TAG SEARCH RESULTS FOR: ""

Iowa casinos seeing impact from Nebraska

By Dar Danielson (Radio Iowa)

This is the final month of the fiscal year for Iowa’s state-licensed casinos, and it appears competition across the boarder will impact the year-end revenue total.

“We anticipate a little less revenue than what was received last fiscal year, but still a very strong year for the industry, and so we did see some softening of the market the last couple of months,” Racing and Gaming Administrator, Brian Ohorilko says. Harrah’s Casino and the Horseshoe Casino in Council Bluffs in southwest Iowa both saw revenue drop in April and May.

“That was expected as the operations in Nebraska are starting to pick up a little bit and so we are starting to see some impact there — but nothing that wasn’t expected,” Ohorilko says. Harrah’s was down roughly $634,000 in gross revenue in May of this year and around $300,000 in April compared to last year. The Horseshoe Casino was down around $3 million in May, and $1.5 million in April of this year.

Ohorilko says the drop is not a major concern. “Still overall it appears that we’re going to have a very strong year in terms of overall revenue throughout the state,” he says. The 19 state casinos brought in more than $1.766-billions in the last fiscal year.

“Annie Jr.” to Take the Stage at Penn Central Mall This Weekend

OSKALOOSA — America’s favorite orphan, Annie, brings her antics and her dog to Penn Central Mall this Sunday, June 25 at 6 p.m. Annie Jr., a shortened version of the Broadway musical, is produced by The Muse Music Store and under the direction of Ally Nolan.

Annie, Jr. features many of the famous songs from the musical such as “Tomorrow,” It’s a Hard Knock Life,” and “You Won’t an Orphan for Long.”

Based on the popular comic strip and adapted from the Tony Award-winning Best Musical, with a beloved book and score by Tony Award winners, Thomas Meehan, Charles Strouse and Martin Charnin, Annie JR. features everyone’s favorite little redhead in her very first adventure.

Little orphan Annie (Brenna Deffenbaugh) charms everyone’s hearts despite a next-to-nothing start in 1930s New York City. She is determined to find the parents who abandoned her years ago on the doorstep of an orphanage run by the cruel Miss Hannigan (Cierra Williams). Annie eventually foils Miss Hannigan’s evil machinations, finding a new home and family in billionaire Oliver Warbucks, (R.D. Keep) his personal secretary, Grace Farrell, (Michelle Lahner) and a lovable mutt named Sandy (Kobe).

After Warbucks decided to find Annie’s parents, a coupe of unsavory people, played by Nollen and Aaron Scholes, attempt to gain the money Warbucks offered and Annie. Other cast members include, Gavin Bowie, Molly Prendergast, Ruby Prendergast, Madison Chamberlain, Grant Johnston, Ryan Keep, Olivia Roberts, Gemma Lahner, and CC Chisolm. Also, Emma Roberts, Delia Lahner, Gabrielle Larson, Zoey Goeller, Eva Nunez and Dakota Williams.

The show is approximately 70 minutes in length and will be performed in center court. Tickets will be available at the door. Note to those attending that the only entrance will be from the northwest by the Love INC Thrift Shoppe.

Nomination Papers for Ottumwa City Council Election Now Available

OTTUMWA — This year the City/School election will be held on Tuesday, November 7, 2023.  There are two City Council positions open for election this fall. The City Council positions are four-year terms. The terms determined by this November’s election become effective at noon on January 2, 2024.

Citizens interested in running for these offices may now obtain a Candidate’s Guide, nomination papers and an affidavit of candidacy from the City Clerk’s Office at 105 E. Third Street, Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM.   The forms are also available at the County Auditor’s Office or from the Secretary of State’s website at https://sos.iowa.gov/elections/electioninfo/cityelections.html

Any resident of the City of Ottumwa, whether registered to vote or not, 18 years of age, who has not been convicted of a felony, unless pardoned by the governor, nor declared mentally incompetent, may seek public office.   Nominees for City Council must obtain 58 signatures from eligible electors, but are encouraged to get more than the minimum.  Persons signing the nomination papers must give their name, their address (place of residence, not a post office box or mailing address), and the date they signed the nomination paper. The number of signatures required is two percent of the total votes cast in the last preceding regular City election.

