CHICAGO - Governor Pat Quinn issued the following statement on the first meeting of the Joint Criminal Justice Reform Committee:

"I salute Representative Zalewski and the Joint Criminal Justice Reform Committee as they convene for their first meeting this afternoon.

"Violence knows no political affiliation, and this bipartisan group is coming together to identify reforms that will strengthen our criminal justice system and our state's public safety.

"As I've made clear, it is necessary to take a comprehensive approach to public safety that includes stronger gun laws such as those included in the Public Safety Act, smarter sentencing reforms and greater investments in proven re-entry and diversion programs as I proposed in this year's budget.

"I look forward to hearing the issue frankly discussed in these hearings, and I am eager to work with the members to make our state and our communities safer for all."

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DES MOINES, IA (07/15/2014)(readMedia)-- The following local residents graduated from Drake University at the conclusion of the spring 2014 semester:

Kelsey Brandt of Bettendorf with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Scott Copeland of Davenport with a Master of Accounting from the College of Business & Public Administration

Ryan Flynn of Bettendorf with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Matthew Gannon of Rock Island with a Juris Doctor from the Law School

Talor Gray of Port Byron with a Bachelor of Science from the College of Arts & Sciences

Marlana Kulig of Coal Valley with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Erika Milas of Bettendorf with a Doctor of Pharmacy from the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences

Nicholas Mims of Davenport with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Nicholas Oestreich of Bettendorf with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Calla Parochetti of Le Claire with a Juris Doctor from the Law School

Jordan Porter of Eldridge with a Doctor of Pharmacy from the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences

Jared Simmer of Davenport with a Bachelor of Science from the College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences

Hayley Thomson of Davenport with a Bachelor of Science in Education from the School of Education

Seth VanDeest of Bettendorf with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Claire Vandercar of East Moline with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from the College of Business & Public Administration

Drake University is a midsized, highly selective private university in Des Moines, Iowa. Drake enrolls more than 3,300 undergraduates and 1,900 graduate students from 47 states and more than 45 countries.

Rock Island, IL– On Saturday, July 19th, the KISS Hope Creek Referendum Committee will be hosting a charitable poker tournament at the Arsenal Island Golf Clubhouse, located at 1838 Gillespie Street on Arsenal Island. The public is invited to come out and show their support for Hope Creek Care Center.

All proceeds will go to the KISS (Keep It Supported for Seniors) Committee. KISS is a public citizen's group dedicated to providing information to Rock Island County residents about the benefits of maintaining Hope Creek Care Center as a publically owned and operated nursing and rehabilitation facility. The primary activity of KISS is to generate voter support to approve a referendum question in November 2014 that will sustain Hope Creek for current and future County residents.

Below are the details for the Texas Hold'em Poker Tournament:

Saturday July 19th - Arsenal Island Golf Clubhouse

Doors Open at 3:30pm - Cards fly at 5:00pm

$40 Buy In - $10 Re-Buy (Unlimited for first hour)

Food & Drink Specials!

Raffle Baskets!

Guaranteed Prizes for Top 10% of Players!

1st, 2nd, & 3rd Place Trophies!

All players must have a valid ID to enter Arsenal Island!

Please, no outside food or drinks.

Please call 309-721-6241 with questions!

In case you missed it, the front page of today's Roll Call features a profile on Senator Harkin's work as HELP Committee Chairman to get a number of bipartisan bills to the President's desk.  In particular, the article says the following of Harkin's work:

The retiring five-term senator ? who hails from a vastly more productive era ? might seem at first blush an unlikely candidate to break through in the most dysfunctional Congress ever. Harkin is an unabashed Midwestern liberal. But he's also proved adept at reaching across the aisle on issues that don't always make the front pages ? such as the Workforce Investment Act reauthorization ? a major overhaul heading to the president's desk.

When the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act is signed by the President, as he has indicated he will do, it will be the fourteenth bill in the HELP Committee's jurisdiction under the leadership of Chairman Harkin to have become law in the 113th Congress.

