An Ottumwa City Councilman will step down at the end of the year. Bob Meyers announced his resignation Tuesday (11/9). His term expires in January 2024. At next Tuesday’s (11/16) regular meeting, the Ottumwa City Council will decide whether to hold a special election to fill the rest of Meyers’ term or to appoint someone to fill the remaining time.
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Students learn about manufacturing jobs
Area high school students got a chance to learn about manufacturing jobs Tuesday (11/9) at a program at Vermeer in Pella. The National Association of Manufacturers sponsored an event called “Creators Wanted.” Carolyn Lee, the executive director of the Manufacturing Institute, says many people don’t know what manufacturing is like in the 21st century.
“That’s why we need to bring it to life. We need to tell the stories. We need to talk about what creators are and why it’s so important . Because once you light that spark, it’s magnetic. They already see it. But until they know about it, they don’t know to come to these great companies and to build their future and their families.”
Governor Kim Reynolds, along with Vermeer CEO Jason Andringa and Pella Corporation CEO Tim Yaggi, also spoke about the importance of filling manufacturing jobs and keeping young Iowa residents in the state.
Climate talks struggle with gap between rich, poor nations
By SETH BORENSTEIN AND ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL
GLASGOW, Scotland (AP) — Large rifts remain as United Nations climate talks tick down to a Friday deadline. A lot of the divide comes down to money, which nations have it and which do not. So it’s time for the diplomatic cavalry to ride in.
Democratic Congress members also joined the two-week climate conference in Glasgow on the sidelines Tuesday to reinforce the Biden administration’s efforts to increase climate action.
The start of the conference saw heads of government talking about how curbing global warming is a fight for survival. The leaders focused on big pictures, not the intricate wording crucial to negotiations. Then, for about a week, the technocratic negotiations focused on those key details, getting some things done but not resolving the really sticky situations.
Now, it’s time for the “high level” negotiations, when government ministers or other senior diplomats swoop in to make the political decisions that are supposed to break the technical logjams. The United Nations has three goals out of Glasgow, which so far are all out of reach: cutting carbon dioxide emissions in half by 2030; rich nations giving poor countries $100 billion a year for combating climate change; and ensuring that half of that money goes to adapting to climate change’s increasing harms.
To forge compromise, they have a big gap to bridge. Or more accurately, multiple gaps: there’s a trust gap and a wealth gap. A north-south gap. It’s about money, history and the future.
On one side of the gap are nations that developed and became rich from the Industrial Revolution fueled by coal, oil and gas that started in the U.K. On the other side are the nations that haven’t developed yet and haven’t gotten rich and are now being told those fuels are too dangerous for the planet.
The key financial issue is the $100 billion a year pledge first made in 2009. The developed nations still haven’t reached the $100 billion a year mark. This year the rich nations increased their aid to $80 billion a year, still short of what’s promised.
As the head of the conference briefed countries Monday on the progress – and the lack of it, in some ways – in the talks, developing country after developing country responded by noting how unfulfilled rich nations’ financial pledges were.
“Everybody here is livid,” said Saleemul Huq, a climate science and policy expert who is director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development in Bangladesh
It’s not as if that $100 billion alone would make a big difference because trillions of dollars worldwide in payments, not pledges, would be needed to combat climate change, not $100 billion, Huq said. Providing the money is important to bridge the gap in trust between rich nations and poor nations, he argued.
“They reneged on their promise. They failed to deliver it,” Huq said. “And they seem not to care about it. And, so why should we trust anything they say anymore?”
While the crowd at the conference Monday cheered on former U.S. President Barack Obama when he urged nations to do more and rich nations to help poor, young Ugandan climate activist Vanessa Nakate tweeted: “I was 13 when you promised $100B #ClimateFinance. The US has broken that promise, it will cost lives in Africa. Earth’s richest country does not contribute enough to life-saving funds. You want to meet #COP26 youth. We want action. Obama & @POTUS #ShowUsTheMoney.”
Nakate told The Associated Press she wasn’t criticizing Obama, who targeted young climate activists with his message, but “speaking the truth….The money was promised, but hasn’t been delivered.”
Huq said that rich, polluting nations also had failed the rest of the world by not delivering on emission targets that would limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. As things stand, it’s the poor who pay for the destruction caused by climate change, he said. Studies have shown that poorer nations, like Bangladesh, are hit harder by climate change than rich nations, which also have more resources to adapt to extreme weather.
