Colorful red crab apple trees line the hillside along River Drive, Davenport.

Fiscal '08 casino admissions virtually the same as 1996


Admissions at the Bettendorf Isle of Capri casino in fiscal 2008 were virtually the same as 12 years ago despite the opening of two hotels next to the riverboat aimed at boosting the number of gamblers.

For the 2008 fiscal year ended June 30, the Isle reported 1,451,452 admissions, nearly identical to the admissions in fiscal 1996 of 1,443,113 when it operated as the Lady Luck casino.

Last year's admissions also were off 28 percent from fiscal 2000, the boat's peak admission year when 2,018,936 gamblers came through its doors.

The Isle's first hotel was completed in August of 1998, while its second hotel opened in July of 2007.

At the Isle's sister boat, the Rhythm City Casino in Davenport, the decline has been even more severe, dropping nearly 47 percent from 1,775,317 admissions in fiscal 1996 when it operated as "The President" to 947,373 for fiscal 2008.

EPA, state at odds over PM 2.5 air pollution designation


The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency plans to designate Scott and Rock Island Counties as "non-attainment" areas for fine particulate pollution.

The Iowa Department of Natural Resources and the Governor's Office have sent letters to the EPA saying the state is working with industries to lower such pollutants and asking for designation of a much smaller area near the air monitoring stations as "non-attainment."

BHS Marching Band kicks off Homecoming '08


The Bettendorf High School Homecoming festivities kicked off Thursday (10/2) with the traditional parade along Spruce Hills and 18th Street, followed by a pep rally at the high school stadium. The Bulldogs, 3-0 on the season with wins over Pleasant Valley, Burlington and North Scott, face winless Davenport West in Friday's homecoming contest.


School board members Scott Tinsman, left, Barry Anderson, Jeannine Crockett and Betsy Justis toss candy to onlookers along the parade route.

6th Street reconstruction progress

6th Street, looking south to State Street and Mississippi River.

6th Street, looking north from Holmes Street.

Mayne sworn in as new First Ward alderman

Dean Mayne was sworn in as the new First Ward alderman Monday night by District Court Judge Paul Macek. Mayne defeated Norm Voelliger in the Sept. 2 special election. The vacancy on the council was created when Keith Kauten, elected in November 2007, resigned from his seat.

Low voter turnout should concern school districts

The very low voter turnout for Bettendorf, Pleasant Valley and Eastern Iowa Community College school board elections Tuesday (Sept. 9) should be of concern to school administrators, sitting school board members and residents.

In one Pleasant Valley district with 1,590 voters, only four votes were cast for the sole candidate. No school board district election drew more than 1 percent of the voters to cast ballots.

Bridge flowers


A tangle of wild Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta) grows along the Mississippi River levee under the I-74 Bridge, Bettendorf.

Mayne defeats Voelliger in special election

First Ward voters sent a message to the mayor and city council Tuesday – we'll choose our own alderman, thank you.

Dean Mayne, a 50-year-old political newcomer, defeated Norm Voelliger 409 to 369 in a special election the Republican-dominated council didn't want to hold.

After alderman Keith Kauten resigned earlier this year, the council decided to appoint a replacement alderman rather than schedule a special election.

The city administration initially told the council a special election would cost $15,000, but later determined it would be $3,200.

Partisan politics rears ugly head in 1st Ward election

The First Ward aldermanic election in Bettendorf took a decidedly partisan, and sad, turn Friday (8/30) with the arrival of a flyer signed by the mayor and all the Republican council members urging the election of the Republican candidate.

While it is naive to think partisan politics aren't part of city elections, past and present, the overt promotion of party affiliation in this special election is particularly troubling.

Tab for Events Center project tops $40 million

The City of Bettendorf's new downtown Events Center will cost more than $40 million under a financial loan package recently approved by the city council.

The 20-year $13.8 million loan to finance the city's portion of the 53,000-square foot-center will cost the city at least $14.785 million in interest. And, with a five-year adjustment clause on interest rates, the price could go much higher if bank interest rates go up over the next 20 years.

Pages

Subscribe to Bettendorf.com RSS
Go to top