The full article can be found here or below.

 

For more information, please contact Senator Harkin's Press Office at (202) 224-3254.

Harkin's HELP Committee Shows Off the Lost Art of Legislating

By Niels Lesniewski and Humberto Sanchez

July 15, 2014, 5:01 a.m.

Ask Sen. Tom Harkin about his committee's work this Congress and he's ready to rattle off a key statistic.

"Fourteen bills. More than any other committee in the Congress. Fourteen bills signed into law."

The retiring five-term senator ? who hails from a vastly more productive era ? might seem at first blush an unlikely candidate to break through in the most dysfunctional Congress ever. Harkin is an unabashed Midwestern liberal. But he's also proved adept at reaching across the aisle on issues that don't always make the front pages ? such as the Workforce Investment Act reauthorization ? a major overhaul heading to the president's desk.

To hear Harkin tell it, much of the opportunity for success comes from having an old-school legislator as a partner.

"First of all, I have a good ranking member in Lamar Alexander. While we disagree on things, we're able to work together and find common ground and get it done," the Iowa Democrat said. Alexander, who became the top Republican on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee this Congress, learned the ropes under a fellow Tennessean, the late Majority Leader Howard Baker.

"That's just it. We just work. It takes work. It takes time," Harkin said last week, as leaders in both parties hailed the WIA.

It also takes discipline.

Harkin rejected the idea of adding an unemployment extension he and other Democrats supported to the re-authorization. "We worked five years on it and it's a good bill and we are not going to let it get screwed up by anything," Harkin said when the bill headed to the floor.

Alexander said the HELP committee has a history of focusing on areas where common ground between the parties can be achieved, including under the leadership of the previous chairman, the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

"I'm proud of the progress we've made and I'll give Sen. Harkin a good deal of the credit," Alexander said. "Ideologically, we are very different, but we both know that our job is to get a result where we can. We have a huge jurisdiction. Sen. Kennedy used to say that we have about 40 percent of the jurisdiction of the Senate. And I think we've produced more legislation that has been reported to the floor and become law than any other committee."

The House cleared the workforce investment agreement with an overwhelming 415-6 vote on July 9.

"The Workforce Investment Act had been stuck, literally, for 10 years. And finally, especially due to the work of Sen. Murray and Sen. Isakson, it passed," Alexander said, lauding Sens. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., for running point.

"I think what you saw was both of us sit down and work with our counterparts across the aisle to find common ground and achieve something that was really important to our country. And that is how we work," Murray said.

Alexander also highlighted the work of longtime committee members Barbara A. Mikulski, D-Md., and Richard M. Burr, R-N.C., who helped pass the Child Care Development Block Grant, which helps low-income families.

?"I think part of the solution is that we look for areas where we can get a result, and we have good participation from other members of the committee. It's not just a two-man show," Alexander said.

Other HELP Committee measures that have become law this Congress include a reauthorization of the toll-free number for the poison control center and promoting access to epinephrine pens in schools. Harkin has more he wants to get done before retiring, but getting his education agenda to move could be quite a struggle. There's more of a partisan divide on that issue than some others he's handled.

"I'm working on the higher education bill. I'll have it out in September. I don't know, maybe lame duck," Harkin said. "Maybe."

If he does, it might be testament to the relationships he's built.

"If I only dealt with my Republican colleagues only on an issue basis, I probably never would get anywhere," Harkin said then. "But I deal with them on a human basis, too."

Alexander said he had particular issues with the Democratic view on the Elementary and Secondary Education Act ? also known as No Child Left Behind.

"Like on kindergarten through the 12th grade, my view of the Democratic bill is that it creates a national school board. We simply don't agree so we had competing bills. On higher education, we may have some different opinions," Alexander said. "But where we can agree we'll work together."

But Alexander also pointed out his recent effort with Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., to simplify the process of applying for and receiving federal financial aid to attend college. Their bill would eliminate the current 10-page Free Application for Federal Student Aid and replace it with a simple, two-question postcard.

