Educational Seminars on Conservation, Niche Farming Gather Standing-Room-Only Crowds

WEST DES MOINES, IOWA - Dec. 5, 2013 -Diverse farmers from across the state gathered in Des Moines this week to celebrate the successes of 2013, while finding new ideas to keep next-generation agriculture thriving in Iowa.

"The 95th annual Iowa Farm Bureau theme, 'Generations of Innovation,' focused on key areas of conservation and niche farming because we know agriculture needs new ideas....creative approaches to bring the next generation of renewable energy to the world; it will bring advances in seed genetics which help us grow food despite turbulent weather, or advances in livestock, food safety and conservation.  It will take innovation to keep farming 'green and growing' for the future," said Iowa Farm Bureau Federation (IFBF) President Craig Hill during his address to members.

The IFBF meeting featured several educational seminars for Farm Bureau members.  "Innovations in Conservation" showed farmers options to help them implement Iowa's Nutrient Reduction Strategy.  Jeff Pape, a farmer and chairman of the Hewitt Creek Watershed Council, says he's seen a lot of progress in conservation in northeast Iowa and peer-to-peer knowledge sharing has encouraged success.  "Farmers have learned from each other and participation among farmers in the watershed has nearly doubled over seven years.  A lot of knowledge is passed back and forth over the fencerow. When we first started this project, some people said there was nothing in it for them. Now they're participating in it because they've learned there's a measureable benefit to their land, their crops and their watershed," said Pape.

Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey encouraged farmers to put one new conservation practice in place on their farms next year, and share with neighbors and non-farmers the importance of persistence. Pape agreed.  "Soil and water metrics have improved because of the nutrient reduction efforts. We have fish back in the stream.  But you don't fix a stream for a water quality issue in three years. This is a forever project. It won't end."

IFBF's Next Generation Innovation session also drew big crowds.  IFBF's Farm business Development Manager Nathan Katzer travels the state and sees a lot of 'gold mine' ideas, just waiting for encouragement and the right kind of guidance.  Niche farming is wide open.  "Many families in the state of Iowa can consider (specialty ag) as a way to get the next generation involved, as a way to add a business to give the younger generation the time and the challenges to grow themselves as a leader, as a manager, as a financial planner ... to be the active farming producer that the family needs to have a successful farm transition," Katzer said.

Andrew Pittz returned to his family's sixth-generation Missouri Valley farm to begin the nation's first commercial aronia berry farm.  Pittz says the encouragement he received from Farm Bureau may surprise some folks, because they don't realize how diverse Iowa Farm Bureau farmers and members really are.  Pittz likes sharing his story and exceeding people's expectations of agriculture.  "Sometimes it makes sense to be conventional in agriculture and sometimes; it makes sense for your farm to be organic," Pittz said. "For us, competing in this market, we are taking on multi-national corporations ...so it really makes sense for us to be organic on the marketing side. And it really pays off in the market place."

The 95th annual Farm Bureau meeting also featured a lively presentation from keynote speaker Dr. Jay Lehr.  Lehr, a futurist, economist, author and competitive athlete, told Iowa farmers that while agriculture will continue to lead the state's economy for generations to come, there will be no shortages of challenges to overcome.  "Agronomy is so much more complex because of weather changes, adaptation of pests, microbes in the soil that change the soil; the number of variables that determine what your soil needs and only those who embrace innovation and technology can keep up and know how to keep us sustainable and growing.  Because of global economic growth, Iowa agriculture will become even more critical and diverse.  One example is Smithfield being bought by the Chinese and in my view, it's a good thing because we'll be exporting more hogs. I think in five years they're going to be buying our corn, too, which will also help our farmers here," said Lehr.

For a more detailed look at the presentations from the 95th Iowa Farm Bureau annual meeting, visit www.iowafarmbureau.com.

 

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About Iowa Farm Bureau

The Iowa Farm Bureau Federation is a grassroots, statewide organization dedicated to enhancing the People, Progress and Pride of Iowa.  More than 153,000 families in Iowa are Farm Bureau members, working together to achieve farm and rural prosperity.  For more information about Farm Bureau and agriculture, visit the Newsroom page on the IBF website at www.iowafarmbureau.com.

