State Fair Presence Connects With Many Inside the Statehouse

DES MOINES, IOWA | Friday morning,  August 26th, Jonathan R. Narcisse will be meeting at the state house with Representative Ralph Watts and House Republican staff.  Earlier this week, the recent gubernatorial candidate and leader of the Iowa Party was asked to meet and discuss with staff more details concerning existing governance solutions.

Narcisse, an independent publisher and former Des Moines school board member, distributed thousands of copies of the Iowa Party's proposed governance solutions at their 2011 Iowa State Fair booth, located in the Varied Industries Building. "People who come to the fair are looking for something new and exciting. The Iowa Party is not a tough sell. And, when you have the chance to white board some facts and figures with your neighbor, the bells start going off."

The Iowa Party's state fair booth inside the Varied Industry building provided Narcisse the opportunity to meet and speak with tens of thousands of Iowans, including many state legislators and statehouse staffers. "It's apparent that the legislature didn't review annual reports for departments and divisions appropriated hundreds of millions of tax dollars. That borders on misfeaceance, malfeasance and dereliction of duty by legislators who are voting billions of dollars in annual spending," stated Narcisse.  

A state representative's assistant who visited the fair shared that, "It gets worse. We vote on bills and appropriations and the next day party leadership sends us memos on what we voted for, especially towards session's end."

"When Ralph Watts invited us to meet with him and House staff this Friday, we were pleased," said Narcisse. "Most Iowans may not know him but he's a well placed and influential legislator." ??In addition to serving on the Appropriations, Labor, Commerce and Transportation Committees, Watts chairs the powerful Administration and Regulations Appropriations subcommittee with oversight of key departments such as Commerce, Administrative Services, Revenue and Inspections and Appeals. Watts also serves on the joint House and Senate State Government Efficiency Review Commission.

"How do you tell a cop, a nurse, a teacher working the graveyard shift at a convenience store to make ends meet they have to pay taxes on overtime while statehouse leaders can't even bother to find out if a staffer at the Alcohol Bureau is giving out massive no bid contracts to his wife's best friend's husband?" stated Narcisse.

"It is clear our message of honest, efficient and accountable government is resonating. We have common sense solutions rooted in Iowa values and over the coming months and the next legislative session we are going to aggressively advocate for those solutions."

The Iowa Party Strategy
by Jonathan Narcisse

The Iowa Party has three main goals:
•    Improving how government operates,
•    Improving the structure of government, and
•    Following the money.

In order to achieve our mission we focus on boards and commissions, school boards, city and town councils and county office holders. Our legislators appropriate funds but they are not the ones that spend
the money or manage the details of governance.

We are not conservative or liberal, Republican or Democrat leaning. We are not ideologically driven at all. We are about the nuts and bolts of governance at the state and local level. This translates into an emphasis on eliminating waste and inefficiency in state and local governance and improving accountability.

During last year's campaign I was painfully reminded of where the resources for operating government come from. One morning at 3:22 a.m. I stopped at the Hardees on S.E. 9th and Army Post Road. The young lady who took my order recognized me from my time on the Des Moines School Board and started a conversation. She had an infant, a daughter in high school and a second job she had to be at at 8:00 a.m.

When she buys diapers she pays an extra penny of sales tax. She deserves to know the $57 million addition to an area high school she's helping to build is being constructed in the most honest, efficient and accountable way. When a grandmother on fixed income buys her grandbabies bandages to cover scraped wounds she deserves to know her tax dollars are not going to a tax credit scheme or funding corruption at the Iowa Association of School Boards.

An examination of the 2011 legislative session confirms core issues of governance and accountability were not priorities of our Republican governor, the Democratic controlled Senate or the Republican controlled House. The political class in Iowa has lost its way. Both parties focus on distractions like dove hunting while pandering to special, vested and powerful lobbyist funded interests.

