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City seeks ideas for redevelopment of land near library, family museum

April 22, 2010 by editor


A sketch of the open area adjacent to the library and Family Museum.

City officials are seeking ideas for redevelopment of the site formerly occupied by the vacant Eagle Food Store along 18th Street, adjacent to both the Family Museum and Library.

The city purchased the vacant grocery store in 1999 for $1.7 million and had the building demolished last year after a series of plans for reuse of the facility were unsuccessful.

'Judd Viburnum'

April 21, 2010 by bgierke

Marie Winn wrote 'The Plug in Drug' in 1977 examining the effects of television on the developing minds of young people. In the 25th anniversary edition, she put the range of new electronic media under her scrutiny and, among other stuff, gave it all as the cause of a significant decline in average SAT scores of U.S. high school seniors.

Bettendorf city elections, appointments 'non-partisan' in name only

April 19, 2010 by editor

Bettendorf city officials are threatening to go to court to try to maximize the length of the appointments the council can make to fill vacant elected positions in the city. For the Quad City Times article on the issue, CLICK HERE.

March gambling boat admissions continue decade long slide

April 15, 2010 by editor

Admissions at the Bettendorf Isle of Capri Casino in March continued a decade long decline for the riverfront gambling operation, off more than 40 percent since 2001. Ten years ago, the riverboat drew 177,745 gamblers during March, providing the Isle with $9.2 million in revenues. Last month, the boat had 101,000 admissions and $6.7 million in revenue. The Isle's best March was 2000 when 183,640 gamblers visited the casino.

Muscatine fine particulate pollution exceeds EPA standards

April 14, 2010 by editor

Fine particulate pollution in the vicinity of Garfield Elementary School, Muscatine, exceeds the air quality standards designed to protect public health, according to the 2007-2009 monitoring results released Tuesday (April 13) by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (IDNR).

Take Heart

April 13, 2010 by bgierke

A “Notice of Annual Meeting Of Shareholders,” aka proxy statement, is the bland accompaniment to large public corporations’ glossy annual reports. Especially when economic tides rise high, the latter are filled with impressive graphs and color photos of beaming faces in far flung places. The former are little more than ink on paper whatever the water level.

Isle of Capri plans purchase of Vicksburg casino for $80 million

April 6, 2010 by editor

The Isle of Capri Casinos, Inc., announced plans Tuesday (April 6) to purchase the Vicksburg, Mississippi gambling casino and hotel from Bally Technologies, Inc. for $80 million cash.

Pleasant Valley School District planing 5 percent tax levy rate increase

April 1, 2010 by editor

The Pleasant Valley School Board is recommending a 5 percent increase in the district's property tax rate to help make up for a reduction in state funding.

At its March 22 meeting, the board approved a budget with an increase of 75 cents per $1,000 assessed valuation, which would bring the overall district tax levy to $14.7432 per $1,000 assessed valuation.

Lee Enterprises gets wage/benefit concessions from St. Louis newspaper union

March 30, 2010 by editor

The union representing St. Louis Post-Dispatch employees has approved a new contract with Lee Enterprises which lowers wages 6 percent, provides three weeks of unpaid furloughs over the next three years, eliminates retiree medical coverage and freezes pension benefits.

MidAmerican should pick up $15 million nuclear feasible study cost

March 16, 2010 by editor

Open Letter to Governor Culver,

According to the Wall Street Journal, MidAmerican Energy earned $1.7 billion for Berkshire Hathaway in 2008. And now the company wants state utility customers to pay $15 million to investigate the feasibility of building a nuclear power plant in Iowa.

Why the Iowa State Legislature approved such a backdoor rate increase is hard to understand, but it clearly has more to do with backroom lobbying than any real financial need on the utility's part.

The Subtle Landscape

Hancher Auditorium dreams
Sept. 7, 2010 by bgierke

Sometime this month, the University of Iowa will decide which of four finalists will design the new $125-million Hancher Auditorium to replace the one ruined by flood several years ago. It will be the most important performing arts venue for quite a swath of this part of the world and thus will have an elevated prominence.

And, elevated in more ways than one. Its new site will be near the old, but somewhere just a bit uphill toward the Levitt Center – above the levels of the record high water. There had been thought of a move downtown, but access to I-80, parking issues and the riparian sublimity kept it closer to the original.

The context of the site is indeed remarkable. Nearby Art Campus buildings include the Levitt Center designed by Charles Gwathmey, The Advanced Technology Lab by Frank Gehry, and The Art Building West by Steven Holl. There’s an expansive park north of the Levitt Center. The gold dome of the Old Capital can be seen toward the south.

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