SPRINGFIELD, Ill.–To prevent instances of insurance companies excluding preventative breast cancer screenings, state Rep. Mike Smiddy, D-Hillsdale, spearheaded a new law requiring all insurance plans to cover preventative testing which became law on August 21.
"As the husband of a breast cancer survivor, I know how important it is to detect this aggressive disease as early as possible, and I don't want any woman in Illinois to go without the testing they deserve," Smiddy said. "This new law makes sure insurance companies can't say no to proven life-saving screening."
Smiddy credits his wife's survival over breast cancer in large part due to early detection. He introduced House Bill 3673 to ensure all Illinois women in Illinois have access to the same resources. The bill requires every insurance plan in Illinois to include breast cancer screening for all women 35 years and older. Under the previous law, breast cancer screening was available for low-income families through the state. However, women not meeting the income requirements could have their testing left of their private plans. The new law requires preventative testing be available under every insurance plan serving Illinois residents. Additionally, a grant program is created to increase testing centers in rural, medically underserved areas.
"This law is an important step in the ongoing fight against breast cancer, and will help thousands of women across Illinois receive the testing they need," Smiddy said. "Our family had to face an enormous challenge when my wife was diagnosed, and no family should be without the lifesaving testing that we know saves lives because insurance companies want to save money."
House Bill 3673 received bipartisan support in both houses of the General Assembly and was signed by the governor on August 21. The legislation has an immediate effective date but residents are urged to contact their insurance providers to ensure their plans have been updated and include the new regulations.
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SPRINGFIELD, IL (08/28/2015)(readMedia)-- The Illinois National Guard conducted a week-long, multi-agency exercise dubbed Prairie Assurance Aug. 24 to 28. The exercise trained elements of a task force of personnel from the Illinois Army and Air National Guard to rapidly respond to a major earthquake in southern Illinois.

The Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) along with representatives from other state agencies, National Guard Bureau, US Northern Command, and the Polish Armed Forces participated in the exercise, providing incident management and emergency management teams, agency technical experts, and military personnel to support the military's training scenario.

"We gained a tremendous amount of insight by having IEMA, other civilian agencies, National Guard Bureau, US NORTHCOM, and Poland participate in this event," said Col. Rick G. Yoder, commander of the joint task force. "It's critical to strengthen partnerships with local, state, and federal partners before a disaster happens."

The exercise simulated a 7.2 magnitude earthquake centered on the New Madrid Seismic Zone. The event took place at the 183rd Fighter Wing and the Joint Forces Headquarters in Springfield, Illinois.

The National Guard has a standing mission to provide support to civil authorities during natural disasters. The joint task force provides command and control of military personnel and equipment in support of civil authorities during a complex catastrophe like an earthquake.

"We want to be able to respond rapidly and efficiently and training together supports that goal," said Yoder. "We train the force to anticipate need. It's ultimately about saving lives and property."

Approximately 220 Army and Air National Guard members and more than 100 civilian emergency management personnel participated in.

A grants submission deadline has been announced by the Moline Foundation. Non-profit organizations are encouraged to apply if they serve the citizens of Moline and the surrounding region, including the Quad Cities.

All materials necessary to receive funds are due in The Moline Foundation offices by 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, September 30, 2015 or must be postmarked by or on Wednesday, September 30, 2015.

Any non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization, including those who have never received Moline Foundation funding in the past, is welcome to apply.

An application should consist of eleven copies of a written request stating the name and address of the organization, its mission, names and addresses of Board members, income and expense statement, balance sheet, and the specific purpose for which any money received would be used including a project budget.  The name, telephone number, and email of a contact person must also be included.  The requested materials should be mailed according to the above deadline.  If you need further information, please call Linda Martin at the Moline Foundation at (309) 764-4193 or visit the website at www.molinefoundation.org.

The Moline Foundation offices are located at the Deere-Wiman House, 817 11th Avenue, Moline, Illinois.

The Moline Foundation, founded in 1953, is a community foundation which provides grants to health, human services, education, workforce development, the arts and other charitable organizations which benefit the citizens of Moline and the surrounding area, including the Quad Cities region in both Iowa and Illinois. Counties served by the Moline Foundation include Scott County in Iowa and Rock Island, Henry, Mercer, Warren, Henderson, and McDonough Counties in Illinois. The Moline Foundation receives and administers charitable gifts and works with citizens to achieve their goals to improve the community.

