Announcement December 18, 2013
Greetings!

The Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) is pleased to announce a new one-stop shop for organics at usda.gov!

We are also pleased to highlight grants to support organic-focused research, education and extension programs.

One-Stop Shop for Organics at usda.gov

Looking for USDA programs and services that support the growing organic sector? USDA has created a centralized web resource center at USDA.gov for all the programs, services, and data we have that support organic agriculture.

Visit (and bookmark) the organic web resource center to access:

  • Conservation programs, flexible microloans, and other financial resources for farmers and ranchers.
  • Organic price reports, cost/revenue comparisons, and other economic and market data.
  • Improved crop and livestock insurance and other programs tailored to the organic sector.
  • Production and conservation assistance and research on organic agriculture.
  • Benefits of organic certification and how to get certified.
  • USDA staff at your local field offices and much more!

USDA is committed to helping organic agriculture grow and thrive by removing obstacles for organic farmers and businesses.

Earlier this year, Secretary Vilsack instructed all USDA agencies to incorporate the needs of the organic sector into their programs and services, and asked AMS to lead this effort.

This one-stop shop for organic-related programs and services at USDA.gov is one way we are meeting those needs.

USDA Blog: A One-Stop Shop for Organics, with Lots in Store
By Mark Lipson, USDA Organic Policy Advisor

Organic Resource Center at USDA.gov

USDA Grants Support Organic Ag Research

Last week, Secretary Vilsack announced that the following universities received a combined total of $3 million to support research, education and Extension programs that will improve the competitiveness of organic livestock and crop producers:

  • University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla., $675,719. This project focuses on developing sustainable wholefarm systems for organic pecan production in the Southeast.
  • Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich., $464,482. This project will develop alternatives to antibiotics for fire blight control in organic crops.
  • University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn., $718,225. This project will create a series of online, interactive educational modules with a focus on the fundamentals of organic agriculture and how to transition to organic farming.
  • University of Texas Pan American. Edinburg, Texas, $746,973. This project focuses on launching an innovative new academic program that engages students in rigorous, well-designed research projects designed to address real-world problems faced by organic farmers in south Texas.
  • Washington State University, Pullman, Wash., $749,661. This project examines whether, over time, the adoption of organic farming improves natural pest control.

The flagship program to fund organic production, the Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative, currently remains unauthorized to continue until a new Farm Bill is passed by Congress.

USDA is funding these efforts through its Organic Transitions Program, which is an essential part of our commitment to the organic farm sector. USDA also provided $847,637 in continuation awards to previous Organic Transitions Program grantees.

Press Release

About the Organic Transitions Program

About the Agricultural Marketing Service

USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) facilitates the competitive and efficient marketing of agricultural products. Through its National Organic Program, AMS facilitates trade and ensures the integrity of organic agricultural products by consistently implementing organic standards and enforcing compliance with the regulations throughout the world. Learn more.

About the USDA Organic Insider

The USDA Organic Insider informs the organic community on a wide range of functions, including regulatory updates, requests for public comments, and USDA programs and services.

You are receiving this email because you elected to receive selected updates from the Agricultural Marketing Service. You may manage your profile to receive additional updates or unsubscribe at any time by using the links below.

History Publishing Company to Publish Book on National Decline

Reversing America's Decline Has Special Message for college and university students

Neal Herrick's new book, Reversing America's Decline: Jefferson's Approach, calls on college and university students   to ignite a movement aimed at reforming our federal government. "Just as the courage, idealism and energy of students in the early 1960's re-energized the civil rights movement," Herrick writes, "the students of today could ignite a movement to reverse America's decline

Neal  Herrick's forthcoming book calls on rank-and-file Republicans and Democrats to join together in pursuing a specific, politically feasible strategy for reforming the federal government. He outlines the strategy in his forthcoming book.

This book from History Publishing Company addresses   America's major problem: its political, economic and moral decline. This decline, according to Reversing America's Decline, is not part of an inevitable cycle. It has specific causes and those causes have specific remedies. To apply these remedies, a major overhaul of our governmental structure is required the author holds. Herrick reaches back to the Founding Fathers, Jefferson specifically, to point the way clearly  defined  in the Federalist Papers, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence and shows the way to a  reformation sorely needed to  halt  America's decline.

