PARIS, Dec. 2, 2015 – Climate change is likely to impede progress on reducing undernourishment around the world in the decades ahead, according to a major scientific assessment released today by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on global food security and its implications for the United States. The report, entitled Climate Change, Global Food Security and the U.S. Food System, identifies the risks that climate change poses to global food security and the challenges facing farmers and consumers in adapting to changing climate conditions. Secretary Vilsack released the report during the COP-21 Paris Climate Conference.

In the absence of response measures, climate change is likely to diminish continued progress on global food security through production disruption that lead to constraints on local availability and price increases, interrupted transport conduits, and diminished food safety, among other causes. The risks are greatest for the global poor and in tropical regions.

President Obama has pledged to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in the range of 26-28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025. U.S. agriculture is helping meet this goal, and American farmers, ranchers and foresters have demonstrated their leadership in recognition that their contributions send a strong message to the rest of the world.

"The past six years have been a success story in terms of global food security. Two hundred million fewer people are food insecure today than they were six years ago. The challenge we now face is whether we can maintain and even accelerate this progress despite the threats from climate change," said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. "The report we are releasing today highlights these challenges and offers pathways to avoid the most damaging effects of climate change."

"The report found that climate change is likely to cause disruptions in food production and a decrease in food safety, which in turn leads to local availability limitations and increases in food prices, with these risks greatest for the global poor and in tropical regions," said Dr. John Holdren, Assistant to the President or Science and Technology and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. "Accurately identifying needs and vulnerabilities, and effectively targeting adaptive practices and technologies across the full scope of the food system, are central to improving global food security in a changing climate."

Food systems in the United States benefit from a large area of arable land, high agricultural yields, vast integrated transportation systems, and a high level of overall economic development. However, changes in climate are expected to affect U.S. consumers and producers by altering the type and price of food imports from other regions of the world, as well as by changing export demand, and transportation, processing, storage, infrastructure that enable global trade.

Climate risks to food security increase as the magnitude and rate of climate change increase. Higher emissions and concentrations of greenhouse gases are much more likely to have damaging effects than lower emissions and concentrations. The author team reviewed a range of scenarios. Under scenarios with continued increases in greenhouse gas emissions the number of people at risk of undernourishment would increase by as much as 175 million above today's level by 2080. Scenarios with lower population growth and more robust economic growth coupled with lower greenhouse gas emissions resulted in large reductions in the number of food insecure people compared to today. Even in these scenarios, higher greenhouse gas emissions resulted in more food insecurity than lower emissions.

Effective adaptation can reduce food system vulnerability to climate change and reduce detrimental climate change effects on food security, but socioeconomic conditions can impede the adoption of technically feasible adaptation options. The agricultural sector has a strong record of adapting to changing conditions. There are many opportunities to strengthen agricultural economies and bring more advanced methods of crop production to low-yielding agricultural regions. Other promising adaptations include reducing food waste through innovative packaging, expanding cold storage to lengthen shelf life, and improving transportation infrastructure to move food more rapidly to markets.

On April 23rd, 2015, Agriculture Secretary Vilsack announced USDA's 10 Building Blocks for Climate Smart Agriculture, a comprehensive set of voluntary programs and initiatives that is expected to reduce net emissions and enhance carbon sequestration by over 120 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent by 2025 - about 2 percent of economy-wide emissions. The ten "building blocks" span a range of technologies and practices to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, increase carbon storage, and generate clean renewable energy. USDA also supports global food security through in-country capacity building, basic and applied research, and support for improved market information, statistics and analysis.

'Climate Change, Global Food Security and the U.S. Food System' was prepared as part of the United States National Climate Assessment and part of the President's Climate Action Plan. USDA led the production of the report on behalf of the thirteen Federal Agencies of the U.S. Global Change Research Program. Thirty-one authors and contributors prepared the report, representing nineteen federal, academic, nongovernmental, and intergovernmental institutions in four countries.

