Iowa State University Scott County Extension and Outreach Master Gardeners will hold a horticulture clinic from 10 a.m. to noon May 9 at the Bettendorf Library, 2950 Learning Campus Drive.

The free clinic offers an opportunity to talk with Master Gardeners about lawn and garden issues.

Residents are encouraged to bring samples of insects, weeds or diseased plants for help identifying the problem and finding a solution. Master Gardeners use their research-based training and resources from Iowa State University to answer questions about lawn and garden care.

The clinic also is open most weekdays during the spring and summer at the ISU Extension and Outreach Scott County Office, 875 Tanglefoot Lane, Bettendorf. Please call the office at 563-359-7577 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday for directions to the office and times when the Master Gardeners will be available.

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A Family-Wealth Guru Offers 4 Insights For Choosing (Or Agreeing To Be) A Trustee

The greatest transfer of wealth in history is happening right now, according to a study from the Boston College Center on Wealth and Philanthropy.

A staggering amount - $59 trillion - is projected to be passed down to heirs, charities and taxes between 2007 and 2061.

"We are in the middle of a massive, unprecedented wealth transfer from the World War II generation to the Baby Boomers, and then to subsequent generations," says family wealth guru John Pankauski, author of the new book, "Pankauski's Trustee's Guide: 10 Steps to Family Trustee Excellence."

"But much of that wealth will not be given to beneficiaries outright."

Instead, he says, it will be held in a trust, which is a distinct entity, much like a corporation. The trust is managed by a trustee, who protects the trust property for the benefit of the beneficiaries.

Sounds good - as long as trustees are honest individuals who don't use the trust as a personal ATM, and simmering rivalries among beneficiaries don't explode, Pankauski says.

"Some trusts will be competently managed," he says. "Others will be abused in a number of ways the creator of the trust had not intended."

The best way to ensure money is handled correctly - and honestly - is to pick the right trustee, but the right one may not be obvious, he says.

Pankauski, founder of the Pankauski Law Firm (www.pankauskilawfirm.com), offers perspective on how to choose a trustee.

·  Don't choose just anyone! Family members, friends and even felons theoretically could be entrusted with managing an inheritor's money. But tread carefully. "Your hard-earned money could be fought over, misspent or squandered if you leave inheritances in a haphazard way or choose a trustee who handles the trust improperly," Pankauski says. A family member often is chosen, but he warns that can lead to ill will among relatives. The decision on the trustee should be treated like a business consideration, not a personal one.

·  Multiple trustees are allowed, but can cause problems. Personal relationships that were previously cordial can turn icy when there are multiple trustees. Co-trustees administer the trust by majority rule unless the trust document demands unanimous decisions. A common problem Pankauski sees is when there are two co-trustees who don't get along, but must agree on everything. It may make sense to have a third co-trustee, such as an impartial trust attorney or bank or trust company, to serve as the tiebreaker.

Pankauski also offers perspective on whether to be a trustee.

·  "I am trusted, but should I be a trustee?" Being a trustee is a great responsibility. Perfection is not required, but incompetence won't be tolerated, Pankauski says. Criticisms could flow freely. If you're holding a lot of cash and the markets go up, beneficiaries complain that you failed to capture those gains. If you're fully invested in the market and the market takes a dip, the beneficiaries complain that you are overexposed. If one of six beneficiaries requests funds for a minor child's education, the other five will want a similar distribution?regardless of need. You may be fairly compensated for your duties as trustee, but the money may not be worth the potential headaches.

·  You don't have to accept the appointment. You can decline to serve. Merely sign a one-page document, which can be as brief as a sentence, stating you decline. No reason is required. Deliver your statement, and a copy of the trust, including all original documents you have, to the beneficiaries and the successor trustee named in the trust document. If no successor trustee is named, you should notify the beneficiaries in writing that you decline to serve and they should retain counsel to protect their interests.

You can agree to serve and later resign. But doing so raises a host of issues, Pankauski says. You can't just ditch your duties. You are still in charge until there is a smooth transition to a successor.

Regardless of whether you plan to create a trust, or you have been appointed trustee of one, you will want to seek legal counsel, Pankauski says.

"The laws that govern the management of a trust vary from state to state and evolve over time," he says. "The right guidance is essential."

About John Pankauski

John Pankauski, the grandson of Polish and Lithuanian immigrants, was deeply influenced by his parents - products of the Depression and World War II who imparted their values of hard work and thrift. He studied political science at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He attended Suffolk University Law School in Boston, and later obtained a master's degree in law from the University of Miami School of Law's Graduate Program in estate planning. He founded the Pankauski Law Firm PLLC, (www.pankauskilawfirm.com), to create a boutique firm of highly talented professionals that restricts its practice to administration and litigation of family wealth and disputes involving wills, trusts, and estates. In addition to trying cases and handling appeals, the firm defends trustees and advises beneficiaries on their rights related to inheritances, power of attorneys, contested guardianships, investments, and family business interests.