SPRINGFIELD - Tim Nuding, Director of the Governor's Office of Management and Budget, issued the following statement regarding the departure of advisor Donna Arduin:

"As a key leader in the new Administration, Donna played an instrumental role in re-establishing sound economic and fiscal principles at GOMB, the Department of Revenue and throughout state government. She helped engineer the elimination of an inherited $1.5 billion budget deficit without a tax increase and produced an on-time budget proposal for the governor to present barely more than one month after taking office. She has been an invaluable advisor to me, and I look forward to her continued advice as we work to reach a pro-growth economic and fiscal agreement for the state."

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Cedar Rapids, IA - Current Cedar Rapids Mayor and former Speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives Ron Corbett today announced the formation of a new conservative Iowa think tank to be called "Engage Iowa".
"For too long liberal think tanks have dominated Iowa's public policy debate.  This creates the mistaken impression that liberals are the only group with new ideas," Corbett said.  It's time for another voice in the choir of good ideas in Iowa."
Engage Iowa will craft research based, pragmatic, common sense solutions that will move our state forward by bringing rural and urban Iowans together to modernize the tax code, build great schools and protect our environment.
"Iowa is on the right track," Corbett said, but we need to get on the fast track."  "A strong, research and Iowa-based idea organization can help propel Iowa forward to a new era of growth, development and an unmatched quality of life," Corbett remarked.
Corbett added, "Engage Iowa will do just that.  We will engage Iowans throughout the State in a series of conversations to help find solutions to the challenges facing Iowa."
Liberals in Iowa, and across the nation, have continued to repackage and roll out the same Big Government schemes that have been failing us for decades.  It is time for some fresh new ideas in Iowa.
Corbett said that the think tank will be overseen and funded by Iowans committed to making the state better.  Corbett will lead it and direct the research.  He indicated that $1.5 million had already been raised and pledged by Iowans to make sure this conservative think tank is successful.
The first policy report dealing with our tax system and the environment is expected to be released this fall.

About Engage Iowa:
Engage Iowa is led by former Speaker of the Iowa House Ron Corbett, an innovative entrepreneur and business leader who, as Mayor, led Cedar Rapids' recovery from one of the worst natural disasters in Iowa's history.  More information can be found at www.EngageIowa.org.
BANDITS CAN'T ERASE EARLY DEFICIT, FALL TO BEES

Five runs in the first two innings were enough for Burlington to take season series finale
BURLINGTON, Iowa (September 1, 2015) - The Burlington Bees offense racked up five runs on five hits in the first two innings, and the Bees bullpen withstood late scoring threats, as the Bees beat the Quad Cities River Bandits, 7-4, Tuesday night at Community Field.
The Bees (23-41 second half, 58-75 overall) pounced on River Bandits starter Elieser Hernandez (2-3) in the very early going, scoring three times in the bottom of the first inning. Center fielder Ayendy Perez and second baseman Tim Arakawa each reached on base hits to start the frame. Catcher Taylor Ward reached on a fielder's choice, advancing Perez to third, with Arakawa forced out at second base for the first out of the inning. Shortstop Zach Houchins singled to left field to drive in Perez and give Burlington a 1-0 lead. With two out, runners on second and third bases and designated hitter Natanael Delgado at the plate, a passed ball by catcher Marlon Avea and a balk by Hernandez each plated a run, giving the Bees a 3-0 lead.
Burlington added to its lead in the second inning, as the first three batters reached base, beginning with a one-out throwing error by shortstop Kristian Trompiz, allowing right fielder Mitchell Esser to reach, and a walk to third baseman Nick Flair. Perez doubled home Esser for the fourth Bees run, advancing Flair to third base. With Arakawa batting, Hernandez threw a wild pitch that plated Flair and made it a 5-0 Burlington lead.
In the bottom of the fourth, Esser led off the inning with an infield single to first baseman Wander Franco, advanced to second on a ground out, and made it to third on a wild pickoff attempt by Hernandez. Perez then hit a sacrifice fly to left field, scoring Esser and making it 6-0.
Forced to play catch-up against Justin Anderson (9-9), the River Bandits (40-24, 85-47) finally chipped into the lead in the top of the fifth inning. With one out, Trompiz tripled to left-center field, and third baseman Luis Reynoso brought him home with a sacrifice fly to deep center field, scoring Trompiz for Quad Cities' first run.
After Delgado's fifth-inning solo homer made it a 7-1 game, the River Bandits rallied again in the sixth inning. They loaded the bases with Avea's infield popup-turned-infield-single, a one-out double by left fielder Jason Martin, and a pitch that hit designated hitter Bryan Muñiz. Right fielder Drew Ferguson took a 2-1 Anderson offering and found the gap in right-center field, clearing the bases and cutting the lead in half. However, the rally ended as second baseman Jose Fernandez struck out and Ferguson was thrown out trying to steal third base on the same play, keeping Burlington ahead, 7-4.
Three runs was the closest Quad Cities came against the Bees bullpen. Right-handers Gaither Bumgardner and Jordan Piche escaped jams with the tying run at the plate in the seventh and eighth innings, respectively. Piche got the last four outs for his eighth save.
The River Bandits return to Modern Woodmen Park Wednesday night for the start of their final regular season home series, a three-game set with the playoff-bound Kane County Cougars. For the opener, the River Bandits will send right-hander Rogelio Armenteros (1-0, 0.00) to the mound, while the Cougars will counter with left-hander Jared Miller (4-4, 5.92).
UP NEXT: All-you-can-ride passes are $10 each on Wednesday at the River Bandits' 7 p.m. game. Gates open at 6 p.m. on a Pay Your Bill Wednesday, when fans can enter copies of their unpaid bills to a drawing, from which the River Bandits will select and pay two up to $100 each. The River Bandits will have fireworks following 7 p.m. games Thursday and Friday, when the team will also be celebrating back-to-back Fan Appreciation Nights, with $2 drinks and Make-A-Wish Night presented by Olympic Steel on Thursday, and Friday Fireworks presented by Smart Toyota of Quad Cities. Individual tickets are on sale at the River Bandits box office and online at riverbandits.com. Ticket plans of 12 to 70 games - which include free parking, reserved seats, merchandise discounts, and guaranteed giveaways - are available by calling 563-324-3000.

