PELLA, IA (01/13/2014)(readMedia)-- The following students were named to the fall 2013 Central College dean's list:

Daniel Dankert of Davenport is the son of Larry and Diane Dankert.

Dionne Riley of Bettendorf is the daughter of Warren and Shelly Riley.

Emma Simmons of Davenport is the daughter of Tom and Terry Simmons.

Katelyn Temple of Erie is the daughter of Drew and Jennifer Temple.

The honor is awarded to full-time students who achieve a 3.5 grade point average or higher on a 4.0 scale while taking 12 or more graded credit hours for the semester.

Central College is a residential liberal arts college dedicated to the education of 1,500 undergraduate students. Guided by its ecumenical Christian tradition, the college community engages in vigorous, free, open inquiry in pursuit of academic excellence. Founded in 1853, the college is affiliated with the Reformed Church in America and NCAA Division III athletics.

Central is a recognized leader in study abroad as a result of its international, residential programs. Central College is located in Pella, Iowa, a thriving community of 10,000 two minutes from the state's largest lake and 40 minutes southwest of Des Moines. Please visit the college website at www.central.edu.

See below; and response from Jeremy Funk, Communications Director, Americans United for Change: "We're sure API President Jack Gerard just made an honest math error and forgot to carry nine zeroes somewhere in his calculations.  Seriously, if big oil can lie so shamelessly about the taxpayer subsidies everyone knows they reap, why should the EPA believe a word of their trash talk about the renewable fuels industry?  Big oil wants nothing more than to be rid of their cheaper, cleaner competition, so whatever they say about ethanol during this critical comment period on the proposed RFS rule must be taken with a grain of tar sand.   Big oil may get a lot more than zero in tax payer subsidies, but there is exactly zero chance that big oil will ever come close to producing enough domestically to meet U.S. oil consumption.  That's why it makes no sense to abandon the renewable fuels industry now at a time it's fulfilling 10% of our nation's fuel needs and at a time it's making incredible innovations that will fulfill more and more demand down the road."

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2013/01/09/1423351/oil-zero-subsidies/

 

Big Oil Lobby Claims The Industry 'Gets No Subsidies, Zero, Nothing' 

BY REBECCA LEBER  ON JANUARY 9, 2013 AT 2:23 PM

Despite ranking among the most profitable corporations in the world, Big Oil benefits from $4 billion in annual tax breaks. It fights to maintain them through aggressive political donations, lobbying, and heavy ad spending, but also employs another tactic: Pretending these tax breaks don't exist.

"The oil and gas industry gets no subsidies, zero, nothing," API President Jack Gerard said on Tuesday. "We get cost-recovery benefits, much like other industries. You can go down the road of allowing economic activity, generating hundreds of billions to the government, or you can take the alternative route by trying to extract new revenue from industry by increasing their cost to do business."

Tax deductions are indeed subsidies, as API admitted in a document that labeled "subsidies for alternative fuels" as "preferential tax treatment." And the oil industry's $4 billion preferential treatment is written permanently into the tax code. These include :

Percentage depletion allowance: lets companies deduct the costs of an oil or gas well, about 15 percent, from its taxes.

Domestic manufacturing tax deduction: Allows oil companies to collect $1.8 billion each year, even though there are vast differences between oil and traditional U.S. manufacturing. It is a benefit that was never intended for them, according to Sen. Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican, who said Congress included oil producers "almost inadvertently."

The foreign tax credit: Oil companies overwhelmingly fall into the category of companies that can claim credits for payments to foreign governments.

Expensing intangible drilling costs: For over a century, oil companies have written off wages, fuel, repairs, and hauling costs.

ExxonMobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips have paid federal tax rates well below the 35 percent top corporate rate, a far cry from paying "more than our fair share". ExxonMobil, for instance, paid a 13 percent tax rate in 2011, after drilling deductions and benefits, and 14 percent on average between 2008 and 2010.

The record-high gas prices of 2012 reinforce the decades of data showing domestic drilling has very little impact on gas prices. At the same time, the Big Five companies are on track to collect more than $100 billion profit this year.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said, "Life's most persistent and urgent question is: 'What are you doing for others?'"

Casa Quad Cities (Casa QC) will host a community service project to commemorate Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, January 20, 2014 at the Casa Davenport office located at 1116 W. 6th Street, Davenport from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.