There have long been trust issues in the annual U.N. climate talks, said Niklas Hohne, a climate scientist at the New Climate Institute in Germany who has attended the conference for more than 20 years and tracks pledges and actions to translate how much they mean for curbing projected warming.
Hohne said poor countries have good reasons to be wary, but nations are gathering “at this conference to build that trust. And the trust can only be built by showing real action.”
While China is now the No. 1 carbon polluter and India is No. 3, carbon dioxide stays in the air for centuries. Based on historical emissions – the stuff still in the atmosphere trapping heat = the United States and European nations are most responsible for climate change, Hohne said.
Hohne said it is normal for high-level ministers to ride to the rescue in the second week of climate talks.
“There are certain issues which go to the ministers and those are the tricky bits and only the ministers can solve them. And once they solve them, they go to the technical level again for the implementation,” Hohne said. “I think we have the normal amount of tricky bits right now.”
U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez brought her climate-celebrity star power to the U.N. climate talks on Tuesday as part of a congressional delegation led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Ocasio-Cortez told reporters her chief hope is to see the United States eestablish itself as a world leader in cutting climate-damaging fossil fuel pollution.
Asked if she had a message to young activists who have instrumental in pressing governments to cut climate-damaging fossil fuel pollution, Ocasio-Cortez told reporters inside the conference site: “Well, I would say, ‘Stay in the streets. Keep pushing.’”
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Ellen Knickmeyer contributed to this report from Glasgow.
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Read stories on climate issues by The Associated Press at https://apnews.com/hub/climate.
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Follow Seth Borenstein and Aniruddha Ghosal on Twitter at @borenbears and @aniruddgh1
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
U.S. corn fields likely to yield record crop in 2021
The USDA is scheduled to release an updated estimate of the 2021 corn crop later today.
Iowa State University Extension economist Chad Hart says the mid-October prediction was a 15 billion bushel corn harvest — the largest ever, “so we are talking about a massive crop (and) basically the same story on the soybean side as we’re looking out there, a very large soybean crop as well.”
Iowa is the nation’s top corn producing state. Justin Glisan, the state climatologist, says it’s been a rollercoaster year for weather, as Iowa has been in a structural drought since the spring of 2020. “But those timely rainfalls during the drought, during the growing season, really held the crop on,” Glisan says. “…The yields look great.”
Hart says farmers had the option of choosing seed varieties that can withstand dry weather.
“The idea is what we have done over the last 40, 50, 60 years with these hybrids is we’ve developed hybrids that are more tolerant of a wider range of weather conditions,” Hart says, “and those changes are definitely paying off as we look out there.”
Hart and Glisan made their comments during a weekend appearance on Iowa PBS.
The latest USDA crop and weather report for Iowa shows the state’s corn harvest was 84% complete by Sunday. Ninety-five percent of Iowa’s soybean crop was harvested by the end of the weekend. Most of the soybeans fields still to be harvested are in southwest and south central Iowa.
Governor Reynolds in Pella Tuesday
Governor Kim Reynolds will be in Pella on Tuesday (11/9). The Governor will be at Vermeer to attend an event by the National Association of Manufacturers. Then she will attend the launch of a patient care high school apprenticeship at the Career Academy of Pella. The No Coast Network will be there and have full coverage for you afterwards.
Service for Graber This Evening
There will be a prayer service tonight (11/9) in Fairfield for Nohema Graber….the Fairfield High Spanish teacher who was allegedly killed by two Fairfield students. The prayer service will commence at 7 pm at the Fairfield High School. A private memorial service for family will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, you can send a memorial to St. Mary Catholic Church in Fairfield or the Fairfield Parks and Recreation department. Meanwhile, the two teenagers charged with murdering a high school Spanish teacher will be in court on Friday. Court documents indicate Willard Miller and Jeremy Goodale, both 16-year-old students at Fairfield High School, have been charged as adults with first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit a forcible felony.
Feds urge schools to provide COVID-19 shots, info for kids
By ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is encouraging local school districts to host clinics to provide COVID-19 vaccinations to kids — and information to parents on the benefits of the shots — as the White House looks to speedily provide vaccines to those ages 5 to 11.
