PORT BYRON, Ill. - As temperatures continue to climb through the month of July, state Rep. Mike Smiddy, D-Hillsdale, is urging residents to stay safe during the summer heat, and highlighting local resources to avoid health problems.

"Extreme temperatures can pose a serious threat for those without access to a cool place, and, unfortunately, heat-related illnesses claim the lives of people in Illinois every year," Smiddy said. "I urge everyone to know the signs of heat stroke, take a few moments to check on elderly or sick neighbors and get to a cool place before you're overheated and are feeling badly."

Symptoms of heat-related illness include headaches, skin that is hot to the touch, increased body temperature, loss of consciousness, seizures and irregular heartbeats. Smiddy urges residents to stay cool and avoid illness by increasing water intake, decrease strenuous, outdoor physical activity and remain in air-conditioning when possible.

Illinois maintains over 120 state facilities that can provide a cool, comfortable place for those in need to stay safe during extreme heat. The centers remain open during normal business hours from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday excluding holidays. For more information about cooling centers or to find a location near you, please call the Illinois Department of Human Services hotline at 800-843-6154 or visit www.illinois.gov/KeepCool.

Area Cooling Centers Include:

Rock Island County Department of Human Services (500 42nd St. Ste. 6, 2nd Floor, in Rock Island and 4711 44th St., Suite 3, in Rock Island)

Mt. Carroll Firehouse, (318 South Clay, in Mt. Carroll - Call 815-244-5313)

River Valley District Library, (214 S Main St., in Port Byron)

Whiteside County Department of Human Services (2605 Woodlawn Rd., in Sterling)

Henry County Department of Human Services (125 West South St., in Kewanee)

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Red Cross on Haiti earthquake relief, response to Grassley, remaining questions

Sen. Chuck Grassley has received a response from the American Red Cross related to his inquiry on spending on earthquake relief in Haiti.  He made the following comment on the response.

"I still have a lot more questions for the Red Cross.  It's unclear why the Red Cross enters into contracts with other organizations stipulating that details of grants can't be disclosed to the media or donors.  Who's driving the lack of disclosure, the Red Cross or the grant recipients?  What's the rationale for it?  It's hard to see how disclosing the dollar amounts given from the Red Cross to the individual organizations and how those organizations spent the money would harm anyone.  I look forward to an explanation.  I have other questions about the spending numbers and how they add up and the overhead costs for both the Red Cross and the grantee organizations.  Also, I'd like to see more details of the results achieved from each of the partner organizations.  Transparency and accountability are important for any spending in the public interest.  With that in mind, I'll continue to ask questions on behalf of the donating, taxpaying public."

The Red Cross' responses to Grassley's questions are available here, excluding the details of partner organizations.

 

Iowa Congressional Delegation Adds Support for Disaster Declaration Request

WASHINGTON– Led by Sen. Chuck Grassley, all members of the Iowa congressional delegation have added their support for Gov. Terry Branstad's request for a federal declaration of a major disaster for the state as a result of severe weather during that occurred during the period of June 20, 2015 and June 25, 2015.  The letter was signed by Grassley, Sen. Joni Ernst, and Reps. Steve King, Dave Loebsack, Rod Blum and David Young.

"The Governor determined that this incident is of such severity and magnitude that effective response is beyond the capabilities of the State and affected local governments to handle effectively and federal assistance is needed," the members wrote.

Severe weather that produced damaging winds, tornadoes, heavy rains, hail and thunderstorms resulting in flooding impacted 19 counties.

The counties included in the request for Public Assistance were: Allamakee, Appanoose, Butler, Clayton, Dallas, Davis, Des Moines, Guthrie, Howard, Jefferson, Lee, Lucas, Marion, Mitchell, Monroe, Warren, Wayne, Winneshiek, and Wright.

The text of the letter is below. A signed copy of the letter can be found here.

 

Goodlatte & Grassley Press for Information About Dangerous Federal Inmates Awaiting Release

Sentencing Commission amendment allows for the release of thousands of federal inmates this November

Washington, D.C. - House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) pressed Attorney General Loretta Lynch for information about the thousands of federal prison inmates who will be released in November as a result of the U.S. Sentencing Commission's decision to lower federal sentencing for all drug trafficking and distribution crimes. Those expected to be released include inmates with violent criminal histories, who have committed crimes involving assault, firearms, sodomy, and even murder.