LONG BALL POWERS BANDITS TO 5-2 WIN OVER BURLINGTON

Trompiz and Muñiz hit fourth-inning home runs for Quad Cities, as Deetz extends scoreless streak

BURLINGTON, Iowa (August 31, 2015) - Shortstop Kristian Trompiz and first baseman Bryan Muñiz each homered, and starter Dean Deetz pitched five scoreless innings to extend his streak to 16 1/3 consecutive innings without allowing a run, as the Quad Cities River Bandits bested the Burlington Bees, 5-2, at Community Field Monday night.

Pitching for the first time since throwing seven no-hit innings Aug. 24 at home against Clinton, Deetz (4-1) retired the first seven Bees in order before a one-out double by right fielder Trever Allen in the third inning. Deetz only allowed one other hit on a night where every batter put a ball into play. Burlington (22-41 second half, 57-75 overall) put two runners on base in the fourth inning, as shortstop Zach Houchins reached on a one-out error by Luis Reynoso at second base, and catcher Taylor Ward singled to put runners at first and second bases. But Deetz got left fielder Trevor Gretzky to fly out to left, and first baseman Steven Mateo ended the inning on a ground ball to Wander Franco at third, who forced out Ward with a throw to Reynoso at second to end the inning.

The River Bandits (40-23, 85-46) took advantage of control issues by Burlington starter Keynan Middleton (5-11) in the early going, with both catcher Garrett Stubbs and Trompiz walking to start the second inning. After a sacrifice bunt by Reynoso moved both runners into scoring position, Franco's ground ball to Houchins at shortstop scored Stubbs and put Quad Cities ahead, 1-0. Franco has collected his first two Midwest League RBIs in the first two games of the series.

The lead widened in the fourth, as Trompiz began the inning with his sixth home run of the year - a drive to straight-away left field. Reynoso followed with a walk and advanced to second on a one-out base hit to right fieldby center fielder Bobby Boyd. Left fielder Jason Martin did not advance the runners, as he flied out to center, but Muñiz brought home both runners on his third home run as a River Bandit this season on a booming shot to left to open up a 5-0 Quad Cities lead.

Following Deetz to start the sixth inning, reliever Juan Robles made his Midwest League debut and became the 59th different River Bandit (tying a franchise record) to play in a game this season, Burlington rallied for a pair of runs in the seventh. After walking a pair in the sixth and recording his first Midwest League strikeout, Robles retired the first batter of the seventh inning before walking the bases loaded with one out. Jacob Dorris took over to face center fielder Ayendy Perez and promptly threw a wild pitch, allowing the Bees to score their first run and move the other two runners into scoring position. Burlington scored again when Perez grounded a ball to the right side, scoring the runner from third base and making it a 5-2 game. Dorris got out of the inning by getting second baseman Tim Arakawa to ground out to Muñiz, who fed the ball to Dorris covering the base to end the threat for the Bees.

Dorris allowed one runner in the last two innings of work and struck out three batters to earn his first save with the River Bandits.

