WEST DES MOINES, IOWA - Sept. 26, 2012 - While Iowa farmers are currently focused on harvesting their fields and caring for their livestock, they also understand the need to open their doors to consumers interested in seeing how food is grown and raised. This fall, the Iowa Farm Bureau Federation (IFBF) is offering the Iowa Farmers Feed US sweepstakes program which invites Iowans to meet today's farmers, take video tours of their farms and register for a chance to win free groceries for a year.

Following the sweepstakes, there will be two free grocery grand prizes of $5,000 each from Iowa Farmers Feed US' grocery partner, Fareway Stores, Inc., awarded to Iowa residents drawn at random from those who register at www.FarmersFeedUS.org/ia. The site offers an up close and personal look at eight Iowa farm families and a chance to tour their farms, which include hog barns, white corn fields and turkey barns. Website visitors can register for the sweepstakes with each of the eight farmers, each day of the sweepstakes, which runs from noon today until noon on October 31, 2012.

"My family is involved in the Iowa Farmers Feed US project because we understand that while not everyone is involved in raising food,  nearly everyone is interested in seeing how animals are cared for, how crops are raised and how we protect Iowa's soil, air and water," explained Justin Dammann, who raises cattle, corn and soybeans in Page County. "This website offers that opportunity for people throughout the state of Iowa, many of whom have never been on a farm. It's a great opportunity for farmers to showcase our commitment to growing safe, wholesome food today."

The website features beef cattle, turkey, corn, dairy cattle, hog and soybean farmers from across the state, each sharing their personal stories about their history in agriculture, farm families and dedication to producing food. Featured farmers include :

  • Justin and Jennifer Dammann, white corn farmers, Essex
  • Russ Yoder, turkey farmer, Wayland
  • Eric and Emily Crossman, hog farmers, Ogden
  • Jim Brown, soybean farmer, Churdan
  • Pam Johnson, corn farmer, Floyd
  • Stephanie Dykshorn, dairy cattle farmer, Ireton
  • Matt Schuiteman, hog farmer, Sioux Center
  • Tim Kaldenberg, beef cattle farmer, Albia

Additional Iowa agriculture groups supporting this initiative include the Iowa Corn Growers Association, the Iowa Pork Producers Association and Midwest Dairy.

 

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Event to raise awareness and support for conservation throughout the state

Des Moines, Iowa - Sept. 26 - Pheasants Forever is pleased to announce Tom Vilsack, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and former Iowa Governor, plans to speak at the organization's Rally for Iowa's Outdoor Legacy event this weekend.  The two-day conservation rally and summit for all residents of the Hawkeye state is slated for September 28 & 29 at the Community Choice Credit Union Convention Center in Des Moines.  The first-time event will bring together Iowans for a common cause: the protection of the state's outdoor resources.

As part of Saturday's conservation summit, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack will address the Rally's attendees. The Secretary is slated to speak at Saturday's luncheon.

In addition to Secretary Vilsack's address, the weekend rally includes several speakers and panelists who are to highlight challenges and opportunities for conservation in Iowa as well as lessons from around the U.S. and other countries. Sessions and panel discussions include, but are not limited to, Private Land Management for Wildlife Diversity & Outdoor Recreation, Natural Resources Management and Economic Development, and Agriculture & Environmentalism - Perspectives from the Field.

"This rally is to remind Iowans that we live in an incredible state, but if we don't take charge of our natural resources and work to protect them, we stand to lose them," says Matt O'Connor, Pheasants Forever Iowa Conservation Director, "If our natural resources disappear, so will our healthy ecosystems and our outdoor heritage. I believe those attending will further appreciate and understand all that Iowa has to offer and what we can do to protect our state."

Renowned outdoor advocates and conservationists Shane Mahoney and Dave Murphy will act as the summit's keynote speakers. Mahoney is the Founder and Executive Director of the Institute for Biodiversity, Ecosystem Science and Sustainability at Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.  He is recognized as an international authority on conservation. Murphy is the Executive Director of the Conservation Federation of Missouri (CFM). CFM is the largest private citizen conservation organization in Missouri. CFM has over 100,000 members and 80 affiliated organizations acting as leaders in conservation of natural resources and protection.

