America's prosperity hinges on our consumer-driven economy.  The economic recovery is slowed in part by tepid consumer confidence that adds to the reluctance by businesses to increase payroll, upgrade equipment and expand operations.  Decision-makers in the private sector are taking a wait-and-see approach due to uncertainty over the federal debt, tax, spending and regulatory policy.  The economic recovery could continue to languish if the federal government fails to rein in spending.

Even so, America's strength and resilience still rests largely within the indefatigable optimism that drives innovators, entrepreneurs, workers and immigrants to scale the ladder of prosperity.

Americans cherish freedoms of speech, press and religion.  U.S. capitalism encourages people from all walks of life to create wealth and achieve the rewards offered by free enterprise.  Bargain hunters would agree the two essential elements of a good buy are the same for a robust economy:  consumer choice and competition in the marketplace.

In the U.S. Senate, I use my legislative and oversight authority to work to strengthen the rights of property owners, taxpayers, consumers, pensioners, patients, and investors.

Consumers armed with accurate, timely information are able to make better decisions and minimize buyer's remorse.  Whether buying big-ticket items such as a car or home or looking for the best surgeon to perform a life-saving transplant, the most informed consumer is likelier to end up a satisfied customer at the end of the day.

I work to foster accountability and transparency in the public and private sectors.  This includes  efforts to advance reforms to the nation's pension laws aimed at preventing bad actors from promising more than they could deliver (remember the Enron scandal); strengthen consumer-friendly comparison tools for family members searching for a quality nursing home; and, let the sun shine in on the financial relationships between medical device makers, pharmaceutical companies, medical professionals and non-profits.

The federal government's system of checks and balances is meant to prevent overreach by the executive, legislative and judicial branches.  That's why I am a strong supporter of sunshine and whistleblower protection laws.  Representing Iowans in Washington, I also have worked to keep close tabs on taxpayer dollars.  Taxpayers deserve to get the most bang for their buck when their hard-earned money is used to build roads, advance medical research, strengthen national security, pay for the military and fund recovery efforts caused by natural disasters.

Transparency also can improve America's health care delivery system. Policymakers have long debated ways to improve quality and rein in the so-called spending curve of U.S. medicine.  On the Senate Finance Committee, I also channel efforts to improve effective medicine and patient safety by promoting better transparency between patients, health care providers, pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers.

I have pressed the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to fully exercise its authority to achieve public disclosure between industry and the doctors who conduct $31.2 billion annually in federally sponsored medical research.  In response to what I exposed about the dramatic disparity between what a number of influential NIH-funded research physicians reported and what they received from pharmaceutical companies, the NIH drafted new guidelines for grant recipients to manage conflicts of interest.  A proposal has been waiting to be processed at the White House Office of Management and Budget since March.  The administration needs to move on this.  The NIH is in a pivotal position to help establish greater accountability in this area through disclosure.  Good stewardship of the tax dollars that back medical research requires it.

In addition, keeping consumers or medical providers in the dark about those with financial ties to medical device makers, as an example, does not help build trust or improve patient outcomes.

A patient having spinal surgery places trust in the doctor's experience and expertise.  The surgeon relies on the current medical literature regarding safety, complications and adverse affects of a medical device or drug when making an informed decision about risks and benefits for the patient.  Troubling reports indicate that severe side effects may have been unreported or under-reported by clinical investigators with financial ties to a bone-growth product they had reviewed.

A patient who is considering surgery has a right to know if his or her physician has a financial relationship with the medical device the doctor is suggesting.  Likewise, a physician using the product deserves to know if the medical professionals who researched and prepared the literature on it have financial ties or consulting arrangements with that company. Public disclosure documenting such financial ties will promote accountability within the industry and allow the public to draw its own conclusions.   Legislation that I co-authored, the Physician Payment Sunshine Act, was enacted into law last year.  It will compel pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical device and medical supply companies to disclose payments to physicians to the public, starting March 31, 2013, for all payments in calendar year 2012.   That will increase payment transparency.

