(DES MOINES) - Gov. Terry E. Branstad today extended the disaster declaration allowing for more propane transport during harvest. The extension is 7 days, through Nov. 14.

Today's proclamation language is below:

WHEREAS,   a proclamation of disaster emergency was issued on October 24, 2013, as a result of the propane shortage being felt throughout the State of Iowa; and

WHEREAS,   effects of the shortage continue and the circumstances and reasons for issuance of the proclamation remain and continue; and

WHEREAS, strict compliance with Iowa Code section 321.449 pertaining to hours of service for drivers of commercial motor vehicles subject to the conditions stated in the October 24, 2013 proclamation will continue to prevent, hinder, or delay timely transportation and delivery of propane throughout the State of Iowa.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, TERRY E. BRANSTAD, Governor of the State of Iowa, by the power and authority vested in me by the Iowa Constitution Art. IV, §§ 1, 8 and Iowa Code § 29C.6(1), and all other applicable laws, do hereby extend a State of Disaster Emergency for the entire state of Iowa originally proclaimed on October 24, 2013 for an additional seven days.  All terms and conditions of the proclamation of October 24, 2013 are hereby included by reference and shall apply as if fully set forth in this proclamation.

This extension of the original proclamation shall become effective at 12:01 a.m. on November 8, 2013, shall continue for seven (7) days, and shall expire on November 14, 2013 at 11:59 p.m., unless sooner terminated or extended in writing by me.

 

 

 

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto subscribed my name and caused the Great Seal of the State of Iowa to be affixed at Des Moines, Iowa this seventh day of November in the year of our Lord Two Thousand Thirteen.

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________

 

TERRY E. BRANSTAD

GOVERNOR

This week Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testified in front of the Senate Finance Committee.  As a member of this committee I had many questions for her.  In particular, I questioned the consequences of whether health care plans participating in the Affordable Care Act are subject to key anti-fraud protections.

Secretary Sebelius stated in a letter to a House member that qualified health plans, programs related to the federally facilitated marketplace, and other programs under the Affordable Care Act are not considered federal health care programs.  I questioned whether this means Obamacare programs are not subject to federal anti-kickback statutes and the federal False Claims Act.

Secretary Sebelius argued that the federal exchanges offer plans from private insurers that should not be subject to anti-fraud protections.  This alarms me.  Billions of dollars in subsidies for individuals going to health insurers to join Obamacare are federal tax dollars.  Those dollars should be subject to anti-fraud laws.  Medicare Advantage also offers plans from private insurers and is subject to those same anti-fraud provisions.  I question why the two programs should be treated differently for federal anti-fraud protections.  Both involve direct payments from the government to private health care plans.

I intend to do everything I can to get to the bottom of whether the federal agency in charge of Obamacare will apply every available anti-fraud protection to this program.

Signing Ceremony to Take Place November 20 at UIC Forum 

SPRINGFIELD - Governor Quinn today announced that he will sign historic legislation in the days ahead that will make Illinois the 15th state in the nation to embrace full marriage equality. The signing ceremony will take place at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) Forum on November 20, 2013 at 3:30 p.m.

"Marriage equality is coming to Illinois," Governor Quinn said. "I look forward to signing this landmark legislation on November 20 and celebrating a big step forward with the people of Illinois."

The legislation, which was approved by the Illinois House this week in a historic vote, will permit all couples in Illinois to receive the rights and protections of marriage. As part of his agenda to ensure Illinois embraces all people, Governor Quinn made marriage equality a top legislative priority this year, featuring it in his 2013 State of the State address.

For the second year in a row, UIC was recently named among the nation's top 25 campuses for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students. UIC is the only institution in Illinois among the top 25 campuses. The UIC Forum is located at 725 West Roosevelt Road, Chicago‚ IL 60608.

UIC houses the historic Hull House, now a museum, which opened Chicago's doors to the world's immigrants and became the national center for innovative social and educational programs. In the fall of 2013, the university experienced record-breaking enrollment of 27,589. For the second year in a row in fiscal year 2013 more than 3,800 baccalaureate degrees were awarded, and more graduate and professional degrees were awarded than last year as well.

 

This momentous celebration will be free of charge and open to the public. For more information, including how to attend this historic event, please visit Equality.Illinois.gov.