Iowa's Conservation Summit Details

  • Weekend tickets include Friday reception, Saturday luncheon, and Iowa's Outdoor Legacy dinner and auction Saturday evening. Tickets are now available and can be purchased here.
  • All Pheasants Forever members are invited. Find out more information HERE
  • Event sponsors include Iowa Pheasants Forever, Iowa Association of County Conservation Boards, Iowa's Water & Land Legacy, Iowa's Natural Heritage Foundation and others.

Iowa is home to 105 Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever chapters and nearly 20,000 combined PF and QF members. For more information about the rally or to reserve tickets, call Mark Langgin, representative of Iowa's Water and Land Legacy, at (515) 244-3468 or Matt O'Connor at (563) 926-2357 / Email Matt. For all other inquiries, please contact Rehan Nana, Pheasants Forever Public Relations Specialist, at (651) 209-4973 / Email Rehan.

Pheasants Forever, including its quail conservation division, Quail Forever, is the nation's largest nonprofit organization dedicated to upland habitat conservation. Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever have more than 130,000 members and 700 local chapters across the United States and Canada. Chapters are empowered to determine how 100 percent of their locally raised conservation funds are spent, the only national conservation organization that operates through this truly grassroots structure.

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"Sun Come Up," the Academy Award-nominated documentary depicting some of the world's first "forced climate migrants" will be shown, free of charge, at The Canticle, home of the Sisters of St. Francis, 841-13th Ave. No., Clinton, on Sunday, Sept. 30, at 2 p.m.

"Sun Come Up" depicts some of the world's first "climate refugees," inhabitants of the Carteret Islands just north of Bougainville, Papua New Guinea.  These peace-loving people are being forced to find a new homeland.  The film examines how and if they will be welcomed by mainland dwellers who live in a more violent society.

 SunComeUp.jpg

Sustainable Clinton, a project of the Clinton Franciscan Center for Active Nonviolence and Peacemaking (CANV),  will host the presentation, one of several hundred screenings to be viewed by thousands of people in church halls, school auditoriums and college campuses nationwide this fall..  The screening will be followed by a discussion about the film and viewers will explore ways to respond to the reality of climate change and its effect on the environment.

" 'Can we remain indifferent to the problems associated with climate change?' is the question facing the world today," said Laura Anderson, coordinator of the CANV.  "We cannot ignore the growing phenomenon of 'environmental refugees,' people who are forced by the degradation of their natural habitat to forsake it - and often their possessions as well - in order to face the dangers and uncertainties of forced displacement.  The situation is equivalent to the crisis faced by persons displaced by war."

More and more environmental refugees are resulting from the warming planet and increased drought, wildfire, flooding, food and water stresses, disease and population displacement.  It has been shown that the poor and vulnerable are disproportionately harmed by environmental degradation and climate change.

For more information call Sisters of St. Francis, 563-242-7611, or visit www.clintonfrnciscans.com.

 

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PEORIA - Lt. Governor Sheila Simon will emphasize the importance of strong female role models and empowerment of young girls on Wednesday at the Girl Scouts of Central Illinois leadership luncheon. The luncheon is part of the Girl Scouts' "Year of the Girl" celebration that recognizes the organization's 100th anniversary. The national campaign encourages individuals and community networks to foster growth and leadership opportunities for young girls so they may reach their full potential.

Simon will draw on her own experience as a professor, prosecutor and mother as she delivers her keynote address, outlining opportunities for women and girls to continue to achieve.

"I want my daughters to grow up without perceived limitations of what they can accomplish and achieve in this world," Simon said. "Every young woman should have a strong network of support, and we can help create that environment within our communities."

DATE: Wednesday, September 26

TIME: 11:30 a.m.

PLACE: Peoria Civic Center, 201 SW Jefferson Avenue, Peoria

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Wednesday, the Inspector General for the Department of Justice issued his report on ATF's Operation Fast and Furious.

This report is a significant milestone for the family of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry.

He was killed in a firefight with illegal aliens who were armed with illegal guns from Fast and Furious.