The first day to file nominations to appear on the ballot with the City Clerk is Monday, August 14, 2023.  The Affidavit of Candidacy must be signed in the presence of a Notary Public.  The nomination papers and affidavit of candidacy must be filed at the City Clerk’s Office no later than 5:00 PM on Thursday, August 31st.

If five or more candidates file nomination papers for City Council, then a City primary election will be necessary.  The City primary election would be held October 10th, four weeks before the City general election on November 7th.

Candidates receiving contributions, making expenditures of incurring debt in excess of $750 are required to file campaign finance reports at the County Auditor’s Office.  Residents with questions about filing for candidacy in this falls City election can contact Christina Reinhard, City Clerk at 683-0620, or Wapello County Auditor, Kelly Spurgeon, at 683-0020.

Government shutdown warnings rise as Republicans seek deeper cuts in budget battle

WASHINGTON (AP) — Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s bid to appease Republican hard-liners and get the House moving again after a recent party rebellion on the floor has some Democrats warning of a difficult road ahead when it comes to passing legislation that will keep the government running.

Republicans teed up votes this past week on guns and on censuring one of former President Donald Trump’s most prominent critics, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. Those votes helped get the House moving again, though the latter effort failed, with Schiff helped by some 20 Republicans.

The most consequential move of the week, however, was an announcement from GOP leadership that arrived with little fanfare. Republicans said they plan to pursue appropriations bills, which fund government programs and agencies, with less spending than the top-line numbers they agreed to in a deal with the White House last month. That compromise avoided what would have been an unprecedented federal default.

McCarthy argued that the numbers he negotiated with the White House amount to a cap and “you can always do less.” GOP Rep. Kay Granger of Texas, who leads the House Appropriations Committee, followed with a statement that said she would seek to limit nondefense spending at 2022 budget levels, saying the debt agreement “set a top-line spending cap -– a ceiling, not a floor.”

The announcements delighted Republicans who had criticized McCarthy, R-Calif., and opposed the debt ceiling legislation because they felt that agreement allowed too much spending. But it drew immediate pushback from Democrats who say an attempt to circumvent the debt ceiling agreement’s top-line numbers effectively guarantees a standoff with the Senate and White House and possibly even a damaging government stoppage when funding expires this fall.

“It is a prelude to a shutdown — what they are engineering,” said Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee.

The emerging dynamic raises the potential for another round of economy-rattling brinkmanship in Washington just months after lawmakers narrowly avoided a damaging federal default.

Partial government shutdowns have become increasingly common in the modern era, with the longest coming under President Donald Trump as he demanded money for a U.S.-Mexico border wall. With President Joe Biden facing down the Republican-controlled House as he runs for reelection in 2024 and some conservatives openly dismissive of the damage a shutdown can cause, the spending fight appears nearly certain to escalate.

The tension created by the GOP’s pursuit of more non-defense spending cuts was evident during hearings held Wednesday and Thursday of the House Appropriations panel.

Democrats accused House Republicans of going back on their word. “Do you think any of us would have made a deal if we thought your ‘22 number was the deal?” said Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md. “What kind of deal is that? What kind of respect for yourselves is that?

“You knew that wasn’t a ceiling,” said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla. “Traditionally, that’s where we are starting. Caps are not ceilings in our world. They are a starting point and then we negotiate from those numbers we have agreed to. That’s how it has always been.”

But Republicans said McCarthy was clear during negotiations that spending had to come down from current levels.

“We can try to fool the American people with smoke and mirrors and pretend, but the speaker was clear. We are in a debt crisis in this country,” said Rep. Andy Harris, R-Md.

Under the debt ceiling agreement, the White House said nondefense spending was expected to be roughly flat in the next budget year and increase by 1% the following year. Defense spending would increase by about 3.3% next year and 1% the following year. The agreement to curb discretionary spending does not include programs like Medicare and Social Security, which are considered mandatory spending.

A few Republicans have urged leadership not to bend to a minority within the conference.

“I think we’ve just got to be really careful not to allow, you know, a small portion of our conference to continually be chipping away at previously agreed upon issues,” said Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark. “That top-line number was agreed to in the (debt-ceiling bill.) They may not like it. They voiced their displeasure last week. They kind of shut the House down, but we’ve got work to do. We need to be doing it.”

Republicans only have a five-seat majority in the House, which magnifies the power that a small bloc can have. It took just 11 members, mostly members of the House Freedom Caucus, to stall House votes on legislation in early June and send lawmakers home early. One of those 11, Rep. Bob Good, R-Va., said moving to 2022 spending levels for nondefense programs will be good for Republican candidates in next year’s general election because that’s what voters are demanding.

