Carbon Capture in Iowa

Carbon Capture in Iowa by Sheri Deal-Tyne, Health and Energy Policy Researcher, PSR, Iowa.

A Lodestone
At this moment, three different carbon capture and pipeline projects have been proposed and are being debated in Iowa. The Iowa projects are significant at the national level because the adoption or rejection of the proposed projects will serve as a “litmus test for a network of CO2 pipelines and carbon capture developments across the U.S. The situation in Iowa is what those in the policy and advocacy arenas recognize as a policy window, or in other words, a pivotal point.
Ethanol
Corn is about two-thirds starch, which is fermented to make ethanol (ethyl alcohol). After fermentation, the ethanol is concentrated through distillation, then dehydrated, and blended with about 2% denaturant, e.g., methanol, to render it undrinkable.
The federal Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) requires that transportation fuel in the U.S. contains specified amounts of renewable fuel. Under the RFS, ethanol is one form of renewable fuel and is blended with gasoline typically at a 10% level. There are a variety of incentives designed to maintain a market for ethanol fuel; however, recent studies emphasize the detrimental environmental impact of ethanol use. The production of ethanol also emits CO2 into the atmosphere. By industry estimates, the fermentation of corn into 100 million gallons of ethanol generates around 300,000 metric tons of CO2 per year.
Land Use, Agricultural Practices, and Food Production Changes
A recently published study found that due to the RFS mandate, corn cultivation increased 8.7% and expanded into 6.9 million additional acres of land between 2008 and 2016. These widespread changes in land use have contributed to a growing world food crisis that has now been made acutely worse by the February 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine. The RFS has also led to changes in tilling and the increased application of nitrogen-based fertilizers. The enormous rise in nitrogen fertilizer use has increased nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. N2O is a potent greenhouse gas—289 times as powerful as carbon dioxide. Finally, the study concluded that ethanol is at least 24% more carbon-intensive than gasoline. 
Corn-Based Ethanol
Despite growing concerns, Iowa is the leading ethanol producer in the US. Iowa has 42 corn ethanol plants across the state that produce more than 4 billion gallons annually. Using the industry figure above, the state of Iowa emits 12 million metric tons of CO2 per year from its ethanol plants. This figure represents the CO2 generated by the fermentation process only. These 42 ethanol plants and 12 million metric tons of CO2 are the focus of the carbon capture and pipeline projects in Iowa.
Proposed Projects
Navigator CO2 Ventures proposed CO2 Pipeline Iowa route. Image from Navigator brochure in public IUB Filing.
Proposed Summit Carbon Solutions project in Iowa.  View a map of the project in the five-state region.
3 – Wolf Carbon Solutions, in conjunction with ADM, proposes a 350-mile pipeline intended to transport CO2 from ADM’s ethanol facilities in Clinton and Cedar Rapids to be stored underground at ADM’s sequestration site in Decatur, Illinois. Wolf Carbon Solutions and ADM have not released a publicly available map of their pipeline route.
Eminent Domain
Before a pipeline for the transportation of hazardous liquids can be built in Iowa, the company proposing the pipeline must obtain a permit from the Iowa Utilities Board (IUB) under Iowa Code chapter 479B. There is no federal siting or permitting for hazardous liquids pipelines. The IUB has primary jurisdiction over the routing-siting of hazardous liquids pipelines in Iowa.
The IUB’s authority to grant the power of eminent domain comes from Iowa Code chapter 479B for hazardous liquids pipelines. The process of taking private property for public benefit is called condemnation. The code states that a permit will not be granted unless the board determines that “the proposed services will promote the public convenience and necessity.”
The first step in the process is an informational meeting to be held in each county affected by the proposed pipeline. At the meeting, a company representative explains the proposed project and landowner compensation, followed by a question-and-answer period. To construct a pipeline on private property, the company must obtain the rights from the owner of the land, typically by means of an easement. An easement grants specific rights to a party other than the landowner and generally includes the right to build a structure like a pipeline, as well as the right to enter the property for maintenance or repairs. An easement can be voluntarily negotiated or, it can be obtained through condemnation.

The company cannot begin to negotiate with landowners for easements until after the informational meeting. The IUB does not supervise or control negotiations for the purchase of voluntary easements. After the informational meeting is held, the company and the landowners begin to negotiate. If the company fails to obtain all needed easements voluntarily, it can then ask the IUB for the authority to take those rights through eminent domain. According to federal and state laws, private property cannot be taken for public use without 1) a need to serve a public use and 2) just compensation to the landowner.

