Earlier this year, the American Red Cross and its partners launched an ambitious campaign that aims to reduce home fire deaths and injuries by 25 percent over the next 5 years. Every day, our staff and volunteers respond to home fires and other emergencies approximately every 8 minutes, so we see the devastation that home fires can cause - and the difference we can make by working together to prevent them.

It's not often that you get to see the tangible difference your support is making. That's why I wanted to share a story with you. It's the story of multiple lives saved because of a smoke alarm installed as part of our home fire campaign. A smoke alarm that was installed because of the support of people like you.

Glen's story

Glen Riley of New Orleans was jolted awake at 3:00 a.m. by the sound of a smoke alarm. A fire had broken out in his three-unit building and was silently spreading up the walls.

Glen woke up his family and neighbors immediately. The building was ultimately destroyed by the fire, but everyone in the building - including a two-month-old baby - made it out safely.

The smoke alarm that saved eleven lives that morning had been installed just months before as part of the American Red Cross Home Fire Campaign, in partnership with the New Orleans Fire Department. Since the campaign began, the Red Cross and its partners have installed smoke alarms in almost 2,000 cities and towns across all 50 states.

With the help of supporters like you, we can dramatically reduce the number of deaths and injuries by home fires. What we're doing together - educating communities on preventing home fires, installing lifesaving smoke alarms and helping fire victims pick up the pieces and get back on their feet - is making a difference.

The Red Cross Home Fire Campaign is only possible because of people like you. Support Red Cross Disaster Relief with a gift of any size and you could help save a life today.

Bettendorf, Iowa - Thanks to the fundraising efforts of the Rotary Clubs of Bettendorf, Davenport and Iowa Quad-Cities, 966 Iowa Quad-City school children in families with limited means will have warm coats this winter.

The clubs received generous donations from their own members and outside donors, and leveraged those donations with matching funds from the Rotary District 6000 (Southern Iowa) annual Warm Coat Drive.

The coats will arrive by truck at 9 a.m. Saturday (Oct. 17) at the Mississippi Bend Area Education Agency, 729 21st St., Bettendorf. They will be distributed to children as part of the AEA's David E. Lane Coats for Kids Program.

"This program is especially meaningful for Bettendorf Rotarians," said Bettendorf Rotary President Kevin Kraft. "This is not a budgeted item, so every year we simply ask our members to reach into their pockets and donate what they can. To work with other Rotarians to provide nearly 1,000 new coats to kids in our community is gratifying beyond words."

"The Coats for Kids project has been such a rewarding experience for the Davenport Rotary. There's something special about being able to put a warm coat on a child in need," says Rotary Club of Davenport President Tom Bowman.  "We also appreciate the opportunity to partner with the other area Rotary groups to extend the reach of the program throughout the Iowa Quad Cities."

Operation Warm Coat provides brand new winter coats to children in need, giving them a newfound freedom and confidence to play, learn and do more. To date, Operation Warm Coat has given winter coats to more than 1.7 million children throughout America and beyond.

Rotary brings together a global network of volunteer leaders dedicated to tackling the world's most pressing humanitarian challenges. Rotary connects 1.2 million members of more than 34,000 Rotary clubs in more than 200 countries and geographical areas. Their work improves lives at both the local and international levels, from helping families in need in their own communities to working toward a polio-free world. 

The Bettendorf Rotary Club was chartered on May 22, 1957, and has more than 100 members fulfilling the Rotary mission.  Rotary Club of Davenport is the oldest service club in the Quad Cities, chartered on November 11, 1911.  The Rotary Clubs of Bettendorf and Davenport co-sponsored the Iowa Quad Cities club in 1985.  All three clubs work to fulfill the mission of "Service Above Self" in a variety of local, regional, national and international ­community volunteer projects.

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DES MOINES, IA (10/15/2015)(readMedia)-- State Treasurer Michael L. Fitzgerald announced that, as a result of Tuesday's online auction, $100 million will be deposited in 42 banks across the state. The state will receive an average rate of return of 0.31% on these six-month certificates of deposit. "This was our last auction for 2015," Fitzgerald said. "I am looking forward to what next year will bring!"