At a meeting of the National Governors Association on July 11, Alexander stood up and showed the current student aid form to demonstrate its length.

"Because it's a bipartisan effort, I think it has a much better chance of actually getting a result," Alexander told CQ Roll Call. "So we are not just interested in making speeches, we are interested in getting a result and where we can we will and where we can't, we'll lay those items aside and go on to something else."

Harkin's also continuing to focus on early learning legislation, pushing for floor time.

But his other baby, the appropriations bill that funds the departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, is stuck in a broader morass as Democrats seek to avoid contentious amendments.

Asked about the chances to consider that bill, Harkin said: "I have no idea. I really don't know."

"I think the CR that we have in September is going to be short-term, probably until December or something," Harkin said. "And then after we come back in the lame duck we'll work on a longer bill, and hopefully it will not be a CR, but it will actually be an omnibus."

And naturally, one that includes his bill.

When Harkin retires at the end of this Congress, Murray ? who has been bolstering her legislative bona fides this Congress ? could be in position to take his dual gavels at HELP and the appropriations subcommittee that funds the programs HELP oversees. But she declined to say whether she would.

"All those questions will be answered at some point, I am not ready [to] yet."

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All donations to benefit River Bend Foodbank

 

On Thursday, July 17 Modern Woodmen of America will invite members, family, friends and the public to help "Pack the Truck" at Modern Woodmen Park.  The event has been rescheduled due to a rain cancellation on June 19. Modern Woodmen volunteers will "Pack the Truck" when gates open at 5:30 p.m. All attendees are asked to bring a canned food donation to help feed the hungry. Media coverage is welcomed and appreciated.

Those with tickets or postcards from the River Bandits game on June 19 can use them to get into the game for free on July 17. Those who do not have the postcard or tickets can purchase a River Bandits ticket at half-price to enter the game. The first 3,000 attendees will receive a commemorative Quad City River Bandit's baseball cap.

Modern Woodmen's "Pack the Truck" event is just one aspect of the Knock Out Hunger campaign, a summer-long project to help food insufficient families in the Quad City area. Modern Woodmen employees donated and collected 1,551 pounds of food and $1,497 in monetary donations prior to the cancelled June 19 "Pack the Truck" event.

Knock Out Hunger campaign

This year, Modern Woodmen has selected River Bend Foodbank to support through its Knock Out Hunger campaign. Modern Woodmen employees and members will donate time, money and food to the food distribution center throughout the summer.

There are multiple mobile food pantry events scheduled, backpack programs, a "Meals from the Heartland" packing event, and a communitywide 5k run/walk. Each event will support the food bank.

River Bend Foodbank is the largest hunger relief organization in the Quad Cities and surrounding communities, distributing more than 8 million pounds of food annually to feed the hungry. The Foodbank serves more than 10,000 individuals every week through its distribution network of 300 charitable feeding programs in a 22-county service area in Eastern Iowa and Western Illinois.

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

For more information about the Knock Out Hunger campaign or the effort to support River Bend Foodbank, contact Amber O'Brien at 309-793-5660, 309-798-6704 (cell) or visit modern-woodmen.org.
After remaining missing for 69 years, Moulton, Iowa, native to return home Saturday to final resting place at Sunset View Cemetery in Moulton

 

(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry Branstad has ordered flags to be flown at half-staff in Iowa from 5 p.m. Friday, July 18, 2014, until 8 a.m. Monday, July 21, 2014, in honor of U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert "Bobby" E. Howard, formerly of Moulton, Iowa. A photo of Staff Sgt. Howard may be found here.

Howard, a 21-year old serving with the 450th Bomber Squadron, 322nd Bomber Group, Medium, 9th Air Force, U.S. Army Air Corps, was last seen April 16, 1945, as his unit was conducting a bombing mission over Germany. His flight was shot down and crashed near Wittenburg, Germany. Only one of the six crew members was able to parachute from the aircraft and was taken prisoner by German forces. Howard and four other crewmembers were declared deceased, but their remains were never found.

