By: Rep. Bruce Braley

I worked hard to put myself through college and law school 30 years ago, spending my summers with the Poweshiek County Roads department repairing roads and bridges, waiting tables, and tending bar.  But I couldn't have made it through school without the help of low-interest federal student loans.

When my daughter headed off to Iowa State a few years ago, it again brought home how much student loan interest rates have increased since my college days.

And college students are facing a big challenge in just a few weeks.  Unless Congress acts by July 1st, interest rates on federally subsidized student loans will double from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent.  This drastic increase would mean a student taking out the maximum Stafford student loan of $23,000 would pay a whopping $11,000 more in interest over the 20 year repayment period of the loan.

In January, I introduced legislation to stop the student loan increase and keep interest rates at 3.4 percent.  But the bill hasn't moved forward because Washington politicians are using the issue to score political points rather than help middle class families.

You'd think that keeping the college dream within reach of more people would be a goal that could attract wide support from both sides of the aisle.  Yet the debate over this important issue has devolved into all-too-typical partisan finger-pointing.

A college degree is the ticket to job opportunities in our increasingly knowledge-based economy.  Yet increasingly, the dream is too expensive.  It's no secret that the cost of college in Iowa has dramatically increased in recent years.  The skyrocketing costs have far outpaced inflation and left graduates with mountains of debt.  Since 2000, tuition at Iowa's public universities has increased by 83 percent.  Iowa college students graduate with the third highest debt in the entire country.

College debt is threatening the economic recovery by putting graduates deeply in debt before they even start their working lives.  College costs are threatening the very accessibility of college to the middle class.

Time is running out.  Congress needs to come together and act by the end of the month.  Keeping college affordable is just too important to job creation and economic growth.

# # #
Davenport Junior Theater is thrilled to host a Movie Night as part of the Family Friday Night Series.  On the second Friday of each month, your family can join us for pizza, lemonade, and a movie in our very own Nighswander Theater.  All movies are rated PG and are for all ages.  And the best part - FREE POPCORN!
Register in advance online for only: $2.50 or pay at the door: $4.00

Happy Feet - Friday, July 13 - 6:00 pm - Junior Theater, 2815 Eastern Avenue

Hook - Friday, August 10 - 6:00 pm - Junior Theater, 2815 Eastern Avenue

Votes to stop tax increase on Canton's Cook Medical, other device manufacturers

Washington, DC - June 7, 2012 - Congressman Bobby Schilling (IL-17) today joined 269 of his colleagues from both sides of the aisle in passing H.R. 436, the Health Care Cost Reduction Act.  This legislation repeals the health care reform law's 2.3 percent excise tax on medical devices and its prohibition on using flexible health spending accounts to pay for over-the-counter drugs, and also allows individuals to recoup unused contributions made to flexible health spending accounts.  The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service has found that the excise tax on medical devices would be passed on to consumers, raising health care costs, and could discourage investment in developing new innovative devices.  

"Last Friday, the American people received more bad news when the unemployment report said that unemployment rose to 8.2 percent and our economy added only 69,000 jobs in May," Schilling said. "Good, high-paying jobs at companies like Canton's Cook Medical will be impacted if Congress and the President don't work together to repeal this tax.  While efforts continue to repeal the health care law in its entirety and replace it with policies that actually address the rising cost of health care, it is important that we keep focused on repealing some of the most damaging pieces of the massive law - job-killing provisions like the 1099 tax reporting requirement and the medical device tax."

"We are pleased that the U.S. House of Representatives has acted with a bipartisan vote to repeal the onerous device tax and hope that the U.S. Senate will quickly follow in a bipartisan manner.  This tax will lead to U.S. technology and jobs being relocated outside the U.S., the loss of future jobs that come with innovations being located outside the U.S., and delays in the latest medical innovations being available to American patients.  Americans want their critical devices manufactured in the U.S. and to have access to the latest medical technologies,"  said Steve Ferguson, Chairman of Cook Group, Inc.