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WASHINGTON, Nov. 7, 2013

"Today's annual report by USDA's Economic Research Service - Rural America at a Glance, 2013 Edition - highlights the critical need for a new Food, Farm and Jobs Bill that will help to reverse troubling demographic and economic patterns in rural America. The fact is, too many people in rural America live in persistently-poor areas. Too many people still have trouble finding a good job. The populations of too many small towns and rural communities are shrinking. This is just one more reminder that we need a national commitment to create new opportunities in rural America that keeps folks in our small towns and reignites economic growth across the nation. The Farm Bill would invest to grow agricultural exports, and strengthen new markets for agriculture that hold job creation potential. It would spur new opportunities to manufacture products and energy from homegrown materials. It would invest in the future of Main Street businesses and communities. Rural America needs a new Farm Bill now, to meet these modern challenges head on and chart a pathway for future economic success across our rural areas."

The Rural America at a Glance, 2013 Edition report can be viewed here: http://www.ers.usda.gov/ersDownloadHandler.ashx?file=/media/1216457/eb-24_single-pages.pdf

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SPRINGFIELD, IL (11/07/2013)(readMedia)-- The Illinois State Military Museum in Springfield will be open Veterans Day from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Learning about the heritage of the Illinois National Guard from1723 to the present day is a great way to honor Illinois Veterans.

WHO:

• The Illinois State Military Museum

WHAT:

• Open for visitors on Veterans Day

WHEN: Monday November 11, 2013 at 09:00AM Central Time (US & Canada)

WHERE:Illinois State Military Museum
1301 N. MacArthur Blvd
Springfield, Illinois 62702

NOTES:

• Admission and parking are free

For additional information, please contact the Illinois State Military Museum at 217-761-3910.

Become our Facebook Fan!

www.facebook.com/illinoisstatemilitarymuseum

Davenport Parks and Recreation is pleased to once again waive green fees for all active military and veterans on Monday, November 11 in honor of Veteran's Day.
This special is available at any of the three city golf courses - Emeis, Duck Creek, or Red Hawk.  You should contact the course directly to book a tee time and you need to bring a military ID to the course. This special is for green fees only on Monday, November 11.  Carts are not included.
(Also please note, Monday, November 11 will be the last opening day of the season for Red Hawk).

Q:       Why is National Adoption Month observed in November?

A:        During this season of thanksgiving, millions of American households open their homes to friends and family from near and far.  We come together to celebrate cherished traditions that have been handed down for generations.  Hospitality, hearth and harvest come to mind as families gather at the table and give thanks.  As Americans make plans for the holiday feast, we can quibble about giblets in the gravy or whether to roast, deep fry or brine the turkey.  Each family enjoys its own unique traditions and family favorites on the Thanksgiving menu.  When it's all said and done, there's really no place like home.  That's why it's especially fitting to commemorate National Adoption Month in November.  Tens of thousands of foster children in America long to have a permanent place setting at their very own family's table on Thanksgiving Day and every other day of the year.  Last year, nearly 400,000 children lived in the U.S. foster care system.  Of those, nearly 102,000 awaited adoption.  More than 26,000 aged out of the system before ever securing a permanent place to call home.  Since 1990, National Adoption Month has helped to raise awareness for children awaiting adoption and appreciation for those who have answered the call to serve as foster or adoptive parents.  So many of us look forward to celebrating the homecoming of friends and family on Thanksgiving Day.  Just consider the hope-filled anticipation of a child longing to be welcomed home for good to a forever family.

 

Q:       What can be done to help more children awaiting adoption to find a permanent, loving home?

A: As co-founder and co-chair of the bipartisan Senate Caucus on Foster Youth, I've worked to raise public awareness and educate policymakers about the challenges facing foster youth, especially those who age out of the system with no long-term support structure in place.  Children and adolescents need stability, certainty and constancy in their lives.  A permanent, loving home provides the most nurturing foundation to help youth reach their fullest potential in society.  We should acknowledge foster youth throughout the year, not just November, and give thanks to parents who heed the call to adopt a child.  And, we can always do more to ensure that children who await adoption get the assistance they need, including support to stay in school and sustain their education.  Earlier this year, I introduced the Foster Youth Stamp Act of 2013 that would provide for the issuance and sale of a postal stamp by the U.S. Postal Service.  Revenue generated from the stamp would support state-based programs, including the Adoption Opportunities Program - which seeks permanent outcomes for foster care youth through adoption, guardianship or kinship care - and the State Court Improvement Program - which seeks to improve legal representation for youth and addresses caseloads and the court's role in achieving safe, stable, permanent homes for children in foster care.

 

Q:       What other legislative provisions have you championed to promote adoption?

