Iowa
Bill would limit Iowa DNR’s ability to buy land at auction. But will it advance?
What is Iowa’s legislative ‘funnel’ and how does it work? (2025)
A look at how the Iowa Legislature uses the “funnel” during its legislative session.
The Iowa Department of Natural Resources would be barred from buying land at auction — with some exceptions — under House and Senate bills that are opposed by conservation groups.
The bills, House File 714 and Senate Study Bill 1198, would block the DNR from purchasing land at auction. The department would only be allowed to buy or acquire land from a willing donor or seller.
But the legislation’s future is uncertain ahead of Friday’s “funnel” deadline, which requires most bills to pass a committee by the end of the week in order to remain eligible for consideration this year.
The bill includes an exception that allows the DNR to acquire land at auction or from a nonprofit that acquired the land at auction “if the acquisition is in furtherance of a local or statewide conservation or recreation plan.”
Rep. Norlin Mommsen, R-DeWitt, said he considers that exception “one of the more important paragraphs in there” but said he’s open to discussing the language if groups have possible changes in mind.
“My goal is to allow for that circumstance where none of us in this room can foresee that it will be imperative that the state acquire it,” he said. “And I think it’s important that we have that outlet, or relief valve, or whatever you call it.”
A range of conservation groups showed up at House and Senate subcommittees on the bill Tuesday to testify against the legislation, while lobbyists for the Iowa Farm Bureau and Iowa Cattlemen’s Association said they oppose the bill’s exception that would allow the DNR to buy land in some cases.
The House Natural Resources Committee did not bring the bill up during its meeting Tuesday, meaning the bill will will fail to clear the funnel deadline unless it passes a committee in the Senate.
Sen. Tom Shipley, R-Nodaway, said he expects to see a proposed amendment to the bill that the Senate Natural Resources and Environment Committee would consider, but he did not have the language of the amendment as of Tuesday morning.
Legislation introduced last year would have banned the DNR from buying land at auction without exception. That bill failed to advance.
According to the DNR, about 1% of Iowa’s land is public land controlled by the DNR.
Over the last two decades, Iowa has lost nearly 1.8 million acres of farmland to development and other uses, for a 5.5% decline, according to a 2024 U.S. Census of Agriculture. Nearly 586,000 farm acres were lost in the last five years.
Iowa DNR has not bought land at auction for more than 20 years
Todd Coffelt, legislative liaison with the Department of Natural Resources, said the department does not currently buy land at auction and has not done so for the last six years, as long as Director Kayla Lyon has been in charge.
Coffelt told senators it has been 20 years since the DNR directly bid on land at an auction. He said the six-year time period referred to the DNR buying land from a different group that had acquired it at auction.
At the House subcommittee, Rep. Austin Harris, R-Moulton, criticized protests of the bill as “the boy who cried wolf.”
“I mean this is ridiculous, guys,” he said. “This doesn’t change a darn thing.”
Harris called the bill common sense.
“It doesn’t change anything,” he said. “It just locks it in because Director Lyon and this administration will not be there forever. Let’s make sure that we continue this policy.”
Harris asked Coffelt whether the DNR’s current policy is not to acquire land at auction.
“Yes,” Coffelt said. “For the last six years, we have not competed at an auction to acquire land.”
“And if a third-party group, nonprofit group, some of whom are represented here today, acquire it through an auction, would you guys acquire that land?” Harris asked.
“No,” Coffelt said.
Conservation groups say bill is ‘another beat of the drum’ to limit public lands
Joe Jayjack, with the Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation, said the bill is “another beat of the drum” by Iowa lawmakers to limit new public land or limit the DNR’s ability to buy public land.
He pointed to last year’s bill preventing the DNR from buying land at auction, and a Senate measure this year that would repeal Iowa’s constitutionally protected Natural Resources and Outdoor Recreation Trust Fund.
“Land has to go to auction for all kinds of reasons, and this is restricting a potential buyer from folks that have to go to auction to sell the land,” Jayjack said.
Fred Long, president of the Iowa Conservation Alliance, said the price of land is unaffordable because large farmers have more money and can pay higher prices.
“That’s what’s keeping the young farmer out,” he said. “It isn’t the little bit of land that the DNR acquires, because if some guy bought most of what they have and tried to start farming, he’d go broke on it.”
Daniel Gibbons with Linn County Conservation said public lands and recreation opportunities are important to attract residents and businesses to Iowa.
“The benefit of public land is growing with a state where our goals are to bring our kids back,” he said. “We want to bring businesses, we want to bring new residents here. And it doesn’t take very long looking at the research that the next generations are really craving that outdoor wildlife and recreation experience.”
Iowa Farm Bureau appreciates limits on DNR land buying but opposes bill’s exception
Matt Groenwald, a lobbyist for the Iowa Farm Bureau, said the organization appreciates lawmakers’ efforts to restrict how much land the DNR can buy.
“We know that every acre owned by government is an acre of lost opportunity for our farmers,” he said. “Many times these acres could be used by farmers, especially young farmers, beginning farmers, cattle farmers, farmers looking to grow their operations so they can thrive in rural Iowa, raise their families in rural Iowa and send their kids to school.”
