DAVENPORT?Residents and businesses downtown soon will have a new, convenient place to drop off items for recycling.

Centennial Park Drop-Off Recycling Center at 202 S. Marquette St.?located just west of Centennial Park and adjacent to the Dog Off Leash Area?will open at 1 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 31, with an official Quad Cities Chamber of Commerce ribbon-cutting ceremony. The media is invited to attend.

"Centennial Park Drop-Off Recycling Center will serve a need in the downtown community for convenient recycling. When recycling is made easier, we know that people recycle more. Of course we always want to see more recycling in our community?not only because it's the right thing to do, but because it extends the life of the landfill," said Kathy Morris, director of Waste Commission of Scott County (Commission).

The new drop-off center?the result of collaborative efforts between the Commission and City of Davenport?will be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Acceptable materials for recycling will include corrugated cardboard, mixed paper (including chipboard, such as cereal boxes), and containers (#1 and #2 plastics, metal cans, and glass food containers). Detailed recycling information may be found on the Commission's Website, www.wastecom.com.

Waste Commission of Scott County is an intergovernmental agency whose mission is to provide environmentally sound and economically feasible solid waste management for Scott County. For more information about the Commission, call (563) 381-1300 or visit www.wastecom.com.

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Davenport, Iowa (October 30, 2013) - The Figge Art Museum is offering FREE admission all day on Saturday

for Family Fiesta Day. Families are invited to celebrate El Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) by remembering their loved ones while exploring the altars and Catrinas on display and interacting in the galleries and studios.

The day's activities begin at 10 a.m. and will include leaving a memory at the community altar, sketching a Catrina, making butterflies, paper marigolds, jointed skeleton figures and decorating traditional sugar skulls. A movie called "Food for the Ancestors" will be shown at 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. in the John Deere auditorium and storytime will take place at noon. A 1 p.m. performance of traditional dances by Ballet Folklorico in the lobby will complete the festivities.

Guests can enjoy traditional treats including pan muerto, conchas, tamales, chips and salsa, spiced cocoa and other snacks throughout the day as well as a special photo op while sampling the food.

This is a companion event to the Day of the Dead exhibition which is a partnership with Casa Guanajuato Quad Cities and sponsored by the Brand Boeshaar Foundation Fund. The exhibition closes on Sunday.

About the Figge Art Museum

The Figge Art Museum is located on the riverfront in downtown Davenport at 225 West Second Street. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday and Sundays 12-5 p.m. Thursdays the museum is open until 9 p.m. Admission to the museum and tour is $7. Admission is free to Figge members and institutional members and free to all on Thursday evenings from 5 p.m. - 9 p.m. To contact the museum, please call 563.326.7804, or visit www.figgeartmuseum.org.

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Today, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius testifies in from of the United States House of Representative's Energy and Commerce Committee regarding the botched rollout of Obamacare. Below is a recent blog piece by Chris Jacobs on the Obama Administration's knowledge that millions who would lose insurance under Obamacare; despite promises to the contrary.

Several experts are available to comment on this topic:

Nina Owcharenko
Bob Moffit
Ed Haislmaier
Chris Jacobs
Alyene Senger

 

How the Administration Knew Americans Would Lose Their Current Health Plans

Chris Jacobs

 

October 29, 2013

There has been much chatter about an NBC News report last night highlighting one clear fact: The Obama Administration knew millions of Americans would lose their current health plans due to Obamacare. That the Administration knew about the impact of Obamacare on Americans' health plans is clear, not least because internal Administration documents suggest an effort to downplay the law's impact to the public.

At issue are regulations issued in June 2010 implementing the "grandfathering" provisions of Obamacare. In theory, this section of the law was intended to allow individuals to keep their existing health plans if they liked them. However, as a leaked draft of the "grandfathering" regulations reveals, the Administration knew that would not be the case. This paragraph, on page 56 of the leaked draft, admits that "most plans will relinquish their grandfathered status" over time?in other words, many Americans will lose their existing health coverage (emphasis added):

After careful consideration, the Departments opted against rules that would require a plan or sponsor to relinquish its grandfathered status if only relatively small changes are made to the plan. The importance of gradual change outweighs the risk of market segmentation. Similarly, the Departments concluded that sponsors and issuers of grandfathered plans should be permitted to take steps within the boundaries of the grandfather definition to control costs, including limited increases in cost-sharing and other plan changes not prohibited by these interim final regulations. As noted earlier, deciding to relinquish grandfather status is a one-way sorting process: after some period of time, most plans will relinquish their grandfathered status since plans rarely stay exactly the same. These interim final regulation will likely influence the time frame over which plan sponsors decide to relinquish grandfathered status.

