KIRKSVILLE, Mo. (January 16, 2015) - Truman State University has released the Fall 2014 Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs' List. To qualify for this list, an undergraduate student must attain a semester 3.50-3.99 grade point average and must complete 12 semester hours of credit.

Area students include Caitlin Staver of Bettendorf (Psychology and Biology); Allison Fullercamp (Exercise Science), Scott McKillip (Business Administration) and Jennifer Riefe (Communication Disorders), all of Davenport; and Simone Collins of Rock Island (Psychology).

TSU has also released the Fall 2014 President's List. To qualify for this list, an undergraduate student must attain a semester 4.0 grade point average and must complete 12 semester hours of credit.

Area students include Alexandria Avila (Agricultural Science), William Daniel (Accounting), Kayleen Green (History, Pre-Education/Secondary), and Chelsea Wagschal (French, Pre-Education/Secondary), all of Davenport.

Founded in 1867, Truman is Missouri's highly selective public liberal arts and sciences university. Truman has the highest graduation rate among the state's public colleges and universities and approximately 50 percent of Truman students pursue an advanced degree immediately upon graduating. U.S. News & World Report has rated Truman as the No. 1 public university in the Midwest region for 18 consecutive years. Washington Monthly recognized the school as the No. 2 master's university in the nation and Kiplinger's Personal Finance named Truman as one of the 100 Best College Values for 2015.

On January 23, 24, and 25, Muscatine Arts Council will host the 21st annual Eagles and Ivories Ragtime Festival. This will be a weekend of world-class ragtime and stride, Dixieland jazz, boogie-woogie, spirituals, traditional jazz, and much more. Each evening concert is $15 and afternoon concerts are $10. A three-day concert package is $40. Children under 16 are free. Tickets are available at Flowers on the Avenue and at the door.
Free events include, Friday 9 am Kick-off concert at Sunny Brook, Saturday 9 am Eagle Watch at Pearl City Station, and Saturday 12 noon Silent Movie with live piano at the Art Center.
Ivory and Gold® features Jeff Barnhart, piano, and Anne Barnhart, flute, are praised by the L.A. Jazz Scene as a musical duo that can, "draw out the beauty in the rich melodies and play the music with taste, sensitivity, and a real affection for the idiom." More on Ivory and Gold can be found at www.ivoryandgold.net. Ragtime Dr. Dave Majchrzak started playing the piano at age 6. Dave graduated from the University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine in 1986. Dave plays with Red Lehr's St. Louis Rivermen and Powerhouse Five Traditional Jazz Bands and has been honored with the late Trebor Tichenor's spot in the St. Louis Ragtimers. Dave has appeared at the festival in Sedalia every year since and was named the 2007 Artist in Residence for the Scott Joplin Ragtime Foundation.

Daniel Souvigny, who recently turned fourteen, lives in Hampshire, IL. He loves music and has a passion for ragtime. He has been playing since the age of five and began serious technique training at the age of ten. He is the youngest musician to win first place in the Junior World Championship of Old-Time Piano Playing Contest.
Mad Creek Mudcats are a Muscatine group playing music from the 1890-1930 time-period. This includes ragtime, traditional jazz and novelty tunes. They are regulars at Eagles and Ivories. They will play during the Friday evening Soup Supper.
Locust Street Boys from the Quad Cities Dixieland jazz band formed in 1990 as a group from St. Ambrose University. They will play during the Saturday evening Syncopation Supper.
The Weekend Schedule
Friday, January 23, 2015
? 9:00 Free Sunnybrook Concert
o Ivory and Gold® with Jeff and Anne Barnhart
? 5:00 - 7:00 Soup Supper
o Wesley United Methodist Church, 400 Iowa Avenue
o Music by Mad Creek Mudcats
? 7:00 - Concert
o Wesley United Methodist Church, 400 Iowa Avenue
o Music by Ivory and Gold®, Ragtime Dr. Dave Majchrzak, Daniel Souvigny ? 10:00 After Hours, Francesca Vitale's, 128 East 2nd Street
Saturday, January 24, 2015
? 9:00 - 3:00 Free Eagle Watch
o Pearl City Station, 200 W. River Front (River Front Park)
o Corp of Engineers Park Rangers & Dave Bakke
? 12:00 Silent Movies
o Muscatine Art Center, 1314 Mulberry Avenue
? 2:00 Concert
o Muscatine Art Center, 1314 Mulberry Avenue
Music by Ragtime Dr. Dave Majchrzak
? 5:00 - 7:00 Syncopation Supper
o Wesley United Methodist Church, 400 Iowa Avenue
o Music by the Locust Street Boys
? 7:00 - Concert
o Wesley United Methodist Church , 400 Iowa Avenue
o Music by Ivory and Gold®, Ragtime Dr. Dave Majchrzak, Daniel Souvigny ? 10:00 After Hours, Francesca Vitale's, 128 East 2nd Street
Sunday, January 26, 2013
? 10:00 - Ragtime, Jazz, Gospel worship service
o Wesley United Methodist Church, 400 Iowa Avenue
? 2:00 - Concert
o Muscatine Art Center, 1314 Mulberry Avenue
o Music by Ivory and Gold®