Transparency and accountability throughout the public and private sectors are standards of good governance that I will continue to champion.  Transparency fosters goodwill in the marketplace and buoys consumer confidence.  Just as American consumers have a right to know where their meat and vegetables are grown, they also have a right to know if their doctor has financial ties to a pharmaceutical company or medical device manufacturer, and their doctors have a right to know about the financial ties of leaders in their profession.

For generations, American consumers have rewarded big thinkers and innovators to out-think and out-innovate the competition. Protecting the public's right to know is as all-American as apple pie and fireworks on the Fourth of July.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Washington, D.C. - Today, Congressman Bruce Braley (IA-01) released the following statement after the House voted on two Libya bills:

"Today I voted to limit the President's authority to engage our country in a third overseas conflict. To date, Libya has cost us $800 million - and we're looking at projected military costs totaling more than $1 billion through September of this year. That's a lot of money that we could be spending on priorities here at home. I don't think we can afford to be engaged in Libya right now, and if the President feels differently, I think it's time he come to Congress and make his case for this war."

The first bill, a resolution authorizing the use of U.S. Armed Forces in support of the NATO mission in Libya, failed by a vote of 123 to 295. Rep. Braley voted against the resolution.

The second bill, which would limit the use of defense spending in Libya, failed by a vote of 180 to 238. Rep. Braley voted in favor of the bill.

 

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ATLANTA, GA (06/24/2011)(readMedia)-- Nicholas Hunt of Bettendorf, IA made the Dean's List for the spring semester 2011 at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Undergraduate students earning a 3.00 or higher academic average for the semester gain the distinction of being named to the Dean's List at Georgia Tech.

The Georgia Institute of Technology, also known as Georgia Tech, is one of the nation's leading research universities, providing a focused, technologically based education to more than 18,000 undergraduate and graduate students. Georgia Tech has many nationally recognized programs, all top ranked by peers and publications alike, and is ranked in the nation's top ten public universities by U.S. News and World Report. As a leading technological university, Georgia Tech has more than 100 interdisciplinary research centers operating through the Colleges of Architecture, Computing, Management, Engineering, Sciences, and the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts that consistently contribute vital research and innovation to America's government, industry and business.

On the web: http://readabout.me/achievements/Nicholas-Hunt-Makes-Deans-List-at-Georgia-Tech/2686809.

Tax Predictability Sought to Encourage Expansion of Clean Energy Alternative, Sustain and Create Jobs

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senators Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Maria Cantwell of Washington today introduced legislation to simplify and extend the tax incentive for domestic biodiesel production.  Their bipartisan bill would provide predictability to investors and producers so the United States can continue moving forward to displace imported fossil fuels with low carbon, renewable biodiesel.

In putting forward the Biodiesel Tax Incentive Reform and Extension Act of 2011, S.1277, Grassley and Cantwell said that the lack of certainty about the tax policy inhibits access to capital and could undermine the progress that the U.S. biodiesel industry has made to build the production capacity and infrastructure needed to displace imported petroleum diesel fuel with domestically produced, renewable, low-carbon biodiesel.

"Today's high gas and diesel prices are slowing our economic recovery and burdening families," said Cantwell. "For economic reasons, national security reasons, and environmental reasons, we must continue to invest in America's clean energy economy. Biodiesel is America's first advanced biofuel, it can be made from a variety of feedstocks, and is less polluting than today's petroleum-based diesel fuel.  This bipartisan bill is smart federal policy because it is helping launch a nascent, domestically-based industry, reforms an existing credit to make sure it supports American biodiesel producers, and provides the industry the certainty it needs to continue to grow."

"America is trying to kick its addiction to foreign oil, and biodiesel is part of the cure," said Grassley.  "The more we can encourage domestic production and meet demand, the better off we'll be economically, environmentally, and geopolitically.  This legislation simplifies the tax credit for producers.  It also gives investors predictability so they'll be more likely to put their money into biodiesel production.  And it's directly tied to jobs."  

