Category Archives: JCRCC

Jones County Republican Central Committee Documents and Records

Hein Announces Re-Election Plans in District 96

(Monticello) – Rep. Lee Hein (R-Monticello) has announced he intends to run for re-election in House District 96.

After redistricting, district 96 is comprised of all of Delaware County and portions of Jones County.

Hein is the third generation to work on his family farm operation, growing corn and soybeans along with raising hogs and cattle.  He has been very active in the Iowa Farm Bureau, the Iowa Farm Business Association, and the Jones County Pork Producers and Cattlemen’s Association.

Hein will continue his focus on job creation, limited government spending, and strengthening Iowa agriculture.

“I have been working to make sure the state does not spend more than it takes in and gives the taxpayers a seat at the table again,” said Hein.  “While our state’s economy is improving, we must do all that we can to get government out of the way and give employers the opportunity to begin hiring again.”

Hein has previously served on the Monticello School Board for nine years, serving as president for five.  In the House, Hein is the Vice Chair of the Agriculture committee and also serves on the Environmental Protection, State Government and Ways and Means committees as well as the Justice Systems Appropriations Subcommittee.

Lee and his wife, Jacky, have two grown children.

 

JCRCC June 2011, Meeting Photo

JCRCC monthly meeting, June 2, 2011. Held at McOtto’s at Hwy 64 & Hwy 151, Anamosa, Iowa.

Republican’s Jones County Fair booth

Jones County Republican Central Committee’s fair booth

Jones County citizens and Republican candidates staffed the information booth at the fair.

Ned RohwedderDave JamisonLee Hein

were meeting and greeting citizens at the Jone County Fair.

Ned Rohwedder for Jones Co. District 4 Supervisor

http://rohwedderforsupervisor.com/

Vote Jamison – Home

http://votejamison.com/

Lee Hein for Iowa Representative

http://heinforstatehouse.com/

Sulzner & Reynolds in a Olin, IA Parade

Janine Sulzner and Kim Reynolds when participating in a Olin, Iowa parade.

Kim Reynolds joins citizens participating in a Olin, Iowa parade.

Jones County Attorney, Phil Parsons

Jones County Attorney

Phil Parsons

My name is Phil Parsons and I am the Jones County Attorney.  I won election in the 2010 election and had been appointed County Attorney in April of 2009.  Prior to being the Jones County Attorney, I was the Assistant Jones County Attorney for approximately two years.  Prior to being in the Jones County Attorney’s Office, I was a private attorney with Kintzinger Law Firm in Dubuque, IA as a general practice attorney.

I am married to a wonderful wife, Jessica, and God has blessed us with two beautiful children.  We currently reside outside of Monticello, and we have lived in Jones County for a little over 5 years.

Since being the Jones County Attorney, I have made a concerted effort to be more than an attorney behind a desk.  I have chosen to engage with the community on its turf.  I have done this by speaking at local organizations, city councils, and schools.  I engage in these endeavors so as to be the attorney for the people of Jones County.  I desire to hear the concerns of the people of Jones County and do what I can as County Attorney to assist in enhancing lives.

I further accomplish this by being the President of the Jones County Safe and Healthy Youth Coalition, co-founder of Ignite (Jones County Young Professionals Organization), and being heavily involved in my local church (New Life Community Church in Monticello, IA).

As Jones County Attorney I hope to do all I can, both in and out of my office, to move our community in a positive direction.

Jones County Treasurer, Amy L. Picray

TREASURER

Amy L. Picray

Jones County Treasurer, Amy L. Picray

I grew up in Dolores, Colorado.  In 1992 I graduated as the valedictorian of my high school class.  In May of 1996, I earned my bachelors of science in Accounting from the University of Wyoming.  While attending the University of Wyoming, I met and married my husband, John Picray.  After graduation, John and I settled in his hometown of Monticello.