We focus on fixing government, fixing education and fixing the economy in our state. We do not ask Iowans to stop being Republicans or Democrats. In fact, we encourage Iowa Party people to be members of the two main parties, especially on February 6th at the caucus next year. We encourage them to become leaders within their parties at the precinct level. And we encourage them to challenge incumbents at the statehouse, if necessary, in the Democrat and Republican primaries, much like the Tea Party nationally has used primary challenges to transform the national G.O.P.

Statehouse leadership must embrace data driven governance.

For example, in FY 2010 the state spent $13.5 billion dollars.
Of that 39.6% was spent on Health and Human Services.

Yet there was no meaningful discussion about fixing Iowa's broken, wasteful, fraudulent and unaccountable welfare system. You would think an area that commands 40 cent of every dollar spent by our state government would warrant attention from our legislative leaders. Instead, they spent their time on matters most Iowans would consider trivial at best and costly distractions, too - such as dove hunting.

Equally egregious is how our governance leaders do business. Too many members of school boards and municipal councils are rubber stamps. Our legislators are rubber stamps, too. While members of the House and Senate are elected to represent Iowans from their districts they, by custom, first serve party leadership, second serve lobbyists and cronies, third spend time on their pet political priorities and last, if at all, deliberate on the real issues Iowans care about:

Efficient and accountable government,
Effective schools and educated Iowans,
A strong economy built around a responsible tax structure.

Jonathan Narcisse, the Iowa Party's gubernatorial candidate finished third in the six person field behind Governors Branstad and Culver. He received nearly 22,000 votes from all 99 counties in Iowa and 1,720 of Iowa's 1,774 precincts.

For more information contact Iowa Party spokesperson Jonathan R. Narcisse at 515-770-1218 or go to: www.iowaparty.org.

More Photos Available in .zip File Here

FUNDRAISER FOR THE KARLI ROSE KELL MUSIC SCHOLARSHIP FUND AT RME  

Wed., Oct. 12, 2011 - 6 pm in the  Redstone Room  at RME  

Admission: $15 per person - Tickets Available Now at RME  

or Online at www.redstoneroom.com

Please join us October 12, 2011 for Moondance - a benefit to raise funds for the Karli Rose Kell music scholarship fund in the  Redstone Room .  Enjoy an evening of live music, silent auction, great food from the Woodfire Grill and cash bar. All proceeds will benefit the Karli Rose Kell Music Scholarship Fund at RME.

Over $43,000 has been raised in Karli's memory since Karli's passing in 2002, including the original scholarships awarded to music students at   Rock Island   High School  . Find out how your donations benefit students and young musicians throughout our community, in financial assistance with fees for music lessons and educational programs at RME, to the thousands of kazoos distributed to school children at RME and at special RME outreach programs in our area.

This fund was established by Ellis Kell, the RME's Director of Programming and Education, and his wife Kristi, in memory of their late daughter Karli Rose, who died in an auto accident in 2002.  


We sincerely hope you will join us at Moondance 2011. However, if you can't make it, donations may be made to Karli's fund at:  

  

KARLI ROSE KELL MUSIC SCHOLARSHIP FUND AT RME
c/o River Music Experience,   129 N. Main Street  Davenport  IA   52801  
For more information phone: 563-326-1333 ext. 113,  

or email: ekell@rivermusicexperience.org


Q: What prompted your longstanding advocacy of whistleblowers?

A: Whistleblowers are unsung heroes who often risk losing their livelihoods, friends and career to expose wrongdoing. It takes courage and integrity to go against the grain, especially in deeply entrenched federal bureaucracies like the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).  In both the public and private sectors, an underlying rule of thumb within the workplace can be to go along to get along. Taxpayers and the general public owe a debt of gratitude to those who fight an often lonely crusade to blow the whistle from within their ranks and expose fraud.

More than 25 years ago I began advocating for whistleblowers when an employee at the Defense Department started raising questions about the astronomical prices being paid for toilet seats, hammers and coffee pots at the Pentagon. After learning about these excessive costs, I started a campaign that exposed cozy contracts and a flagrant absence of financial accountability at the Defense Department. Not surprisingly, the whistleblower in the Defense Department case was less popular at work than a skunk at a Sunday afternoon picnic. Unfortunately, this description still rings true today. 