A: As an outspoken advocate for "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" at the policymaking tables in Washington, I believe these founding principles apply especially to vulnerable children in our society.  I've worked with Iowa families, foster youth, child welfare advocates, court representatives and social workers to help identify financial, legal and bureaucratic roadblocks that make it difficult for kids to find a permanent, loving home through adoption, guardianship or reunification with their birth family.  Through congressional hearings and legislation, I've worked to raise awareness about the stability that adoption can bring to a child in need of a loving home as well as the public good adoption brings to society.

•         In 1997, I worked to advance the Adoption and Safe Families Act that is credited with doubling adoptions from foster care in many states.

•         As then-chairman of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, I secured an expansion of federal tax credit assistance in the 2001 tax law that increased qualified expenses for adoption from $5,000 to $10,000.  Today the tax credit is indexed for inflation and was made a permanent provision of the federal tax code earlier this year. Adoptive parents this year may apply $12,970 in qualified adoption expenses to their 2013 federal tax return.

•         In 2006, congressional hearings in the Senate Finance Committee led to the passage of the Child and Family Services Improvement Act that improved programs designed to help troubled families and increased caseworker visits for foster care youth.

•         In 2008, I authored the Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions law which increased federal incentives for states to move children from foster care to adoptive homes; made it easier for children to be adopted by relatives; made children with special needs eligible for federal adoption assistance; and, established new educational opportunities for youth who age out of foster care at age 18.

Q:       What is National Adoption Day?

A:        Since 2000, 44,500 families have finalized adoptions on National Adoption Day. Organizers single out the Saturday before Thanksgiving to raise public awareness and honor adoptive families across the country.  As Iowans count our blessings and celebrate family on Thanksgiving Day, let's remember the children in our communities who dream to find a family to call their own once and for all.  Have you, a family member, friend or neighbor considered adoption?  On behalf of the thousands of foster children whose single-most important wish upon the turkey's wishbone would be to take a seat at their very own family's Thanksgiving table, I encourage you to prayerfully consider the call if you're in a position to do so.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa is seeking answers from the Obama administration on indications that Obamacare will bypass key anti-fraud protections.

"I am alarmed at indications that the Administration may try to exempt the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) from certain federal anti-fraud provisions," Grassley wrote to top administration officials today.  "PPACA provides for billions of dollars in subsidies to be paid directly to insurance companies.  These taxpayer dollars should be subject to the full arsenal of civil and criminal anti-fraud protections provided by Congress."

Grassley's letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Attorney General Eric Holder came amid statements that the administration does not consider qualified health plans and other programs related to the federally facilitated marketplace under the new health care law to be federal health care programs.  That appears to mean the Obamacare programs are not subject to federal anti-kickback statutes and the federal False Claims Act, one of the government's most effective tools against fraud, especially health care fraud in recent years.

Grassley raised these concerns at a Finance Committee hearing with Sebelius on Wednesday.  He asked her to explain her letter to a House member that the Obamacare health plans are not considered federal health care programs.  She suggested Medicare Advantage, for example, and Obamacare should be treated differently for federal anti-fraud protections.  Grassley believes both programs should be treated the same for anti-fraud purposes, since both involve direct payments from the government to private health care plans.

"Congress' intent to treat kickbacks under PPACA as False Claims Act violations is clear.  It cannot lawfully be nullified by the stroke of a pen through an administrative exemption," Grassley wrote today.  "If this nullification were allowed to stand, HHS would be removing a vital tool to investigate and prosecute fraud.  It undermines public confidence that the government is serious about protecting American taxpayer dollars from fraud, waste and abuse.   Intentionally attempting to strip away these vital protections by administrative fiat is extremely disturbing."

Grassley is the Senate author of the 1986 whistleblower amendments strengthening the federal False Claims Act, making it more effective than ever in exposing fraud against the government.

The text of Grassley's letter to Sebelius and Holder is available here.

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Congratulations to the following students who have made the Rivermont Collegiate 1st Quarter Honor Roll!