OPPORTUNISTIC BANDITS EDGE OUT BURLINGTON

Quad Cities scores runs on a sacrifice fly and wild pitch for 84th win - second-most in franchise history

BURLINGTON, Iowa (August 30, 2015) - Brock Dykxhoorn allowed one run on six hits and struck out three batters in seven innings, and the Quad Cities River Bandits capitalized on their chances offensively, scratching two runs across on four hits to beat the Burlington Bees, 2-1, Sunday afternoon at Community Field.

Dykxhoorn (8-4) tied a career high with seven innings pitched, reaching that mark for the third time this season after accomplishing the feat on July 2 against Peoria and Aug. 9 against Dayton. Dykxhoorn became Quad Cities' first eight-game winner this season.

The scoring began in the second inning against Burlington starter Michael Bolaski (9-11) on a rally that began with River Bandits second baseman Jose Fernandez reaching on an error by Bees third baseman Nick Flair. With first baseman Ryan Bottger batting, Fernandez stole second base and advanced to third on Bottger's infield hit to Flair. Shortstop Luis Reynoso walked to load the bases for third baseman Wander Franco, who flied out to left, deep enough to score Fernandez and give Quad Cities (39-23 second half, 84-46 overall) the 1-0 lead.

The Bees (22-41, 57-75) looked ready to pull even in their half of the second with runners on first and second bases and one out, but Dykxhoorn recovered well, getting right fielder Natanael Delgado to fly out to center field and designated hitter Trever Allen to ground out to third base to end the threat.

Burlington tied the game in the fourth inning on a leadoff single by second baseman Tim Arakawa and RBI double by shortstop Zach Houchins. With the Bees primed take the lead, Dykxhoorn buckled down again, retiring left fielder Trevor Gretzky on a fly ball to right field, striking out first baseman Steven Mateo, and getting Delgado to fly out to center field with the go-ahead run on third base.

After Gretzky's seventh-inning leadoff single and stolen base of second with nobody out, Dykxhoorn finished the inning and the outing strong, striking out Mateo and Delgado, and coaxing a ground ball back to himself on the mound off the bat of Allen.

With Dykxhoorn still the pitcher of record in the top of the eighth inning and Bolaski still in the game, the River Bandits began a two-out rally with the bases empty, as center fielder Bobby Boyd tripled to left-center field. Left fielder Jason Martin and designated hitter Drew Ferguson each walked, knocking Bolaski out of the game in favor of right-handed reliever Jason Hoppe. With right fielder Ramon Laureano at the plate, Hoppe's wild pitch scooted far enough from catcher Taylor Ward to score Boyd and put Quad Cities ahead, 2-1.

The Bees had one last rally in the tank against Quad Cities reliever Zach Davis in the eighth inning. Center fielder Ayendy Perez hit a one-out single, and Arakawa reached on a two-out fielding error by Fernandez. Angel Heredia came in from the bullpen to get out of the jam, and in an eight-pitch at-bat, he got Houchins to ground out to Fernandez to end the inning. Heredia worked a perfect ninth, ending the game by catching Delgado looking for a strikeout to seal the victory, earning his sixth save in 15 days and team-high 12th overall this season.

With the 2-1 win, the River Bandits won their 84th game - the second-most in Quad Cities franchise history behind the 1992 Quad City River Bandits, who won 91 games. Sunday's contest was the ninth one-run game between Quad Cities and Burlington this season, and the sixth straight game decided by the minimum.