In early 2014, the Sentencing Commission promulgated Amendment 782, which imposed a two-level reduction in the base offense levels for all drug trafficking and distribution offenses, including trafficking offenses that involve drug quantities substantial enough to trigger mandatory minimum sentences.  The Commission made those reductions retroactive, applying them to all inmates in the Bureau of Prison's custody who are serving a sentence for a drug offense. Over the past year, thousands of federal inmates have filed motions with their courts of jurisdiction for sentence reductions.

In their letter to Attorney General Lynch, Chairmen Goodlatte and Grassley note that their concerns about violent offenders being released were ultimately ignored by the Sentencing Commission. They request that Attorney General Lynch provide the House and Senate Judiciary Committees with detailed information about the federal inmates who will be released on November 1 or thereafter.

Below is the text of the letter. A copy of the signed letter can be found here.

 

Senate Passes Protections for Whistleblowers of Antitrust Crimes

 

WASHINGTON - The Senate has unanimously passed legislation to extend whistleblower protections for employees who provide information to their employer or the Department of Justice regarding criminal antitrust violations. The Criminal Antitrust Anti-retaliation Act was introduced by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and Ranking Member Patrick Leahy.

"Violators of antitrust laws put businesses and our economic wellbeing at risk, so whistleblowers who call attention to violators should be praised, not punished. Unfortunately, these folks often face retribution at work for their efforts to correct misconduct.  The Criminal Antitrust Anti-retaliation Act protects these individuals from workplace retaliation and  abuse. It may also serve as a deterrent of future misconduct.  I'm grateful for the work of my colleagues to move this bill forward and urge my colleagues in the House of Representative to take action to shield these whistleblowers from reprisal," Grassley said.

"I applaud the Senate for passing bipartisan legislation that will protect employees who blow the whistle on criminal antitrust violations.  Whistleblowers play an important role in alerting the public, Congress, and law enforcement agencies to wrongdoing in a number of areas. By protecting those who would blow the whistle on criminal antitrust behavior, our bill will help facilitate the reporting of violations that ultimately affect consumers.  I urge the House to pass this bipartisan legislation," Leahy said.

The Criminal Antitrust Anti-Retaliation Act establishes protections for whistleblowers who assist in criminal antitrust cases by prohibiting employers from retaliating against an employee who provides information to the employer or the Justice Department regarding conduct that violates the criminal antitrust laws.  The bill allows an employee who believes he or she is the victim of retaliation to file a complaint with the Secretary of Labor, and provides for that employee to be reinstated to their former status if the Secretary finds in their favor.  Grassley and Leahy authored similar whistleblower statutes as part of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002.

The Senate unanimously passed a similar version of the legislation last Congress.  The legislation is based on recommendations from a Government Accountability Office report released in July 2011.  The Criminal Antitrust Anti-Retaliation Act now goes to the House of Representatives for consideration.

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                                                                        Grassley Joins in Introducing Voluntary COOL Legislation

WASHINGTON - Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa joined Senators John Hoeven, Debbie Stabenow and other members of the Senate Agriculture Committee today to introduce the Voluntary Country of Origin Labeling (COOL) and Trade Enhancement Act of 2015. The bipartisan measure is designed to prevent retaliatory trade sanctions by Canada and Mexico, yet still allow voluntary labeling of beef, pork and chicken that is produced in the United States.

"A voluntary labeling program is a simple solution that will allow the United States to abide by its WTO obligations while giving producers the option to label their products," said Grassley. "It's an approach that Canada has also taken. In the end, Americans should be able to know where their meat comes from, with a label that has integrity based on a single definition of U.S. pork and beef, just like they know where their t-shirts come from."

The bipartisan bill positions the U.S. to avoid retaliatory tariffs by repealing the mandatory COOL law and replacing it with a voluntary program that will enable processors to voluntarily label meat products. The bill maintains the integrity of the label, ensuring that the product is actually "born, raised and slaughtered in the United States," rather than just processed in the U.S.

In May 2015, the World Trade Organization (WTO) ruled for the fourth time that the United States' mandatory COOL law violates international trade agreements. The WTO is undergoing an arbitration process to determine the level of retaliation that Canada and Mexico will be authorized to implement. Both countries say they intend to implement retaliatory tariffs should the U.S. fail to address the current COOL law. Canada has said it will seek more than $3 billion and Mexico will seek $650 million in countervailing duties.