Fitzgerald created the Invest in Iowa program in 1983 as a way to deposit state funds in Iowa financial institutions. The treasurer's office uses an auction format offering state deposits to Iowa banks six times a year, which allows the state to earn a competitive return on the funds while ensuring local banks have the money they need to keep the economy moving. The financial institutions hold the funds as CDs and use the money to make loans. Currently, the Invest in Iowa program has over $332 million invested in Iowa banks.

"We have seen a growing demand for this program over the last few years," Fitzgerald stated. "This allows us to increase the amount of funds available for bidding. I am glad this program continues to help facilitate lending around the state."

Invest in Iowa quarterly auctions are held on the second Tuesday of January, April, July and October. In response to growing interest in this program, two auctions offering one-year term CDs are also held throughout the year. The next auction is scheduled for January 12, 2016 at 10 a.m and will offer six-month term CDs. Each auction has an established minimum interest rate and a minimum bid. To learn more about the Invest in Iowa program, visit IowaTreasurer.gov, select "Invest in Iowa" under the "For Businesses" tab or contact the treasurer's office at 515-281-5368.

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Thursday, November 12
6PM-7PM
Black Hawk College, Moline

State legislators will be making important decisions about the future of energy in Illinois this year.  The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently made history by announcing that for the first time, it will require carbon to be treated as a pollutant.  This gives Illinois the chance to move towards a cleaner, more reliable, and affordable energy economy while creating thousands of jobs.  There are several proposals in Springfield that address energy issues that are under consideration this year and next.

Experts from several environmental organizations will give information on the Clean Power Plan and on the proposed Illinois Clean Jobs bill.  Representative Mike Smiddy will attend and provide his insight into overall energy issues in Springfield.

RSVP at ilenviro.org/qcforum or iec@ilenviro.org.  Call 217-544-5954 with any questions you may have.

October 12, 2015

 

GRANTED:

 

NUMBER

COUNTY

CASE NAME

14-0067

Johnson

State v. Jackson

14-0256

Polk

State v. Tyler

14-0656

Marshall

State v. Prusha

14-0831

Hancock

State v. Lamoreux

14-1112

Polk

State v. Ary

14-1557

Warren

McFadden v. Dep't of Transp.

14-2042

Pottawattamie

State v. Lewis

15-0030

Scott

State v. Hill

 

DENIED:

 

NUMBER

COUNTY

CASE NAME

 