The biodiesel tax incentive was first enacted in 2004.  Since then, it has helped encourage the production and use of biodiesel.  Production in the United States has increased from 25 million gallons in 2004 to 690 million gallons in 2009, before Congress allowed the tax credit to lapse at the end of 2009, which resulted in job loss throughout 2010.  The credit was restored retroactively in December 2010 through December 2011.

A study by Cardno ENTRIX, an international consulting firm that specializes in environment and natural resources economics, estimates that this year, domestic biodiesel production is expected to support more than 31,000 jobs and replace 800 million gallons of imported diesel fuel.  The same study estimates that with the appropriate federal framework, by 2015 biodiesel production will replace 1.9 billion gallons of imported diesel fuel, support more than 74,000 jobs, and generate $4 billion in income and approximately $7.3 billion in gross domestic product.  The study also found that if Congress does not enact the Cantwell-Grassley Biodiesel Tax Incentive Reform and Extension Act of 2011 and the biodiesel tax credit is allowed to expire at the end of 2011, consumers would be forced to spend an additional $6.6 billion for diesel fuel between 2012 and 2015.

Specifically, the Cantwell-Grassley measure would:

  • eliminate potential abuses and simplify administration of the incentive for both taxpayers and the Internal Revenue Service.  The bill changes the incentive from a blender credit to a production tax credit so that incentives are given for building the domestic production industry.   The change would focus the benefits of the credit on the production capacity of these cleaner, greener fuels rather than on the activity of just blending them with petroleum diesel. By focusing on the production of the 100 percent bio-based fuel, this bill will shut down, once and for all, any remaining opportunity for the abuse known as "splash and dash," in which oil companies add a few drops of biodiesel to their petroleum diesel just to qualify for the tax credit. 
  • provide the $1 per gallon tax credit for the production of biodiesel, renewable diesel and aviation jet fuel that complies with fuel standards and Clean Air Act requirements that define qualified fuels under current law.
  • increase the credit from $1 to $1.10 for the first 15 million gallons of biodiesel produced for small producers, those with an annual production capacity of less than 60 million gallons
  • simplify the definition of "biodiesel" to encourage production from any biomass-based feedstock or recycled oils and fats.
  • simplify the coordination between the income tax credit and the excise tax liability to tighten compliance and reduce administrative burdens on taxpayers.
  • extend this tax credit for five years, giving needed financial predictability so that more facilities can be brought online in the United States.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA), today announced that several Iowa universities will receive a total $192,189 for the creation and continuation of advanced nursing traineeship programs.  The funding comes from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).

"Iowa's colleges and universities have some of the strongest health training programs and best health professionals in the country, and by making further investments in educating Iowa's healthcare workforce we will keep our state a leader for generations to come," said Harkin.  "Today's funding will not only open doors for Iowans who want to become nurses, but will ensure that when Iowans get sick or seek medical assistance, they will have highly trained health care providers to treat them.  This is truly a double-win for our state."

Senator Harkin is Chairman of the Appropriations subcommittee that funds HHS. He is also Chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee.

St. Ambrose University- $1,807.00
New funding for the creation of an Advanced Education Nursing Traineeship program.

Graceland College- $82,726.00
Continued funding for the Advanced Education Nursing Traineeship program.

Allen College- $54,002.00
Continued funding for the Advanced Education Nursing Traineeship program.

University of Iowa- $53,654.00
Continued funding for the Advanced Education Nursing Traineeship program.

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Sgt. 1st Class Evadne Benson, center, First Army Equal Opportunity Advisor, meets with two squads of Military Explorers, from Post 9044 in Davenport, Iowa, and Post 120 from Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. The cadets, ranging from 11 to 21 years of age, are learning about the military ways of life prior to their potential future affiliation with the service of their choosing. The "Nighthawk" and "Green Dragon" squads took a guided tour of the new First Army headquarters building on Rock Island Arsenal, Ill. The group is conducting a four-day Explorer Challenge on "The Rock", consisting of military training and orientation events.   (Photo by Master Sgt. Danette Rodesky-Flores, First Army Public Affairs)

As we know, Davenport has a strong German background. Yet it is different from other traditionally German cities like St. Louis, Cincinnati and Milwaukee. Davenport was deeply shaped by the so-called Forty-Eighters, young German revolutionaries who in 1848 opposed monarchies in Germany, particularly in Schleswig-Holstein, but were defeated and had to leave the country. Most of them were intellectuals who brought with them special gifts and talents which they put to use in Davenport.