In summary, the Hoeven-Stabenow Voluntary COOL bill:

  • Addresses the WTO case by removing beef, pork, chicken, and ground product from mandatory labeling requirements under COOL
  • Establishes a purely voluntary label for U.S. origin beef, pork, chicken, and ground product
  • Protects consumers by maintaining the integrity and usability of "Product of U.S." labels

Joining Grassley in cosponsoring the bill are Senators John Thune, Amy Klobuchar, Heidi Heitkamp, Mike Enzi and Sherrod Brown.

Grassley's remarks from today's press conference are below.  Video of the press conference can be found here.

I thank Senator Hoeven and Senator Stabenow for their work to find a solution to Country of Origin Labeling that works for everyone.

We started working on COOL back in the late 90s.

I have always supported COOL for meat, because I believe consumers have a right to know where their food is coming from.

They know where their t-shirts come from.

However, we must be true to our obligations at the World Trade Organization which has ruled against our current law.

This bill is a WTO compliant path forward for Country of Origin Labeling.

There's no way that Canada can dispute a voluntary labeling program when they have the same basic program.

In the past, Canada has even proposed to the United States that a voluntary option could be a solution.

To me, COOL boils down to one major point- the definition of what constitutes U.S. beef and pork.

The bill introduced today will allow the market to decide in a voluntary way if meat should be labeled with its country of origin.

That will address the required segregation with mandatory labeling that everyone agrees is the core of the WTO case.

If companies choose to label their product with a U.S. origin label, that label needs to have integrity.

The bill today ensures there is a single, clear definition of what constitutes meat labeled as a product of the U.S.

That is very important to me and many of my constituents who produce our meat.

Consumers will also be able to have confidence in the label on their meat.

They will have the assurance that if a meat label says 'Product of the U.S.' it truly is an American product.

Grassley Statement at an Executive Business Meeting on the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Reauthorization Act

Good morning.  The bipartisan Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Reauthorization Act of 2015, S. 1169, is first on today's agenda.  This bill, which I introduced in April with Senator Whitehouse, extends the authorization for some key juvenile justice programs, which expired in 2007.  The bill also will go a long way to ensure accountability in the spending of federal grant funds.

Dozens of organizations, including Fight Crime Invest in Kids, the Coalition for Juvenile Justice, Boys Town, and Rights 4 Girls worked with us on this bill's development and at least 100 groups have signed endorsement letters in support of S. 1169.  I want to take this opportunity to also thank the members of this Committee who are cosponsors, including Senators Cornyn, Leahy, Hatch, Coons, and Blumenthal.  The bill is a truly bipartisan effort.

Senator Whitehouse and I have a complete substitute amendment to this measure that we will now offer for this Committee's consideration.

Among other things, our substitute amendment, like the bill it would amend, calls for continued congressional support of programs that serve at-risk youth.  Such youth include, for example, youths who are being exploited by human traffickers and children with trauma, mental health or substance abuse issues.   Our substitute, like S. 1196, also phases out an exception in current law that permits States to lock up children who have committed so-called "status offenses," which would not be an offense if committed by adults.  These include offenses like running away, truancy, or violating a curfew.

And, like the underlying bill, our substitute amendment not only extends the authorization for existing juvenile justice programs, which are designed to keep juveniles away from adult offenders, but it does so in a way that is fiscally responsible.  The substitute, just like S. 1196, limits authorized funding levels for these programs to the amounts provided by appropriators for juvenile justice programs in recent years, with a slight adjustment for inflation.

But the substitute is an improvement over the bill we originally introduced in several ways.  First, the amendment would accord greater priority in federal funding to those programs that are scientifically proven to work with at-risk juveniles.  The addition of this new language will ensure that scarce federal resources must go primarily to the most meritorious programs.

Second, the substitute also incorporates some new provisions to encourage States to phase out the use of unreasonable restraints of juveniles in detention.  Such practices include, for example, the shackling of girls during childbirth.  We worked with human trafficking advocates as well as Senators Schumer and Cornyn on the development of this language.  Senator Durbin also worked with us on the development of language that calls for States to consider alternatives to detention for nonviolent youth who come into contact with the criminal justice system, and that language now is part of this amendment

Finally, the amendment incorporates some grant accountability reforms that are not in the original version of S. 1196.  In recent years, I've actively engaged in oversight of the Justice Department, and during this time, the DOJ Inspector General has identified grant management as one of the top management and performance challenges at the Department.  In this same period--most recently at an oversight hearing I chaired in April--we have witnessed numerous controversies relating to the grant making and oversight practices of the Department's Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, or OJJDP.

