It's déjà vu all over again, again - Congress seems to be ignoring the gathering fiscal storm clouds. The most immediate of these is just around the corner: if lawmakers do not pass legislation to fund federal programs by September 30, the government will shut down.
What is a government shutdown?
Many federal government agencies and programs rely on annual funding appropriations made by Congress. Since the government's fiscal year starts on October 1, a government shutdown will occur if Congress does not pass appropriations bills for next fiscal year by September 30. In a "shutdown," federal agencies must discontinue all non-essential discretionary functions until new funding legislation is passed and signed into law. Essential services continue to function, as do mandatory spending programs.
What services are affected in a shutdown and how?
Each federal agency develops its own shutdown plan, following guidance released in previous shutdowns and coordinated by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The plan identifies which government activities may not continue until appropriations are restored, requiring furloughs and the halting of many agency activities. However, "essential services" - mainly those related to public safety - continue to operate, with payments covering any obligations incurred only when appropriations are enacted. In prior shutdowns, border protection, in hospital medical care, air traffic control, law enforcement, and power grid maintenance have been among the services classified as essential, while some legislative and judicial staff have also been largely protected. Mandatory spending not subject to annual appropriations, such as for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid also continues. Other example of activities that continue are activities funded by permanent user fees not subject to appropriations such as immigration services funded by visa fees.
Although a number of programs are exempt, the public is still likely to feel the impact of a shutdown in a number of ways. For example:
  • Social Security and Medicare: Checks are sent out, but benefit verification as well as the issuance of cards would cease. While unlikely to happen again, in 1996 over 10,000 Medicare applicants were temporarily turned away every day of the shutdown.
  • Environmental and Food Inspection: In 2013, the Environmental Protection Agency halted site inspections to 1,200 different sites that included hazardous waste, drinking water and chemical facilities. The FDA delayed just almost 900 inspections.
  • National Parks: During the 2013 shutdown, the National Park Service turned away millions of visitors to more than 400 parks, national monuments, and other sites. The National Park Service estimated that the shutdown led to over half a billion dollars in lost visitor spending nationwide.
  • Health and Human Services: The National Institutes of Health would be prevented from admitting new patients or processing grant applications. In 2013, states were forced to front the money for formula grant programs such as Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (cash welfare).
  • Internal Revenue Service: In the event of a shutdown, the IRS, which verifies income and social security numbers, would again not be able to perform this service. In 2013, a backlog of 1.2 million such requests potentially delayed mortgage and other loan approvals. As well billions of dollars of tax refunds were delayed.
Is the government preparing for a shutdown?
The administration has held a conference call with senior officials to discuss agencies' preparations for a possible shutdown.  OMB indicated that agencies will be following similar procedures to the 2013 shutdown with plans updated for this year.  Those updated plans have not yet been made public like they were in 2013.
How would federal employees be affected?
If agency shutdown plans are similar to those in place in 2013, the last time there was a shutdown, approximately 850,000 of 2.1 million non-postal federal employees would be furloughed. In 2013, most of the 350,000 civilian employees of the Department of Defense were recalled to work within a week. Furloughed employees would not be allowed to work and would not receive paychecks. While Congress has historically granted back pay, it is not guaranteed.
How and why do mandatory programs continue during a shutdown?
Whereas discretionary spending must be appropriated every year, mandatory spending is authorized either for multi-year periods or permanently. Thus, mandatory spending generally continues during a shutdown. However, some services associated with mandatory programs may be diminished if there is a discretionary component to their funding. For instance, in both the 1996 shutdowns and the 2013 shutdown, Social Security checks continued to go out. However, staff who handled new enrollments and other services, such as changing addresses or handling requests for a new Social Security card, were initially furloughed in 1996. In 2013, a more limited amount of activities were discontinued, including verifying benefits and providing new and replacement cards, but processing of benefit applications or address changes continued. At least one major mandatory program would pause: the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, commonly known as "food stamps"). The USDA indicated they would not be able to administer the program during a shutdown this year because contingency funds that were used to administer the program during 2013's shutdown have been exhausted.
How many times has the government shut down?

