Categories
Burlington Iowa News Political West Burlington

State Issues from Tom Sands

News from the Hill…    

This time of the year there are only two committees that meet on a regular basis, the Appropriations Committee and the Ways and Means Committee.  Occasionally the Oversight Committee will meet, but not regularly.  A few weeks ago it appeared that we would be adjourning for the year in early April.  Presently we seem to be crawling to adjournment, not racing towards adjournment.  The pace to adjournment may have slowed, but not necessarily the work load.  This is also, the time of year when different members of the Legislature and special interest groups desperately try to get their special bills passed.  While the stories may differ, the theme is the same; “life will end as we know it, if their bill does not pass.”  The line of legislators stopping by my desk on the floor telling me why their bill, which is sitting the Ways and Means Committee, is so important seems to never end.  At the same time the line of special interest groups and/or lobbyist wanting to meet with me never ends.  One of the first things I learned after serving my first year is that every bill while on the face may seem inconsequential, is important to somebody somewhere.  However, that does not necessarily make the bill a good bill or if the bill was to become law, good policy.  It is always a tough balance between what people may want and what is in the best interest of the body or the people of Iowa.  I do not take my job lightly nor try to let my personal positions affect what is debated in the Ways and Means Committee.  However, there are some hard facts, we will look at each bill through the eyes of the taxpayer and ask this question “does this benefit the taxpayer?”  The answers “No” will most likely place the bill in the drawer and it will not see the light of day again.

Volunteer Firemen/EMS…    

This week on the House floor we passed HF 2459 which increases the tax credit for volunteer firefighters and volunteer emergency medical services (EMS) personnel.  It also adds reserve peace officers to the person’s eligible for the credit.  This credit was just established last year and is showing up on the Iowa Tax form for the first time.  We doubled the credit from $50 to $100 to help encourage people to volunteer for our local fire departments and local EMS departments.  As our society evolves and becomes much more mobile, it is increasingly difficult to find good people willing to volunteer.  We are fortunate to have many good people who have stepped up to volunteer in our communities and to be there when they are needed.  Thank you for what you do.  I voted for this bill and have encouraged the Senate to do the same.  It is up to the Senate to pass this bill now.

Community Colleges Levy…    

Another Ways and Means Bill that passed off the House Floor and sent over to the Senate this week was HF 2456.  Current Iowa Code provides that in addition to a Community College districts property tax levy, the voters in that district may vote a facilities property tax levy not exceeding 20 and one-fourths cents per $1,000 of assessed value for up to 10 years.  This money is used to purchase grounds, construct buildings, and pay debts contracted for the construction of buildings, etc.  These referendums typically pass over whelming across the state.  The bill eliminates the need to force the Community Colleges to spend lots of money to hold these elections every ten years.  However, to protect taxpayers they can petition the Community Colleges and force the election.  This bill should save time and money and strikes a good balance between the taxpayers and the tax receivers.  I supported this legislation and voted for HF 2456.  This bill is now in the hands of the Senate.

 “The taxpayer – that’s someone who works for the federal government but doesn’t have to take the civil service examination.” – Ronald Reagan

 For more information on these and other bills:  www.legis.iowa.gov

 Until next time,

Tom Sands

 This week’s forums:    Saturday, April 5th

9:00 – 10:30 AM              Muscatine Community College Student Center

11:15 AM – 12:15  PM    State Bank of WapelloCommunity Room

Categories
Burlington Iowa News West Burlington

Security Breaches of Personal Information at Fed. Agencies More than Doubles

Click here: The number of security breaches involving Personally Identifiable Information (PII) at federal agencies more than doubled in recent years, increasing from 10,481 in 2009 to 25,566 in 2013.
Categories
Burlington Iowa News Political West Burlington

Employers: Obamacare Will Cost $5,000 More Per Employee

Click here: Employers Say Obamacare Will Cost Them $5,000 More Per Employee
Categories
Burlington Iowa News West Burlington

Amish House Moving

Amazing video of the Amish moving a house!