This past Saturday, May 2, members of the Modern Woodmen of America home office chapter and their families joined local Modern Woodmen youth service club members and members of the US Army Child, Youth & School Services (CYSS) Center on the Rock Island Arsenal to help with upkeep of the CYSS Center.

Volunteers raked leaves, sanitized toys, cleaned playground equipment and maintained the grounds at the center from 8 a.m. and noon. The project supports Join Hands Day, a national day of service sponsored by Modern Woodmen and other fraternal benefit societies.

Join Hands Day, which occurs annually on the first Saturday in May, is the only national day of service designed to bring youths and adults together to plan and implement service projects in their communities. As the generations work side by side, they learn more about each other, sparking a new level of understanding and respect.

Previous Join Hands Day projects undertaken by Quad Cities volunteers include cleaning area food pantries, landscaping the YMCA's Camp Abe Lincoln grounds and providing painting upkeep at various local organizations.

Founded in 1883, Modern Woodmen of America touches lives and secures futures. The fraternal benefit society offers financial products and fraternal member benefits to individuals and families throughout the United States.

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Local Advocates Argue Damaging Cuts to Services for Children Can Be Avoided with Adequate Revenue

 

Rock Island, IL - Today, advocates in the Quad Cities - armed with a new analysis from the Responsible Budget Coalition (RBC) - are pushing back against Governor Bruce Rauner's proposed FY 2016 cuts.  The RBC analysis breaks down cuts geographically and shows families in the Quad Cities area will suffer due to steep reductions in services for children, home services, autism, community care, public safety, and economic development.

Despite warnings from bond houses that a failure to extend 2014 income tax rates would cause serious harm to Illinois' families, politicians failed to act.  Failure to extend the tax rates resulted in a $5-6 billion revenue gap for the upcoming budget year, and as a result, Governor Rauner has been pressing lawmakers to pass a budget with $6 billion in cuts to vital programs.  The cuts are the result of expiring tax rates, which are primarily going to corporations and upper-income individuals.

Advocates that work with at the Arc of the Quad Cities Area are advocating for a responsible state budget.  The Arc of the Quad Cities Area's Respite Program provides children and adults with disabilities care throughout the workday so that their families can work.  Rauner's FY 16 budget proposes the elimination of respite programs, resulting in a $90,000 cut for Arc.

Respite care provides families cost-effective, short-term, intermittent care for persons with intellectual or developmental disabilities. This program provides primary caregivers the opportunity to work and handle the daily struggles with the comforting knowledge that their children are well taken care of in their absence. One of the primary benefits of the Respite Care program is to defer to deter costly residential placement of individuals of disabled individuals, which is roughly $60,000 a year in a CILA setting or $240,000 in a state-operated facility.

Says Kyle Rick, Executive Director of The Arc of the Quad Cities Area, "Respite dollars are some of the most cost effective use of funding for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the State of Illinois. Eliminating this essential service is counter-intuitive and potentially ruinous for working families with disabled children."

With the deadline for lawmakers and the Governor to pass a budget just 33 days away, local advocates say they will continue to fight for adequate revenue to avoid Rauner's unnecessary and painful cuts.

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Quad Cities Report Summary

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BANDITS THRASH TIMBER RATTLERS, 10-1, FOR SWEEP

Quad Cities hits three doubles and three triples for sixth straight road win and best 24-game start since 1992

GRAND CHUTE, Wis. (May 3, 2015) - Six Quad Cities River Bandits had two-hit games, and four players drove in two runs each, while right-hander Joe Musgrove went five shutout innings for his fourth win in a 10-1 victory that completed a three-game series sweep over the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers at Neuroscience Group Field at Fox Cities Stadium Sunday afternoon.

The first five batters in the River Bandits order - left fielder Bobby Boyd, first baseman Jamie Ritchie, center fielder Derek Fisher, second baseman Mott Hyde and third baseman Nick Tanielu - as well as shortstop Kristian Trompiz each had two hits. The first four batters each scored two runs, while Hyde, Tanielu, Trompiz and catcher Alfredo Gonzalez each drove in two runs.

By scoring a season-high 10 runs and matching a season high with 13 hits, first-place Quad Cities (18-6) swept its second straight road series and matched a season high with a fifth straight win overall. The club has its best record through 24 games since 1992.

For a second straight day, the River Bandits had their biggest inning in the first. Boyd led off the game by grounding a double down the third-base line, and Ritchie drew a walk against Timber Rattlers left-hander Kodi Medeiros (0-2). Fisher then grounded to first baseman David Denson, who dropped the ball, loading the bases with no outs. Medeiros walked Hyde on four pitches to score the first run, and Tanielu followed with a two-run single into right field. Gonzalez grounded into a fielder's choice for the first out, but Hyde scored to make it 4-0. Medeiros faced nine batters in the inning, which was the largest first inning for the River Bandits this season.