PEORIA PITCHING OUTSHINES BANDITS IN SERIES FINALE

Gomber, Chiefs bullpen hold Quad Cities to two runs on three hits in teams' final regular season meeting
DAVENPORT, Iowa (August 29, 2015) - Peoria's Midwest League All-Star left-hander Austin Gomber pitched six innings, allowing one unearned run on two hits, and the No. 5 through No. 9 hitters in the Chiefs lineup collected eight of the team's nine hits in a 4-2 win over the Quad Cities River Bandits in front of 5,948 at Modern Woodmen Park Saturday night.
Gomber (15-3) won his seventh consecutive start and beat the River Bandits (38-23 second half, 83-46 overall) for the second time in four starts after losing his first two decisions to Quad Cities (38-23 second half, 83-46 overall) in April.
The Chiefs (38-23, 71-58) aided their starter with a pair of second-inning runs on consecutive one-out hits. Center fielder Harrison Bader singled to right, and catcher Brian O'Keefe hit an RBI double to left field. Designated hitter Steve Bean followed with an RBI single to center field to double Peoria's lead to 2-0.
Quad Cities second baseman Jose Fernandez began the bottom of the second inning by reaching on a throwing error by Gomber. With right fielder Ryan Bottger batting, Fernandez stole second base and advanced to third on Bottger's groundout. However, shortstop Kristian Trompiz struck out swinging, and after third baseman Luis Reynoso walked, first baseman Wander Franco, struck out looking in his first Midwest League at-bat, stranding two runners on base.
The River Bandits put a dent in the lead in the fourth inning, as Fernandez reached on a one-out walk and stole second base with Bottger batting. On the pitch when Bottger struck out, Fernandez stole third base and advanced home on O'Keefe's wild throw that went flying pver third baseman Paul DeJong into left field, making it a 2-1 game.
After the second inning, Quad Cities starter Joshua James (6-4) kept the Chiefs off the scoreboard until the eighth inning, when Derek Gibson had a leadoff bunt single and went to second base on James' errant throw to first base. After James' wild pitch sent Gibson to third base, DeJong's sacrifice fly gave Peoria a 3-1 lead. James pitched a career-high eight innings and tied his career high of seven strikeouts. James became the first River Bandit to go eight full innings in a start since Michael Feliz did so against Burlington Aug. 5, 2014.
Peoria increased its lead in the ninth on a solo home run by Bader off reliever Steve Naemark. The River Bandits were held to just three base runners in the fifth through eighth innings by Gomber and relievers Nick Lomascolo and Nick Frey.
In the ninth inning with a 4-1 lead, Chiefs right-hander Jery Then started by walking Fernandez and Bottger, bringing the tying run to the plate with nobody out. Trompiz reached on a fielder's choice fielded by shortstop Oscar Mercado, who cut down the lead runner Fernandez at third for the first out, and Then struck out Reynoso looking for the second out. Franco, called up Friday from the rookie-level Gulf Coast League Astros, hit a ball up the middle that was knocked down by Then and overthrown by the pitcher to first base, allowing Bottger to score, while sending Trompiz to third and Franco to second. With the tying runs in scoring position, catcher Marlon Avea, who joined the River Bandits Saturday from Short-Season Tri-City and earlier singled in his first Midwest League at-bat,  struck out swinging on three pitches to end the game, earning Then his second save of the year.
ARMENTEROS LEADS BANDITS' LEAGUE-BEST 16TH SHUTOUT

Quad Cities' 83rd win ties 2010 team for second-most in franchise history
DAVENPORT, Iowa (August 28, 2015) - Just called up from Short Season Tri-City on Tuesday, Rogelio Armenteros fit in with his new team in his Midwest League debut, throwing five innings of one-hit shutout baseball, striking out a career-high nine batters and walking one as the Quad Cities River Bandits blanked the Peoria Chiefs, 3-0, in front of 6,696 at Modern Woodmen Park Friday night.
Armenteros (1-0) was the 34th pitcher used by the River Bandits (38-22 second half, 83-45 overall) this year, and he became the 20th different starting pitcher this season, both Quad Cities franchise records. In his five innings of work, Armenteros collected at least one strikeout each inning and only allowed baserunners on a single, walk, error, and third-strike wild pitch.
The River Bandits were able to rally against Peoria right-hander Jack Flaherty (8-3) for a run in the second inning. Designated hitter Drew Ferguson led off the inning with a base hit and stole second base with right fielder Ramon Laureano batting. Laureano singled to right, moving Ferguson to third, and stole second base with second baseman Jose Fernandez at bat. Fernandez hit a sacrifice fly to left field to score Ferguson and give Quad Cities a 1-0 lead.
Peoria (37-23, 70-58) had its best opportunity of the night in the third inning after a leadoff single by catcher Steve Bean. With one out and Bean on first base, second baseman Darren Seferina walked, before shortstop Oscar Mercado flied out to center field. Third baseman Paul DeJong reached on an error by third baseman Luis Reynoso to load the bases for first baseman Alex De Leon, but Armenteros struck out the Chiefs' RBI leader to end the inning and leave the bases full.
In the fourth inning, the River Bandits capitalized on two Peoria errors to add to their lead. With the bases empty and two outs, Fernandez singled, and catcher Trent Woodward reached on catcher interference by Bean - the inning's first error - to put runners on first and second bases with two outs. Shortstop Kristian Trompiz grounded a ball to Mercado, who dropped it, loading the bases. Reynoso cashed in on the pair of errors by depositing the first pitch he saw from Flaherty into right-center field to score Fernandez and Woodward, giving Quad Cities a 3-0 lead. Flaherty went a career-high seven innings, allowing three runs - one earned - on five hits and one walk and six strikeouts.
For the River Bandits, Eric Peterson pitched three shutout innings in relief, allowing two hits in the sixth and one in the eighth, but also striking out a pair of batters. Angel Heredia struck out one batter and allowed a runner on Fernandez's error in the ninth inning before recording his 11th save of the season to preserve the win.
The Midwest League-leading 16th shutout by Quad Cities is the most for the franchise since pitching 17 in 1980.

