Former Indian Hills Community College President Dr. Lyle Hellyer has died. The college made the announcement Tuesday (3/15) on social media. Hellyer was the school’s president from 1973 until he retired in 2001. The college’s Facebook post says Hellyer’s “bold vision and leadership is still felt today and will not be forgotten.” Dr. Lyle Hellyer was 91.
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War in Ukraine disrupts key supply chains – and lives
By MATT O’BRIEN
The Associated Press – It can be hard to measure the ways that Russia’s war in Ukraine has disrupted the global supply of parts and raw materials needed to complete a variety of products – from cars to computer chips.
But cutting off one of those supply links brought a “depressing feeling” to Andrey Bibik, head of the Interpipe steel plant in Dnipro, Ukraine. He spent the first hours of the war winding down his bustling 24-hour operation and sending almost everyone home.
“It’s empty and lonely. You don’t hear a sound. You see everything is frozen,” he said.
Getting Interpipe’s steel transmission pipes to Texas oil companies and its railway wheels to European high-speed train operators has been put on hold. Hundreds of the plant’s roughly 10,000 employees have joined the fight against Russia. Others have fled; a remaining skeleton crew runs its canteens and makes spikey metal obstacles to block Russian tanks and convoys. Its bomb shelters house dozens of local families at night.
“It was a hard choice to stop production. We had plenty of orders, a lot of customers awaiting our material. But if you have to choose between safety, and possible profits, I think the answer is obvious,” said Bibik, who’s worked at the company for nearly two decades. “The most important thing we have is life and we really need to take care of the people we love.”
Similar production halts have spread across other industries in Ukraine, motivated not just by safety concerns but also because the war and mass exodus of refugees have closed off roads and railways to commercial freight traffic. Some of Interpipe’s finished products bound for overseas export are now stalled at the Black Sea port of Odesa.
Ukraine accounts for only about 0.3% of the world’s exports, while Russia’s share is about 1.9%, according to a report by the Dutch bank ING. Still, some industries doing business with these nations are starting to feel the war’s impact.
For Russia, a key producer of energy, steel and raw metals such as nickel, copper, platinum and palladium — many of which are important to the auto industry — the supply concerns are tied to punishing Western economic sanctions and Russia’s moves to retaliate against them. For Ukraine, the war itself is cutting off supplies.
“We want to give priority to the refugees, people trying to move out of the war zone, and humanitarian and military convoys,” said Interpipe’s Houston-based chairman and former CEO Fadi Hraibi.
The disruption of another Ukrainian industry — the making of wiring harnesses used in cars — is already hurting European automakers. Ukraine has more than 30 automotive plants, most of them centered near the western border with Poland and other European neighbors, according to a government agency that promotes foreign investment.
German parts supplier Leoni said production has been interrupted at its two western Ukraine plants in Styri and Kolomyja and that it’s looking for temporary alternatives. “We are aware that this situation is currently affecting not only Leoni, but the entire industry,” said spokesperson Gregor le Claire.
Ukraine is also among the world’s largest suppliers of neon, a gas used in lasers that help etch integrated circuits onto computer chips. That worries auto industry executives, who fear that tight neon supplies could worsen a global chip shortage that has already forced production cuts and made vehicles scarce worldwide.
Interpipe has five factories in Ukraine, all located in the industrial hub of Dnipro and its surrounding oblast, or region, which holds a strategic position on the Dnieper River southeast of the capital, Kyiv.
Until Russian airstrikes began targeting Dnipro on Friday, the country’s fourth-largest city had been mostly quiet — except for occasional air raid sirens — in the two weeks since Russia invaded the country. But executives at Interpipe made a quick decision on Feb. 24 to shut down all of its facilities.
Russian President Vladimir Putin launched the invasion before dawn and by lunchtime, plant operations were wound down, Bibik said. That evening, he watched the last five workers get shuttled off to the suburb where they live. All of Interpipe’s workers are still being paid, Bibik and Hraibi said.