Wisconsin (8-16) never brought the tying run to the on-deck circle for the entire game. Musgrove (4-1) allowed a first-inning leadoff double to Milwaukee Brewers rehabbing second baseman Scooter Gennett, but a groundout, strikeout and flyout ended the inning. Musgrove also worked around lone singles in each of the next four innings to scatter five hits and strike out three batters without a walk. Gennett went 2-for-4 in his third game of a rehab assignment with Wisconsin. He singled in the third inning but also grounded into an inning-ending double play in the fifth inning. In the three-game series against Quad Cities, Gennett finished 3-for-8 with a double, run, RBI, walk, stolen base and sacrifice fly. He played all of Sunday's game at second base.

Medeiros held Quad Cities to a four-run lead until the fifth inning, when Hyde hit a leadoff single to center field and went to second base on a wild pitch. Tanielu hit an infield single with a ground ball deep to the shortstop hole, and Gonzalez walked to load the bases. Medeiros was then removed for right-hander Josh Uhen, who struck out designated hitter Alex Hernandez and right fielder Ryan Bottger before allowing Trompiz's two-run single to center field. Medeiros was charged with six runs - five earned - on six hits and four walks with one strikeout in four innings and three batters of work. Uhen allowed two more runs in the sixth inning, when Ritchie and Fisher hit consecutive singles, Hyde hit his Midwest League-leading 12th double, and Gonzalez brought in a run with a groundout.

Following Musgrove, River Bandits left-hander Bryan Radziewski began the sixth inning with an 8-0 lead. Timber Rattlers shortstop Greggory Munoz hit a leadoff single before designated hitter Dustin DeMuth grounded into a double play. Catcher Carlos Leal then doubled to right-center field and scored his team's only run on third baseman Tucker Neuhaus' RBI single to cut the lead to 8-1. Radziewski allowed a single and two walks to load the bases in the seventh before striking out DeMuth to end the inning. He retired the final seven batters in order to earn his first Midwest League save. Quad Cities pitchers have allowed seven total runs in the last six games.

Timber Rattlers right-hander David Burkhalter worked the final three innings and did not give up a hit until two outs in the ninth inning, when Trompiz hit his first triple since 2013, and Boyd and Ritchie followed with consecutive RBI triples to make it 10-1.

Now 10-2 in road games this season, the River Bandits open a three-game series in Kane County at 6:30 p.m. Monday.

BANDITS RACE TO 3-0 LEAD, TOP TIMBER RATTLERS

First-place Quad Cities improves to 9-2 on the road and clinches fourth straight road series

GRAND CHUTE, Wis. (May 2, 2015) - Quad Cities River Bandits shortstop Mott Hyde had two doubles among a team-high three hits, and third baseman Nick Tanielu posted a season-high three RBIs on two doubles, including a two-run double in a three-run first inning that lifted his team to a 5-2 victory over the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers at Neuroscience Group Field at Fox Cities Stadium Saturday afternoon.

Before Saturday's Kentucky Derby, the River Bandits (17-6) had a fast start against Timber Rattlers left-hander Zach Hirsch (1-3). Center fielder Derek Fisher had a one-out infield single on a hard ground ball off the glove of Hirsch, and Hyde lined a double down the left-field line to put two runners in scoring position. Tanielu then smacked the first pitch he saw from Hirsch to left-center field, scoring Fisher and Hyde. After first baseman Jacob Nottingham's groundout moved Tanielu to third base, second baseman Alex Hernandez lined an RBI single into center field to make it 3-0. The three-run first inning was Quad Cities' largest opening inning in 11 road games this season.

Spotted a three-run lead before taking the mound, River Bandits right-hander Kevin Comer kept Wisconsin (8-15) scoreless for the first four innings. In the first inning, he allowed a one-out single to left fielder Mitch Meyer and issued a full-count walk to Milwaukee Brewers rehabbing second baseman Scooter Gennett, but designated hitter Sthervin Matos grounded to Hernandez who touched second base and threw to first base to end the inning. In the second inning, Hyde's two-out throwing error and a single by catcher Greg McCall put two runners on base before Comer struck out center fielder Monte Harrison. In the fourth inning, Comer allowed two singles to put runners at first and third bases with one out, but a strikeout by McCall and flyout by Harrison ended the inning.

Quad Cities added a run in the third inning, as Hyde doubled to left field and Tanielu doubled to left-center field on consecutive pitches from Hirsch to make it 4-0. Hyde's 11 doubles and 12 extra-base hits this season are both leading the Midwest League.

Wisconsin cut into the Quad Cities lead in the fifth inning, when shortstop Gregory Munoz hit a leadoff triple to center field, and Gennett brought him home with a sacrifice fly to left field. With two outs and the bases empty, Comer walked Matos and was removed from the game, as Quad Cities brought in left-hander Reymin Guduan (1-0) to make his Midwest League debut. Guduan began by allowing third baseman Tucker Neuhaus' RBI triple to right-center field before striking out right fielder Elvis Rubio to end the inning. Comer was charged with two earned runs on four hits and two walks with five strikeouts in 4 2/3 innings.

