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Biden & Trump campaign in Iowa

Speaking softly, but firmly, former Vice President Joe Biden brought his Presidential campaign to Ottumwa Tuesday (6/11).  The front-runner for the 2020 Democratic nomination spent most of his 30 minute speech criticizing President Donald Trump and his policies.  Saying he “wanted to make America America again”, Biden said the President is an existential threat to America’s core values and went on to say Trump “makes the wrong choices.”

“Iowa farmers have been crushed by his tariff war with China. He thinks that being tough is great.  Well, it’s really easy to be tough when someone else absorbs the pain.”

Biden also laughed at the idea that anyone benefited from the Trump tax cuts and went on to say that he would raise taxes, while complaining about tax loopholes.  As for his current lead in the polls for the Democratic nomination, Biden said that means nothing right now.

“Iowa is a critical, critical state.  I see all these polls; they don’t mean a thing right now.  This is a marathon and the marathon is just beginning.  But at the end of the day, if you can’t cross the line in Iowa, you don’t win the marathon.”

Meanwhile, President Trump was also in Iowa Tuesday.  He visited an ethanol plant in Council Bluffs and spoke about his administration’s move to allow year-round sale of E-15, that’s gas with 15 percent ethanol.

“America must never again be held hostage to foreign suppliers of energy as we were under the Obama/Biden….Sleepy Joe…group.  Sleepy Joe.”

Then last night the President spoke at the Republican Party of Iowa’s annual dinner in West Des Moines.

“Make America great again.  (applause)  Keep America great.  (applause)  I tell you, it slightly beats it out, huh?   You know polls don’t mean a damn thing.  We proved that, didn’t we prove that?  Did anybody ever prove it like we proved it?”

Trump said of Biden, “People don’t respect him. Even the people that he’s running against, they’re saying: ‘Where is he? What happened?'”.      

Granger Smith Selling Charity T-Shirt To Honor Late Son

Granger Smith suffered a huge tragedy last week when his three-year-old son River died in a tragic drowning accident. Now the singer is using his son’s memory to do some good and help others.

Granger’s Yee Yee Apparel site is selling “The River Smith Tribute Shirt,” which features an image of a Yee Yee Excavator with the name “Riv” on its body. The company shares that “Riv’s favorite thing to do was watch excavators scoop up dirt,” adding that they chose the color red because it was River’s favorite.

The post explains that, “100{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} of the proceeds from this shirt will go to Dell Children’s Medical Center in honor of River Kelly Smith,” sharing, “He was cared for by the wonderful staff at Dell Childrens before he passed away.”

This day in 2000, Kenny Chesney makes his first “Tonight Show” appearance

This day in 2000, Kenny Chesney made his first public statement about the infamous “horse incident” following the George Strait Country Music Festival in Buffalo, New York on NBC-TV’s “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.” It also marked his very first “Tonight Show” appearance. Of course, Kenny and buddy Tim McGraw were acquitted of all charges stemming from the brouhaha in an Orchard Park, New York courtroom.

Iowa removes files that exposed governor’s personal info

By RYAN J. FOLEY

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa’s court system has blocked public access to online records detailing Gov. Kim Reynolds’ 2000 drunk driving arrest, saying they inadvertently exposed her sensitive personal information for nine months.

The records contained the governor’s Social Security number, driver’s license number and other information that should not have been made public under court rules. After an inquiry from The Associated Press last week, the court system removed public access to the files after determining that they should not have been accessible online even though they had been since last September.

Iowa Judicial Branch spokesman Steve Davis said that the Warren County clerk of court’s office in Indianola received a request for the paper files on the case Sept. 5, as Reynolds was seeking a four-year term in the November election. After retrieving them from an archive, the worker scanned the files into the Electronic Data Management System so that they could be more easily accessed by court staff in the future, he said.

Under court rules intended to protect personal privacy, the files should have been placed at a security level that allowed only court personnel to access them. Instead, the records were inadvertently made available to all users, including thousands of lawyers, court officials, media outlets and members of the public who use or subscribe to the service.

Iowa became the first state to require electronic filing of all court records in 2015. Court rules require filers to redact confidential personal information, and they can face sanctions for submissions that fail to do so. Paper files for cases that occurred before electronic filing do not have such redactions, and clerks are supposed to restrict access to them if they choose to scan those records into the system.