BANDITS SURGE EARLY, HANG ON TO BEAT PEORIA, 8-6

Quad Cities jumps to 8-1 lead and withstands furious late rally for MiLB-best 82nd win

DAVENPORT, Iowa (August 27, 2015) - First baseman Bryan Muñiz was 2-for-4 with two runs and a two-run home run in his first professional game as a leadoff hitter, and left-hander Zach Davis halted a five-run rally to preserve the lead in the Quad Cities River Bandits' 8-6 win over the Peoria Chiefs, who clinched a playoff spot earlier Thursday night, in front of 4,671 at Modern Woodmen Park.

Davis entered in the eighth inning after Peoria (37-22 second half, 70-57 overall) rallied to close an 8-1 gap to an 8-5 deficit. With two runners on base, Davis allowed one more run to score before getting a ground ball to end the inning and keep the River Bandits (37-22, 82-45) ahead, 8-6. In the ninth inning, the left-handed reliever allowed a one-out single and a two-out walk to put the tying run at first base before a game-ending popout earned Davis his first save since Aug. 15, 2014, with the rookie-level Greeneville Astros.

The River Bandits trailed in the first inning, after a two-out double by third baseman Paul DeJong and RBI single by first baseman Alex De Leon. With a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the third inning, Chiefs left-hander Dewin Perez (2-6) allowed consecutive one-out singles to third baseman Luis Reynoso and Muñiz, who both advanced on a passed ball by catcher Luis Cruz. Center fielder Jason Martin grounded out to first, scoring Reynoso and tying the game, 1-1. Designated hitter Ramon Laureano followed with a double to right-center field that one-hopped over the fence, bringing Muñiz across home plate and giving Quad Cities a 2-1 lead.

In the fourth inning, the River Bandits took advantage of three Chiefs errors, starting with shortstop Oscar Mercado's fielding error on a leadoff ground ball by catcher Trent Woodward. Second baseman Jose Fernandez bunted, and Cruz threw it past Mercado at second base into center field. As Woodward advanced to third base, center fielder Harrison Bader fired a throw toward third base that skipped past DeJong, allowing Fernandez to advance to second base. Quad Cities capitalized with an RBI single by shortstop Kristian Trompiz, plating Woodward, before right fielder Ryan Bottger's sacrifice fly to right field, driving in Fernandez and making it 4-1. Reynoso popped out before Muñiz capped the rally with a two-out, two-run homer to left-center field - his second as a River Bandit and fourth of the season.

The largest lead came with two more runs in the sixth inning. Bottger and Reynoso drew consecutive walks from reliever Steve Sabatino. Muñiz flied out, and Martin struck out, before Laureano drew a walk to load the bases. Sabatino was lifted for left-hander Sasha Kuebel, and left fielder Drew Ferguson bounced a ball over the mound and into center field for two-run single and 8-1 Quad Cities lead.

After the first-inning Chiefs run, River Bandits pitchers kept Peoria off the board for six straight innings, including two scoreless innings by starter Thomas Eshelman, right-hander Jacob Dorris (1-0) in his Midwest League debut, and Elieser Hernandez, who began the sixth inning, and pitched a pair of scoreless innings himself, before getting into trouble in the eighth. With two runners on base and two outs, back-to-back singles by designated hitter Brian O'Keefe and Cruz made it 8-3. Two batters later, second baseman Darren Seferina doubled to right field to score two more runs, forcing Hernandez out after 2 2/3 innings and bringing Davis into the game.

The 82nd win for the River Bandits gives them the third-highest win total in Quad Cities franchise history, trailing only the 1992 Quad City River Bandits, who won 91 games, and the 2010 Quad Cities River Bandits, who won 83. Despite the loss, Peoria clinched a playoff spot by virtue of Beloit's loss to Wisconsin, sending the Chiefs to the playoffs for the first time since 2009.

Grassley, Cornyn Seek Details on Obscure Third Party Litigation Financing Agreements

 

WASHINGTON - Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn are examining the impact third party litigation financing is having on civil litigation in the United States. In letters to Burford Capital, Bentham IMF and Juridica Investments Ltd., three of the largest commercial litigation financing firms, Grassley and Cornyn requested details regarding the cases they finance, the structure and terms of the agreements they've entered into and their returns on investment. The Senators also sought information on firms' general practices, such as whether the court or interested parties are made aware of any third-party agreement.

"Litigation speculation is expanding at an alarming rate.  And yet, because the existence and terms of these agreements lack transparency, the impact they are having on our civil justice system is not fully known.  The information we requested today will help us better understand this industry.  It's vitally important to our civil justice system that litigation decisions aren't unduly influenced by third parties," Grassley said.