12-2301

Black Hawk

Holmes v. State

13-0633

Polk

Colbert v. State

13-1171

Scott

Grice v. State

13-1360

Scott

Davis v. State

13-1413

Polk

Hamilton v. State

13-1733

Polk

Jenson v. Cummins Filtration

13-1847

Polk

Ramirez v. State

13-1923

Scott

Reed v. Schaeffer

13-1989

Washington

State v. Sanchez

13-2042

Johnson

Lindsey v. State

14-0108

Marshall

State v. Leiva

14-0187

Johnson

State v. Avalos-Covarrubias

14-0248

Mahaska

State v. Bryant

14-0307

Black Hawk

Anderson v. State

14-0321

Warren

Johnston v. State

14-0366

Black Hawk

State v. Cram

14-0394

Polk

State v. Harris

14-0404

Polk

Watkins v. State

14-0424

Black Hawk

State v. Rodriguez

14-0458

Linn

State v. Lucas

14-0526

Linn

State v. Breen

14-0534

Tama

State v. VerBeek

14-0565

Polk

JBS Swift & Co. v. Hedberg

14-0598

Clinton

State v. Boutwell

14-0745

Polk

State v. Moredock

14-0801

Chickasaw

Parson v. Parson

14-0818

Black Hawk

Thomas v. State

14-0822

Polk

State v. Hupp

14-0864

Buchanan

State v. Clay

14-0867

Woodbury

McGuire v. State

14-0898

Pottawattamie

Shea v. Lorenz

14-0900

Polk

Bonilla v. State

14-0905

Scott

State v. Bernal

14-0907

Scott

State v. Fleming

14-0923

Des Moines

Washington v. State

14-0945

Muscatine

State v. Walker

14-0955

Black Hawk

Glasper v. State

14-0976

Lyon

State v. Hoppe

14-1081

Dubuque

Konzen v. Goedert

14-1082

Allamakee

City of Postville v. Upper Explorerland Reg'l

14-1172

Marshall

State v. Ramirez

14-1177

Linn

Chiavetta v. State

14-1190

Buena Vista

State v. Marble

14-1212

Palo Alto

Fay v. State

14-1244

Muscatine

State v. Tovar

14-1248

Black Hawk

State v. Cherry

14-1323

Cerro Gordo

State v. Simmer

14-1334

Wapello

Harryman v. State

14-1360

Warren

State v. Youngs

14-1400

Polk

Olofson v. State

14-1433

Appanoose

In re Guardianship/Conservatorship of Melsa

14-1456

Marshall

State v. Hernandez

14-1476

Polk

State v. Mayfield

14-1496

Floyd

State v. Benedict

14-1521

Hardin

In re Det. of Waters

14-1532

Scott

Bates v. State

14-1565

Bremer

State v. Cole

14-1581

Scott

State v. Schildberg

14-1582

Scott

State v. Lam

14-1584

Polk

McHose v. Prop. Assessment Appeal Bd.

14-1609

Black Hawk

State v. Menton

14-1610

Woodbury

State v. Marshall-Limoges

14-1675

Black Hawk

State v. Schnieders

14-1691

Poweshiek

In re G.B. & A.B.

14-1697

Dickinson

Smith v. Smith

14-1772

Buena Vista

In re Marriage of Brus

14-1774

Woodbury

State v. Yates

14-1867

Jefferson

Walbaum v. Iowa Dep't of Revenue

14-2049

Clinton

In re Marriage of McDermott

14-2068

Warren

In re K.P.

14-2078

Polk

Menard, Inc. v. Simmer

14-2140

Black Hawk

State v. Dahl

15-0016

Monona

In re M.M.

15-0035

Scott

In re Marriage of Shovar

15-0061

Story

In re Marriage of Mersman

15-0070

Pottawattamie

State v. Vance

15-0879

Benton

In re K.S. and K.S.

15-0964

Dubuque

In re K.H. and A.H.

15-1096

Polk

In re J.R. and N.B.

15-1156

Polk

In re M.M.

 


 

UNDER CONSIDERATION BY THE COURT:

NUMBER

COUNTY

CASE NAME

 


13-0739

Johnson

State v. Marshall

13-0997

Black Hawk

Willock v. State

13-1259

Marshall

State v. McDowell

13-1269

Polk

State v. Dowell

13-1998

Polk

State v. Hood

13-2004

Polk

State v. Pierce

13-2033

Linn

State v. Parmer

14-0124

Story

State v. Saxton

14-0357

Scott

In re J.C.

14-0409

Linn

King v. State

14-0467

Polk

Reinsbach v. Great Lakes Coop.

14-0640

Polk

Ramirez Trujillo v. Quality Egg

14-0727

Davis

State v. Hartman

14-0764

Cherokee

Conklin v. State

14-0773

Black Hawk

State v. Lindsey

14-0889

Muscatine

State v. Alvarado

14-1004

Muscatine

Enriquez v. State

14-1021

Polk

State v. Frencher

14-1076

Black Hawk

State v. Goddard

14-1215

Winneshiek

Bruening Rock Prods. v. Hawkeye Int'l Trusts

14-1259

Polk

Smoker v. Bd. of Medicine

14-1273

Polk

White v. State

14-1341

Clayton

In re Estate of Weber

14-1405

Scott

State v. Cole

14-1425

Scott

State v. Romilus

14-1599

Scott

State v. Hayes

14-1605

Polk

Iowa Individual Health & State Univ. of Iowa

14-1715

Emmet

State v. Kuhlemeier

14-1765

Sioux

Thompson v. ATI Prods.

14-1808

Mitchell

Spitz v. Dist. Ct.

Featuring Dr. Doug McCollum


DAVENPORT, IA - OCTOBER  2015 -Gilda's Club is hosting Dr. Doug McCollum in a discussion on Constructive Coping Skills Following Diagnosis on Thursday, October 22nd from 6:00 - 8:00 pm.