Beginning in 2013, the health care reform law institutes a 2.3 percent excise tax on the manufacture or import of medical devices  - devices like those produced by Cook Medical in Canton, Illinois.  Canton is a community in Illinois' 17th Congressional District that would be harmed by the medical device tax.  Cook Medical has 70 employees, and has aspirations to expand and increase its number of employees by 300 percent in its two Canton facilities by this time next year.  The health care reform law's medical device tax will not only raise health care costs and stifle research and development on innovative new medical devices at companies like Cook Medical, but will also destroy jobs in an industry that employs more than 400,000 Americans throughout the country - 70 in Canton alone. 

Kevin Meade, the Mayor of Canton, last month wrote Speaker of the House John Boehner in opposition to the medical device tax and the impact it would have on his community.  That letter can be seen by clicking here. Cook Medical joined a number of organizations, companies, and manufacturers in writing Congress to urge for the repeal of the medical device tax.  That letter can be found by clicking here.

# # #

Mr. President - As I grew up on my family's farm outside of New Hartford, Iowa, where I still live today, I grew to appreciate what it meant to be a farmer.  The dictionary defines a farmer as "a person who cultivates land or crops or raises animals".  But that definition doesn't come close to fully describing what a farmer is.

Being a farmer means someone willing to help a cow deliver her calf in the middle of the night, when its five degrees outside.  A farmer is someone willing to put all their earthly possessions at risk just to put a bunch of seeds in the ground, and hope that those seeds get rain at just the right time.

Farmers work hard cultivating their crops, and get the satisfaction of seeing the result of their hard work at the end of each crop season.  They take great pride in knowing they are feeding this nation and world.  And farmers tend to be people who relish the independence that comes with their chosen profession.  They are people with dirt under their fingernails.  They work long hours.  And often are underappreciated for what they do to put food on American dinner tables.  And they receive an ever shrinking share of the food dollar.

Farmers have chosen a line of work that comes with risk, risk that is inherent and often out of farmers' control.  The risk inherent in farming is why we have a farm program.  If we want a stable food supply in this country, we need farmers who are able to produce it.  When they are hit by floods, droughts, natural disasters, wild market swings, or unfair international barriers to their products, farmers need the support to make it through.  Most farmers I know wish there wasn't the need for a government safety-net, but they appreciate that it's there when they do need it.

And for decade after decade, congress has maintained farm programs because the American people understand the necessity of providing a safety net for those providing our food.  That's not to say each and every farm program ever created needs to continue.  Just as there are shifts in the market, sometimes public sentiment towards certain farm programs shifts.  Take direct payments for instance.  There was a time and place for direct payments, to help farmers through some lean years.  But now, times are okay in the agriculture industry, and the American people have rightly decided it is time for direct payments to end.  The Senate Committee has responded, and we have proposed eliminating the direct payment program.  And many farmers agree direct payments should go away.

There are other reforms the American taxpayers want to see.  There is no reason the federal government should be subsidizing big farmers to get even bigger.  People are tired of reading reports about the largest ten percent of farmers receiving nearly 70 percent of agriculture subsidies.  And you know what, most farmers agree with that as well.  Many farmers understand that in order for us to have a farm program that is defensible and justifiable, it needs to be a program designed to help the small and medium-size farmers who actually need assistance getting through rough patches out of their control.  The Senate Agriculture committee listened, and placed a payment limit of $50,000 per individual in this bill, $100,000 for married couples, for the payments under the Agricultural Risk Coverage program.

Taxpayers are equally tired of reading reports about how so many non-farmers receive farm payments.  I have been working to get reforms in farm payment eligibility for years.  And just as the tide has turned on the status quo for direct payments, the tide has turned on payment eligibility.  This bill contains crucial reform to the "actively engaged" requirements.  These reforms will ensure farm payments go to actual farmers.  The American people are not going to stand idly by anymore and watch farm payments head out the door to people who don't really farm.

There have been some people complaining about the payment limit reforms.  They complain that it will detrimentally change the way some farm operations do things.  Well, if they mean it won't allow non-farmers to skirt around payment eligibility, and line their pockets with taxpayer money meant for actual farmers, then yes, these reforms will impact those farming operations.  But let me make it perfectly clear, the reforms contained in this bill will not impact a farmer's ability to receive farm payments.  Furthermore, the reforms will not affect the spouse rule.