Attorney General Holder delayed any discipline for the officials responsible for Fast and Furious until after this report was released.

The time for accountability has finally come.

There are no more excuses for inaction.

The Inspector General's non-partisan review confirmed virtually everything I heard from whistleblowers over the last year and a half.

The Justice Department tried to push all the blame on the ATF and officials in Phoenix.

But, the Inspector General confirmed that senior officials in Washington ignored red flag after red flag.

Senior officials in both the Justice Department and ATF knew or should have known that Operation Fast and Furious was putting guns into the hands of criminals.

But, they ignored the risks and failed to take steps to protect public safety.

The Inspector General also confirmed that there were major information-sharing failures between law enforcement agencies.

We are still going through the nearly 500 page report, as well as 309 pages of new documents that the Justice Department produced late Wednesday.

However, I was surprised to learn from the report that Attorney General Holder testified that he doesn't remember the conversation with me about Fast and Furious in my office on January 31, 2011.

I remember that conversation.

My staff told the Attorney General that day what whistleblowers had told us.

Specifically, we discussed in that meeting that two weapons that ATF let go in Fast and Furious were found at the murder scene of Border Patrol Agent Terry.

I emphasized that I was personally bringing it to his attention because these were very serious and credible allegations, not a just run-of-the-mill letter.

Yet, even after that meeting, the Department didn't take it seriously.

The Inspector General's independent report says so explicitly:

"We do not believe that the gravity of this allegation was met with an equally serious effort by the Department to determine whether ATF and the U.S. Attorney's Office had allowed the sale of hundreds of weapons to straw purchasers."

The Justice Department claimed that its process for writing letters to Congress was sound.

But its February 4, 2011 response was false.

DOJ later withdrew it and claimed it relied on bad information from ATF and the U.S. Attorney's Office.

However, the Inspector General agreed with me that the Justice Department's response was seriously flawed?and not just the initial response.

The Inspector General also found that the Justice Department knew its initial reply wasn't true when it reaffirmed the denial of the whistleblower allegations in a May 2, 2011 letter to me.

Instead of acknowledging that it was wrong, the Department repeatedly doubled-down on its denials.

For example, Attorney General Holder said on multiple occasions since November 2011 that the wiretap affidavits authorized by Justice Department headquarters did not put senior leadership on notice that ATF was walking guns.

Most recently, on June 7 of this year the Attorney General went before the House Judiciary Committee.

At this point, many Members of Congress had obtained and read the affidavits, even though the Justice Department did not want us to see them.

Members who reviewed them said that the affidavits contained evidence of gunwalking.

But, Attorney General Holder testified:

"I've looked at these affidavits.  I've looked at these summaries. There's nothing in those affidavits as I've reviewed them that indicates that gun walking was allowed."

Well, now the Inspector General has read them too.

His independent, non-partisan conclusion is at odds with the Attorney General.

I quote from his report: "[T]he affidavits described specific incidents that would suggest...ATF was employing a strategy of not interdicting weapons or arresting known straw purchasers."

In fact, much of the Inspector General's report is redacted because those affidavits are still under seal.

Chairman Issa and I asked the Justice Department months ago to move to unseal them so the public could decide for themselves.

Now the Inspector General has joined us and is also calling on the Department to ask for permission from the court to release the affidavits.

The Justice Department should have filed that motion months ago.

Unsealing the affidavits will allow the American people and the Terry family to see the whole story.

The details in those affidavits show that senior officials knew or should have known about gunwalking in Fast and Furious.

The Inspector General independently confirmed this point, contrary to Attorney General Holder's denials.

Those denials by the Attorney General show either incompetence or lack of truthfulness.

Congress created an explicit statutory duty for certain senior Justice Department officials to authorize all wiretap applications.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Jason Weinstein, who served directly under Criminal Division head Lanny Breuer, was one of the officials who approved some of those affidavits.

Senior officials like Mr. Weinstein tried to claim that they shouldn't be held accountable because they only read memos summarizing the wiretaps?not the full wiretap applications.

But, the Inspector General found that Justice Department officials should review more than just the cover memo.

He said that under the statute they have a responsibility to be informed before authorizing wiretap applications.