Under Iowa law, the IUB determines whether a company has demonstrated the public use requirement, but the IUB does not have jurisdiction over the question of compensation. If the use of Eminent Domain is required, compensation is determined in an entirely separate proceeding by a compensation commission in each county for which condemnation authority has been granted, under Iowa Code chapter 6B. Pipeline History Lessons: Dakota Access
Steve Roquet is a farmer in Keokuk County, Iowa. Against his wishes, a section of the Dakota Access pipeline was constructed across his land. Roquet was provided with a copy of an “agricultural mitigation plan” by the Iowa Utilities Board, which he assumed the pipeline installers would follow. Violations of the plan witnessed by Roquet and third-party pipeline inspectors included working in wet conditions and failure to preserve the entire layer of topsoil.   These violations culminate in soil compaction, drainage issues, and a 60-90 percent reduction in crop yields all along the pipeline’s route. The photo below shows rich, valuable topsoil dumped directly on the pipeline at the bottom of the ditch, resulting in disastrous mixing of topsoil and subsoil.
Rich Iowa topsoil at the bottom of the Dakota Access pipeline ditch. Source: Steve Roquet
Roquet contrasts the pipeline projects with the wind turbines on other farmers’ land in Iowa. Consenting to a wind turbine on your land is voluntary, and the landowner receives compensation each year, Roquet points out. In Roquet’s case, he received a one-time payment for the easement right of way and diminishing funds over a five-year period for crop loss. That means no funds after the fifth year, despite facing reduced crop production to this day, which Roquet documents in crop yield reports. The compensation he did receive did not reflect the reduction Roquet has seen in his yields. Roquet emphasizes that he was not given a choice about the Dakota Access pipeline. He was told that if he signed the easement agreement, he would receive X amount of dollars, and if he refused to sign the easement, they would take the land anyway, through eminent domain. He says that the discussion surrounding the easement did not involve any kind of negotiation over terms or dollars. Indeed, when Roquet was informed of the amount that he would be compensated for the pipeline installation on his land, Roquet replied that he would pay Dakota Access that amount to stay away from his land.

Roquet’s experiences with pipeline construction on his land are not isolated. In fact, a study done by researchers at Iowa State University corroborates Roquet’s experiences. Farmers in South Dakota also faced similar problems. Research being conducted on farms in Ohio is documenting the impact of a series of smaller pipelines on soil degradation there.

Roquet’s efforts to resolve his crop yield problems with Dakota Access have thus far been unsuccessful. To make matters worse, in early February 2022, Roquet received a letter from Navigator informing him that they would be surveying his property for the construction of their CO2 pipeline. Unconfirmed reports are that the Navigator CO2 pipeline will be constructed adjacent to the Dakota Access pipeline in some Iowa Counties.
Follow the Money
Navigator CO2 Ventures is a Texas-based company. Navigator’s “Heartland Greenway” project is being funded by Valero and BlackRock. Valero is a transnational manufacturer and marketer of transportation fuels and petrochemical products. BlackRock is one of the largest institutional investors in the coal industry with share and bond holdings of US$109 billion.
Summit Carbon Solutions is part of the larger Summit Agricultural Group in Alden, Iowa which is owned by Bruce Rastetter. Rastetter is the former president of the Iowa Board of Regents and is well known in Iowa as a high-dollar GOP donor. Jess Vilsack, son of USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack now serves as the general counsel for Summit Carbon Solutions and former Iowa governor Terry Brandstad is their Senior Policy Advisor.

Wolf Carbon Solutions is also a private company that is part of Wolf Midstream, a $4 billion energy infrastructure business based in Calgary, Alberta. Wolf Midstream recently completed construction on a CO2 pipeline in Alberta. The pipeline, known as the Alberta Carbon Trunk Line, carries captured CO2 that is used for EOR in the Alberta tar sands. Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) is a transnational food products corporation. Their joint project proposes to transport CO2 to ADM’s “fully permitted and already-operational” sequestration site in Decatur, Illinois. This site is a CCS test project being funded by the US Department of Energy. The total carbon capture and storage work at ADM is valued at $441 million, of which $281 million came from the Department of Energy. The project employs 11 people.