In the sixth inning, Guduan allowed a walk to first baseman David Denson and single by McCall before getting Harrison to ground into a double play and striking out Munoz. Guduan also got the first two batters in the eighth to work two scoreless innings with three strikeouts.

Hirsch lasted until the seventh inning, when right fielder Ryan Bottger hit a leadoff single into center field, left fielder Jason Martin sacrifice bunted him to second base, and a wild pitch moved him to third base before designated hitter Sean McMullen walked. Right-hander Gian Rizzo came in to face catcher Alfredo Gonzalez, who lined an RBI single into center field for a 5-2 Quad Cities lead. Hirsch was charged with all five earned runs on eight hits and one walk with five strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings.

River Bandits right-hander Eric Peterson pitched 2 1/3 scoreless innings for his second save. He allowed two singles in the eighth inning before Harrison grounded into his second double play. Wisconsin outhit Quad Cities for a second straight game and managed a hit in eight different innings, but the team went 0-for-9 with runners in scoring position and left 11 runners on base, including at least one every inning.

With its fifth straight road win, and fourth straight win overall, Quad Cities clinched a fourth straight road series to open the season and has its best record through 23 games since beginning 18-5 in 1992.

MARTIN, BANDITS SNEAK BY TIMBER RATTLERS, 2-1

Quad Cities pitchers keep Wisconsin from scoring over the final eight innings of series opener

GRAND CHUTE, Wis. (May 1, 2015) - In his Midwest League debut, Quad Cities River Bandits left fielder Jason Martin brought in both his team's runs with a fourth-inning, bases-loaded walk and a sixth-inning RBI single, and left-hander Chris Lee earned his first win of the season in a 2-1 victory over the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers at Neuroscience Group Field at Fox Cities Stadium Friday night.

Quad Cities (16-6) improved to 4-0 in road series openers and won its third straight game overall to open a season-high three-game lead for first place in the Western Division over Burlington (13-8), which lost in Peoria Friday night.

Despite managing only five hits in the series opener, the River Bandits drew eight walks with seven strikeouts on offense. Timber Rattlers right-hander Victor Diaz began the game with back-to-back walks to right fielder Bobby Boyd and first baseman Jamie Ritchie. But Diaz struck out center fielder Derek Fisher before getting designated hitter Mott Hyde to fly out and catcher Jacob Nottingham to ground into a fielder's choice. In the bottom of the first inning, rehabbing Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Scooter Gennett bounced a leadoff single into center field, went to second on a groundout and scored when third baseman Sthervin Matos lined a two-out RBI single to left-center field. It was the only run against Lee (1-2), who worked a season-high five innings, allowing six hits with no walks and four strikeouts.

In the second inning, Lee worked around a one-out double by catcher Carlos Leal with a groundout and strikeout. In the third inning, center fielder Monte Harrison reached on a one-out infield single and went to second base on a sacrifice, but Matos lined out to third baseman Kristian Trompiz to end the inning. In the fourth inning, Lee allowed back-to-back one-out singles to put runners at first and third bases but threw out a runner at home plate on a squeeze bunt attempt. In the fifth inning, Gennett reached first base when Ritchie came off the base to catch a throw, and Lee hit Matos with a two-out pitch before a groundout by designated hitter Tucker Neuhaus ended the inning.

Diaz kept the 1-0 lead for the home team until the fourth inning, when Hyde reached on Gennett's errant throw to first base and went to third base when Gennett missed shortstop Luis Aviles' throw to second base on a one-out ground ball hit by River Bandits second baseman Alex Hernandez. Trompiz worked a nine-pitch walk to load the bases before Martin drew a walk that brought Hyde home with the tying run. Diaz was then removed for left-hander Tyler Linehan, who got a strikeout and fielder's choice groundout to strand the bases loaded in a 1-1 tie. Diaz was charged with one unearned run on one hit and five walks with one strikeout in 3 1/3 innings.

After Linehan worked 1 1/3 scoreless innings, right-hander Mark Williams allowed Hyde's two-out triple in the fifth inning, before getting Nottingham to ground out to end the inning. The 1-1 tie remained for right-hander Cy Sneed (1-2), who began the sixth inning by allowing a single to Hernandez. With one out and Martin at bat, Hernandez stole second base and went to third base when Leal's throw went into center field. Two pitches later, with the infield in, Martin lined his first Midwest League hit to center field to score Hernandez for a 2-1 lead. Sneed escaped the inning after Martin was caught stealing, and the Timber Rattlers reliever went on keep Quad Cities scoreless the rest of the way on three walks and one hit - Fisher's two-out, ninth-inning triple past first baseman David Denson - over four innings.