In 2012, the Joint Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Accounting Command - Central Identification Laboratory (JPAC) received information from German Officials of human remains found within a burial site located close to the possible aircraft crash site. In 2014, JPAC's Research and Analysis Group concluded a historical association drawn from Missing Air Crew Report #14463 and artifacts and human remains recovered at the excavation site. Mitochondrial DNA testing positively identified part of the remains belonging to Staff Sgt. Howard.

Robert Howard was born December, 19, 1923, in Moulton, Iowa. He graduated from Moravia Public School in Moravia, Iowa, in 1941, and participated in marching band, orchestra, concert band and dramatics.

Howard enlisted in the U.S. Army on March 19, 1943, and transferred into the U.S. Air Army Air Corps. His military awards and honors include the Purple Heart, Air Medal (with one silver and two bronze Oak Leaf Clusters), Army Good Conduct Medal, American Campaign Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal (with three bronze service stars), World War II Victory Medal and Enlisted Crew Wings.

Howard is survived by brothers Harold and Dennis, both of Des Moines, sisters Evelyn Lewin of Indianola, Janie Ballanger of Coatsville, Mo., and Evelyn June Nance of Tulsa, Okla., and by many nieces, nephews and extended family members. His parents and his sister, Betty Howard Harvey are deceased.

The Governor's directive applies to all U.S. and state flags under the control of the state. H.R. 692, signed in 2007, requires federal government agencies in the state to comply with the Governor's Executive Order that the U.S. flag be flown at half-staff in the event of the death of a member of the Armed Forces.

A memorial service will be held at Sunset View Cemetery in Moulton, Iowa, on July 19, 2014, at 11 a.m., with full military honors provided by the Iowa National Guard. The cemetery is located north of Moulton, at the northeast corner of highway 202 and 535th Street. The memorial service is open the public.

Flags will be at half-staff on the State Capitol Building and on flag displays in the Capitol Complex, and upon all public buildings, grounds, and facilities throughout the state. Individuals, businesses, schools, municipalities, counties and other government subdivisions are encouraged to fly the flag at half-staff for the same length of time as a sign of respect.

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Scott County Administration Building

First Floor Boardroom

July 21, 2014

2:00 PM to 5:00 PM



  1. Roll Call

  1. Approval of Minutes

  1. Approval of the Revised Annual Service and Budget Plan

  1. Transition Plan

  1. Discussion/Approval of the Baker Tilly Report

  1. Approval of Service Agreements from Each County

  1. HIPAA- ISAC Calling In

  1. Approval of FY15 Service Contracts:

a. Handicapped Development Center (HDC)

b. Vera French CMHC

c. Compassion Counseling

d. Crossroads

e. Senior Resources

f. Optimae Life Solutions

g. Consumer Design Services

h. Cornerstone Wellness

i. Mediapolis Care Facility

j. Pathway Living Center, Inc.

k. Wagner Pharmacy

l. Bridgeview CMHC

m. Mercy Medical Center- Clinton

n. Skyline, Inc.

o. DHS Targeted Case Management

p. Family Counseling and Psychology Center, P.C.

q. Liberty Counseling

r. Lutheran Services in Iowa

 

  1. Regional Board Designation of Targeted Case Management Entities

  1. CEO Report

  1. Financial Report

  1. Other Items

  1. Public Comment

  1. Adjournment

Brucemore's sophisticated and saucy nightclub event, Cabaret in the Courtyard, will return for two back-to-back weekends of stars on the stage and on the sky, August 7 - 9 and 14 - 16 at 7:30 p.m. Since 2003, the lovely ambience of the historic courtyard has been magically transformed into a cabaret club with tables, chairs, twinkling lights, and stars on the stage and in the sky. Cabaret in the Courtyard is sponsored by Bankers Trust, Novak Design Group, and Corridor Business Journal.

