Nov 10

I-74 bridge timeline


The westbound (northbound) I-74 bridge predates the interstate highway system by more than 20 years.

As revealed at a Bettendorf City Council meeting, construction on the new I-74 bridge will begin in 2019 with expected completion around 2023. The first letting on related street projects, the designs of which have been altered during planning, will be in 2014. This document from 2004 (PDF) had a 2015-20 time frame for bridge construction.

Work on plans to replace the I-74 bridge began in 2004. At the time, the estimated cost was $600 million. In December 2011 it was $767 million and may be $1.4 billion by the time it is actually built, according to this item from the city of Bettendorf’s website.

If this timeline holds, that’s 19 years from start of plans to open bridge. It was 24 years and one month between opening of the two spans that currently serve as the I-74 bridge. The older/westbound span will be 85 years old in 2020 and the younger/eastbound span will be 60 in 2019.

My I-74 terminus page is here.

This is a timed post.
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Nov 09

Three seasons in one weekend

Well, this is, uh, weird. Also, Iowa.

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Nov 08

How Iowa’s congressmen have exited


Iowa’s House districts, 1942-60. Compare to the present-day map I put in the Election Day post.

The reduction (again) of Iowa’s congressional districts created a race between incumbents in the new 3rd, which is one of the very few times they leave. Iowans love their incumbents. If you’re asking why Iowa has never elected a woman to Congress, this is a huge part of it. We don’t get new seats every decade like Arizona or Florida.

Since and including 1988, there have been 66 total races for U.S. House seats in Iowa. FIVE were open seats, all caused by the incumbent running for Senate or governor. The winners of those elections — Jim Nussle, Tom Latham, Leonard Boswell, Steve King, and Bruce Braley — themselves went on to win repeated terms. Here’s a rundown, going even farther back:

  • 2012: Leonard Boswell (D) lost incumbent-vs-incumbent by redistricting
  • 2006: Jim Leach (R) lost in national landslide for Democrats
  • 2006: Jim Nussle (R) ran for governor and lost
  • 2002: Greg Ganske (R) ran for Senate and lost
  • 1996: Jim Lightfoot (R) ran for Senate and lost
  • 1994: Neal Smith (D) lost in national landslide for Republicans
  • 1994: Fred Grandy (R) ran for governor and lost in the primary
  • 1992: Jim Nagle (D) lost incumbent-vs-incumbent by redistricting
  • 1990: Tom Tauke (R) ran for Senate and lost
  • 1986: T. Cooper Evans (R) declined to run
  • 1986: Berkley Bedell (D) declined to run
  • 1984: Tom Harkin (R) ran for Senate and won
  • 1980: Chuck Grassley (R) ran for Senate and won
  • 1978: Mike Blouin (D) lost to Tauke
  • 1976: Ed Mezvinsky (D) lost to Leach

We have to go back to 1986 to find an open race that was not caused by the incumbent seeking higher office, and 1978 to find an incumbent losing his district to someone new in a non-“wave” election — but even then, the Democrats lost 15 seats that year. (BTW, those post-1980 Senate races? Harkin 4, Republicans 0.)

Four of six Iowa U.S. House seats changed hands in 1974: two Republicans suffering the consequences of Watergate, one Republican retirement, and one Democrat running for Senate. This is when Grassley and Harkin were elected to the House. There has never been that much simultaneous turnover in Iowa since.

Posted in Iowa Miscellaneous | Comments Off on How Iowa’s congressmen have exited
Nov 08

ISU fans benefit from Longhorn Network


Longhorn Network-branded camera equipment at the Erwin Center in Austin, January 24, 2012. Photo has been lightened.

The Iowa State at Texas game was picked for the nearly-mythical Longhorn Network a while ago, probably as the least-desired conference home game on Texas’ schedule. (Or maybe because after ISU’s win in 2010, Texas didn’t want anyone to see it.)

While nearly no one in Texas will be able to watch this game, Iowans will be able to see it for free on ABC stations. This is certainly an odd turn of events. Will the graphics be LHN’s or ESPN’s? We’ll find out.

Posted in Iowa Miscellaneous, Sports | Comments Off on ISU fans benefit from Longhorn Network
Nov 06

Election Day

Iowa officially loses a U.S. House seat today, now on a peer level with Arkansas and Utah. This is technically the fifth set of Iowa U.S. House districts in my lifetime. Also, we are now as far from the 2000 election as 2000 is from 1988.

UPDATE: A presidential election is always a big reminder of the passage of time, isn’t it? Suddenly your stuff seems that much older.

Posted in Iowa Miscellaneous | Comments Off on Election Day
Nov 05

Death, taxes, and Iowa State losing to Oklahoma

Oklahoma’s 70th win in the Iowa State series Saturday is another notch for the Sooners, but it’s not the highest total for either team. Oklahoma has beaten Oklahoma State more times (82 through 2011), and Iowa State has lost to Nebraska more times (86 according to the NCAA, 85 according to ISU).

In fact, 70 wins over one opponent barely makes the top 15 in raw wins. The difference between OU-ISU and the many above it is that the underdog has been able to pull out more wins along the way. For example, through 2011 Tennessee has beaten Kentucky 74 times and Vanderbilt 73, but both losers have about two dozen wins to their credit.

The top five raw win totals, based on numbers from mcubed.net: Nebraska>Kansas (91), Nebraska>Iowa State (“86”), Oklahoma>Oklahoma State (82), Alabama>Mississippi State (77), Texas>Texas A&M (76)*.

*There are some bowl projections with a meeting in the 2013 Cotton Bowl, in which case the entire state of Texas will spontaneously combust.

Posted in Sports | Comments Off on Death, taxes, and Iowa State losing to Oklahoma
Nov 01

Two longtime Iowa TV personalities leaving

WHO’s John Bachman is leaving at the end of November and KCRG’s John Campbell is retiring Dec. 14.

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Oct 31

Stewart Mandel scares ISU fans for Halloween

AAAAAAHHHHHH!

I’ll say the same thing I said a few weeks ago: Somebody is going to hire Iowa State’s Paul Rhoads and look very smart for doing it. Why not Auburn, where Rhoads worked for one (albeit disastrous) season as defensive coordinator in 2008?

Posted in Sports | Comments Off on Stewart Mandel scares ISU fans for Halloween
Oct 31

A longstanding error corrected

A decade ago, when I was making a new map for Wapsie Valley for a directions booklet, I erred in the directions from Traer. I wrote “US 20 W” instead of “E”. While a minor thing, I feel it’s only right to fess up to such a long oversight.

I had occasion to revisit the issue because North Tama plays at Wapsie Valley Friday. The school isn’t at Fairbank, but at the intersection of county roads V56 and C50 southeast of Readlyn. (In addition, I reversed the order of direction alternatives on the page. There’s little need to take US 63 through Waterloo when US 20 and V49 are much faster.)

The entire booklet, detailing locations of dozens of schools in eastern and central Iowa, can be downloaded here.

Posted in Maps | Comments Off on A longstanding error corrected
Oct 30

Dateline check

KCRG has the lead wrong but the writeup right:

TAMA, Iowa – Jacob Wrage completed 13 of 19 passes for 240 yards and four touchdowns as the Redhawks moved on to the A quarterfinals with a win at Traer.

(Mostly unrelated note: South Tama is still alive in the 3A playoffs.)

Marshalltown article about NT-Starmont here. This is the first time the two teams ever played. The Starmont school is centralized in the district at the intersection infernal roundabout of IA 3 and IA 187.

Posted in Sports, Tama County | Comments Off on Dateline check