These reforms reflect what we hear from the grassroots - which is congress needs to be better stewards of taxpayer dollars.  That's true if we are talking about the farm program, or any other federal program.  Those who are against these reforms, are asking the American people to accept the status quo, and continue to watch as farm payments go to mega-farms and non-farmers.  We cannot, and will not accept the status quo.

The Agriculture Committee should be proud of the improvements we are making to payment limitations in this bill.  With these reforms, we bring defensibility and integrity to this farm bill.  In fact, without these reforms to the farm program, I wouldn't be able to support this bill.  I urge my colleagues to voice their support for these important payment limit provisions, and join with me in resisting any attempt to weaken these reforms.

Rockhurst University Announces Spring 2012 Dean's List

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Rockhurst University has announced the dean's list for the spring 2012 semester. This honor recognizes students who have achieved a grade-point average of 3.5 or above and includes Gabriella Binion of Davenport.

Miss Binion has also been awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Spanish. Congratulations!

Rockhurst University is one of 28 Catholic, Jesuit universities in the United States. It seeks to challenge students while providing a supportive environment for intellectual and personal growth.

CARTHAGE ANNOUNCES DEAN'S LIST HONOREES

Kenosha, Wis. - Carthage College has named outstanding scholars to its Dean's List for academic excellence during the spring semester of 2012.  Dean's List honors are accorded Carthage students who achieve a 3.5 grade point average while carrying at least 14 credit hours during a semester.

Erin Holst of Bettendorf, Pace Raymond Bennett and Nathan Andrew Moore, both of Moline.

Local Students Honored at St. Olaf College

NORTHFIELD, MN (06/07/2012)(readMedia)-- The following local residents were among nearly 900 St. Olaf College students who were recognized for academic achievement at the college's annual Honors Day convocation on May 4. Honors Day recognizes students who have a cumulative grade point average of 3.60 or higher on a 4.0 scale. The convocation also recognizes students who have been awarded scholarships and fellowships, including Fulbright scholars, Goldwater scholars, and senior members of leadership and academic honor societies.

Joseph Dickens from Bettendorf, is a Mathematics major and a graduate of Bettendorf High School. Joseph is the son of Jayne Rose and Dan Dickens.

Amelia Schoeneman from Rock Island, is an Environmental Studies and Political Science major and a graduate of Rock Island High School. Amelia is the daughter of Megan Quinn.

The ceremony began with a colorful academic procession led by St. Olaf President David R. Anderson '74, and was followed by a reception for students, parents, friends of the college, faculty and staff.

St. Olaf College - As one of the nations leading liberal arts colleges, St. Olaf College offers an academically rigorous education with a vibrant faith tradition as a college of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. St. Olaf prepares students to become responsible citizens of the world by fostering the development of mind, body, and spirit. Widely known for its programs in mathematics, the natural sciences, and music, St. Olaf also provides dynamic opportunities for interdisciplinary study. Committed to global education, more than three-quarters of St. Olaf students participate in off-campus study programs. Over the years, St. Olaf College has been a national leader among liberal arts colleges in producing Rhodes Scholars, Fulbright Fellows, and Peace Corps volunteers.

COE COLLEGE (CEDAR RAPIDS) SPRING DEAN'S LIST

Ashley Jipp, Freshman, daughter, Gary and Wendy Jipp of Bettendorf, 2011graduate of Pleasant Valley High School.
Lindsey Jipp, Freshman, daughter, Gary and Wendy Jipp of Bettendorf, 2011graduate of Pleasant Valley High School.

Full-time students who rank in the top 10 percent of the student body are named to the Dean's List at Coe. For the 2012 spring term, students achieving a grade point average of 3.92 or higher earned this high honor.

Clarke University student-athletes named NAIA Scholar-Athletes

(DUBUQUE, Iowa) Twenty-three Clarke University student-athletes have been named Daktronics-National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) Scholar-Athletes. The following area student was named to the honor list:

Megan Chitty of Davenport.