But the organization is registered as undecided on the bill because of the bill’s exception language.
“The inclusion of paragraph two would codify a currently unused practice by DNR and does not achieve our members’ goal of eliminating taxpayer dollars from competing against our citizens at auction,” Gronewald said.
Jake Swanson, a lobbyist for the Iowa Cattlemen’s Association, echoed similar points.
“Our farmer members do not want to see government representatives bidding against them at an auction,” he said.
Stephen Gruber-Miller covers the Iowa Statehouse and politics for the Register. He can be reached by email at sgrubermil@registermedia.com or by phone at 515-284-8169. Follow him on X at @sgrubermiller.
Iowa
Nebraska Men’s Basketball’s Week Ahead: Crucial Games at UCLA and Home vs. Iowa
Nebraska men’s basketball faces a critical week that will determine its Big Ten Conference and NCAA Tournament seeding.
The Huskers play at UCLA on Tuesday night and finish the regular season next Sunday at home vs. Iowa.
The Huskers are currently tied for second place in the Big Ten with Michigan State. Both teams have four conference losses. They are one game in the loss column ahead of Illinois and Purdue, with five losses. Wisconsin has six losses.
The top four teams earn the coveted triple bye for the Big Ten Tournament. Regular-season champion Michigan has one spot locked up.
Here are the remaining schedules of the contenders for the triple bye, with conference record in parentheses:
Nebraska (14-4)
* Tuesday: at UCLA
* Sunday: vs. Iowa
Michigan State (13-4)
* Sunday: at Indiana
* Thursday: vs. Rutgers
* Sunday, March 8: at Michigan
Illinois (13-5)
* Tuesday: vs. Oregon
* Sunday, March 8: at Maryland
Purdue (12-5)
* Sunday: at Ohio State
* Wednesday: at Northwestern
* Saturday: vs. Wisconsin
Wisconsin (12-6)
* Wednesday: vs. Maryland
* Saturday: at Purdue
Maintaining an NCAA seed no worse than 3 should benefit the Huskers, who wouldn’t have to play, theoretically, the No. 1 seed until the Elite Eight game.
It’s a ton to play for in the final week of a historic regular season for Nebraska. But that’s what March is all about.
Nebraska at UCLA
When: Tuesday, 10 p.m. CT
Where: Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles
Records: Nebraska, 25-4, 14-4 in Big Ten; UCLA, 19-10, 11-7 in Big Ten
TV: FS1
Rankings updated based on games through Saturday.
UCLA rankings
* Associated Press Top 25: Not ranked
* NCAA Net Ratings: 40
* USA Today Coaches Poll: Not ranked
* Kenpom.com: 41
* ESPN Power Index: 34
* Top 25 and 1: Not ranked
* Team Rankings.com: 41
In Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology projections for ESPN, UCLA is a 9-seed for the 68-team NCAA Tournament. The next Bracketology will be released Tuesday.
Nebraska rankings
* Associated Press Top 25: 12
* NCAA Net Ratings: 12
* USA Today Coaches Poll: 10
* Kenpom.com: 11
* ESPN Power Index: 15
* Top 25 and 1: 8
* Team Rankings.com: 11
In Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology projections for ESPN, Nebraska is a 3-seed for the 68-team NCAA Tournament.
Nebraska-UCLA analysis
The Bruins are coming off a strange week. They crushed visiting rival USC, 81-62, on Tuesday, then lost at Minnesota, 78-73, on Saturday.
UCLA is 16-1 at home, its only loss to Indiana, 98-97, in double overtime on Jan. 31.
The game will be a homecoming for Huskers forward Berke Buyuktuncel, who played at UCLA in 2023-24, his freshman season. Buyuktuncel has started 27 games and averages 6.7 points and 5.6 rebounds per game this season for the Huskers and frequently earns praise from coach Fred Hoiberg.
Nebraska thoroughly dispatched USC on Saturday, 82-67, an impressive performance on the road against a Trojans team desperate for a statement win to help — or save — their NCAA hopes.
Pryce Sandfort scored 32 points — one short of his career high — as the Huskers won their 14th conference game, a school record. Nebraska is 7-2 on the road in conference games.
This should be a great matchup — UCLA a strong team playing at home vs. a Nebraska team playing well and full of confidence. This feels like a one-possession game.
Iowa at Nebraska
When: Sunday, March 8, 4 p.m. CT
Where: Pinnacle Bank Arena
Records: Nebraska, 25-4, 14-4 in Big Ten; Iowa, 20-9, 10-8 in Big Ten
TV: Fox
Rankings updated based on games through Saturday.
Iowa rankings
* Associated Press Top 25: 33
* NCAA Net Ratings: 28
* USA Today Coaches Poll: 30
* Kenpom.com: 24
* ESPN Power Index: 35
* Top 25 and 1: Not ranked
* Team Rankings.com: 31
In Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology projections for ESPN, Iowa is an 8-seed for the 68-team NCAA Tournament.