Interpipe’s customers in the energy and rail industries typically order their pipes, wheels and other products months in advance, but Hraibi said the disruptions will cause shortages and lead some to look for alternatives. For some wheel customers, such a Saudi Arabian railway operator, Interpipe is the sole supplier, he said. Two of the company’s chief steel industry rivals, OMK and Evraz, are in Russia and he hopes customers will avoid them.
“I don’t know if our business will survive,” he said. “We do all that’s necessary to support the people, to keep our employees, to be able to restart in a month or two or three, whenever things get back to — at least closer to — normal. But in reality, nobody can predict what’s going to happen.”
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AP Auto Writer Tom Krisher contributed to this story from Detroit.
Another push to update Iowa’s 44-year-old ‘Bottle Bill’
RADIO IOWA – A plan to revamp Iowa’s “Bottle Bill” has cleared its first hurdle in the Iowa Senate and key lawmakers vow this is the year they’ll approve changes in the system for redeeming the nickel deposits on cans and bottles.
Senator Ken Rozenboom, a Republican from Oskaloosa, said there’s “a growing pool” of deposits that are never paid back. “I’ve been here 10 years. The concept has been around for well over 40 years. Every year we have seen proposals, we’ve seen bills to fix the problem,” Rozenboom said. “In my view, those attempts never got to the heart of the problem and this bill is an attempt to do that.”
Rozenboom cites one estimate indicating the wholesale distributors of beer and pop keep as much as $48 million annually from unredeemed deposits. His bill would have that money routed to the state instead and deposited in the Taxpayer Relief Fund.
“Getting rid of the private innovation and expanding government we don’t believe is the solution,” said David Adelman, a lobbyist for the Iowa Wholesale Beer Distributors Association.
Jon Murphy is a lobbyist for the Iowa Beverage Association which represents the distributors of non-alcoholic drinks. The group is instead proposing creation of a non-profit outside of state govenrment that would manage the redemption system — and start charging the nickel deposit on bottles and cans of water, tea and sports drinks.
“It’s important to our industry that we get the plastics back that we use for our bottles,” Murphy said. “…We believe that every bottle out there should come back and become another bottle.”
Rozenboom’s bill would let grocers opt out of accepting empty bottles and cans and paying the deposits. Former Senator Bill Dix is now a lobbyist for Fareway, which has objected to having customers bring dirty empties back inside grocery stores. “We also support the fact that it brings administration of the program into a state agency,” Dix said.
R.G. Schwarm is a lobbyist for Cleaner Iowa, a group that backs the Bottle Bill. The group opposes letting more than two-thousand grocery stores and convenience stores opt out of accepting empty cans and bottles and paying back the deposits..
“There are approximately 60 redemption centers,” Schwarm said. “…We’re going to be removing 90% of the infrastructure and redemption opportunities for consumers.”
Rozenboom’s bill also raises the per container fee redemption centers get from one cent to two cents. Sheri Cunningham owns the redemption center in Pella and she told lawmakers she’s struggling to keep the business open.
“If I close, 21 million containers are going to be out there and somebody else is going to have to find a way to redeem them,” she said.
Senator Joe Bolkcom, a Democrat from Iowa City, said tens of millions of dollars in deposit money isn’t being redeemed and it needs to be accounted for and perhaps used to open more redemption centers.
“Iowans love the Bottle Bill,” Bolkcom said. “If we don’t get something done, it is going to fall apart. It is on life support here.”
Republican Senator Jason Schultz of Schleswig said negotiations among the grocers, retailers and wholesalers have failed to produce an agreement and it’s time for legislators to force the issue. “This is the best game in town we have right now,” Schultz said.
Schultz helped guide the bill out of a subcommittee and all but guaranteed the bill would clear the full Senate Ways and Means Committee soon.
Unemployment rate drops in January
RADIO IOWA – Iowa’s unemployment rate dropped to 3.7% in January, which was down from the revised December rate of 3.9%.
