Sports, February 3rd

High School Basketball

Mt. Pleasant was looking to spoil Keokuk’s senior night last night, but the Chiefs had other plans, winning the girls’ game 83-13 and taking the boys game 57-38. In the girls’ game, Abby Carthey and Hailey Parrott finished with four points apiece. In the boys’ game, Christian Stacy led the way for the Panthers with 18 points. The girls’ will host Ottumwa and the boys’ will travel to Ottumwa on Monday, February 5th, with both games at 7:30 pm. KILJ 105.5 FM, kilj.com, will cover the boys’ game with the pregame show at 7:15 pm.

The Danville girls’ team will take on Columbus today at 2 pm in the two seed game. The Danville boys’ team demolished Wapello last night 73-44. The Bears will travel to Collins-Maxwell today at 2:30 pm. 

The Van Buren County girls’ team will face off against Davis County tonight at 5 pm on the road. The boys’ team snuck past Lone Tree last night 67-65. The Warriors will compete against Davis County tonight at 6:30 pm.

The Holy Trinity Catholic girls’ team will take on Lone Tree at Southeastern Community College (SCC) today for the one seed game at 3:30 pm. The Holy Trinity Catholic boys’ team will face off against WACO in the two seed game tonight at 5 pm at SCC. 

The Central Lee boys’ team fell to Hillcrest Academy last night 54-40 after being outscored 23 to 9 in the third quarter. The Hawks will take on Cardinal on Monday, February 5th, with the girls’ team playing at 6 pm.

The Mediapolis boys’ team needed overtime, but the Bulldogs escaped with a 62-59 win against Louisa-Muscatine last night. The boys’ team will take on Central Lee on Tuesday, February 6th, at 7:30 pm. The Mediapolis girls’ team will face off against Holy Trinity Catholic on Monday at 7:30 pm.

The Winfield-Mt. Union boys’ team will travel to SCC tonight to compete against West Burlington at 6:30 pm. 

Girls’ Basketball Regional Pairings

The Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union has released the regional pairings for classes 1A, 2A, and 3A and here’s some of our local matchups. In Class 1A Region 7, Lone Tree will host Winfield-Mt. Union. Danville will take on Burlington Notre Dame with the Bears acting as host. The winner of the two games will compete against one another. 

In Class 1A Region 8, WACO will face off against Hillcrest Academy at home and New London will travel to Holy Trinity Catholic. All Class 1A games are scheduled to take place on February 8th at 7 pm.

For Class 2A Region 6, Van Buren County hits the road to face off against Pleasantville on February 10th at 7 pm. Columbus will host West Burlington on February 13th at 7 pm.

In Class 3A Region 1, Mediapolis will host Central Lee on February 10th at 7 pm.

In Class 3A Region 5, Fairfield will take on the top seed Solon on the road and Washington will host Davis County. Both games will take place on February 10th at 7 pm.

High School Wrestling

WACO will host a tournament today.

New London, Columbus/Winfield-Mt. Union, and Mt. Pleasant will compete at districts on February 10th.

The girls’ state tournament is in the books and here is how our local wrestlers did on day two of the tournament.

#10 Mara Smith of Fort Madison was eliminated by fall at the hands of #6 Lilly Stough of Waverly-Shell Rock in the 125-pound weight class.

In the 135-pound weight class, #21 Ellie Brenneman of Mid-Prairie lost by fall to #8 Kaydence Boom of Wilton, ending her tournament run.

Keokuk’s #22 Jayliah Gardner was pinned by #15 Layna Demoss in the 145-pound weight class.

In the 155-pound weight class, #8 Tatum Wolford of Wapello defeated #20 Madilyn Rowson but fell to #4 Emmalee Spurgeon, which sent her to the 7th place match. This led to a sudden victory over #6 Lauren Luzum of Decorah to capture 7th place.

Lastly, #15 Samantha Lyons of Fairfield was eliminated by #3 Grace Britten by fall in the 170-pound weight class.