"Third party litigation financing pumps millions of dollars into our justice system, and the current lack of oversight makes it difficult to track this money's influence on the actions of litigants and the outcomes of litigation. These letters will give us insight into where this money is going and will help us craft effective protection to keep the civil justice system honorable and fair," Cornyn said.

Commercial lenders finance the cost of civil litigation in return for a portion of any recovery, but typically, neither the existence nor the terms of such agreements are disclosed to the court or opposing party. Third party litigation financing is estimated to be a multi-billion dollar industry, but it is largely unregulated and is subject to little oversight, fueling concerns that such agreements distort the civil justice system.

Links to the signed letters can be found below:

Letter to Burford Capitol

Letter to Bentham IMF

Letter to Juridica Investments Ltd.

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Grassley Probes Record Lack of Confirmed Watchdog at State Department

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley today asked the State Department and a lead agency watchdog group to provide all records that would document how and why the State Department went more than five years without a permanent inspector general.  Grassley cited several examples in which a later, permanent inspector general found the lapse compromised agency oversight.  

"Every agency needs a permanent, independent inspector general," Grassley said. "The position is too important to assign to a placeholder.  An acting inspector general doesn't have the mandate to lead, and he or she might not be able to withstand pushback from an agency that doesn't want to cooperate with oversight."  

Grassley said going for more than five years without a permanent inspector general at the State Department is "egregious."  That covers the entire four-year tenure of Secretary Hillary Clinton, the only secretary of State to have served without a single permanent inspector general overseeing the department since the creation of that watchdog position in 1957.  

"The Obama Administration should answer for why it allowed that to happen," Grassley said.  "There's been no transparency on the reason for the lack of an appointment for so long.  We'll never know the extent of the damage to good governance caused by this lapse, but it's fair to say some of the problems exposed lately probably could have been prevented with a permanent inspector general in place."

The White House allowed the position to be "temporarily" filled by an individual with demonstrated close ties to the officials he was charged with overseeing.  The work of the subsequent, Senate-confirmed inspector general provides insight into some of the problems that arose from the previous unusual arrangement.  The permanent inspector general reported that aides to Clinton contributed to an "appearance of undue influence and favoritism" in departmental investigations of three allegations:  that the U.S. Ambassador to Belgium allegedly solicited a prostitute; that a department manager allegedly engaged in sexual misconduct and harassment; and that Cheryl Mills, then chief of staff and counselor to Clinton, allegedly unduly influenced an investigation of an unauthorized release of communications concerning a nominee for a U.S. ambassadorship.

Grassley cited an example in his own investigation where a permanent inspector general might have investigated thoroughly and shielded whistleblowers who alleged they were retaliated against for reporting to an acting inspector general sexual misconduct at the U.S. consulate in Naples.  Also, the permanent inspector general for the State Department and the permanent Inspector General for the Intelligence Community have recently uncovered problems in the way Clinton handled emails containing classified information, Grassley said.

Grassley sought correspondence and information from Michael E. Horowitz, chair of Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, and Secretary of State John Kerry.  Grassley is a long-time advocate for agency inspectors general.

His letter is available here.

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Grassley Adds to State Department Questions Amid Newly Disclosed Emails

WASHINGTON -- Sen. Chuck Grassley is continuing his inquiry into State Department personnel practices amid newly disclosed emails showing the intersection of official actions and private business involving a top aide who was working for the State Department as a Special Government Employee, an outside firm, Teneo, and the Clinton Foundation at the same time.

"How can the taxpayer know who exactly SGEs are working for at any given moment? How can the ethics officer at the State Department know?" Grassley wrote to Secretary of State John Kerry and similarly, in a letter to the top aide, Huma Abedin.

Grassley pointed out that in a letter to the Department of State on July 5, 2013, in response to a Grassley inquiry, Abedin wrote: "I was not asked, nor did I undertake, any work on Teneo's behalf before the Department (and I should note that it is my understanding that Teneo does not conduct business with the Department of State). I was also not asked, nor did I provide, insights about the Department, my work with the Secretary, or any government information to which I may have had access."

Grassley wrote that emails newly disclosed through a Freedom of Information of Act lawsuit regarding a trip to Ireland by Clinton include State Department, Teneo and Clinton Foundation employees and so "raise a number of questions about the intersection of official State Department actions, private Teneo business, and Secretary Clinton's personal interest in fundraising for the Clinton Foundation and related entities."

Grassley asked a series of questions to try to shed light on the State Department business that intersected with Teneo and Clinton Foundation business.

