Iowa
Sarah Corkery making Iowa congressional campaign about state-level issues
DES MOINES, Iowa (Gray Media Iowa Capitol Bureau) – Most candidates for congress run on what they’d do at the federal level. That’s not what Congresswoman Ashley Hinson’s Democratic challenger talked about Tuesday.
Sarah Corkery, a Democrat running in eastern Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District is hoping to win voters by making her campaign about issues that state lawmakers passed.
“Here in Iowa, right, we’ve got the trifecta with the Government [sic], House, and Senate and their stuff they’re pushing through is mean. Coming after our LGBTQ kids last two years ago. Coming against our AEAs, which help disabled kids. Now coming against women’s access to healthcare and it will be contraception yet.” Corkery said.
Corkery says Iowa’s abortion law is too strict. “We need to codify Road [sic] vs Wade first of all. And I truly believe all medical decisions should be between a person and a doctor and that should be no government involvement in this conversation at all. So we’ve got a long ways to go from a six week ban to making sure it’s just a protected health situation,” she said.
Corkery also went after private school vouchers that Republicans in the Iowa Legislature passed. “42 counties don’t even have a private school and 95% of them are Christian, so we know it’s happening. We are Christianizing the next generation and it’s not right,” Corkery said.
So why is this candidate running for Congress talking about all of these state issues? Well, Corkery says that state lawmakers have swung too far to the right, and she’s hoping that will bring people over to her federal campaign.” “We need to get Iowans and Democrats fired up about these issues and out to the polls this fall. Like I said, here’s where we vote and here is where we have a lot of problems to fix,” she said.
There are 23,000 more registered Republican voters than Democrats in the 2nd District. Her focus on state issues will be a test to see if she can win enough over along with enough independents to win.
—
Conner Hendricks covers state government and politics for Gray Media-owned stations in Iowa. Email him at conner.hendricks@gray.tv; and follow him on Facebook at Conner Hendricks TV or on X/Twitter @ConnerReports.
Copyright 2024 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Iowa DNR flags 8 beaches for high bacteria levels
PALO, Iowa (KCRG) – The Iowa Department of Natural Resources says eight beaches are not recommended for swimming.
Beaches in eastern Iowa include Pleasant Creek in Palo, Backbone in Dundee and Lake Darling in Brighton.
Other beaches include Black Hawk in Sac County, Clear Lake in Cerro Gordo County, Crandalls Beach and Emerson Bay in Dickinson County, and North Twin Lake West in Calhoun County.
Testing shows the waters are showing high levels of E. coli, which is an indicator of other potentially harmful bacteria in the water.
Swimming in contaminated water could lead to illnesses and infections.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
Staffing new Iowa prisons may be “impossible,” union president warns
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — The number of inmates at Iowa’s prisons are expected a surge in the coming years, but prison workers don’t don’t they’re ready for the challenge.
Gov. Kim Reynolds signed Iowa’s habitual offender law June 2, a measure expected to cause the number of inmates in Iowa prisons to surge.
Under the new law, a person is considered a habitual offender once they are convicted of their third felony. Their mandatory minimum sentence would be doubled, as well as increasing their maximum sentence.
To counter the expected increase, the state is planning to build three new prisons.
Todd Copley, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the union that represents Iowa’s prison workers, said the state cannot staff the facilities it already has.
“The Department of Corrections can’t staff the prisons that we have, let alone build three more where it would be impossible to staff those,” Copley said.
The nonpartisan Legislative Services Agency predicts the number of inmates behind bars at Iowa prisons will surge by nearly 50 percent in three years.
“t’s, I don’t think words comprehend what the staff is facing in the future,” Copley said.
The LSA says Iowa’s prison system has more than 230 vacant positions, more than half of those being for correctional officers. Iowa prisons are already over capacity by 27 percent across the state.
Staffing issues are at the center of a lawsuit against the Iowa Department of Corrections after a guard and nurse were murdered by inmates at the Anamosa State Penitentiary in 2021. The suit says poor staffing contributed to their deaths.
“I talk frequently with a lot of the correctional officers and, you know, what happened with the murders at Anamosa is devastating. It’s so unfortunate,” Copley said.
Copley said the staffing shortage is dangerous for both staff and inmates.
“Believe it or not, somebody has loved ones somewhere in the prison system in Iowa. We have to look after those individuals as well,” he said.
Copley said the state has to do more to help those doing dangerous work.
“You can work at McDonald’s for $20 an hour and not worry about getting stabbed, beaten or having urine thrown on you for that matter,” he said.
The LSA estimates it will cost nearly $2 billion to build the new prisons.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
If we say Iowans help Iowans, why did we fail the Beamans? | Opinion
This is a problem of society, not a problem of individuals.
Hear about the events that lead this disabled family to arrests, separations
Hear from Bonnie and Todd Beaman, disabled parents who recount the events that led to arrests and separation from their children.
No single moment put the Beaman family on a path to separation, squalor and legal trouble. No isolated choice by a family member, or an institution, set up the sobering circumstances that the Register’s Lee Rood and Cody Scanlan exhaustively detailed in a series of reports.
What’s happened to the Beamans is the result of cascading failures, especially in local and state government.
Iowans should not tolerate it.