River Bandits right-hander Keegan Yuhl began the sixth inning with a 2-1 lead. He allowed a leadoff single by right fielder Elvis Rubio but promptly picked Rubio off first base. Yuhl did not allow another hit until Neuhaus grounded a one-out double down the third-base line in the eighth inning. After Rubio flied out, right-hander Ryan Thompson entered with two outs and walked Leal before getting Denson as a pinch hitter to ground out. It was the only time Wisconsin put the tying run in scoring position against the Quad Cities bullpen. Thompson allowed a leadoff single in the ninth inning before striking out the next three batters for his first Midwest League save

BANDITS' POWER, PITCHING GAIN SERIES WIN

Derek Fisher hits his league-leading fifth home run, and Jacob Nottingham hits his fourth

DAVENPORT, Iowa (April 30, 2015) - Quad Cities River Bandits first baseman Jacob Nottingham hit a second-inning solo home run, center fielder Derek Fisher hit a third-inning, two-run home run, and right-hander Joshua James tossed four scoreless relief innings to earn the win in his team's 4-2, rubber match victory over the Cedar Rapids Kernels in front of 2,808 at Modern Woodmen Park Thursday night.

Finishing April with its best 21-game start since 2001, Quad Cities (15-6) maintained a two-game lead in first place of the Midwest League Western Division standings over Burlington (13-8). In the three games against Cedar Rapids, River Bandits pitchers allowed three runs - all unearned - in 29 innings.

On Thursday, Kernels center fielder Zack Granite led off the game against River Bandits right-hander Brock Dykxhoorn with a ground-ball double down the third-base line and went to third base when shortstop Nick Gordon grounded out. Dykxhoorn escaped the jam by striking out designated hitter Zack Larson and getting left fielder Trey Vavra on a popout caught by Nottingham along the first-base dugout railing.

In the second inning, Kernels right fielder Max Murphy hit a leadoff double to left-center field, but Dykxhoorn struck out third baseman T.J. White, and catcher Brett Doe lined out to third baseman Alex Hernandez. Dykxhoorn did not allow a Kernels runner in scoring position through the third and fourth innings, getting help from a double play.

Nottingham opened the scoring with one out in the bottom of the second inning, when he hammered a 3-0 pitch from right-hander John Curtiss (2-1) to the Miller Lite Party Deck in right field for his fourth home run of the season, which momentarily tied him with Fisher for the team and league lead. In the third inning, catcher Jamie Ritchie hit a one-out single and stole second base before Fisher ended an 11-pitch battle with Curtiss by sending his league-leading fifth home run over the right-center field wall for a 3-0 Quad Cities lead.

The Kernels (12-9) snapped a 13-inning scoreless streak by Quad Cities pitchers in the fifth inning. Doe led off with a double, and with one out left fielder Zack Granite grounded to second baseman Mott Hyde, whose errant throw allowed Granite to reach first base and Doe to score. With a 3-1 lead, Dykxhoorn was removed for right-hander Jose Montero. When Granite stole second base, Ritchie's throw went into center field, allowing Granite to reach third base, and Gordon's groundout scored Granite to cut the lead to 3-2. Both runs were unearned against Dykxhoorn, who allowed three hits and two walks with three strikeouts in 4 1/3 innings.

After Curtiss yielded three earned runs on five hits with four strikeouts in the first four innings, Kernels left-hander Sam Clay began the bottom of the fifth inning with a 3-2 deficit. Shortstop Kristian Trompiz worked a leadoff walk, and Clay's high school teammate and fellow Buford, Ga., native Jamie Ritchie lined an 0-2 single through the middle for his game-high third hit. A walk to Fisher loaded the bases, before designated hitter Nick Tanielu grounded out to second base to bring in Trompiz. Then Hyde, Clay's college teammate at Georgia Tech, drew a full-count walk to reload the bases before Clay got Nottingham to ground out and end the inning.

James (1-0) began the sixth inning with a 4-2 lead and allowed a leadoff infield single to the left side by Kernels first baseman Tyler Kuresa, who went to second base on a passed ball. But James responded by retiring the next 11 Kernels in order and 12 of 13 to finish the game. Doe was hit by a pitch with two outs in the ninth inning before James struck out second baseman Jonatan Hinojosa to end the game. James allowed only one hit and hit one batter while striking out five in four shutout innings.

BANDITS SHUT OUT KERNELS FOR GUARANTEED WIN

Quad Cities scores twice each in the sixth and seventh innings to force first rubber match of the season

DAVENPORT, Iowa (April 29, 2015) - One day after losing their first shutout of the season, the Quad Cities River Bandits notched their first shutout win, with right-handers Daniel Mengden and Austin Chrismon combining for a 4-0 victory over the Cedar Rapids Kernels on Guaranteed Win Night in front of 1,343 at Modern Woodmen Park Wednesday night.

