TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

Dolly Parton Accepts The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award From The Academy

Dolly Parton was awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award for “outstanding contributions to humanitarian causes” on Sunday night by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and while she wasn’t on hand to accept the honor in person, she did appear via video. Looking healthy as ever, Dolly’s video was shown as her “9 To 5” co-star Lily Tomlin presented the award.

“Well hi, everybody! I wanna thank my good buddy Lily Tomlin for presenting me with this award. Hi Lily, I love you,” Parton began. “I also want to thank the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for this great honor…this award tonight… It’s an honor just to be considered … I don’t take this kind of thing lightly.” She added, “It makes me want to dream up new ways to help lift people up. Isn’t that what we’re supposed to be here for? So from my heart to yours, I truly thank you.”

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1970, Jerry Lee Lewis and his second wife, Myra – who was also his cousin – were divorced. Their 1958 wedding, which took place when she was just 13 years old, caused such a scandal that it effectively ruined his career. In fact, the only thing illegal about the marriage was the fact that Jerry hadn’t divorced his first wife when he wed Myra.
  • Today in 1994, Patty Loveless’ CMA-winning album, “When Fallen Angels Fly,” went gold.
  • Today in 1996, Jeff Foxworthy’s “Crank It Up–The Music Album” went gold.
  • Today in 1996, Brooks & Dunn released the single, “A Man This Lonely.”
  • Today in 1998, Garth Brooks’ TV special “Garth Brooks: Double Live” aired on NBC. The show was actually performed live three times, for three different time zones.
  • Today in 1998, Reba McEntire was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame.
  • Today in 1999, Faith Hill found out that her album, “Breathe,” debuted at #1 on the “Billboard” pop albums chart. The project sold 242,000 copies its first week out, good enough to knock the rock group Rage Against the Machine out of the top spot.
  • Today in 2002, Jamie O’Neal left the country for a USO Tour of the Balkans and the Mediterranean Sea. She was overseas through the end of the month.
  • Today in 2003, Reba McEntire’s album, “Room to Breathe,” is in stores. It’s her first studio album in 4 years.
  • Today in 2003, LeAnn Rimes’ “Greatest Hits (To Be Continued)” was released.
  • Today in 2003, a DVD of Shania Twain’s NBC concert special, “Shania: UP! Live in Chicago,” appears in stores.
  • Today in 2005, The Johnny Cash biopic “Walk The Line” opened in theaters, with Joaquin Phoenix in the starring role. Reese Witherspoon portrays June Carter, Shelby Lynne took the role of Cash’s mother, and Shooter Jennings played his own late father, Waylon Jennings.
  • Today in 2008, The Zac Brown Band’s album, “The Foundation,” was released.
  • Today in 2011, Taylor Swift met Bruce Springsteen when he attended her show at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina. Also in attendance: Scotty McCreery.
  • Today in 2012, Luke Bryan, Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood and Lady Antebellum each won during ABC’s American Music Awards at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles.
  • Today in 2015, Jimmy Buffett’s “Margaritaville” was announced as a new addition to the GRAMMY Hall of Fame. The class also featured James Carr’s “The Dark End Of The Street,” plus music by the Andrews Sisters, Lead Belly and The Sir Douglas Quintet.
  • Today in 2016, funeral services were held for Leon Russell at the Victory Baptist Church in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee. Steve Ripley, formerly of The Tractors, was a pallbearer. Honorary pallbearers included Elton John, Sam Bush, John Cowan, Mike Lawler, T. Graham Brown, Jim Halsey and Willie Nelson.
  • Today in 2016, Dan + Shay’s Dan Smyers announced on social media that he’d gotten engaged to his girlfriend, Abby Law, in Hawaii. They got married in May 2017.
  • Today in 2016, George Strait’s album ,”Strait Out Of The Box: Part 2,” was released.
  • Today in 2019, with Taylor Swift in the midst of a public argument with Big Machine over her rights to perform some of her older songs on the American Music Awards, a pair of fans paid $1,000 to have two digital billboards in Nashville calling for the label to “let Taylor perform her own songs.”
  • Today in 2019, Billy Ray Cyrus visited the White House in Washington, D.C., with the family of Channing Smith, a Tennessee teen who committed suicide, to discuss cyber bullying with first lady Melania Trump.
  • Today in 2020, Brad Paisley sang “This Is Country Music” during the 14th annual Stand Up For Heroes event, raising millions online for a military charity. Also aboard were Bruce Springsteen, Sheryl Crow, Ray Romano, Jon Stewart and Mickey Guyton, who covers “To Make You Feel My Love.”

