During National 4-H week we celebrate contributions the 4-H youth organization has provided our community. During the week of Oct. 1-7, we reflect on the important impact the program has made on our youth. Having been a leader for more than 30 years, I see more each year the value of the life skills gained by the hands-on learning 4-H…
Read MoreCategory: Opinion
Nunn statement on passing legislation to avert government shutdown
U.S. Representative Zach Nunn (IA-03) released the following statement after the House of Representatives passed legislation to avert a government shutdown: “The status quo in D.C. is critically broken. I’m fighting daily to bring Iowa commonsense to our nation’s capital and end the rigged system that has led to nearly-limitless spending and sky-high inflation. My first bill was a Balanced…
Read MoreLily is gone; so is public trust
~by Victoria Riley, GreeneCountyNewsOnline publisher What doesn’t city of Jefferson officials want us to know about the investigation, trial, and sentencing of Lily? Lily, a brindled dog who lived at the corner of S. Vine and W. Madison Sts, was accused of biting a child in Russell Park last month. Within a few hours, Lily was impounded on a mandatory…
Read MoreView from My Window – A visit to The Grotto
~a column by Mary Weaver I was recently fortunate to attend the Okoboji Writer’s Retreat, a three-day conference on writing, storytelling, poetry, creating documentaries, fiction, memoir and obituary stories, and opinion writing. I primarily attended the lectures and panels on opinion writing provided by Todd Dorman, Art Cullen, Kathy Obradovich, Laura Belin, and Rekha Basu. For those of you who…
Read MoreBringing Washington opportunities to the Heartland
~a column by U.S. Senator Joni Ernst The U.S. government is the world’s largest customer – required by federal law to consider buying from small businesses. So, why aren’t Iowans sharing in the bounty? Here in the heartland, we’ve seen a steep decline in government contracting activity over the past decade. In 2009, 945 Iowa small businesses participated in federal…
Read MoreTo think or not to think… for ourselves
~ a column by Colleen O’Brien We have a political party run by preschoolers; the kind of toddlers who are tyrants and act out at all times unless they get what they want when they want it. It’s impossible to be around them and maintain your own sanity, for they are bratty, hurtful, mean, and they will get even if…
Read MoreIf
~a column by Colleen O’Brien In the mid-1950s, in Junior High, we had to memorize the poem “If” by Rudyard Kipling. He wrote it in 1895 and it was not published until 1910. It went right to the top of favorite poems in England and has stayed there at least through 1996, the last time a favorite poem was news.…
Read MoreDrewry’s message to the Jefferson city council
Editor’s note: Following is the statement Allison Drewry, owner of a dog who allegedly bit a child at Russell Park last month, asked a family friend to read at the Sept. 12 Jefferson city council meeting. The friend, Jim North, rose to speak during the Open Forum portion of the meeting. Although many residents have been allowed to go much…
Read MoreThe view from my window
COVID is back, Reynolds responds ~a column by Mary Weaver Our new State of Iowa welcoming motto FREEDOM TO FLOURISH, but NOT ON MY WATCH, the Governor’s response to Covid prevention seems incompatible. We are all aware that COVID is rearing its ugly contagious head again. In my immediate family our adult son returned from a short vacation to Colorado,…
Read MoreBook banning II
A book about book banning in the 1930s – The Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes ~ a column by Colleen O’Brien The banning of books has been going on since books were first published. China is the prototype for this behavior – between 221 and 206 BCE, books were banned if disliked by the central government of the…
Read MoreSpeak up
~a column by Colleen O’Brien The only way to have a decent life for everyone is to have a democratic government. It’s harder to keep it going than a dictatorship or an oligarchy, but the idea of it is for everyone, however many times we forget that. The undermining of it in this country and around the world is currently…
Read MoreView from My Window – The dog days of summer
~by Mary Weaver Do you remember watching Sesame Street with your kids or grandchildren? I feel like Oscar the Grouch. As you may recall Oscar lived in a garbage can, was a slimy green colored furry Muppet that always spoke gruffly. If you are really old, he is a parallel to Mr. Bluster who was a puppet on the Howdy…
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