Iowa Workforce Development says the leisure and hospitality industries added the most jobs in January — up 2,500. IWD says the industry saw a loss of 800 jobs in December — but has generally trended up steadily since COVID quarantines ended. Most gains were within accommodations and food services, which are up 6,500 jobs since August.
The state unemployment rate one year ago in January was 4.4%, and the U.S. unemployment rate in January increased to 4%.
Brainard joins Oskaloosa Main Street
Oskaloosa Main Street has a new program director. Amy Brainard is moving into the role after 17 years as coordinator of the Mahaska County 4-H program for the Iowa State University Extension and Outreach. Brainard is an Oskaloosa High graduate and life-long Mahaska County resident.
World shares mixed, oil down $5.50 per barrel
By ELAINE KURTENBACH
BANGKOK (AP) — Shares rose in Europe after a mixed session in Asia on Monday, where Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index sank 5% after the neighboring city of Shenzhen was ordered into a shutdown to combat China’s worst COVID-19 outbreak in two years.
Benchmarks rose in Frankfurt, Paris and Tokyo and U.S. futures were higher. Oil prices retreated against the backdrop of uncertainty from the war in Ukraine.
Germany’s DAX advanced 2.8% to 14,003.93, while the CAC 40 in Paris picked up 1.7% to 6,367.58. Britain’s FTSE 100 gained 0.3% to 7,178.48.
The future for the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1%, auguring a positive start for the week’s trading. The S&P 500 future was 0.7% higher.
The spreading virus outbreaks in China are compounding worries over supply chain disruptions both from the pandemic and from the war.
A vital manufacturing and technology hub of 17.5 million people, Shenzhen is home to some of China’s most prominent companies, including telecom equipment maker Huawei Technologies Ltd., electric car brand BYD Auto, Ping An Insurance Co. and Tencent Holding, operator of the popular WeChat message service.
Foxconn, supplier to Apple and other electronics brands, said it had suspended factory lines in Shenzhen due to the shutdown. In a notice to Taiwan’s stock exchange, its listed company Hon Hai Precision Industry, the world’s largest contract manufacturing company, said it did not expect the suspension to have a major impact on its business.
Hon Hai shares lost 1% on Monday.
The Hang Seng index dipped 5.4% but regained some lost ground to close 5% lower at 19,531.66. The exchange’s tech index dropped 11%.
The Shanghai Composite index slipped 2.6% to 3,223.53. The A-share index in Shenzhen’s smaller market lost 2.9%.
Authorities have restricted access to Shenzhen by suspending bus service and said everyone in the city will undergo three rounds of testing after 60 new cases were reported Sunday. All businesses except those that supply food, fuel and other necessities were ordered to close or work from home.
Infection numbers in mainland China are low compared with other countries and with Hong Kong, which reported more than 32,000 new cases Sunday. But Beijing’s “zero tolerance” strategy has led to lockdowns of entire cities to find and isolate every infected person.
In other Asian markets, Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index rose 0.6% to 25,307.85 and the S&P/ASX 200 in Australia gained 1.2% to 7,149.40. South Korea’s Kospi lost 0.6% to 2,645.65.
The Ukraine crisis and central bank efforts to fight inflation remain the focus for most markets.
Russia’s military forces were keeping up their campaign to capture Ukraine’s capital as residents of other besieged cities held out hope that renewed diplomatic talks might open the way for more civilians to evacuate or emergency supplies to reach them.
A fourth round of talks was expected Monday between Ukrainian and Russian officials to discuss getting food, water, medicine and other desperately needed supplies to cities and towns under fire, among other issues, Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak said.
On Friday, the S&P 500 fell 1.3% and the Dow industrials lost 0.7%. The Nasdaq composite index gave up 2.2% and the Russell 2000 index of smaller companies slipped 1.6%.
World markets have been rocked by dramatic reversals as investors struggle to guess how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will affect prices of oil, wheat and other commodities produced in the region.