The key revenue stream for a CCS project is the 45Q tax credit, which provides a credit for CO2 that is captured and stored. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 set the rate for permanently stored CO2 to $31.77/mt in 2020 for new CCS facilities and raised the rate to $50/mt in 2026, plus annual inflation adjustments. For storage plus enhanced oil recovery, the rate was $20.22 in 2020 and will rise to $35 in 2026. There is a proposal to increase the 45Q tax credit to $85/mt for permanent storage in the Build Back Better legislation.

Additionally, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) signed in November 2021, provides $2.1 billion for low-interest loans for shared CO2 transport infrastructure, as well as $2.5 billion in grant funding for commercial large-scale carbon sequestration projects and associated CO2 transport infrastructure. In all, more than $12 billion in CCUS investments are funded by the IIJA.
California connection A recent amendment to California’s Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS), a crediting mechanism intended to reduce California’s fuel intensity by 20% by 2030, has created a further incentive for the ethanol industry to utilize CCS in their production of ethanol with the LCFS recognizing CCS as an acceptable strategy to reduce emissions from transportation fuels.

Resistance As part of the Iowa permitting process, the public is allowed to file an objection, letter of support, or provide a comment on the IUB’s online Open Docket Comment Form. Any information submitted is available for public viewing subject to the Iowa Open Records Act. Submissions regarding pipeline proposals are available here. (For comments regarding the Summit pipeline, use Docket Number HLP-2021-0001 in the search application. For comments regarding the Navigator pipeline, use Docket Number HLP-2021-0003.)
The Boards of Supervisors in 20 Iowa counties have filed objections opposing the use of eminent domain for the pipelines. The Des Moines Register reports that the number of objections filed so far exceeds the number filed during the permitting process for the Dakota Access pipeline.
Conclusion  Apparently, the Biden administration has identified CCS as necessary infrastructure to meet climate goals. Certainly, the fossil fuel industry is pushing CCS to extend the lifespan of their activities. The rollout of CCS at these levels will require extensive construction of pipelines. According to Reuters, the White House has “declined to comment on the use of eminent domain to construct those pipelines.” Property rights, the just application of eminent domain, and the preservation of valuable farmland are not partisan issues. The Iowa projects are the first link in a network of CCS and pipeline projects across the U.S. and arguably hold a key to whether these projects move forward. We need effective climate solutions that will also preserve farmland for food production. Our world needs energy, but it also needs food, clean water, and a livable climate. 

Sheri Deal-Tyne is the Health and Energy Policy Researcher for Physicians for Social Responsibility: Iowa. Learn more about the chapter by clicking here.

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The High Five

Once again we bring you Friday’s version of ProgessIowa’s High Five Newsletter. This is a good newsletter to use to follow Iowa’s Republican dominated legislature while they are in session:  

Happy Friday!

Did anyone else have Iowa in their final four? According to the ESPN TC app, over 10% of March Madness Brackets had the Hawkeye men going all the way to the finals! Congratulations to the Iowa men’s basketball team for a tremendous season, and we’ll continue rooting for the Iowa women’s and Iowa State teams this coming week!

Progress Iowa is having our own March bracket, with the #Extreme16 to call out the extreme elected officials in Iowa, including Governor Reynolds, Sen. Chuck Grassley, Rep. Ashley Hinson, and many in the legislature. You can nominate an elected official for our Extreme Sixteen here: Extreme Sixteen bracket

This week was the second and final funnel week for the Iowa Legislature, and unlike the first funnel week, bills had to have been passed by a floor vote in either the House or Senate chamber, and have made it through the committee process in the opposite chamber to survive for full consideration the rest of session. There are some exceptions to this, but fortunately funnel week helped stop some terrible bills from moving forward.

Let’s take a look at the bills that didn’t survive the funnel:

1. BAD BILLS BLOCKED: Fortunately, the second funnel week here in Iowa helped stall a number of bad bills introduced by Iowa’s Republican lawmakers. Here’s a few of the worst bills that didn’t make it through the second funnel:

SF2364 – Better known as the bill that would put teachers in jail, this bill didn’t make it through the House and is no longer eligible this session.

SF2205 – This bill would have required schools to post curriculums online months in advance, putting undue strain and burden on educators and potentially would have cost schools millions of dollars.

