Here’s an update to a story the No Coast Network has been following. A Newton girl who had run away has returned home. 14-year-old Madison Anne Marie Rodgers had left home early Sunday morning (10/17)and was reported missing the next day. Newton Police tell the No Coast Network that Madison returned home Wednesday morning (10/20).
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Mahaska County homeless can get help Saturday
Homeless people in Mahaska County can get help with several services on Saturday (10/23). Love INC (In the Name of Christ) is holding its second annual Mahaska Connect at Central Methodist Church in Oskaloosa. Love INC executive director Susan Doolan says help will be available to get legal and personal services.
“Help to get birth certificates. You need that to apply for housing assistance. Maybe it’s a driver’s license or an ID or maybe it’s medical care or food stamps or banking type information. There’s also some physical therapy services, some mental health services.”
Mahaska Connect will be held Saturday from 8am to 1pm at Central Methodist Church in Oskaloosa. This is free of charge. And there will be transportation to and from the event from New Sharon, Beacon, Fremont, University Park and Rose Hill. For more information, call 641-676-3750.
Iowa National Guard to help resettle Afghan refugees
Dozens of Iowa National Guard members are being deployed to help resettle Afghan refugees.
The Sioux City Journal reported Tuesday (10/19) that about 30 members of the 185th Air Refueling Wing in Sioux City are being deployed. About 35 others are from the 132nd Wing in Des Moines.
The Iowa members will be assigned to an undisclosed location in the U.S. to assist with Operation Allies Welcome, an effort to bring U.S. citizens home from Afghanistan and to resettle vulnerable Afghan refugees.
The Iowa National Guard said guard members will deploy for roughly 60 to 90 days starting next month. A spokesman for the Iowa National Guard said he couldn’t provide specific details about where the members will go.
At least 50,000 Afghans are expected to be admitted into the United States following the fall of Kabul as part of an “enduring commitment” to help people who aided the American war effort and others who are particularly vulnerable under Taliban rule, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has said.
Jan. 6 panel plans contempt vote as Trump sues over probe
By MARY CLARE JALONICK, JILL COLVIN and COLLEEN LONG
WASHINGTON (AP) — A House committee tasked with investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection is moving swiftly Tuesday to hold at least one of Donald Trump’s allies in contempt as the former president is pushing back on the probe in a new lawsuit.
Trump is aggressively trying to block the committee’s work by directing former White House aide Steve Bannon not to answer questions in the probe while also suing the panel to try to prevent Congress from obtaining former White House documents. But lawmakers on the House committee say they will not back down as they gather facts and testimony about the attack involving Trump’s supporters that left dozens of police officers injured, sent lawmakers running for their lives and interrupted the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory.
“The former president’s clear objective is to stop the Select Committee from getting to the facts about January 6th and his lawsuit is nothing more than an attempt to delay and obstruct our probe,” said Chairman Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., and Republican Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the panel’s vice chairwoman, in a joint statement late Monday.
They added: “It’s hard to imagine a more compelling public interest than trying to get answers about an attack on our democracy and an attempt to overturn the results of an election.”
Trump’s lawsuit, filed after Biden decided to waive his right to block the document release over executive privilege concerns, claims that the panel’s August request was overly broad and a “vexatious, illegal fishing expedition,” according to papers filed in federal court in the District of Columbia.
The lawsuit was expected, as Trump has repeatedly made clear that he will challenge the investigation of the violent attack by a mob of his supporters. But Trump’s challenge went beyond the initial 125 pages of records that Biden recently cleared for release to the committee. The suit, which names the committee as well as the National Archives, seeks to invalidate the entirety of the congressional request, calling it overly broad, unduly burdensome and a challenge to separation of powers. It requests a court injunction to bar the archivist from producing the documents.
The Biden administration, in clearing the documents for release, said the violent siege of the Capitol more than nine months ago was such an extraordinary circumstance that it merited waiving the privilege that usually protects White House communications.
The legal challenge came a day before the panel is scheduled to vote to recommend that Bannon be held in criminal contempt of Congress for his defiance of the committee’s demands for documents and testimony. In a resolution released Monday, and scheduled to be voted out of the panel on Tuesday, the committee asserts that the former Trump aide and podcast host has no legal standing to rebuff the committee — even as Trump’s lawyer has argued that Bannon should not disclose information because it is protected by the privilege of the former president’s office.