Volunteers will assemble donations for charities in the Quad Cities, including the Red Cross of the Quad Cities, Hope Creek Care Center for seniors, the United Way, and Jefferson-Edison Elementary in Davenport. The projects will be kits for families who have lost their homes to fire, activity kits for residents of Hope Creek, and school supplies kits donation for students. Snacks will be provided by a donation from Panera Bread Bakery-Café of Iowa.

Each year, Americans across the country answer that question by coming together on the King Holiday to serve their neighbors and communities. The MLK Day of Service is a part of United We Serve, the President's national call to service initiative. It calls for Americans from all walks of life to work together to provide solutions to our most pressing national problems.

AmeriCorps volunteers from Casa QC and Prairie State Legal Services will be participating, as well as volunteers from Augustana, Alcoa, and John Deere. Other interested volunteers should register online at http://bit.ly/casamlk2014. For more information, email Vivian Chang, the AmeriCorps VISTA Volunteer Coordinator, at vchang@casaqc.org or call 563-322-3723.
The promise of a new year sparks the desire to get healthy ? at least for the first few weeks. "Most New Year's resolutions are aimed at changing habits, and habits ? even if they have disastrous consequences for the long run ? are hard to change," says Joshua Kellman, MD, a clinical associate in the department of psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience at the University of Chicago. "They become rather hard-wired over time." But just because New Year's resolutions are tough to keep doesn't mean they're impossible. Start with a new approach: goal-setting that includes physical and emotional well-being, with milestones that increase your commitment as you reach them.

Resolution No. 1: Learn to Laugh at Yourself

Laughing is one New Year's resolution that should be easy to keep ? and it's good for your health. "Being able to engage life positively and with spontaneity is crucial to mental and even physical health," says Kellman. "And when we laugh, this is what we are doing." Studies have found that people who laugh a lot are at decreased risk for heart attack. So make a resolution to chuckle, giggle, or have a hearty guffaw ? even at your own expense when you do something silly or embarrassing. Laughing feels much better than stressing.

Get 10 more resolution goals that will help you ring in a healthy 2014.

Learn more at EverydayHealth.com »

WATERLOO - Jan. 13, 2014.  Lt. Governor Sheila Simon will urge state leaders to overhaul the way schools are funded in Illinois during the final hearing of the Education Funding Advisory Committee (EFAC) this afternoon in Waterloo. Simon said the current formula hurts rural and high-poverty districts and should be changed before the 2014-15 school year.

"In our current system, the perennial losers are low-income and rural communities: those with the least local resources and the least political clout," Simon said. "Yet our state needs all students to succeed if we are to grow our economy and improve our quality of life. It will take guts to fund these schools equitably, but it is a moral and economic imperative."

Simon recommended several changes, including a cap on the state payments made to offset property taxes and the merging of transportation funds into the primary funding formula. She also asked the committee to tackle "proration," or the way the state handles payments when funding falls short. Districts that rely most heavily on state dollars should be cut at a lower rate than those who rely least on state funds, she said.

"The proration inequity has contributed to financial instability in districts across the state, and is most visible in North Chicago and East St. Louis. We will see more districts in jeopardy if we continue on our current path," she said.

Started by State Sen. Andy Manar (D-Bunker Hill), the purpose of the Advisory Committee is to examine the state's current education funding system and propose a system that provides adequate, equitable, transparent, and accountable distribution of funds to school districts that will prepare students for achievement and success after high school. The Advisory Committee is comprised of eight members appointed by the Senate president and the Senate minority leader.

The Illinois State Board of Education notes that the Advisory Committee is required to consider the following when making its recommendations: the number of students in a school and school district and the level of need of those students; a school district's ability to provide local resources; transparency and accountability; revenue predictability; and the long-term implications and outcomes of the funding system. The Advisory Committee must seek input from stakeholders and members of the public on issues and possible improvements to the existing funding system.

 

Simon serves as the state's point person on education reform. In this capacity, Simon is working to increase the proportion of working-age adults with college degrees or certificates to 60 percent by 2025. As chair of the 25-member Governor's Rural Affairs Council, Simon is also working to improve the delivery of state services and education opportunities to rural Illinois.

 

A copy of Simon's testimony is available upon request.

 

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Saturday February 11, 2012 - 2:00 PM

Iowa Public Television

Maytag Auditorium in Johnston, Iowa

(Terrace Hill - Des Moines, Iowa) First Lady of Iowa, Chris Branstad, will present the 2014 Terrace Hill Endowment for Musical Arts Piano Competition (THEMA) Scholarship Awards at the conclusion of the final piano competition performance Saturday February 8, 2014.