Davis said paper records related to the August 2000 arrest can still be accessed at the courthouse. Reynolds spokesman Pat Garrett declined comment.

Reynolds has said that the arrest, her second for operating while intoxicated in a year, was a turning point. She says that she got treatment for alcoholism and has been sober since then.

Then the Clarke County treasurer, Reynolds also received a legal break that may have helped save her career in public office.

Reynolds was arrested by an Iowa State Patrol officer on Interstate 35 after a motorist called in a reckless driver. The man reported that he almost lost control of his vehicle after Reynolds’ minivan forced a vehicle traveling in the right lane over to the left and that Reynolds went into the median while traveling 65 miles per hour.

The trooper found Reynolds had an open bottle of whiskey and a blood alcohol content of .228. She agreed to the breath test at the jail after having a relative get in touch with her friend Gary Kimes — a judge who had previously served as Clarke County attorney, a report shows.

An assistant Warren County attorney later charged Reynolds with second-offense operating while intoxicated, noting Reynolds had been convicted of her first offense eight months prior. But the same day, the prosecutor amended the charge to first-offense operating while intoxicated, without giving a reason for the change.

The second-offense charge would have been an aggravated misdemeanor, which means it was an “infamous crime” under state law that could have disqualified Reynolds from voting and holding public office. Instead, she pleaded guilty to the lesser charge a month later and went on to be elected to the state Senate, lieutenant governor and governor.

The Iowa Supreme Court overruled prior precedent in 2014 and declared that only felonies, not aggravated misdemeanors, trigger the loss of voting rights.

Norwalk beats Oskaloosa in Monday Softball Doubleheader

A busy week for the Oskaloosa High softball team got off to a tough start Monday (6/10).  The 5th ranked Indians lost a doubleheader to 14th ranked Norwalk in Oskaloosa.  Norwalk took the first game 1-0 as Haley Downe pitched a two-hitter for the Warriors, striking out 12.  Hayle Hacker took the loss; she allowed six hits and struck out nine.  The nightcap started with an offensive flurry.  It was tied 4-all after three innings.  But Norwalk broke that tie with one run in the sixth and added three more in the seventh for 8-4 win. Faith DeRonde and Ashley Kindley each had two hits for Oskaloosa…. DeRonde was the losing pitcher.  The Indians are 8-4 overall and 2-3 in the Little Hawkeye Conference.  They’ll host Grinnell Tuesday night (6/11) in a makeup game starting at 7:30.

AP analysis: Broad legalization cuts into medical marijuana

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — When states legalize pot for all adults, long-standing medical marijuana programs take a big hit, in some cases losing more than half their registered patients in just a few years, according to a data analysis by The Associated Press.

Much of the decline comes from consumers who, ill or not, got medical cards in their states because it was the only way to buy marijuana legally and then discarded them when broader legalization arrived. But for people who truly rely on marijuana to control ailments such as nausea or cancer pain , the arrival of so-called recreational cannabis can mean fewer and more expensive options.

“It’s ridiculous. The prices are astronomical,” said Beverett, who moved to Sacramento from Texas because medical marijuana is illegal there. “Going to the dispensary is just out of the question if you’re on any kind of fixed income.”

It’s a paradox playing out nationwide as more states take the leap from care-centered medical programs to recreational models aligned with a multibillion-dollar global industry.

States see a “massive exodus” of medical patients when they legalize marijuana for all adults — and then, in many cases, the remaining ones struggle, said David Mangone, director of government affairs for Americans for Safe Access.

“Some of the products that these patients have relied on for consistency — and have used over and over for years — are disappearing off the shelves to market products that have a wider appeal,” he said.

Cost also rises, a problem that’s compounded because many of those who stay in medical programs are low-income and rely on Social Security disability, he said.

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In Oregon, where the medical program shrank the most following recreational legalization, nearly two-thirds of patients gave up their medical cards, the AP found. As patients exited, the market followed: The number of medical-only retail shops fell from 400 to two, and hundreds of growers who contracted with individual patients to grow specific strains walked away.