SF2312 – This highly controversial bill would have limited Iowans’ ability to sell their property for land conservation, and we are glad to see it didn’t survive funnel week.

There are many bad bills left in play this session, however, and we all need to stand together to hold Iowa’s Republican lawmakers accountable.

Click to tweet: I want our legislators focusing on issues Iowans care about, not their wealthy & corporate buddies. That’s why I’m urging Iowa Republicans to focus on their constituents rather than an extreme agenda this last part of session. #Iowa

After you share that message, check out some of the bills that survived funnel week and the other top stories we’re watching today:

2. THE GOOD, THE BAD, THE UGLY: And while some terrible bills were defeated this funnel week, some of Corporate Kim Reynolds’ top priorities are still in play thanks to Republicans taking advantage of their supermajority. Speaker Grassley has moved some Republican bills out of their original committees and over to Ways and Means and the Appropriations committee so they will be eligible after the funnel. Reynolds’ terrible unemployment benefit slashing bill was one of these bills, because some Republicans prioritize corporations over anything else.

3. WHERE IS HER EMPATHY?: And while these terrible bills are making headlines today, State Representative Ruth Ann Gaines, a former Iowa Teacher of the Year and a 40-year veteran of East High School in Des Moines, called out Governor Reynolds for her terrible comments about the shooting at East High last week. In her first public comments about the tragedy, Reynolds passed the buck onto Iowa’s school system that she has spent over a decade underfunding.

4. IOWA ELECTIONS ARE SAFE AND SECURE: New data from MIT shows that Iowa ranked third in the nation for administering the 2020 election, meaning our elections were safe and accessible. Even so,Iowa Republicans worked to dismantle voting rights in the state of Iowa, touting false claims about election integrity. This effort is still being seen at the national level as Republican controlled state houses continue to pass voter suppression laws after the record turn out in 2020.

5. IOWA SOIL AND WATER QUALITY IN JEOPARDY: Dr. Francis Thicke is a soil scientist and organic dairy farmer. He has served as the National Program Leader for Soil Science for the USDA-Extension Service and was the 2010 Democratic candidate for Iowa Secretary of Agriculture. In his first article for our online news blog, Potluck, he shares his expertise about the water and soil quality issues facing Iowa.

Thanks for reading, and we’ll get back with you Monday for another Hive Five!

– The Progress Iowa Team

Progress Iowa | P.O. Box 548 | Des Moines, IA 50302

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Sunday Funday:  Vernal Equinox Edition

Back once again – Randy Rainbow!

I love to call it Vernal Equinox – conjures up a picture in my mind of a white haired, white bearded old guy who is getting out of his cabin as the world warms to go around and greet all his neighbors with good tidings of great things to come. So welcome Vernal Equinox. Glad to see you. Can you sink some Russian tanks in Ukraine in the mud? Thanks.

Well, I guess a lot of folks expected the Hawkeye men to go a long ways in the tourney. In the words of the eternal optimist- maybe next year.

Here we go:

A) Russia is expanding their attacks on Ukraine by now including what major western Ukraine city?

B) The nomination of Sarah Bloom Raskin to the Federal Reserve Board was stopped by Sen. Joe Manchin for what reason last week?

C) The US Senate had an unusual moment of unanimity when it passed a bill by voice vote that would make what permanent?

D) President Biden held a two hour call with what other world leader Friday concerning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine?

E) A leaked memo from the Kremlin ordered Russian media to make as much use of what Fox commentator’s broadcasts as possible?

F) It is still women’s history month – Sally Ride was a great name for the woman who became America’s first what?

G) Both Moderna and Pfizer are seeking approval from the FDA for what related to covid?

H) Hearings for what pioneer SCOTUS nominee begin tomorrow?

I) What singing legend asked that the Rock ’n’ Roll Hall of Fame withdraw her name from nomination to the Hall?

J) Amazon bought what major Hollywood movie studio Wednesday for $8.5 billion?

K) “Switchblades” were in the news last week in relation to the Ukraine War. What are switchblades in this context?

L) Russia created a list of individual Americans that they would put sanctions on. What was unusual about the list?

M) In Iowa, debate on a bill to stop mandates of what were derailed in the Iowa House?

N) Lizzie Magie invented a board game called the “The Landlord’s Game” in 1904. That game was the forerunner of what highly popular board game?