Three high school seniors will compete for $5,500 in scholarships in a live performance at the IPTV Maytag Auditorium in Johnston. The rebroadcast dates of the finals on IPTV will be announced later.

The public is invited and encouraged to attend the finals for the Senior Piano Competition that will begin at 2 pm followed by the awards presentation for the winners.

The finals are part of the Terrace Hill Endowment for Musical Arts piano competition for high school seniors. The Terrace Hill Endowment for the Musical Arts Piano Competition started as a tribute to musical talent in Iowa with private donations left from the reconditioning of the 1901 Steinway grand piano that adorns the music room in Terrace Hill, The Governor's Residence.

The THEMA Piano Competition has awarded over $100,000 in scholarships by the First Lady of Iowa. High school seniors continuing their piano studies are eligible to use their scholarships at an Iowa college or university.

2014 THEMA SCHEDULE

Friday, February 7th

7:00 -9:00 p.m. THEMA Junior competition

IPTV Studios in Johnston

8:00 p.m. Master Class Award Winners

 

Saturday, February 8th

2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Final Senior THEMA competition in Maytag Auditorium (doors open at 1:30 p.m.)

3:15 p.m. Award presentation by First Lady Chris Branstad

3:30 p.m. Reception in front lobby

 

For more information about the THEMA Piano Competition and the Terrace Hill Endowment for the Musical Arts contact Diane Becker at 515-242-6317 or diane@terracehillsocietyfoundation.org

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We've seen a lot of talk recently about the proposed gas tax hike. In farm country, agribusiness is concerned about rural bridges in decay - bridges that might see a couple dozen cars a day. In suburbia, developers are worried that one of their main urban sprawl cash cows might dry up. And of course, the road construction lobby is just drooling to get more money to lay asphalt and concrete anywhere and everywhere.

Yet what about reality? Is a car-centric transportation system what's needed for the 21st century? For one thing, more roads mean more cars, more greenhouse gas emissions, and more climate change. Furthermore, as people drive less, it makes sense for the public investment to shift. And even as Governor Branstad and his Iowa House buddies deep-six a paltry sum for passenger rail, I predict they'll have no problem justifying truckloads of cash for highways.

And I would not be surprised to see the debate shift from a gas tax hike to a sales tax hike, thus making those of us who use the roads the least (i.e., low-income Iowans) pay for the desired "improvements."

See my additional comments in today's Register online, and tune-in tonight, Monday, for more talk on this topic. Your views welcome, too, at (855) 244-0077.

Tuesday, we talk with Scott Warner of Corazon Coffee Roasters about the debate over what it means to be "fair trade."

Wednesday, we talk with Harold Hedelman about another tool for folks wanting to do more about the climate crisis. Harold talks about the Natural Resources Defense Council's upcoming Citizens Advocate training in Des Moines. (See Events page for details.)

Thursday, State Rep. Dan Kelley is back on the hill - and back in the studio with us for an update on the first week of legislative action . . . or inaction, as some are predicting.

Join the conversation live Monday-Thursday from 6:00-6:30 pm. Listen and watch online at www.fallonforum.com. Call-in at (855) 244-0077 to add your voice to the dialogue. Podcasts available after the program. And catch the Fallon Forum on KHOI 89.1 (Ames) Wednesdays at 4:00 pm and KPVL 89.1 (Postville) Wednesdays at 7:00 pm.

Thanks! - Ed

Floor Speech by Senator Chuck Grassley on How the Senate Should Work

Delivered Monday, January 13, 2014

Senator McConnell has made a very important call to restore the Senate as the great deliberative body it was designed to be.

I would like to continue to add my voice to that call and expand on some observations I have made previously before the Senate.

The U.S. Senate is a unique body designed with a unique purpose in mind.

In Federalist Paper 62, attributed to the Father of the Constitution, James Madison, the unique role of the U.S. Senate is explained:

"The necessity of a senate is not less indicated by the propensity of all single and numerous assemblies to yield to the impulse of sudden and violent passions, and to be seduced by factious leaders into intemperate and pernicious resolutions."

When Madison talks about "factious leaders" and "intemperate and pernicious resolutions" he basically means what we call partisanship and the "my way or the highway" approach to legislating that is all too common these days.