“Lots of people have started trying to figure out how to make these concentrates and edibles themselves in their kitchen,” said Travis MacKenzie, who runs TJ’s Gardens, which provides free medical cannabis to children with epilepsy. “There are things that we don’t really want people to do at home, but the market conditions are such that people are trying to do more at home.”

The numbers compiled by the AP through public records requests and publicly available documents provide a snapshot of the evolution of marijuana as more states — Michigan was last in the door, and Illinois is about to follow — legalize pot for all adults.

Ten states have both medical and recreational markets. Four of them — Oregon, Nevada, Colorado, Alaska — have the combination of an established recreational marketplace and data on medical patients. The AP analysis found all four saw a drop in medical patients after broader legalization.

Marijuana at a medical-only marijuana dispensary in Oregon. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)

In Alaska, the state with the second-biggest decline, medical cardholders dropped by 63{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} after recreational sales began in 2016, followed by Nevada with nearly 40{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} since 2017 and Colorado with 19{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} since 2014.

The largest of all the legal markets, California, doesn’t keep data on medical patients, but those who use it say their community has been in turmoil since recreational pot debuted last year. That’s partly because the state ended unlicensed cannabis cooperatives where patients shared their homegrown pot for free.

There is limited scientific data backing many of the health claims made by medical marijuana advocates, and the U.S. government still classifies cannabis in any form as a controlled substance like LSD and cocaine.

Still, the popularity of medical pot is rising as more states legalize it. There are 33 such states, including the politically conservative recent additions of Oklahoma and Utah. Oklahoma has among the more liberal guidelines for use and has approved more than 100,000 patient licenses since voters backed legalization last June.

Getting a precise nationwide count of medical patients is impossible because California, Washington and Maine don’t keep data. However, absent those states, the AP found at the end of last year nearly 1.4 million people were active patients in a medical marijuana program. The AP estimates if those states were added the number would increase by about 1 million.

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As more states legalize marijuana for all adults, some who have been using it medically are feeling disenfranchised.

In Michigan, where medical marijuana has been legal for over a decade, the creation of a new licensing system for medical dispensaries has sparked court challenges as the state prepares for the advent of general marijuana sales later this year. A cancer patient there filed a federal lawsuit this month, alleging the slow licensing pace has created a shortage of the products she needs to maintain her weight and control pain.

In Washington, medical patients feel they were pushed aside when that state merged its medical and general-use markets, which also is what’s happening in California.

Los Angeles dispensary owner Jerred Kiloh sells medical and recreational marijuana and said those markets are quickly becoming one, since few companies are going to produce products for a vanishing group of customers. He said his medical business has dipped to 7{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} of overall sales and is dropping month to month.

“It’s going to be gone,” said Kiloh, president of the LA trade group United Cannabis Business Association.

In Oregon, regulators are struggling to find a path that preserves the state’s trailblazing low-cost medical pot program while tamping down on a still-thriving black market. A special state commission formed to oversee the market transition put out a report earlier this year that found affordability and lack of access are major hurdles for Oregon’s patients.

“Patients have needs. Consumers have wants,” said Anthony Taylor, a medical marijuana advocate who sits on the Oregon Cannabis Commission. “Patients are in crisis right now.”

General legalization has “indelibly changed the medical market,” and regulators want to identify the patients most affected by the transition, said Steve Marks, executive director of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, which oversees Oregon’s recreational marijuana program.

Lawmakers just passed a bill that includes language that will allow the commission to explore a pilot program for home delivery of medical cannabis to patients in underserved areas, he said.

Meanwhile, Oregon U.S. Attorney Billy Williams has demanded lawmakers get control of excess weed being trafficked out of state and cited the medical industry as a potential source of illicit cannabis.

As a result, lawmakers are “paring the medical program back to what it probably should have been from the outset,” said Ben Pirie, a cannabis law attorney in Portland.

“There are patients with legitimate needs, but there are many more growing way more cannabis than needed to address those needs — and what do you do with that?” Pirie said, adding “there is this sweet spot in the middle that’s difficult to hit.”

Oregon law allows medical patients to shop tax-free at general-use stores, and recreational stores can sell medical pot, although those products comprise just 8.5{99cd714f394079a7f0ed2eb1518dd31342ff3ceb5b6c267c3ad8acd5b5a7d66b} of their sales.

