after the crisis subsides they would not have been set back by irreparable damage. We are putting a lot of resources into anti-radicalization initiatives to minimize the conflict cycle and prepare for the post-crisis rebuilding. SF houses six independent institutions that administer these and many other services to make a real and lasting difference for Syrians."
Interview Opportunity: Mr. Hitto will be giving a talk at the Islamic Center of Naperville (2844 W Ogden Ave) on Saturday, November 14 at 5:00pm. There will be opportunities for interviews directly before or after the talk. Please coordinate with Noura Almasri, SF-USA Operations Manager at 630 670 0443. Yaser Tabbara, chief strategist and spokesperson for Syrian Forum is also available for immediate on or off camera comment. He can be reached at 312 718 3725
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