First lady Jill Biden and Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy are set to visit the Franklin Sherman Elementary School in McLean, Virginia, on Monday to launch a nationwide campaign to promote child vaccinations. The school was the first to administer the polio vaccine in 1954.
The visit comes just days after federal regulators recommended the COVID-19 vaccine for the age group. The White House says Biden will visit pediatric vaccination clinics across the country over the coming weeks to encourage the shots.
At the same time, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona are sending a letter to school districts across the country calling on them to organize vaccine clinics for their newly eligible students. The officials are reminding school districts that they can tap into billions of dollars in federal coronavirus relief money to support pediatric vaccination efforts.
The Biden administration is providing local school districts with tools to help schools partner with pharmacies to administer shots. And it’s asking schools to share information on the benefits of vaccines and details about the vaccination process with parents, in an effort to combat disinformation surrounding the shots.
The White House is encouraging schools to host community conversations and share fact sheets on the vaccines and is working with the American Academy of Pediatrics to partner local physicians with schools aiming to share science-based information about the shots.
About 28 million kids ages 5 to 11 are newly eligible for shots now that the Pfizer vaccine is approved for the age group. The White House says the federal government has procured enough of the two-dose vaccine for all of them.
A Pfizer study of 2,268 children found the vaccine was almost 91% effective at preventing symptomatic COVID-19 infections. The Food and Drug Administration studied the shots in 3,100 vaccinated kids in concluding the shots are safe.
While kids are less likely than adults to develop severe COVID-19, with the delta variant they get infected and transmit “just as readily as adults do,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, government’s top infectious diseases expert, said at a recent White House briefing.
Since the coronavirus pandemic began, at least 94 children ages 5 to 11 have died from COVID-19, more than 8,300 have been hospitalized and more than 5,000 have developed a serious inflammatory condition linked to the virus.
State Climatologist says late October rains were ‘semi-drought buster’
RADIO IOWA – This week’s drought monitor shows that for the first time since July 7, no part of Iowa is considered to be in severe drought. State Climatologist Justin Glisan says Iowa has been in a “structural drought” since May of 2020.
“We’ve had ebb and flow,” Glisan says. “We’ve had heat waves. We’ve cold weather outbreaks. We’ve had very dry conditions.”
Rainfall was as much as 10 inches below normal in some areas of the state — that is, until the steady rainfall in October.
“We’re not in a drought buster now, but we’re in a semi-drought buster,” Glisan says. “We’ve had anywhere from three to five inches over 14 days across much of western Iowa. You look at eastern Iowa two to three, even four inch totals — above average, of course. We’ve received precipitation amounts in two weeks that we would see in a a month and a half, especially in fall.”
Parts of the western U.S. have been in a long-term drought, but Glisan says those kind of sustained dry conditions are unlikely in the Midwest.
“On the west coast, they’re impacted by different weather patterns than we are in the central part of the United States. They’ve also had what we call the ‘mega drought’ along with heat waves, forest fires of a record that we haven’t seen before. When you have burn scars on the topography, you get rain events, that rain runs off, it doesn’t soak in and it perpetuates that drought,” Glisan says. “Luckily, in the central part of the United States it doesn’t look like we can get into a long-term, perpetual drought given the moisture gate from the Gulf of Mexico, but also the different air masses that impact us.”
Glisan made his comments during taping of “Iowa Press” which aired last week on Iowa PBS.
Teen injured in UTV accident
A 15-year-old was injured in a UTV accident Saturday evening (11/6) in Keokuk County. The Iowa State Patrol says a UTV driven by a 14-year-old from Marengo was going through a field in Keswick around 6:15pm Saturday when it rolled over. There were five people in the UTV and a 15-year-old passenger in the back seat on the passenger side was injured. The injured teen, who is from Parnell, was taken by ambulance to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics for treatment. No one else was injured. No names have been released; the investigation into the accident continues.
Fairfield teens accused of killing teacher to appear in court
The two teenagers charged with murdering a high school Spanish teacher will be in court on Friday (11/12). Court documents indicate Willard Miller and Jeremy Goodale, both 16-year-old students at Fairfield High School, have been charged as adults with first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit a forcible felony. Nohema Graber was found dead last Wednesday (11/3) at a Fairfield Park.
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