Bannon was a private citizen when he spoke to Trump ahead of the attack, the committee said, and Trump has not asserted any such executive privilege claims to the panel itself.
“Mr. Bannon appears to have played a multi-faceted role in the events of January 6th, and the American people are entitled to hear his first-hand testimony regarding his actions,” the committee wrote in the resolution.
The resolution lists many ways in which Bannon was involved in the leadup to the insurrection, including reports that he encouraged Trump to focus on Jan. 6, the day Congress certified the presidential vote, and his comments on Jan. 5 that “all hell is going to break loose” the next day.
Once the committee votes on the Bannon contempt measure, it will go to the full House for a vote and then on to the Justice Department, which would decide whether to prosecute.
In a letter obtained by The Associated Press, the White House also worked to undercut Bannon’s argument. Deputy Counsel Jonathan Su wrote that the president’s decision on the documents applied to Bannon, too, and “at this point we are not aware of any basis for your client’s refusal to appear for a deposition.”
“President Biden’s determination that an assertion of privilege is not justified with respect to these subjects applies to your client’s deposition testimony and to any documents your client may possess concerning either subject,” Su wrote to Bannon’s lawyer.
Bannon’s attorney said he had not yet seen the letter and could not comment on it. While Bannon has said he needs a court order before complying with his subpoena, former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and former White House and Pentagon aide Kashyap Patel have been negotiating with the committee. It is unclear whether a fourth former White House aide, Dan Scavino, will comply.
The committee has also subpoenaed more than a dozen people who helped plan Trump rallies ahead of the siege, and some of them have already said they would turn over documents and give testimony.
The committee has demanded a broad range of executive branch papers related to intelligence gathered before the attack, security preparations during and before the siege, the pro-Trump rallies held that day and Trump’s false claims that he won the election, among other matters.
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Associated Press Writers Zeke Miller, Nomaan Merchant and Eric Tucker contributed to this report.
State and federal ag departments monitoring African Swine Fever outbreak
Meat processors and agriculture officials are working to make sure they’re prepared for a highly-contagious swine disease.
Tyson Foods, the U.S.D.A, the Iowa Department of Ag and other industry groups took part in a mock exercise last month to work on their response to a simulated African Swine Fever outbreak. Rosemary Sifford, with the U.S.D.A.’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, says the agency is monitoring the spread of the disease around the world.
“Dominican Republic and Haiti right now are our biggest concern in terms of proximity of the virus to the United States and the risk level,” Sifford says, “but we do also still recognize the risk level for products and people moving from other countries that have the virus in Asia and Europe.”
Among the things the groups want to work on is encouraging trucks to get washed as soon as they leave a packing plant to avoid contaminating farms. During the exercise, KatieRose McCullough, with the North American Meat Institute, says the industry found some areas it needs to work on, including: “Identifying maybe those employees that have hogs at home,” McCullough says. “Are they being provided different PPE to be wearing in our facility or alternative clothing?”
There is no vaccine for African Swine Fever. The disease can be deadly to pigs and economies could also take a hit. Some governments ban pork imports from countries where the disease is confirmed.
(By Katie Peikes, Iowa Public Radio)
Another try at redistricting Iowa’s Congressional districts
An agency will release a second attempt at redrawing Iowa’s congressional and legislative district lines this week, and the response from Republicans could make clear whether they intend to stick with the state’s nonpartisan process or opt for a more partisan approach that favors GOP candidates.
For 40 years, Iowa legislators have ultimately approved maps created by bureaucrats specifically banned from taking partisan sensibilities or candidate preferences into account. As a result, Iowa typically has among the nation’s most competitive congressional races.
But the once-a-decade process allows that if legislators reject two maps drawn by the Legislative Services Agency, lawmakers can create any map they want as long as it abides by rules such as relatively equal population distribution and compact districts. With Republicans holding majorities in both legislative chambers as well as the governorship, the GOP would have complete control of that process.
Republicans already have rejected the first set of maps, and Democrats have become increasingly anxious that if they vote down the second effort during an Oct. 28 special session, it would signal a move to approve maps that could make the GOP even more dominant in the increasingly right-leaning state. The LSA has promised to release the new set of maps this week.
