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Snapchat Inc. to pay $15 million to settle discrimination and harassment lawsuit in California

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Snapchat Inc. will pay $15 million to settle a lawsuit brought by California’s civil rights agency that claimed the company discriminated against female employees, failed to prevent workplace sexual harassment and retaliated against women who complained.

The settlement with Snapchat Inc., which owns the popular disappearing-message app by the same name, covers women who worked for the company in California between 2014 and 2024, the California Civil Rights Department announced Wednesday. The settlement is subject to court approval.

The agreement resolves a more than three-year investigation over claims that the Santa Monica, California-based company discriminated against female employees when it came to pay and promotions, the department said in a statement.

The bulk of the settlement money will go to employees who faced discrimination at Snapchat Inc., California officials said.

“In California, we’re proud of the work of our state’s innovators who are a driving force of our nation’s economy,” said Kevin Kish, director of California’s civil rights agency. “This settlement with Snapchat demonstrates a shared commitment to a California where all workers have a fair chance at the American Dream. Women are entitled to equality in every job, in every workplace, and in every industry.”

Snapchat Inc. said it disagrees with the agency’s claims but that it decided to settle to avoid costly and lengthy litigation.

“We care deeply about our commitment to maintain a fair and inclusive environment at Snap, and do not believe we have any ongoing systemic pay equity, discrimination, harassment, or retaliation issues against women,” the company said in a statement.

Snapchat Inc. grew from 250 employees in 2015 to over 5,000 in 2022. But the growth didn’t translate to advancement for female employees who “were told to wait their turn, were actively discouraged from applying for promotions, or lost promotion opportunities to less qualified male colleagues,” California officials said.

In particular, women in engineering roles, which account for about 70% of Snap’s workforce, found barriers when trying to advance from entry-level positions, according to the complaint.

California’s civil rights agency also said in its lawsuit that women were sexually harassed and that when they spoke up, they faced retaliation that included negative performance reviews and termination. Male managers routinely promoted male employees over more qualified women, the agency said.

“Women were told, both implicitly and explicitly, that they were second-class citizens at Snap,” the agency said in its lawsuit.

The settlement will require the company to hire an independent consultant to evaluate its compensation and promotion policies and retain an outside auditor of its sexual harassment, retaliation, and discrimination compliance. The company will also have to train its staff on preventing discrimination, retaliation and sexual harassment in the workplace, officials said.

Snapchat Inc. also agreed to provide information to all employees about their right to report harassment or discrimination without fear of retaliation.

You have until July 1st to nominate a State Fair ‘Iowan of the Day’

By Ethan Hewett (Radio Iowa)

The deadline is approaching for nominations for the 2024 Iowan of the Day Awards at the Iowa State Fair. Ten people will be singled out for the title during the August event.

The fair’s Chloe Hamaker says the Iowan of the Day program is an opportunity to recognize those people who are positively impacting their towns and their neighbors.

“We are just looking to highlight Iowans who demonstrate integrity and leadership and hard work,” Hamaker says. “Those who are always volunteering and helping out in their communities.”

Winners of the Iowan of the Day receive a day of recognition at the fair, gate admission for four, 200-dollars in cash, use of a golf cart at the fair, V-I-P parking, and more. Hamaker says they have seen individuals from six to 90 years old receive the recognition.

“There was one little girl who helped raise funds to pay for milk for all the kids in her class — if their family couldn’t afford milk in their school lunch program, she raised money so they could have milk with their lunch,” she said. “Then there are individuals who have just volunteered a lot of time with the youth, or Big Brother/Big Sister programs or volunteered in the hospitals, different things like that.”

Nominations from 2021, 2022 and 2023 will also be reconsidered. While there are no age limitations, Hamaker says nominees do need to be Iowa residents and nominating someone is easy.

“We just ask that you submit a letter of nomination as well as any letter of references from other individuals who you think know them well and any supplemental information, such as news articles or other awards that they’ve won,” she says.

Nomination forms are available at blueribbonfoundation.org. All nominations are due by July 1st.

Iowa’s Scholastic Clay Target Program crowns youth sporting clays champions

DES MOINES — Athletes from 36 Iowa teams participated in the 2024 Iowa Scholastic Clay Target Program (SCTP) Sporting Clays Championships held June 13-15 at Black Oak Clays near Pella. The course was set by Dave Koch of Little Fox River Sporting Clays in Missouri.

Trenton Hol of North Mahaska Shooting Sports won the Men’s Varsity Division, Erin Mathes from the Pella Shooters Club won the Ladies Varsity Division, Pella Christian won the Varsity Squad Division, and Harlan won the Junior Varsity Squad Division. Find the complete list of all results online at  https://app.sssfonline.com/nationals/4148.

