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Iowa athletes help deliver Meals on Wheels in Iowa City area

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Iowa athletes help deliver Meals on Wheels in Iowa City area


IOWA CITY, Iowa (KCRG) – On average volunteers with Meals on Wheels of Johnson County help deliver ready-to-eat meals to older adults and people with disabilities.

“The best thing that we can do is provide a quality meal that somebody would enjoy if they made it themselves or if they went to a restaurant,” Director of Community Health and Nutrition Melissa Wahl said.

They’ve seen a big increase in need for their services after adding more than 200 clients within the past year.

“We were over 1,600 clients last year. We served over 265,000 meals,” Wahl added.

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The nonprofit’s Monday through Friday operation not only helps those in Johnson County, but also Linn and Washington.

“We could not do what we do without our volunteers,” Wahl said. “Each one of them are important and vital to the program.”

A client-favorite day is when University of Iowa athletes help with meal deliveries. It’s part of their partnership with the Swarm Collective that helps create opportunities for Iowa athletes to serve charities and nonprofits in Iowa.

“Most of our clients are in their 80′s. They live on $1,200-1,500 a month and they are homebound, so they don’t leave their homes very often. That outside world really is that TV screen. When you take them off the TV screen and put them in the homes of our clients, it’s magical,” Wahl said.

This week members of the Iowa men’s basketball and football team helped deliver meals along the 12 routes in the Iowa City area.

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“People really appreciate what we do on a Saturday, but I feel like it’s just as important to get out in the community and make a change in the world and really just in general,” senior punter Tory Taylor said. “We all really enjoy doing it.”

It came at the perfect time for the Iowa football team who was on their bye week.

“I have my own bubble with the football team, but going out and meeting new people and doing this for them, it means a lot,” Sebastian Castro senior defensive back said.

“We have a lot of time and it feels good spending that time giving back to the community. When I was younger, it wasn’t always easy. I wish I had someone who could come spend time with us, especially athletes,” junior defensive back Jermari Harris said.

The Iowa athletes said they were happy to help.

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“It feels good just to help out the community. We always want to help out the community in different ways and just doin small things like this has helped a lot of people. We’re just happy to be able to do that,” junior wide receiver Diante Vines said.

“Just to know we could make somebody’s day by delivering a meal during on our off time and being able to support the people who support us on and off the field. They probably watch us on the TV, they cheer for us, so just to show our appreciation, it feels good,” junior running back Leshon Williams said.



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Iowa

Six people rescued from northwest Iowa river – Radio Iowa

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Six people rescued from northwest Iowa river – Radio Iowa


An eight year old child was among six people rescued Saturday afternoon on the West Fork of the Des Moines River, north of Estherville. Travis Sheridan, Estherville’s Fire Chief, said a 911 call indicated a kayak flipped over and a woman and child were in the water.

“Once fire fighters got on the scene, the child was still OK, with just basically her face sitting above the water. Her life jacket was caught in the log jam,” Sheridan said. “They’d tried taking it off, but that just sucked the child further into the log jam.”

Firefighters were able to cut the girl’s life jacket off and rescue her from the river. Sheridan credits the girl’s aunt for keeping the eight year old’s head above water.

“She held onto that child for over 30 minutes,” Sheridan said. “She saved that child’s life until our rescue personnel could get on scene.”

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Firefighters used the department’s rescue boat to bring the aunt, her niece and four others to shore. Two others who’d be in the river were able to get out of the water on their own. Sheridan said the Emmet County dispatcher was on the phone for 40 minutes, relaying information from the stranded people on the river to rescuers. The Iowa Department of Natural Resources deployed a back-up rescue boat to the scene and the Iowa State Patrol had three drones flying overhead to monitor the situation.

“It was just a collaborative effort by all,” Sheridan said. “I couldn’t have asked for a better outcome.”

The names of the people who were rescued have not been released.

(Reporting by Ed Funston, KILR, Estherville)

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Iowa

67 state boards and commissions being eliminated – Radio Iowa

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67 state boards and commissions being eliminated – Radio Iowa


Eighty-three state boards and commissions are being eliminated or consolidated.

Governor Kim Reynolds recommended even more for elimination, but legislators pared down her list and she has approved the final plan.

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Iowa-Nebraska NAACP president Betty Andrews is raising concerns about shifting power away from the Iowa Civil Rights Commission to a director appointed by the governor. The plan also eliminates several commissions in the Iowa Department of Human Rights.

“It sends a sad, unwelcoming message to communities of color, to people with disabilities and women,” Andrews said, “that civil rights and their interests are not a priority at the highest level of state government.”

Reynolds said have the Iowa Civil Rights Commission be an advisory group rather than a decision-making board makes sense.

“We had a part-time board that was really managing things and it’s just too hard to do that. You need somebody that’s there full time,” Reynolds said. “…It’s just a better way for us to really manage the organization.”

Reynolds sids there’s never been a comprehensive review of all state boards and commissions and it’s a continuation of her efforts to make state government more efficient. A year ago, the legislature approved the governor’s plan to reduce the number of state agencies from 36 to 16.

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New Iowa law flouts U.S. Constitution's Supremacy Clause

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New Iowa law flouts U.S. Constitution's Supremacy Clause


Rick Morain is the former publisher and owner of the Jefferson Herald, for which he writes a regular column.

Where does your primary loyalty lie: as a citizen of America, or as a citizen of Iowa?

Probably seems like a meaningless question. But around the nation, more and more states these days are enacting laws in opposition to those of the federal government, placing the loyalty question front and center. And a growing number of U.S. residents are declaring a preference to honor their state laws above those of the United States.

ORIGINS OF THE SUPREMACY CLAUSE

In terms of settled law, there’s no real dispute: federal law outranks state law. The U.S. Constitution leaves no doubt. Article VI, Clause 2 (the “Supremacy Clause”), reads as follows:

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