Middle School (Grades 6-8)

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

Asha Alla

Elizabeth Decker

Clayton Douglas

Faith Douglas

Jessica Elliott

Aislinn Geedey

Jacob Hansen

Mary Aisling McDowell

Dwira Nandini

Elizabeth Paxton

Grace Sampson

Anna Senjem

Honors (All grades B- or higher or C+ or higher for courses designated as Upper School level)

Christopher Cumberbatch

Kenton Fee

Chirag Gowda

Jewell Hixon

Jonathon Kokoruda

Jozef Porubcin

Lauren Schroeder

Elias Sheumaker

Genevieve Strasser

Nikhil Wagher

Jack Westphal

 

Upper School (Grades 9-12)

Headmaster's List (GPA 3.85-4.00)

Adam Dada

Anastasia Eganova

Maram El-Geneidy

Tejasvi Kotte

Summer Lawrence

Benjamin Nordick

Manasa Pagadala

Emilia Porubcin

Michal Porubcin

Shravya Pothula

Suhas Seshadri

Alexander Skillin

Loring Telleen

MingSui Tang

Distinction (GPA 3.50-3.84)

Christian Elliott

Shivani Ganesh

Ryan Howell

Amanda McVey

Victoria Mbakwe

Grace Moran

Thomas Rodgers

Pavel Yashurkin

Merit (GPA 3.00-3.49)

Spencer Brown

Hema Chimpidi

Sukhmani Gill

Hayley Moran

Lauren Sears
In an Increasingly Globalized World, Cooperation is an
Imperative, says CEO & International Speaker

Whether we like it or not as Americans, the world is changing. Berny Dohrmann, an entrepreneur and international speaker, says we should like it.

"Embracing change is at the heart of the spirit of cooperation, which I believe to be at the heart of a solution to the problems plaguing humanity," says Dohrmann, chairman and founder of CEO Space International, and author of "Redemption: The Cooperation Revolution," (www.ceospaceinternational.com).

"Many of us have been taught that competition is the primary feature of our economic system; however, the most salient common denominator for all successful human interaction features is just the opposite - it is cooperation."

Removing competitive thinking and replacing it with cooperative thinking opens us up to developing alliances that elevate what we do, rather than strategies that aim to take down our competitors, Dohrmann says.

"Cooperative thinking is the ultimate virus-removal program for the mind," he says. "Cooperative action helps resolve individual problems and, in the long run, can resolve the problems of the entire world."

Dohrmann describes some issues we face that would benefit from cooperative thinking:

• Republicans versus Democrats - a stalemate. We face massive problems -- terrorism, poverty, climate change, to name just a few. But our biggest problem lately has been agreeing upon the most basic functions of government, including paying our bills on time. Why? Because our federal congressional leaders view their roles as competitors, which demands that one group of them win and the other group lose. They value their competition over the welfare of their country and its citizens, who suffered lost wages, lost business, and lost access to crucial services.

• How will we deal with the major emerging economies that are developing? China, India and several countries in South America are among many emerging economies worldwide, which is why government and corporate leaders in America require a sea change in worldview. As Dohrmann puts it: "Cooperation produces speed in distribution of goods and services (social capital). Competition produces three speeds: slow, slower and damn near stopped. Cooperative investment rewards direction. Competition punishes it. Cooperative accounting rewards planning and this is in contrast to manipulated near-term profit illusions. Competition rewards hype. Cooperation rewards integrity. Competition rewards error. Cooperation rewards truth."

• The largest growing city in the U.S. is prison. By a large margin, America has the highest incarceration rate of any country on Earth. In 2009, the number of adults under correctional supervision - including probation, parole, jail or prison -was 6,977,700. The prison population has quadrupled since 1980, mostly due to mandatory sentencing since the "war on drugs." Almost 60 percent of America's prison population, an industry in itself, is related to minor marijuana offenses, which is a drug that's "far less harmful than over-the-counter meds or alcohol," Dohrmann says. He cites the recent case of a Utah woman who was sentenced to 11 years in prison for possession of $32 of marijuana.

"This is a staggering dynamic of stupidity in our society," he says. "Whether we like it or not, humans have taken chemicals to alter their experience since recorded history; it's like we've declared war on human nature. There is certainly a better cooperative solution to this problem, and others."

About Berny Dohrmann

Berny Dohrmann is chairman and founder of CEO Space International, one of the largest support organizations for business owners. He is the inventor of Super Teaching, a Title I technology that accelerates retention for public schools, and speaks on it around the world, at conferences and on TV programs. As a member of the Dohrmann family, which operated the largest global resort-outfitting firm as Dohrmann Hotel Supply for several generations, he grew up with several business mentors, including Napoleon Hill, Earl Nightingale, Walt Disney, Warner Earnhardt, Bucky Fuller, Dr. Edward Deming and Jack Kennedy. He has learned from both success and adversity: Indicted for criminal contempt for a $86,000 junk bund from an investment banking firm he had sold, he fought the charge in court, but lost in 1995 and went to prison for 18 months. He has since made a documentary about the experience.

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