O) Patsy Mink, former representative from Hawaii, is most noted for writing what law that gave women equal opportunities?

P) A woman in Russia displaying a sign that said “No War! They are lying to you” broke into what to display that sign?

Q) A 7.4 magnitude earthquake shook what area of Japan that had a catastrophic earthquake in 2011?

R) President Biden will be attending a meeting in Brussels next week with other leaders of what?

S) Howard Schultz is returning as CEO of what company in an effort to stem the growing union movement in that company?

T) In yet another atrocity committed by Russians against Ukrainians last week included the bombardment of what building in Mariupol being used as a shelter?

Meanwhile, Republicans think fighting for freedom means punching a flight attendant for asking you to wear a mask. – Middle Age Riot

Answers:

A) Lviv

B) Her stance against fossil fuels

C) Daylight Savings time

D) China’s Xi Jing Ping

E) Tucker Carlson’s 

F) female astronaut

G) a second booster

H) Ketanji Brown Jackson

I) Dolly Parton

J) MGM

K) Killer drones used to take out tanks and other military vehicles

L) It was all Democrats – they got no problem with Republicans

M) Stop mandates on covid vaccinations by businesses and Government 

N) Monopoly

O) Title IX – celebrating its 50th year this year.

P) The state television’s evening news broadcast

Q) Fukushima

R) NATO to discuss Ukraine

S) Starbuck’s

T) a theater

Putin must be defeated, and Ukraine must prevail.

But America’s true enemy … lies within. – duty2warn tweet

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DeJear Files To Run For Governor!

Candidate Deidre DeJear filed her nominating petitions to run for Governor Tuesday morning. I believe she can win and take Iowa in a new direction that will pay attention to the citizens of Iowa rather than the corporate big wigs. DeJear will be that fresh voice that Iowa needs.

DeJear has a vision for Iowa, unlike her opponent. The current governor has a vision that seemingly has been dictated to her by the Koch Brothers political arm, Americans For Prosperity. DeJear’s vision is inspired by Iowans and what the state needs to become Iowa again.

As noted here a couple of weeks ago, many former Iowans are wondering what has happened to Iowa? Well, the answer is Republicans. Reynolds and the legislature are in the process of turning Iowa into a libertarian dream state much as Kansas was a few years ago. America then watched as Kansas swirled down the figurative drain as revenues dried up and the state nearly shut down.

Despite DeJear’s lack of name recognition, it appears the governor’s race is very tight already. According to a recent Des Moines Register poll Reynolds is only 8 points ahead, a very weak position for an incumbent governor. Her strategy to divide Iowa is not popular.   

Get involved, folks. This has the makings of a huge upset next fall – and of course money is the fuel that runs campaigns.

Donate here:

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Covid Ain’t Over Yet, Folks

When Yogi Berra stated one of his more famous ‘yogiisms’ “It ain’t over til it’s over” little did he know that would be a statement that could be applied to many things. In his case he was talking about a baseball game. Today that statement could easily be applied to the current state of the covid pandemic.

Just because cases are going down in recent weeks is no real indication that the virus has been conquered. It is a nice respite from the constant bad news but we have had such respites before. Remember last summer? It looked like maybe we were turning a corner back then also.

At that time people were getting vaccinated at a high rate. Had the trend continued maybe we could have contained the virus. But a hard core 40% of the country flat out refused to be vaccinated. The push behind their refusal was based on a constant stream of lies coming from right wing media and social media. Many paid for believing these lies with their lives.

Now we look at a relative lull in covid cases. Hospitalizations are down, but deaths remain relatively high at over a thousand a day. Think about that. That is at a level of 365,000 a year – a very high level. Yet at this time for some reason people seem to be no longer scared of the virus.

As some may point out, a large percentage of those dying of covid these days are from that hard core 40% that refused to get vaccinated. Choosing not to get vaccinated was a fatal mistake for many. They are also the group that is getting the severe cases of covid in recent months.

As we all know, having a disease usually leaves behind some form of immunity from getting that disease again. That is the basis for vaccination. In the case of covid, we know that the immunity left after contracting the disease is not as strong as the immunity a person gets from the vaccine. We also now know that both immunities wane over time. Many folks got the booster about 5 to 6 months ago. Evidence is starting to come in that the strength of those boosters is ebbing.