High School Bowling

Mt. Pleasant will travel to Louisa-Muscatine on Monday, February 5th.

The Mt. Pleasant girls’ team will be heading to Oskaloosa on Monday, February 12th and the boys’ team on Tuesday, February 13th, to compete in the state qualifying meet. Burlington and Keokuk will also be making the trip.

College Basketball

The #3 Iowa women’s team will travel to Maryland tonight at 7 pm.

The Iowa State women’s team will hit the road to take on UCF today with tipoff at 11 am. 

The #12 Iowa State men’s team will travel to #18 Baylor tonight at 7 pm. 

The Iowa men’s team was able to outlast Ohio State last night 79-77. Tony Perkins led the way in the winning effort with 20 points and seven rebounds. The Hawkeyes will face off against Penn State on the road on Thursday, February 8th, at 6 pm.

This Day in Sports History

1876 – Albert Spalding invests $800 to start a sporting goods company, manufacturing the first official baseball, tennis ball, basketball, golf ball and football.

2008 – Super Bowl XLII, University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, AZ: the New York Giants upset the New England Patriots, 17-14; MVP: Eli Manning, New York, QB. Thus, ending the Patriots bid for a perfect season.

2013 – Super Bowl XLVII, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, New Orleans, LA: the Baltimore Ravens beat the San Francisco 49ers, 34-31; MVP: Joe Flacco, Baltimore, QB. First Super Bowl loss in 49ers history.

Prep Wrestling: Girls’ State Tournament Results

Coralville, IA- The Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union’s state wrestling tournament is in the books and here’s how our local wrestlers fared in day two.

#10 Mara Smith of Fort Madison was eliminated by fall at the hands of #6 Lilly Stough of Waverly-Shell Rock in the 125-pound weight class.

In the 135-pound weight class, #21 Ellie Brenneman of Mid-Prairie lost by fall to #8 Kaydence Boom of Wilton, ending her tournament run.

Keokuk’s #22 Jayliah Gardner was pinned by #15 Layna Demoss in the 145-pound weight class.

In the 155-pound weight class, #8 Tatum Wolford of Wapello defeated #20 Madilyn Rowson but fell to #4 Emmalee Spurgeon, which sent her to the 7th place match. This led to a sudden victory over #6 Lauren Luzum of Decorah to capture 7th place.

Lastly, #15 Samantha Lyons of Fairfield was eliminated by #3 Grace Britten by fall. 

State Champions

100-Pound Weight Class: Katie Biscoglia of Raccoon River-Northwest

105-Pound Weight Class: Layla Phillips of Mason City

110-Pound Weight Class: Jasmine Luedtke of Ottumwa

115-Pound Weight Class: Renah Utterback of Sigourney-Keota

120-Pound Weight Class: Camille Schult of Waverly-Shell Rock

125-Pound Weight Class: Molly Allen of Riverside, Oakland

130-Pound Weight Class: Colbie Tenborg of Saydel

135-Pound Weight Class: Bella Miller of Wahlert, Dubuque

140-Pound Weight Class: Kiara Djoumessi of Waverly-Shell Rock

145-Pound Weight Class: Mahri Manz of Lewis Central

155-Pound Weight Class: Nicole Olson of Missouri Valley

170-Pound Weight Class: Naomi Simon of Decorah

190-Pound Weight Class: Libby Dix of Mt. Vernon

235-Pound Weight Class: Olivia Huckfelt of Spencer

The Dickey Dispatch by Senator Adrian Dickey

It was an exciting week at the statehouse with several great pieces of legislation being passed through subcommittees and committees!

 

On Tuesday, I loved seeing two FFA groups from our district visit us at the Capitol! It was so incredible talking to the students who are actively pursuing leadership responsibilities through the FFA program. This week, the Mount Pleasant FFA and the North Mahaska FFA chapters visited. Each year I ask the students who grew up on a farm or have an ag background and I am always amazed how many students are in FFA with no ag background! I love this! It is a great example how out Ag industry in Iowa has marketed themselves to all Iowans about the GREAT careers in Iowa in the ag industry!