The amendment reflects technical input from the Inspector General's Office and is designed to help resolve the accountability problems that have plagued OJJDP for years.  It will require GAO audits of the agency's internal controls every three years as well as audits of certain States receiving grants.  It also will require the Justice Department's Audit, Assessment Office to institute a comprehensive review of OJJDP's internal controls.

It will tighten bill language that holds States accountable for failing to meet the law's core requirements, by ensuring that States must incur a substantial financial penalty if they are out of compliance.  And it will not only encourage the Attorney General to provide States with greater technical guidance on compliance with the law's core requirements, but it also will require each State grantee to designate someone who must certify to that State's compliance with the law's core requirements.

I'm glad to have had the opportunity to work on these key reform provisions.  And I am pleased we have revisited the authorizing statute for some vitally important juvenile justice programs?a statute which is long overdue for an update, to reflect the latest scientific research on what works with at-risk adolescents.

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Grassley, Johnson, Goodlatte, Conyers Concerned about New OLC Opinion that Denies Records to Inspectors General, Blocks Oversight, and Circumvents Congressional Intent

WASHINGTON - Senators Chuck Grassley and Ron Johnson, and Congressmen Bob Goodlatte and John Conyers today expressed great concern with an opinion from the Office of Legal Counsel that allows the Justice Department to deny access to records sought by the Inspector General.

The Inspector General Act of 1978 authorizes the Inspector General to access "all records" in the Department's possession.  However, today, the Office of Legal Counsel's 58-page opinion argues that other provisions generally restricting the "disclosure" of certain kinds of information override the specific instruction that the Inspector General have access to all records of the Department.  The Office of Legal Counsel reaches this conclusion despite clear and recent legislation enacted in response to the controversy over these very access issues.  Following several instances of the Inspector General testifying to Congress about the Justice Department hindering his oversight by withholding records, Congress enacted, and the President signed, Section 218 of the Department of Justice's fiscal 2015 Appropriations Act.  That provision prohibited the use of any funds to deny the Inspector General timely access to records.  The only exception was for any "express" limitation in the Inspector General Act.

The Justice Department has denied or substantially delayed the Inspector General's access to records in connection with a number of inquiries, including those related to: (1) whether the Department had violated the civil liberties and civil rights of individuals detained in national security investigations following September 11, (2) the review of Operation Fast and Furious, (3) the review of the FBI's use of National Security and Exigent letters, (4) the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) sex parties scandal, (5) the DEA's use of confidential sources, and (6) the DEA's use of administrative subpoenas to obtain bulk data collections.

The Department's refusal to provide records on a timely basis as required by law wastes months in bureaucratic roadblocks and frustrates the independent oversight Congress created Inspectors General to provide. Prior to 2010, the FBI and other agencies in the Justice Department routinely provided similar information to the Inspector General's office.

Here are comments from Grassley, Johnson, Goodlatte and Conyers.

Senator Chuck Grassley, Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee:

"The Inspector General Act of 1978 directs that Inspectors General have a right to access all records, documents and other materials.  If the Inspector General deems a document necessary to do his job, then the agency should turn it over immediately.  The clear command of that law is being ignored far too often by agencies across the executive branch.  By this opinion's tortured logic, 'all records' does not mean 'all records,' and Congress's recent attempt to underscore our original intent with an appropriations restriction is nothing but a nullity. The prospect of the Obama administration using this opinion to stonewall oversight, avoid accountability, and undermine the independence of inspectors general is alarming."

Senator Ron Johnson, Chairman, Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee:

"I am deeply concerned that this opinion undermines the Department of Justice Office of Inspector General's independence, and ultimately the independence of all inspectors general, as other agencies will likely use its misguided arguments to justify stonewalling their own watchdogs.  The Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee recently reported out S. 579, the Inspector General Empowerment Act of 2015, which makes clear Congress's view that inspectors general must be given prompt, unfettered access to agency documents for purposes of carrying out their responsibilities under the act.  Unfortunately, the Department of Justice today has dug further into its position ? against the clear will of Congress ? that the agency is not always obligated to provide documents to its inspector general, and that the agency itself gets to choose when to grant permission to access certain documents. I am committed to working with my colleagues to ensure all inspectors general have the statutorily mandated independence from their agency that is so crucial to performing their responsibilities."