Men’s Varsity Individual Sporting Clays

  1. Trenton Hol, North Mahaska Shooting Sports
  2. John Boender, Pella Christian Eagles
  3. Logan Sease, Ankeny Centennial Jaguars
  4. Owen Playle, Ankeny Centennial Jaguars
  5. Hunter Uitermarkt, PC Eagles
  6. Kaden Miller, Des Moines Clay Crushers

Women’s Varsity Individual Sporting Clays

  1. Erin Mathes, Pella Shooters Club
  2. Quincy O’Donnell, Underwood Youth Trap Club
  3. Madalynn Schroder, Pella Shooters Club
  4. Makenna Six, Pella Christian Eagles
  5. Lauren Harmon, Ankeny Centennial Jaguars Shooting Sports
  6. Megan Vos, Oskaloosa Shooting Team

Sporting Clays Varsity Squads 

  1. Pella Christian Eagles Varsity Gold Squad, 514 points
  2. Ankeny Centennial Jaguars Squad, 506 points
  3. Pella Christian Eagles Varsity White, 480 points
  4. Des Moines Clay Crushers Varsity 1 Squad, 463 points
  5. Ankeny Hawks Shooting Sports Squad, 456 points

Iowa’s SCTP teams will attend the last competition of the season on June 20-23 at the New Pioneer Gun Club in Waukee, for the Iowa Scholastic Clay Target Program Skeet Championship.

Mahaska Health’s 5th Annual Men’s Health Event and Tractor Ride is on Saturday

OSKALOOSA — In recognition of June being Men’s Health Month, Mahaska Health is hosting an event at the Mahaska County Fairgrounds on Saturday, June 22nd, 2024. Members from the community are invited to receive free services, learn about their health, and bring their tractors for an optional tractor ride around Oskaloosa.

This year is the 5th annual Men’s Health Event and Tractor Ride. Guests can receive free cholesterol tests, blood pressure checks, sleep assessments, PSA testing, and other vital screenings from 8:00 am to 12:00 pm. The tractor ride, an optional addition for participants, starts at 10:00 am heading south out of the fairgrounds.

“We’re excited to connect with our community and promote health and well-being at this event,” shared Dr. Eric Miller, Family Medicine Physician and Accountable Care Medical Director. “It is not only a celebration of our local heritage it is also a way people can get convenient access to helpful health services. Come out, enjoy the day, and keep your health on track!”

Mahaska Health welcomes current patients and the public to attend, inviting the community to connect with friends and neighbors, showcase their tractors, and receive insights into their health. For more information and to register for the event, visit mahaskahealth.org/2024-mens-health-event or call 641-676-7420.

Kansas is making a big run at Kansas City’s pro teams with a plan to help pay for new stadiums

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is making a serious run at becoming the new home for the reigning Super Bowl champions with legislators approving a plan Tuesday for luring both the Chiefs and Major League Baseball’s Kansas City Royals away from Missouri.

Bipartisan legislative supermajorities OKed the measure to authorize state bonds to help finance new stadiums and practice facilities for both teams on the Kansas side of the metropolitan area of 2.3 million residents, which is split by the border with Missouri. Three Super Bowl victories in five years — and player Travis Kelce’s romance with pop icon Taylor Swift — have made the Chiefs perhaps the area’s most celebrated civic asset.

The plan from the Republican-controlled Legislature goes next to Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly. While she stopped short of promising to sign it, she said in a statement that “Kansas now has the opportunity to become a professional sports powerhouse.”

Both the Chiefs and the Royals said they look forward to considering Kansas options. The lease on the Missouri complex with their side-by-side stadiums runs through January 2031, but both have said they already should have been planning for the future.

“We’re excited about what happened here today,” Korb Maxwell, an attorney for the Chiefs who lives on the Kansas side, said at the Statehouse after the bill cleared the Legislature. “This is incredibly real.”

The approval capped a two-month push to capitalize on the refusal in April by voters on the Missouri side to continue a local sales tax used to finance the upkeep of the teams’ stadiums.

Backers of the plan brushed aside decades of research by economists concluding that government subsidies for professional sports stadiums are not worth the cost. They also overcame criticism that lawmakers were moving too quickly.

A spokeswoman for Missouri Gov. Mike Parson did not immediately respond to an email message seeking comment. But in Kansas City, Missouri, Mayor Quinton Lucas promised to “lay out a good offer” to keep both teams in town.

“Today was largely, in my opinion, about leverage,” Lucas said. “And the teams are in an exceptional leverage position.”

Some Kansas officials reached the same conclusion.

“I think the Chiefs and the Royals are using us,” said state Rep. Susan Ruiz, a Kansas City-area Democrat.