“What we’re really concerned about is this corrosive effect on our democracy,” Iowa Senate Democratic leader Zach Wahls said. “We have really serious concerns about what would happen if we get to a third map and partisan amendments start to get filed.”
Only five states have an independent commission to draw maps — Arizona, California, Colorado, Iowa and Michigan, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. Fifteen states have a politically appointed commission or advisory group to draw them, and in the remaining 30 states the legislature draws the maps.
The Iowa Legislature approved the current process in 1980 after a struggle to approve maps a decade earlier resulted in the Iowa Supreme Court adopting its own plan. Under Iowa’s process, lawmakers can vote to accept or reject the nonpartisan maps but can’t tinker with the lines until the third round — a point only reached in 1981, when lawmakers approved the third maps without changes.
Senate Republican leader Jack Whitver said GOP senators were only following the law when they voted unanimously against the first maps, saying lawmakers wanted to see improvements in the population deviation and compactness of some of the districts. Whitver denied that Republicans simply intended to wait for the third set of maps and redraw them to suit themselves.
“We have a very specific process in Iowa code, including how those districts are drawn and what they look like, so if anyone thinks you could just come in and draw whatever you want, that’s not legal in Iowa,” he said. “It’s following the process of a nonpartisan map, a second nonpartisan map, get to a third map if it happens, but you still can’t throw away Iowa law as far as the requirement of what a district should look like.”
What worries Democrats is that Whitver and other party leaders, including House Speaker Pat Grassley, have been unwilling to say they won’t amend the third set.
Iowa law isn’t specific about requirements on legislators, saying only the third map “shall be subject to amendment in the same manner as other bills.” If Republicans were to stray into gerrymandering it would be challenged in court but it’s not been tested since 1980, so it’s unclear how the Iowa Supreme Court would rule.
The court itself has become considerably more conservative in recent years since Reynolds has named four of the seven justices. Two others were seated by her mentor and Republican predecessor Terry Branstad.
Lawmakers may face some pressure to uphold Iowa’s system, so there is some expectation they will not completely discard that tradition, said Donna Hoffman, a political science professor at the University of Northern Iowa.
“There is a norm essentially that you will take one of the LSA’s maps. Now, in an era in which norms are frequently broken, does that mean anything?” she asked.
TPI Composites to lay off over 700 workers
One of Jasper County’s largest businesses is laying off most of its workers. TPI Composites will be laying off 710 workers at its Newton plant, according to the Iowa Workforce Development’s Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act website. TPI makes blades for windmills. According to the City of Newton, TCI employs about 800 people.
Colin Powell has died of COVID-19 complications, family says
WASHIINGTON (AP) — Colin Powell, former Joint Chiefs chairman and secretary of state, has died from COVID-19 complications, his family said Monday. He was 84.
In an announcement on social media, the family said Powell had been fully vaccinated.
Musco Lighting Fall Challenge
By Jerry Mackey:
The annual Musco Lighting Fall Challenge provided non stop racing action both Friday and Saturday, October 15 & 16 as the 2021 racing season came to a close on the Mahaska County fairgrounds ½ mile dirt track. The Southern Iowa Speedway saw 200 entries take part over the two days of racing action.
Despite rains early in the week, the dirt track held up very well with preparations being led by Randy McClure. The fans saw plenty of wheel to wheel racing excitement both nights.
The Mid States Machine Stock Cars saw Cedar Rapids driver Johnny Spaw scoring a clean sweep taking both nights A features. Spaw stated in victory lane, “ I have raced Osky many times and have never won here, this is awesome to not only win one but to win both is truly a weekend we won’t forget”.
Oskaloosa regulars Maguire DeJong and Curtis VanDerwal each scored wins in the Oskaloosa Quality Rental Sportmods. First time visitor to Oskaloosa, Ty Griffith ran second in both features.
Bedford, Iowa’s Luke Ramsey topped huge field of Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks in scoring both nights main events. 61 entries were in attendance in the Hobby Stock class over the two nights.
Local driver Nathan Moody scored the Friday night win in the Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts with Kolby Sabin of Des Moines picking up the Saturday night win.
Glen Sayville from New South Whales Australia captured the win on Friday night in Non Wing Sprinters while Colton Fisher scored the win on Saturday night.