Since Congress introduced the modern budget process in 1976, there have been 18 "funding gaps," where funds were not appropriated for at least one day. However, before 1980, the government did not shut down, but continued normal operations through six funding gaps. Between 1981 and 1994, all nine funding gaps occurred over a weekend, and government operations were only minimally affected.
There have been three "true" shutdowns. The first two happened in the winter of 1995-1996, when President Bill Clinton and the Republican Congress were unable to agree on spending levels and shut down the government twice for a total of 26 days. The third was in 2013 when the House and Senate standoff on funding resulted in a 16-day shutdown.
Does a government shutdown save money?
While estimates vary widely, evidence suggests that shutdowns tend to cost, not save, money. For one, putting contingency plans in place has a real cost. In addition, a number of user fees and other charges are not collected during a shutdown. Contractors sometimes include premiums in their bids to account for uncertainty in being paid. And although many federal employees are forced to be idle during a shutdown, they have historically received back pay, negating much of those potential savings. OMB official estimates of the 2013 government shutdown found that $2.5 billion in pay and benefits was paid to furloughed employees for hours not worked during the shutdown as well as roughly $10 million in penalty interest payments and lost fee collections.
How can Congress avoid a shutdown?
There are essentially two ways to avoid a government shutdown - by passing appropriations or a continuing resolution (see below question on "What is a Continuing Resolution?"). Theoretically, the House and Senate Appropriations committees are supposed to pass 12 different appropriations bills, broken up by subject area and based on funding levels allocated in a budget resolution. Often, these bills are combined into a larger "omnibus" or "minibus" set of appropriations.
This year, no appropriations bill has been passed by both chambers. The House Appropriations Committee has passed all twelve bills, but only six - Defense, Military Construction-VA, Energy-Water, Homeland Security, Commerce-Justice-Science, and Legislative - have made it through the full House of Representatives. Meanwhile, the Senate Appropriations Committee has passed all bills, but the full Senate has not passed any of them.
What is a Continuing Resolution (CR)?
A continuing resolution temporarily funds the government in the absence of full appropriations bills, often by continuing funding levels from the prior year. Traditionally, CRs have been used to give lawmakers a short period of time to complete their work on remaining appropriations bills while keeping the government operating. CRs sometimes apply to only a few categories of spending, but can also be used to fund all discretionary functions, and can be used for an entire year.
CRs differ from normal appropriations bills in that they often "continue" the funding allocations from previous bills at the prior year's rate or a formula based on the prior year's rate. Even when overall funding levels have differed, lawmakers have often simply scaled up all accounts by a percent change in spending rather than making individual decisions on spending accounts. However, CRs often do include certain "anomalies," where specific items are increased or decreased to work around some problems that would occur from continuing the previous year's policies, or "policy riders," specifying certain statements of policy.  Colloquially, a "clean CR" does not contain policy riders or politically motivated changes to funding levels.
How often does Congress pass CRs?
Congress frequently passes CRs when it is unable to agree on appropriations, and occasionally multiple CRs are necessary to fund the government for an entire fiscal year. They have also sometimes been relied on during Presidential transition years. In FY 2001, for instance, a series of intense congressional negotiations leading up to the 2000 elections led to a series of ten one-day CRs. In total, Congress funded the first three months of that fiscal year with 21 continuing resolutions.
Not surprisingly, CRs have been quite prevalent in the past few years, being used to fund the government entirely in FY 2011, when eight CRs were passed; in FY 2013, when two CRs were passed; and in FY 2014, when two CRs after the government shutdown bought time before final passage of the Ryan-Murray agreement. Even the less-contentious FY 2015 funding negotiations necessitated three CRs before passage of the CROmnibus appropriations bill, which still contained a CR for Homeland Security. The most recent year when a full-year appropriations bill passed and no CRs were necessary was 1997.
What are the disadvantages of using CRs?
Continuing resolutions have several negative implications on the budget's overall efficiency. CRs usually continue funding at the past year's level without any regard for changing policy needs or the value of each program within an agency. Using a continuing resolution wastes hundreds of hours of careful consideration and program evaluation incorporated into each agency's budget submission. For instance, the President's budget annually proposes a list of eliminations and reductions of programs that are duplicative or ineffective; a continuing resolution will continue to fund these unwanted programs. Finally, the use of continuing resolutions disrupts activities within agencies, makes it difficult to plan or start future projects, and costs staff time to revise work plans every time the budget changes.
How is the House addressing funding?
As of September 24, the House has debated and passed a bill that would defund Planned Parenthood, which press reports suggest is demanded by many conservatives to be a part of any government funding bills. The House has not voted on a CR. No official bills nor time frame for votes are available at this time. The White House has threatened to veto the bill that defunds Planned Parenthood.
How is the Senate addressing funding?
As of September 24, the text of a short-term CR (funding the government through December 11th) has been released with cloture votes scheduled, but it includes language defunding Planned Parenthood. Press reports suggest that specific language will not be able to get the 60 votes necessary to advance the bill and a regular CR will then likely be voted on extending government funding until mid-December.
How does a shutdown differ from a default?
In a shutdown, the government temporarily stops paying employees and contractors who perform government services, whereas in a default the list of parties not paid is much broader. In a default, the government exceeds the statutory debt limit and is unable to pay some of its creditors (or other obligations). Without enough money to pay its bills, any of its payments are at risk?including all government spending, mandatory payments, interest on our debts, and payments to U.S. bondholders. While a government shutdown would be disruptive, a government default could be disastrous.
How does a shutdown differ from "sequester"?
A government shutdown closes down non-essential government operations due to lack of funding, whereas sequester or sequestration is shorthand for the reductions in discretionary spending caps in place that constrain the total amount of funding for annually-appropriated programs.
The first example of sequestration was included in the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985. The current version of sequestration is a product of the Budget Control Act (BCA) that resolved the 2011 debt ceiling negotiations. The BCA called on a Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction (the "Super Committee") to identify at least $1.5 trillion in deficit reduction over ten years, and set in motion the sequester if it did not identify at least $1.2 trillion. The Ryan-Murray Bipartisan Budget act negotiated around some of the sequester caps for FY 2014 and 2015; however, that agreement ends on October 1 and the full sequester-level caps return. FY 2016 appropriations, which are being negotiated at the moment, need to be at or under those caps if they are not changed.  If appropriations bills violate those caps, then across-the-board cuts are enforced in January. CRFB has released a separate plan to deal with the sequester caps called the Sequester Offset Solutions (SOS) plan.