What might come as a shock to anyone who has followed the United States Senate lately is the fact that the Senate was specifically designed to check partisan passions and ensure that Americans of all stripes are fairly represented though a deliberative process.

Clearly the Senate is not fulfilling the role the Framers of the Constitution intended.

To find out what went wrong, we first have to examine how the Senate was supposed to function.

About this propensity of legislatures to be dominated by factious leaders acting intemperately, Madison goes on to say:

"Examples on this subject might be cited without number; and from proceedings within the United States, as well as from the history of other nations."

Note that in advocating for the creation of a Senate to counter this negative tendency, Madison references examples from proceedings within the United States.

Many state legislatures in the early days of our Republic were unicameral with frequent elections and weak executives.

This led to many instances where a temporary majority faction would gain control and quickly pass legislation that advantaged the majority at the expense of the minority.

The U.S. Senate has been called the greatest deliberative body in the world because it was specifically designed to proceed at a measured pace and to guarantee the rights of the minority party.

As James Madison wrote in Federalist Paper Number 10:

"Complaints are everywhere heard from our most considerate and virtuous citizens, equally the friends of public and private faith and of public and personal liberty, that our governments are too unstable, that the public good is disregarded in the conflicts of rival parties, and that measures are too often decided, not according to the rules of justice and the rights of the minor party, but by the superior force of an interested and overbearing majority."

What's unique about the Senate is that the rules and traditions force senators to work together to prevent an "overbearing majority" from steamrolling the minority party.

Because the rules of the Senate are built around consensus, as opposed to the House of Representatives where the majority party dominates, it forces senators of all parties to listen to each other and work together.

At least that was true for most of my time in the Senate.

That has changed in recent years.

If anyone wonders why the tone in Washington has become so heated recently, the loss of the Senate as a deliberative body is certainly a big factor.

There's an apocryphal story, that may or may not be historically accurate, but which certainly depicts how the Senate was intended to function.

The story goes that when Jefferson returned from France where he was serving during the Constitutional Convention, he asked George Washington why the Senate had been created.

Washington replied by asking Jefferson "Why did you pour that tea into your saucer?"

"To cool it," said Jefferson.

"Even so," responded Washington, "we pour legislation into the senatorial saucer to cool it."

In the House of Representatives, the Rules Committee sets out the terms of debate for each bill.

If you want to offer an amendment in the House, you have to go hat in hand to the Rules Committee and ask permission.

If the House leadership doesn't like your amendment, you're out of luck.

By contrast, the Senate has a tradition of allowing extensive debate and amendments by any senator without prior approval by anybody.

However, that tradition has gone out the window under the current majority leadership.

We have seen an unprecedented abuse of cloture motions to cut off the deliberative process paired with a tactic called "filling the tree" to block amendments being considered.

The Senate Majority Leader has effectively become a one-man version of the House Rules Committee, dictating what amendments will be debated and which ones will never see the light of day.

He has done so again on the unemployment bill currently before the Senate.

In fact, he's been quite unashamed about saying that he is not going to allow any amendments.

This strips the ability of individual senators to effectively represent their state, regardless of party.

Blocking amendments also virtually guarantees that any legislation the Senate votes on will be more partisan in nature, violating the very purpose of the Senate according to James Madison.

By empowering the majority leader at the expense of individual senators, the people of the 50 states lose their voice in the Senate and party leaders get their way instead.

The people of Iowa sent me to the United States Senate to represent them, not to simply vote up or down on a purely partisan agenda dictated by the Majority Leader.

Everyone complains about the lack of bipartisanship these days, but there is no opportunity for individual senators to work together across the aisle when legislation is drafted on a partisan basis and amendments are blocked.

Bipartisanship requires giving individual senators a voice, regardless of party.

That's the only way to get things done in the Senate.

In the last decade, when I was Chairman of the Finance Committee, and Republicans controlled the Senate, we wanted to actually get things done.

In order for that to happen, we knew we had to accommodate the minority.

We had to have patience, humility, and respect for the minority, attributes that don't exist on the other side anymore.

And we had some major bipartisan accomplishments, from the largest tax cut in history to a Medicare prescription drug program to numerous trade agreements.

Those kind of major bills don't happen anymore.

The Senate rules provide that any senator may offer an amendment regardless of party affiliation.

Each senator represents hundreds of thousands to millions of Americans and each has an individual right to offer amendments for consideration.

The principle here isn't about political parties having their say, but duly elected senators participating in the legislative process.