The American Iron Racing Series brought 13 cars to the SIS to race on Saturday night and Doak Allen drove his Chevy Nova to the win.
2021 Southern Iowa Speedway Track Champions were recognized on Friday night and were awarded their point fund checks. SIS drivers shared over $5,400 in point fund money. Track champions Doug Sylvester-Non Wing Sprints, Billy Cain-Sport Compacts, Dustin Griffiths-Hobby Stocks, Maguire DeJong-Montezuma and Derrick Agee-Stock Cars.
The Southern Iowa Fairboard and Race committee would like to thank all the Drivers, Crews and especially the fans for their support in 2021 as they look forward to the 2022 season.
Musco Lighting Fall Challenge Feature Results Top Five
Friday, October 15 Saturday, October 16
Mid States Machine Stock Cars
- 00 Johnny Spaw-Cedar Rapids 1. Spaw
- 10G Dustin Griffiths-Hedrick 2. 81D Scott Davis-Madrid
- 93 Mike Jeanette-Newton 3. B17 Steve Byers-Indianola
- 74 Brock Haines-Fairfield 4. Griffiths
- Byers 5. 75 Austin Kemper-Wapello
Oskaloosa Quality Rental Sportmods
- 30M Maguire Dejong-Montezuma 1. 1V Curtis VanDerwal-Osky
- 56 Ty Griffith-Webster City 2. Griffith
- VanDerwal 3. Dejong
- 29L Colton Livezy-New Sharon 4. 20J Jeremy Grantham-Allison
- 04 Trent Orwig-Ottumwa 5. 84B Trent Brink-Bussy
Parker Tree Service Hobby Stocks
- 17L Luke Ramsey-Bedford 1. Ramsey
- 11R Brayden Richards-Madrid 2. Richards
- 27 Clint Nelson-Baxter 3. 4W John Watson-DesMoines
- 73 Aaron Martin-Delta 4. 77 Keaton Gordon-Ottumwa
- 77 Gordon 5. Martin
Dirt N Asphalt Sport Compacts
- 41 Nathan Moody-Osky 1. 9 Kolby Sabin-DesMoines
- 63B Terry Bickford-Shannon City 2. 23H Alex Hayes-Iowa City
- 5H Tyler Harring-Osky 3. 2M Matt Moore-Ottumwa
- 69JX William Michel-Columbus Junction 4. 62 Lewie Winkleman-New Sharon
- 2M Moore 5. 2H James Harring-Osky
Non Wing Sprints
- 76 Glen Sayville-Australia 1. 11 Colton Fisher-Mediapolis
- 11B Ben Woods-Newton 2. Sayville
- 71 Robert Bell-Colfax 3. 11B Woods
- 25 Kelly Graham-Hedrick 4. 71 Bell
- 38 Logan Alexander-New Virginia 5. 12 Doug Sylvester-OttumwaAmerican Iron racing Series
1. Doak Allen-West Burlington -72 Nova
2. 25 Bobby VanBuskirk-Hedrick- 58 Studebaker
3. 68 Travis Heier-Anamosa- &5 Ford Maverick
4. 501 Bart Miller-Clarence-68 Ford Galaxie
5. 5 Brian Gade-Clarence-69 Ford Galaxie
Crunch time: Biden faces critical next 2 weeks for agenda
By JONATHAN LEMIRE and ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is entering a crucial two weeks for his ambitious agenda, racing to conclude contentious congressional negotiations ahead of both domestic deadlines and a chance to showcase his administration’s accomplishments on a global stage.
Biden and his fellow Democrats are struggling to bridge intraparty divides by month’s end to pass a bipartisan infrastructure bill and a larger social services package. The president hopes to nail down both before Air Force One lifts off for Europe on Oct. 28 for a pair of world leader summits, including the most ambitious climate change meeting in years.
But that goal has been jeopardized by fractures among Democrats, imperiling the fate of promised sweeping new efforts to grapple with climate change. There’s also rising anxiety within the party about a bellwether gubernatorial contest in Virginia and looming Senate fights over the federal debt limit and government funding that could distract from getting the president’s agenda across the finish line.
Biden is trying to stabilize his presidency after a difficult stretch marked by the tumultuous end of the Afghanistan war, a diplomatic spat with a longtime ally and a surge in COVID-19 cases that rattled the nation’s economic recovery and sent his poll numbers tumbling.