Alisabeth Von Presley (August 7 - 9) will perform songs from her debut album mixed with fun twists on classic hits during this album release event. She has held many names onstage over the years? Pink Haired Woman, Photographer Lady, and The 'MOO WITH ME' Girl from Rent?but for Cabaret in The Courtyard, she's excited to finally be performing as herself.  Alisabeth's award-winning music career has included the title of Grand Champion for Converse's competition  "Challenge, Create, Change" (for her Beautiful Revolution music video); first place for Cellular South's Jingle Competition; taking the top prize with her a capella jazz group, Jazz Transit, while competing in Europe; and being selected for the Hollywood Round of American Idol Season 12. In addition to performing locally as the guest artist for multiple productions with SPT Theatre (including A Modern Salon at Brucemore earlier this year), Alisabeth has graced the stages of area theaters in more than 50 musical productions, while serving as producer for five more. In reviewing her work, The Gazette writes that Alisabeth "owns every moment of every show she's in. She is a tour de force who should be in New York, but we're lucky she's in Cedar Rapids."  For more information, visit www.AlisabethVonPresley.com.

Ben Schmidt (August 14 - 16) draws from the roots of American music and a unique sense of poetic phrase to create songs that defy categorization. Join the singer/songwriter for a special evening of original music mixed with select covers of some of his creative influences. With a top notch band of seasoned players, Schmidt will deliver a range of styles including blues, jazz, rock, soul, acoustic, and folk. Schmidt's relaxed, intimate stage presence invites his audience to enjoy the lyrical storytelling while his sense of groove and shuffle will have you tapping your feet and looking for a dancing partner!  This is your chance to travel the lesser known byways of American music?from the Delta of Texas and New Orleans to the streets of Chicago (where Schmidt was raised) and into the little cafés of Greenwich Village. Self-taught, and continually evolving, Schmidt has been playing guitar for over 20 years and writing songs since he was fifteen. He has released three self-produced CDs?Write it down (2002), While you were Sleeping (2005), and Silt (2010).  Ben is a favorite of Eastern Iowa public radio stations and is a featured artist on WSUI's Java Blend compilation CD, as well as KUNI's Best of Live from Studio One compilation disc.

Advance tickets are $20 per person and $18 per Brucemore member. All tickets are $25 at the gate (if available). Space is limited; please call (319) 362-7375 or visit www.brucemore.org to purchase tickets. Individuals reserving five or more advance tickets will have tables reserved under their name. All performances begin at 7:30 p.m. with gates opening at 7:00 p.m. On-site parking is available. Patrons are encouraged to bring their favorite beverages, but no food is allowed.

Experience Brucemore, an unparalleled blend of tradition and culture, located at 2160 Linden Drive SE, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. At the heart of the historic 26-acre estate stands a nineteenth-century mansion filled with the stories of three Cedar Rapids families.  Concerts, theater, programs, and tours enliven the site and celebrate the heritage of a community.  For more information, call (319) 362-7375 or visit www.brucemore.org.

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Wisconsin wins third straight over Quad Cities to take first season series since 2008

GRAND CHUTE, Wis. (July 14, 2014) - Wisconsin Timber Rattlers designated hitter Clint Coulter hit a grand slam to cap a five-run fourth inning that lifted the home team to a third straight win over the Quad Cities River Bandits and 8-4 victory in the four-game series finale at Neuroscience Group Field at Fox Cities Stadium Monday afternoon.

Center fielder Johnny Davis had four singles for Wisconsin (13-11 second half, 49-44 overall), which won nine of 16 regular-season games against Quad Cities (12-12, 47-46) to take the season series for the first time since 2008, when Wisconsin won eight of 14 games. The River Bandits have lost three straight games for the first time in the second half after allowing 35 runs on 46 hits in the four-game series.

Quad Cities was the first team to score Monday for the only time in the four-game series. First baseman Chase McDonald drove his sixth home run of the season to right-center field off right-hander Barrett Astin (6-4) for a 1-0 lead. Wisconsin answered in the next half-inning against left-hander Blaine Sims (1-2), who allowed two walks and a two-out game-tying double by timber Rattlers catcher Paul Eshleman.