Meanwhile, the rules that came with general legalization put lower caps on the potency of edibles. That means medical customers often pay more for the same dose they got before broad legalization.

Medical cardholders, for example, used to buy gummies or chocolate bars infused with 400 mg of THC, the high-inducing element of cannabis. Now, edibles are capped at 100 mg for medical patients but cost the same or more.

“Who, with any medical condition, needs to be eating 20 pieces of candy a day?” asked Erich Berkovitz, Oregon’s last remaining state-licensed medical marijuana processor.

___

Patients can also grow a small number of plants, but that doesn’t address the needs of the many medical patients who don’t smoke and instead rely on marijuana-infused edibles or tinctures.

Bill Blazina, a Navy veteran, used the state’s medical program in 2013 when he was diagnosed with esophageal cancer. But the 73-year-old grandfather found the landscape had changed dramatically when he was diagnosed last year with a new cancer in his lung.

The highly concentrated marijuana oil he took before — and wanted to take again — was selling for $60 a gram, his daily dose. A two-month supply would cost thousands at a retail pot shop, so Blazina connected with what he calls a “compassionate grower” who sold him the same amount at cost for $750, a transaction that fell in a legal gray area.

“I didn’t even know his name,” said Blazina, sitting in a rocking chair in his home in the tiny coastal town of Waldport. “I met him … and he’d bring it to me and smile, and I’d give him money and say, ‘Thank you,’ and I’d be on my way.”

Blazina’s high-potency marijuana oil in Oregon. (AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus)

After surgery and chemo, his cancer is in remission, but he still swallows a tiny drop of the oil on a piece of tortilla twice a day. He’s learned how to make it himself: He and his neighbor combine their eight legal plants, pulverize a pound (0.45 kilograms) of marijuana flower, steep it in grain alcohol, strain it and then simmer the resulting mix of alcohol and plant juice in a rice cooker until only dark black oil is left.

A pound of that flower at a retail store would be about $2,000, Blazina said.

“I think the regulations should go toward more access and how do we get more access, realistically, for the people who need it medically,” he said, before taking his afternoon dose. “It prohibits people who don’t have the ability to grow from getting the medicine they need because it drives the price up — and I don’t see that as being helpful at all.”

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Kastanis is an AP data reporter in Los Angeles. Associated Press writers David Eggert in Lansing, Michigan, and Michael R. Blood in Los Angeles contributed to this report. Flaccus, Kastanis and Blood are members of AP’s marijuana beat team. Follow Flaccus on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/gflaccus. Follow AP’s complete marijuana coverage: https://apnews.com/Marijuana.

Biden Preview

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden plans to use his visit to Iowa to criticize President Donald Trump’s economic policy as hurting those very voters who helped elect him.  Biden says in remarks prepared for delivery Tuesday afternoon (6/11) in Ottumwa that Trump “thinks he’s being tough” and “it’s easy to be tough when someone else is feeling the pain.” Trump was the first Republican to carry the economically struggling county since Dwight Eisenhower.  Biden asks in his prepared remarks, “How many sleepless nights do you think Trump has had over what he’s doing to America’s farmers? Zero.”  The former Vice President will speak at 12:30 Tuesday afternoon at the Bridge View Center in Ottumwa.  The No Coast Network will be there and have full coverage for you at 5:00.

John Rich’s new hit benefits families of fallen soldiers

John Rich has a new hit on his hands. The singer’s recently-released tune, “Shut Up About Politics,” featuring Fox News’ The Five (Greg Gutfield, Donna Brazile, Dana Perino, Jesse Watters, and Juan Williams), is at number one on the Country Digital Song Sales chart, thanks to 33,000 downloads sold. It is also at 17 on the Hot Country Songs chart.

The tune also debuts on the “Billboard” all-genre Hot 100 at 91, making it Rich’s second solo Hot 100 hit. He previously made it to 95 with 2009’s “Shuttin’ Detroit Down,” which made it to 75.

Proceeds from the song will be donated to Folds of Honor, an organization providing educational scholarships to children and spouses of fallen and disabled U.S. service members.

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