Individuals differ in how they respond to hearing they have cancer. Doug will summarize how many people respond in negative ways. The resiliency model and what research has found to be the most productive emotional, cognitive, and behavioral ways of coping with cancer will be discussed.

A nearly 3-year cancer survivor, Doug volunteers at Gilda's Club. He had a 42-year career as a psychologist with a PhD from the U of Iowa.

For more details and to register, please call Gilda's Club at 563-326-7504 or email kelly@gildasclubqc.org.


About Gilda's Club

Free of charge, Gilda's Club Quad Cities provides support, education and hope to all people affected by cancer.  As a Cancer Support Community affiliate, we are part of the largest employer of psychosocial oncology mental health professionals in the United States.  Our global network brings the highest quality cancer support to the millions of people touched by cancer.


# # #

The Mayo Clinic reports that your oral health can offer clues about your overall health. This November, National Dental Hygiene Month, get to know your mouth and understand the connection between good oral hygiene and being healthy overall. Contact your dentist as soon as oral problems arise. TRICARE's dental coverage is separate from its medical coverage and your enrollment eligibility determines which dental program you can have.

Read the full article here.

Davenport, Oct. 15, 2015 – People should continue to jump in quickly to give CPR, using breaths if they've been trained in CPR and employing mobile technology to speed up the rescue of cardiac arrest victims, according to the American Heart Association's 2015 Guidelines Update for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care (ECC).

The latest American Heart Association guidelines, published today in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, highlight how quick action, proper training, use of technology and coordinated efforts can increase survival from cardiac arrest.  A leading cause of death in the United States, cardiac arrest is caused when the heart suddenly stops, usually due to an electrical malfunction in the heart that causes an irregular heartbeat and disrupts blood flow through the body. Survival depends on immediate CPR and other actions starting with bystanders. That's why the American Heart Association has been training people in CPR, first aid and advanced life support all around the world.

More than 326,000 people experience cardiac arrest outside of a hospital each year and about 90 percent of them die, often because bystanders don't know how to start CPR or are afraid they'll do something wrong. The 2015 guidelines say high-quality CPR training for both bystanders and healthcare providers will help them feel more confident to act and provide better CPR to cardiac arrest victims. This guidelines update, which is intended to evolve CPR training, also recommends that all bystanders should act quickly and use mobile phones to alert dispatchers, with the ultimate goal of having immediate CPR given to all victims of cardiac arrest.

The AHA guidelines, which are based off the latest resuscitation research, have been published since 1966 to provide science-based recommendations for treating cardiovascular emergencies - particularly cardiac arrest in adults, children, infants and newborns. This 2015 update confirms known CPR recommendations with several quality enhancements to help save even more lives, including a range for the rate and depth of chest compressions during CPR. The last update to the guidelines was in 2010.

Key points from the 2015 Guidelines Update provides bystanders, dispatchers and communities with practical guidance to improve the effectiveness of their teamwork:

·         Untrained bystanders should still call 911 and provide Hands-Only CPR, or CPR without breaths, pushing hard and fast in the center of the chest to the rate of 100-120 compressions per minute. However, if the bystander is trained in CPR and can perform breaths, he or she should add breaths in a 30:2 compressions-to-breaths ratio.

·         Bystanders should use mobile phones to immediately call 911, placing the phones on speaker, so the dispatcher can help bystanders check for breathing, get the precise location and provide instructions for performing CPR.

·         Dispatchers should be trained to help bystanders check for breathing and recognize cardiac arrest. Dispatchers should also be aware that brief generalized seizures may be an early sign of cardiac arrest.

·         Mobile dispatch systems that notify potential rescuers of a nearby presumed cardiac arrest can improve the rate of bystander CPR and shorten the time to first chest compressions.  Communities may want to consider this service to improve the chain of survival.

Improving Healthcare's Systems of Care

Inside hospitals, CPR training is foundational to the lifesaving care healthcare systems provide, considering about 200,000 cardiac arrests occur in hospitals annually. Yet, research shows resuscitation skills can decline within a few months - far before the two-year current evaluation standard. Frequent training ensures hospitals are continuously evaluating how to deliver patients the highest quality of emergency cardiovascular care.