Congressman Bob Goodlatte, Chairman, House Judiciary Committee:

"Today's Office of Legal Counsel opinion contains the same kind of outcome-oriented lawyering that produced the Department of Justice's infamous recess appointments memorandum, which was unanimously rejected by the Supreme Court in 2014. The law is clear that the Office of the Inspector General should have unfettered access to materials for its investigations, but political lawyers at the Department of Justice have engaged in legal gymnastics to shield key information from government watchdogs.

"The Office of Legal Counsel's efforts to reduce transparency will leave the Department of Justice vulnerable to mismanagement and misconduct. This is not the type of government the American people deserve. The House Judiciary Committee will work with other committees of jurisdiction to explore a legislative fix to reiterate Congress' intent that the Office of the Inspector General is entitled access to all documents and records within DOJ's possession."

Congressman John Conyers, Ranking Member, House Judiciary Committee:

"This opinion is a departure from the plain text of the statute and the intent of Congress when we drafted it?but this one memorandum hardly ends the conversation.  The Inspector General must have complete and direct access to the information that his office deems necessary to conduct complete and impartial investigations.  He should not have to ask permission from the very agency he oversees.  I suspect that we will work quickly, and likely with overwhelming and bipartisan majorities, to make certain that the Inspector General Act is explicit on this point."

An Inspector General investigation can be prevented under the law in certain limited circumstances, but the Attorney General is required to explain in writing to both the Inspector General and Congress why the Inspector General's work should be impeded despite the Inspector General Act's guarantee of access to all agency records - something that the Attorney General has failed to do in each of the many instances records were withheld from the Inspector General since 2010.

The members said they would be working to determine a path forward to fix the issue that remains unresolved by the Office of Legal Counsel's opinion.

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Judiciary Committee Clears Grassley, Whitehouse Bill to Reauthorize Juvenile Justice Programs with Improved Accountability

WASHINGTON - The Senate Judiciary Committee today passed legislation from Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and Senator Sheldon Whitehouse that would ensure that at-risk youth are fairly and effectively served by juvenile justice grant programs. Their legislation updates existing law by promoting improved transparency and accountability at the state and federal level.  It also adds additional support for youth with mental illnesses and guards against fraud and mismanagement of grant funds through enhanced oversight.

"Juvenile justice programs are important tools to help local communities serve and protect at-risk youth, however the law authorizing these programs hasn't been revisited in more than a dozen years.  Our bill provides a long-overdue policy refresh to improve opportunities for our nation's must vulnerable children and strengthen safeguards for youth who encounter the juvenile justice system.  Just as importantly, we created an oversight structure that will help ensure that both federal grant making agencies and grantees are held accountable for their actions with young people and for the taxpayer money for which they are responsible. Our goal is to make sure that youth can benefit from the programs' full potential," Grassley said.  "I hope the Senate will act quickly to move this bill forward."

"This long-awaited reauthorization could put a real dent in the school-to-prison pipeline and assure that law enforcement intervention with kids does the least possible unnecessary harm to them and to their futures." said Whitehouse.  "It's a commonsense bill that will help kids maintain their education while detained, keep kids out of jail for status offenses that would never land an adult in prison, divert them to substance abuse and mental health services if that's the real problem, better protect them from adult criminals and from solitary confinement, and address racial disparities in the current system.  I thank Chairman Grassley for his leadership on this issue and I hope to see the bill passed by the full Senate soon."

The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act was created in 1974 to ensure the safety of at-risk youth who enter the criminal justice system, and assist states with their juvenile justice programs and activities.  The program has not been updated since the last reauthorization passed Congress in 2002.

The bill is cosponsored by Senators Richard Blumenthal, Roy Blunt, Chris Coons, John Cornyn, Richard Durbin, Dianne Feinstein, Orrin Hatch, Amy Klobuchar, Patrick Leahy and Marco Rubio.

Grassley and Whitehouse said they appreciate the endorsement of more than 150 organizations that have voiced support for the bill.

The Grassley-Whitehouse bill:

·         Revises and extends authorization for the key juvenile justice programs that were originally authorized under the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974.  The law has four core requirements, or protections, for youth in contact with the criminal justice system, with which states must comply in order to be eligible for juvenile justice funding.