IOWA CITY – The Iowa City VA Health Care System will officially commemorate the renaming of its Galesburg VA Clinic to the "Lane A. Evans VA Clinic" this week.

A Marine Corps Veteran and longtime lawmaker, Evans was best known for his work on Veterans issues.

Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-Ill., and Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., led efforts to rename the facility after Evans' passing at the age of 63 in November of last year. The bill was signed by President Barack Obama and passed into law in mid-December.

Media are invited to attend the renaming ceremony; which will be held at the VA outpatient clinic in Galesburg, IL (310 Home Blvd., Galesburg, IL 61401) on Friday, January 23, beginning at noon. Please contact Jon Pruett, Public Affairs Officer, at 319.339.7104 or jonathan.pruett@va.gov to communicate interest in attendance.

####
Modifications Help Create A Home Environment
That's Safe and Supportive

Not every person struggling with dementia lives in a nursing home or assisted-living facility.

In fact, more than 15 million Americans - usually family members or friends - provide unpaid caregiving to people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia, according to a 2014 report by the Alzheimer's Association.

Although it's wonderful so many are willing to assume that responsibility, it's also important they take steps to make sure the home is a safe place, says Kerry Mills, co-author with Jennifer Brush of the book "I Care: A Handbook for Care Partners of People With Dementia." (www.engagingalzheimers.com)

Part of that is to focus on potential hazards. The concept is not unlike new parents making a house "childproof." Many of the concerns are similar, such as stairs, electrical sockets, sharp objects and swimming pools.

At the same time, it's easy to go too far, Mills said. Ideally, the environment for the person with dementia should be as unrestricted as possible.

"For example, if your loved one enjoys cooking for a hobby and can safely cut and peel vegetables, then by all means, encourage it," Mills says.
Mills suggests several ways to make a home safer for someone with dementia.

•  For the front and back doors. Use bells on the doors, motion sensors that turn on lights or alerts, or other notifications that make the care partner aware when someone has gone out. Add lamps or motion-activated lighting so people can see where they are going when they are entering or leaving the house.

"Another way to discourage someone from wanting to leave the house is to make sure that he or she gets plenty of outside exercise whenever possible," Mills says.

•  For stairways and hallways. Add reflective tape strips to stair edges to make stairs more visible. Remove obstacles, such as mats and flowerpots, to minimize risks of falls on or by the stairs.

Also, install handrails in hallways and stairways to provide stability, and install a gate on the stairway to prevent falls. Improve the lighting around hallways and stairs by installing more ceiling fixtures or wall sconces.

•  For the bathroom. Install grab bars and a raised toilet seat to help both the individual with dementia and the care partners so they don't have to lift the person on and off the toilet.

Add grab bars inside and outside the tub, and a non-skid surface in the tub to reduce risks of falls. You can also add colored tape on the edge of the tub or shower curb to increase contrast and make the tub edge more visible.