Q:  Is there legislation to help whistleblowers?

A:  In 1986, I co-authored an update of Abraham Lincoln's False Claims Act to include "qui tam" provisions. This legal tool empowers ordinary citizens to bring a lawsuit alleging fraud on behalf of the U.S. government.  The law has helped recover more than $28 billion back to taxpayers, primarily from fraud by government contractors and against government programs like Medicare and Medicaid.  In 2009 I co-authored the Fraud Enforcement Recovery Act that was signed into law.  This new law overturns a number of court decisions that limited the scope and applicability of the False Claims Act ensuring that the law will protect taxpayer dollars for generations to come. 

I also co-wrote the 1989 Whistleblower Protection Act for government employees who stand up and speak out against wrongdoing and waste of taxpayer dollars.  Since then, I have co-authored legislation to bolster the law in response to rulings by the Merit Systems Protection Board and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals.  These rulings were often based upon incorrect interpretations of the law and supported the general anti-whistleblower sentiment found in executive branch agencies. The bill, introduced with Senator Akaka of Hawaii, is called the Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act. 

Q: Do whistleblowers still need protection?

A: It's a constant battle to make sure that whistleblower protections aren't watered down and that whistleblowers aren't retaliated against.  Whether raising the red flag on government waste and wrongdoing, health care or defense contractor fraud, or corporate corruption, whistleblowers put a lot on the line to protect the public and taxpayers. And, unfortunately, all too often, the federal bureaucracy seems to line up against them, maybe now more than ever.  Whistleblowers deserve strong protections under the law from intimidation, harassment, demotion or even dismissal for doing the right thing.  Our system of self-government is strengthened when government is made more transparent, more accessible and more accountable.

August 26, 2011

Dr. Paul to make five stops to speak, meet voters
ANKENY, Iowa - The Iowa component of the Ron Paul 2012 Presidential Campaign announced today that Ron Paul will return to Iowa on Saturday, August 27th, two weeks after his historic near-first place showing at the Ames Straw Poll.  

Dr. Paul will greet Republican voters in Madison County, sign copies of his book Liberty Defined, grant an in-studio interview to Iowa Public Radio, speak at the Iowa Corn Growers Annual Meeting and attend the Polk County Republican Summer Picnic.

Dr. Paul's visit takes place two weeks after his historic showing at the consequential Ames Straw Poll.  Dr. Paul won 4,671 votes at Ames, topping Governor Mitt Romney's vote total from 2007 and drawing a near statistical tie with winner Michele Bachmann at 27.6 percent of the vote versus 28.5 percent.  Dr. Paul's finish earned him a strong second place and it was the fourth highest vote total ever received by a candidate at the important test of candidate strength.

"We are so pleased to again welcome Dr. Paul to Iowa, particularly in the aftermath of his respectable showing at the Ames Straw Poll," said Iowa campaign chairman Drew Ivers.

"This next visit of Dr. Paul's and future visits will enable the Iowa team to build upon past successes while redoubling our efforts on behalf of our candidate, who is the number one family-friendly champion of the Constitution," said Mr. Ivers.

Details of the events are as follows.  All times CDT.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

10:00 a.m.
Madison County GOP Meet & Greet
North Side Café
61 W. Jefferson St. (N. of Courthouse)
Winterset, Iowa 50273

1:00 p.m.
Signs copies of his book Liberty Defined
Barnes & Noble Booksellers
4550 University Avenue
West Des Moines, IA 50266 

2:30 p.m.
Iowa Public Radio (10-min in-studio recording)                   
2111 Grand Avenue
Des Moines, Iowa 50312

3:45 p.m.
Iowa Corn Growers Annual Meeting and Policy Conference           
Polk Room
Sheraton Hotel
1800 50th Street
West Des Moines, Iowa 50266          

5:15 p.m.
Polk County Republican Summer Picnic Fundraiser             
Jalapeño Pete's at the Iowa State Fairgrounds
(Centrally located at the State Fairgrounds across from the Admin. Bldg.)