Compare that paragraph to a very similar paragraph on page 11 of the official, publicly released regulation. The final version struck a sentence emphasizing "the importance of gradual change" in transitioning health coverage to the new, post-Obamacare regime?and said that "more plans," not "most plans," will relinquish their grandfathered status over time. In other words, the Obama Administration tried to massage and downplay the regulation's impact on Americans' ability to keep their health coverage, even though the substantive contents of the rule changed very little from the leaked draft to the official document.

For millions of Americans?as many as 16 million who buy their own health insurance, according to one estimate?Obamacare will prove anything but a "gradual change." They are losing their existing health plans and have no good options. Some will migrate to Obamacare's new (non-functioning) exchanges, where the law's new requirements mean their premiums could increase substantially. This is change?a change that Heritage predicted?but it's not the change President Obama sold to the American people.

Ninety Miles: A book of poetry, also written by Jeffrey Lynn Hines is a collection of poems.

Much like the words to your favorite song or that special greeting card you received, "Ninety Miles" will reach out to you for so many good reasons. You will find poetry that is fresh, heartfelt and sensitive to Gods' leading without being driven by all.

Ninety Miles: A Book of Poetry is great gift, great for upbeat and inspirational reading and just  curling up with your own copy in your comfy chair by yourself.

Hines writes "It was on that dark night/On the back roads of life/It was you and I and God/The World adrift......."

Ninety Miles will take you on a journey of Love, Life and God that reminds us all of the best that life offers us.

They are available to the General public by ordering on line at www.publishAmerica.com, www.amazon.com and www.Barnesandnoble.com.   You can also request additional information at BooksbyJeff2013@Outlook.com

Experience Ninety Miles: A Book of Poetry for FREE. You can view/request Free Power Points or mini-review copies.  Check out the Face Book pages by the same name to find more information and quotes.

Mid Term Elections Are  Coming

The year 2014 is coming and the political pundits, power brokers and junkies are deciding who will run in the Mid Term and who you can choose from in the next Presidential Election.

Corporations, Political Extremist and Super PACS are more than willing to take control without a second thought.   If this concerns you, than Life In "Corporate America: 2041" is the book you need to read.

The reader will find that Life in "Corporate America: 2041" is more than just about politics.  It allows the reader to follow Michael DeMerit as he travels from city to city looking for work.

Life in Corporate America: 2041 takes place after 25 years of Conservative government.  The Corporations have become Owners/Operators of Counties/Cities/States and the Federal Government "For Profit".

You will also be able to view the story through various other eyes through newspaper excerpts and reports.

Hines writes "Perhaps we should have realized what was happening behind the scenes.  Perhaps we should have realized special interest and corporations were becoming more powerful than any of our political parties"

In addition, you can view "the history "that took us from 2016 to 2038 and also read excerpts of Articles Michael collected along the way. Life in "Corporate America: 2041" allows the reader to see this "Corporate America" through the eyes of more than just Michael DeMerit.

They are available to the General public by ordering on line at www.publishAmerica.com, www.amazon.com and www.Barnesandnoble.com.   You can also request additional information at BooksbyJeff2013@Outlook.com

Experience Life in "Corporate America: 2041" and Ninety Miles: A Book of Poetry for FREE. You can view/request Free Power Points or mini-review copies.  Check out the Face Book pages by the same name to find more information and quotes.

Ama

Amana - Come celebrate the holidays with The Church Basement Ladies in this all-new show filled with their heart-warming humor and wisdom. The year is 1959 and the ladies are putting final touches on the annual Sunday School Christmas program. You can almost smell the cookies baking as these ladies dish out much more than holiday goodies. Away in the Basement is a delightfully funny way to celebrate the holiday season!

The cast of Away in the Basement consists of Sean McCall of Marengo, Kay Francis of Naples, Florida, Deborah Kennedy of West Amana, Katie Colletta of Rockton, IL., and Nikki Savitt of Arlington Heights, IL. Away in the Basement is directed by Curt Wollan with music director Shari Rhoads.