Lower the water temperature or install an anti-scald valve to prevent burns, and remove drain plugs from sinks or tubs to avoid flooding.

•  For the possibility the person becomes lost. Provide your loved one with an identification or GPS bracelet in case he or she wanders. Label clothes with the person's name, and place an identification card in his or her wallet with a description of the person's condition. Notify police and neighbors of the person's dementia and tendency to wander.

About Kerry Mills

Kerry Mills, MPA, is an expert in best care practices for persons with dementia both in the home and in out-of-home health care residences and organizations. She is a consultant to numerous hospitals, assisted livings, hospice, home care agencies, senior day care centers and nursing homes. In her twelve-year career in health care, she has served as executive director and regional manager for numerous long-term dementia facilities. She is an outspoken advocate for persons with dementia, lecturing in Hong Kong, Canada, China, Europe and the United States. Her book, coauthored with Jennifer A. Brush, "I Care," (engagingalzheimers.com), is the 2014 Gold Award Winner of the National Mature Media Awards.

The annual presentation of Rock Island's Advanced Technology and Sustainability Consortium (ATSC) Mark W. Schwiebert Sustainability Leadership Award will be held on Monday, January 19, 2015 at 6:45pm during a meeting of the Rock Island City Council.

The 2014 award recipient is MetroLINK (Rock Island County Metropolitan Mass Transit District).  This multi-county public transit system serves the communities of Carbon Cliff, Colona, East Moline, Hampton, Milan, Moline, Rock Island and Silvis, IL.

Although the opening of the Operations and Maintenance Center is the most recent addition to MetroLINK's operations, this award is not based solely on that construction. This award took into consideration their entire range of operations. MetroLINK was selected for the following reasons:

Operations and Maintenance Center:

  • The facility incorporates elements such as:

o   A rooftop with a system with 1,344 Photovoltaic Solar Panels to provide electricity needs

o   A 32 panel solar thermal hot water system to heat water used for vehicle washing

o   Water use reduction through bus wash recycling

o   Heat recovery systems

o   Use of bio swales and native grasses to control storm water runoff

o   Radiant in-floor heating system in maintenance area

o    An indoor CNG and Diesel refueling station

District Station:

·         Metro's District Station replaces an outdated (1978), on-street transfer location and offers a number of passenger amenities including real time next bus information
  • The Station incorporates a number of sustainable elements, including a photovoltaic roof, occupancy-controlled lighting and the re-use of rooftop water runoff for the Station's water feature.

General Operations:

  • MetroLINK has been a leader in environmentally friendly policies for over a decade, committing to green technologies through the use of Compressed Natural Gas vehicles and bio diesel fuel, utilizing innovative energy sources in capital infrastructure pieces, and promoting the environmental benefits of using transit to potential riders.
  • Since 2002, MetroLINK has acquired forty two (42) CNG-powered buses, accounting for nearly 75% of its fixed-route fleet.

Headquartered in Moline, MetroLINK provides transportation services throughout the Quad City Area to over 3.2 million riders a year.  MetroLINK strives to drive economic development, transportation infrastructure and livable communities throughout the area.

The ATSC was created in 2006 by former Mayor Mark Schwiebert to work with technology oriented businesses located in Rock Island. The ATSC was developed to:

  • Provide networking opportunities for businesses that are developing or are significant

users of technology.

  • Determine how the City can better support businesses that are technology oriented or

have an interest in sustainability concepts, processes, or products.

  • Explore technology based enterprise to increase Rock Island's visibility and brand the

City as being a tech friendly community.

Members of ATSC established the Mark W. Schwiebert Sustainability Leadership Award in April 2009.  This award was created to honor former Mayor Schwiebert for his 20 years of service to Rock Island and for his work in the area of sustainable initiatives. This special award is given annually to a business, organization, or individual demonstrating outstanding leadership in the area of green or sustainable initiatives.

