Joyce Darlene Cline Masaoay

Joyce Darlene Cline Masaoay, age 95, of Seymour, Iowa, passed away peacefully on Monday, March 6, 2023, at the Corydon Specialty Care Center  at Corydon, Iowa.

Graveside services will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Thursday, March 9, 2023, at the Glasgow Cemetery south of Lockridge, with Pastor Kevin Dice, officiating of the Round Prairie Baptist Church.

A Celebration of Life Service will be held at the Seymour United Methodist Church on Saturday, March 18, at 11:00 a.m. with Pastor Shawn LaRue, officiating.

Memorials may be made to Seymour Fire Department; 109 N. 5th St., Seymour, Iowa 52590

Online condolences may be sent to the family at www.murphyfuneralandmonuments.com

Murphy Funeral Home of Mt. Pleasant, is caring for her arrangements.

Ruth Kerr

Ruth V. Kerr, 106, of Wapello, passed away on Friday, March 3, 2023, at Southeast Iowa Regional Hospice House in West Burlington.  Visitation will be held on Thursday, March 9, 2023, from 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. at the Snyder and Hollenbaugh Funeral and Cremation Services of Wapello.  Funeral services will follow at 11:00 a.m. at the funeral home.  Burial will be in the Wapello Cemetery.  Memorials may be directed to the Wapello Fire Department or the Wapello United Methodist Church in memory of Ruth.  Online condolences may be left for the family at www.sandhfuneralservices.com.

Ruth Verlee Hartsock was born on May 17, 1916, in Louisa County, Iowa the daughter of James and Lillie Pearl (Hank) Hartsock.  She was united in marriage to Lawrence Charles Kerr on May 19, 1934, in Wapello.  Ruth was a homemaker.  She was a member of the United Methodist Church, Long Creek Homemakers Club and the Red Hat Club.  Ruth enjoyed quilting, fishing, playing cards and traveling.

Ruth will be deeply missed by her children: Lawrence M. (Judy) Kerr of Macomb, Illinois, Keith (Deanna) Kerr of Toolsboro and Ronald (Shirley) Kerr of Wapello; eight grandchildren and many great grandchildren and great-great grandchildren.

Ruth was preceded in death by her parents; husband; daughter, Shirley Fletcher; son, Merwin Kerr; three grandchildren; one sister and six brothers.

Names for Veterans Memorial

April 1st is the deadline to submit a veteran’s name to be added to the Henry County Veterans Memorial prior to Memorial Day 2023.

The deceased veteran must meet ONE of the following criteria: Have been born in Henry County, entered military service from Henry County, OR have lived in Henry County for at least ten years.  Proof of military service documents MUST accompany the request.

Applications are available at area funeral homes; at the Veterans Hall, 300 W Monroe St, Mt. Pleasant; Veterans Affairs, 106 E Clay St, Mt. Pleasant, or by calling 319-385-4983.

Henry County Board of Supervisors Meeting Agenda

AGENDA

 

March 7, 2023

 

Approve Agenda

 

Approve Minutes

 

9:00 Jake Hotchkiss, Engineer Weekly Update

Motion to approve plans and set letting date for IRVM building.

Motion to promote employee to Equipment Operator II

 

10:00 Henry County Max Levy Budget Hearing FY24

 

Other County Business as time allows

 

Supervisors Sub-Committee Updates

 

 

 

March 9, 2023

 

No Meeting Supervisors at ISAC Training

Jazz Band Competition Results

Congratulations Director Lindsey Pogmore and the WMU Jazz Band. A second place finish in competition Saturday at Clear Creek Amana automatically qualifies WMU Jazz Band for the Iowa Jazz Championships.

Mount Pleasant High School Jazz Bands also participated in the Southeast Iowa Bandmasters Association Jazz Festival Saturday at Clear Creek-Amana High School. Jazz 1, directed by Jim DePriest, placed third in Class 3A while Jazz 2, directed by Laura Westfall, placed second in the second bands category.

MPCHS Results from FFA Competition

Here are the results for Mount Pleasant from the FFA District Convention held Saturday at Muscatine High School…

Welding: Carter Westfall and Mason Yocum- Silver Rating

Ag. Sales: Ethan Graber- Silver Rating

Extemporaneous Speaking: Kamryn Hart- Silver Rating

Chapter Website: Jacie Campbell- Silver Rating

Ag. Broadcasting: Chase VanBibber- Silver Rating

Chapter Program: Julie Campbell and Kaylen Hunold- Bronze Rating

Experience the Action: Tyi Alter, Alexis Francy and Ella McNamee- Bronze Rating

Delegates: Ella McNamee and Briar Bender

Kamryn Hart also performed her final duties as a Southeast District officer.

MP InMotion First Runner Up at Ft. Madison Invitational

In their last competition of the show choir season, Mount Pleasant High School’s InMotion placed as First Runner Up in the finals of the Fort Madison Invitational Saturday night. Southeast Polk won the competition, followed by Mount Pleasant, Hannibal, Davenport West, West Branch and Quincy.