·         Limits spending levels for the reauthorized juvenile justice programs to amounts appropriated by Congress for the same or similar programs in the most recent fiscal year, adjusted by 2 percent annually for inflation.

·         Phases out the "Valid Court Order" exception that permits states to lock up juveniles for status offenses that would never land an adult in prison such as running away, curfew violations or truancy.

·         Provides for enhanced accountability and oversight of Justice Department grant making practices based on input from the Justice Department's Office of Inspector General and the Congressional Research Service.

·         Adds a requirement that the Justice Department offer periodic training and technical assistance to states on best practices and protocols to achieve compliance with the law's core requirements, as well as a requirement that states designate one individual who shall certify the state's compliance with the core requirements.

·         Conditions receipt of grant funds on new state planning requirements.

·         Enables students to continue their education while detained.

·         Strengthens provisions to screen, refer, and provide treatment, to children with mental health challenges and/or substance abuse issues.

·         Eliminates the use of shackles on pregnant girls being detained.

In addition, the bill addresses concerns brought forward by whistleblowers and verified by the Justice Department.  The whistleblowers provided evidence that many states fall short of core requirements that are a condition of the states receiving taxpayer-funded grants.  The Justice Department office responsible for overseeing the program acknowledged, after Senator Grassley chaired an April 2015 hearing on that office's grant making practices, that since 1997 it has followed an unlawful policy, which allowed states to receive these juvenile justice grants despite violations of funding requirements.  This oversight hearing prompted Grassley and Whitehouse to craft the new accountability requirements to ensure that taxpayer dollars are being used appropriately, and youth are being adequately served.

A detailed list of the bill's key provisions is available here.

A copy of the text of the bill as passed by the committee is available here.

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Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program gets "minimal" IRS oversight, GAO says

Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to review various aspects of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program, including federal oversight of the program.   According to the GAO, this program is the largest source of federal assistance for developing affordable rental housing with an estimated cost of $8 billion in forgone revenue in 2014.   The GAO found that the IRS conducted "minimal" oversight of the state housing finance agencies (HFAs) that award the tax credits to developers.  The GAO said, "Monitoring, one of the internal control standards, should occur in the course of normal operations, be performed continually, and be ingrained in the agency's operations," yet the GAO found that the IRS has performed only seven audits of HFAs (of 56 total HFAs) between 1986 and 2015. The GAO further stated, "As a result of minimal monitoring, IRS does not know the extent of compliance monitoring by HFAs, which limits its ability to determine if the HFAs appropriately awarded credits to projects."  The GAO also said the state entities "increasingly" have missed the deadline to submit their annual report to the IRS and "often submit incomplete or inaccurate forms."  Grassley, a watchdog of the IRS and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, released the GAO report and made the following comment on it.

"This report confirms what we've seen again and again.  The federal government is good at giving out money and tax breaks and terrible at checking on results.  No one at the IRS or HUD seems to have any way of knowing whether a multi-billion-dollar program for low-income housing has worked as intended.  This doesn't bring accountability, and it may or may not deliver affordable housing for people in need.  The agencies need to step up their oversight for the sake of low-income people who need housing and the taxpayers who deserve accountability."

The report is available here.  The GAO is performing subsequent reviews of the tax credit at Grassley's request.

Positions available in Iowa City, Davenport and Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C - Congressman Dave Loebsack today announced that his office is now accepting applications from Iowa college students to participate in a Congressional internship program. Positions are available in Loebsack's Iowa City, Davenport or Washington, D.C. offices. The Congressional internship program is open to undergraduate students and recent graduates, regardless of major. Fall internships typically begin around Labor Day and run through the end of the year, though specific dates can be set for each individual.

"As a former educator, I have seen the benefits that internships can provide by giving students a firsthand look into the government process," said Loebsack. "I encourage all hardworking, motivated students and recent graduates to apply."

Interns based in Washington, D.C. will focus on learning about the legislative process and the federal government by working closely with the legislative, communications and constituent services staff members. Interns based in Iowa City or Davenport will focus on providing constituent services and interacting with members of the community.  Interested candidates should email their cover letter, resume, a short writing sample and a letter of recommendation to  LoebsackInternship@mail.house..