There certainly was more discussion on AEAs this week. In my previous newsletter I highlighted how the AEA system is in need to become more efficient and the administrative bloat that weighs down the AEA system needs addressed. As a business owner, I understand that changes sometimes need to be made to increase the efficiency of any system. Assistance to students with disabilities must improve as well and certainly more conversation will be had on these issues.

For those of you who know me, you know how much I am against speed cameras (or what I refer to as “revenue generators”) that are popping up all over the state. There are several bills alive right now with different approaches addressing the out of control placement of these “revenue generators” throughout the state. Some of the bills regulate them and some of the bills ban them. Whatever approach we take, it’s time to get it addressed!

  • These are “revenue generators” because the ticket is NOT issues to the person at fault, rather to the car owner. It should NOT be the responsibility of the car owner to make whoever was driving the car pay the fine, that responsibility should be on the law enforcement agency that is issuing the ticket.
  • These are “revenue generators” because the way the ticket is issued, they are not traffic violations. Therefore they do not have to follow the scheduled fine structure that is in place by state law. The state has a scale as to the maximum a fine for a speeding ticket can be charged at various intervals (5-10 MPH over, 11-20 MPH, etc….). Since these “revenue generators” do not have to follow state law, more often than not the fine from these “revenue generators” is double what state law allows!
  • These are “revenue generators” because I have seen tickets that have been issued at 1 MPH over the limit. Find me a law enforcement official who has written a ticket at 1 MPH over.
  • These are “revenue generators” because over a year ago on behalf of the Iowa Senate Transportation committee, I requested the data (number of tickets, revenue generated, crash data, etc) from every community that has these “revenue generators”, and only 1 community provided the data. They must be afraid of us seeing how much revenue these are generating!
  • These are “revenue generators” because the most profitable ones in the state are ALWAYS placed on state or federal highways, rarely on city owned streets. If the taxpayer of the state is paying for and maintaining the road, why isn’t the state getting the income from the “revenue generators” that are being placed on the road?
  • These are “revenue generators” because the City of Prairie City (just one example of MANY) has earned $3.4 MILLION in just over a year off of their cameras, with nearly all of that revenue coming from the camera on Hwy 163 (which is a state road). One can argue the safety issue concerning these “revenue generators” however there is no common sense argument to justify how citizens in the entire state should be subsidizing new tennis courts, new fire station, new water system, paving roads, etc. in Prairie City so that their residents don’t have to.

I serve on the Senate Ways and Means committee and this week we released two proposals to ensure tax relief for Iowans. The first proposal will lower corporate and individual income taxes. The second is a constitutional amendment which requires a two-thirds majority to increase taxes.

Since Republicans took the majority, we have consistently been putting money away into the taxpayer relief fund. While states such as Minnesota have been running up massive deficits, Iowa has a massive budget surplus. The logical thing to do with these funds is to give the money back to the taxpayers and that is what we intend to do!  The constitutional amendment is a GREAT idea because it ensures that regardless of the political direction Iowa goes in the future, the citizens and their tax dollars will be  protected in the Iowa constitution.

Lastly, I had the opportunity to go to catch up with Henry County Sheriff, Rich McNamme at the Iowa Sheriffs Association Legislative Reception. While we chatted about issues this session that are of importance to the law enforcement community, we also had a few minutes to share stories with others from our trip this fall when we visited the Texas border.

I’m proud to stand by our brave men and women in uniform who risk their lives to protect us! It is because of them that I proudly stood by Governor Reynolds’s Back the Blue Bill which became law in 2021. As a volunteer fire fighter for 32 years, I could not be more grateful for the work of the law enforcement community!

Shirley K. Zahner – PENDING

Shirley K. Zahner, 76, of Burlington passed away on Thursday, February 1, 2024, at the Southeast Regional Hospice House in West Burlington.