That’s raising the risk the U.S. economy may struggle under a toxic combination of persistently high inflation and stagnating growth. The Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates at its meeting this week as it and other central banks act to stamp out the highest inflation in generations, while trying to avoid causing a recession by raising rates too high or too quickly.
U.S. stocks are about 10% below peaks hit earlier this year, while crude oil prices are more than 40% higher for 2022.
U.S. benchmark crude oil lost $6.51 to $102.82 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It surged $3.31 per barrel on Friday to $109.33 per barrel.
Brent crude oil, the standard for international pricing, declined $5.40 to $107.27 per barrel.
The U.S. dollar rose to 118.02 Japanese yen from 117.35 yen. The euro strengthened to $1.0952 from $1.0926.
Democrats ponder positioning of 2024 Iowa Caucuses
Democrats are considering a plan that could bump the Iowa Caucuses out of the first-in-the-nation position — and the party will be hosting three forums to give Democrats across the country a chance to weigh in on how the party picks its presidential nominees.
Later this summer, the Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee is to recommend the sequence of voting events in 2024. Former Iowa Democratic Party chairman Scott Brennan is a member of the committee, which met this past weekend.
“I have been assured that it’s going to be a fair and open process,” Brennan said, “and I take everyone at their word that is going to be the case.”
National party leaders have been encouraging states to hold primaries rather than caucuses. According to the National Conference of Sate Legislatures, Democratic Parties in just Iowa, Wyoming and Nevada held Caucuses in 2020 and officials in Nevada already are planning to hold a presidential primary in 2024.
“Caucuses have their challenges, but I think we want to work with the Rules and Bylaws Committee to come up with a proposal that makes the Caucuses even more open and accessible.”
The Des Moines Register was first to report national party leaders have developed a memo that outlines some new rules for which states have early voting contests in the 2024 presidential election, but the committee took no action on the matter this weekend. The chairman of the Iowa Republican Party said national party leaders are poised to confirm that the Iowa Republican Party’s Caucuses are to be first in 2024 and send the message that Middle America matters to the GOP.
(Reporting by Iowa Public Radio’s Clay Masters; additional reporting by Radio Iowa’s O. Kay Henderson)
Osky’s new superintendent: from band director to administrator
Oskaloosa’s new school superintendent once performed in the Indians’ marching band. Mike Fisher was hired last week to take over as superintendent this summer, following Paula Wright’s retirement. Fisher was band director for the West Marshall Community Schools before he changed his career path toward administration.
“My wife and I often talk about faith leading and faith calling. It wasn’t something I was actually pursuing. I got my Master’s degree just because I wanted to continue my education and just happened to get into educational leadership. I was not looking for a job. And then one day got a call from Waterloo Schools. Just a cold call, they got my name from a professor I’d had and said ‘We’d be interested in you applying for a position tp be an administrator in Waterloo.’ Never dreamed we’d do that, but finally took the plunge, followed the faith leaning and there we were in Waterloo. Spent six years in a deeply urban school district. Some of my wife and I’s favorite memories are from our time in Waterloo.”
Fisher then moved to Charles City in 2018 to become superintendent of schools there.
Keokuk County Sheriff’s warning about a scam
The Keokuk County Sheriff’s Office wants to tell you about a new scam that’s going around. In this case, you’ll get a phone call saying that someone has used your Amazon account to make purchases of over $1000….and they want to confirm your personal information. The Sheriff’s Office says don’t give out your personal information over the phone to someone who calls you out of the blue asking for it.
Daylight Savings Time starts this weekend
Daylight Savings Time begins this weekend. Incoming Oskaloosa Fire Chief Scott Vaughan reminds us to change the batteries in our home smoke detectors.
“Change those batteries on Saturday night and make sure that those smoke detectors are working, which is obviously the most important thing a homeowner can do to hopefully prevent a fire and have the best chance of getting out and having the least amount of damage in a fire.”
You also need to set your clocks forward one hour before you go to bed Saturday night (3/12).
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