FAA lifts order slashing flights, allowing commercial airlines to resume their regular schedules

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Aviation Administration said Sunday it is lifting all restrictions on commercial flights that were imposed at 40 major airports during the country’s longest government shutdown.

Airlines can resume their regular flight schedules beginning Monday at 6 a.m. EST, the agency said.

The announcement was made in a joint statement by Transportation Secretary Sean P. Duffy and FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford.

Citing safety concerns as staffing shortages grew at air traffic control facilities during the shutdown, the FAA issued an unprecedented order to limit traffic in the skies. It had been in place since Nov. 7, affecting thousands of flights across the country.

Impacted airports included large hubs in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and Atlanta.

The flight cuts started at 4% and later grew to 6% before the FAA on Friday rolled the restrictions back to 3%, citing continued improvements in air traffic controller staffing since the record 43-day shutdown ended on Nov. 12.

The number of flights canceled this weekend was at its lowest point since the order took effect and was well below the 3% cuts FAA was requiring for Saturday and Sunday. Data from aviation analytics firm Cirium showed that less than 1% of all flights were canceled this weekend. The flight tracking website FlightAware said 149 flights were cut Sunday and 315 were canceled on Saturday.

The FAA statement said an agency safety team recommended the order be rescinded after “detailed reviews of safety trends and the steady decline of staffing-trigger events in air traffic control facilities.”

The statement said the FAA “is aware of reports of non-compliance by carriers over the course of the emergency order. The agency is reviewing and assessing enforcement options.” It did not elaborate.

Cancellations hit their highest point Nov. 9, when airlines cut more than 2,900 flights because of the FAA order, ongoing controller shortages and severe weather in parts of the country. Conditions began to improve throughout last week as more controllers returned to work amid news that Congress was close to a deal to end the shutdown. That progress also prompted the FAA to pause plans for further rate increases.

The agency had initially aimed for a 10% reduction in flights. Duffy had said worrisome safety data showed the move was necessary to ease pressure on the aviation system and help manage worsening staffing shortages at air traffic control facilities as the shutdown entered its second month and flight disruptions began to pile up.

Air traffic controllers were among the federal employees who had to continue working without pay throughout the shutdown. They missed two paychecks during the impasse.

Duffy hasn’t shared the specific safety data that prompted the cuts, but he cited reports during the shutdown of planes getting too close in the air, more runway incursions and pilot concerns about controllers’ responses.

Airline leaders have expressed optimism that operations would rebound in time for the Thanksgiving travel period after the FAA lifted its order.

Retired UI researcher, author may run for Iowa Sec. of Agriculture

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

A retired University of Iowa researcher who leads a non-profit group focused on water quality issues is exploring a run for Iowa Secretary of Agriculture.

Chris Jones, a Democrat, is the author of The Swine Republic, a collection of essays about agricultural pollution that was published as a book in 2023. “I don’t see any other candidates in either party trying to tackle or embrace these issues that we have in Iowa, you know, with our water and the environment in general,” Jones said during an interview with Radio Iowa. “I think it’s frustrating for people to read about the condition of their environmental day after day after day and politicians won’t address it.”

Jones lives near Lansing in the northeast corner of Iowa. He is president of the Driftless Water Defenders, a group formed to focus attention on agricultural runoff into Iowa lakes and streams. Jones said Iowa’s alarming cancer rate — the second highest in the nation and one of only two states where it’s growing — has changed the conversation. “We know that there’s multiple drivers of disease, right? And so it’s very difficult to pin a disease like cancer onto one thing,” Jones said, “but we also know that we’re sort awash in chemicals here, right? And we know the research is out there that shows nitrate in drinking water is a driver of cancer.”

