Local parents pushing for change in student abuse investigations in Iowa school districts
A teacher at the Urbandale elementary school, Amanda Delzell, was placed on administrative leave after attempting to report what she considered abuse. Delzell was later fired by the district. It's this situation that has Paige Petek and Pam Gronau seeking a change in Iowa code.
'It's my understanding that a full formal investigation where the parent should have received a report showing what they had found in their investigation was never done, it was never given to them. And so that was where the huge red flag came in and I said this has to change,' said Pam Gronau, a concerned parent with three students attending a central Iowa school district.
Under current state law, teachers are mandatory reporters, except for when the abuse is at the hands of an educator. This allows school districts to take the lead in abuse allegations, which means the information surrounding an incident could be kept private. Gronau is advocating for a bill that will take alleged abuse investigations out of the hands of the school districts and into the hands of the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services.
Haven't filed your taxes yet? Here are some helpful tips
'As a parent, you want to make sure you send your children to the school … you want to know that they're safe when they're there. And in most cases, I think, most of our schools are doing the right thing. But we can't let there be even one opportunity for the right thing not to be done. We need to ensure that we are protecting our kids at all costs,' said Gronau.
The bill sets up districts the department would open across the state to handle these investigations. The Legislative Services Agency projects that the DHHS will conduct around 600 investigations per year, and would need seven new full-time employee positions to handle the cases. The projected cost is over $700,000 in year one and $656,000 in year two. Though the bill passed through the Iowa House unanimously in a 96-0 vote, Gronau is concerned that the fiscal implications may hold it up in the Iowa Senate.
The bill was recently placed in unfinished business, which means it could or could not pass and be signed into law this session. Gronau is urging Iowans to reach out to their elected officials and ask them to advance this bill along in the process.
'We need to protect our students in the state of Iowa and there shouldn't be a cost taken on their protection,' said Gronau.
Iowa News:
Iowa State University Insect Zoo to close
Local parents pushing for change in student abuse investigations in Iowa school districts
Haven't filed your taxes yet? Here are some helpful tips
Man who shot at Iowa police officers sentenced after pleading guilty
WATCH: Which Hawkeyes and Cyclones are bound for NFL? Draft Day Preview
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
a day ago
- The Hill
A lesson from Iowa on government reform: It's not just the taxes — it's the spending
Former President Herbert Hoover argued that governments have the instincts of a vegetable — that is, 'they keep spreading and growing.' Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) echoed Hoover when she stated that 'like any large organization, government is marked by bureaucracy's natural tendency to grow. If that growth isn't constantly checked and rechanneled toward its core function, it quickly takes on a life of its own.' This is why Reynolds has made reform of government a priority during her time in office. Fiscal conservatism is not just pro-growth tax reform, but even more importantly it must include limiting spending and reducing the size of government. Fiscal policy has been a significant part of Reynolds's agenda: 'We reduced taxes—saving Iowans more than $24 billion over 10 years. No more tax on retirement income. No inheritance tax. And starting this month [January 2025], Iowans get to keep even more of the money they earn, with a 3.8 percent flat tax — a far cry from the 8.98 percent of six years ago,' said Reynolds. Iowa's corporate tax rate, once the highest in the nation at 12 percent, has been reduced to 7.1 percent and will continue to decrease until it reaches a flat 5.5 percent. Not only will Iowa have eliminated the progressive income tax, but it will also have reduced the top tax rate by almost 60 percent. These reforms are grounded in common-sense budgeting ideas, which have prioritized spending control and government efficiency. These efforts have not only ensured budget stability with surpluses, full reserve accounts, and a Taxpayer Relief Fund with a $3.6 billion balance, but they have also enabled responsible tax reductions. During her Condition of the State address, Reynolds launched Iowa's DOGE task force, modeled after her efforts to reform state government. 'I like to say that we were doing DOGE before DOGE was a thing…,' she said. Prior to forming the DOGE taskforce, Reynolds was able to get two major state government reform laws passed. 