Message: Tell the EPA to Put Family Farmers and Rural Economies Ahead of Big Oil Profits

www.SavetheRFS.com Launched


Watch 'Simple Choice': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKRRGDM6a3Q&feature=youtu.be

Washington DC - On the same day the EPA is holds its public hearing on the proposed rule 2014 Standards for the Renewable Fuel Standard Program, Americans United for Change announced it is soon hitting the airwaves in Iowa in defense of the RFS. "Simple Choice" will air primarily in the Des Moines media market in the heart of the country where real people and their lives and livelihoods are at stake, while big oil advertises to elites in the DC market.  The ad urges the millions of Americans who benefit from the RFS - from family farmers, ethanol industry workers, secondary industries, surrounding economies, to American consumers paying less at the pump - to tell the EPA to do what's best for rural America, not Big Oil's bottom line.

 

Viewers are encouraged to visit www.SavetheRFS.com operated by Americans United ally VoteVets.org, the 360,000+ supporter veterans group, and sign up to be part of a team of real Americans who will communicate the importance of renewable fuels and the RFS to our nation's leaders, including those who aspire to lead the country in the future. 

Brad Woodhouse, President, Americans United for Change: "The industry that brought us the Gulf oil spill loves the new RFS rule as it stands and would love nothing more than to keep rural America quiet until the ink is dry.   That's why it's incredibly important that Americans in the heartland make their voices heard, because the strength in numbers of those who benefit from the RFS can beat Big Oil's deep pockets.  If this misguided EPA rule is made permanent, the ripple effect cannot be overstated.  As the family farmer and ethanol industry goes, so goes the positive economic growth we've seen in rural America since the RFS was established, so goes the hundreds of thousands of American jobs the industry has created, so goes the availability of fuel 70 cents cheaper wholesale than gasoline, so goes the billion dollars American consumers save every week, so goes the gains made in combating climate change and reducing dependence on oil from unstable regions overseas.   Big Oil knows that if they're successful at eliminating their cheaper, cleaner, better performing competition, then anything goes when it comes to prices at the pump.  The oil industry doesn't care what it takes to rake in more profits, even if it means sending more of our troops, and money and jobs overseas.  This is a whole new standard in greed: an industry that can reap $23 billion in profit in one day while shamelessly collecting tens of billions of dollars in tax payer subsidies, and still want more."

"Simple Choice"

Script

Americans United For Change

TV  (:30) 

It's a pretty simple choice.

Small towns?

Or Big Oil?

Jobs right here at home?

Or more jobs sent overseas?

Our economy?

Or theirs?

Family farms?

Or oil company profits?

It's America's energy, and it's America's choice.

Tell the E-P-A to stand with Iowa farmers and small towns, not big oil.

Tell the E-P-A: Don't gut the renewable fuel standard.

Visit Save The R-F-S dot com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PREVIOUS RELEASES SINCE LAUNCHING OUR PRO-RFS CAMPAIGN WITH VOTEVETS :

11.22.13 Big Oil Reaps $23 Billion Windfall - In One Day

11.19.13 VoteVets.org, AUFC Join Forces Against Big Oil's Scheme to Repeal the Renewable Fuel Standard

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Don't Believe Big Oil's Lies About Renewable Fuels: They'll Say Anything to Eliminate the Cheaper, Cleaner Competition

FACT: Ethanol Creates Hundreds of Thousands More Jobs and Means Less Pinch at the Pump