 

What were these gifts and talents? Who were these Forty-Eighters and what had shaped them in Germany before they crossed the ocean?

 

Ms. Helen Reinold, a graduate of Augustana College and a graduate student at the University of Oldenburg in Germany, has researched this topic during her recent internship with the German American Heritage Center in Davenport.  Ms. Reinold will present her findings to the interested public in a lecture and discussion, entitled The Intellectual Origins of the Davenport Forty-Eighters, at the German American Heritage Center at 712 Second Street in Davenport, on Thursday, June 30, 2011, at 5:30 p.m.  It is free of charge.

 

You are cordially invited to attend this event. We are looking forward to greeting you among us.

 

Dr. Egon W. Gerdes, Executive Director, German American Heritage Center


MOUNT PLEASANT, IA (06/24/2011)(readMedia)-- Dr. Nancy Erickson, vice president for academic affairs at Iowa Wesleyan College, Mount Pleasant, has announced the names of students who have qualified for the 2011 spring semester Dean's List. To qualify for the Dean's List, a student must attain a grade point average of 3.50 or better on a 4.00 scale with 12 credit hours or more and no incomplete grades at the time the list is declared.

Ayla Serrano of Rock Island, IL is among those named to the academic honors list this semester.

The mission of Iowa Wesleyan College is to prepare students to succeed in a changing global environment. Iowa Wesleyan is a four year liberal arts college providing quality, individualized learning experiences that combine the development of the intellect with adaptive life skills. The college is affiliated with the United Methodist Church, with which it shares a commitment to spiritual values, social justice and human welfare.

Iowa Wesleyan College is the oldest private coeducational liberal arts college west of the Mississippi River. For more information about Iowa Wesleyan College please visit www.iwc.edu

On the web: http://readabout.me/achievements/Ayla-Serrano-named-to-Iowa-Wesleyan-College-Deans-List/2679839.

MOUNT PLEASANT, IA (06/24/2011)(readMedia)-- Brittany Kahler of Marengo, IA, graduated from Iowa Wesleyan College. Commencement ceremonies were held May 7 on the Mount Pleasant, Iowa, campus. Kahler earned a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in Studio Art.

Students completing their degrees in May, as well as those who completed their studies at the end of the fall semester in December, were honored in the outdoor ceremony.

Iowa Wesleyan College is a four-year, liberal arts college. For information on programs and enrollment, go to www.iwc.edu.

On the web: http://readabout.me/achievements/Brittany-Kahler-graduates-from-Iowa-Wesleyan-College/2676484.

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley today encouraged new college graduates in Iowa who are interested in gaining valuable work experience and learning more about American government to apply for a fall internship in his office in Washington and in local offices in Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, Waterloo, Davenport, Council Bluffs and Sioux City.

"Spending a semester after college working in a congressional office is a good way to learn a lot about the legislative branch of government," Grassley said.  "It's important to me to encourage greater understanding and involvement in the process of representative government, so the internships are available to college graduates and students of all areas of study."

Grassley's fall interns will work from late August to mid-December.  Interns assist staff members with constituent services and administrative, legislative and communications work, including that of Grassley's staff on the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, where he serves as Ranking Member.

The application deadline is Friday, July 8.  Application forms are available on Grassley's Senate website and in his offices in Iowa.  Due to security-related delays in postal mail delivery to U.S. Senate office buildings, internship applications should be faxed to 202-224-5136 or emailed to intern_applications@grassley.senate.gov.  For more information, send messages tointern_applications@grassley.senate.gov, or call 202-224-3744 and ask for Emily Smith.

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