"The 2015 update calls for integrated systems of care that participate in continuous quality improvement and that provide a common framework for both community and healthcare-based resuscitation systems," said Clifton Callaway, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the AHA's Emergency Cardiovascular Care committee and professor of emergency medicine at the University of Pittsburgh. "We must create a culture of action that benefits the entire community in which it operates, inside and outside the hospital setting."

In addition to a strengthened systems of care, the guidelines recommendations for healthcare professionals are:

·         Upper limits of recommended heart rate and compression depth have been added, based on new data suggesting that excessive compression rate and depth are less effective. Rescuers should perform chest compressions at a rate of 100 to 120 per minute and to a depth of at least 2 inches, avoiding excessive depths greater than 2.4 inches.

·         Targeted temperature management helps prevent brain degradation during post-cardiac arrest care. New evidence shows a wider range of temperatures are acceptable. Providers should select a temperature between 32-36 degrees Celsius and maintain it for at least 24 hours.

·         Healthcare providers are encouraged to simultaneously perform steps, like checking for breathing and pulse, in an effort to reduce the time to first chest compression.

·         There is insufficient evidence to routinely intubate newborns with poor breathing and muscle tone who have been born with meconium, infants' first feces, in their amniotic fluid.  Instead, the new recommendation is to begin CPR under a radiant warmer to get oxygen to the infant faster

For almost 50 years, the American Heart Association's CPR and ECC guidelines have been used to train millions in CPR, first aid and advanced cardiovascular care around the world. These guidelines are based on an international evaluation process that involved hundreds of resuscitation scientists and experts worldwide who evaluated thousands of peer-reviewed publications.

This year's update provides recommendations on the data where new evidence requires a systematic review, in part, due to a network of trainers who regularly implement the CPR and ECC guidelines and rely on the science to inform the most effective care.  To further make the guidelines practical and adaptable to many audiences, the AHA is providing this year's update in three forms: the full Guidelines Update, a Guidelines Highlights document summarizing key points, and a mobile-friendly, searchable website compendium of all the association's scientific findings. Learn more at 2015ECCguidelines.heart.org.

About the American Heart Association

The American Heart Association is devoted to saving people from cardiovascular disease and stroke - America's leading killers. We team with millions of volunteers to fund innovative research, fight for stronger public health policies, and provide lifesaving tools and information to prevent and treat these diseases. The Dallas-based association is the nation's oldest and largest voluntary organization dedicated to fighting heart disease and stroke. A leader in resuscitation science, the organization trains over 17 million people per year in CPR, first aid and advanced cardiovascular care around the world through programs and awareness campaigns. To learn more or join us, call 1-800-AHA-USA1 or any of our offices around the country, or visit heart.org.

Community leaders will gather on October 22nd to discuss the greater Quad City area's capacity to accommodate a population in which older adults are the new majority.

This town hall event, "Maturity Re-Imagined", will be led by Alternatives (for the Older Adult) and will take place at Watch Tower Lodge in Rock Island, IL from 11:30-3:30 p.m.

Alternatives' CEO, Kathy Weiman notes, "There is a large demographic shift occurring.  We will begin to see baby boomers move from a focus on work life to a focus on community life.  Together, we hope to explore the wide range of needs, demands, products and services that will emerge as a result of the longevity revolution."

Attendees will discuss seven priorities as we age; including finances, purpose, health, family, work, leisure and housing and how those priorities might impact the greater Quad Cities.

The keynote speaker will be Jennifer Reif, Acting Director for the Illinois Department on Aging.

Those in attendance will include political leaders, attorneys, caregivers, major employers, volunteers in the Quad Cities, spiritual leaders, retirees and health care providers.

Alternatives mission is to promote the independence and quality of life for older adults, adults with disabilities, and their families.

For more information about this event, please contact Community Resource Specialist Ellen Berberich at 309-277-0167.

DES MOINES, Iowa, Oct. 15, 2015 - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced that the U.S. Department of Agriculture will award $30 million to projects in six states to protect, restore and enhance wetlands on private and tribal agricultural lands. The projects are being funded under the Wetland Reserve Enhancement Partnership (WREP), a program authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill.