The ATSC currently has 50 members.  Meetings are held the second Wednesday of the month at City Hall.  Contact Magda Dziembowski at (309) 732-2909 or dziembowski.magda@rigov.org for membership information.

###
Sunday, January 18: Learn about the area's bald eagles at the Medic EMS building, 107 N. Cody Road, LeClaire, Iowa. At 1:30pm, wildlife photographer, Burt Gearhart, will give an all-ages slide presentation and lecture that will reveal many interesting discoveries about Bald Eagles and their everyday lives in Iowa. See eagles diving for fish, eating while flying, flying with icicles on their toes and much more. Learn to distinguish between immature and mature eagles, what they eat, and why they winter in the area. Attendees will learn about this incredible wildlife opportunity to view and photograph the annual winter gathering of Bald Eagles along the Mississippi River north and south of LeClaire.
At the conclusion of the presentation, at approximately 3pm, join Burt at Lock & Dam 14 to view and photograph the Eagles of LeClaire.
Burt's prints that celebrate Bald Eagles, the Mississippi River, and the historic beauty of LeClaire will also be on display. This program is free and open to the public.
Also that day, The Faithful Pilot Café and Spirits will be open noon-5pm for lunch with a great view of the bald eagles soaring above. Isabel Bloom will have a drawing for a free Eagle sculpture. Bierstube's Bald Eagle Day special on January 18 is 10% off your bill, excluding alcohol.
###
Recognizing a growing need, Skip-a-Long Child Development Services has made an investment in our community's families and has expanded our Moline child care center to include two additional classrooms!
Why is the center adding more classrooms?

The Moline Skip-a-Long child care center has noticed a significant increase in the need for care of 18-36 month old children, and has made this investment as part of the program's mission to make sure ALL children in the Quad Cities area have a great start to being prepared for success in school and in life.

Thanks to the hard work of Estes Construction and Koehler Electric, the project broke ground at the end of July, 2014 and was completed and began serving children in December, 2014!

Please join us for a ribbon-cutting ceremony and open house to tour our new classrooms and see the children enjoying their new learning environment! Opportunities for photos and video of our center's children in the classrooms will be available. Our Chief Executive Officer - Marcy Mendenhall and our center's director - Julie Allen will be available for comments.

WHAT: Open House and Chamber of Commerce Ribbon-Cutting
WHERE: Skip-a-Long Child Development Services - 4800 60th St., Moline, IL
WHEN: Tuesday, January 27th, 2015
TIME: Open House - 9:00am to 11:00am
10:00am - Remarks by: Scott Raes - Mayor of Moline
Teresa Woodworth - Skip-a-Long Board Chair
Chamber of Commerce Ribbon-Cutting

Congratulations to the following students who have made the Rivermont Collegiate 2nd Quarter Honor Roll!

 

Middle School (Grades 6-8)

 

High Honors (All grades B+ or higher or B or higher for courses designated as High School level or advanced track math)

Rohan Abernathy-Wee

Asha Alla

Harris Ciaccio

Christopher Cumberbatch

Elizabeth Decker

Annika Didelot

Sean Dougherty

Jessica Elliott

Jaden Fee

Jacob Hansen

Emad Haque

Mary Aisling McDowell

Sarah McVey

Dwira Nandini

Davis Priest

Nandini Reddy

Grace Sampson

Ava Satterfield

Peyton Seberg

Anna Senjem

Genevieve Strasser

Jack Westphal

Claire Westphal

Alexander Xiao

 

Honors (All grades B- or higher or C+ or higher for courses designated as High School level or advanced track math)

Benjamin Bergfeld

Michael Cumberbatch

Chirag Gowda

Jewell Hixon

Sofia Hunner Rojas                         

Angela Jones

Jozef Porubcin

Lauren Schroeder

Allison Swiger

 

 

Upper School (Grades 9-12) 

 

Headmaster's List (GPA 3.85 - 4.00) 