  • According to research conducted by economics professors at the University of Wisconsin and Iowa State University: In 2011, ethanol reduced wholesale gasoline prices by an average of $1.09 per gallon. Regular grade gasoline prices averaged $3.52 per gallon in 2011, but would have been closer to $4.60 per gallon without the inclusion of more than 13 billion gallons of lower-priced ethanol.  Since 2000, ethanol has kept gasoline prices an average of $0.29 per gallon cheaper than they otherwise would have been.  Based on the $0.29-per-gallon average annual savings, ethanol has helped save American drivers and the economy more than $477 billion in gasoline expenditures since 2000 - an average of $39.8 billion a year.
  • Growth Energy: "The U.S. Department of Energy estimates for every one billion gallons of ethanol produced, 10,000 to 20,000 jobs are added to our domestic economy.  According to the most recent available data by the DOE, ethanol saves American consumers more than $35 billion per year at the pump.  In 2011 alone, the ethanol industry created and supported more than 400,000 new jobs across the country that cannot be exported or outsourced. In addition, ethanol production contributed $42.4 billion to the nation's GDP and generated $4.3 billion in federal tax revenues. Ethanol production also plays a critical role in revitalizing America's rural areas ? some of the hardest hit by the economic downturn ? by stimulating economic growth."

FACT: Ethanol Has Almost No Impact on Food Prices

  • RFA: "A recent study commissioned by the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD) examined the impacts of ethanol policies, including the RFS and now-defunct blender's tax credit, on world crop prices in the 2005-2010 timeframe. Using a partial equilibrium economic model, the study found corn prices in 2009/10 wouldn't have been any different at all with or without the RFS in place. Corn prices would have been just 3.3% lower, on average, in the entire five-year study period without the RFS and ethanol blender's tax credit, the study found. The effect of the RFS and other ethanol-related policies on other crops is even less...The Center for Agricultural and Rural Development (CARD), Food and Agriculture Policy Research Institute (FAPRI), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Michigan State University, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) are among the many other organizations that have similarly concluded the RFS has had only modest impacts on crop prices and no meaningful impact on retail-level food prices."

 

FACT: Ethanol Benefits, Not Hurts the Environment

  • RFA: Using ethanol in place of gasoline helps to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by up 30-50% given today's technology. Because ethanol is made from renewable, plant-based feedstocks, the CO2 released during a vehicle's fuel combustion is "recycled" during the growth of ethanol feedstocks. Independent analyses comparing ethanol and gasoline show ethanol reduces GHG emissions from 30-50%. A study published by Yale University's Journal of Industrial Ecology found that GHG emissions from ethanol produced at modern dry-mill facilities are "... equivalent to a 48 percent to 59 percent reduction compared to gasoline, a twofold to threefold greater reduction than reported in previous studies."  New technologies, additional feedstocks, and higher blends of ethanol including E85 all promise greater C02 reductions.
  • RFA:  In 2012, the 13.2 billion gallons of ethanol produced reduced greenhouse gas emissions from on-road vehicles by 33.4 million tons.  That's equivalent to removing 5.2 million cars and pickups (comparable to the number of registered vehicles in the state of Michigan) from the road for one year.

FACT:  Ethanol Does NOT Harm Your Gas Tank; Would NASCAR Have Driven 5 Million Miles on It if It Did?