We are also seeing that the virus continues to mutate. History has shown us that when mutations show up in other parts of the world Americans have been very slow to react to the warnings that other countries have given us. We had a solid warning on the coming of Omicron and Americans, especially that hard core 40% refused to listen.

The Guardian had a good article on the warning that other countries (the UK, Europe and China) are giving the US:   

“In the past couple of weeks, the UK and several countries in Europe, including Germany, France and Switzerland, are experiencing a new wave. At least 12 countries, geographically extending from Finland to Greece, are experiencing new increases in cases, some quite marked, such as Austria exceeding its pandemic peak, and Finland with an 85% increase from the prior week. Many of these countries are also showing a rise in hospital admissions. 

<<skip>>

Indications within the United States support the idea that new wave is already getting started. Wastewater surveillance is relatively sparse in the United States, but 15% of the 410 sites where it was conducted between 24 February to 10 March 2022 showed a greater than 1000% increase compared with the prior 15-day period. Also, the BA.2 variant is gaining steam in the United States and is now accounting for more than 30% of new cases.

The root cause for the new wave is hard to pin down. Certainly, the BA.2 variant is known to have increased transmission, at least about 30% more than its sister lineage, Omicron BA.1. With the concomitant reduction of mitigation restrictions and waning immunity protection of vaccines, that transmission advantage will increase. This “BA.2 triad” of factors is thus hard to dissect, as they are clearly interdependent. Rather than focusing on what precisely is driving the new wave, the imperative is to drive some preventive action. 

<< skip >>

This is a critical issue, because there is a substantial dropdown of protection, from 90-95% with a third shot to 75-80% without a booster, versus Omicron hospitalization and death. The problem of lack of adequate vaccination in the United States is compounded by not having any plan for a fourth dose. The Israeli study of over 1 million people age 60 and over showed a 4.3 fold enhanced protection versus severe illness from Omicron compared with those receiving three shots.

Not only is there a gaping hole in our immunity wall, but the $58bn budget of the American Pandemic Prepared Plan (AP3), advanced by the White House to comprehensively address the deficiencies, was gutted by the Senate and reduced to just $2bn. Under threat are the order of more than 9.2m Paxlovid pills, the Test-to Treat program announced at the State of the Union address, better data, wastewater surveillance, efforts to develop a pan-coronavirus vaccine, research on long Covid, and many other critical public health measures. {bolding mine}

It ain’t over til it’s over and it don’t look like it’s over by any means. It looks like we are just in the eye of another hurricane right now. Sure hope I am wrong.

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Iowa Senate Passes Bipartisan Resolution Supporting Ukraine

Iowa Senate Democrats

Wednesday the Iowa Senate unanimously approved the following resolution in support of Ukraine:

SENATE RESOLUTION NO. 105

A Resolution reaffirming Iowa’s commitment to its relationship with the Ukrainian people and supporting Ukraine’s efforts to remain an independent and autonomous nation.

WHEREAS, the relationship between Ukraine and the United States is marked by strong bilateral trade, educational and cultural exchange, and tourism; and

WHEREAS, the State of Iowa’s ties with Ukraine are demonstrated by its sister-state relationship with Cherkasy Oblast, and sister-city relationships between Newton and Smila, Osklaloosa and Shpola, and Muscatine and Drohobych; and

WHEREAS, Ukraine and the State of Iowa have enjoyed a long and mutually beneficial trade relationship and anticipate continuing trade growth, including exports of tractors, farm implement vehicles, and seeders, planters, and transplanting tools; and

WHEREAS, in 2021, the State of Iowa exported $73,485,215 of commodities to Ukraine and imported $3,011,563 of commodities from Ukraine; and

WHEREAS, Ukraine shares with the United States and the State of Iowa the common values of freedom, democracy, human rights, and rule of law; and

WHEREAS, Ukraine has been an independent and autonomous nation maintaining fair and free elections since 1991; and

WHEREAS, Russian military forces have committed an unprovoked and unjustified attack on the people of Ukraine; and

WHEREAS, Russian President Vladimir Putin has chosen a premeditated war that will bring a catastrophic loss of life and suffering; and

WHEREAS, Russia is solely responsible for the loss of life, destruction, and human suffering that its attack will bring; NOW THEREFORE,

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE, That the Senate affirms that the people of Iowa stand in solidarity with the people of Ukraine; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the Senate stands clearly against Russia’s flagrant aggression, authoritarianism, and attack on democracy; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the Senate supports the right of all persons to live in a free society, the right to self-determination, and the right to live without fear of attack, foreign or domestic, anywhere in the world.