Jones argues Iowa’s agriculture sector needs to diversify. “We can’t get the environmental outcomes that we want with only two crops on the landscape. We have two species covering 75% of our land area in Iowa. We’re never going to get good water when that’s the case,” Jones said. “We need a diversity of economy. We’ve got way too much invested in ethanol.”

Jones said the ethanol industry produces way too few jobs when compared to the 11,000 square miles of land planted with corn that’s used to produce ethanol. “That’s less than one job per square mile on the best land on earth. That’s ridiculous,” Jones said. “We need to think about something different than ethanol. We need to think about something different about CAFOs.”

Iowa has at least 4000 confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs), according to the latest EPA data.

Jones has formed an exploratory committee which allows him to start raising money for a potential campaign. Jones says he’ll decide in January whether to take the next step and run for office. Jones was a research engineer for the Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research at the University of Iowa for eight years before his retirement in May of 2023. Jones graduated from Simpson College in 1983 with a degree in chemistry and biology and earned a doctorate in analytical chemistry from Montana State University.

Iowa’s current agriculture secretary, Republican Mike Naig, plans to seek re-election.

Responsible expansion of Iowa’s cow herd program set for Dec. 2 in Albia

ALBIA, Iowa – Have you found yourself debating about whether now is a good time to expand your beef cow herd?  Have you been thinking about how to optimize production to capitalize on this record-high market?  The Dec. 2 program, Responsible Expansion of Iowa’s Cow Herd, might be just the ticket.

Iowa State University extension beef specialist Chris Clark said this session, to be held in Albia, will help producers think about opportunity and risk regarding herd expansion, and will include strategies to keep breeding females in the herd to increase profitability.

“We will go through an interactive exercise talking about cow appreciation/depreciation and risk based on cow age and stage of production,” he said. “One of the take-home messages is that the better we do at keeping females in the herd, the more profitable we are. Then we will talk through some management practices to improve reproductive success and reduce replacement rate.”

Potential topics of discussion include nutritional management of first-calf heifers, breeding strategies for yearling heifers, animal selection and buying versus raising replacements.

The Iowa Beef Center team developed this program with producer success in mind, hoping to help them evaluate opportunity and risk of herd expansion in light of the strong cattle market.

“It’s an interesting time in the beef industry,” Clark said. “On one hand, we would all like to have as many females as possible producing calves right now. On the other hand, replacement females are really valuable.  Simply put, can we afford to expand, and if we do, how do we make the most of that investment?”

This program is set for Dec. 2 from 6 p.m. to approximately 7:30 p.m. at the Monroe County Extension Office, 4 Washington Avenue East, Suite 1, in Albia. Thanks to support from Appanoose, Davis, Monroe, and Lucas County Extension and the Iowa Beef Center, this program is offered at no charge to participants. The program is open to the public and an evening meal will be provided.  Preregistration is requested to help with planning and can be done by calling the Monroe County Extension Office at 641-932-5612.

For more information about the program contact Clark by phone at 712-250-0070 or by email at caclark@iastate.edu.

Arrest Made in Oskaloosa Following ICAC Child Sexual Abuse Material Investigation

OSKALOOSA – An Oskaloosa man was arrested over the weekend after an investigation into child sexual abuse.

The Oskaloosa Police Department says that 60-year-old Robert Eugene Trout Jr. was taken into custody on Saturday following an investigation that took over a year.

The Iowa Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force reportedly sent information regarding suspected child sexual abuse material being downloaded within the city of Oskaloosa to the Oskaloosa Police Department in August of 2024. The initial CyberTip was submitted to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) in June 2024, after an electronic service provider reported that apparent illegal material was being accessed from an IP address located in Oskaloosa.

Investigators conducted a court-authorized search warrant to obtain subscriber information associated with the IP address in question. That information identified the individual associated with the account. Residence information was independently confirmed.

On August 21, 2024, investigators executed a search warrant at a residence in the 100 block of North 7th Street, where investigators seized multiple electronic devices, including cellular phones, computers, hard drives, laptops, and digital storage media. All seized items were later submitted to ICAC for forensic examination.

The forensic review conducted by ICAC identified a significant amount of suspected child sexual abuse material, including numerous images and videos involving minors well below the age of legal consent. Additional evidence, including internet bookmarks and search terms, was consistent with the exploitation of children.