Adam Dada

Clayton Douglas

Faith Douglas

Anastasia Eganova

Maram El-Geneidy

Shivani Ganesh

Tejasvi Kotte

Molly Lewis

Hayley Moran

Benjamin Nordick

Manasa Pagadala

Emilia Porubcin

Michal Porubcin

Alexander Skillin

Suhas Seshadri

Loring Telleen

 

Distinction (GPA 3.5 - 3.84) 

Spencer Brown

Hema Chimpidi

Christian Elliott

Ryan Howell

Thomas Rodgers

Nadezhda Sinutkina

Gwyneth Vollman

Pavel Yashurkin

 

Merit (GPA 3.00 - 3.49)

Jacob Engelke

Kenton Fee

Jesus Fuentes

Aditya Gohain

Jonathon Kokoruda

Brittany McDonald

Nathan McVey

Bhavana Purighalla

Joseph Rodgers

Nikhil Wagher

 

# # #

Attend Milestones Area Agency on Aging Blizzard Bags Event

 

WHO              Congressman Dave Loebsack

 

WHAT            Dave will attend the event and help assemble Blizzard Bags for seniors

 

WHERE          Milestones Area Agency on Aging

935 E. 53rd St.

Davenport

 

TIME              9:30am

 

Speak at United Neighbors Martin Luther King Jr. Day Ceremony

 

WHO              Congressman Dave Loebsack

 

WHAT            Dave will speak at the annual event honoring Martin Luther King Jr.

 

WHERE          United Neighbors

808 N. Harrison St.

Davenport

 

TIME              10:30am

 

Attend "Candles of Light" Celebration

 

WHO              Congressman Dave Loebsack

 

WHAT            Dave will attend the inaugural Candles of Light awards ceremony honoring members of the community

 

WHERE          Grant Wood Elementary School

1930 Lakeside Dr.

Iowa City

 

TIME              1:00pm

 

Attend Bethel AME Church MLK Day Community Celebration

 

WHO              Congressman Dave Loebsack

 

WHAT            Dave will attend the annual celebration

 

WHERE          Bethel AME Church

411 S. Governor

Iowa City

 

TIME              2:00pm

 

Attend MLK Day Unity March

 

WHO              Congressman Dave Loebsack

 

WHAT            Dave will participate in the annual march

 

WHERE          Old Capitol

Pentacrest

Iowa City

 

TIME              3:30pm

 

###

(DES MOINES) - Iowa Gov. Terry E. Branstad today delivered his inaugural address after taking the oath of office to serve his sixth non-consecutive term as Iowa's governor. This is the governor's seventh inauguration - one as lt. governor and six as governor. A photo of Branstad can be found here.

 

The following is the governor's inaugural address, as prepared for delivery:

 

U.S. Charles Grassley, our new U.S. Senator Joni Ernst, Governor Chris Christie, Lt. Governor Reynolds, Mr. Speaker, Mr. Leader, Mr. Chief Justice, justices and judges, legislators, other elected officials, distinguished guests, family and friends: I am honored to be here, with all of you, today.

Madam President Jochum, thank you for that very nice introduction.

Lieutenant Governor Reynolds, it has been a great pleasure to serve side-by-side with you these past four years and I am thrilled our partnership will continue these next four years.

Thank you for your vision on building a more prosperous Iowa future, for your leadership on STEM education and economic development and for your remarks today.

This is my sixth inauguration as your governor. It would not have been possible without the love and support of my family.

It also would not have been possible without the support of the Iowa voters.

I still marvel at a system and a state where a poor North Iowa farm boy can be elected governor. It remains a great honor and privilege to have been chosen by the people of Iowa again and again to serve as your chief executive.

Inaugurations are celebrations. Not the celebration of any one election, but the celebrations of our heritage, our history, our democracy; and of everything that is good and right and cherished about Iowa. Our Iowa way of life is prospering.

At the inaugural celebration four years ago, however, we were a state with an unsure footing, facing budget woes and economic hard times.

We knew that coming together as Iowans to work together for Iowans was critical to our success.

I joked then, as my father used to say, our eyes were bigger than our wallets. While uncertainty may have started with the state budget, it was felt by our school districts, our businesses, and Iowa families.