Reversing America's Decline: Jefferson's Approach will be published January 14, 2014 and will be in Barnes and Noble bookstores, Amazon, BN.com and other fine book stores.

Contact: Don Bracken, djb@historypublishingco.com, (Tel) 845-398-8161

DES MOINES, IA - Nicholas A. Klinefeldt, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Iowa, announced the conclusion of a multi-agency investigation of internet-related child pornography crimes in the Southern District of Iowa.

The investigation, spearheaded by Homeland Security Investigations-Des Moines, Iowa, centered on the trading of child pornography pictures and videos on peer-to-peer file-sharing networks. Five defendants were charged and convicted in separate prosecutions and were sentenced to a combined total of more than 43 years in prison: Francisco Zayas (Marshalltown), 240 months; Monroe Wardlow (Grinnell), 96 months; Enrique Guzman (Osceola), 80 months; William Trimble, Jr. (Albia), 60 months; and Michael Hanold (Creston), 48 months. After serving their terms of imprisonment, each defendant will be required to serve a term of supervised release of at least 5 years and to register as a sex offender.


Other law enforcement agencies assisting with the operation included the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, and the Iowa police departments of Albia, Creston, Grinnell, Marshalltown, and Osceola. The cases were prosecuted by the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Iowa as part of its "Project Safe Childhood" initiative.

WASHINGTON, December 18, 2013 - The United States Department of Agriculture and the Brazil Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Food made a joint statement today:

The United States and Brazil are two of the world's largest agricultural producers and exporters. Over the last 20 years, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Brazil's Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, and Food Supply (MAPA) have collaborated on many agriculture issues and currently have some 100 agricultural cooperative activities. As global leaders in the use of innovative agricultural production technologies, both countries share a keen interest in exploring further agricultural cooperation.

Both Brazil and the United States maintain a strong commitment to science-based rulemaking. USDA and MAPA recently agreed to a path forward to amend rules that currently limit bilateral beef trade. Bilateral trade of all beef and beef products could occur once each exporting country meets the importing country's equivalence and technical requirements for animal health and food safety.

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USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. To file a complaint of discrimination, write: USDA, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, Office of Adjudication, 1400 Independence Ave., SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call (866) 632-9992 (Toll-free Customer Service), (800) 877-8339 (Local or Federal relay), (866) 377-8642 (Relay voice users).


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Lost in translation: Once-supportive Hispanics turning backs on Obama, ACA

They were among President Obama's best supporters, but support for the president and his signature health insurance scheme is quickly dying among Hispanics.

A recent Gallup poll showed Obama's approval rating among Hispanic down 23 percent, to 52 percent in November from 75 percent in December 2012.
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NPR more than capable of standing on its own
The network draws 4.6 percent of its revenue directly from the government ? federal, state and local ? and an additional 11.4 percent from the federally-funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
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Volunteer firefighters battle IRS, Obamacare on Capitol Hill
Volunteer firefighters are fighting back against IRS mandates that they be classified as employees subject to Obamacare mandates.
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NOTICE! Posting an opinion on this site DOES NOT constitute publication of the opinion. The opinions posted on this site are subject to modification or correction by the court. Opinions on this site are not to be considered final until the time for rehearing or further review has passed. The court of appeals publishes only a limited number of final opinions. An unpublished opinion of the Iowa appellate courts may be cited in a brief; however, unpublished opinions shall not constitute controlling legal authority. The official published opinions of the Iowa Court of Appeals are those published in the North Western Reporter published by West Group.

Opinions released before April 2006 and available in the archives are posted in Word format. Opinions released after April 2006 are posted to the website in PDF (Portable Document Format).   Note: To open a PDF you must have the free Acrobat Reader installed. PDF format preserves the original appearance of a document without requiring you to possess the software that created that document. For more information about PDF read: Using the Adobe Reader.

For your convenience, the Judicial Branch offers a free e-mail notification service for Supreme Court opinions, Court of Appeals opinions, press releases and orders. To subscribe, click here.