With its quickest nine-inning home game of the season - two hours, seven minutes - Quad Cities (14-6) evened the three-game series against Cedar Rapids (12-8) and restored its Western Division first-place lead to two games over the Kernels and Burlington (12-8).

In his first start at Modern Woodmen Park, Mengden limited the Kernels to three hits and two walks with three strikeouts in five shutout innings. In the first inning, he worked around a two-out single by Kernels right fielder Zack Larson. In the second inning, he allowed a one-out single by third baseman T.J. White, but second baseman Pat Kelly grounded into an inning-ending double play - the first of three turned in the game by Quad Cities.

The River Bandits had their first scoring chance in the second inning against Kernels left-hander Mat Batts (2-1). Third baseman Nick Tanielu and designated hitter Jacob Nottingham began the inning with back-to-back singles to right field to put runners at first and third bases. Batts then struck out first baseman Bryan Muñiz and left fielder Jorge Martinez. When the latter's third strike went in the dirt, Nottingham ran toward second base, drawing a throw from catcher Brian Navarreto. Tanielu then ran from third base toward home, but shortstop Nick Gordon threw back to Navarreto to get Tanielu for the inning's final out.

Mengden went on to work around a walk in the third inning and single in the fourth inning. In the fifth inning, center fielder Tanner English drew a two-out walk but was thrown out trying to steal second base by catcher Alfredo Gonzalez.

In the sixth inning, Chrismon (2-1) allowed a leadoff single by left fielder Zack Granite before getting Gordon to ground into a double play. He walked Larson before getting an inning-ending popout. In the bottom of the inning, River Bandits shortstop Kristian Trompiz hit a leadoff fly ball down the right-field line that Larson appeared to lose in the sky, before it dropped inside the right-field line for a double. Center fielder Bobby Boyd then put a sacrifice to the third-base side of the pitcher's mound, where Batts fielded the ball and overthrew first base, allowing Trompiz to score and Boyd to reach second base. Gonzalez then sacrificed Boyd to third base, and with the infield in, second baseman Mott Hyde hit an RBI single to center field to make it 2-0.

In the seventh inning, Batts began by allowing consecutive singles to Nottingham and Muñiz, putting runners at first and third bases. Martinez then brought in Nottingham with a ground ball to the right of second base, where Muñiz avoided the tag of Kelly, who threw to first base for one out. Right fielder Ryan Bottger then grounded a double down the third-base line to score Muñiz for a 4-0 Quad Cities lead. Batts was removed after allowing four runs - three earned - on seven hits and one walk with six strikeouts in 6 1/3 innings.

Chrismon held the 4-0 lead without allowing a runner into scoring position in the final two innings. In the eighth, Granite hit a leadoff single before Gordon grounded into his second double play. In the ninth, White collected his game-high third hit with a two-out single before Chrismon struck out Kelly looking to end the game. Chrismon allowed four hits and two walks while striking out three batters in four innings. All seven Kernels hits were lone singles in seven different innings.

Contracts Often Limit Where Physicians Can Work If They Change Employers

Patients may just shrug when they learn their doctor plans to move to a new office.

After all, they can just follow, right?

Maybe not. Or at least, not easily.

Physician contracts often contain restrictive covenants that limit where doctors can work if they leave their current practices. The idea is to keep them from competing with their old employer.

For example, the contract could require the doctor's new office to be 15 or more miles away. The doctor also might have to give up privileges at the local hospital.

"These contract provisions hold numerous traps for the unwary," says Dennis Hursh, an attorney who has provided legal services to physicians for more than three decades and is the author of "The Final Hurdle: A Physician's Guide to Negotiating a Fair Employment Agreement." (www.TheFinalHurdle.com)

Patients can be left scrambling to find a new physician.

The situation can be even worse for the doctor, who essentially might have to start his or her career over again, building a new patient base.

Hursh says it's not unusual for him to answer desperate phone calls from doctors who paid little attention when they agreed to their contracts, but now wonder whether their soon-to-be-former employers can enforce the restrictions.

"Unfortunately, they probably can," he says.

Doctors need to be diligent and negotiate favorable terms before they sign an employment contract, he says. Hursh says there are several ways to deal with restrictive covenants so that doctors are not facing career-damaging situations.

•  Keep the distance reasonable. Although geographic restrictions are common, in most cases the agreement should not require the doctor's new office to be more than five miles from the old one. In rural areas, a somewhat larger area may be reasonable, Hursh says.
Also, when employers have multiple offices, the distance rule should apply only to the office where the doctor spent most of his or her working time.

•  The general practice of medicine should not be restricted. "It's one thing to agree that patients will have to drive five miles from your old office if they want to continue seeing you," Hursh says. "It's another thing to agree you won't see patients in hospitals, nursing homes or ambulatory surgical centers that are within the prohibited area."