The votes on the Kansas stadium-financing plan were 84-38 in the state House and 27-8 in the Senate. Lawmakers from across the state — even western Kansas, far from any new stadium — supported the measure.

It would allow state bonds to cover up to 70% of each new stadium, paying them off over 30 years with revenues from sports betting, state lottery ticket sales and new sales and alcohol taxes collected from shopping and entertainment districts around the new stadiums.

House Commerce Committee Chair Sean Tarwater, a Kansas City-area Republican, said the Chiefs still are likely to spend $500 million to $700 million in private funds on a new stadium.

“There are no blank checks,” Tarwater told GOP colleagues during a briefing.

Legislators debated the plan during a one-day special session called by Kelly to have them consider reducing taxes after she vetoed three tax-cutting plans before legislators adjourned their regular annual session May 1.

Republican leaders had promised that the stadium proposal wouldn’t come up until the Legislature first approved a plan to cut income and property taxes by a total of $1.23 billion over the next three years. Many lawmakers argued that voters would be angry if the state helped finance new stadiums without cutting taxes.

With the tax bill passed, the stadium plan gained support even from lawmakers who saw it as a handout for wealthy team owners. Some said failing to act risked pushing the teams to leave the Kansas City area, and a few said they had wanted the Chiefs in Kansas since childhood.

“It is amazing to me the speed with which we can solve problems when they’re oriented around wealth, when they’re oriented around business,” said state Rep. Jason Probst, a Democrat from central Kansas.

Yet Probst voted for the bill.

“This is the system that we’re stuck in, so if we choose to opt out of that system, we will lose every time,” he said.

Economists who study pro sports teams have concluded in dozens of studies that a new stadium and shopping-and-entertainment area merely takes existing economic activity away from elsewhere in a community, resulting in little or no net gain.

“It could still help Kansas and maybe hurt Missouri by the same amount,” said Andrew Zimbalist, an economics professor at Smith college in central Massachusetts who has written multiple books about sports. “It’s a zero-sum game.”

A skeptical state Sen. Molly Baumgardner, a Kansas City-area Republican, used a Christmas Eve metaphor to characterize supporters’ excitement before she voted no.

“There are visions of sugar plums,” Baumgardner said.

Attorney General Bird Launches Cold Case Unit to Seek Justice for Victims and Families

DES MOINES — Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird announced the launch of her office’s new cold case unit to investigate Iowa’s more than 400 unsolved murders. The announcement was made in a press conference at the Polk County Sheriff’s Office in Des Moines. Speakers at the press conference also included:

  • Steve Ponsetto, Investigator and lead of the Iowa cold case unit in the Iowa Attorney General’s Office
  • Sheriff Kevin Schneider, Polk County Sheriff
  • Jody Ewing, founder of IowaColdCases.org
  • Josh Okland, brother of cold case victim Ashley Okland

“I became a prosecutor to fight for victims and families,” said Attorney General Bird. “That is why on day one in office, I made it a priority to build our office’s first cold case unit. I am glad to announce that we have today launched our new unit that will bring fresh eyes to Iowa’s cold cases and dedicate a team to detecting new leads. And I thank the legislature for granting us the budget to make it happen. My promise to families of Iowa cold case victims is this: we will never give up, we will never stop searching, and we will never lose hope. If even one case is solved, it is all worth it. No one should get away with murder.”

The cold case unit will consist of three full-time investigators and one prosecutor. The unit will partner with local law enforcement agencies across Iowa to crack cold cases, seek answers for families, and ensure no murderer walks free.

To submit a cold case tip, contact the Iowa Attorney General’s office at 1-800-242-5100 or coldcase@ag.iowa.gov.

Cut Flower Production on an Amish Farm (near Sigourney)

SIGOURNEY — The Iowa Specialty Crop Growers Association is hosting a field day at Moonlit Waters Country Garden, near Sigourney, Iowa on June 20th.

The field day will begin with showcasing the farm’s flower delivery truck at 9:00, with the official program beginning at 9:30. The grower will then take the group on a tour of the farm, highlight flowers grown in high tunnels and caterpillar tunnels as well as in the field., and walk attendees through demonstrations, with time at the end for discussion & questions. Registration is free for Iowa Specialty Crop Growers Association members, and $10 for non-members. They will have subject matter experts from ISU (Cindy Haynes & Dan Fillius), as well as Ball Seed joining in.

More information & registration: https://www.iowaspecialtycrop.org/events-2/#!event/2024/6/20/iscga-field-day-cut-flower-production-on-an-amish-farm

Ottumwa PD Seeking Public Assistance to Identify Robbery Suspect

OTTUMWA — On June 4, 2024, at approximately 11:50 p.m., the Iowa Liquor and Tobacco Store located at 1021 E. Main, Ottumwa, was robbed.  The clerk who was working at the store during the robbery sustained minor injuries from a weapon that was used during the crime.  