His team has continued its strategy — one that served it well during the campaign and earlier this year — of blocking out the outside noise to stay focused on a singular mission, this time to pass the two-part package that will give Democrats a platform on which to run in next year’s midterm elections.
“These bills, in my view, are literally about competitiveness versus complacency, about opportunity versus decay, and about leading the world or continuing to let the world move by us,” Biden said Friday while pushing the legislation in Connecticut.
Yet beneath the White House’s pleas for patience — reminding people that hard things take time — is a bubbling sense of urgency that a deal needs to be struck rapidly.
For the White House, there are the explicit target dates, including an end-of-month deadline on transportation funding and Biden’s upcoming foreign trip. But there are also more abstract imperatives: proving Democrats can deliver on their promises to voters and protecting Biden’s waning political capital.
With new urgency, the administration has sent signals to Capitol Hill in recent days that it is time to wrap up negotiations, that a deal needs to be reached, according to two White House officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss private conversations. Biden himself has expressed impatience and will be increasing his own personal outreach this week to push lawmakers to find a compromise and bring the bills to a vote, the officials said.
West Wing officials are still optimistic that an agreement will ultimately be struck, but there are also fears that the messy, drawn-out negotiation has clouded the tangible benefits of what Biden aims to deliver to voters.
Biden sought to address some of that when he traveled to Hartford, Connecticut, last week to showcase initiatives to sharply reduce the cost of early childhood care — perhaps one of the only pieces of the legislation that is a lock to make the final package.
Even Democratic leaders are divided on the best way to shrink the overall price tag of the package in order to win over more votes. Biden said Friday he prefers including all of the wish-list proposals, but trimming down the length of the programs to cut costs. His thinking is that a future Congress can vote later to extend programs that the American people will find popular.
But days earlier, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi suggested the opposite tack — approving a narrower set of programs to last for a longer time period.
Some Democrats have pushed for passing the bipartisan infrastructure deal by Oct. 31 even if the larger social services package is not settled, a move many progressives dislike because they could lose leverage for the latter bill.
The fate of climate change provisions is particularly perilous.
West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin’s objections to a program aimed at speeding the nation’s transition away from fossil fuels threatens the heart of Biden’s plans to combat climate change just before he tries to assert American leadership on the issue at the upcoming global conference in Scotland.
The Democrats’ razor-thin margins in both houses of Congress have empowered individual lawmakers like Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, vexing fellow lawmakers and the White House. White House aides have not abandoned the clean energy program but are exploring alternate means to string together a mix of policies to cut emissions, officials said.
Abandoning the provisions could wound Biden in Glasgow, at a summit that the administration has held out as a vital opportunity not just to combat climate change but to reassert U.S. leadership on the issue after four years of retrenchment under President Donald Trump. The United States will be bringing a major footprint to the gathering — including former President Barack Obama — but it risks falling behind European nations that have taken more concrete steps to cut emissions.
Biden’s stop in Scotland early in November will follow his participation in a summit of world leaders in Rome. But Chinese President Xi Jinping’s decision to skip the gatherings — delaying the first meeting between the leaders of the two superpowers — could diminish their relevance. Still, Biden is expected to meet in Italy with French President Emmanuel Macron as the men look to repair relations after a U.S. submarine deal with Australia scuttled a French contract and led the French to briefly withdraw their ambassador from Washington.
Also looming is the Nov. 2 gubernatorial election in Virginia, which is regarded as a referendum on Biden and the Democrats’ chances of retraining control over Congress next year.
Terry McAuliffe, who previously served as the state’s governor, is locked in a closer-than-expected race with Republican businessman Glenn Youngkin in a state that Biden won by 10 points last year.
McAuliffe has been surprisingly public in his criticism of the administration’s legislative strategy, urging Democrats to pass the infrastructure bill before Election Day to give him something to show voters. White House officials privately expect McAuliffe to emerge with a narrow win and believe they can ignore worries about a smaller-than-expected margin of victory.
But a tight outcome, or a Youngkin win, could rattle Democrats uncertain about Biden’s political coattails — potentially making them less likely to take risky votes for his agenda — and would buoy Republicans heading into the midterms.
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