  • U.S. Energy Department: The Energy Department conducted its own rigorous, thorough and peer-reviewed study of the impact of E15 fuel on current, conventional vehicle catalyst systems. The Energy Department study included an inspection of critical engine components, such as valves, and did not uncover unusual wear that would be expected to impact performance. Rather than using an aggressive test cycle intended to severely-stress valves, the Energy Department program was run using a cycle more closely resembling normal driving. The Energy Department testing program was run on standard gasoline, E10, E15, and E20. The Energy Department test program was comprised of 86 vehicles operated up to 120,000 miles each using an industry-standard EPA-defined test cycle (called the Standard Road Cycle). The resulting Energy Department data showed no statistically significant loss of vehicle performance (emissions, fuel economy, and maintenance issues) attributable to the use of E15 fuel compared to straight gasoline.
  • NASCAR: NASCAR announced November 12, 2013 that it surpassed more than five million competition miles across its three national series on Sunoco Green E15, a biofuel blended with 15 percent American Ethanol made from American-grown corn. The five million miles have been accumulated across practice, qualifying and racing laps dating to 2011 when the biofuel was introduced to the sport. ... In 2011 NASCAR entered into a groundbreaking partnership with Sunoco and the American Ethanol industry, launching its long-term biofuels program to reduce emissions of the fuel used across its three national series. The transition to the biofuel reduced on-track carbon emissions and teams report an increase in horsepower.
Bring Your Four-Legged Kids to Visit the Big Guy
WHAT: Why should Fido miss out on holiday cheer? Nowadays people want pet pictures not just of their children with Santa, but also with their pets as well. Pet pictures with Santa have become a welcome new tradition for many.
Kids, dogs - we love them all! On Monday, December 9 we invite our four-legged friends to "sit" for a photo with Santa at SouthPark Mall. On Monday, December 16 NorthPark Mall will host pet photo night.
At SouthPark Mall, stop by the Wish List tree near Express to help support the Quad City Animal Welfare Center and make a difference in the life of a homeless animal. When attending pet photo night, please be sure to keep our animal friends on their leashes.
WHEN: Pet Night will be held on Monday, December 9, from 6pm-9pm at SouthPark Mall
Pet Night will be held on Monday, December 16, from 6pm-9pm at NorthPark Mall
WHERE: NORTHPARK MALL SOUTHPARK MALL
VON MAUR COURT YOUNKERS COURT
INTERVIEWS
& VISUALS:
Talk with guests about plans to pamper their pets for the holidays.
Talk with families about what else is on their lists and how they plan to spend this season.
Talk with retailers about this year's holiday trends and their plans and expectations for the season.
-- Photographers and Camera Crews Welcome with Appointment Only--
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DES MOINES, IA (12/05/2013)(readMedia)-- During the holiday season gift cards are popular presents. State Treasurer Michael Fitzgerald reminds Iowa consumers to shop smart when it comes to gift cards. "According to the National Retail Federation, 8 in 10 shoppers will give a gift card this holiday season.* Nationally, shoppers will spend an average of $163 on gift cards, up 4% from last year," Fitzgerald said. "Each year, over a billion dollars in gift cards go unclaimed because cards are lost or forgotten.** Don't let that happen to your gift. These tips can help you protect the value of the gift you give this season."

Tips for Gift Card Purchasers:

  • Ask about expiration dates and fees. If the disclosures are too confusing you may want to avoid purchasing the gift card.
  • Buy gift cards from reputable retailers and where you know will be convenient for the recipient to use.
  • Give the original receipt and disclosure information to the recipient in the event it is needed to replace a lost or stolen gift card.
  • Encourage the recipient to use the gift card right away.

"I plan to give some gift cards this year, but will always warn them to use it right away," Fitzgerald said. Even if there is an expiration date on a gift card, retailers are required to honor all of the gift cards they sell for five years.

Consumers with questions or concerns regarding an expired gift card that a retailer will not honor are encouraged to contact the state treasurer's office. Please provide a copy of the gift card and a brief letter stating the circumstances. The information can be sent to the address below or emailed to upreport@iowa.gov.

Michael L. Fitzgerald

Treasurer of the State of Iowa

Unclaimed Property Reporting Desk

State Capitol, Des Moines, Iowa 50319

*http://www.nrf.com/modules.php?name=News&op=viewlive&sp_id=1694

** http://business.time.com/2012/01/09/billions-wasted-do-gift-cards-make-sense-when-so-many-go-unused/

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Summaries for Most Recent Opinions

Click here for summaries of selected opinions most recently filed by the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Opinions of the Iowa Court of Appeals will be filed at 8:30 a.m. on the dates listed below:

2013

 

 

 

January 9

April 24

August 7

November 20

January 24

May 15

August 21

December 5

February 13

May 30

September 5

December 18

February 27

June 12

September 18

 

March 13

June 26

October 2

 

March 27

July 10

October 23

 

April 10

July 24

November 6

 

 

 

 

 

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.

Opinions Expected Next Filing Date

A list of cases on which the Iowa Court of Appeals is expected to rule will be posted at 8:30 a.m. one day preceding each opinion filing day.

Opinions Archive

This archive contains opinions from 1998 to the present. Summaries of opinions are archived for opinions filed between 1998 to April 12, 2006 only.

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.
Start your Christmas right with Junior Theatre Movie Night!

