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Iowa House delegation calls for more Johnson & Johnson vaccine

Iowa’s congressional delegation is urging the Biden Administration to restructure the state’s weekly allocation of Covid vaccine. The group says putting more doses of Johnson and Johnson’s vaccine in the mix make sense. Representative Ashley Hinson of Marion says pharmacies in rural parts of the state cannot afford the freezers required to store the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.

 “Rural and low income Iowans face unique barriers to receiving the Covid vaccine,” Hinson says. “One of the challenges, of course, is storing the vaccine in cool enough temperatures.”

Congresswoman Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Ottumwa says prioritizing distribution of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine to rural areas would reduce the burden on rural health care providers and county health officials. Miller-Meeks is a former director of the Iowa Department of Public Health.

Maren Morris, Miranda Lambert & More To Perform On Sunday’s GRAMMY Awards

The GRAMMYs are less than a week away and we finally know who’ll be performing on the show.

The Recording Academy just announced this year’s lineup, including Brand Carlile, Maren Morris, Miranda Lambert and Mickey Guyton, as well as Taylor Swift, her first performance in five years, Harry Styles, and BTS.

The Recording Academy confirms the performers will all come together “while still safely apart,” with Cardi B, Billie Eilish, Dua Lipa, Chris Martin, Megan Thee Stallion, Post Malone, Roddy Ricch, John MayerDaBaby, Lil Baby, and Brittany Howard also confirmed to perform.

The show, hosted by Trevor Noah, will also pay tribute to independent music venues impacted by the pandemic, with bartenders and box office managers from venues like Los Angeles’ Troubadour, New York’s Apollo Theater, Nashville’s Station Inn and more presenting categories during the show.

The 63rd Annual GRAMMY Awards go down Sunday, live from Los Angeles, airing on CBS at 8 pm ET.

Source: GRAMMY

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1972, the “Kiss An Angel Good Mornin'” single by Charley Pride was certified gold.
  • Today in 1975, Conway Twitty’s “Linda On My Mind” hit the top fo the Billboard country chart.
  • Today in 1980, Willie Nelson’s single, “My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys,” topped the charts.
  • Today in 1982, the single, “Elvira,” by Oak Ridge Boys was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1984, Ricky Skaggs and his wife, Sharon, welcomed their daughter, Molly Kate into the world.
  • Today in 1991, Dolly Parton’s “Eagle When She Flies” album was released.
  • Today in 1991, the “Love Can Build A Bridge” album by the Judds was certified gold.
  • Today in 1993, the “Best Of Vince Gill” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 1994, Suzy Bogguss’ “Greatest Hits” album was released.
  • Today in 1996, Garth Brooks’ self-titled debut album was certified for sales of 7-million copies. On the same day, he topped the charts with his single, “The Beaches of Cheyenne.”
  • Today in 1999, at the Academy of Country Music’s “Hat” awards, Faith Hill earned six nominations. Garth Brooks, Steve Wariner, and Brooks & Dunn each got four.
  • Today in 2003, Emerson Drive’s Pat Allingham married his longtime girlfriend, Krista Williamson.
  • Today in 2003, CMT’s “Most Wanted Live” featured the premiere of Daryl Worley’s video “Have You Forgotten?”
  • Today in 2006, at the Academy of Country Music Awards, Brad Paisley was nominated six times, Brooks & Dunn and Sugarland were each nominated five times, and Rascal Flatts and Carrie Underwood four times.
  • Today in 2007, Carrie Underwood sang “Wasted” on “American Idol.”
  • Today in 2011, Sara Evans released her new album, “Stronger.”
  • Today in 2015, Rascal Flatts performed the national anthem before the Kobalt 400 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway (Kevin Harvick won the race).
  • Today in 2015, RaeLynn kicks off a weeklong Music In Our Schools tour with a performance at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida.
  • Today in 2017, Jaren Johnston left the stage during The Cadillac Three’s show at the Commodore Ballroom in Vancouver, British Columbia, to deal with a male fan who’s abusing a woman…he broke his guitar in the process.

Coronavirus update

Two people from Wapello County and one from Marion County are among 13 new deaths from COVID-19 reported Friday (3/5) by the Iowa Department of Public Health.  That brings the state’s death total for the pandemic to 5549.  And another 405 Iowans have tested positive for coronavirus, bringing the total for the pandemic as of Friday to 338,670. Seven new positive tests for COVID-19 have been reported in Marion County, six in Wapello County, three in Mahaska County, two in Poweshiek County, one new positive coronavirus case has been reported in both Monroe and Jasper Counties and no new cases in Keokuk County.