'When we started our alignment work in 2022, state operations hadn't been reviewed in forty years — and it showed,' she said. 'Layers of bureaucracy had accumulated over decades, expanding government beyond its core function, keeping us from working effectively as one team, and hampering our service to Iowans. We were too big, too fractured, and too inefficient.' Both government reform measures worked to limit government and make services more efficient. 'We've transformed the way our State interacts with citizens, businesses, and entrepreneurs,' Reynolds said. 'We consolidated agencies (from 37 to 16), eliminated 1,200 burdensome regulations, remade legacy systems, centralized programs, and leveraged technology.' These reforms have already saved taxpayers $217 million, exceeding original projections just within the first 18 months. Prior to the reform, Iowa had 256 boards and commissions. Eighty-three of them have now been eliminated and others consolidated. In starting this reform, Reynolds asked basic questions that all policymakers should be asking about government — local, state, and federal. ' What is the core mission of each agency? How is it funded? How is it staffed and what does it own? Are the agency's programs working? How did the structure of the agency compare to other states? Where is there duplication or misalignment? What can we cut?' These questions align with the principles of priority-based budgeting, as outlined in the ALEC State Budget Reform Toolkit. Finally, Reynolds understands that conservative budgeting is at the heart of tax reform. 'But it's not enough just to cut taxes,' she says. 'You have to make them sustainable, especially if you want to keep bringing them down. The growth they create helps, but you also have to keep spending in check.' This is a lesson that many states and the federal government have yet to learn. Going into the 2026 legislative session, Reynolds is making property tax reform a priority. Across the nation, reforming property taxes appears to be the most difficult tax reform endeavor. Nevertheless, she understands that local governments must apply the same fiscal conservatism as well as undertake government reform measures in order to provide property tax relief. With the laudable goal of tax relief, spending must be addressed through priority-based budgeting. Regardless of the tax, it is government spending that drives high taxation.


CNN
30-07-2025
- CNN
Iowa Democrats face long odds to regain their top spot ahead of the 2028 primaries
Primary elections US elections Democratic Natl Committee Democratic Natl ConventionFacebookTweetLink Follow Ahead of the 2024 presidential primaries, Iowa Democrats launched a Hail Mary to save their status as an early nominating state. Chastened by the disastrous rollout of an app in 2020 that delayed the results of that year's caucuses, the state party switched to a vote-by-mail primary and made its pitch alongside dozens of other states vying to go first. It also warned that moving Iowa out of first would give Republicans an opening to claim Democrats had abandoned the state. It didn't work. And two years after the Democratic National Committee made South Carolina the first primary state, overhauled the early nominating state window and demoted Iowa at the behest of former President Joe Biden, the future of Iowa's Democratic caucuses looks bleaker than ever. Iowa must now compete against dozens of other states when the party begins its deliberations on the 2028 calendar, a process that could begin as early as later this year. The state party has lost its voice on the DNC's powerful rules and bylaws committee that runs the process, while rival early states Nevada, New Hampshire and South Carolina gained a seat each, as did Michigan, which moved up the calendar in 2024. The final makeup of the 2028 primary calendar will be critical to what strategies presidential campaigns employ and which candidates gain traction. Iowans are quick to note that their caucuses boosted the campaigns of former presidents Jimmy Carter and Barack Obama as well as former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Republicans are expected to keep the start of their primary calendar in Iowa. Critics of the caucuses, however, argue that the early states should reflect the diversity of the nation and overlap with the swing states Democrats need to win the general election. Even Democrats who support Iowa having an early say in the process are willing to let go of the caucus system, which critics say lacks the accessibility and flexibility of primary elections. Under the traditional caucuses system, voters physically gather in places such as schools and churches the evening of the election and go through a series of votes, weeding out candidates who fail to gain enough support. The process can take hours. 