“Democrats have no interest in cutting spending,” Good said. “They have to be forced to do so. We should have used the debt ceiling to force them to cut spending. We should use the appropriations process to force them to cut spending. We shouldn’t fear a government shutdown. Most of what we do up here is bad anyway.”

Many senators, Democrat and Republican, did not seem as concerned about the possibility of a shutdown.

“This crowd that is giving McCarthy trouble is irrelevant for purposes of getting appropriations bills passed,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn. “When it comes to appropriations bills, you have to create a coalition that doesn’t include the Freedom Caucus.”

“In the end, I think we’ll resolve these issues,” said Sen. Susan Collins, the top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

DNC gives Iowa Democrats more time to tweak 2024 Caucus plans

By O. Kay Henderson (Radio Iowa)

National Democratic Party leaders have found the mail-in participation plan for the 2024 Iowa Caucuses does not comply with national party rules, but Iowa Democrats have more time to tweak their proposal.

Iowa Democratic Party chair Rita Hart says there are “missing pieces” in the plan. but that was done intentionally. National Democrats have chosen five other states to hold the first presidential primaries in 2024, but details are still being worked out. “We look forward to providing more details to the committee once the calendar challenges are resolved,” Hart said in a letter to the Democratic National Committee’s Rules and Bylaws Committee, which is meeting in Minnesota today.

Iowa Democrats plan to use mail-in presidential preference cards for their 2024 Caucuses, but haven’t said when results of the voting would be announced. National party leaders say that date needs to be nailed down, to comply with the party’s plan that South Carolina Democrats host the first presidential primary in 2024.

Drought starting to stress crops

By Dar Danielson (Radio Iowa)

Crops are starting to show signs of stress brought on by the drought. Iowa Sate University Extension field agronomist Angie Rieck Hinz sees it in the corn in her north-central Iowa area.

“We see leaf rolling because it’s dry we see nutrient deficiencies that are showing up because it’s dry, mostly not because our soil fertility rates are too low, but because it’s dry,” she says. The bean crops have also been impacted.

“Our soybeans are extremely short this year and a lot of that has to do with these really dry conditions we’re experiencing,” Hinz says. Hinz says some areas in her region are short four to five inches of soil moisture needed to produce a healthy crop.

“Generally speaking when we look at our crop production systems we need about 20 inches of moisture for a corn crop our soils hold about eight to 12 inches depending on where we’re located in Iowa,” she says. Hinz says they need some rain soon to keep the crop conditions from getting worse.

The latest Iowa Drought Monitor showed most of Mahaska County, and all of Keokuk County, under a “Moderate Drought.” Most of Wapello and Monroe Counties are under a “Severe Drought.”

Stewards of the Beautiful Land Program Starts This Week in Mahaska County

OSKALOOSA — Trees Forever, The Tallgrass Prairie Center, various County Conservation Boards and Roadside Programs are offering Stewards of the Beautiful Land for a sixth year, starting Thursday, June 22nd . Stewards of the Beautiful Land – Mahaska has 4 field days, meeting monthly, geared for the outdoor enthusiast who wants to learn more about prairie plants, trees and forests, and the environments they thrive in, and how to advocate for native landscapes.

“This is going to be a great Stewards season; we will have the in-person field trips so participants can learn together in some fantastic outdoor classrooms and learning labs. Plant identification, establishment, and management as well as tree care and more will be taught,” says Trees Forever Field Coordinator, Peter Lundgren.

The field days are complimented with monthly webinars featuring guest presenters which lay the groundwork and knowledge base for where to find native plants on the landscape, the various landforms of Iowa, invasive species identification and management, pollinator habitat enhancement and protection and more.

Each month will also feature the in-person meeting to learn from one another, walk through the woods or prairie identifying native plants and trees, and hands-on skills like how to properly plant and care for natives. In-person field days are being hosted in Mahaska, Dickinson, Story, and Carroll counties.

For more information contact Peter Lundgren at plundgren@treesforever.org or via phone at 319-640-2883. Registration is live on the Trees Forever events calendar found at this link: https://treesforever.org/stewards/.