Rock Island, IL: If you are looking for activities to keep the kids engaged and busy during the Rock Island/Milan school break, the Rock Island Public Library has planned plenty of free family learning and fun from Oct. 5-16.

Registrations are now being taken for a free Crypto Club, featuring code making and breaking in four workshops with lead "spymaster" Elizabeth Russell. Ciphers, encrypted messages, and secret codes are all based on math patterns! Russell, a math tutor by day, will lead 4th through 8th grade participants or equivalents through the skills behind creating cryptography spy codes. The twice-weekly workshops are Tuesdays and Thursdays, Oct. 6, 8, 13, 15, from 1:00 to 2:00 pm in the Main Library Community Room. The workshops build on skills learned in each session, so participants should plan to attend all four sessions. To enroll, call the Library's Children's Room at 309-732-7360 or click "register" under the Crypto Club listing in the library's online calendar.

School age kids can also drop in on a free water-powered vehicles experiment with Bob Windt, aka "Rocket Man," on Wednesday, Oct. 14 from 4:00 to 5:00 pm

at the 30/31 Branch. The hands-on rocket science fun is part of the library's monthly "STEM-AZING" programming on literacy in science, technology, engineering and math topics. The event is free and no registration is required.

For preschoolers just starting their learning journey, the library offers "Play and Grow," a structured play group for ages three and under, on Thursday, Oct. 8 at 10:30 am, also at the 30/31 Branch. The monthly activity helps preschoolers build early literacy skills through talking, singing, reading and playing. The event is free and no registration is required.