Again, as part of our duty to represent the citizens of our respective states, each senator has an individual right to offer amendments.

This right cannot be outsourced to party leaders.

The longstanding tradition of the Senate is that members of the minority party, as well as rank and file members of the majority party, have an opportunity to offer amendments for a vote by the Senate.

The now routine practice of "filling the tree" to block amendments has been a major factor in the destruction on the Senate as a deliberative body.

This is usually combined with filing cloture to cut off further consideration of a bill, which has occurred to a truly unprecedented extent.

In a deliberative body, debate and amendments are essential so cloture should be rare and the abuse of cloture strikes to the very heart of the how the Senate is intended to operate.

It is important to note that the majority leader has tried to pass off the cloture motions he has filed, which are attempts by the majority party to silence the minority party, as Republican filibusters.

There seems to have been a concerted attempt to confuse cloture motions with filibusters but the Washington Post Fact Checker has caught the majority leader in this distortion, giving his claim of unprecedented Republican filibusters Two Pinocchios.

In fact, a report by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service called "Cloture Attempts on Nominations: Data and Historical Development" by Richard S. Beth contains an entire section titled, "Cloture Motions Do Not Correspond with Filibusters."

The abuse of cloture, often combined with the blocking of amendments, prevents all Senators from doing what they were sent here to do, not just members of the minority party.

And, it's gotten even worse.

Even where the majority leader has decided he's going to be open to amendments, he has created, out of whole cloth, new restrictions to limit senators' rights.

First, he normally only opens up the amendment process if there's an agreement to limit amendments.

And, this is usually only a handful or so.

Then, he has magically determined that only "germane" or "relevant" amendments can be considered.

Of course, nowhere do the Senate rules require amendments to be germane, other than post cloture.

Senators elected in the last few years appear to be ignorant of this fact.

You'll hear some senators here argue against an amendment saying it's non-germane or non-relevant.

They've totally fallen for the majority leader's creative rulemaking, thus giving up one of their rights as a senator with which to represent their state.

I can't count how many non-germane or non-relevant amendments I had to allow votes on when I processed bills when Republicans were in charge.

They were usually tough, political votes, but we took them because we wanted to get things done.

You don't see that nowadays.

The current majority avoids tough votes at all costs.

And that's why they don't get much done.

The American people sent us here to represent them.

That means voting, not avoiding tough votes.

We sometimes hear that this is a question of majority rule versus minority obstruction.

Again, that ignores that each senator is elected to represent their state, not simply to be an agent of their party.

There are policies that have majority support in the Senate that have been denied a vote.

What happened during Senate debate on the budget resolution seems to prove that point.

The special rules for the Budget Resolution limit debate, so it can't be filibustered, but allow for unlimited amendments.

A Republican amendment to the Senate Budget Resolution in support of repealing the tax on life-saving medical devices in President Obama's health care law passed by an overwhelming 79 to 20, with more than half of Democrats voting with Republicans, rather than their party leader.

A Republican amendment in support of approval of the Keystone XL Pipeline to bring oil from Canada passed 62 to 37.

Votes like these that split the Democrats and hand a win to Republicans are exactly what the majority leader has been trying to avoid by blocking amendments.

That's why the Senate didn't take up a budget resolution for more than three years.

Until we put an end to the abuse of cloture and the blocking of amendments, the Senate cannot function as the Framers intended.

We must bring back the Senate as a deliberative body.

Our politics today desperately need the cooling saucer of the Senate.

The action by the majority leader to make it easier to consider nominations on a purely partisan basis went in the wrong direction.

In the face of bipartisan opposition and with no Republican votes, the so called "nuclear option" established a precedent effectively overruling the rules on the books.

A better move would be for the Senate to establish the precedent that filling the tree and abusing cloture to block a full amendment process is illegitimate.

It's time to restore the Senate so it can fulfill its Constitutional role.

Senator McConnell has made a thoughtful and well-reasoned appeal and I hope my colleagues will listen for the sake of this institution and the country as a whole.

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What Worked in the Old Days Still Works Today, Says Award-Winning Author

Have you ever wondered how members of the same family, from aunts, uncles and cousins to siblings born of the same parents and raised in the same household, can be so very different?