Away in the Basement is inspired by the books of Janet Letnes Martin and Suzann Nelson, including the best seller "Growing Up Lutheran" and is written by Greta Grosch with music and lyrics by Drew Jansen.

Tickets are $27.50 for adults and $18 for students. Walk-ins are always welcome if seats are available. Some shows are sold out and reservations for Away in the Basement are highly recommended. The show runs through Dec. 22 and is rated Theatre G.

Call the box office at 319-622-6262 for tickets and show times or visit the web site at www.oldcreamery.com.

The Old Creamery Theatre is a not-for-profit professional theatre founded in 1971 in Garrison, Iowa. The Company is celebrating 42 years of bringing live, professional theatre to the people of Iowa and the Midwest.

Opening Statement of U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley

Budget Conference Committee

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

I'm glad to be here to get to work with our House colleagues to reconcile our differences on the fiscal year 2014 budget resolution.  This is regular order.  This is how this process is meant to work.

Our country is on an unsustainable fiscal course, yet this is the first time since 2009 since we've worked together to reconcile a budget resolution.

This is just the first step of this conference process.  I'd like to make a simple request regarding process.  The people's business ought to be public.

We've got important and difficult matters before us.  The deliberations and deal-making shouldn't be done in the dead of night in a backroom with only a small handful of individuals.

To regain the trust of American people, we must demonstrate that we can work together to confront our fiscal challenges.  There is an enormous amount cynicism among the populace about Washington.

Part of that cynicism, I believe, comes from the fact that many of the recent budget deals have been concocted in a back office by a few leaders, and rank and file members were left to take it or leave it.  They weren't debated.  There was no deliberation.  And nearly no one had an opportunity beforehand to even read them.

This is a terrible way to govern.  It's part of the reason people don't trust Washington to do what's right.  We should use this budget conference to change that perception and hold our meetings in public, in the light of day.

The President and the Senate Democratic leadership have insisted upon a balanced approach to replace the sequester cuts.  This so-called balanced approach would include tax increases with some spending cuts.  The problem with this logic is simple.

The fiscal problems facing the federal government are not balanced.  The problem is not that we tax too little; it's that we spend too much.   The offer of a so-called balanced plan is wrongheaded.  The problems we face are caused by a one-sided problem - spending.

The Congressional Budget Office projects that by 2038, federal spending will be 26 percent of GDP, compared to the 40-year average of 20.5 percent.  Spending on health care entitlements and Social Security will double over the next 25 years.

As a result, deficits will continue to grow and the resulting debt will grow faster than GDP, a path which CBO says is ultimately unsustainable.  CBO's projection included revenue levels higher than the historical average.  There is the root of the problem --spending growth outpaces even the higher revenue.

The President talks a great deal about growing our economy, creating jobs and growing the middle class.  I don't believe we need to grow government in order to create jobs, to grow the economy or increase the prosperity of Americans.  A more prosperous America does not result from an ever larger, more intrusive government.

President Kennedy knew the virtue that wealth, left in the hands of entrepreneurial Americans, would create new jobs, spur economic growth and grow the economy.

President Kennedy stated in 1962, the tax system "exerts too heavy a drag on growth in peace time; that it siphons out of the private economy too large a share of personal and business purchasing power; that it reduces the financial incentives for personal effort, investment, and risk-taking."

Yet, the Senate budget, which I opposed, would increase taxes by $1 trillion.  President Obama got his tax increase in the fiscal cliff deal of January 2013.  We increased taxes on job creating Americans by $600 billion.  Now is the time to focus on the other side of the ledger–the spending side.

I remain cautious about plans to trade spending reductions that are in law as a result of the Budget Control Act, for the promise of spending cuts or entitlement reform at some point in the future.

I will not entertain a so-called balanced plan that punishes small businesses and job creators with higher taxes in exchange for minor entitlement reforms that do not change the deficit and debt trajectory of our country.

If we're going to reform our entitlement programs to ensure their viability for future generations, we should do just that.  Perhaps the proposals included in President Obama's budget could be a starting point, and should be up for consideration.

I'm aware that there is a great deal of angst surrounding the impending sequester cuts, particularly those to the Department of Defense.  The defense of our nation is one of the primary constitutional responsibilities of the federal government and we should not take it lightly.

However, there should be no illusion that the Department of Defense is immune from wasteful spending, fraud and mismanagement that costs taxpayer millions and billions of dollars.