NOTE: Copies of these opinions may be obtained from the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Judicial Branch Building, 1111 East Court Avenue, Des Moines, IA 50319, for a fee of fifty cents per page.

Summaries of most recent opinions.

No. 3-798 / 12-2037

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. BIANCA AZUCENA ARREOLA-DOMINGUEZ, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-806 / 12-2304

GARY DEAN LONGNECKER and SUE ANN LONGNECKER, Plaintiffs-Appellees, vs. DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, As Trustee for ABFC ASSET BACKED SECURITIES SERIES 2005-WF1, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-874 / 13-0411

IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP AND CONSERVATORSHIP OF CARRIE BISBEE, CARRIE BISBEE, Ward-Appellant.

No. 3-876 / 13-0636

JAMES MCCARTHY, Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee, vs. JELD-WEN, INC., Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

No. 3-916 / 13-0476

FAWAD S. ZAFAR, M.D., Petitioner-Appellant, vs. IOWA BOARD OF MEDICINE, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-917 / 13-0493

DARREN BARRETT, Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. AMANDA SWANK and AEROPOSTALE, INC., Defendants-Appellees.

No. 3-948 / 13-0542

SHERRY A. DUVAL, JODI R. FRANKLIN, and JOEL A. FRANKLIN, Plaintiffs-Appellees, vs. JAY FOX, As Trustee of the Residuary Trusts of Kenneth L. Albertson and of Vera A. Albertson, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-965 / 12-1929

DRAKE L. EAVES, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-972 / 12-2287

L.N.S., Plaintiff-Appellant, vs. S.W.S., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 3-1036 / 12-1554

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. JENNIFER WASSON, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1043 / 12-2135

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. DARON WAYNE THOMAS, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1048 / 12-2314

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. RAMOND MANLEY THOMPSON JR., Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1050 / 13-0054

JENNIFER JANSSEN, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-1051 / 13-0057

JOHN LEWIS ARTHUR ANDERSON, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-1072 / 13-0816

J. PARKER RITTGERS, KATELYN GAIL RITTGERS, and KELLY GRACE RITTGERS, Plaintiffs-Appellants, vs. WEST BANK, Successor Trustee to STANLEY FOREST RITTGERS as Trustee of the MARY RITTGERS TRUST, and ALL OTHER KNOWN AND UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 3-1076 / 13-1533

IN THE INTEREST OF T.L., Minor Child, H.A., Mother, Appellant.

No. 3-1079 / 10-1592

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. TYSON DAVIS KIDD, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1081 / 11-2028

CHRISTOPHER LANGLEY, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-1083 / 12-0446

RICHARD W. BROWN, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-1085 / 12-1318

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. RAVIN MILLER, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1088 / 12-1919

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. WAYNE WILLIS SOLOMON JR., Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1090 / 12-1932

JEFFERY ALLEN GERARD BAKER, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-1095 / 12-2317

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. EVERETT RICHARD EWOLDT, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1104 / 13-0454

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. ANTHONY EARL HOPKINS, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1106 / 13-0463

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. LONISE BERNAE PORTER, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 3-1108 / 13-0468

EDWARD ALAN ROHN, Applicant-Appellant, vs. STATE OF IOWA, Respondent-Appellee.

No. 3-1123 / 13-0862

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF NIKKI LEE TECH AND TROY DENNIS TECH Upon the Petition of NIKKI LEE TECH, n/k/a NIKKI LEE DAWES, Petitioner-Appellee, And Concerning TROY DENNIS TECH, Respondent-Appellant.

No. 3-1128 / 13-1611

IN THE INTEREST OF A.B.-S., I.B.-S., and M.B.-S., Minor Children, A.B.-S., Father, Appellant.

No. 3-1130 / 13-1606

IN THE INTEREST OF J.S. AND N.S., Minor Children, A.S., Mother, Appellant.

No. 3-1131 / 13-1644

IN THE INTEREST OF T.A., Minor Child, M.A., Mother, Appellant.

No. 3-1158 / 13-1609

IN THE INTEREST OF K.G., Minor Child, R.P., Father, Appellant.

No. 3-1159 / 13-1584

IN THE INTEREST OF J.W. AND M.S., Minor Children, A.S., Mother, Appellant.