Funeral arrangements are pending at the Murphy Funeral Home of Mt. Pleasant.

James H. ‘Jim” Gill

James H. ‘Jim” Gill, 95 of Mt. Pleasant passed away on Friday, February 2, 2024, at Sunrise Terrace in Winfield.

A private graveside service will be held at the Forest Home Cemetery in Mt. Pleasant.  Friends may call from 3 to 7 p.m. on Monday at the Murphy Funeral Home of Mt. Pleasant.  The family will not be present.  In lieu of flowers his family suggest you make a memorial to your favorite charity in his memory.

 

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

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

MPCHS January 2024 Students of Character

Mount Pleasant High School is proud to announce the January 2024 Students of Character, Addison McGehearty & Delania Hourihan. These students have demonstrated Trustworthiness, Respect, Responsibility, Fairness, Caring, and Citizenship. Students are nominated by the MPCHS faculty each month. If you see these students at school or in the community, please tell them to keep up the good work! We are Panther Proud of you all!

#GoPanthers #PantherProud

 

Additional nominees:

Adria Goodrich

Ashley Silva Rodrigues

Lilly Skaggs

Hannah Reinier

Jolynn Martin

Reyna Aranda-Lopez

 

30th Music in Motion Show Choir Invitational TOMORROW!

The excitement roars as we approach the 30th return of the Music in Motion Show Choir Invitational tomorrow. Stay tuned to KILJ for result updates throughout the weekend as our area Show Choirs compete in this annual extravaganza.

Music in Motion Performance Schedule

Music in Motion Performance Schedule

Concessions Menu

Concessions Menu

Kitchen Menu

Kitchen Menu

Find more information HERE!

Senator Mark Lofgren Week 4 Update

The Capitol was a busy place this week with visitors from many interest groups and those wishing to share their perspectives about proposed legislation. The Iowa Bicycle Coalition was among the visiting groups. Subcommittee hearings on the Governor’s proposed AEA bill were held in the House and the Senate on Wednesday bringing even more visitors to both chambers. We appreciate the parents, educators, superintendents, administrators, and all who came to voice their opinion and give us their perspective. This is how we can best find a solution and progress on this issue for the benefit of all Iowa students.
AEA and Reading Instruction Reform
As I’ve mentioned in previous newsletters, it is the legislature’s job to look at state agencies and departments and areas that the state of Iowa invests in to see how they can be improved or changed. That responsibility gives merit to this bill. Starting the discussion in subcommittee provides an opportunity to learn more about the system, and to work together to figure out if there are ways to make this system work better for the students that need it. Although I don’t currently serve on the education committee and therefore did not attend the subcommittee meeting in the Senate, I have voiced concerns brought to my attention from constituents to education committee members, and have been following the status of the bill. It appears that it has passed out of subcommittee with an amendment in the Senate, however, the House subcommittee did not put its stamp of approval on it this week. See the links to SSB 3073 and HSB 542.

I mentioned Senate Study Bill 3069 last week.  This is the bill that restricts the type of reading instruction for children in grades Kindergarten through 3rd Grade to evidence-based practices. This is another education bill that moved forward in the Senate this fourth week of session.

William Penn University Visits the Capitol

I enjoyed visiting with Luke Wichers on Tuesday regarding his experience at William Penn University. Students in the Teacher Education Program at William Penn spoke with legislators about their support for a State Funded Student Teaching Stipend as a way to help with the teacher shortage across the state. This would be a program that would be comparable to other careers with paid internships and could be modeled after other states that have student teaching stipends, like Michigan, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Maryland and Oklahoma. It was an honor to speak with this young man from Muscatine who is passionate about becoming a middle school or high school teacher. He will make Muscatine proud!