I've spent a great deal of time and effort on oversight of DoD's accounting and audit practices. I can tell you from experience that there is absolutely no basis for anyone to believe that the Pentagon is spending every taxpayer dollar wisely without a penny to spare.  With DoD lacking even the most basic audit controls to detect and root out waste and fraud, opportunities for significant savings abound without even cutting a single program.

So, while I recognize the concerns about these Defense cuts, and I wish we had gone about it in a more thoughtful way.  We should seriously consider giving agency heads more flexibility in managing the sequester cuts.  But, I know firsthand that billions of dollars of taxpayer money at the Pentagon is lost to waste, mismanagement and negligence.

Again, I'm glad that we're finally engaged in this process.  It's time to get to work to find sound fiscal solutions to our nations' challenges.
By: Chris Orestis

I recently went to see the movie "Gravity" starring Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.  It is a fast-paced, exciting thrill-ride from start to finish. After we left the movie, and I replayed the life-threatening events for the actors that unfolded on the screen, I could not help but begin drawing comparisons to the long-term care funding crisis currently unfolding in America today.

Start with the stars of the movie: Sandra Bullock and George Clooney are both baby boomers and they find themselves unprepared to deal with a sudden crisis that puts them in immediate jeopardy. Most seniors and baby boomers are also unprepared for what is too often a sudden health crisis through which they must safely navigate. In space, an unexpected collision with a satellite or other object is disastrous. For a family, an unexpected fall or rapid decline in health can also be disastrous. The astronauts in "Gravity" had to contend with limited oxygen and how they could conserve this precious resource long enough to find sanctuary. For families confronting the costs of long term care, money is like oxygen. It is a precious resource in limited supply that must be conserved. The biggest fear of the young is not living long enough, and the biggest fear of people in long-term care is living too long and outliving their "oxygen" supply.

Once disaster strikes in the movie, Sandra Bullock and George Clooney are literally tethered together and entirely dependent on each other for survival. Spouses and their family also experience a similar "tethering" effect where they become very reliant on one another to make it through a long-term care crisis. The feeling of being overwhelmed can be helped by sharing the burden, and focusing on the ultimate goal of making sure a loved one will be able to receive the best possible care.

In the movie, the astronauts are prepared for every contingency and have dedicated support systems in place to get them through each phase of their mission. Nonetheless, when disaster strikes things quickly spin out of control. In life, too few people have made plans for how to handle long-term care. A future long-term care patient may have close loved ones, but those family and friends may not be able to drop everything in devotion to a patient's care. Families should put in time now to discuss the wishes of loved ones when it comes to long-term care, and understand the financial situation and available resources.  Are there savings and investments that can be accessed; is there a long-term care and/or life-insurance policy in place that can be converted to pay for care-- and where is it; is there a final will or living will, and should a power-of-attorney document be in place?

In the movies, our heroes often work their way through challenges with a combination of luck and skill (and, of course, some movie magic) to find their way to a happy ending.

For families confronting the hard decisions and costs surrounding long-term care, however, they will not be able to count on a hero swinging in at the last minute to rescue them. But, a happy ending is possible for families that take the time now to prepare, seek out information and know how to work together to make sure their loved one will be able to achieve a safe landing.

About Chris Orestis: Chris Orestis, nationally known senior health-care advocate and expert is CEO of Life Care Funding (www.lifecarefunding.com), which created the model for converting life insurance policies into protected Long-Term Care Benefit funds. His company has been providing care benefits to policy holders since 2007. A former life insurance industry lobbyist with a background in long-term care issues, he created the model to provide an option for middle-class people who are not wealthy enough to pay for long-term care, and not poor enough to qualify for Medicaid.

Q:        What are the next steps to resolve the budget impasse in Washington?

A:        The 16-day partial government shutdown ended with a deal to appoint a budget conference that includes 29 lawmakers from the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.  The bicameral, bipartisan panel is tasked with reaching an agreement on government funding levels.  I was named to serve on the budget conference, which is operating under a December 13 deadline to issue its final recommendations to Congress.  The vote to reopen the government did not lock in policy changes to address the $17 trillion national debt.  Now the budget conference is working to create a blueprint for future revenue and spending levels.  The last budget conference took place more than four years ago in April 2009.

 

Q:        What priorities will you promote as a member of the budget conference?