•  Continuing the doctor-patient relationship. Patients often become attached to a particular doctor and want to stick with him or her. But when a doctor moves to a new practice that can get tricky.

Contracts usually prohibit doctors from directly asking their patients to follow them to the new practice, Hursh says. Barring such solicitation, whether it's in the office or by phone call or letter, is reasonable, he says. But advertisements by the doctor's new employer should not be considered direct solicitation.

•  Sometimes restrictions should not apply. If an employer fires a doctor without cause, then the restrictive covenant should not go into effect, Hursh says. That's also true if the employer breaches its agreement with the doctor, although that can be difficult to negotiate, he says.

"An employer could worry the physician will claim some far-fetched theory of an alleged breach to get out of the restriction," he says. "One way to deal with that might be to list specific grounds for a breach in the contract."

Hursh says one of the most extreme cases he ever experienced involved a doctor whose non-compete clause prohibited the practice of medicine within 65 miles.

A hospital 62 miles away wanted to hire him.

It was while negotiating a contract with the hospital that Hursh and the hospital's attorney discovered the restriction.

"The restriction was so ludicrous that we both agreed that the former employer would almost certainly lose if they tried to sue," Hursh says.

But the hospital figured: why take chances.

The offer to hire the doctor was withdrawn.

About Dennis Hursh

Dennis Hursh has been providing health-care legal services for more than three decades. Since 1992, he has been managing partner of Hursh & Hursh, P.C., www.PaHealthLaw.com, a Pennsylvania law firm that serves the needs of physicians and medical practices. He is a member of the American Health Lawyers Association, where he is involved in the Physician Organizations Practice Group.

Community mental health professional offers insight into healthy aging

DAVENPORT, IA (April 29, 2015) - Senior Star at Elmore Place invites Quad City seniors and their families to the presentation, Healthy Minds for Seniors, at 1 p.m. on Monday, May 11 at 4502 Elmore Avenue, Davenport.

Led by guest speaker Alex Hogg, a licensed independent social worker with Family Resources, the informal presentation will address the signs of depression, anxiety, grief and compassion fatigue and how to recognize their differences.  In addition, Hogg will discuss therapy as a treatment option.

According to the National Institute on Aging's website, an estimated two million Americans age 65 or older suffer from major depression, and another five million suffer from less severe forms of the illness ... yet, depression is a widely under recognized and under treated medical illness.  Depression can, and should, be treated when it occurs with other illnesses such as heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer and Parkinson's disease, since untreated depression may delay recovery from or worsen the outcome of these other illnesses.

"Senior Star continues to present discussions with industry professionals to offer Quad Cities friends and neighbors access to information that they otherwise might not discover from their own research online," said Marc Strohschein, executive director of Senior Star at Elmore Place.  "We encourage all senior adults and their family members to join us for this vital discussion."

Light refreshments will be served.  An RSVP is requested no later than May 8 by calling 563.484.5114.

For more information about Senior Star at Elmore Place or to schedule a tour, call 563.484.5114 or visit the website at www.seniorstar.com.

 

About Senior Star at Elmore Place

Senior Star at Elmore Place, a Senior Star community, features 236 modernly decorated apartments spanning across 20 acres of beautifully landscaped property with many customized amenities to offer its residents three distinctive living experiences:  independent living, assisted living and memory care.  For more information, visit www.seniorstar.com.

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There may still be an opportunity to enroll in Marketplace coverage for 2015 for those who are uninsured and were unaware that a penalty would be assessed on their 2014 tax return. This special enrollment period ends tomorrow, April 30th, 2015, and is specifically for individuals who are not currently enrolled in a Marketplace plan AND have a penalty on their taxes for 2014 for not having insurance, AND were unaware, or did not understand the penalty and its implications.

The Project of the Quad Cities has trained Illinois-licensed navigators providing FREE in-person enrollment assistance. For information on eligibility, please call (309)762-5433, or visit us at 2316 5th Avenue, Moline, IL 61265.

Emmalynn Tully of Bettendorf performed in voice seminar at Augustana College

ROCK ISLAND, IL (04/29/2015)(readMedia)-- Sixteen Augustana students, including Emmalynn Tully, performed in a voice seminar on Tuesday, April 28 in Wallenberg Hall. Selections included "The Sky Above the Roof" by Ralph Vaughan Williams, sung by mezzo soprano Sara Naftzger, and Stephen Sondheim's "Green Finch and Linnet Bird" from Sweeney Todd, sung by soprano Victoria Beale. Students were accompanied by Michelle Crouch, Sheila Doak, Howard Eckdahl and Justin Lebo on piano.

Elizabeth DeMay of Geneseo exhibits art at Augustana Teaching Museum of Art

Every year graduating studio art students create and display a collection of original art. This year twenty students, including Elizabeth DeMay, created unique collections that were displayed in the Augustana Teaching Museum of art from April 24 to May 24.