In a 1-1 tie in the third inning, Davis hit his second inning-opening single to left field, went to second base on a balk, advanced to third base on a groundout and scored on right fielder Michael Ratterree's single through the left side for a 2-1 Wisconsin lead.

The Timber Rattlers' big fourth inning began with three straight one-out singles by Eshleman, shortstop Steven Halcomb and Davis to load the bases. Second baseman Chris McFarland popped out to second base for the second out, but Ratterree drew a full-count walk to force in a run, making it 3-1. Sims got behind Coulter, 3-0, and worked back to a 3-2 count, before Coulter lifted his 14th home run down the left-field line, extending Wisconsin's lead to 7-1. For a second straight day, the Timber Rattlers had at least nine batters in an inning. In his second Midwest League start, Sims allowed seven earned runs on nine hits and four walks with two strikeouts in the first four innings.

Quad Cities left-hander Chris Lee started the fifth inning, and he kept the deficit to 7-1 until third baseman Taylor Brennan drove his 11th home run of the season off the scoreboard in left-center field for an 8-1 Wisconsin lead. It was the only run in 1 2/3 innings against Lee, who was replaced by left-hander Chris Cotton after the home run. Cotton allowed a single and two walks to pitch 2 1/3 scoreless innings.

Meanwhile, Astin scattered four hits and a walk through the first six innings. In the seventh inning, he walked third baseman Tyler White, and designated hitter Brian Holberton singled for his second hit of the game. McDonald grounded into a double play, but left fielder Marc Wik drew a walk, and catcher Brett Booth hit his third home run of the season to right field, cutting the deficit to 8-4. White, who earlier extended a hitting streak to six games, scored a run for the seventh straight game to set a new mark by a River Bandit this season. Astin allowed four earned runs on seven hits with three walks and five strikeouts, while finishing seven innings for the third time this season to earn his first win since May 25.

Wisconsin left-hander Clint Terry struck out four batters around one hit in the final two scoreless innings. The only hit came on a double by McDonald, who has a three straight two-hit games in a five-game hitting streak and five multi-hit games in July.

Quad Cities begins a stretch of 12 games against Eastern Division teams with the opener of a three-game home series at 7 p.m. Wednesday against Fort Wayne. River Bandits right-hander Adrian Houser (4-3) is scheduled to face TinCaps right-hander Yimmi Brasoban (0-4).

UP NEXT: The River Bandits open a six-game homestand with Eastern Division opponents at 7 p.m. Wednesday on Quad Cities Builders & Remodelers Association and Epic Stone Night and a Pay Your Bill Wednesday presented by U.S. Bank, CBS WHBF and Mix 96. Tickets are available at www.riverbandits.com. To order any of the River Bandits 2014 ticket plans - with new lower prices - call the River Bandits box office at 563-324-3000. Season ticket and mini-plan packages start at just seven games and begin at less than $40. Call a River Bandits account representative today to choose your seats and get the details of our various mini-plan packages.
Fathom Events is joining The Weinstein Company and Walden Media to give movie fans across the country the unique chance to experience the glamorous red carpet for the Aug. 11 premiere of the highly anticipated new film "The Giver" as though they were invited guests with the cast and crew. In addition to seeing the full film, attendees  at "The Giver: World Premiere Red Carpet Event," at 250 select theaters nationwide, will have the opportunity to interact with the film's stars - Meryl Streep, Jeff Bridges, Katie Holmes, Taylor Swift and Brenton Thwaites are among those scheduled to appear - as they speak directly to theater audiences from the red carpet.
It'll be almost as if you're there with the stars and creators of this exciting film, at 7 p.m. local time (live in ET, delayed for CT, MT and PT). And, just like a real film industry insider, attendees at "The Giver: World Premiere Red Carpet Event" will get to enjoy "The Giver" four days before its official theatrical release.
"The Giver: World Premiere Red Carpet Event" will be presented at the following cinemas in your area on Monday, Aug 11:
Cinemark Davenport 18 with IMAX 3601 E 53RD ST DAVENPORT IA 52807

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