'A generation of us have a lot of romanticism about the Iowa caucuses, and I do mourn that in some ways, but I think in the interest of fairness, making people stand for three hours in a gymnasium is just probably not the fairest way to do things,' said one Democratic strategist who has worked on several Iowa political campaigns. DNC officials have insisted that the process to apply to be an early state will be open. Chairman Ken Martin said throughout his campaign to lead the committee that the calendar criteria should be to design a schedule that's rigorous, efficient and would battle test candidates. 'The DNC is committed to running a fair, transparent, and rigorous process for the 2028 primary calendar. All states will have an opportunity to participate,' DNC communications director Abhi Rahman said in a statement. 'Iowa's DNC members and Chair Rita Hart are fierce advocates for Iowa Democrats and they will have their voices heard during that process.' Hart, the Iowa Democratic Party chair, said her current focus is on winning elections in 2026, when her party will contest an open governor's seat, a US Senate seat, and the state's four congressional seats, at least two of which are competitive. 'I do expect to have tough and direct conversations with the DNC regarding our Iowa caucuses and the serious concerns surrounding the Biden 2024 calendar,' Hart said. 'National Democrats let Trump get a head-start in the 2024 campaign by excluding Iowa.' The uncertainty hasn't stopped potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidates from adding Iowa to their early-state tours. Buttigieg held a May town hall in Cedar Rapids, where he reminded the crowd of his narrow 2020 caucuses win five years earlier. Arizona Sen. Ruben Gallego will appear at the Iowa State Fair, long seen as a rite of passage for presidential hopefuls, in August. And former US Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel, who is now a CNN commentator, will be the guest of honor at a party fish fry in September. 'People default to what they've done in the past,' said Molly Magarik, an outgoing DNC rules and bylaws committee member from Delaware who doesn't support keeping Iowa first. 'And so absent an alternative process, it doesn't surprise me that people are still going to run the old playbook.' Within Iowa Democratic circles, there has been some debate about how hard the state should fight to keep its early-state status or if Democrats there should just ignore the DNC altogether. Pete D'Alessandro, a longtime Iowa Democratic strategist who worked on Bernie Sanders' presidential campaigns and supports either caucuses or a primary, argued that Iowa Democrats should just set their date and ignore any potential consequences from the DNC, including a loss of delegates. Candidates, he said, would likely still show up, especially as the Republicans' caucuses draw media attention. 'I'm gonna let you down a little secret, as someone who's worked on these campaigns: They're not coming here for the delegates,' he said.
Yahoo
19-07-2025
- Yahoo
Top WH officials encourage Ernst to run again in private meeting
Top White House officials privately met with Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa this week encouraging her to run for reelection in an effort to preserve the GOP majority. The Tuesday meeting was held at the White House and included President Donald Trump's chief of staff Susie Wiles and deputy chief of staff James Blair, according to two White House officials granted anonymity to discuss details of the meeting. The two implored Ernst to run for a third term, telling her the White House would 'love to have her in the Senate,' though she has not definitively reached a decision yet, according to one of the officials. The meeting comes as Senate Republicans have braced for Ernst, 55, to retire. Despite saying last year she intended to run for reelection, she has faced recent setbacks: losing her bid for the No. 3 spot in Senate GOP leadership and facing scrutiny from MAGA allies for voicing early concerns about Trump's pick for Defense secretary, Pete Hegseth. She also earned a spate of harsh media coverage when she responded to town hall attendees angry about Medicaid cuts by saying, 'Well, we all are going to die.' Bryan Kraber, her campaign manager, said Ernst has no plans to tap the brakes. 'Senator Ernst has been proud to partner with President Trump,' he said. 'She will continue to work with him to deliver for Iowans. With over $3.4 million cash on hand and the strong support in every corner of the state, Joni isn't slowing down anytime soon.' Iowa would not be an easy win for Democrats – Trump carried the state by 13 points in 2024 – regardless of Ernst's decision and the Trump administration is confident they will keep the seat. 'If she chooses not to run then we'll be fine, " said one of the White House officials. 'We'll cross that bridge when we get to it.' Ernst would be the fourth Senate Republican to call it quits ahead of 2026, joining Sens. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, who is running for governor. The White House and Trump intend to be involved in 2026 midterm races, said the same official. The White House recently held private conversations about a backup candidate for Sen. Susan Collins in case she decided not to run for reelection in Maine.