Executive Summary, Climate Change, Global Food Security, and the U.S. Food System

Full Report: Climate Change, Global Food Security, and the U.S. Food System

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The LeClaire Chamber of Commerce
is pleased to sponsor
the First Annual Holiday Decorating Contest
to get our town ready for guests of
Christmas in LeClaire!
Deadline is this Friday, December 4 by 5p.m.
Businesses, Store Fronts and Windows will be judged,
and the winner will receive
$200 in LeClaire Chamber Bucks!
Get those Santas, Garlands, Lights
and all else Christmas dusted off and up in time
for Christmas in LeClaire,
and enjoy some extra Holiday Spending Bucks!
The LeClaire Chamber of Commerce will have openings on its Board of Directors as of January 2016. All current members of the Chamber are invited to express an interest in serving on the Board.

 

Terms are two years, and Board Members are required to attend monthly meetings, the 4th Tuesday of each month, at LeClaire City Hall, 8:00a.m.  Candidates do not have to be business owners. An interest in the progress of LeClaire and a willingness to serve and be a part of the direction of our future are all that are necessary.

If you have an interest in serving on the Board, please submit your letter of interest via mail or email no later than December 7, 2015, 5p.m., to:

LeClaire Chamber of Commerce

PO Box 35

LeClaire, IA 52753

Your name will be added to the ballot that will be available online at www.leclairechamber.com as of December 11, 2015, and all current Chamber of Commerce members will be invited to vote for Board Members and Annual Award Winners at that time. All Board Members will be introduced at the Annual Dinner, January 30, 2016, Davenport Country Club.

Thank you for your interest in serving on the LeClaire Chamber Board of Directors.

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa is the lead Republican on a bipartisan investigative report released today that gives rare insight into how a company prices a landmark prescription drug.  In this case, the company anticipated it would face public outcry over a high price for a Hepatitis C drug but went forward anyway.

"This report sheds light on one example of the pricing decisions made by one company with a new prescription medicine that entered the market without competition in high demand," Grassley said.  "This might be an example that received the most attention in some time, but it won't be the last.  I look forward to discussions with my colleagues and the public on the policy questions in the report.  I encourage everyone to read the report for the level of detail into pricing strategy that we don't often see."

Grassley and Sen. Ron Wyden released the results of their 18 month investigation into the pricing and marketing of Gilead Sciences' Hepatitis C drug Sovaldi and its successor, Harvoni.  The investigation draws on internal documents from the company.  These include a chart linking  price points with levels of potential public outcry and an email from a company executive saying the company should "not fold to advocacy pressure" and should "hold our position whatever competitors do or whatever the headlines" on the price.

The drug went on the market for $1,000 per pill, or $84,000 for a single course of treatment, creating significant expense for Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance companies.  Iowa and many other states faced significant pressure on their Medicaid programs over the costs, struggling with wanting to give patients access to a landmark treatment and how much taxpayers can afford.

This is the second time in recent weeks that Grassley has weighed in significantly on high prescription drug costs.  Last month, he and Sen. John McCain pressed the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services to use her full authority to allow the importation of prescription drugs from Canada.

The Sovaldi report, along with more information on the investigation, is available here.  Video of the senators' news conference unveiling the report is available here.

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Davenport, IA: On November 1st, 2015, Quad-City based company Medix Dental received national PACE (Program Approval for Continuing Education) approval from the Academy of General Dentistry (AGD). The AGD is the second largest dental association in the world, behind the American Dental Association (ADA).

Medix Dental, a dental technology company, is one of nine total PACE providers in the state of Iowa. They join a select group of providers committed to offering quality continuing education programs to dentists all over the country. The programs provide dentists with educational credits required for their ongoing state licensure renewals.

"We've long noticed a significant lack of resources and guidance in the dental technology industry," says Tom Terronez, President of Medix Dental. "We look forward to offering dentists the tools they need to make informed decisions about practice technology, data security, and HIPAA compliance. We're truly inspired to provide thoughtful educational programs to help dental professionals navigate the ever-changing technology landscape."