Contact:
Drew Ivers, Iowa Campaign Chairman
Drewi@RonPaul2012.com
515.835.1914
Authorized and paid for by Ron Paul 2012 PCC. www.RonPaul2012.com

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Second Annual Chocolate and Wine Tasting Event to Raise Funds for Mothers and Children living with HIV/AIDS in the Quad Cities

The second annual Project Chocolate With A Splash of Wine fundraising event will take place Sunday, September 25th, 2011 from 2 to 5 pm at the Hotel Blackhawk in Davenport, Iowa. Ticket prices are $35 per person, $60 per couple, or $220 for a "Box of Chocolates" group package that includes 8 tickets and a complimentary bottle of wine. Attendees will be treated to samples of chocolate-themed creations made by local chocolatiers, bakers and chefs. Vendors include Chocolate Manor, the Clarion Hotel, Edible Arrangements, Little Slice of Heaven, Ultimate Chocolates, The Isle of Capri, Decadent Revenge Bakery, Cupcakes, Muffins & More, and Shakespeare's Chocolates. The Hotel Blackhawk will provide wine samples and hors d' oeuvres and the Bettendorf Coffee Hound will provide gourmet coffee. Local celebrities will be judging the chocolate concoctions and guests will have the opportunity to vote for "People's Choice." There will also be live entertainment and a raffle that includes items from Isabel Bloom, East Side Bakery, D'Alessandro and more.

All proceeds from Project Chocolate will benefit The Project of the Quad Cities (TPQC). Established in 1986, The Project of the Quad Cities is a nonprofit, community-based organization that provides those infected with or affected by HIV/AIDS in the Quad City area with case management and support services Project Chocolate funds will directly benefit HIV positive Mothers and Children in the Quad City area. Visit the website at www.apqc4life.org to learn more about The Project of the Quad Cities.

To purchase tickets or for more information please contact Shannon Rembowski at 309-721-7804 or Shannon@apqc4life.org.

At The Phoenix Fine Art Gallery in Moline:
Please come:
Friday, August 26th. 6.00 p.m.
Vernissage ( opening reception)  for  Artists Zachary Cleve and Emma Farber for their show "Stepping in, Looking Through," a two-person fine arts exhibition with paintings
that explore themes of isolation, obstacles, communication and personal development.

The reception will be held from 6:00pm to 8:00pm, and is open to the public. 
About the Artists:
Zachary Cleve was born in 1986 in Davenport, Iowa. He graduated with bachelor's degrees in painting and sociology from Saint Ambrose University in 2010, culminating in a senior honors exhibition in his final semester. Zachary has facilitated figure drawing sessions at the Figge Art Museum in Davenport, been a teaching assistant, and participated in numerous group exhibitions.

Emma Farber was born in 1988 in Moline, Illinois. She is graduating this winter from Saint Ambrose university with degrees in painting and graphic design, with a minor in art history. She will have her senior honors show this December.

The medium for the paintings are Oil on Canvas.
Certificates of  authenticity and provenance for all art sold throught the Phoenix Fine Art Gallery is provided with all sales.
The Phoenix Fine Art Gallery is at 1530 Fifth Ave. Moline.
First floor of the Moline Club building, corner of  5th. Ave and 16th. Street.

The current national soybean yield average is 44 bushels per acre, but to meet world demand, that figure needs to be boosted to 59.5 bushels per acre by the year 2030. The checkoff's Production Research program funds research utilizing soybean genomics to help meet this goal.

A new checkoff project will use the mapped soybean genome to accelerate the process of developing and introducing new traits that could lead to high-yielding varieties.

Click here to download an audio news report with USB Production Research program Chair Jason Bean, a soybean farmer from Missouri, discussing how says the checkoff supports research that utilizes the mapped soybean genome to identify and evaluate specific soybean genes that increase yields.

If you would like to conduct additional interviews, please call Erin Hamm at 888.235.4332 or e-mail your request to hamme@osborn-barr.com.