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Nearly a year ago, in August 2014, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa asked the Drug Enforcement Administration why it paid an Amtrak secretary $854,460 over 19 years for train passenger information it could have received for free, according to an inspector general report.  Grassley was and is concerned that the DEA might have paid for the information instead of working cooperatively with a drug enforcement task force to get the material at no cost.  The same month, the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General confirmed it "has been conducting an investigation of alleged payments for information by Drug Enforcement Administration personnel to an Amtrak employee."  Today, the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General issued an audit report entitled "Audit of the Drug Enforcement Administration's Confidential Source Policies and Oversight of Higher-Risk Confidential Sources."  The report does not specifically address the Amtrak informant payments.   Instead, it raises serious issues about the DEA's failure to oversee its agents' use of confidential sources.  Grassley, Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary, made the following comment.

"The latest report confirms concerns raised by the Amtrak incident.  The DEA needs to do a better job of managing the handling of confidential informants.  When the agency overpays and fails to manage long-term informant relationships properly, that's both detrimental to taxpayers and can impede the agency's ability to use informants effectively to help enforce the law.   It's good news that the DEA agrees with the inspector general's recommendations.  The agency needs to implement the recommendations.  On the Amtrak incident, since it's been nearly a year since the inspector general confirmed an investigation, the results of the investigation seem overdue.  The inspector general should advise on where the investigation stands and release any results for the sake of accountability."

The report released today is available here.  More information on Grassley's work on this issue is available here.  

SPRINGFIELD, IL (07/20/2015)(readMedia)-- The Illinois National Guard has learned that individuals claiming they are the Illinois National Guard have been telephoning the public soliciting donations.

It is against Department of Defense regulations for the Illinois National Guard and all other entities under DOD to ask for donations of any kind.

If you receive any contact of this nature, please contact your local law enforcement to report the incident.

Opportunity to Experience Highways in a Big Rig  

Summary: The American Trucking Associations & Tennant Truck Lines will host a trucking event to focus on highway safety, what role trucking plays in the Quad Cities and the U.S. and why trucking is a great career choice.

Who: Professional Truck Drivers with millions of miles of accident free driving, American Trucking Associations, Tennant Truck Lines, Iowa Motor Truck Association and Illinois Trucking Association

What: Trucking event that will give the media the opportunity to:

·       Take a ride in a big rig;

·       Meet four professional truck drivers with a combined 74 years behind the wheel and over 7.1 million of accident-free miles;

·       See some of the newest safety technology;

·       Learn about safety on our nation's highways;

·       Learn about sharing the road with large trucks;

·       Learn about the blind spots around large trucks;

·       Learn about the shortage of truck drivers and technicians

When: Thursday, July 23, 2015 - 11:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m.

Where: Tennant Truck Lines - 20812 E 550 Street, Colona, IL 61241.

Interviews: Professional truck drivers, Tennant Truck Lines President Aaron Tennant, American Trucking Associations, Illinois Trucking Association and Iowa Motor Truck Association

American Trucking Associations is the largest national trade association for the trucking industry. Through a federation of 50 affiliated state trucking associations and industry-related conferences and councils, ATA is the voice of the industry America depends on most to move our nation's freight. Follow ATA on Twitter or on Facebook. Trucking Moves America Forward  

Share the Road is a highway safety outreach program of the American Trucking Associations that educates all drivers about sharing the roads safely with large trucks. An elite team of professional truck drivers with millions of accident-free miles deliver life-saving messages to millions of motorists annually. The safety program is sponsored by Mack Trucks, Inc. and Michelin North America, Inc. www.atastr.org

Tennant Truck Lines, Inc. (TTL) is an open deck carrier that services the Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, and Midwest regions of the country. We have full terminals currently located in Moline, Illinois; Augusta, Georgia; and Baltimore, Maryland. We have drop yards in Grand Island, NE and Valley City, ND as well as drop trailers at many customer locations around the country. These operating centers allow TTL to effectively service our customers and traffic lanes with pride, safety and quality service. Since 1946, we have been an industry leader in transportation and will continue to lead the pack by meeting and exceeding customer requests. 

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The purple Hilltop Campus Village banner that has been displayed from a second story window for many months will soon be taken down. The Hilltop Campus Village sold the property at 1028 Harrison to Andrew Wold, President of Alliance Contracting, L.L.C..

Wold has specific plans for the property, intending to turn it back to a single-family residence. "I am pleased to partner with HCV on yet another project and am excited to get this project underway! This home has great potential and I plan on bringing this home back to life again.", he said.