Davenport Junior Theatre is thrilled to host a Movie Night as part of the Family Friday Series.  We hope your family can join us for pizza, lemonade, popcorn and a movie in our very own Nighswander Theatre.  We will also have special holiday performances from our Ensemble Actors and Mainstage Dancers.  It is going to be a blast!  Best of all, it is only $4.00 per person!  This included 2 slices of pizza, popcorn, lemonade and the movie.

"Dr. Suess' How the Grinch Stole Christmas"
Live Action - Jim Carey  

Friday, December 6 : 6:00pm - 9:00pm

$4.00 per person, pay at door or register in advance

Located at the Annie Wittenmyer Complex
2818 Eastern Avenue in Davenport

CASI/PLUS 60 are hosting a dance this Friday, December 6, 2013 from 7:00-10:00 p.m. at CASI, 1035 W. Kimberly Road, Davenport. Music provided by The Night People, a musical group who plays 60's & 70's music. Come enjoy light snacks and a cash bar while dancing the night away!

Tickets are $8 in advanced at CASI and $10 at the door.

For more information, please call: Sarah Arp at CASI at: 563.386.7477, 229 (office) or 563.343.0038 (cell) or email at: sarp@casiseniors.org

CASI, 1035 West Kimberly Road, Davenport, Iowa. CASI is open Monday-Friday, 8am to 5pm. www.CasiSeniors.org

Environmental specialists with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources are seen in the photo below taking samples of Mississippi River water near the Interstate 80 bridge, south of the Stephen L. Colby Response in LeClaire, Iowa, Dec. 4, 2013. Iowa DNR is conducting water sampling along the shoreline to determine any impact to the water.

Link to more photos: http://www.dvidshub.net/image/1065927/iowa-state-representatives-test-river-water#.Up_Iu8RDu1g#ixzz2mYWMO3kd

December 2013

COMMENTARY: The holiday season brings a special focus to merchants and service providers, as well as those engaged directly in the celebration of the spiritual aspect of this time of year. With additional parking and more businesses along the commercial corridors, Hilltop Campus Village is attaining new vigor.

Small businesses have a great opportunity to compete with larger stores using social media and co-promotional strategies. With a critical mass of businesses now in the area, it makes sense to implement these strategies.

There has been some exciting discussion this year about the local HCV merchants getting together to draw people into the area.

The HCV is looking forward to helping anyone who wishes to develop this effort by serving as a communications conduit. Email us with your interest so we can start this ball rolling.

 

HCV actions and activities:

o   Parking along the west side of Harrison Street appears to be taking hold. After an initial period of uncertainty, it appears the spaces are being used with considerable frequency.

o   The 30-space parking lot at 15th and Ripley is nearly completed, with curbs in place and permeable asphalt paving applied. The spaces are delineated by lines and numbered, with the only elements remaining will be the paving of the driveway (first week in December) and the landscaping in the spring.

o   Proposed policies for street light installation and maintenance and for new snow removal policies have been submitted to the Department of Public Works for comment and review. The DPW is looking at multiple strategies to remove snow, should we have any this season (any bets?).

 

HAPPENINGS IN THE HILLTOP

o   REMINDER to those with reservations: The Gold Coast - Hamburg Historic District Association is sponsoring a High Tea on Saturday, December 7, 2013. Proceeds from this event will be used to further educate people on the history of the Gold Coast - Hamburg Historic District. Guests will also be entertained by members of the Barley House Band.  

The venue for the High Tea Meal is 321 W. 6th St. in Davenport, IA. For further details, contact PJ Slobojan, 563-326-2894, . pjs312@q.com  

o   On Thursday December 5, there will be a Grand Opening of the Harrison Lofts mixed use complex at the 1400 block of Harrison Street, across from the Hilltop Plaza Park and the Third Missionary Baptist church. The event will begin at 4pm and a ceremony will start at 5pm.

o   A Nova Christmas, an annual holiday concert with the professional vocal ensemble, the Nova Singers will be held at 7:30pm on Saturday December 21 at St. Paul Lutheran Church, 2136 Brady Street. Tickets are $15-$18, students free. For information and tickets call 309-341-7038 or email nova@knox.edu.