Department of Education Releases ESA Statistics for 2023-2024 School Year

The Iowa Department of Education has released statistics for this school year regarding how many Iowa families utilized the new Education Savings Accounts (ESA) to help pay for non-public school. The number of students using ESAs was more than anticipated, demonstrating strong demand for the program. Almost 17,000 students are using ESAs this school year. Twelve percent of those students were previously enrolled in public school, while 21% are incoming kindergarteners. Two-thirds of those accessing an ESA were already enrolled in private school.

Opponents to school choice promised a mass exodus of students from public school, however, despite an increase in private school enrollment, the enrollment in public schools decreased by less than 1%. Students leaving rural schools for private schools could typically be counted on one hand, if any. Opponents also claimed it would lead to massive cuts in funding, but last year the legislature approved more than $107 million in new school funding for K-12 public schools. This year the governor has proposed a higher minimum starting pay for new teachers, regular funding increases, and other educational spending to total even more new money for Iowa schools than last year.

As you can see from the data, school choice was not the demise of public education in Iowa. The reality of the school choice debate is that a vast majority of Iowa students will continue to be educated in public schools. Choice will lead to better student outcomes in both public and private schools because every time Americans have more choice, quality goes up and costs are held down. Iowa schools won’t see mass closures, opportunities in rural Iowa will remain, and student achievement will increase.
Moving Iowa Closer to Becoming a Zero Tax State

This week, the Iowa Senate released two proposals for more historic income tax relief for Iowans. The first bill includes a number of reform measures including accelerating the current income tax cuts, lowering rates even further for both corporate income taxes and individual income taxes, and a plan to generate additional revenue to be used for tax relief. The second bill is a constitutional amendment requiring a two-thirds majority to increase taxes in Iowa and preserve the new flat tax by putting it into the Iowa Constitution.

Since Republicans took the majority in 2017, we have been conservatively budgeting and responsibly funding the priorities of Iowans. At the same time, we’ve been putting money into our reserves and the Taxpayer Relief Fund. Under this proposal, two new funds would be created: the Iowa Taxpayer Relief Trust and the Income Tax Elimination Fund. The trust would receive $2.6 billion from the relief fund. That money, with its own separate oversight board and contracted with IPERS to manage, would be invested and start accruing interest. The interest would be deposited into the Income Tax Elimination Fund. Once the elimination fund meets a series of requirements, tax rates are reduced the following tax year and the money is used to stabilize the budget. This process continues until the income tax is completely eliminated in Iowa.

The opportunity to use the funds from the Tax Relief Fund to provide Iowans with more security, stability, and prosperity is an opportunity we may never have again. It is why the second part of the tax reform package is just as important. The constitutional amendment requires two-thirds support among legislators, because taking more of Iowans’ hard-earned money should require a broad consensus, not the narrowest of majorities. Additionally, by putting a flat tax into the constitution, we can ensure the only thing that changes in the future is the tax rates instead of overly-complicated brackets.

Many of us ran for office looking to make big changes to the state and make it a better place for our friends, neighbors, children, and grandchildren. These proposals would be such a benefit to families and small businesses all across the state. It would also protect the hard work we have done to provide tax relief for Iowa families and give them the confidence to know their hard work is protected now and in the future.

  Bills that Progressed in the Senate this Week

Subcommittees and committee meetings were held on a variety of topics this week including the ownership of Iowa land by foreign entities, religious freedom, traffic cameras and hands-free devices, as well as others. The Senate Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee met and heard from three different agencies or departments on their legislative priorities for this session. As we approach the first major legislative deadline of the year, we will continue discussing topics large and small, while we work through the process and find out what has enough support to move forward.
Director Beth Townsend, Iowa Workforce Development, Ambassador and Former Governor Terry Branstad, World Food Prize, and Executive Director Mike Norris, Southeast Iowa Planning Commission speak with the Senate Economic Development Appropriations Subcommittee during their meeting on Monday.

I hope you will be able to get out and enjoy this recent warm up! It sure makes my morning runs much more enjoyable!

 

Best regards,

Mark