Members of the HCV project team were also pleased. Robert Lee, HCV Board of Directors President, said, "From the time we receiced the property as a donation, we wanted to proceed carefully to make sure it was sold to someone who would honor our mission of restoration and revitalization. We are satisfied that Mr. Wold has the knowledge, passion and financial capacity to do this project correctly."

The house is known as the George W. Smiley house. It was built in the late 1860s and is a contributing property to Davenport's College Square Historic District, which is listed on the National Registry of Historic Places. The district contains three of Davenport's most prominent landmarks: Trinity Episcopal Church, Central High School, and the Parker-Ficke home. It has in it many examples of Second Empire, Gothic Revival, Beaux Arts and Romanesque Revival architectural styles.

Director Scott Tunnicliff was pleased by the opportunity that presented itself. "This wasn't the sort of project that comes along too often, so we wanted to do it right. We appreciate very much the donation of the property made to us by Wells Fargo Bank, and the opportunity it allows for the new owner to help further enhance the district. But for the donation, the efforts of our project team and Mr. Wold, this very likely could have become a liability for the area, or face demolition."

The HCV put together an application for people to make an offer on the house, and to tell what their intentions were for its re-use, and demonstrate they possessed the ability to devise and implement a plan.  The application stipulated that any intention of demolition would not be acceptable to the HCV.

Mr. Wold has a number of projects on his plate, but intends for this to be gotten to pretty quickly. "Timing for the project was another criteria in reviewing the application, said Tunnicliff. "We couldn't have this just change hands and then have nothing happen. We wanted to make sure this liability would be turned into an asset for the district."

Persons wishing more information may contact the Hilltop Campus Village office at 563 322 8293 or 563 370 2098.

Storm Lake Estate Receives Largest Claim in State History

DES MOINES, IA (07/17/2015)(readMedia)-- State Treasurer Michael L. Fitzgerald announced today the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt has returned a record $2.3 million in unclaimed property to one gentleman's estate in Storm Lake. "I'm very excited to announce the Maurice Wittrock unclaimed properties were claimed through his estate," Fitzgerald said. "Many of the properties have been in the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt for years. Throughout the years, we tried to reach out and contact Mr. Wittrock, but he chose not to come forward to claim his property. During that time, finders reached out to him as well, offering to reunite him for a fee. I'm pleased his attorney and the estate were able to claim the money at no cost. Our mission is to reunite unclaimed property to its rightful owners and we do that at no cost."

The Great Iowa Treasure Hunt program has returned over $195 million in unclaimed property to more than 465,000 individuals since Fitzgerald started it in 1983. Unclaimed property refers to money and other assets held by financial institutions or companies that have lost contact with the property's owner for a specific period of time. State law requires these institutions and companies to annually report and deliver unclaimed property to the state treasurer's office, where it is held until the owner or heir of the property is found. Common forms of unclaimed property include savings or checking accounts, stocks, uncashed checks, life insurance policies, utility security deposits, and safe deposit box contents.

Visit the Great Iowa Treasure Hunt at GreatIowaTreasureHunt.com to begin your search. Be sure to like Great Iowa Treasure Hunt on Facebook and follow the program on Twitter @GreatIATreasure.

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View Online: http://readme.readmedia.com/Jackpot-2-3-Million-Great-Iowa-Treasure-Hunt-Payout/11668805

U.S. Navy Steelworker 2nd Class Matthew Gullion-Foster of Davenport, Iowa, carries pipes for scaffolding at Tupukas Primary School. A team of U.S. Navy Seabees, U.S. Air Force RED HORSE engineers and Australian Regular Army engineers constructed a new building at the site as part of Pacific Partnership 2015. The hospital ship USNS Mercy is currently in Papua New Guinea for its second mission port of PP15. Pacific Partnership is in its 10th iteration and is the largest annual multilateral humanitarian assistance and disaster relief preparedness mission conducted in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region. While training for crisis conditions, Pacific Partnership missions to date have provided real world medical care to approximately 270,000 patients and veterinary services to more than 38,000 animals. Critical infrastructure development has been supported in host nations during more than 180 engineering projects.

https://www.dvidshub.net/image/2060786/us-navy-seabees-and-us-air-force-red-horse-engineers-build-school-papua-new-guinea-during-pacific-partnership#.Vagg9_lViko

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