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley will hold town meetings in 14 Iowa communities today through Thursday.  

   

Starting this afternoon, the meetings will take place in Carroll, Denison, HarlanOaklandRed OakAtlanticOnawaMissouri ValleyGlenwoodSidneyShenandoahBedford, Corning and Audubon  

   

"I look forward to these meetings to hear directly from Iowans and to have the kind of dialogue that's needed for the process of representative government to work.  I like to say it's a two-way street.  I need to go to people to answer questions and listen to comments, and they need to come out and participate in the discussion.  The meetings are open to the public.  Everyone's invited."  

   

Grassley has held a constituent meeting in every one of Iowa's 99 counties every year since he was first elected to the U.S. Senate.  After the 14 town meetings this week, he will have held a constituent meeting in every Iowa county this year.  

   

In addition to regular meetings in Iowa, and Grassley participates in many meetings beyond one in every county, every year, the Iowa senator responds to every constituent letter, email and phone call.  Grassley also communicates with Iowans on Facebook, Twitter and athttp://grassley.senate.gov.  He is a regular guest on public affairs programs statewide where he responds to questions from Iowans on any subject.  

   

Separately this month, Grassley participated in a wind-farm groundbreaking ceremony in Iowa Falls, attended the Iowa State Fair, and spoke to the National Foundation for Women Legislators.  He also participated in a General Aviation Manufacturers Association event at the Rockwell Collins' hangar at the Eastern Iowa Airport in Cedar Rapids and spoke at Rotary Club meetings in Bettendorf and Ames.  The U.S. Senate is scheduled to reconvene on Tuesday, September 6.  

   

Below is more information about the town meetings this week.  Grassley will be available for interviews with local reporters for 15 minutes after every meeting.  

   

Monday, August 29  

   

3-4 p.m.  

Carroll County Town Meeting  

New Hope Village Activity Center Gymnasium  

1211 East 18th Street in Carroll  

   

5-6 p.m.  

Crawford County Town Meeting  

Denison Municipal Utilities Community Room  

721 Broadway in Denison  

   

Tuesday, August 30  

   

8-9 a.m.  

Shelby County Town Meeting  

Harlan Public Library  

718 Court Street in Harlan  

   

10-11:30 a.m.  

Pottawattamie County Ag Town Meeting  

Oakland Community Building  

129 Harrison Street in Oakland  

   

1-2:30 p.m.  

Montgomery County Ag Town Meeting  

Montgomery County Family YMCA  

101 East Cherry Street in Red Oak  

   

3:30-5 p.m.  

Cass County Ag Town Meeting  

Cass County Community Center Medium Room  

805 West 10th in Atlantic  

   

Wednesday, August 31  

   

7:30-8:30 a.m.  

Monona County Town Meeting  

Onawa Community Center  

320 10th Street in Onawa  

   

10-11 a.m.  

Harrison County Town Meeting  

United Western Coop  

222 East Lincoln Highway in Missouri Valley  

   

1-2 p.m.  

Mills County Town Meeting  

Glenwood Senior Center  

20 North Vine in Glenwood  

   

3-4 p.m.  

Fremont County Town Meeting  

Sidney Senior Center in the Northridge Shopping Center  

2820 Northridge Road in Sidney  

   

4:45-5:45 p.m.  

Page County Town Meeting  

Shenandoah Medical Center Rapp Meeting Room  

300 Pershing Avenue in Shenandoah  

   

Thursday, September 1  

   

8-9 a.m.  

Taylor County Town Meeting  

Taylor County Farm Bureau Meeting Room  

607 Pollock Boulevard in Bedford  

   

10:15-11:15 a.m.  

Adams County Town Meeting  

Corning Community Building  

601 6th Street in Corning  

   

1:30-2:30 p.m.  