Additional free events for children of all ages during Rock Island/Milan school break include :

Reading with Rover - Kids are invited to read their favorite story aloud to one of the literary dogs of the QC Canine Assistance Network (QC CAN). Reading aloud to a dog is a fun way to practice reading skills. Families can drop in for a reading session at any of these times and locations:

Tuesday, Oct. 6 from 2:00 to 3:00 pm at the Main Library;

Wednesday, Oct. 7, from 6:00 pm to 7:00 pm at the Southwest Branch;

Wednesday, Oct. 14 from 5:00 to 6:00 pm at the 30/31 Branch.

A free family movie featuring a brave and kind princess, a likeable Prince Charming, and some unlikable stepsisters will be shown at 2:00 pm on Friday, Oct. 9. The 2015 movie is rated PG, and runs for 1 hour and 54 minutes. Wear your favorite princess or Prince Charming costumes if you like, and enjoy the free movie and popcorn.

A seasonal autumn leaf garland craft for the whole family will be offered at 6:00 pm on Tuesday, Oct. 13 and again at 10:00 am on Saturday, Oct. 17, both at the Southwest Branch. Each program includes a craft with supplied materials and activity for all ages and all skill levels. Registration is required. To sign up, call 309-732-7338 or click "register" on the library's online calendar listing.

Families can also get in the Halloween spirit a little early with a Monster Mash Costume Party on Saturday, Oct. 17 at 2:00 pm at the 30/31 Branch. The free event for all ages includes family friendly party games and a costume contest. Do attend the monster mash - it's sure to be a graveyard smash! The event is free and no registration is required.

Event locations are the Main Library, 401 19th Street, the 30/31 Branch, 3059 30th Street, and the Southwest Branch, 9010 Ridgewood Road, Rock Island.

For more free events for all ages, pick up a fall events brochure at library locations, call 309-732-READ or visit the library website at www.rockislandlibrary.org.

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WAVERLY, IA (09/24/2015)(readMedia)-- Fifteen Wartburg students have been accepted into the college's Teacher Education Program.

Those accepted include :

Brooke Chapman, a music education major from DeWitt

Audrie Aden, a elementary education major from Davenport

Andrea Weiss, a music therapy and music education major from DeWitt

Students had to demonstrate effective reflective components in teaching, pass the Praxis Core Academic Skills for Educators exam and complete several other requirements to be considered for the program.

Admission to the Teacher Education Program allows students to begin professional education courses in their field.

Wartburg, a four-year liberal arts college internationally recognized for community engagement, enrolls 1,661 students. Wartburg is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and named after the castle in Germany where Martin Luther took refuge disguised as a knight during the stormy days of the Reformation while translating the Bible from Greek into German.

(Moline, IL - Sept. 24, 2015) - After finalizing production specs, organizers are happy to announce the release of great new seats, including FLOOR SEATS, PIT TICKETS, AND SEATS NEXT TO THE STAGE, for Miranda Lambert's Roadside Bars and Pink Guitars Tour in Moline, IL. Miranda will be joined by Raelynn, Clare Dunn and Courtney Cole at iWireless Center on Saturday, October 17th. These will be available this Thursday at 10am and can be purchased at the iWireless Center Box Office, by phone at 800-745-3000 and online at www.Ticketmaster.com.
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Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley made the following statement after the Justice Department failed to provide a substantive response to a Sept. 14, 2015, letter sent by Grassley and Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Chairman Ron Johnson.  Grassley and Johnson asked Attorney General Loretta Lynch for answers about whether the Justice Department would deem a proffer session as a waiver of a witness's Fifth Amendment rights and whether the department has an ongoing criminal inquiry related to the witness.  The Justice Department's response failed to address any of the senators' questions.

Here is Grassley's statement.

"The Justice Department is giving us less information than normal when they should be giving us more, so that we can make an informed decision about whether to seek an immunity order.  You know it is getting a little absurd when someone at the Justice Department is apparently leaking details to the press about an investigation that the department officially refuses to admit to Congress that it is conducting.