Truman State University Announces Spring 2012 President's List

KIRKSVILLE, Mo. - Truman State University has released the Spring 2012 President's List. To qualify for this list, an undergraduate student must attain a semester 4.0 grade point average and must complete 12 semester hours of credit.

Area students include :

Andrew Keith Piotter, Exercise Sciences, of Bettendorf

Andy Wang Yang, Computer Sciences, also of Bettendorf.

Truman State University Announces Spring 2012 Provost and Vice President's List

KIRKSVILLE, Mo. - Truman State University has released the Spring 2012 Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs' List. To qualify for this list, an undergraduate student must attain a semester 3.50-3.99 grade point average and must complete 12 semester hours of credit.

Area students include :

?Aubrey Ann Crowley of Davenport, Health Science

Margaret Alyson Schutte of Davenport, Exercise Science

Chelsea Kathleen Wagschal of Davenport, French Pre-Education/Secondary

KIRKWOOD COMMUNITY COLLEGE SPRING DEAN'S LIST

[Cedar Rapids, Iowa] --Kirkwood Community College has released its Dean's List for the Spring Semester. These students have achieved a 3.3 grade point average or higher after completing 12 or more credit hours with the college.

Kirkwood students from the area earning this distinction are:

Lenora Caruso, Quinn Claussen, Abigail Donohoe, Matthew Gasser, Kyle Kuehl, Kaytlyn Sheffler, and Alyssa Wellman, all from Bettendorf.

Nick Bakeris, Tony Bakeris, Collin Belk, Grant Bushman, Justin Day, Anthony Faison, Kayla Holst, Michael Leal, Ashley Stichter and Elizabeth Teichler, all from Davenport.

Mitchel Trouten of Moline.


DRURY UNIVERSITY DAY SCHOOL DEAN'S LIST

SPRINGFIELD, Mo., June 7, 2012 - Olivia Thompson of Moline has earned a spot on Drury University's Dean's List. This is a significant accomplishment; it means a student earned a grade point average of 3.6 or greater (on a 4-point scale) while carrying a full-time course load of 12 or more semester hours at Drury, a top 10 midwestern university, according to US News & World Report.


Free Concerts feature Local Performers

Don't miss The Friends of Vander Veer Summer Concert Series, presented by The Family Credit Union. This series of three concerts are FREE to the public, and feature live music from artists in the community.

The first concert will be Thursday, June 14th from 6:30-8:00 p.m. Concerts are held on the lawn at Vander Veer. Bring your lawn chairs and enjoy the music!

Future concerts are scheduled for: Thursday, July 12, and Thursday, August 9. The raindate is Thursday, August 23. Each concert is from 6:30-8:00 p.m.

The first concert on June 14th features The Fast Clydes. One of the earliest styles of rock and roll music, rockabilly found its roots in the south during the mid 1950s. The Fast Clydes mix elements of rock, jump blues, boogie woogie and western swing to form driving, danceable rhythms. This style of music was made popular by artists such as Carl Perkins, Johnny Burnette, Gene Vincent, Wanda Jackson and a young Elvis Presley.

The Friends of Vander Veer non-profit organization is pleased to partner with The Family Credit Union and Davenport Parks and Recreation to offer these concerts free-of-charge.

For more information, visit www.friendsofvanderveer.com or call 563-323-3298. Visit The Friends of Vander Veer on Facebook for concert information, as well.

**Thursday, June 7, 2012**

 

CHICAGO - June 7, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today took action on the following bill:

 

Bill No.: SB 2348

An Act Concerning: Appropriations

Makes appropriations for FY12 and FY13 mandated expenditures.

Action: Signed

Effective Date: July 1

 

###

SPRINGFIELD - June 7, 2012. Governor Pat Quinn today announced that Maj. Gen. William L. Enyart, the 37th Adjutant General of the State of Illinois and Commander of the Illinois National Guard, has retired from military service and resigned as the Director of the Illinois Department of Military Affairs effective immediately.