Based on the forensic findings and investigative interviews, investigators obtained a court-authorized arrest warrant for Trout on November 14, 2025.

On November 15, 2025, officers located Trout during a traffic stop within the City of Oskaloosa and took him into custody without incident.

Trout was charged with Sexual Exploitation of a Minor and transported to the Mahaska County Jail. Additional charges could be forthcoming as the ICAC completes review of the remaining seized devices.

Authorities say that while the case involved material obtained online, there is no evidence that any children in Oskaloosa were directly harmed. The investigation remains ongoing.

This day in Country Music History

  • Today in 1994, Kathy Mattea’s album, “A Collection Of Hits,” was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1994, Sammy Kershaw’s “Feeling Good Train” album was certified gold. The same day his “Haunted Heart” project was certified platinum.
  • Today in 1994, Billy Ray Cyrus’ “Some Gave All” CD was certified for sales of 8-million.
  • Today in 1997, LeAnn Rimes’ version of “How Do I Live” was certified double platinum – the only country single ever to reach that mark at that time. On the same day, Rimes’ “Blue” album was certified for multi-platinum sales of 5-million.
  • Today in 1997, Shania Twain’s “The Woman In Me” made Shania Twain the first female country artist to have an album certified for shipments of 10-million copies
  • Today in 1998, Garth Brooks’ “Double Live” album was released, the same day new albums from Jewel, Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston hit record stores. After the dust had settled on what record stores called “Super Tuesday,” Garth emerged victorious. He captured the #1 spot on the album charts – and set a first-week sales record of 1.9-million copies.
  • Today in 1998, “The Prince Of Egypt – Nashville” soundtrack was released. The album featured songs by Vince Gill, Wynonna, Reba McEntire, Clint Black, Faith Hill and Jessica Andrews.
  • Today in 1999, Tim McGraw’s album, “A Place In The Sun,” was certified double-platinum.
  • Today in 1999, Faith Hill’s Breathe album debuted at the top of both the “Billboard” country and all-genre album charts.
  • Today in 2000, Pam Tillis’ “All of This Love” album was certified gold.
  • Today in 2000, Alabama’s “For the Record: 41 Number-One Hits” collection was certified quadruple-platinum.
  • Today in 2011, Scotty McCreery picked up a gold album for “Clear As Day.”
  • Today in 2012, the Zac Brown Band took the prestigious Madison Square Garden in New York for the first time – noting, “We have to make a new bucket list after tonight.”
  • Today in 2016, Luke Bryan’s single, “Huntin’, Fishin’ And Lovin’ Every Day,” went platinum.
  • Today in 2017, Kenny Rogers received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum in St. Louis.
  • Today in 2017, the animated Christmas movie, “The Star,” debuted in theaters. Kris Kristofferson, Kelly Clarkson and Opry Winfrey provided voices for the picture, while the soundtrack featured Kelsea Ballerini, Jake Owen, Pentatonix and Jessie James Decker
  • Today in 2017, the Chase Rice album, “Lions & Lambs,” was released. On the same day? Tim McGraw & Faith Hill’s “The Rest Of Our Life” album dropped as well.
  • Today in 2018, the Hallmark Channel premiered the holiday movie “Christmas At Graceland,” which starred Kellie Pickler as a Chicago businesswoman. The soundtrack uses six Elvis Presley holiday recordings, including “Santa Claus Is Back In Town,” “Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town” and “Blue Christmas.”
  • Today in 2018, Pistol Annies’ “Interstate Gospel” debuted at #1 on the Billboard country albums chart.
  • Today in 2019, Jordan Davis and his wife, Kristen, welcomed their daughter, Eloise Larkin Davis.
  • Today in 2019, Keith Urban headlined a Concert for Recovery at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut, with proceeds earmarked to fight the opioid crisis.
  • Today in 2020, Lucinda Williams suffered a stroke at her home in Nashville
  • Today in 2021, Cole Swindell & Lainey Wilson’s collaboration “Never Say Never” was released.