Dentists interested in upcoming CE courses should refer to the AGD website at agd.org, or Medix Dental's website at medixdental.com. New courses will be posted frequently, so check back regularly for CE course options.

About Medix Dental

Medix Dental (medixdental.com) partners with dental practices all over the nation to manage their IT as well as advise strategically on practice technology decisions and compliance. By becoming an extension of their clients' practices, Medix Dental is able to minimize technology issues, increase practice profitability, and improve practice contentment.

Seasonal Performance also Includes The Nutcracker Suite and Hansel and Gretel

St. Ambrose professor Marian Lee will be featured in the Quad City Symphony Orchestra's seasonal Masterworks III:  Winter Fun - Mozart and More performances.  Two performances are scheduled.  One is Saturday, December 5 at 8:00 p.m. at the Adler Theatre in Davenport.  The second performance is Sunday, December 7 at 2:00 p.m. in Centennial Hall in Rock Island on the Augustana College campus.

The performances will feature Lee on piano in Mozart's Piano Concerto #21, the slow movement of which was used as the theme song to the movie Elvira Madigan.  Listeners will also catch the the spirit of the season in Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite, Humperdinck's Prelude to Hansel and Gretel and a potpourri of sleigh rides by Mozart, Prokofiev, Delius, and Anderson.

The Quad City Symphony Orchestra has also extended special invitations to the military and music teachers for the performances.  The Rock Island Arsenal USO and the Federated Music Teachers of the Quad Cities will join under the QCSO's new engagement program Communities in Concert.

Mark Russell Smith, QCSO's Music Director, conducts.

Group and student pricing is available for all performances.

More information and tickets for performances and events are available at www.qcso.org
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Charge into another dimension with an action-packed anime adventure when Fathom Events, ELEVEN ARTS and VIZ Media present an exclusive cinema event featuring "BORUTO: NARUTO THE MOVIE", the exciting new installment of the popular NARUTO series, in select cinemas nationwide on Sunday, December 13 at 12:55 p.m. local time and Monday, December 14 at 7:00 p.m. local time.
The cinematic event, which will be presented with original Japanese dialogue and English subtitles, includes a special introduction from New York Comic Con, featuring opening remarks by Masashi Kishimoto, the film's executive producer and the creator of the bestselling manga (also published by VIZ Media), as well as the famed Japanese voice of Naruto, Junko Takeuchi. The movie's plot centers on Naruto as the Seventh Hokage, as Hidden Leaf Village is planning to host the Chunin Exams to train new shinobi from the village and from their allied villages.


"BORUTO: NARUTO THE MOVIE" will be shown at the following movie theaters in your area on December 13:
Cinemark Davenport 18 with IMAX 3601 E 53Rd St Davenport IA 52807
Tickets are available Dec. 4 at participating theater box offices and online at www.FathomEvents.com.
Dec. 12th 1:30 & 7:30 PM
Dec. 13th 1:30 PM
Adler Theatre - Davenport
Ballet Quad Cities premiere of The Nutcracker is less than 2 weeks away! Tickets are going fast, so make sure you have your tickets before they sell out!
Join us for an Afterglow party on December 12 after the 7:30 performance in the lobby of Hotel Blackhawk to meet the dancers & musicians.

Prepared Statement by Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa

Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee

Hearing on "Puerto Rico's Fiscal Problems:

Examining the Source and Exploring the Solution"

December 1, 2015

 

Good morning. The purpose of today's hearing is to learn more about the origin of Puerto Rico's fiscal problems, and what's needed to help restore fiscal balance and economic growth.  It's my hope that we'll have a valuable discussion based on facts, and informed by our witnesses' expertise.

Puerto Rico's debt crisis didn't happen overnight. It's been years in the making. Fundamentally, the starting point for any solution is to first identify the problem and understand its size and scope.  Unfortunately, confusion reigns as Puerto Rico has failed to provide audited financial statements for the past two years.