HILLTOPPORTUNITIES

o   Business/Organization office space now available. Low cost office space within the Hilltop Campus Village office at 601 Brady Street for start ups, small businesses and not for profits. Five private enclosed and secure spaces are for lease at very reasonable rates, utilities included.

Sizes range from 170 sq ft. to 625 sq ft. Interested parties may contact Ted Priester,  tpriester@priesterlaw.com, 563 322 5386.

o   Two stand alone properties have just been made available for sale in the HCV, due to the owner's pending retirement. Both are highly visible commercial buildings, one with abundant parking, the other with an existing income stream of $1000/month. Contact the HCV for contact information on these and other properties.

 

WHAT'S NEXT?

o   A nomination has been made by the HCV to the City's Design Review Board subject to Mayoral and City Council approval. This board is charged with examining and approving issues related to painting, signage and related issues in the downtown, the East Village and in the Hilltop Campus Village. 

o   The HCV will be announcing a new board member next month. If approved by the board in December the nominee will take office in January. 

o   Main Street Iowa and the Iowa Economic Development Authority have made available Business Innovation Challenge Grants. Maximum awards will be for $20,000 and minimums for $5,000. A total of $100,000 will be awarded. A dollar-for dollar local match is required. 

Eligible projects include but are not limited to Business Retention, Expansion and Recruitment efforts; Marketing and Promotion programs; Technical Assistance Programs; Innovative or Creative Business Training Programs; and Start up Assistance programs.

Only one application is available per community and all applicants must be within a Main Street Iowa District. Forward ideas to the HCV office or a board member. or call 563-322-8293. Application deadline is February 14, 2014. 

 

KUDOS!

o   To the four students of Davenport Central High School who were profiled on the front page of a recent issue of the QC Times for their efforts to establish a sustainable urban garden on the CHS grounds. Such an effort has been talked about when discussion of using green space comes up, but these young citizens have made it happen. Congratulations too to Gail Lynn Heninger, their faculty advisor through the Talented and Gifted program.

o   Also to St. Paul's Lutheran Church and the First Baptist Church for their respective urban gardening efforts. FBC has done theirs for a number of years, plowing, planting and inviting neighbors to take what they need.

St. Paul's has augmented their gardening ministry by demolishing a house at 2003 Main Street, and dedicating the vacant lot to be used as a community garden, with produce to be given to the needy. A refreshing alternative to other uses.

WORK GROUP SESSIONS: Meetings open to all

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

o   Meeting time: Second Wednesday of the month (December 11), 5:00pm, HCV office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301.

§  Board Nomination

§  MSI Business Innovation Challenge Grant projects

§  Volunteer of the Year

ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Second Monday of the month (December 9), 4:00 pm., Hilltop Campus Village office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301

§  4th quarter fundraising strategies

DESIGN COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Third Thursday (December 19), 5:00pm, Hilltop Campus Village office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301  

§  Hilltop Plaza landscaping

§  Design Review Board nominee

PROMOTIONS COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Second Tuesday (December 10), 4:00pm, Hilltop Campus Village office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301

§  Planning for Open House/Business after Hours

ECONOMIC RESTRUCTURING COMMITTEE

o   Meeting time: Third Wednesday, (December 18) noon, Hilltop Campus office, 601 Brady Street, Suite 301

§  Marketing availability of retail space, incubator

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The Hilltop Campus Village is a not for profit organization dedicated to restoration, redevelopment and revitalization of this area.  Questions, comments and suggestions may be addressed by contacting the Hilltop Campus Village office at 563-322-8293 or  hcvscott@gmail.com or board members.

CHICAGO - Governor Quinn today issued the below statement regarding President Obama's call to increase the national minimum wage:

"President Obama and I agree - no one should work 40 hours a week and live in poverty.

"Increasing the minimum wage will ensure that workers get a fair day's wage for a fair day's work, while fighting poverty and bolstering our economy.

"Earlier this year, I called for increasing the minimum wage in Illinois to at least $10 an hour and I will continue to work with members of the General Assembly to make it happen."

 

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