Yet the Inspector General also found that even "a reader of the ... cover memorandum would infer from the facts that ATF agents did not take enforcement action to interdict the weapons or arrest [straw purchasers]."

So, the memo Mr. Weinstein admits he did read indicated that ATF had walked guns, according to the Inspector General.

Back in September of last year, Attorney General Holder said at a press conference:

"The notion that somehow or other this thing reaches into the upper levels of the Justice Department is something that...I don't think is supported by the facts."

Maybe the Attorney General doesn't think someone who reports directly to the head of the Criminal Division is a senior official, but I do.

As a result of the Inspector General's findings, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Weinstein has resigned.

Weinstein should be held accountable but he shouldn't take the fall for more senior officials who are also culpable.

Mr. Weinstein reported directly to Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer.

When the Justice Department sent its letter to me denying ATF ever walked guns, Breuer knew otherwise.

He knew in 2010 about gunwalking in another case, Operation Wide Receiver.

That was long before the allegations in Fast and Furious.

Yet he waited nine months before emails about Wide Receiver were about to be produced to Congress before he publicly apologized for not doing more about gunwalking in Wide Receiver.

I asked Breuer whether he had seen the draft of February 4 false letter to me.

Breuer testified: "I cannot say for sure whether I saw a draft of the letter that was sent to you."

Then, a month after Breuer's testimony, the Justice Department released more documents showing that Breuer was sent five drafts of the letter before it was sent to me.

He forwarded three of them to his personal email account.

Breuer still maintained in written responses that it was "highly unlikely" he had read the letter because he was in Mexico when it was sent.

On this matter, the Inspector General report contained a significant factual error.

The report read: "The OIG found no e-mail messages from Breuer in which he proposed edits, commented on the drafts, or otherwise indicated he had read them."

That is not true.

In response to one of the drafts Breuer received, he commented that to Weinstein that it was "great work."

That may not be a proposed edit, but it is certainly a comment.

Thus, Breuer's statement to Congress is simply not credible.

Emails show that Breuer was very engaged in the process, asking for and receiving updates from Weinstein at each stage of the drafting.

Breuer and Weinstein sent multiple emails to each other on the matter each day, with Breuer asking after a quiet period: "Jason, let me know what's happening with this."

Rather than holding him accountable for this evidence, the Inspector General report gives him a pass.

Worse, new emails produced Wednesday show that Breuer was in the weeds about his deputy, Jason Weinstein, coming to brief Senate Judiciary Committee staff a week after the Justice Department's false letter.

On February 13, 2011, Breuer sent an email about such details as what specific questions my staff asked of Weinstein at the briefing.

Breuer wrote: "The goal - and by all accounts it seems to have worked - was to communicate that ATF's work in the AZ case and others like it reflected sound judgment and investigative work."

It is clear that Breuer was in the weeds enough to know that what the Justice Department was communicating to me was undermined by the gunwalking he knew about in Wide Receiver.

He should have come forward in February 2011 and told Congress that he knew ATF had walked guns.

His failure to do so, coupled with his attempt to mislead Congress, are why I have called for him to resign or be fired.

Now Attorney General Holder has been saying for months that he would hold off on any personnel action until the Inspector General report was released.

Mr. Attorney General, it's time to hold people accountable.

I'd like to close with language from a statement that the family of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry issued:

"The Department's failures chronicled in the report had deadly and tragic consequences for hundreds of innocent American and Mexican victims of violent crimes.

"And our son, friend, relative and hero, Brian Terry, is dead.

"Questions and concerns should have been raised before the weapons purchased in this failed government sting wound up in the hands of drug dealers and killers, including those who killed Brian.

"The focus today should not be on political spin control nor on praise for the DOJ supervisors who chose to resign in light of the report's findings, but rather on the gross negligence of the Department documented in the report and the tragic consequences of that negligence."

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Amana - Richard Hannay, usually just an ordinary guy, is suddenly caught up in whispers of espionage, daring escapes and close encounters with beautiful women in this hilarious man-on-the-run play opening Thursday, Oct. 11 at 3 p.m. at The Old Creamery Theatre's Main Stage, 39, 38th Ave., Amana.

