Common sense suggestion from the Des Moines Register's Editorial Board: Iowa's legislators must tackle the state's most pressing needs when they return to the Capitol
January 1, 2012
Iowa's legislators must tackle the state's most pressing needs when they return to the Capitol
The Register’s Editorial
It’s the first day of 2012. That means Iowans are promising to lose weight or save more money or quit smoking. New Year’s resolutions are about making changes now to create a better tomorrow. They are about proactively trying to shape your own future.
Iowa lawmakers, however, can take actions that impact the future of others, of the entire state. In one week the 84th Iowa General Assembly will convene in Des Moines. Our elected officials should remain solely focused on creating a better Iowa going forward.
What a refreshing point of view - focus solely on creating a better Iowa GOING FORWARD - this is pretty much liberalism and progressivism rolled into one and writ large!
In that spirit, lawmakers should resolve to do the following:
Iowa’s child abuse registry has more than 50,000 names on it. The sheer number raises questions about the legitimacy of this list. I'm not so sure that the sheer number raises questions about the legitimacy of the list - here's why (paper napkin calculation)
Population of state of Iowa (2010): 3,046,355
Female persons %: 50.5%
Appx number of females: 1,538,410
Proportion of American women rape victims: 1 out o 6
Estimated number of female Iowans raped 256,400
It's a safe assumption that most rapes are committed upon minors,
so if every one of the 50,000 names on the Iowa Child Abuse Registry
has raped five under age females, then one might feel as if it is
highly likely that the overwhelming majority of Iowa's female
children rapists ARE on the register - which can't be a bad thing.
Complaints from Iowans about a lack of due process rights, lengthy appeals and being wrongly labeled an “abuser” raise concerns. The government blacklisting people who have not been convicted in a court is constitutionally questionable.
Recently a workgroup made recommendations about what lawmakers should do to address problems with the registry. Legislators should adopt them, as well as recommendations in the “minority report” that would protect those who work with children from immediately putting their jobs at risk if placed on the registry. Our elected officials should also re-examine the burden of proof required to place someone on the list. It is currently “more likely than not” abuse occurred rather than the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard for finding someone guilty in a criminal court.
A registry that is supposed to protect kids also has to ensure adequate safeguards for those accused by social workers of wrongdoing. Point well made, especially when, in some instances, the social workers have a partisan interest in getting a parent out of a child's life, as in the event when the social worker's grand child is involved, and the social worker simply does not approve of the parent
Right now there are many indications it's not doing that.
Gov. Terry Branstad is pushing a plan to reform Iowa’s public schools. Before adopting any specific recommendations, lawmakers should ensure such changes have been proven to work. BE STILL MY HEART! The voice of reason! And what an opportunity to think about just what it is that we want (and have reason to expect) our public schools to do for our students. I will suggest two things as being the primary functions of any educational institution to teach:
(1) CRITICAL THINKING - do not accept "conventional wisdom" just because it is "conventional" and do not in any way assume that "constituted authority" has the first clue about what it is talking about, and,
(2) THE VALUE OF ONGOING COMMUNITY SERVICE - we want involved and engaged citizens - engaged in the political process, involved in making our communities better, whether working directly within the political system, as an elected official, or helping out at election time, as an election official, or working as a city / village / municipal worker, a teacher, librarian, park district employee, volunteer, etc
PLEASE NOTE WELL AND CAREFULLY - neither of THESE functions involves meeting numbers on some standardized tests, and know, full well, that in order to meet standardized test number criteria, it is necessary to "teach to the test" or to cheat!
NOTE FURTHER - each and every "miracle" in public school education has been brought about my lies, by fictions, by cheating. THERE ARE NO MIRACLES; THERE ARE NO SHORT CUTS!
Note further, that children reading 3 grade levels behind the grade in which they are placed will not improve one whit by being forced to "work harder; to do more home word," becuase the books they will be working harder and poring over HAVE NOT BEEN DESIGNED TO MEET THEIR NEEDS - when you read 3 grades behind your level, you need easier text books - better written text books, and you need to read, almost constantly, BUT, unless such books are available, the test scores will not improve, the children will not learn how to read (ALL TEXTBOOKS - all subjects need to be reading accessible)
That means taking the time to demand evidence on everything from changing how teachers are paid to third-grade reading initiatives to additional testing.
Also, lawmakers cannot overlook how other areas of government affect education. Human services, for example, help ensure kids have health care, food and stability at home. Libraries help foster the love of reading but have seen state funding cut. Funding schools should not come at the expense of other important programs that impact student achievement.
Good on you Des Moines Register! You rock!
One thing lawmakers should seriously consider: require students to spend more time in class. Current Iowa law requires school to be held a minimum of 5.5 hours per day (and 27.5 hours over a 5-day segment) for 180 days of the year. This calendar was implemented when people were traveling on mud roads and kids spent summers working on the farm.
Perhaps the most shameful act of the 2011 Legislature: approving dove hunting in the state. Iowa had protected the birds for nearly a century. Polls show Iowans are opposed to killing them. The only silver lining: the controversy has renewed an effort to ban lead ammunition. Hunters using lead ammunition spread it all over Iowa’s fields and forests, which kills other wildlife, including the beloved bald eagles.
Lawmakers should ban lead shot in all public areas, regardless of what wildlife a hunter is targeting. There is no question lead is dangerous. It has been banned from paint and gasoline. It can damage organs in all animals, including humans.
Last year The Des Moines Register Opinion pages detailed the job perks of state legislators. They receive salaries of $25,000 to $37,500 annually. They automatically receive per diems and “constituent allowances” that are frequently sheltered from taxes. They don’t have to account for how the expense money is spent. The vast majority receive free health insurance, frequently for their entire families. These and other fringe benefits can cost taxpayers more than $18,000 per lawmaker, per year.
Lawmakers should pay themselves in a way that is transparent. Compensation should be subject to taxes. Per diems for lawmakers who live near the Capitol should be reduced, and all money provided for expenses should be accounted for by the lawmakers. They should at least contribute to covering the cost of their health insurance if not pay the entire amount themselves.
Lawmakers talk about streamlining government, making sacrifices and tightening the state’s budgetary belt. This is an opportunity for them to practice what they preach.
The board would resolve disputes over public records and meetings and take a huge step toward more transparent government. The Senate has passed this legislation several times, and Gov. Terry Branstad supports it. The House should finish the job this year.
The governor and both parties are determined to do something about the disproportionately high property tax rates paid by business and industry. The solution should not substantially reduce revenue that pays for critical local services, such as schools, libraries, human services and public safety.
A recent report projects Iowa will outgrow its existing prisons in the next decade unless criminal sentences are reduced. Lawmakers should start by trimming mandatory minimum sentences and lifetime parole for sex offenders. The alternative is to build several costly prisons.
Roads and bridges are in bad shape, demand is increasing and the revenue is falling short. Phase in an increase in the gas tax if necessary, but do it now.
Infrastructural improvement - ought always to be atop the list
Iowa has the nation’s model for state and federal redistricting. The Legislature should extend that model to counties, where politics still plays too large a role.
Create a health insurance exchange. Let the federal government do it.
Waste time on divisive issues like gay marriage and abortion.
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