****Language Alert. Camera operator uses some foul language.****

Categories
Burlington Iowa News West Burlington

Holy Grail Found

Click here: There is ‘no doubt’ it contains the cup which touched the lips of Jesus Christ, two historians claim.
Categories
Burlington Iowa Obituaries West Burlington

Obituaries this week

Patricia “Pat” A. Hummer, 83, Burlington died Saturday, March 29, 2014

Darlene Hoover, 79, Burlington, died Sunday, March 30, 2014

Donald Ray Gugeler, 91, Burlington died Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Donald Leonard Salisbury, 78, Burlington, died Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Art Dilsaver, 83, West Point, formerly Burlington, died Thursday, April 3, 2014

Caroline G. Nees, 82, Calhoun, Georgia formerly Burlington died Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Richard “Dick” Duane Hassman, 84, Burlington, died Saturday, April 5, 2014

Categories
Burlington Iowa News Political West Burlington

CNN: Democrats Acting Like “Chickens With The Heads Cut Off”

Categories
Burlington Iowa News Political West Burlington

Obamacare: Taxpayers in the Hole for $1.5 Trillion

Click here: Obamacare: Taxpayers in the Hole for $1.5 Trillion

barackobama-52-110661297802769ftv

Categories
Burlington Iowa News Political West Burlington

State Issues from Tom Sands

News from the Hill…    

This week in the Iowa House we passed several of the bills that came from the Ways and Means Committee.  One of those bills was HF 2447, which I had drafted to fix a problem motor sports people were having with the Iowa Department of Transportation with their car haulers being over length.  The bill establishes a new classification specifically for these types of haulers that should work for everybody.  The bill passed the Iowa House with 93 voting aye and 0 nays.  The bill now heads to the Senate for their consideration.  I have spoken personally with Senate Ways and Means chair, who has indicated they will take a look at the bill.  I sponsored and voted for this bill and will continue to follow it through the process in the Senate, as I meet with their Ways and Means Committee Chair regularly this time of year.  

NASCAR…    

Another bill that was passed this week was SF 2341 which replaced HF 2451 that dealt with the same subject.  These bills made a couple small code changes with the possibility of bigger returns for the taxpayers of Iowa.  Several years ago the legislature passed a bill that helped the owners of Iowa Speedway in Newton into a reality by permitting the track to keep some of the sales tax dollars that were generated at the track.  The incentive was to stop on January 1, 2016 or once they received $12.5 million whichever came first, and only could apply if the 25% of the ownership was held by residents of Iowa.  The incentive was performance based, if there were sales there would be sales tax, if there weren’t any sales, no sales tax dollars. Taxpayers were never on the hook if the track did not succeed.  This past year the track was sold to NASCAR.  I had several meetings with the track management and a teleconference with the owner of NASCAR.  They wanted the legislature to consider changing the law for the ownership restriction to permit an Iowa Business and extend the sunset to January 1, 2026.  The cap of 12.5 million was to remain intact.  I was slow to move the bill until I heard first hand on some of the improvements they wanted to make to the track.  While I can’t share many specific details, I believe that with this new ownership NASCAR has every intention to make the Iowa Speedway a major entertainment facility.  They are uniquely capable of bringing attractions, producing nationally televised events, exporting the Iowa brand and creating value that the previous owners could not provide.  I assigned this bill to myself personally to floor manage.  I wanted to make sure the bill passed on its merits and not on someone’s passion for NASCAR.  The Senate passed the bill with 36 voting aye and 9 nays.  The House passed the bill 82 voting aye and 14 nays, now the bill heads to the Governor for his consideration.

Honoring our Veterans…    

This week we debated and passed one of Governor Branstad’s initiatives, Home Base Iowa.  The bill, SF 303, exempts federal retirement pay received from the military service from the state individual income tax retroactive to January 1, 2014.  The bill also exempt’s military survivor benefits from Iowa income tax.  The bill makes several different changes that hopefully will aid our veterans and show a small token of our appreciation to their service.  The main objective is to encourage more veterans to move back to Iowa to live, work and/or retire.  I voted for pieces of this bill that came through the Ways and Means Committee and the entire bill amended by the House on the Floor.  The bill now heads back to the Senate for their consideration of our House Amendment.

 “I now say that the world has the technology –either available or well advanced in the research pipeline – to feed on a sustainable basis a population of 10 billion people.  The more pertinent question today is whether farmers and ranchers will be permitted to use this new technology.” – Norman Borlaug  September 8, 2000

 For more information on these and other bills:  www.legis.iowa.gov

 Until next time,

Tom Sands

Categories
Burlington Health Iowa News West Burlington

Smile! Fluoride in tap water IS safe after all

Click here: Smile! Fluoride in tap water IS safe after all and can even IMPROVE dental health claim scientists
www.publicdomainpictures.net
www.publicdomainpictures.net