InMotion earned a spot in the finals after winning first place in Class 3A during the daytime competition, getting an award for having the Best Closer (final song). In the Middle School Division, Mount Pleasant’s Chain Reaction came in second place, with Southeast Polk getting first, Central Lee third, Keokuk fourth and Ottumwa fifth.

In the Small School Division, West Branch placed first, followed by Central Lee and Danville.

 

The Dickey Dispatch by Senator Adrian Dickey

Hello Senate District 44!

All I can say is that I am glad Funnel Week is over. There are 3 grueling weeks every session: the first funnel week, the second funnel week, and the final week. In my opinion, the first funnel is always the most difficult, so I’m certainly glad that week has passed! Between lengthy committee meetings, last second subcommittees, and some “spirited” conversation, I am ready for the weekend.

This week also saw more groups find their way to the Capitol. Some of these groups were the Mt. Pleasant iJAG. The iJAG program (Iowa Jobs for America’s Graduates) is an awesome program that is optional for schools to participate in and for those that do, the state provides funding. This is something I encourage all schools to look into! It provides our youth a lot of different learning options focused on careers and in ways that differ than traditional education formats. In a short summary, it exposes students to a vast array of careers that most of them may have never known to exist.

Indian Hills Community College, Southwest Iowa Community College, and even a group of international guests from Ukraine visited me as well. I had a wonderful time visiting with these groups and valued the conversations that arose. Taking time to speak with these groups was definitely a needed distraction from this busy week, and I want to thank each of these groups for their time.

I am sure many of you saw the untruthful attack ads that were taken out on me last week – full-page color ads in my local papers. Have you heard the term “dirty politics”? Well that ad was it. A group of trial attorneys paid for the ads that were untruthful and hypocritical! The legislation they referred to was NOT a self-interest bill. It did deal with an issue I am very passionate about (and campaigned on) and that is TORT reform! Greedy attorneys are bogging down our legal system. For every illegitimate lawsuit they file, a legitimate one gets pushed back. It is because of these ambulance-chasing attorneys (they are the ones with the billboards up, the ones who have commercials on 2 AM tv, etc.) as to why WE NEED TORT REFORM in Iowa. It is NOT about trucking companies avoiding responsibility. It is simply slowing down the crazy number of lawsuits that have NO merit to them.

Their attacks suggested that I should not have voted on the bill however they did not tell the Representatives and Senators who are also attorneys (I’m guessing there are 20 of them) to do the same thing. Attorneys in this state had more to lose financially with tort reform than what anyone else has to gain! When have we demanded that every farmer that serves in the Capitol remove themselves from voting on legislation that concerns farming, like the ethanol bill? We don’t. This argument holds true with every industry.

One realistically would ask, “Why would these attorneys file these lawsuits if the trucking company was not at fault?” and it is a fair question. However the reason is, because it costs attorneys a few hundred dollars in legal fees to file the lawsuit and it costs the plaintiff NOTHING to file or to “sign on” with an attorney. However, it costs the trucking companies $200,000 – $300,000 or more in legal fees, expert testimony, accident recreation, attorney fees, etc. to defend these bogus cases and even after spending that, there is a risk the trucking companies could lose. There is a HUGE trend where juries in very litigious counties are awarding BIG verdicts even when the trucking company is NOT at fault. So when a trucking company is looking at the risk and the cost to defend, it often makes more “business sense” to settle for $200,000 than to incur the cost to defend yourself and still have the risk of losing. These attorneys are making a lottery out of our legal system!

Slowing down this craziness was the basis of this litigation. Regardless of what the attack ads states, this was NOT a personal bill by me. There are 9,306 trucking companies in Iowa. Additionally, nearly every farmer today is a trucking company if they have even a single grain truck and any small business that uses anything from a pickup truck to a semi would is also affected by this legislation. 1 out of 11 paychecks in this GREAT state are tied to the trucking industry. That is a lot of companies and A LOT of lives that would be POSITIVELY impacted with this legislation. The tort reform issue and legislation trying to address the issue has been in the Capitol years before I ever got elected.

The last piece of legislation I want to highlight is SF 167. This is a bill that I ran through the Workforce Committee, and I look forward to taking it to the Senate floor. This bill focuses on providing opportunities for teenagers to work, ONLY if they choose to. Federal regulations greatly limit the number of hours and days that 14-18 year olds may work. These same individuals are free to attend extracurricular activities, sporting events, etc. with little to no regulation. This bill simply allows greater opportunity for youth to work at a job if they choose. They may want to save money for a new car, take a date to the movies, or simply save money for college. This bill also PROHIBITS youth under 18 years of age to work in/with a variety of dangerous environments, such as explosives, saw-mills, mining, and on the floor of a meat packing plant. All in all, this bill helps to PROTECT Iowa’s youth, while also providing them with greater opportunity to engage in work activities. The news outlets and various Democrats have painted this bill to be a “youth slave labor” bill, and protested that “our kids are not for sale.” This is not only a great disrespect to those throughout history who were enslaved, but a downright lie. I am proud to have brought this bill to the Senate Workforce Committee, and appreciate the support of those who backed this great bill.

This week brought some amazing legislation out of committee, and leaves me with a great feeling. Funnel week again has proved to be as crazy as expected, but it feels great that it is now done. As always, thank you for the support and for reaching out.