The annual spring exhibition of senior student work is part of their Senior Inquiry capstone project. Every art and graphic design major creates a coherent body of original art work for the senior exhibition, concentrating in one medium or related media. Weekly working sessions and periodic group critiques with faculty in relevant media inform their work.

The finished project is a representative, high-quality collection for their portfolios. In combination with the public presentation component, the Senior Inquiry project gives art and graphic design students an edge for graduate school or the professional art world.

Christine Harb receives Eddie Mabry Diversity Award from Augustana College

Augustana College awarded six students the 2015 Eddie Mabry Diversity Award. Among the winners was senior, Christine Harb of Davenport majoring in Biology and Pre-Medicine. Harb was recognized for the research project: The Seperation Wall.

This award recognizes academic work by dedicated students who have demonstrated a significant commitment to enhancing multicultural awareness at Augustana. Submissions included works that explore issues related to diversity and multiculturalism such as social class, culture, race/ethnicity, sex/gender, sexuality, disability, and religion.

Philip Tunnicliff was elected to Augustana College's Student Government Association

Twenty-one Augustana College students were elected to the college's Student Government Association (SGA) for the 2015-2016 academic year.  Philip Tunnicliff of Bettendorf, majoring in Geology has been elected as senator for the junior class.

Students elected to Augustana's Phi Beta Kappa

Forty-eight students at Augustana College, in Rock Island, Ill., recently were elected into the college's Phi Beta Kappa chapter. This national academic honor society recognizes scholarly achievement, character, integrity, and independence of mind. Members are elected by faculty. Election is less a reward for past success than a recognition of exceptional promise for future growth and achievement.

Among the elected students are:

Hassan Baig of Moline majoring in Religion.

Adam Bengfort of Davenport majoring in Engineering Physics and Applied Mathematics.

Benjamin Knapper of Davenport majoring in Applied Mathematics and Computer Science.

Samantha McGreer of Illinois City majoring in Pre-Medicine and Biochemistry.

Andrew Shearouse of Coal Valley majoring in Business Administration-Management Information Systems and Computer Science.

Rosalie Starenko of Rock Island majoring in Geography and Spanish.

Anthony TouVelle of Bettendorf majoring in German Studies and International Business.

The new Phi Beta Kappa members will be formally honored on campus and introduced at the Senior Honors Convocation on Saturday, May 23, at noon, in Centennial Hall (3703 7th Ave., Rock Island).

Phi Beta Kappa was founded in 1776 and celebrates and advocates excellence in the liberal arts and sciences. It has more than half a million members and chapters at 283 American colleges and universities. Invitation to membership is a reflection of outstanding achievement. Only about 10 percent of the nation's institutions of higher learning have Phi Beta Kappa chapters, and only about 10 percent of the arts and sciences graduates of these institutions are selected for Phi Beta Kappa membership.

Founded in 1860, Augustana College is a selective four-year residential college of the liberal arts and sciences. The college is recognized for the innovative program Augie Choice, which provides each student up to $2,000 to pursue a high-impact learning experience such as study abroad, an internship or research with a professor. Current students and alumni include 155 Academic All-Americans, a Nobel laureate, 13 college presidents and other distinguished leaders. The college enrolls 2,500 students and is located along one of the world's most important waterways, the Mississippi River, in a community that reflects the diversity of the United States.

Venture back Into the Woods as City Circle Acting Company of Coralville presents the Tony Award-winning musical classic by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine, April 24-May 3 at the Coralville Center for the Performing Arts.

Follow a baker and his wife as they struggle to meet the demands of a vengeful witch so that they may have their hearts' desire?a child of their own. On their journey in and out of the woods, they meet a woman fleeing a ball, a girl with extraordinary hair, a cow-sick boy, a sweet-loving granddaughter, a couple of princes, and at least one giant.

This show features two equity actors bringing their professional polish to the CCPA Stage.  Kristen Behrendt (DeGrazia) shows her Broadway talents as the delightfully cruel and crafty witch, a role made famous by Bernadette Peters.  Patrick DuLaney presents his professional chops as the Baker, who helps connect each of these hilarious and heartbreaking fairy tales together into a story even the Grimm Brothers never imagined.

"I remember listening to the cassette tape of the original cast in 1987 before ever seeing the show on stage.  I imagined what the show would look like--how the stories would be told in the theater.  I'm thrilled to be able to work with this all-star cast to bring this vision finally to life," says director Chris Okiishi. "Even though these are Fairy Tale characters and the stories are firmly based in the Brothers Grimm, I think our audiences will relate in a very real way to the characters' triumphs and struggles.  And who hasn't wondered what happens after 'Happily Ever After'?"

Tickets are $12-$27 and can be purchased online at http://www.coralvillearts.org/ or by calling 319.248.9370 or in person at the CCPA box office at 1301 5th Street and at the Coralville Recreation Center at 1506 8th Street. Into the Woods is sponsored by University of Iowa Community Credit Union.

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