What we do know is that for many years as Puerto Rico's economy suffered, debt and spending increased to the point where the Island lost investor confidence. Puerto Rico has defaulted on certain debt obligations, lost access to the normal markets, and now faces a liquidity crisis.  The Governor and others have stated that the Island's current debt "is not payable."

Puerto Rico's economy has suffered for decades in part because of barriers to job creation and labor force participation. The federal minimum wage mandate, generous entitlement programs, bureaucratic red tape, and a bloated public sector have stifled business activity. This has a direct impact on Puerto Rico's residents, who are our fellow U.S. citizens. High unemployment rates have resulted in a declining population as Puerto Ricans have left the Island in search of jobs. A diminished population means lower tax revenues to fund government spending.

Despite these long-term economic challenges, for many years Puerto Rico maintained a balanced budget and high credit ratings on its debt. What, then, led to the fiscal crisis the Island faces today? While the economic challenges may be debatable, it's clear that since 2000, Puerto Rico's public debt has risen from 60 percent of GDP to now more than 100 percent. This is an indication of serious fiscal mismanagement.

Thanks to the highly attractive triple-tax exempt status of its bonds, it was easier for Puerto Rico to borrow and paper over deficits, rather than address financial shortcomings and economic realities in order to balance its budget.  The consequence of this decision is an accumulation of approximately $72 billion of debt, arising from roughly 17 different debt issuers.  This includes more than $18 billion in constitutionally protected general obligation debt.  And, also around $24 billion in debt issued by public corporations, like the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA).

Moreover, because of its triple-tax exempt status, a wide array of investors own Puerto Rican bonds. According to Bloomberg, Puerto Ricans alone hold $20 billion of the debt.  And nearly 60 percent of Puerto Rico's debt is held largely in the individual retirement accounts and 401(k)'s of regular folks throughout the U.S.  I'm told that approximately 16,000 Iowans are invested in funds that hold PREPA bonds. These folks aren't vultures. They're middle-class Americans who probably knew little about Puerto Rico's finances. They simply invested in one of many tax-exempt municipal bond fund's containing Puerto Rico's bonds.

Notwithstanding all of this, we're told that Puerto Rico's debt needs to be restructured in order to address its fiscal challenges.  Puerto Rico, though, lacks access to an orderly debt restructuring mechanism, like Chapter 9 of the bankruptcy code. Thus, Congress has been called upon to extend Chapter 9 to Puerto Rico's public corporations. Or to create a broad new bankruptcy regime, dubbed "Super Chapter 9," to restructure all debt, including the Island's constitutionally guaranteed general obligation bonds. According to a recent New York Times article, "advisers to the island's government have been urging the governor to default on the debt, saying that only a catastrophe would move Congress - especially Republicans - to help." I hope the Governor will tell us whether this is accurate. It would trouble me greatly if true.

This isn't the first time Congress has been asked to help address a situation like Puerto Rico now faces. In the past, we've provided help in a bipartisan way. During the 1990s, the District of Columbia faced its own fiscal crisis, as it was insolvent and unable to pay its bills. Congress worked with District and Clinton Administration officials to pass the District of Columbia Financial Responsibility and Management Assistance Act in 1995.  We'll hear more about the response to that crisis and others from our witnesses today.  I'll note that Congress considered extending Chapter 9 to the District of Columbia, but decided that there was "little practical significance or advantage to such a legislative gesture."  As the committee report to the bill stated, "the issues facing the District of Columbia . . . require political and structural, as well as financial remediation."

One of the reasons extending Chapter 9 to the District was rejected is because it's designed primarily to restructure and decrease municipal debt. The idea being that relief from creditors is what's needed in order to gain a fresh start. But Chapter 9 cannot bring about financial rehabilitation. It does not increase economic growth or alter the fundamental fiscal trajectory.  In short, Chapter 9 cannot address the root causes of fiscal problems, but instead pushes them off to future generations.

As for "Super Chapter 9," this is something that no State can do, and has been described as "unprecedented in the American context."  It would be a bad idea, with negative consequences, for Congress to permit Puerto Rico to walk away from its constitutional debt obligations.  Unlike other bonds, constitutional debt, whether issued by Puerto Rico or a State, has that government's full faith and credit commitment to repay the debt.