Zach Wahls
Senator Joe Bolkcom
State Senator Nate Boulton
Liz Mathis
Bill Dotzler
State Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott

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J.D. Scholten Announces Run For Iowa House District 1 Sioux City

Followo JD on Twitter https://twitter.com/JDScholten

I grew up in Sioux City, Iowa. I graduated high school, attended college here, and even played professional baseball for the Sioux City Explorers. I love this city through and through.

When my dear friend Representative Chris Hall decided to step down from representing Sioux City in the Iowa House, I knew it was time for me to step up.

 Today I am announcing that I am running for Iowa House District 1, to represent my hometown of Sioux City! Chip in $10 to help jumpstart my campaign! 

I see too many of my classmates and kids that grew up in Sioux City move away. I see too many families rely on donation boxes at gas stations, pancake breakfasts or GoFundMe accounts to pay for medical costs.

Folks in Sioux City deserve a Representative who will listen to them. Someone who will fight for them and their families. Someone who will always put them first before the out-of-state special interests.

As Iowa’s State Representative, I will fight for affordable health care, a quality education for every family in my district, and for an economy that works for ALL of us, not just those at the top.

Make no mistake: I will fight for my community every step of the way. Will you chip in $10 to help jumpstart my campaign? Every single dollar will make a huge difference in fueling our campaign forward! 

The community of Sioux City has given me so much, it’s time for me to give back. People often say, change starts at the local level. Well, it’s time for me to step up to the plate for Iowa House District 1. Let’s go!

Standing Tall for All
J.D. Scholten

JD Scholten

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Watch This Week’s Blue Statehouse Alert Live

Iowa House Dems are committed to keeping Iowans informed of what is going on every week in Des Moines. Sign up for weekly updates.  https://iowahouse.org/sign-up-for-the-blue-statehouse-alert/

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One Way To Stand Up To Putin

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Tucker Carlson—whose prolific record of spewing racist, inflammatory, and generally awful bile on national television—is now essential viewing for fans of Vladimir Putin.

That’s the word from David Corn, who got his hands on a leaked Kremlin memo instructing Russian media outlets to feature Carlson and his pro-Putin talking points in broadcasts. The memo calls it “essential” to do this “as much as possible.”

You can check out photos of the memo here. (We’re not publishing the full document in order to protect Corn’s source.) But the top takeaway touting Carlson as a must-watch for Kremlin-friendly media should genuinely concern you. Remember, Carlson boasts the largest total audience on cable news. Millions of Americans are closing out their evenings by consuming pro-Putin views during a war rife with misinformation—and that’s on top of the vitriolic programming Carlson so regularly supplies.

Stay tuned to this space to see if Carlson, or as New York once brilliantly called him, the “sentient pair of pleated khakis,” responds to Corn’s reporting tonight on his show.

P.S. Have you been thinking, “I wish I could do something about the war in Ukraine?” Our CEO Monika Bauerlein has been wondering the same.

One way to stand up to Putin, she writes, is to help save Meduza, the largest independent news site still operating in Russia. Here at Mother Jones, we are enormously proud to be part of an international community of reader-supported newsrooms. As a Mother Jones reader, we believe that your support for Meduza will help keep bringing the truth to Russia in this especially perilous moment for independent journalism. Read more on the stakes here—and what you can do to help.

—Inae Oh

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Nobel Nominee Kathy Kelly To Speak In Iowa City

Peace Activist Kathy Kelly
“War Is Never the Answer”
Friday, March 18th, 7:00 pm
Unitarian Universalist Society
2355 Oakdale Rd, Coralville

Kathy Kelly, American peace activist, author, and member of the Veterans For Peace Advisory Board, will speak on “War Is Never The Answer” on Friday March 18.

Kelly has worked extensively for peace in the past thirty
years in Iraq, Afghanistan, and US streets and prisons. Veterans For Peace #161 and the Unitarian Universalist Society are co-sponsoring the event.

This event is free and open to the public.

Contact John Jadryev at 319 430-2019 for additional information.

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