"In light of the details reported in the media, the committee will be seeking more information about the State Department's attempts to regain possession of the email records that should have remained at the State Department in the first place.  The FBI should also provide clarity on how it will handle the emails now that they have been recovered from the server.  Allowing an independent authority to search for records that were requested by Congress, the Inspector General, the press, and the public years ago, and then providing the records to the appropriate requesters, would be a welcome move in transparency."

$20 in Advance & $25 at the Door!
Call 563-322-8844

Join the German American Heritage Center and MUGZ Homebrew Club for our annual Arts & Draughts Beer Tasting on Saturday, October 3 from 6pm-8pm.
We welcome our friends from MUGZ as they brew delicious German-style suds! We will have Jerry's Market on hand selling their famous brat baskets with German potato salad and piano music from Enjoy with Troy!
Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Must be 21 or over to attend.
Raise a Glass to Raise Funds! Arts & Draughts is a fundraising event that supports educational programming and exhibits at the German American Heritage Center.

Purchase your tickets by calling 563-322-8844 or emailing kelly.lao@gahc.org. The German American Heritage Center is located at 712 West Second St. Davenport, IA at the foot of the Centennial Bridge.

As the last out was recorded Monday evening by the Champion West Michigan Whitecaps in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the Midwest League closed a record setting 2015 season.

  • The Midwest League set a regular season attendance record during 2015 drawing 4,233,904 fans breaking the previous record set in 2010, of 4,184,843 fans. This total was (i) 10% of all fans who attended every Minor League Baseball ("MiLB") game throughout all MiLB  Leagues, and (ii) exceeded every other League except for the Class AAA Leagues, International and Pacific Coast.

  • The post-season saw an additional 32,479 fans through the turnstiles, the highest since 2010 when the playoffs brought in 34,686 fans. Without question the enthusiasm of the fans at the playoff games exceeded anything experienced before.

  • A number of clubs either continued record streaks or set new attendance records:

  1. Dayton continued its consecutive home sell out streak which began in 2000 and once again was the number 1 Class A team in attendance; exceeded every Class AA team; and number 8 in all of MiLB

  2. South Bend and Quad Cities set attendance records-South Bend exceeding 300,000 fans for the first time in its history by drawing 348,000 fans.

  3. Fort Wayne had its highest per game average attendance and would have set an all time attendance record had it not had 3 rain outs during the season.

  4. Kane County finished in the top 30 in attendance in MiLB, and second in the Midwest League.

  5. The remainder of Midwest League Clubs had very strong results which helped to contribute to a League wide record setting season.

President Dick Nussbaum, completing his first year in this role commented: "The Sixteen (16) Midwest League Clubs have shown they are the very best in Minor League Baseball, and as we congratulate our champion, the West Michigan Whitecaps, all Clubs can take a bow for this record setting season.  The 2016 Season can not come soon enough."

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LECLAIRE, Iowa - Join us on Saturday, September 26 from 11am-10pm for "Cure It With Corn - Beatin' Leukemia Iowa Style" on Levee in LeClaire, Iowa. It is a fun event for a great cause! Enjoy Live Music from: Tapestry 11am-12pm, Candymakers 12:30-2:30pm, Just Chords 3-5pm, Rude Punch 5:30-7:30pm, and Moonshine Run 8-10pm. There will be a silent auction, Kids' Zone, pulled pork sandwiches, hot dogs, chips, beverages, and sweet corn. Admission is $10 at gate. All proceeds are going to LLS (Leukemia, Lymphoma Society) and the University of Iowa Marrow Donor registry, bethematch.org . T-shirts are available for purchase at Happy Joe's in LeClaire or online at www.cureitwithcorn.com. T-shirts and koozies will also be available for sale at the event. More information at https://www.facebook.com/cureitwithcorn
James "Jimmy" Lange, a LeClaire Paramedic with Medic EMS, was diagnosed with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia in October of 2014. This type of Leukemia is a long, drawn out type, and until symptoms get stronger, there is not much that can be done but monitoring. One day Jimmy went to the doctor and was basically told there is nothing he can do right now to help himself. Jimmy then said "I can do something, let's find a cure for leukemia!" He rallied a group of people on Facebook and now we have "Cure It With Corn". This is not a fundraiser for Jimmy. This is a fundraiser to raise money to help find a cure for leukemia, but this is Jimmy's brainchild. So, join us in celebrating life, and please help us find a cure.
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Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today applauded a new report from the White House Broadband Opportunity Council that details coordinated steps to expand access to high speed internet in poorly connected areas over the next 18 months. The report says more than 25 percent of US households do not have high speed internet because of income or geography. The Broadband Opportunity Council is chaired by Penny Pritzker, Secretary of the US Department of Commerce and Tom Vilsack, Secretary of the US Department of Agriculture.