No. 3-1160 / 13-1642

IN THE INTEREST OF G.N., S.N., and B.B., Minor Children, R.N., Father, Appellant, H.B., Mother, Appellant.

No. 3-1161 / 13-1704

IN THE INTEREST OF B.M., Minor Child, L.M., Mother, Appellant.

The Vaporosity Shop has opened its doors at 3009 - 14th Ave in Rock Island.  Hours are Monday thru Friday 11am until 8pm, Saturday from 11am until 6pm and Sunday from 12 Noon until 3pm.

The Vaporosity Shop sells e-cigarettes and offers dozens of flavor choices.  E-cigars available, too.

Check us out on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Vaporosity-Shop-Rock-Island/1432024953676590

For many people, the holidays involve indulging in buffet tables loaded with lots of fattening, processed foods and sugary sweets.

For those of us who strive the rest of the year to eat a healthy diet while leading busy lives, it can be a challenging time. Not only are we busier than ever, we know that all those foods we usually try to avoid are going to give us indigestion, sap our energy, and pile on the pounds.

"It really isn't hard to give yourself, your family and friends the gift of delicious, nutrient-rich meals over the holidays," says holistic chef and certified healing foods specialist Shelley Alexander, author of "Deliciously Holistic," (www.aharmonyhealing.com), a new, full-color cookbook featuring more than 154 of her favorite healing foods recipes and 50 pages of holistic lifestyle tips to increase energy and immunity.

"Instead of heading to the local supermarket, visit a farmers' market, where you can buy fresh, local, seasonal and organic produce, along with other nutritious foods created by farmers and local food artisans," she says. "You'll have a much more enjoyable experience in addition to stocking up on all the ingredients you need to have handy. You can also find excellent choices at natural and health food stores."

Nutrient-rich, whole foods that don't have unnatural fillers and other additives, including seasonal, organic vegetables and fruits, wild-caught seafood, and pasture-raised, organic chicken and meats that come from well-fed, unadulterated, healthy animals, will completely nourish your body, make you feel better and ramp up your energy, she says. And you'll find you won't overeat, so it's much easier to maintain your weight without counting calories.

Alexander offers six tips for quick and convenient healthy eating during the holidays.

• When shopping, check labels and avoid foods with a long list of ingredients. The best whole foods have one or just a few unprocessed or minimally processed, easily recognized ingredients, Alexander says. Among ingredients to avoid: chemicals, artificial sweeteners, high fructose corn syrup, nitrates, MSG, genetically modified ingredients and preservatives (indicated by the initials BHT, BHA, EDTA and THBQ.)

• Set aside a few hours each week to prep foods to eat in the days ahead. Cut up produce and store it in airtight containers. Lightly wash produce before using with natural vegetable wash or use one part white vinegar to three parts water. Make several homemade vinaigrettes or dressings to last all week so you can make leafy greens and vegetable salads in minutes. Clean and marinate enough meat or poultry for dinners over the next few days.

• Start your day with a green smoothie. Cut and freeze organic fresh fruit to use in green smoothies. You can also buy frozen fruit that's already cut up. Add organic kale or spinach, coconut water or nut and seed milks plus natural sweeteners such as dates or stevia for an energy-boosting beverage.

• For your holiday dinners, plan on making at least three to four dishes that are both delicious and nutritious. Good examples are pasture-raised, wild turkey with sage and garlic, baked wild salmon with lemon and herbs, steamed greens, roasted heirloom root vegetables drizzled with balsamic glaze, pureed winter squash soups, and desserts made with seasonal fruits, spices, and healthy sweeteners like coconut sugar or raw honey.

• Invest in a dehydrator. Dehydrate fruits and vegetables and raw nuts or seeds that have been soaked in unrefined sea salt water (which removes anti-nutrients, kick-starts the germination process, and increases key vitamins), and you'll have plenty of on-the-go snacks with a long shelf life. Dehydrators are convenient and easy to use; Alexander recommends Excalibur.

