|
Two Mount Pleasant School Board Meetings
The Mount Pleasant School Board meets for a special session Monday followed by a work session. The special session begins at 6 pm and will include approval of the master contract with the union. The board will be asked to approve a land lease agreement for the Ag Education Land Lab. Other items on the agenda include a memorandum of understanding for the I Jag program and personnel items. The Board will set the public hearing date for the new fiscal budget and go into closed session to discuss the purchase of real estate. The work session begins at 6:30 pm and will focus on next year’s capital projects and the spending plan for the penny sales tax. Both meetings will be held in the High School Media Center.
From Representative Taylor Collins
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
From Senator Mark Lofgren
– Week 11 –
Dear Senate District 48
This Week in the Senate
Week Eleven of the 2023 Session focused again on floor debate. Next week, Week 12, will include another major legislative deadline.
Hands Free Bill Passes the Senate with Strong Support
One bill debated this week was Senate File 547, known as the “hands free” bill. This is a piece of legislation that I have personally worked on for several years. Being a runner and having many friends who are avid bicyclists, this bill is important to me and to many whom I consider friends. The bill is designed to keep Iowa roads safer from the dangers of cell phone usage while driving. Current Iowa law prohibits sending and viewing of text messages while driving. SF 547 would update the law, making it illegal to use electronic devices while driving unless it is used in a voice-activated/hands free mode. I was proud to have the bill pass the Senate on Wednesday with strong bipartisan support. Hands-free legislation is supported by law enforcement and has been shown to reduce traffic deaths and injuries in states with similar legislation. Strong, bipartisan support confirms the importance of this common sense legislation. I look forward to its vote in the Iowa House soon.
Providing Access to Fresh Milk
Senate File 315 also passed the Senate this week with bipartisan support. This bill allows for the sale of fresh, or unpasteurized, milk and dairy products for small producers with 10 dairy animals or less directly to consumers. The bill would allow for legal selling of fresh milk but also establishes regulations to ensure consumer safety. Requirements will be in place for proper labeling of fresh milk and for proper veterinary care for the dairy animals. Fresh milk may only be distributed directly to consumers through individual orders and cannot be distributed in restaurants or grocery stores. The demand for this kind of dairy market is growing, and this bill allows for small producers to safely produce in this expanding market.
Protecting Iowa’s Welfare System from Error, Fraud and Abuse
This week the Senate made progress toward rooting out error, fraud, and abuse in Iowa’s welfare system. This issue has been a priority in the Iowa Senate for the past five years. On Wednesday, the Senate took a strong step forward with the passage of SF 494. The bill establishes updated and effective income and identity verification parameters for public assistance programs such as SNAP, Medicaid, FIP, and CHIP by using private sector technology to identify possible errors and fraud. Eligibility will be examined through employment information, income records, incarceration, and other information from federal and state sources. The purpose of welfare programs is to help those in need, and to properly do it, a system needs to be in place to prevent erroneous payments taking resources away from those in need.
This bill also refines asset limits to ensure wealthy people without typical income are not abusing the welfare system by collecting benefits. Iowans have routinely shown their support for common-sense safeguards on public assistance programs. SF 494 puts those policies into effect by implementing electronic verification used in the private sector every day and saving the taxpayers millions of dollars per year.
Reforming Iowa’s Certificate of Need Legislation
Improving and ensuring access to important health care services has been a priority this year. On Wednesday, the Senate passed Senate File 506 to reform Iowa’s Certificate of Need law. Certificate of Need (CON) was a federal policy designed to assess the needs of health care facilities in a community and help improve access to care, while controlling costs by avoiding duplication. In Iowa this expanded to not only include the physical location of a facility, but also the equipment and services provided at that location. While CON laws may have been beneficial at some point in time, we now find them to be hindering competition and innovation in the areas most in need.
Senate File 506 reforms Iowa’s CON law so it no longer applies to community mental health facilities, birth centers, and rehabilitation facilities. Institutional health facilities, like hospitals, nursing facilities, residential facilities, and ambulatory surgical centers, would still be under CON with targeted regulations. Under this bill, institutional health facilities would not need to apply for CON to replace equipment, buy new equipment, or change services.
Fifteen other states have repealed or amended their laws since the federal policy was repealed in 1986, including California, Texas, Utah, Idaho, Kansas, and South Dakota, because they have not been effective in controlling costs or improving access to services, the original intent of CON legislation. According to the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, Iowans would likely see lower health care spending per capita, lower physician spending per capita, and potentially see an increase in facilities, especially in rural areas.
Health care access, cost, and the need for quality services are topics we hear about from our constituents often, and we want to ensure Iowans have access to the care they need, when they need it. This bill is one way we can help Iowans and our rural communities by easing government regulations that are not producing the outcomes they were intended to create.
Parental Bill of Rights Moves Forward
Since online learning became the norm during the pandemic in March of 2020, parents have become more aware of and involved in the content taught to their students and the materials available to them at their school. Ensuring parents are part of their children’s education has become a nationwide conversation and that holds true here in Iowa.
Parents and community members have routinely contacted us to describe the explicit materials available to their young students. They naturally are unnerved by that content and believe the delicate topics of gender and sexuality are best taught in the home. Sexual development and sexually explicit content are properly determined to be issues explained in the context of the moral and religious beliefs of Iowa families. SF 496 was a bill introduced by Governor Reynolds to address and enhance parental involvement in their children’s education.