One week after moving to Monticello, I began working as the Tax Deputy in the Jones County Treasurer’s Office.  Ten years later I was appointed by the Jones County Board of Supervisors to fill the Treasurer’s unexpired term.  In November of 2006 I was elected to my first full term as Treasurer of Jones County.

One of my primary missions, as Treasurer of Jones County, is to provide efficient and convenient customer service through the use of technology.  Examples include emailing forms/applications, utilizing the internet to provide information and accept online payments, and acceptance of credit cards or E-checks over the phone.  I have been very active in the Iowa State County Treasurers’ Association, and more specifically, my work on the Association’s Web Policy Group has helped to promote and develop the many resources available at www.iowatreasurers.org.

I have two children:  Brooke, 12, and Wade, 9.  My husband , John, is a hog buyer for Lynch Livestock, and also farms with his brother Jim.  We stay busy following our kids and their many activities.  In our spare time we enjoy snowmobiling, kayaking, and camping.

I enjoy working as Treasurer of Jones County.

Jones County Recorder, Marie Krutzfield

Jones County Recorder, Marie Krutzfield

Marie Krutzfield

Jones County, Recorder, Marie Krutzfield

I am Marie Krutzfield. I was employed as Deputy recorder three years prior to being appointed to Jones County Recorder in September of 1998, then elected as Recorder in the November election. I am running for my fourth term as Jones County Recorder. I worked at the Monticello State Bank in Monticello, Iowa, for 20 years prior to coming to the Jones County Recorder’s office.

My husband Larry,  is employed by the City of Anamosa, we will be married 39 years this year. We have two daughters, and three grandchildren. We have always been residents of Jones County.

I have a staff of one full-time employee and one part-time clerk. We process all Real Estate Transactions that occur  in Jones County. Other duties include processing passports, marriage licenses, and recording death and birth certificates, and issuing certified copies of these records as requested. We issue game licenses, register snowmobiles, ATV’s, and Boats.

I would like working in my position as Jones County Recorder.

Ned Rohwedder, Supervisor, Dist 4, Jones County, Iowa

SUPERVISOR, DISTRICT 4, JONES CO.

Ned Rohwedder (website)

Iowa, Jones County, District 4, Supervisor

Ned Rohwedder, Olin, is on the Jones County Board of supervisors.

Jones County elected a new supervisor for District 4 this year, and Ned believes the grounding he has received as a 15 year school board member and 24 year church board member will be a foundation in serving as a supervisor.

Rohwedder was a medic in the Army Reserves for six years after graduating from college. He has been a volunteer for the Olin ambulance service since 1988 and is a member of the Olin School Foundation and the Farm Bureau.

Cindy and Ned Rohwedder (website)

Ned has lived in Jones County his entire life; graduating from Olin high school in 1967, and raising five daughters there with his wife Cindy. He has farmed in Olin for 35 years and is looking at this position as a step to serve his home county. Ned looks forward to using his experience to serve as a County Supervisor to keep Jones County a great place to live and raise a family.

Jones County Caucus Sites 2010

Jones County Caucus Sites 2010

Caucus Manual 2010

Grassroots Manual

Example/Model Caucus

Please Support Jones County Republican Candidates

Donate online <– Click HERE

ISSUES AND SOLUTIONS FOR IOWANS via Jones County Republicans

ISSUES AND SOLUTIONS FOR IOWANS

IMMIGRATION: The primary responsibility of the government is to the citizen.

Eliminate chain migration which gives control of immigration policy to aliens and foreign governments (1)

Secure our borders and discourage all those who violate them, alien and citizen, by enforcing immigration laws

End multiculturalism and bilingualism in public institutions, promote assimilation and unity of citizenship, allegiance to American culture, and English as the official language. (1)

EDUCATION:

Decisions on the education of our children must be as decentralized as possible.