• Make batches of fermented vegetables twice a month. Alexander recommends eating fermented vegetables every day to keep your digestive system healthy. They're loaded with probiotics - the good bacteria your intestines need. Mix a variety of organic vegetables such as carrots and celery into brine with warm filtered water, unrefined sea salt, and cultured vegetable starter or liquid whey, and mix with shredded cabbage heads. Pack the mixture into sterilized glass jars and allow the vegetables to ferment for five to seven days. Once done fermenting, store in the refrigerator for up to 6 months.

"Stick to whole, healthy foods this holiday season, and you'll feel so good, you won't want to go near the buffet table at your office party," Alexander says.

About Shelley Alexander, CHFS: Shelley Alexander has enjoyed a lifelong love of delicious, locally grown, seasonal foods. She received her formal chef's training at The Los Angeles Culinary Institute. Alexander is a holistic chef, certified healing foods specialist, cookbook author, and owner of the holistic health company, A Harmony Healing, in Los Angeles.

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia and Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware said today they will look for opportunities to advance their bipartisan proposal to provide coverage of intensive behavioral therapy for obesity and the coordination of programs to prevent and treat obesity in Medicare and Medicaid.

"The costs to society caused by diabetes and obesity are tremendous," Grassley said.  "There are ways to reduce the incidence of both those conditions.  Working with the Finance Committee on a bipartisan basis and the Congressional Budget Office, I'm confident we can take steps to achieve better health for Americans battling these two conditions."

"I've long held that preventive measures are one of the best ways we can improve health outcomes and save money on health care," Rockefeller said.  "Chronic diseases like diabetes are expensive to manage and, if left unaddressed, lead to additional health problems down the road. Our effort works to prevent and manage obesity and diabetes through increased access to prevention programs for Medicare and Medicaid subscribers. This will lead to greater health care savings and has the potential to improve overall health outcomes which will boost the productivity and well being of our communities."

"We all know that obesity and diabetes are two of the main drivers of poor health and increasing health care costs in our country," Carper said. "If we do not rein in the growth of obesity and diabetes, this may be the first generation of Americans with a shorter life span than earlier generations.  Overweight and obese patients are at increased risk for cancer, cardiovascular disorders, and other adverse health outcomes. Spending on diabetes treatment alone is one of the fastest growing parts of Medicare. To get this epidemic under control, we need to ensure that Medicare covers the full range of therapies and treatments that might help lower our country's obesity rates and better prevent chronic diseases like diabetes."

Grassley, Rockefeller and Carper sponsored an amendment, which was offered and withdrawn, to the physician payments bill considered in the Finance Committee last week that would provide coverage of intensive behavioral therapy for obesity and the coordination of programs to prevent and treat obesity in Medicare and Medicaid.  The proposal would establish diabetes prevention program services for eligible diabetes prevention program participants.  It also would broaden coverage of prescription drugs for weight loss management under Medicaid and Medicare Part D.

 

The proposal is meant to take advantage of existing anti-diabetes efforts and a new spate of federally approved weight loss drugs to address both diabetes and obesity, conditions that often interact.

Grassley, Rockefeller and Carper said they will look for legislative opportunities to advance this proposal in the coming months while continuing to work with other sponsors of the legislation including Sens. Al Franken, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski.  The senators also recognized the work of several senators and House members in this issue area and said they hope for bipartisan advancement of proposals to combat obesity and diabetes.

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Purity Ball 2014

Quad Cities Father-Daughter Purity Ball

Special Father/Daughter Event

February 22, 2014

At The Lodge, 900 Spruce Hills Drive, Bettendorf, Iowa 52722

SAVE THE DATE for the second Quad City Purity Ball!!!

Back by popular demand - a Christ-centered event for Fathers and Daughters.

Relationships that matter!

Featured speaker: Molly Sanborn.

Molly is upfront and captivating. She has been a role model for teens, proving that it is possible to live above the influence and have a blast while doing so. She lived a life of purity and married Craig in 2009.

Find out more about her ministry online:

www.MollySanborn.com

www.CraigandMolly.com

Find out more about the QC Purity Ball online:

www.PurityballQC.com

For more information, send an email to: purityballqc7@gmail.com

Join us for a wonderful evening of ministry and dedication!

You will be glad you did!

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