Attached are images of the suspect that were captured when the Robbery took place.  The Ottumwa Police Department would like assistance from the public to try to identify a possible suspect.  The suspect was described as a skinny male who was tall, wearing a red coat and black pants.  

If anything in the pictures look familiar, for example the coat or the mask, they are requested to contact the Ottumwa Police Department at 641-683-0661. 

Singer Justin Timberlake arrested and accused of driving while intoxicated on New York’s Long Island

NEW YORK (AP) — Singer Justin Timberlake was arrested early Tuesday and is accused of driving while intoxicated on New York’s Long Island, authorities said.

Timberlake was expected to be arraigned in Sag Harbor, on the eastern end of Long Island, according to a statement from the Suffolk County district attorney’s office.

Timberlake’s representatives did not immediately return requests for comment from The Associated Press.

Sag Harbor is a coastal village in the Hamptons, around 100 miles (160 kilometers) from New York City. In the summer, it is a hotspot for wealthy visitors.

A young Timberlake was a Disney Mouseketeer, where his castmates included future girlfriend Britney Spears. He rose to fame in the popular boy band NSYNC and embarked on a solo recording career in 2002. As an actor, Timberlake has won acclaim in movies including” The Social Network” and “Friends With Benefits.”

He has won ten Grammy awards and four Primetime Emmy Awards.

Last year, Timberlake was in the headlines when Spears released her memoir, “The Woman in Me.” Several chapters are devoted to their relationship, including deeply personal details about a pregnancy, abortion and painful breakup. In March, he released his first new album in six years, the nostalgic “Everything I Thought It Was,” a return to his familiar future funk sound.

Timberlake has two upcoming shows in Chicago on Friday and Saturday, then is scheduled for New York’s Madison Square Garden next week on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Oskaloosa Main Street’s 55th Annual Art on the Square a Success

OSKALOOSA — On Saturday, June 8, Art on the Square returned for its 55th year. Festivities included over 35 artist booths, an Emerging Artist area for first-time participants, live music from Paul Imholte and his array of instruments, and kids’ activities. In the week leading up to Art on the Square, local artists and creatives painted 27 windows in the Main Street district as part of the “Children’s Storybook” Window Art Walk. Some organizations and downtown businesses also offered Creative Stations.  The Lions Club set up their spin art station, the Mahaska County 4H hosted a “Make Your Own Button’ station at United Way, the Book Vault offered a “Create Your Own Bookmark’ station, and the ISU Extension brought the “StoryWalk” to the downtown city square park. Oskaloosa was the place to be for arts & culture on June 8.

As in the past, Art on the Square judges were sent out to select award-winning artwork. The judges this year, Glenna Rummels and Nicole Steddom visited every booth and talked with artists to decide on four Best of Show, four Honorable Mentions, and one Emerging Artist of the Year. After much deliberation, the judges selected the following artists to receive the awards:
  • Best of Show, 1st Place, Two-Dimensional: Bob Kling (Indianola, IA) for Painting “Onions”
  • Best of Show, 1st Place, Three-Dimensional: Greg Harris (Leawood, KS) for wood-turned bowls
  • Best of Show, 2nd Place, Two-Dimensional: Laura Larabee (Monticello, IA) for oil painting on mahogany wood
  • Best of Show, 2nd Place: Three Dimensional: Allison Vial (Urbandale, IA) for handcrafted polymer clay jewelry
  • Best of Show, Emerging Artist: Osmar Castro (Marshalltown, IA) for a large ceramic vase
  • Honorable Mentions: Mike Mittermeier (Urbandale, IA) for abstract landscapes with oil on panels, Lauren Terrell (Oskaloosa, IA) for “Untitled” oil painting, Sue Burnham (Oskaloosa, IA) for sculpture needle felting, Tarun Dhall (Des Moines, IA) By Creative Heart.
Every one of the 36 artists who participated in Art on the Square exhibited talent and beautiful art. While many of the artists were locals living near Oskaloosa, others traveled from around Iowa as well as Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma. A wide range of artwork filled the booths around the Square, from oil, watercolor, and acrylic paintings to pottery and ceramics, photography, wire sculptures, fiber arts, fine woodworking, jewelry, and more.
This year was a great success, and it wouldn’t have been possible without the sponsors and volunteers who helped make it happen, the artists who brought their talent to downtown Oskaloosa, and the community members who attended to support art and artists. On behalf of Oskaloosa Main Street and the Art on the Square committee, thank you!
For more information about Art on the Square, contact Oskaloosa Main Street at mainstreet@mahaskachamber.org or 641-672-2591.

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