Audubon County Town Meeting  

Audubon County Economic Development Community Room  

800 Market Street in Audubon  

 

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WHAT:           "I Can Run a Mile" Run with Carl training run for area youth

Pleasant Valley Elementary Schools participate in this event. It helps encourage participation for Run with Carl, held Labor Day, Sept. 5th at 7:30 a.m. Run with Carl is a memorial run that raises money for Pleasant Valley and Bettendorf High School college scholarships.

WHEN:           Thursday, Sept. 1st at 3:15 p.m.

 

WHERE: Pleasant Valley Elementary Schools Participating:

Bridgeview

Cody

Pleasant View

Riverdale Heights

Hopewell

WHY: "Run with Carl is a great event for families to do together. It's affordable and supports the local community," said Jamie Lange, PR Chair, Run with Carl. "The practice run is a great way for kids to realize they can complete the full mile on race day. There's something for all ages and these are short enough distances that kids and novice runners can accomplish it."

Having a practice run before race day (Labor Day) builds confidence in the participants and helps kids prepare for the one mile fun run.  Funds raised through Run with Carl provide college scholarships to graduates of Pleasant Valley High School and Bettendorf High School.

 

About the Bettendorf Rotary: The Bettendorf Rotary Club was chartered in 1957. The group meets every Wednesday at noon at Fortune Garden Restaurant (2211 South Kimberly Road, Bettendorf). Bettendorf Rotary has been the title sponsor for Run with Carl for six year. The race is presented by Trinity Regional Health System.  Additional sponsored by United Healthcare and Hamilton Technical College. 

 

About the Carl D. Schillig Memorial Fund, Inc.: The Carl D. Schillig Memorial Fund was established in 1995 in memory of Carl Schillig who was killed at age 15 in a car-pedestrian accident. The fund provides a $4000 college scholarship to graduates of Pleasant Valley High School - which Carl attended - and Bettendorf High School graduates. With Carl's philanthropy as its inspiration, the nonprofit also distributes proceeds from the run to organizations in which Carl was active, including the Bettendorf  Pleasant Valley Aquatics, the Cornbelt Running Club, and Our Lady of Lourdes Church.

 

-end-

New York, NY, August 29, 2011 - A local favorite has been recognized as one of the best in the nation when it comes to fine vodka.  TheFiftyBest.com recognized locally crafted River Baron Vodka as one of the top 10 vodkas made in the United States.

River Baron, which is distilled at Mississippi River Distilling Company in Le Claire, Iowa, was named as eighth best in a sampling held in New York City.  A panel of 28 judges participated in a blind taste test to determine the nation's 50 best handcrafted vodkas.

River Baron Vodka was one of the highest scoring spirits in the competition and was awarded a silver medal.  Judges comments included:  "Full sweet nose, butterscotch, vanilla, buttery, cotton candy, banana, nutty, sweet butter, pepper, light spice, smooth, velvety, assertive, very light, really good, perfect."

The vodka is made from 100% local ingredients.  Corn from Le Claire, Iowa and wheat from Reynolds, Illinois are used to make this handcrafted vodka. Distillers say the honor is a big thrill.  "We're a tiny distillery in little old Le Claire, Iowa." said owner and distiller Garrett Burchett.  "To have aficionados in New York City even taste our vodka, let alone call it one of the best, is a real thrill."

The small distillery has come a long way in a short time says distiller and owner Ryan Burchett.  "It's been a wild ride.  In eight months, we've seen over 10,000 tourists visit our distillery.  We've launched three products with two more on the way before the year is out.  Now to be recognized as one of the best in the country, is somewhat surreal.  It's been so much fun to watch this thing grow in such a short period of time."

TheFiftyBest.com is an award winning website that provides rankings for various products and services including gourmet dining, wine & spirits, travel, and luxury goods.  The site bills itself as, "A good taste guide to things that taste good."

Mississippi River Distilling Company is open from 10 AM to 5 PM Monday through Saturday and from 12 to 5 PM Sundays.  Free tours are offered to the public daily on the hour from 12 to 4 PM or by appointment.  The tour takes visitors through the entire distilling process.  Tours end in the Grand Tasting Room with free samples of products for those patrons over 21 years of age.

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