Trailer For Eric Church’s IMAX Film Released

The trailer for Eric Church’s IMAX concert film “Evangeline Vs the Machine: Comes Alive” is now out. The film hits IMAX theaters across North America for two nights only: February 11 and February 14. Featuring a complete run-through of his album “Evangeline Vs. The Machine” as well as live versions of some of his biggest hits, Church says of the film, “This project was never about fitting into a box – it’s about breaking the damn thing wide open. Seeing it in IMAX takes that to another level. The scale and sound experience is like nothing else.” Tickets for the IMAX screenings can be bought here

 

Starbucks workers kick off 65-store US strike on company’s busy Red Cup Day

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — More than 1,000 unionized Starbucks workers went on strike at 65 U.S. stores Thursday to protest a lack of progress in labor negotiations with the company.

The strike was intended to disrupt Starbucks’ Red Cup Day, which is typically one of the company’s busiest days of the year. Since 2018, Starbucks has given out free, reusable cups on that day to customers who buy a holiday drink. Starbucks Workers United, the union organizing baristas, said Thursday morning that the strike had already closed some stores and was expected to force more to close later in the day.

Starbucks Workers United said stores in 45 cities would be impacted, including New York, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, San Diego, St. Louis, Dallas, Columbus, Ohio, and Starbucks’ home city of Seattle. There is no date set for the strike to end, and more stores are prepared to join if Starbucks doesn’t reach a contract agreement with the union, organizers said.

Starbucks emphasized that the vast majority of its U.S. stores would be open and operating as usual Thursday. The coffee giant has 10,000 company-owned stores in the U.S., as well as 7,000 licensed locations in places like grocery stores and airports.

As of noon Thursday on the East Coast, Starbucks said it was on track to meet or exceed its sales expectations for the day at its company-owned stores.

“The day is off to an incredible start,” the company said in a statement.

Around 550 company-owned U.S. Starbucks stores are currently unionized. More have voted to unionize, but Starbucks closed 59 unionized stores in September as part of a larger reorganization campaign.

Here’s what’s behind the strike.

A stalled contract agreement

Striking workers say they’re protesting because Starbucks has yet to reach a contract agreement with the union. Starbucks workers first voted to unionize at a store in Buffalo in 2021. In December 2023, Starbucks vowed to finalize an agreement by the end of 2024. But in August of last year, the company ousted Laxman Narasimhan, the CEO who made that promise. The union said progress has stalled under Brian Niccol, the company’s current chairman and CEO. The two sides haven’t been at the bargaining table since April.

Workers want higher pay, better hours

Workers say they’re seeking better hours and improved staffing in stores, where they say long customer wait times are routine. They also want higher pay, pointing out that executives like Niccol are making millions and the company spent $81 million in June on a conference in Las Vegas for 14,000 store managers and regional leaders.

Dochi Spoltore, a barista from Pittsburgh, said in a union conference call Thursday that it’s hard for workers to be assigned more than 19 hours per week, which leaves them short of the 20 hours they would need to be eligible for Starbucks’ benefits. Spoltore said she makes $16 per hour.

“I want Starbucks to succeed. My livelihood depends on it,” Spoltore said. “We’re proud of our work, but we’re tired of being treated like we’re disposable.”

The union also wants the company to resolve hundreds of unfair labor practice charges filed by workers, who say the company has fired baristas in retaliation for unionizing and has failed to bargain over changes in policy that workers must enforce, like its decision earlier this year to limit restroom use to paying customers.

Starbucks stands by its wages and benefits

Starbucks says it offers the best wage and benefit package in retail, worth an average of $30 per hour. Among the company’s benefits are up to 18 weeks of paid family leave and 100% tuition coverage for a four-year college degree. In a letter to employees last week, Starbucks’ Chief Partner Officer Sara Kelly said the union walked away from the bargaining table in the spring.

Kelly said some of the union’s proposals would significantly alter Starbucks’ operations, such as giving workers the ability to shut down mobile ordering if a store has more than five orders in the queue.

Kelly said Starbucks remained ready to talk and “believes we can move quickly to a reasonable deal.” Kelly also said surveys showed that most employees like working for the company, and its barista turnover rates are half the industry average.