Instead of shrinking from the challenges our state faced, after a long first session back, we came together.

We balanced our budget and we got our fiscal house in order. Today, our rainy day funds are again full and we operate on a two-year budget with five-year projections ensuring stability and predictability for Iowa taxpayers.

With a common cause of improving opportunity for Iowa families by making it easier for Main Street businesses to create Iowa jobs, and old-fashioned persistence, we enacted the largest property tax cut in Iowa history.

We know a globally competitive education that opens doors to better skills and better training creates a world-class work force. Getting better results for Iowa students and rewarding outstanding teachers won the day and we passed a transformational education reform.

Even on the most divisive issue of the day, health care, we did what our leaders in D.C. rarely do: we found middle ground.

These compromises were not easily reached. There was hand-wringing and politics aplenty. But I know we all fiercely believed that by working together and meeting these challenges we could find greater success, greater opportunity, and greater prosperity for our people.

We were right, results speak louder than rhetoric. Incomes are rising, government is shrinking, and we have more people employed than at any time in our state's history.

Today, we gather with Iowa facing a much different set of challenges than those of four years ago. We live in a global economy with competition coming from every hemisphere.

Although we are growing as a state, we aren't growing fast enough. Iowa remains the one state in the nation that has not grown by even 50 percent since the 1900 census.

The growth of our state, in terms of population, jobs, incomes, and opportunities - these are the challenges we now face.

My message today is this: we are the architects of our future.

This state we all call home, this The Heart of The Heartland, has an opportunity to grow.

The generational challenges our state faces, the opportunities we must embrace, call for a tried and true way of doing business in Iowa: working hard, setting long term goals, and making sacrifices to build Iowa's future.

Are we willing to make these commitments for Iowa?

Simply put, our future is what we want it to be; it is what we make it.

We can either design a blueprint for growth and build Iowa for a brighter future, a more bountiful future, cementing opportunity and prosperity, or, we can squander our hard work and the foundation we have built, fall into the partisan traps and go down a path neglecting to improve our state's standing in the world and the opportunities for prosperity for Iowans.

To meet our challenge of growth as a state, we must address very familiar areas: our business climate, our skilled workforce, revitalizing our infrastructure, and spurring greater innovation and entrepreneurship within our state.

However, we must approach these areas with a perspective grounded in the 21st century, based on the strong foundation we've built together, but also acknowledging the challenges we must face together.

I have traveled to all of Iowa's 99 counties every year as Governor. While the majesty of our landscape and the spirit of our people have not changed much, Iowa truly has.

We farm differently. Our crops are going to more places around the world than ever before and being planted and harvested by equipment laden with computers and connected to the internet.

We communicate differently. Information travels faster than ever before. When I was governor before, a cell phone was the size of a briefcase. Today, we carry phones in our pockets with more computing power than we ever dreamed possible.

We work differently. Advanced manufacturing is now the leading industry in our state and Iowa is at the forefront when it comes to turning corn and soy beans into sources of renewable energy, building products and even pharmaceuticals.

Indeed, Iowa truly has changed. And we must embrace these changes and adapt to them. This is the juncture we now face as a state, and as elected officials, as we prepare to build Iowa's future.

It's true, Iowa has seen economic and income growth. We have been beneficiaries of a strong agricultural economy.

However, laying the groundwork for future economic growth in Iowa requires building on our success, harnessing new technologies that will quickly expand and flourish. Our economic development strategy must build on our agricultural success as well as position Iowa for the global, modern marketplace.

One area that the Iowa Economic Development Authority believes is poised for tremendous growth worldwide is renewable, bio-chemical production from biomass feed stocks.

Already there are more than 3,500 US jobs working in the renewable chemicals sector but that is expected to increase fivefold.

Today, Iowa is a leader in the available supply of biomass. Let's build on our advantage and position our state for growth in this burgeoning industry with a new incentive for the production of renewable chemicals from biomass feed stocks.