Senate nears relief bill votes after half-day GOP delay

By ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate steered on Friday toward a voting marathon on Democrats’ $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill after enduring an extraordinary half-day holdup forced by a Republican foe of President Joe Biden’s top legislative priority.

The chamber planned to begin voting around midday on a mountain of amendments, mostly by GOP opponents and virtually all of which were destined to be rejected. That would set the Senate on course toward approving its reworked version of the massive measure, probably over the weekend, and shipping it back to the House so it could whisk the final package to Biden for his signature.

Moments after the Senate took up the legislation Thursday, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., forced the chamber’s clerks to read aloud the entire 628-page measure. The exhausting task took the staffers 10 hours and 44 minutes and ended shortly after 2 a.m. EST, with Johnson alternately sitting at his desk and pacing around the mostly empty chamber.

Democratic leaders made more than a dozen late additions to their package on Thursday. That reflected their need to cement unanimous support from all their senators — plus Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote — to succeed in the precariously divided 50-50 chamber.

The Senate’s 51-50 vote to start debating the package, with Harris pushing Democrats over the top, underscored how they were navigating the package through Congress with virtually no margin for error. In the House their majority is a scrawny 10 votes.

The bill, aimed at battling the killer virus and nursing the staggered economy back to health, will provide direct payments of up to $1,400 to most Americans. There’s also money for COVID-19 vaccines and testing, aid to state and local governments, help for schools and the airline industry, tax breaks for lower-earners and families with children, and subsidies for health insurance.

“We are not going to be timid in the face of a great challenge,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

The new provisions offered items appealing to all manner of Democrats. Progressives got money boosting feeding programs, federal subsidies for health care for workers who lose jobs, tax-free student loans, and money for public broadcasting and consumer protection investigations.

Moderates won funds for rural health care, language assuring minimum amounts of money for smaller states and a prohibition on states receiving aid using the windfalls to cut taxes. And for everyone, there was money for infrastructure, cultural venues, start-up companies and afterschool programs.

Even with the late revisions, there was a good chance lawmakers will make yet another one and vote to pare back the bill’s $400 weekly emergency unemployment benefits to $300.

That potential change could also extend those emergency payments another month, through September. It was described by aides and a lobbyist who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal conversations.

Biden and Senate leaders had agreed Wednesday to retain the $400 weekly jobless payments included in the version of the relief bill the House approved Saturday. The reduction to $300 — which seemed likely to occur once the Senate begins a “vote-a-rama” on scores of amendments later this week — seemed to reflect a need to secure support from moderate Democrats.

It also left House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the task of keeping her chamber’s numerous progressives on board. Liberals already suffered a blow when their No. 1 priority — a federal minimum wage increase to $15 hourly that was included in the House package — was booted from the bill in the Senate for violating the chamber’s rules and for lack of moderates’ support.

In another bargain that satisfied moderates, Biden and Senate Democrats agreed Wednesday to tighten eligibility for the direct checks to individuals. The new provision completely phases out the $1,400 payments for individuals earning at least $80,000 and couples making $160,000, well lower than the original ceilings.

“My hope is they don’t screw around with it too much,” Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., said of the Senate in an interview. “If they do there could be some problems.”

Congress wants to send the bill to Biden before March 14, when a previous round of emergency benefits for people tossed out of work by the pandemic expires.

Johnson told reporters he was forcing the bill’s reading to “shine the light on this abusive and obscene amount of money. ” Schumer said Johnson would “accomplish little more than a few sore throats for the Senate clerks.”

Asked about GOP delays, Biden told reporters he’s talked to Republican lawmakers and added, “We’re keeping everybody informed.” Biden met last month with Republican senators who offered a plan one-third the size of Democrats’ proposal, and there have been no signs since of serious talks.

Johnson’s move pointed to a larger GOP argument: Democrats were ramming an overpriced bill through that disregarded that growing numbers of vaccinations and other signs suggesting the country’s pandemic ordeal is beginning to ease.