The Beamans, who have a myriad of mental, physical and intellectual issues, have always faced struggles, but they should have had more help. Iowans are rightly proud that Iowans help Iowans. In the Beamans’ case, there was too little help until it was too late.
It should be nonnegotiable that social services and healthcare agencies have sufficient personnel and other resources to help ― to at least prevent a family from falling through cracks so severely that only the criminal justice system is left to try to pick up pieces.
Hear how Sarah Beaman’s time in group homes would lead to jail
Hear from Sarah Beaman as she recounts her time away from her family in group homes and how she would end up in jail.
Todd and Bonnie Beaman have four adult children. Bonnie and the children have intellectual disabilities, and Todd’s IQ is only slightly above that threshold. The family scraped by for years with Social Security disability income and community-based services provided through Medicaid. The services became less consistent over the years after a managed care organization took over the Medicaid services from state workers in 2016. In 2025, two houses tied to the family, in Menlo and Audubon, were found in appalling condition, including sewage on a basement floor. Criminal cases are pending against three members of the family, and 33-year-old Sarah has been separated from her parents and siblings for almost a year while state workers seek a placement suitable for her needs.
“In Iowa, finding a permanent home with skilled caregivers for anyone with her level of need as proved incredibly difficult, if not impossible, as providers, bed space and Medicaid coverage for such services has dwindled,” Rood wrote. Her reporting also revealed that the number of dependent adult abuse reports in Iowa increased by 50% from 2021 to 2025, and that deaths tied to such abuse went from 18 in 2022 to 31 in 2025.
One important reminder from the Beamans’ story is that the federal-state Medicaid does so much beyond the political flashpoint of assisting lower-income Americans with health insurance and medical costs. Far afield from debates about work requirements, income thresholds and fraud dangers is the reality that tens of thousands of Iowans, and millions of other Americans, are so severely disabled that government-sponsored care is their only chance to survive. This is the sort of spending that members of Congress say they want to protect by cracking down on waste and fraud. But it is hard to imagine care improving as Medicaid spending is reduced by close to $1 trillion over 10 years under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
The family’s troubles also echo the door-slamming issues that hundreds of Iowa families have described in the 10-plus years since private companies took over administering health coverage for Medicaid recipients in Iowa. “They either said funds are too limited or they didn’t have anyone who could handle” Sarah’s heath issues, Bonnie told Rood.
The situation deteriorated. One of Todd and Bonnie’s daughters, Charlie, married a man, Joshua Walker, in 2024 who she alleges has committed domestic abuse. Walker walked into a police station one day and admitted he’d violated his parole, but a police officer did not arrest him, the officer said, because he looked and smelled so bad.
Pause on that moment. He was not arrested because he was in such poor shape. The result, according to the Register reporting, was further abuse and further deterioration. We, as a society, turned off the levers of help because they were needed so desperately.
Detaining Walker could have helped the Beaman family. The criminal cases against the family members seem more like, in part, punishment for the rest of our failures. Investigators and prosecutors surely can identify mistakes the Beaman elders have made. But incarceration and other penalties are not the key answer we should reach on the question of the Beamans.
Avoiding these kinds of tragedies for other families will always be difficult, especially if no help comes from Washington. But the Beamans’ case should serve as a rallying cry. The state ombudsman office should examine why the Beamans were left to flounder. Leadership at the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, in flux after Senate Democrats voted down the confirmation of former director Larry Johnson, should make sure other families do not suffer as the Beamans did. Local and state law enforcement must continue its work to train officers to handle people who have mental health issues. And we, as Iowans, should re-examine how Iowans can help Iowans anew.
This is a problem of society, not a problem of individuals. Iowans understand the unique level of difficulty that caring for severely disabled people entails. They understand that case workers and other state employees must make difficult judgments about when families can no longer be kept together, or when autonomy is no longer possible. They know that state workers cannot conjure trained and dedicated care workers from thin air.
Yes, solutions will cost money. Local, state and federal taxpayer money. And that funding is in short supply at every level. But Iowans helping Iowans has long been our ethos. We should have been more helpful to the Beamans. We must be more helpful to other Iowans like them.
Lucas Grundmeier, on behalf of the Register’s editorial board
This editorial is the opinion of the Des Moines Register’s editorial board: Rachel Stassen-Berger, executive editor; Lucas Grundmeier, opinion editor; and Richard Doak and Rox Laird, editorial board members.
-
Montana2 minutes agoBankhead takes swings at Bodnar, calls for him to resign race • Daily Montanan
-
Nebraska7 minutes agoNebraska State Patrol K9 helps troopers find over 500 pounds of cocaine
-
Nevada14 minutes ago
Promoter of election conspiracy theories wins GOP primary for Nevada secretary of state
-
New Hampshire16 minutes ago
Authorities are investigating a fire at the former Laconia State School
-
New Jersey22 minutes agoICE agent fires shots after being hit by van in New Jersey, police say
-
New Mexico29 minutes agoAlbuquerque Fire Rescue participates in two-day cave rescue training
-
North Carolina32 minutes agoOfficials urge caution as invasive armadillos move into western NC
-
North Dakota37 minutes agoGeological survey flights collecting data across North Dakota