Earlier this summer, Loebsack joined with fellow Members to call on the Council to modernize regulations for Rural Utility Service's (RUS) Telecommunications Program to better facilitate high speed rural broadband development. The report calls for the RUS program to revise their regulations, which will open additional funding opportunities. Loebsack is a member of the Communications and Technology Subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over broadband issues.

"Ensuring everyone has access to high speed internet, no matter where they live, is important for rural economic development, education, job growth, businesses, farmers, and families across Iowa," said Loebsack. "I have met with many small businesses, farmers, and rural telecommunication companies who have stressed the importance of expanding high speed internet to rural areas. Broadband also gives small and rural schools the power to vastly expand their educational options, providing students with a cutting-edge 21st Century education regardless of geography.

"I am pleased President Obama, along with Secretaries Pritzker and Vilsack, laid out this plan to make sure Iowans and others in rural areas are not left behind. Expanding broadband is critical for all Iowans."

Moving forward, the federal government has made four specific commitments in response to the report to expand high speed internet, including:

·         Changing federal programs to allow broadband as an eligible expense in communities participating in the programs;

·         Creating an online inventory with details on federal assets such as telecommunications towers;

·         Streamlining applications for broadband to allow faster deployment and boost competition;

·         Creating an online information hub for communities to learn about federal broadband loan programs.

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(Des Moines, IA)  - Longtime Church World Service staff member, the Rev. Russ Melby will be able to commemorate his retirement after three decades of service in fighting hunger and poverty when he receives the annual Robert D. Ray Iowa SHARES Humanitarian Award in Des Moines Thursday.

"Russ Melby embodied so much of what Church World Service is about, in helping communities to rally in fighting hunger and poverty," CWS President and CEO, the Rev. John L. McCullough said. "I am thrilled the World Food Prize Foundation chose to honor Russ in this way, and I offer my heartfelt congratulations to Russ and his family."

Church World Service works to end hunger and poverty, and to promote peace and justice, in more than 30 countries. Melby worked to organize CROP Hunger Walks across Iowa during his tenure with the New York-based agency, in addition to engaging communities of faith to support humanitarian assistance. CWS is the national sponsor of CROP Hunger Walks, which raise money for hunger-fighting programs in the U.S. and support the life-sustaining work of CWS globally.

"Russ helped thousands of people in Iowa to see the difference they can each make in fighting hunger," McCullough said. "I can't think of a more deserving person."

The World Food Prize Foundation established the Robert D. Ray Iowa Shares Humanitarian Award in 2013 in recognition of the exceptional leadership that former Governor Ray demonstrated in dealing with multiple situations affecting refugees in Indochina, and to honor him on his 85th birthday (September 26). In doing so, the award was named after the Iowa SHARES campaign, which the Governor created in 1979 in order to send desperately needed food and medicine to suffering and dying refugees from Cambodia. Iowa SHARES stands for Iowa Sends Help to Aid Refugees and End Starvation.

The third annual Robert D. Ray Iowa SHARES Humanitarian Award will be presented to Rev. Melby on Tuesday, October 13, at the Iowa Hunger Summit, a free, grassroots event organized by The World Food Prize to unite all Iowans working to alleviate hunger at home and abroad. More information, an agenda and registration is available at iowahungersummit.org.

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