"Through locally led partnerships like these, USDA is targeting conservation in the places that make sense, allowing us to address local concerns," Vilsack said. "These projects will improve water quality, prevent flooding, enhance wildlife habitat and meet increasing conservation challenges on over 19,000 acres of wetlands."

Created by the 2014 Farm Bill, WREP is a special enrollment option under the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program's Wetland Reserve Easement component. Through WREP, which is administered by USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), states, local units of governments, non-governmental organizations and American Indian tribes collaborate with NRCS through cooperative and partnership agreements. These partners work with tribal and private landowners who voluntarily enroll eligible land into easements to protect, restore and enhance wetlands on their properties.

Wetland reserve easements allow landowners to successfully enhance and protect habitat for wildlife on their lands, reduce impacts from flooding, recharge groundwater and provide outdoor recreational and educational opportunities. The voluntary nature of NRCS' easement programs allows effective integration of wetland restoration on working landscapes, providing benefits to farmers and ranchers who enroll in the program, as well as benefits to the local and rural communities where the wetlands exist.

NRCS awarded grants for projects in Iowa, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi, Nebraska and Tennessee.

2015-2016 WREP Projects:

  • Iowa: Partners will acquire and restore prairie pothole wetlands and associated tallgrass prairie uplands on five sites within Prairie Pothole Joint Venture Priority Areas and Ducks Unlimited Living Lakes Initiative Emphasis Areas. Partner contributions will nearly double the acres of wetlands that will be protected and restored. NRCS plans to invest $3 million in this project.
  • Kentucky: Partners will acquire and restore wetlands in high priority small watersheds to reduce sediment and nutrients entering the Mississippi River. Coordination with the Kentucky Indiana Bat Fund, The Nature Conservancy and other partners will provide protection of adjacent forested wetlands, increasing the impacted area and quality of protected habitat provided for wildlife. NRCS plans to invest $9.4 million in this project.
  • Mississippi: Partners will expand an existing project to increase the acres acquired and wetlands restored in the Mississippi River Basin. These additional wetland acres will provide habitat for fish and wildlife, improve water quality by filtering sediments and nutrients, reduce flooding, recharge ground water and provide outdoor recreational opportunities. NRCS plans to invest $5.1 million in this project.
  • Missouri: Partners will enhance 9,500 acres of existing wetlands and restore 500 acres of critically imperiled wet prairie habitats on existing USDA easements improving a total of 10,000 acres. Strong partner support across 30 counties will build on the success of ongoing conservation easement programs in the state. NRCS plans to invest $2.4 million in this project.
  • Nebraska: Additional partners will build on the success of two previous WREP projects to acquire and restore the state's playa wetlands and mixed-grass prairie buffers. By modifying irrigation and grazing practices this project will provide a unique twist on traditional easements with innovative partner input that links production agriculture land with conservation easements. NRCS plans to invest $1.7 million in this project.
  • Tennessee: Partners will acquire and restore wetlands in a Hypoxia Task Force priority watershed of the lower Mississippi River, reducing the sediment and nutrients entering the river while improving wildlife habitat. The project area also includes areas along the Mississippi River in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Kentucky and Missouri. Twenty-six of the 35 counties in the project area are identified by the USDA as Persistent Poverty StrikeForce Counties, where assistance to combat rural poverty will be targeted. This is the second phase of work that began in 2012 that is on track to enroll 15,000 acres by 2016. NRCS plans to invest 8.4 million in this project.

WREP partners contribute a funding match for financial or technical assistance. These partners work directly with eligible landowners interested in enrolling their agricultural land into conservation wetland easements.

Today's awards build on the more than $330 million USDA announced in fiscal year 2015 to protect and restore agricultural working lands, grasslands and wetlands. Collectively, NRCS easement programs help productive farm, ranch and tribal lands continue in agricultural production and protect the nation's critical wetlands and grasslands that are important to water supplies and home to diverse wildlife and plant species. Under the former Wetlands Reserve Program, private landowners, tribes and entities such as land trusts and conservation organizations have enrolled 2.7 million acres through 14,500 agreements for a total NRCS and partner investment of $4.3 billion in financial and technical assistance.

Visit NRCS's ACEP webpage to learn more about NRCS's wetland conservation opportunities.

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