You'll have fun keeping up with the action in this comic thriller adapted by Patrick Barlow, from the novel by John Buchan. The 39 Steps is based on the movie by Alfred Hitchcock. The cast consists of Vaughn Irving of Santa Fe, New Mexico, Lisa Margolin of Iowa City, Sean McCall of Marengo and Nicholas Hodge of South Amana.

Directed by Tom Milligan of West Amana, The 39 Steps runs through Nov. 11 and is rated Theatre PG. Tickets are $27 for adults and $17.50 for students. Show times are Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sundays at 3 p.m. and Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m.

Walk-ins are welcome if seats are still available. Reservations are recommended. Call the box office at 800-35-AMANA (352-6262) or visit us online at oldcreamery.com Student rush tickets are $12. No reservations accepted for rush tickets. Come to the box office no earlier than 30 minutes before a performance for this special rate. For more information or to order tickets, call The Old Creamery Theatre at 800-35-AMANA (352-6262) or visit the web site at www.oldcreamery.com

The Old Creamery Theatre Company is a not-for-profit professional theatre founded in 1971 in Garrison, Iowa. The company has been bringing live, professional theatre to the people of Iowa and the Midwest for 41 years.

The War on Me

By: Letha Hadady, D.Ac.

Politicians arguing on the campaign trail carve up crucial issues of health and well-being by reducing them, especially Medicare and Medicaid, to numbers. Republicans would privatize Medicare, turning over this essential safety net for our seniors to private insurance companies. Have you dealt with one of your insurance companies lately?

Obamacare, passed into law by a Democratically controlled Congress, cuts some $700 billion from Medicare by limiting payments to doctors and hospitals. This will add to the list of hospitals and clinics going broke and to the physicians who refuse to accept patients who are on Medicare. Medicaid, which pays not only for services to the poor but nursing care for the elderly, is already in the tender grip of the hard-up states and is being slashed.

Politicians forget that everybody suffers from reduced health care. Germs and their attendant illnesses don't care about the numbers: If I am sick, you are likely next in line. A hospital that must cut its cleaning staff will spread illness not only to its own patients but to the public. When it comes to health care, we are all in this together?which is why we must individually do more to protect ourselves, our families, and everybody else.

Last winter I retreated to my favorite hotel in the Florida Keys to finalize my most recent book, Naturally Pain Free (Sourcebooks, July 2012). While sunning at the pool I noticed a strange bite on my arm ? from a flying insect or a spider? The bug bite was not warm or itchy, but I began to feel slightly feverish. After two decades running an alternative health practice based on traditional Asian medicines, I know trouble when I feel it. I quickly consulted a local physician who, even before the test proved positive, assured me I had contracted MRSA, the most dangerous of antibiotic-resistant staph infections.

Left untreated, MRSA can eat into flesh, and once it enters the bloodstream it is deadly. Rampant in hospitals, superbugs such as MRSA presently account for 100,000 deaths annually in the United States alone. Superbugs may be passed on at the pool, beach, gym, or yoga class. Pets can catch MRSA and pass it on to their owners. The Infectious Diseases Society of America warns, "because bacteria are constantly evolving and outsmarting the drugs used against them ... we are losing the ability to fight lethal infections."

I passed on my infection to my lifelong partner (with a kiss and by sharing bedsheets,) but I learned not only how MRSA is treated but how to avoid it, which I incorporated into Naturally Pain Free. Personalized prevention (at home and in public) is the first defense for any illness and there are many natural therapies you can try that don't require a prescription.

How's your blood pressure? A little on the high side? You have lots of company. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 67 million Americans have hypertension but less than half are being treated. The condition can and does lead to discomfort, strokes, and heart attacks, the No. 1 killer of men and women.

Fortunately, you can lower your blood pressure by making a few dietary changes, doing simple, non-challenging exercises, and adding a few time-tested herbal remedies to your daily routine. (The information is available on my website, http://www.AsianHealthSecrets.com.)