Limited locations with high visibility

Unionized workers have gone on strike at Starbucks before. In 2022 and 2023, workers walked off the job on Red Cup Day. Last year, a five-day strike ahead of Christmas closed 59 U.S. stores. Each time, Starbucks said the disruption to its operations was minimal. Starbucks Workers United said the new strike is open-ended and could spread to many more unionized locations.

The number of non-union Starbucks locations dwarfs the number of unionized ones. But Todd Vachon, a union expert at the Rutgers School of Management and Labor Relations, said any strike could be highly visible and educate the public on baristas’ concerns.

Unlike manufacturers, Vachon said, retail industries depend on the connection between their employees and their customers. That makes shaming a potentially powerful weapon in the union’s arsenal, he said.

Improving sales

Starbucks’ same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, rose 1% in the July-September period. It was the first time in nearly two years that the company had posted an increase. In his first year at the company, Niccol set new hospitality standards, redesigned stores to be cozier and more welcoming, and adjusted staffing levels to better handle peak hours.

Starbucks also is trying to prioritize in-store orders over mobile ones. Last week, the company’s holiday drink rollout in the U.S. was so successful that it almost immediately sold out of its glass Bearista cup. Starbucks said demand for the cup exceeded its expectations, but it wouldn’t say if the Bearista will return before the holidays are over.

Iowa Food Banks get $1 million in state funds to match recent donations

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

Iowa’s six regional food banks have received enough donations this month to trigger the $1 million in state funding Governor Reynolds pledged to match that increase in contributions.

The state’s largest food bank serves 55 counties and will get about $475,000 from the state. Food Bank of Iowa spokeswoman Annette Hacker said to put that in perspective, the organization spent well over half a million dollars just this week buying food. “The Food Bank of Iowa has been responding to record and rising need for three and a half years,” Hacker said. “…The surge we’ve seen of truly historic proportions has only been in the last 14 days. It frankly feels like a lifetime.”

Hacker said the managers of some of the food pantries served by the Des Moines-based Food Bank of Iowa estimate the number of people coming through their doors has doubled and in some cases tripled so far this month. “The surge in need truly is unprecedented and that’s not a word we use lightly. We’ve never seen anything like it,” Hacker said.

State officials announced yesterday that by sometime today all 130,000 Iowa households that are signed up for SNAP benefits should have the money delivered to their electronic benefit cards. “We’re very grateful the government’s reopened and we’re thankful that Iowans who rely on SNAP will have those benefits they can use at the grocery store, but the effects of this are going to linger for a while,” Hacker said.

Chris Ackman, a spokesman for the HACAP Food Reservoir in Hiawatha that serves nine eastern Iowa counties, agreed. “I’m sure it will be a busy weekend at the grocery stores, but the need for food is still going to be very present,” Ackman said.

In just the past six weeks, the HACAP Food Reservoir spent nearly a third of their yearly food purchasing budget, according to Ackman. “That just shows you how big of a need there was when the shutdown began, how much we’ve purchased in food to meet the need,” Ackman said, “and then all of this, timing wise, is all right before the Thanksgiving holidays which is usually one of our biggest times for getting even more food out.”

Hacker of the Food Bank of Iowa said it’s clear challenging times are ahead, “but what we also know is the community has risen to the occasion once again and they’ve helped us to keep up, to try to fill this gap, to try to meet this demand, so whatever’s ahead we’ll meet it head on and we’ll meet it together.”

Valerie Petersen, associate director of the Food Bank of Siouxland in northwest Iowa, said part of the spike in food demand is coming from older Iowans. “They’ve planned for retirement,” Petersen said. “They’ve planned for their future, and yet, with the rising cost of things, they’re not able to make ends meet.”

When SNAP benefits weren’t delivered earlier this month, the Food Bank of Siouxland in northwest Iowa saw local food pantry visits almost double, but at the same time Petersen said she saw more volunteers come in to help, companies hosted more food drives, and people increased their donations. “It has been a very good reminder that we take care of each other in our community,” she said, “and hopefully the communities around Iowa are seeing that as well.”

The other three food banks that distribute food in Iowa are the River Bend Food Bank in Davenport, Northeast Iowa Food Bank in Waterloo and Food Bank for the Heartland in Omaha.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.