A:        First, to restore credibility and fiscal integrity to one of Congress' primary constitutional responsibilities:  the power of the purse.  The United States is not only facing a debt crisis.  We are also facing a crisis in confidence by the American people in our institutions of government.  Lawmakers need to come together to put the federal budget and budgeting process back on track.  For too long, Washington has been riding the gravy train, refusing to turn the corner on deficit spending or put the brakes on the national debt.  The federal budget has been driven off the rails by overpromises and overspending.  A driving force behind the reckless fiscal path includes unsustainable entitlement spending that's creating long-term generational inequity. Consider the largest federal pension and health care entitlements, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid that serve older Americans. As the historic demographic shift continues over the next two decades, reforms are needed not just for spending discipline but to save the programs themselves, programs that have become part of the social fabric of America.  Other federal entitlements, such as food stamps, unemployment benefits and disability payments, have seen dramatic growth as eligibility was expanded during the Obama administration.  Adding even more burden to the taxpaying public, new federal subsidies paid out under the Affordable Care Act also will add to the wealth redistribution formula that is reshaping the size, scope and influence of the government into the U.S. economy and its reach into the lives of Americans.  On the budget conference committee, I intend to drive a hard bargain on behalf of the taxpaying public with a simple, straightforward message:  Washington cannot tax, spend and borrow its way to prosperity.  To that end, I'll work to restore principles of good governance during the negotiations, including transparency, accountability and fiscal integrity.

 

Q:        What needs to happen to reach a budget agreement?

A:        A concurrent budget resolution requires majority approval by the conferees to advance for a final up-or-down vote by Congress.  The budget resolution does not require the President's signature.  Instead, it has the authority to set the spending and taxing levels by which lawmakers on the respective committees will allocate tax dollars that operate services and functions of the government.  It boils down to lawmakers reaching an agreement on taxes and spending.  I disagree with those who believe raising taxes is the solution to reducing deficits and paying down America's $17 trillion debt.  Remember, less is more.  Spending less and taxing less will do more good for the economy.  The key to America's prosperity is rooted in the genesis of our republic.  We are a nation of self-starters who believe in personal responsibility, wealth creation and upward mobility.  Generations of Americans have worked hard to lay claim to their piece of the American Dream.  A tax-hungry, spendthrift Uncle Sam puts that dream at risk.  Restoring long-term prosperity will require a bipartisan consensus for permanent solutions to strengthen public entitlement systems and enact job-creating reforms of the federal tax code.  So, in addition to laying the groundwork for spending reductions that shrink the deficit, the budget conference should take the high road and identify long-lasting solutions that steer us away from fiscal cliffs.  Restoring fiscal integrity is the best way to avoid defaulting on the full faith and credit of the United States.

 

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Washington, D.C. - Congressmen Dave Loebsack (IA-02), Jim Renacci (OH-16) and Mike Quigley (IL-05) today issued a bipartisan call for Rep. Paul Ryan (WI-01) and Sen. Patty Murray (WA), the Co-Chairs of the Budget Conference Committee, to proactively implement comprehensive transparency measures for the committee, which is tasked with developing a bipartisan budget agreement by December 13th. According to press reports, after the Budget Conference Committee gave opening statements this morning, they plan to retreat behind closed doors to craft the blueprint. Implementing basic transparency measures will ensure the committee's process and final products are free from the question of undue influence and special interest intervention. In 2011, Loebsack, Renacci and Quigley led the fight to ensure the so-called "Super Committee" was open and transparent.

"The discussion being had in this room will affect every Iowan and every American and our constituents have a right to know what plans are on the table," said Rep. Dave Loebsack (IA-02). "Members of this Conference Committee will undoubtedly be under intense pressure from all sides to try and influence what is included in the final product. For the American people to have any amount of confidence in the final product, the process must be open and transparent."

"At a time when we are facing a $17 trillion national debt, it is critical that members of the Budget Conference Committee take very seriously their task at hand," said Rep. Jim Renacci (OH-16). "That includes ensuring that the process is transparent so that the people of Ohio's 16th district and Americans everywhere may have confidence in their decisions as they ultimately will affect our families, small businesses, and struggling economy."

"The Budget Conference Committee must be open and transparent to have any chance of restoring the public's trust in government, which is at an all-time low. When it comes to the most important decisions impacting American families and our economy, a transparent process will empower taxpayers to be the government's best watchdog and hold it accountable to the people it serves," said Rep. Mike Quigley (IL-05).

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