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Fairfield girl honored for heroism
On Aug. 8, Gov. Culver held his annual Lifesaving Awards
Ceremony at the Iowa State Fair. Among
those honored was Cara Johnson of Fairfield,
who received the Outstanding Service Award.
Cara helped save her family when their house burned down
due to an electrical malfunction on March 29 by following the procedures
she’d learned through the “Adopt a Firefighter Program.” Congratulations, Cara!
It’s a sure sign that summer is coming to an end when
students, parents and teachers prepare to head back to school.
Not Ron Hunerdosse, though. Ron spent 36 years as a PE teacher and
coach with the Fairfield
schools. He coached my son Curtis in
basketball and my daughter Cassie in track and cross-country.
Ron’s life’s work really made an impact. This summer I attended his retirement
party. Former students, teachers and
parents showed up to thank Ron for his many years of service, and it gave me
a glimpse of how one teacher can touch the lives of so many.
I know that our local schools are a top priority for the
people in our Senate district, and they’re a top priority for me in my work
at the Iowa Statehouse. Our recent
efforts are improving student achievement by keeping the best teachers in Iowa classrooms, increasing accountability, and making
quality preschool accessible to all Iowa
kids.
I’m looking forward to seeing these successes firsthand
when I visit local classrooms as part of America's Legislators Back to
School Program.
This national effort, sponsored by the nonpartisan National
Conference of State Legislatures, teaches young people what it's like to be a
legislator. Every year, more than 1,400 state
lawmakers visit an estimated 320,000 students in their classrooms, bringing
civics to life for our young Americans and encouraging them to play an active
role in their government.
It also gives me the opportunity to meet personally with
young constituents, answer questions, share ideas and listen to concerns.
I am setting up my visits for the upcoming school year and
am interested in visiting any elementary, junior high and high school
classroom that would have me. If you’d
like me to come to your school at any time throughout the year, call me at 641-919-5575
or e-mail me at becky.schmitz@legis.state.ia.us.
Every legislator wants to keep their promises, but only
those that pay close attention to the budget have a good chance of
succeeding.
That’s why I’ve pushed the Legislature to adopt solid
budgeting practices in the last few years.
These reforms are now helping us keep our promises to Iowa’s students,
families and communities despite the current nationwide economic
slowdown.
The fact that we are now making better budget decisions is
one reason Iowa’s
economy is much stronger than the nation’s as a whole. The state budget is balanced, obeys the
state’s expenditure-limitation law, and fully funds our emergency savings
accounts.
According to the nonpartisan Legislative Services Agency, Iowa’s
rainy day funds will grow to $620.3 million in the next year, the largest
amount ever in the state’s savings account. At the same time, we’ve repaid nearly all
of the funds that earlier Legislatures had borrowed.
Our strong state budget means we can re-allocate funds for
flood and tornado recovery while keeping promises to improve student
achievement and teacher quality, create good-paying jobs, make health care
more accessible, and reduce our dependence on foreign oil.
By making tough budget decisions, we have improved Iowa’s financial
standing, are honoring our commitments to Iowans, and continue to make our
state a better place to live, work and raise a family.
The Iowa Arts Council has received a $100,000 grant from
the National Endowment for the Arts for Iowa artists and arts organizations
recovering from storm damage.
Some of the dollars will go to the 2008 Emergency Arts
Relief program, which provides up to $500 for immediate recovery needs.
Others will be used for larger grants and stipends generally ranging from
$3,000 - $6,000.
Disaster-affected Iowa
artists and Iowa
arts organizations that are nonprofit, federally tax-exempt, and located in a
state- or federally-declared disaster area are eligible to apply. Complete information and applications are available
at www.iowaartscouncil.org.
Working with Iowa
young people can be a great win-win opportunity for local businesses. The Iowa Student Internship Program is now
accepting applications from local businesses interested in providing
internships to Iowa
college students.
Companies are eligible to apply for up to three internships,
which are worth $3,100 each. The program is available to Iowa-based companies
that:
- Have
fewer than 500 employees, with a significant portion employed within Iowa in
biosciences, advanced manufacturing or information technology.
- Offer
internships to students of Iowa
community colleges, private colleges, or regent institutions within two
years of graduation.
- Create
a substantive working experience for interns in research and
development, engineering, process management and production, product
experimentation and analysis, product development, market research,
business planning and administration.
For more information, visit www.iowalifechanging.com/business/innov&comm.html
The Iowa Utilities Board is coordinating a community-based
initiative to weatherize homes for Iowans in need before the winter heating
season.
A community grant of up to $5,000 is available for
communities with a population of 10,000 or less to educate residents on
weatherization and energy efficiency.
The Utilities Board is also offering matching grants of up
to $500 to organizations throughout Iowa.
These grants are to be used to weatherize homes and provide educational
materials for Iowa’s
low-income families, elderly or disabled individuals.
More information is available at www.state.ia.us/iub.
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