Let's not forget that Puerto Rico issued its bonds with the knowledge that Chapter 9 bankruptcy wasn't an option in the event of a default.  Is it fair to retroactively change the rules at the expense of these investors, if other options exist for addressing Puerto Rico's debt problems?  At the very least, this is an idea that should be at the end of the line, not the front.

The challenges Puerto Rico faces are great and require more than just short-term solutions that don't provide long-term relief. The debt is a symptom of a bigger problem.  Merely extending debt restructuring authority, absent tools to address the fundamental causes of the fiscal problem, is not a long-term solution that will help Puerto Rico.

Puerto Rico has struggled to make the difficult decisions to cut spending and balance its budget. If Congress is to act, then we must ensure that Puerto Rico has the tools to help itself out of this situation. Today's hearing can help us identify what may, or may not, need to be looked at for Puerto Rico to get its balance sheet back in order.

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WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa today released a report from his oversight and investigative staff analyzing 18 federal agencies' responses to his inquiries on paid administrative leave and endorsed the report's recommendations for reining in this largely unproductive, expensive practice.

"Everything I've seen shows a Wild West environment among agencies on paid administrative leave," Grassley said.  "According to this report, and others related to it, every agency uses this leave differently.  Some agencies use it too extensively, and the taxpayers get short-changed.  The statutory and regulatory vacuum on the use of paid leave has contributed to this problem.  As the report recommends, Congress should step in with legislation to fill the void. The legislation would make clear when paid administrative leave is allowable and when employees should be on the job instead.  This kind of leave shouldn't be a crutch for management to avoid making tough personnel decisions or a club for wrongdoers to use against whistleblowers."

The report analyzes responses from 18 agencies to an inquiry from Grassley and Rep. Darrell Issa in October 2014.  The report finds that agencies use the paid leave designation broadly, "for everything from negotiating collective bargaining agreements to returning from active military duty to investigating allegations of employee misconduct."  This is because agencies' policies on when this type of leave can be used and the appropriate length of time for paid leave vary widely.

Open-ended leave is expensive and unproductive for taxpayers, the report finds.   Seventeen agencies spent almost $80.6 million to place employees on paid administrative leave for one month or more in fiscal year 2014.  That amount might be lower than the reality due to the imprecise calculations some agencies provided.

Although requested by Grassley in his inquiry letters, agencies did not always provide sufficient justification for placing employees on administrative leave for more than one year, and their justifications varied widely.  When reasons were provided, they were vague, such as "investigations for misconduct."  Agencies did not explain why these investigations took so long.

The report finds that the use of paid administrative leave can be troubling for employees, such as whistleblowers, whose managers might use leave as retaliation.  Employees cannot appeal their administrative leave status.

The report concludes, "Based on the explanations and evidence received in the course of this inquiry, agencies are able to place an employee on administrative leave simply to avoid addressing an uncomfortable?or potentially even unjustifiable?personnel action. Maintaining this status quo serves neither the taxpayer nor the employee. Its costs are high, and its benefits dubious. Under current practice, employees who did commit misconduct can avoid accountability on a taxpayer-funded vacation, but employees unjustly accused are deprived of professional development and, more importantly, legal recourse, because employees in administrative leave status have no right to appeal its use."

The report recommends statutory changes and other actions to: authorize and define administrative leave in statute; encourage agencies to use options other than paid administrative leave; limit paid administrative leave to specific purposes and short-term duration; provide safeguards against the retaliatory use of administrative leave; preserve non-duty pay status as authorized by law and in the interests of the agency; ensure tracking and recording of administrative leave; and continue and strengthen congressional oversight over administrative leave.

Grassley is working on bipartisan legislation to implement the recommendations.  He is working with the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, with jurisdiction over leave policy, to develop and advance the legislation.

The report is available here.  The appendices are available here, here and here.

 

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