"The bottom line has always been and still is whether the taxpayers are well-served by agency practices and spending," Grassley said.  "No one will know for sure until the State Department is more transparent about how it operates."

Grassley's letters are available here and here.

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SPRINGFIELD - The Illinois Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), representing more than 32,000 active duty and retired police officers, is urging the members of the Illinois House of Representatives to follow the lead set by the Senate and vote to override Governor Bruce Rauner's veto of Senate Bill 1229. This common-sense legislation will allow state employees to continue providing critical state services even if they are unable to reach a collective bargaining agreement with the Rauner administration. Millions of Illinoisans count on the services these state workers provide every day, and the legislation will ensure that these services continue without interruption, regardless of where the collective bargaining process stands.

"Senate Bill 1229 removes the 'my way or the highway' mentality from collective bargaining," said Illinois FOP Legislative Chairman Keith Turney. "It provides a fair and equitable process for resolving disputes while making sure our veterans care, child protection, education, public safety, and many more vital state services continue unabated."

Senate Bill 1229 provides a fair and independent process by which Illinois can avoid a work stoppage. If an impasse is reached during collective bargaining, the legislation requires both sides to present reasonable proposals to an independent arbitrator rather than go out on strike or institute a lockout. The arbitrator will carefully consider the proposals made by both sides and determine a course of action. The arbitration process typically helps both sides reach some reasonable middle ground in the collective bargaining process.

Mandating the use of an arbitrator in lieu of a strike or lockout, called interest arbitration, has been in place for years regarding contract talks with police, fire and other public safety officers in Illinois, including FOP members. Senate Bill 1229 will extend those provisions to cover contract talks with all state employees for the short term.

"There have been no labor stoppages among public safety sector employees like FOP members in the decades since this process has been in place," said Illinois FOP Labor Council Executive Director David Wickster. "It works for both sides and keeps public employees at their jobs and off the picket line."

"There is no doubt that Illinois is in bad financial shape, but we need to remember that state employees have ALWAYS paid their fair share through payroll deductions for pensions and other legally negotiated benefits," said FOP President Chris Southwood. "The men and women of this state deserve to be fairly compensated for their work, and the citizens of Illinois have a right to expect uninterrupted state services. Everybody wins with this common-sense legislation. We applaud the members of the Senate who voted to override the Governor's veto, and we urge the members of the House to join their colleagues and do the right thing."

The Fraternal Order of Police, founded in 1915, is the largest organization of sworn law enforcement officers in the United States. With a proud tradition of officers representing officers, the FOP is the most respected and most recognized police organization in the country. The Illinois FOP, chartered in 1963, is the second largest State Lodge, proudly representing more than 32,000 active duty and retired police officers - more than 10 percent of all FOP members nationwide. Visit www.ilfop.org for more information.

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The Alzheimer's Association will be having a special event on Thursday, September 3 at 12:00 P.M. at The Vine Coffeehouse (1207 N. Jefferson St. in Ottumwa) to kickoff our special Iowa Caucus Project in the Ottumwa area!

For the past few months, Alzheimer's advocates have been growing a movement in Iowa and New Hampshire that is raising awareness and persuading presidential candidates to discuss their plans for addressing Alzheimer's disease.  We want to bring this movement to Ottumwa!

We will be talking about ways we can advocate for those with Alzheimer's and their loved ones, ensuring this disease becomes a national priority.  We will discuss how to talk to a candidate, the media, and other ways to grow an Alzheimer's Awareness Movement across Iowa.

Come join us for a great discussion on how we can make sure our next President will be dedicated to helping us end Alzheimer's disease!  To register, please go to: act.alz.org/iatrainings.  Please email me at eholley@alz.org if you have any questions.
Looking forward to seeing you there!
Emily Holley

Emily Holley | Iowa Caucus Field Director | Alzheimer's Association® | cell: 515.664.3405 | 24/7 helpline: 800.272.3900eholley@alz.orgalz.org

AMANA, Iowa- A new Art Exhibit by Amana Colonies Artist, Marci Schwartz entitled "Portraits of Amana" will open on September 10 and continue until November 8th and consists of portraits of residents of the Amana Colonies.

Marci and her husband Ben live in South Amana along with their 3 daughters, Lucy 8, Harper 4 and June 3.

The public is invited to an open house on September 10th from 5:00-7:00pm.  At that time visitors may view Marci's work, visit with the artist and enjoy refreshments.

The Amana Arts Guild Gallery is open daily, except Tuesdays, from 10:30-4:30pm through September, October will be weekends only.

For more information call 319-622-3678 or email amanarts@southslope.net

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