“Instead of heading into a dark tunnel, we’re accelerating out of it,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

The economic recovery began to stall late last year as the virus surged, causing a shortfall in hiring in recent months. Employers added just 49,000 jobs in January and cut 227,000 jobs in December. Economists estimate that the February employment report being released Friday will show gains of 175,000, not nearly enough to swiftly recover the nearly 10 million jobs lost to the pandemic-induced recession.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates economic growth will exceed 4% this year without Biden’s rescue package. Republicans cite that as evidence the economy is pointed upward, but Democrats say a strong economic stimulus is still needed to prevent a relapse.

“It’s a crisis that is still very much with us, and it is deadly, deadly serious,” Schumer said.

___

Associated Press writers Josh Boak, Alexandra Jaffe and Lisa Mascaro contributed to this report.

With gradual snow melt, Iowa’s spring flood risk remains ‘normal’

BY 

Iowa was inundated by record or near-record flooding in 2019, followed by severe-to-extreme drought in 2020, drought that’s endured into 2021.

What will this spring hold, as planting season is mere weeks away? Nathan Young is associate director of the Iowa Flood Center, based at the University of Iowa.

“The likelihood of flooding is normal for this time of year, for the most part,” Young says. “It’s slightly elevated in some parts of the state where we’ve got significant snowpack, like in southeastern Iowa. We’ve had a nice, gradual snow melt over the past couple of weeks so that risk is declining. All in all, I think it’s going to be a pretty typical year.”

It’s been a cold and snowy winter, with some parts of the state reporting snowfall just during February ten to 14 inches deeper than usual. Still, so far, there are no indications of major flood threats. The flood center has a network of about 300 sensors placed on bridges in dozens of waterways all across the state.

“They allow us to anticipate floods during the events as well as to understand the long-term history of water levels at that location,” Young says, “so we can make forecasts or estimate the long-term likelihood of flooding throughout the state.”

Those sensors measure river levels every 15 minutes and communicate data to the center’s Iowa Flood Information System platform. It’s a Google Maps-based web interface that visualizes real-time flood information for the entire state and is freely available to all — including the National Weather Service.

“The Weather Service, when they make their official flood forecasts, they use an ensemble of different predictions and ours is one of the ones they take into account,” Young says. “There are some rivers where they don’t make forecasts, especially some of the smaller rivers and in those locations, our information is the only information available.”

A wealth of information about the state’s waterways is accessible to anyone on the Iowa Flood Information System website.

Ottumwa road construction notes

Here are a couple of traffic notes for Ottumwa.  Starting Friday morning (3/5), the 200 block of South Ransom Street will be closed to through traffic.  Residents will still be able to get to their homes, but otherwise, drivers are asked to use an alternate route.  And traffic is limited to one lane at the intersection of Finley and Ward in Ottumwa.  It’s recommended you use an alternate route.  Both road projects are expected to take one week.

Mahaska County COVID-19 vaccine update

Mahaska County Public Health Director Patty Malloy gives the No Coast Network an update on COVID-19 vaccines in the county.

“Vaccine distribution is going well.  We’re in the phase IB, which is our 65 and older population.  And then we’re working through the different tiers.  Tier I was our first responders, teachers, firefighters, preschool and child care workers.  And now we’re into the Tier II, so we have some of those food, agriculture, distribution and manufacturing (jobs)…if they work in an area where they can’t social distance.”

Malloy also says she doesn’t know when doses of the new Johnson and Johnson coronavirus vaccine will be coming to Mahaska County.

Miranda Lambert Announces New Album & New Bar

Miranda Lambert just surprised fans with news of a new album. The singer announced she’s releasing “The Marfa Tapes,” a collaboration with Jack Ingram and Jon Randall, on May 7th.

As the title suggests, the album was recorded in Marfa, Texas, and Miranda shares that the songs on it are “raw.”

“You can hear the wind blowing, the cows mooing…,” Miranda writes, “We wanted you to feel like you were right there with us, sitting around the campfire, escaping the world, disappearing into the music.”

The trio also released the first song off the record, “In His Arms.”

But that’s not the only exciting Miranda news. According to the Nashville Business Journal, Miranda is set to be the first female country star to get her very own bar on Nashville’s Lower Broadway, Miranda Lambert’s Casa Rosa. Miranda is teaming with TC Restaurant Group for the bar and restaurant, the same company behind similar country star-backed establishments, Jason Aldean’s Kitchen and Rooftop Bar, Luke Bryan’s Luke’s 32 Bridge Food + Drink, Florida Georgia Line’s FGL House, and more.

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