In rare 3-3 decision, Iowa Supreme Court declines to reinstate law largely banning abortion

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Abortion will remain legal in Iowa after the state’s high court declined Friday to reinstate a law that would have largely banned the procedure, rebuffing Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds and, for now, keeping the conservative state from joining others with strict abortion limits.

In a rare 3-3 split decision, the Iowa Supreme Court upheld a 2019 district court ruling that blocked the law. The latest ruling comes roughly a year after the same body — and the U.S. Supreme Court — determined that women do not have a fundamental constitutional right to abortion.

The blocked law bans abortions once cardiac activity can be detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy and before many women know they are pregnant.

Writing for the three justices who denied the state’s request to reinstate the law, Justice Thomas Waterman said granting that request would mean bypassing the legislature, changing the standard for how the court reviews laws and then dissolving an injunction.

“In our view it is legislating from the bench to take a statute that was moribund when it was enacted and has been enjoined for four years and then to put it in effect,” Waterman wrote.

The court has seven members but one justice declined to participate because her former law firm had represented an abortion provider.

While the state’s high court maintains the block on the law, it does not preclude Reynolds and lawmakers from passing a new law that looks the same. The decision Friday was largely procedural — the 2022 appeal to the 2019 ruling was too late.

Abortions remain legal in Iowa up to 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Most Republican-led states have severely curtailed access to abortion in the year since the U.S. Supreme Court stripped women’s constitutional right to abortion by overturning Roe v. Wade and handing authority over the issue to states.

Reynolds signed the 2018 law despite state and federal court decisions at the time, including Roe, affirming a woman’s constitutional right to abortion. Planned Parenthood sued and a state judge blocked the law the following year. Reynolds did not appeal the decision at the time.

In a separate case, the Iowa Supreme Court decided last year to reverse an opinion saying the state’s constitution affirms a fundamental right to abortion. Roe was overturned a week later and Reynolds sought to dissolve the 2019 decision.

state judge ruled last year that she had no authority to do so and Reynolds appealed to the state’s Supreme Court, which is now far more conservative than when the law was first passed. Reynolds appointed five of the court’s seven members.

Although called a “fetal heartbeat” law, the measure does not easily translate to medical science. At the point where advanced technology can detect the first visual flutter, the embryo isn’t yet a fetus and does not have a heart. An embryo is termed a fetus eight weeks after fertilization.

The Iowa law contains exceptions for medical emergencies, including threats to the mother’s life, rape, incest and fetal abnormality.

Governor signs public funding bill for new A’s stadium in Vegas, growing global sports destination

RENO, Nev. (AP) — Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo signed into law Thursday a $380 million public financing package to help build a Major League Baseball stadium for the Oakland Athletics on the Las Vegas Strip as MLB’s commissioner outlined a months-long approval process for the A’s proposed move there.

The first-term Republican governor and former sheriff in Las Vegas said he was excited to sign the measure the Democrat-controlled Legislature approved Wednesday night after a seven-day long special session.

“This is an incredible opportunity to bring the A’s to Nevada,” Lombardo said in a statement from Carson City.

The $1.5 billion stadium with a retractable roof is planned near the homes of the NFL’s Vegas Raiders, who fled Oakland in 2020, and the NHL’s Golden Knights, who won the Stanley Cup this week in just their sixth season.

“This legislation reflects months of negotiations between the team, the state, the county, and the league,” Lombardo said. “Las Vegas’ position as a global sports destination is only growing, and Major League Baseball is another tremendous asset for the city.”

Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred outlined the review process of the A’s proposed relocation during a news conference hours earlier at a meeting of owners in New York. With a capacity of 30,000, the stadium would be MLB’s smallest.

Manfred said the team must submit a relocation application explaining its efforts in Oakland and why Las Vegas is a better market. A relocation committee will define the new operating territory and television territory. It will then make a recommendation to Manfred and the eight-man executive council. The executive council formulates a recommendation to all clubs, which must approve the move by at least three-quarters vote.

The team said in a statement late Thursday the Nevada governor’s signing of the funding package was “a significant step forward in securing a new home for the Athletics.”

“We will now begin the process with MLB to apply for relocation to Las Vegas,” the statement said. “We are excited about Southern Nevada’s dynamic and vibrant professional sports scene, and we look forward to becoming a valued community member through jobs, economic development, and the quality of life and civic pride of a Major League Baseball team.”