This bill, passed by the Senate on Wednesday, does not “ban” books, does not implement speech codes, nor does it censor materials. SF 496 simply implements common sense and protects the innocence of elementary students. It is completely reasonable for sexually explicit content to be unavailable to elementary students in their school. It is completely reasonable to ensure parents are informed of their children’s activities in school, especially on an issue as sensitive as gender identity. It is also completely reasonable to prohibit discussions of gender identity and sexual activity to kindergarteners and elementary students.
Instead of hiding information from parents, in SF 496 Senate Republicans have introduced the concept of parental rights into Iowa law. The principle has appeared in state judicial rulings for nearly a century, and it is now one step closer to being in Iowa law. To sum it up, parental rights means that parents bear the ultimate and fundamental responsibility for the upbringing of their child. Students are not mere wards of the state and parents must have the ability to guide their education, moral and religious upbringing, and the preparation for their future.
Visitors This Week
Visitors this week included representatives from the Family YMCA organization and representatives from NENA-911, the National Emergency Number Association. Both were at the capitol to discuss their legislative priorities.
Janet Kay Crawford
Janet Kay Crawford, age 86, of Washington, Iowa, died Wednesday, March 22, 2023, at the University of Iowa Hospital following a sudden illness.
Celebration of life services will be held 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, March 28, 2023, at the Jones & Eden Funeral Home with Pastor Anthony DeVaughn officiating. Calling hours will begin at 2:00 p.m. Monday at the Jones & Eden Funeral Home where the family will be present to receive friends from 5:00 until 7:00 p.m. Interment will take place at the Elm Grove Cemetery in Washington. In lieu of flowers, memorials have been established for Paws and More Animal Shelter. Online condolences may be sent for Janet’s family at www.jonesfh.com.
Janet was born February 5, 1937, in Washington, Iowa, the daughter of Charles and Wilma (Brinning) Crone. She attended school in Washington, Iowa. Janet was united in marriage to Dwaine William Crawford on December 30, 1954, in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa.
Janet worked as a waitress at Willows Supper Club and was later a bartender at the Washington Bowling Alley. She worked in housekeeping at the Washington County Hospital and later at Halcyon House until her retirement at age 79.
She was a member of the United Methodist Church in Washington. Janet enjoyed reading, knitting, doing crafts and decorating her home. She also enjoyed her garden and tending to her house plants. Janet was an avid Iowa Hawkeyes and St. Louis Cardinals fan. She enjoyed the company of her family and friends and attending her grandchildren’s events.
She is survived by her daughter Debbie Ponder of St. Louis, Missouri; son, Gary (Kathy) Crawford of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa; son, Mark (Beth) Crawford of Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin; daughter, Lisa (Roger) Crawford of Washington Iowa; 13 grandchildren; 14 great-grandchildren; brother, Tod (Cheryl) Crone of Washington, Iowa; sister-in-law, Nettie Crone of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; brother-in-law, Ron (Judy) Crawford of Iowa City, Iowa; as well as many nieces and nephews.
Janet was preceded in death by her parents; husband, Dwaine Crawford; son, Ronald Crawford; daughter, Nancy Crawford; one granddaughter, Kiley Crawford; and brother, Rick Crone.
Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau is partnering with law enforcement across the state to help curb the epidemic of distracted driving.
April 3-10, the Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau is partnering with law enforcement across the state to help curb the epidemic of distracted driving.
In 2022, 9,201 crashes on Iowa roadways were because of distracted/inattentive drivers. These accidents are responsible for 20 deaths, 3,652 injured persons, and over $81 million dollars in property damage. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports 32,483 people died in distraction-affected crashes across the country from 2011 to 2020.
In Iowa, distracted driving is a primary law which means law enforcement officers can stop any driver who is texting (reading, writing, or sending) or using any portable electronic device, unless the motor vehicle is at a complete stop and off the traveled portion of the roadway.
Alex Dinkla with the Iowa State Patrol says, “Distracted driving is a leading cause of vehicle crashes on Iowa’s roads, and most of this distraction is attributed to using electronic devices. People know texting and driving is dangerous and illegal, but they do it anyway, and it puts others at risk.”
Beginning April 3, drivers will see increased law enforcement efforts. Officers will be stopping and ticketing those caught texting and driving. You drive, you text, you pay.
The GTSB encourages drivers to use hands free options when engaging a mobile device in their vehicle. Drivers can also limit distractions by enabling the ‘driving’ focus on phones.
The Governor’s Traffic Safety Bureau works with city, county, state, and local organizations to develop and implement strategies to reduce deaths and injuries on Iowa’s roadways using federally funded grants.
WACO Principal Receives Award
Tim Bartels, WACO Secondary Principal, is this year recipient of the Iowa State Education Association’s TEAM (Together Educators and Administrators Make It Happen) Award. The award honors a school administrator who has worked to create a collaborative, collegial working environment for all staff in the school building or district. This award is given to one administrator in the state of Iowa. Mr. Bartels will be honored this summer at a luncheon on August 1st in Des Moines.
Super Market Sweep Puts Over $1,000 of Food in the Cup Pantry
Five businesses raced up and down the aisle of the Mount Pleasant HyVee filling shopping carts with items for the Fellowship Cup in Mount Pleasant. Beck’s Seeds won the traveling trophy for coming closest to $250 but Two Rivers Bank won the Greatest Grabber award for collecting $314 worth of food items in the five minutes allowed for the three member teams to shop. A total of $1,285 in items were trucked off to the Fellowship Cup for the Cup’s food pantry by the five participating teams….Farm Bureau Financial Services, Beck’s, Two Rivers Bank, Farm Credit Services and Iowa State Bank of Fairfield.