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Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

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By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

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By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

Press Release

PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

Thirteen women, one man and no abortion

By Lynda Waddington | 09.26.08 | 11:17 am

On Wednesday afternoon a small but mighty group gathered in Marion to begin statewide discussions on the plight of women, the challenges facing organizations that serve women and the legislative targets and goals that will soon be developed by the Iowa Commission on the Status of Women.

The meeting, organized and hosted by the state agency, marked the first time in roughly 30 years that public hearings were held outside of the state’s centralized metro area. Next week the Commission will continue public hearings in the cities of Urbandale and Storm Lake.

What may come as a surprise to those who have not sat in on such meetings is that abortion — that hot-button issue that seems to emerge during each election season — was not a topic of discussion. Those who attended the meetings — representatives from the Iowa Department of Corrections, the Domestic Violence Intervention Program, the Iowa Policy Project, Five Giant Steps, the Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault and the Iowa Coalition Against Domestic Violence among others — were instead fixated on the kitchen table issues that adversely affect women in Iowa. This is not to say that women’s health, including reproductive health, was not a concern among those in attendance. It was just that this group of women and one man, Commissioner Tom Carnahan of Davenport, understand that reproductive health is just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to women’s issues.

Robin Robinson, project manager for Five Giant Steps, provided the Commission with information related to early childhood development that was specific to Linn County. This project, which was born from the Cedar Rapids Area Chamber’s and the Cedar Rapids Community Foundation’s Fifteen in 5 initiative, focuses on the area’s youngest residents.

“[Five Giant Steps] is an information conduit and we are responding to current needs, such as in relation to the flood recovery efforts in this area,” Robinson said.

Robinson presented the Commission members and other meeting participants with printed documents outlining the current state of child care programs in Cedar Rapids and Palo following the June floods. The 2008 floods, according to those documents, affected local licensed and registered child care settings that serve a total of 1,547 children. Of that total amount, 32 percent are child care settings that had major flood damage and have subsequently closed. To date, it is uncertain if these providers will re-open and again service the community. An additional 16 percent also suffered major damage, have not yet restarted operations, but plan to be operational at some point this fall.

Flooding also impacted services being offered by the Domestic Violence Intervention Program, which serves Cedar, Iowa, Johnson and Washington counties, as well as the Cedar Rapids-based Waypoint Services, according to Kristie Fortmann-Doser, DVIP executive director. The most pressing need this organization has going into the 2008 legislative session, however, is monetary.

“Since 2002 nine dual — domestic violence and sexual assault — programs have closed or been forced to merge with other programs in state because of lack of funding,” Fortmann-Doser said. “During a time when DVIP has seen a nearly 100 percent increase in services in the four county area we serve, the program has lost roughly $140,000 in funding from the state. These monies in the past have been offset through the Iowa Attorney General’s Office, but it is our understand that offset will no longer be available.”

Without the offset and while facing further federal and state funding cuts, the program is facing a potential 41 percent funding loss.

The Commission was also given a glimpse into Iowa wage equity from Beth Pearson of the Iowa Policy Project. Despite women comprising nearly half of the state’s workforce, according to Pearson, disparities persist between the genders.

“For instance, although women in Iowa are more likely than men to receive a post-secondary education, they are also more likely to be in poverty and to earn a lower wage than male peers,” Pearson said, citing her organization’s recent study on women and the economy.

She recommended the Commission look at policies that would provide paid family leave for women in the workforce.

One of the problems outlined by many in attendance is that women seeking services in Iowa (as well as many women incarcerated in Iowa) have dual barriers. For instance, not only may a woman be a victim of sexual violence, but she might also be a substance abuser. A woman who is earning less and trying to work her way out of poverty might be hampered by problems associated with finding and affording quality child care or transportation to a higher paying job. In this way, many of the issues surrounding the betterment of women as a whole are multifaceted and don’t lend themselves to single solutions.

The Iowa Commission on the Status of Women will continue to host the public hearings and then will develop their legislative priorities for the 2008 session.

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Comments

  • Peggy2

    “She recommended the Commission look at policies that would provide paid family leave for women in the workforce.”

    Who's going to pay for that? And what's it really going to solve?

    The problem is the near-total disintegration of the traditional family. Teaching women that their worth is immeasurable and they shouldn't sleep with a man unless they're married to him costs nothing; we haven't tried it yet.

    Everything else has failed and now these well-meaning folks are going to do more of the same. A good first step would be to quit treating women like they can't handle the truth.