The $380 million in public funding would mainly come from $180 million in transferable tax credits and $120 million in county bonds. Backers have pledged that the creation of a special tax district around the proposed stadium would generate enough money to pay off those bonds and interest. The plan would not directly raise taxes.

The plan had revived the national debate over public funding for private sports clubs. A’s representatives and some Nevada tourism officials have said the measure could add to Las Vegas’ growing sports scene and act as an economic engine. But a growing chorus of economists and some lawmakers have warned that such a project would bring minimal benefits when compared to the hefty public price tag.

Opposition came from both sides of the aisle, especially in northern and rural Nevada several hundreds of miles away from Las Vegas.

“No amount of amendments are going to change the fact we are giving millions of public dollars to a billionaire,” Assemblywoman Selena La Rue Hatch, a progressive Democrat from Reno, said during Wednesday night’s debate.

“Using taxpayer money on pet projects instead of private capital is socialism,” said Republican Sen. Ira Hansen, from neighboring Sparks.

But backers said in addition to creating 14,000 construction jobs and permanent jobs subject to collective bargaining, Major League Baseball on the Las Vegas Strip will build on the excitement surrounding the Raiders, the Golden Knights and the WNBA’s Aces in a city that had no major professional sports before 2016.

“With the Aces winning a national championship last year and the Golden Knights securing the Stanley Cup just last night, it is clear Las Vegas is clearly becoming the entertainment and sports capital of the world,” said Democratic Assemblywoman Shea Backus, from Las Vegas.

U-I researcher says work needed before automated vehicles can drive rural roads

By Dar Danielson (Radio Iowa)

A just completed study at the University of Iowa’s Driving Safety Research Institute found there is more work to be done to create an automated vehicle that can safely navigate on Iowa’s rural roads.

Institute Deputy Director Omar Ahmad says the study is the first of its kind. “Most of the testing is taking place in larger urban areas, or on interstates. But the fact is, that while a smaller portion of the population lives in rural areas, half of all traffic fatalities occur on rural roadways,” Ahmad says.

One of the goals of the research was to see if automated vehicles can provide help to elderly residents with mobility, vision, or other challenges who can’t drive themselves. Ahmed says they created an automated shuttle bus designed to deal with the unique situations in rural driving, like navigating on gravel. “You drive a gravel roadway in the center of the road and then you give way as you approach somebody and then you more or less go back to the center because that’s the best part of the gravel roadway,” he says. “As you get towards the edge, the gravel starts to get looser, and especially in bad weather, it can almost pull you in or off the road.”

He says their automated vehicle had trouble discerning when to move to the middle of the gravel, especially in wet weather conditions. “It would stay towards the edge regardless of whether the weather was good or bad,” Ahmed says. “And we would want it to be smarter like a human and drive more towards the center and only go towards the edge when it sees somebody approaching.”

The automated vehicle also had trouble sensing what was a hazard and what was not — sometimes slowing down for dust clouds created on gravel roads. Another issue came at intersections with low visibility, or where the rural road came to a highway. “If the sensors can’t see around the corner, or because the traffic is moving so fast, if they don’t see the traffic until it’s almost too late, that can be very challenging. And that was certainly something that we experienced, as we were making turns onto highways where we were at a stop sign and the traffic was approaching really fast,” he explains, “our sensors weren’t able weren’t look far enough ahead in either direction.”

They used a safety driver in the bus as they drove a 47-mile route multiple times a week, round trip between Iowa City, Hills, Riverside, and Kalona. For each drive, the bus began and ended the route at one of the four pre-arranged locations to pick up residents who were volunteer research participants.

Ahmad says they collected a lot of data and says there is a lot of work ahead. “The technology has a lot of potential, it has a lot of promise, but it’s simply not there yet in terms of its reliability to be able for us to feel confident driving without a safety driver,” he says. Ahmad says there is a lot of potential for automated vehicles to make a driver safer, but taking the driver completely out of the equation is not going to happen anytime soon. “They are not yet a replacement for the driver. And I would say it’s fairly hard to predict when they will be, but my own personal guess would be that it will be quite some time,” Ahmad says.

The U.S. Department of Transportation awarded eight institutions a $7 million grant for automated vehicle research. Ahmad says the U-I was one of three to study rural driving conditions, and the first of the three to complete the data collection portion of their project. He says they will now share the good and bad issues they found with rural roadways and automation with the other institutions.

NEWSLETTER

Stay updated, sign up for our newsletter.