Let's also encourage innovation with a more effective angel investor tax credit fostering the growth of start-up companies across our state.

Building on Iowa's agricultural success with modern bio-renewable products and improving our business climate will result in growing incomes for Iowa families.

As we position Iowa for economic growth and development in the 21st century, we must also equip Iowa workers with the training and skills to fill the jobs of the future for a career in the renewable chemical sector, in advanced manufacturing, or with a start-up company.

Building the skills of our workforce so they can build the products and ideas of the 21st century does not begin after high school. It does not begin during high school. It must begin the very day our Iowa children step foot in a school for the first time.

We have already made positive steps in this direction. With Lt. Governor Kim Reynolds' and Mary Andringa's leadership on the STEM initiative, more Iowans are getting access to critical science, technology, engineering and math education.

As Lt. Governor Reynolds said, STEM is only the first step. We must continue working to position Iowa schools to generate a skilled workforce ready for global competition.

By working from day one to equip students with the skills needed in a knowledge-based economy, we will position Iowa's workforce for the jobs of tomorrow.

As Benjamin Franklin once said, "An investment in knowledge pays the best interest."

I have proposed the greatest investment in our schools in state history. We have worked together to freeze tuition for Iowa students at our Regents institutions for the past two years, and we ought to make it three. For growth, we need a more skilled workforce and we also need more innovation and entrepreneurship in our state.

Where Iowa is lagging is creating new jobs from new companies starting here in Iowa.

Universities across this nation are full of people working on the most challenging problems and solving them with groundbreaking ideas.

Our colleges and universities are no different. Faculty and students at our colleges and universities are working on cutting edge biotechnology and medical research and coming up with new ideas for internet based businesses.

What we need to improve, is our ability to turn those extraordinary ideas into Iowa companies and Iowa jobs. Our universities can play a key role in economic growth by converting university research into industry start-ups.

Allowing these ideas to develop, grow and flourish in our state will foster growth in unforeseen areas and will build the innovative Iowa future we truly need.

Iowans know: our people and our land have always been connected. The success and bounty of one is linked to the other.

This same shared fate is true in the 21st century and it extends to economic opportunity and internet connectivity. Addressing infrastructure today means addressing broadband in addition to our roads and bridges.

I'd like to share a story with you about Michael Koenig, Stuart McCulloh and Holden Nyhus. These young men grew up on farms near Pleasantville, DeWitt and Forest City. They all walked fields as a crop scouts, marking down the location and type of weeds in a field. Sometimes they knew the type of weed and sometimes they didn't. But Michael, Stuart and Holden thought to themselves, "There has to be a better way to do this."

In May 2011, as Iowa State University students these three founded Scout Pro: A company that pairs mobile devices, a web-based application and the internet with good, old fashioned crop walking.

Their web-based application allows farmers in the field to better identify the type of weed they see and pinpoint its exact location, allowing for more efficient crop maintenance and better yields.

Our farmers, and the growth of companies like Scout Pro, rely on infrastructure for success - both roads and broadband.  Addressing the infrastructure that makes both the delivery of internet faster and the roads better must be a priority as we build Iowa's future.

Looking around the room today, I know we can meet the challenges our state faces. It's what we have always done. Embracing challenges and exceeding expectations is what makes our state so great.

We have met our past challenges with perseverance and that perseverance has built character. It is that character, I believe, which gives us greater hope for our future prosperity.

As you look at the back of a one-dollar bill, you will see The Great Seal of the United States. The Seal includes an unfinished pyramid. The unfinished pyramid is just that: unfinished.  Our country and our state are never finished being built, never finished improving and we are always adapting to what comes our way.

That's the funny thing about challenges and Iowans. Challenges make us work harder, dream bigger and go farther than ever before and they become opportunities for advancement.

My solemn promise to you today, is to always meet our challenges head on, earnestly and with building a more successful Iowa future as my guide.

I am ready to once again work with you to build Iowa's future. So let's build it well and let's build it together.

Thank you. God bless you and God bless the great State of Iowa.

###

Pages