 

"I thank General Enyart for his more than 35 years of military service, including the last five years leading the 13,000 men and women of the Illinois National Guard," Governor Quinn said. "Illinois has the most exemplary National Guard in the United States and has had an exemplary leader."

 

During Maj. Gen. Enyart's tenure as the Adjutant General, the Illinois National Guard deployed the 33rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team to Afghanistan, the largest single deployment of Illinois National Guard Soldiers since World War II, and has responded to two major floods and a major winter storm in Illinois.

 

Most recently, the Illinois National Guard deployed nearly 1,500 troops to the Chicago area to help ensure the NATO Summit was a safe and secure event for the citizens of Illinois as well as thousands of foreign diplomats and heads of state.

 

"It has been a privilege and an honor to serve as the Adjutant General of the Illinois National Guard," Maj. Gen. Enyart said. "To have led the Illinois National Guard through the largest deployment since World War II, to have served through floods, blizzards and ice storms with the finest men and women in the world has taught me a greater appreciation for the strength of this great nation, for the strength of its service members, its families, its working men and women than I could ever have gained without that experience."

 

Governor Quinn will name Maj. Gen. Dennis Celletti, the Assistant Adjutant General - Army, as the acting Adjutant General until a new Adjutant General and Director of Military Affairs is selected.

 

 

###

Will work to preserve the Arsenal and regional defense manufacturing in final proposal

Washington, DC - Congressman Bobby Schilling (IL-17) and Congressman Dave Loebsack (IA-02), both members of the House Armed Services Committee, today applauded the Senate Armed Services Committee's advancing of the Fiscal Year 2013 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which has provisions similar to report language Schilling and Loebsack included in the House Armed Services Committee version of the NDAA.  Complementing H.R. 5706, the Army Arsenal Strategic Workload Enhancement Act introduced by Schilling and Loebsack last month, the Senate language would support the Rock Island Arsenal's manufacturing capabilities while continuing to support the advancement of public-private partnerships.

The House of Representatives passed its version of the defense authorization on May 18, 2012.  Schilling and Loebsack's report language directs the Department of Defense to identify the critical manufacturing capabilities provided by the industrial base in the public and private sectors and determine the amount of work that is required to maintain them in peacetime.

"With the Rock Island Arsenal's 150th birthday approaching, the best gift we can give its hard-working employees is the certainty of continued workload," Schilling said. "I'm pleased that the Senate Armed Services Committee acted promptly on their version of the defense authorization, and am looking forward to a final package with the strongest possible protections for the Arsenal and our area's defense manufacturing capabilities - a package that I hope the full Illinois and Iowa Delegation can support."

"This is another positive step forward for the arsenal, the people of the Quad Cities and our nation's defense," said Loebsack. "Rock Island Arsenal is central to our region's economy and it's highly skilled workforce and advanced manufacturing capabilities are critical to our national security and to our ability to supply our troops with the equipment they need, when they need it.  I look forward to working with the entire bistate, bipartisan and bicameral delegation to move forward and continue the work we started last year."

Schilling and Loebsack were joined by Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Tom Harkin (D-IA), Dick Durbin (D-IL), and Mark Kirk (R-IL) in introducing the bicameral Army Arsenal Strategic Workload Enhancement Act on May 9, 2012.  This legislation would help to keep arsenals like Rock Island warm and employees' skills sharp by requiring that the Army produce a plan to ensure they are properly workloaded.  Though the Army creates such plans for some of its divisions, it currently does not for arsenals.

This legislation builds on Schilling's and Loebsack's efforts on the House Armed Services Committee to include in last year's defense bill the landmark provision lifting the cap on the number of public-private partnerships arsenals are able to enter into, maximizing the possibility for private-sector job growth at installations like the Rock Island Arsenal.  Schilling and Loebsack also included in last year's bill the provision designating the Rock Island Arsenal as a Center of Industrial and Technical Excellence, further improving its ability to enter into public-private partnerships, provide for our men and women in combat, and strengthen the Arsenal's core skills and manufacturing abilities.  These provisions were included in last year's comprehensive defense bill and signed into law by the President.

# # #

To send Congressman Schilling an e-mail, click here

Pages