"We see it in every family - Grandma's so easygoing and her son be so strict; Mom's a zany beatnik and her sister's a corporate v.p. Anyone with brothers and sisters will even see it within their own sibling group," says Lynn Shafer, award-winning author of "Stories from Brooklyn: Ancient Voices, Ritual Chants," (www.jo-anbooks.com), a timeless look at the interplay of disparate members of an extended 1940s family.

A ground-breaking study by researcher Robert Plomin in the 1980s is still the preeminent resource for psychologists seeking to understand personality diversity within families.  Even among siblings, the study showed, while physical traits may be very similar, personalities can be as varied as random individuals from the general population.

"Expand that to the extended family, including the vast non-traditional extended families we see today, and you're likely to see more differences than similarities," says Shafer. "Still, many of these families are tight-knit and cohesive. They serve as an inspirational example for humanity as a whole. Despite a union of very different people, we can all love, learn and grow together."

How can you build a strong family? Shafer shares timeless tips:

• Establish a solid foundation based on shared values. It's no secret that very religious families tend to be close-knit and strong. Why? "Because religion provides a structured means of sharing beliefs and values, a process that begins in infancy, when babies are taken to worship services and undergo the rituals that mark their membership in the religion," Shafer says.  While fewer American families are religion-focused than were in decades past, they can all still strive to emphasize the importance of family values and their role in reuniting every family member. Creating rituals and traditions are one way to emphasize values.

• Make your family history a story to celebrate. The story about how brave Uncle Joe once rescued a dog from a well; the singing talents of the three great aunts who performed at county fairs as little girls; the one-cheek dimple that is the family hallmark -- these are the stories that make your family special. "It's not about memorizing the family tree, but about ensuring children know that they are part of something greater than themselves - and that is both a privilege and a responsibility," Shafer says. A child who is constantly reminded, with fondness, that she's the spitting image of wonderful Aunt Bessie will feel a bond with Aunt Bessie - even if she's bee gone for decades.

• Commit to attending, or hosting, family gatherings. Often, the places for sharing those stories are family gatherings - weddings and funerals, holidays and anniversaries. "It may be a question of the chicken or the egg," Shafer says. "Strong families tend to have many shared family stories. Strong families also tend to gather together frequently - and that's where those stories are most often shared." Family gatherings are also a good place for family members with very different personalities to learn to find common ground and practice getting along for the sake of everyone at the special event.  "Imagine what a more peaceful world it would be if we were all forced to play nicely with our obnoxious cousin as children!" Shafer says.

About Lynn Shafer

Lynn Shafer is a Brooklyn native and a graduate of Brooklyn College. A veteran English teacher in New York City schools, she has utilized oral history to create a body of work that can be read aloud. The story "Ancient Voices, Ritual Chants" was runner-up in the fiction category of the Pirate's Alley Faulkner Society annual competition in 1995 for previously unpublished work, portions of which she has read aloud at the prestigious 92 Street Y in Manhattan. She has also written and performed poetry at the Truro Center for the Arts on Cape Cod, where she attended workshops for many years. "Stories from Brooklyn" is published by Jo-An Books - "Books that are making history." Find it at www.jo-anbooks.com and anywhere books are sold.

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS, January 13, 2014 - Iowa Farm Bureau Federation (IFBF), Iowa's largest grassroots farm organization, received several honors, including the Pinnacle Award, a top honor of national achievement at the American Farm Bureau Federation's (AFBF) 95th Annual Convention in San Antonio, Texas.

State Farm Bureaus were presented awards at the kickoff of the AFBF meeting January 12 to recognize their excellence in membership achievement and implementation of outstanding programs serving Farm Bureau members in 2013.

The Pinnacle Award is the highest level award and is given to the most outstanding state in each membership group. To be eligible for the award, a state must have achieved membership quota for the year and have the most President's Awards in its membership group.  IFBF received four President's Awards, given to the most outstanding entry in each membership group for each program area.

The Awards for Excellence are awarded to state Farm Bureaus that have demonstrated outstanding achievements in six program areas: Education and Outreach; Leadership Development; Member Services; Membership Initiatives; Policy Development and Implementation; and Public Relations and Communications. IFBF received an Award of Excellence in all six categories.

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About Iowa Farm Bureau

The Iowa Farm Bureau Federation is a grassroots, statewide organization dedicated to helping farm families prosper and improve their quality of life.  More than 153,000 families in Iowa are Farm Bureau members, working together to achieve economic growth, educational improvement, and environmental quality in their communities.  For more information about Farm Bureau and agriculture, visit the online media center at www.iowafarmbureau.com.

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