Eliminate the federal Department of Education, since education should primarily be a local and state function. (1)

Eliminate tenure for government schoolteachers and college professors making them accountable for the quality of the education they provide. (1)

School vouchers for parents who choose to send their children to alternate schools.

ENERGY:

The government must allow and encourage the exploration of all forms of energy, to include nuclear, fossil fuels and alternative energy sources.

We must limit our dependence on foreign energy by utilizing domestic resources.

RIGHT TO LIFE:

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness…” (3)

TAXES:

The Constitution of the United States Article I Section 8 lays out very clearly the power of the government to lay and collect taxes.

Eliminate the progressive tax because its purpose is the re-distribution of wealth and not to fund the constitutionally legitimate functions of government (1)

All residents of the country must pay taxes so they will have a stake in limiting its abuse (1)

Eliminate automatic withholding to bring full disclosure of the amount the government is confiscating from its citizens (1)

Eliminate the Death Tax, Corporate Income Tax (double taxation)

All federal income tax increases must require a supermajority vote of three fifths of the congress (1)

Limit federal spending to less than 20 percent of GDP. (1)

SIZE AND ROLE OF GOVERNMENT:

The primary purpose of Government is to do those things which the individual cannot do for themselves.  We believe in the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution as written, “The powers not delegated to the United Stated by the Constitution, nor prohibited by the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people”.  Therefore we believe that the States maintain more power to govern than the Federal government and that the Federal government should govern only those things which are stated in the Constitution.  We believe that any government which cannot be held accountable to the governed is tyranny and that our Founders set in place checks and balances in an attempt to prevent this tyranny.

JOBS:

It is not the responsibility, nor is it possible for the government to “create” jobs.  However, it is possible for the government to affect the jobs of American citizens through over-regulation and over-taxing, which stifle entrepreneurs.  The free market solutions that have driven the most prosperous periods of the American economy are the only solutions which cannot only bring our economy out of weak times but take us into the 21st Century from a position of strength.

The government must create tax incentives for those businesses which hire American citizens

Must limit regulation related to employer/employee relationships.

There must be a presumption against any new regulation.

AGRICULTURE & INTERNATIONAL TRADE:

Ensure all foreign policy decisions are made for the purpose of preserving and improving American society and the standard of living of American citizens

Reject all treaties, trade agreements, entanglements, institutions or enterprises that have as their purpose the supplantation of America’s best interest to an amorphous “global” interest (1)

Ensure that the American farmer is allowed the opportunity to succeed without excessive intrusion by government, activists, and environmental groups.

Tax incentives should be given to producers that keep money in the “family farm”

All foreign aid should have American agricultural products (ie; grain, livestock, machinery, etc.) as a pre-requisite to obtaining such assistance. (4)

ENVIRONMENT:

The “environment” has been hijacked and used by the left to implement more restrictions on the American people and industry.  As Iowans, we, more than most understand our relationship with our environment and work hard to preserve our natural resources.  The Federal government was not given the power and does not have the power to create or enforce any regulations based on the “environment”.

Eliminate the special tax-exempt status of environmental groups, since they are not nonpartisan charitable foundations (1)

Eliminate statutory authority granting environmental groups to bring lawsuits on behalf of the public (1)

Fight any effort to use environmental regulations to set industrial policy (cap and trade) (1)

RETIREMENT INVESTMENT:

We believe in the character and the ingenuity of the American people.  We also believe in the idea of personal responsibility.  It has never been in the power or in the best interest of the citizen to turn over his or her future to a government body for management and distribution.

Social Security must be phased out and the citizen should be given the opportunity to invest their own money in the way that they see fit.

Tax incentives for investment must be implemented to allow the American citizen to invest without fear of government intrusion.

The responsibility for one’s future does not lie with the government or other citizens, but in the individual.

Credit given to:

1. Mark Levin, Author of Liberty and Tyranny, A Conservative Manifesto

2. The United States Constitution

3. The Declaration Of Independence

4. Steve Rathje