Nebraska rankings
* Associated Press Top 25: 12
* NCAA Net Ratings: 12
* USA Today Coaches Poll: 10
* Kenpom.com: 11
* ESPN Power Index: 15
* Top 25 and 1: 8
* Team Rankings.com: 11
In Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology projections for ESPN, Nebraska is a 3-seed for the 68-team NCAA Tournament.
Nebraska-Iowa analysis
The Hawkeyes are coming off a puzzling, 71-69 loss at Penn State on Saturday. Iowa led 67-62 with 3:49 to play, and then scored only one more basket. Iowa plays host to Michigan on Thursday.
Nebraska will get a final curtain call at Pinnacle Bank Arena, where the Huskers are 15-2.
Nebraska should have revenge on its mind after losing at Iowa, 57-52, on Feb. 17, in Sandfort’s return to Iowa City, where he played for two seasons.
Whatever Nebraska nerves were a factor at Iowa shouldn’t be in play at Pinnacle Bank Arena. Nebraska shot only 21 percent from distance in Iowa City. Sandfort scored 13 points, his lowest total since Jan. 10, when he scored 12 at Indiana.
Iowa’s Bennett Stirtz scored 25 points. That won’t happen in this game. Neither will Nebraska’s ice-cold shooting from distance, especially if the game could determine the triple bye for the Huskers.
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Iowa
Iowa Boys High School State Basketball Tournament Sets Two Classes
The Class 1A and Class 2A Iowa high school boys basketball state tournament brackets are now official following substate action.
The Iowa High School Athletic Association Boys State Tournament begins Monday, March 9 from the Casey’s Center in Des Moines, Iowa.
St. Edmond, the top-seed in 1A, gets Woodbine in a rematch of a quarterfinal from a year ago. Woodbine ended the run of defending state champion Madrid in a substate final on the same court that St. Edmond qualified on when they defeated Riverside.
Burlington Notre Dame plays Bellevue, MMCRU meets Boyden-Hull and Bishop Garrigan battles Bellevue Marquette Catholic in the other elite eight games.
The other substate finals saw Burlington Notre Dame defeat Calamus-Wheatland, MMCRU eliminated North Union, Bishop Garrigan downed South Winneshiek, Bellevue bested East Marshall and Bellevue Marquette Catholic topped Montezuma.
In 2A, Kuemper Catholic is the No. 1 seed and will face Union Community in the opening game on Wednesday, March 11. The other quarterfinals see Treynor vs. Grundy Center, Unity Christian vs. defending state champion Western Christian and Iowa City Regina vs. Aplington-Parkersburg.
Kuemper Catholic survived vs. Roland-Story, Union knocked off Pella Christian in a nail-biter, Treynor bested Underwood, Grundy Center downed Beckman Catholic, Unity Christian handled Southeast Valley, Western Christian ran past Tri-Center, Iowa City Regina downed Northeast and Aplington-Parkersburg defeated Cascade.
Here are the Iowa High School Athletic Association Boys State Basketball Tournament pairings for Class 1A and Class 2A.
Quarterfinals
Tuesday, March 10
Semifinals
Thursday, March 12
Championship
Friday, March 13
Wednesday, March 11
Semifinals
Thursday, March 12
Championship
Friday, March 13
Iowa
Minnesota Wild Recalls Tyler Pitlick From Iowa | Minnesota Wild
SAINT PAUL, Minn. – Minnesota Wild President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Bill Guerin today announced the National Hockey League (NHL) club has recalled forward Tyler Pitlick from the Iowa Wild of the American Hockey League (AHL).
Pitlick, 34 (11/1/91), has tallied two goals, 24 penalty minutes (PIM) and 26 shots in 31 games with Minnesota this season and ranks fourth on the team with 76 hits. He has also collected 11 points (8-3=11) and 31 shots in 12 games with Iowa. The 6-foot-2, 201-pound native of Minneapolis, Minn., owns 111 points (58-53=111) and 565 shots on goal in 451 career NHL games over 11 seasons with the Edmonton Oilers (2013-17), Dallas Stars (2017-19), Philadelphia Flyers (2019-20), Arizona Coyotes (2020-21), Calgary Flames (2021-22), Montreal Canadiens (2021-22), St. Louis Blues (2022-23), New York Rangers (2023-24) and Minnesota (2025-26). He has tallied three points (2-1=3) in 22 career Stanley Cup Playoff games. Pitlick has also recorded 140 points (60-89=149) in 289 career AHL games in parts of eight seasons with the Oklahoma City Barons (2011-15), Bakersfield Condors (2015-16), Hartford Wolf Pack (2023-24), Providence Bruins (2024-25) and Iowa (2025). He was originally selected by the Edmonton Oilers in the second round (31st overall) of the 2010 NHL Draft. Pitlick was signed by Minnesota as a free agent on July 2, 2025, and wears sweater No. 19 with the Wild.
Minnesota hosts the St. Louis Blues tomorrow at 4 p.m. CT on FanDuel Sports Network and KFAN FM 100.3.
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