Whether on my website, Facebook, or call-in radio shows, I am often asked for advice about curing or ameliorating pain -- backache, headache, carpal tunnel syndrome, toothache. The best answer is to take measures to ensure the body does not need to generate pain to call your attention to an underlying illness. However, an almost universal treatment to mitigate pain is centuries-old: acupuncture.

Many people suffer migraines. The most effective remedy addresses the source of head and neck pain, including tension, digestive problems or muscle spasm. But a tea made with Chinese chrysanthemum flowers will also help. For eyestrain headaches I often recommend a tea made with nourishing Tibetan goji berries.

This season, notices for flu shots seem to be in every pharmacy and even supermarkets. Here is a simple preventive for colds and flu: Gargle twice a day with a couple drops of Australian tea tree oil in a half-glass of warm water, and swab the inside of the nose with a Q-tip and tea tree oil.

There is talk of politicians waging a war on women. I say it is a war on men and women ? on you and me. While personal prevention is the first shield against illness, we also must have easy access to affordable medical care in order to treat illnesses and avoid spreading them.

Tell the politicians by voting in November. But first, vote for yourself by practicing the art of self-defense.

About Letha Hadady

Letha Hadady is globally renowned for her expertise in traditional Asian and alternative health. The author of five books, including her latest "Naturally Pain Free," Letha has made extensive appearances on TV, talk radio and the internet. Letha is an adjunct faculty member for New York Open Center, and The Renfield Center for Nursing Education, Beth Israel Medical Center in New York. She has led stress-management workshops and acted as a natural product consultant for Sony Entertainment Inc., Dreyfus, Ogilvy & Mather, and Consumer Eyes, Inc. in New York. Her website is http://www.asianhealthsecrets.com.

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Dave Loebsack today announced that the City of Davenport will receive a $100,000 grant to establish a year round farmers market.  The funding comes from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farmers Market Promotion Program.

"This funding will help to connect local farmers to the local community and consumers," said Loebsack.  "In addition to promoting new economic opportunities and growth in the area, the expanded farmers market season will provide new opportunities for farmers and increased access to fresh and healthy products for consumers."

The funding will be used to improve infrastructure at the Freight House Farmers Market that will facilitate a year round market for local and regional foods, including refrigerated storage and value added processing and packaging equipment, infrastructure for electronic purchasing, and a certified kitchen incubator for educational training and classes for producers and consumers.

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Attached are photos featuring Governor Pat Quinn on his trade mission to Brazil holding several productive meetings with Brazilian business leaders and industry groups with the goal of strengthening partnerships that will boost Illinois' economy and create jobs.

Governor Quinn is shown met with business leaders on Monday from the Federation of Industries of the State of São Paulo, which is the largest business organization in the country, representing more than 130 industry groups.

For updates on Governor Quinn's trip, visit www.Illinois.gov or follow him on Twitter at @GovernorQuinn. More information about Illinois trade and business opportunities can be found on the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity's website at www.illinoisbiz.biz.

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Moline, IL... State Representative Rich Morthland (R-Cordova) is encouraging residents to join him by signing an online petition that calls on the Governor to implement, without delay, the bi-partisan Medicaid reform package enacted earlier this year. One of the key components of the SMART Act is increased scrutiny of Medicaid eligibility standards.

"Previous and current administrations have failed to take the necessary steps to remove people from the Medicaid program who may have enrolled when eligible, and then became ineligible for various reasons such as finding a job, an increased household income, or the aging out of a child," explained Morthland. "By removing these individuals who no longer qualify from the rolls, it is estimated to save taxpayers hundreds of millions."

The reform package contains tight timeframes for the procurement of an eligibility verification vendor. While the initial requirements have been met, it was revealed last week that the contracted vendor, Maximus Health Services, does not anticipate starting the reviews until January 2013.

"The entire Fiscal Year 13 budget framework relies on the timely and efficient implementation of the reforms. The selected vendor has previous experience that would allow for an expedited timeframe.  If eligibility verification is delayed a full six months into FY13, funding will be jeopardized to those in our community who truly need it."

Morthland is encouraging residents to visit http://morthland.ilhousegop.org/save-state-350-million-by-implementing-medicaid/ today and sign the petition urging Governor Quinn to end the delay.

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