    • http://www.iowaindependent.com LyndaWaddington

      Many of the women who could benefit from paid family leave are married women starting families, caring for an ailing parent, or needing time off to help with a sick child. Women (and men) are sometimes forced to choose between continuing their career and caring for their families. This is because those who do take time off will be “re-hired” at an entry or lower level position than where they were before.

      • Peggy2

        I'm sure there are married women who get caught in these unfortunate situations but, with the help of a spouse they are more able to recoup from such a trial without government intervention, i.e. tax money.

        A single woman with children is pretty much dead in the water when something catastrophic happens such as a child afflicted with a lengthy illness. No amount of tax money is going to make her life easier – she needs a spouse and the kids need a father.

        While there are always exceptions, two-parent homes are the ideal. I don't think it's politically incorrect to tell the truth, especially when the truth is a good thing.

        Peace.

  • RegularJoe

    “Teaching women that their worth is immeasurable and they shouldn't sleep with a man unless they're married to him costs nothing; we haven't tried it yet.”
    Huh? Thought the 'family values' crowd had been advocating premarital abstinence for ages now, and we see how well that works out here in what I like to call 'reality'. I see many fundie groups push abstinence-only education based only on their particular beliefs in their particular invisible monsters, which leads, sometimes even in the 'best' families, to teenage pregnancy and difficult choices.
    Worth is, by definition, measurable.
    Want a good read? Try “Freakonomics” by S. Levitt and S. Dubner. You'll get insight into how the “traditional family” – two-parent, etc. – has less to do with a child's success than their socioeconomic position…as well as seeing many of our other common-sense preconceived notions turned on their heads.
    In the end, what 'truth' is there?

    • Peggy2

      Some of the “family values” crowd have been advocating abstinence but most fell off the radar long ago and have blended right in with the rest of our secular society. Your ridicule of parents who teach their kids abstinence in hopes that they will have a happy, healthy life is just more of the same peer pressure we face on a daily basis. Not many parents have the cajones to stick with it because of the constant barrage of comments like yours.

      Stop and think about how many hours in a day any given American teenager spends either with his parents or in a church-related setting. Then ask yourself how much time they spend at, for most, a God-less school, listening to sex-saturated music on iPods, passing pornographic 'jokes' and pictures around on their cell phones and the 'Net, and watching television, where everybody is jumping into bed with whomever turns them on.

      Abstinence has not yet been tried in this country.

      I have four daughters and know that, regardless of what I do, stopping short of locking them in a closet until they're 25, odds are that at least one of them will have sex out of wedlock, end up pregnant, contract a venereal disease, get divorced, move back home with minor children, etc., etc., so you'll have to forgive me for not wanting any of these things for any of my children or anyone else's.

      I can only infer from the title of the book you recommend that “success” is measured by one's financial portfolio. My definition of success has nothing to do with this world.

      Jesus said, “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life.” If, as you suggest, there is no truth, then why bother to offer an opinion on anything?

      • jayson

        Are you suggesting that a country run on religious principles, which legislates morality and keeps offensive content out of the media would be a better idea?

        I'm just asking, because that country already exists. It's called Saudi Arabia.

        • Peggy2

          A better idea than what?

          • jayson

            You said that “abstinence has not yet been tried in this country.”

            Your complaints, namely that our “secular society” is one in which kids spend too much time at “God-less schools, listening to sex-saturated music,” etc.

            Since you say that your four daughters are going to be at risk no matter what you do, I have to assume that you are stating that abstinence is something you can not impress upon them, but which could only work if the whole country does it.

            The only way a whole country is going to do something in lock step is if it is a society like Saudi Arabia's, where they have a state religion which dictates morality.

            I'm asking if you think that would be a better idea than how we do things here in America, where we're free to live our lives how ever we like.

          • Peggy2

            Who's advocating a “state religion”?

            I want Americans in general to be concerned about the common good especially when it comes to youth.

            And you're mistaken, Jayson. You're not free to live your life however you like in America. We have laws and their foundation is in God's natural law.

  • Peggy2

    Who's advocating a “state religion”?

    I want Americans in general to be concerned about the common good especially when it comes to youth.

    And you're mistaken, Jayson. You're not free to live your life however you like in America. We have laws and their foundation is in God's natural law.

  • Peggy2

    Who's advocating a “state religion”?

    I want Americans in general to be concerned about the common good especially when it comes to youth.

    And you're mistaken, Jayson. You're not free to live your life however you like in America. We have laws and their foundation is in God's natural law.

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