QCA.news - Quad Cities news and view from both sides of the river

Wednesday, April 8th, 2026

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Black Hawk College EMS program earns continued accreditation

Black Hawk College’s paramedic program has maintained national accreditation through 2031, reaffirming its training standards for EMS students.

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Road work on IL-81 in Cambridge begins April 13

The project will take place from First Street to the north junction with Illinois 82.

WVIK Greetings from downtown Cairo, where unpretentious cafés are part of centuries-old charm WVIK

Greetings from downtown Cairo, where unpretentious cafés are part of centuries-old charm

Downtown Cairo, or Wust el-Balad as it's known, is a trove of hidden gems. Imprinted on every high-ceilinged building, arched balcony and iconic roundabout are relics that feel like love letters from the past.

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Traffic Alert: Road work to begin on Illinois 81 in Cambridge

The Illinois Department of Transportation is set to begin work on Illinois 81 in Cambridge on April 13.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Death Notice: Kenneth Fordham

A memorial service for Kenneth Marvin Fordham, 77, will be held at 11:30 a.m. Friday, April 17, at Eldridge United Methodist Church, 604 S. 2nd St., Eldridge. Visitation will be from 10 a.m. until the time of the service on Friday at the church. Inurnment will be in Davenport Memorial Park Cemetery. Chambers Funeral Home, Eldridge, is assisting the family with arrangements. Mr. Fordham died Tuesday, March 24, 2026, at Senior Star, Davenport. Memorials may be made to the ASPCA or the Animal Legal Defense Fund. Online condolences may be made at www.McGinnis-Chambers.com. A full obituary will appear in the April 15 edition of The NSP. 

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Death Notice: Evelyn Finis

A Celebration of Life open house for Evelyn Marie Finis, 87, of Eldridge, will be held from 1-4 p.m. Saturday, April 18, at the Dixon Legion, 604 Davenport St., Dixon, IA 52745. Burial will be in the Dixon Cemetery. Mississippi Valley Cremation and Direct Burial is assisting the family with arrangements. Mrs. Finis died Wednesday, April 1, 2026, at the Clarissa C. Cook Hospice House, Bettendorf. Memorials may be made to the Clarissa C. Cook Hospice House. Online condolences may be made at www.mvcremation.com. A full obituary will appear in the April 15 edition of The NSP. 

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

I-74 Pedestrial Trail closing overnights for work, starting April 13

Residents who enjoy overnight strolls or bike rides across the I-74 bridge will need to temporarily find a new route. A news release from the City of Bettendorf says the I-74 Bridge Pedestrian Trail will be closed overnight starting Monday, April 13 as crews complete utility work underneath the bridge. Workers will need to use [...]

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Illinois leads the nation with most tornadoes so far this year

Illinois has had a very active severe weather season, so far this year.

KWQC TV-6  Tax deadline approaching: What to know about filing, extensions, last-minute mistakes KWQC TV-6

Tax deadline approaching: What to know about filing, extensions, last-minute mistakes

With the April 15 deadline approaching, tax experts say last-minute filers should act quickly — and understand how extensions, penalties and mailing rules could impact their return.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Black Hawk College EMS program awarded continuing accreditation

Black Hawk College has announced that its Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Professions – Paramedic program has been awarded Continuing Accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP), reaffirming the program’s commitment to excellence in EMS education. The accreditation decision is effective March 2026 and was made after a comprehensive review and [...]

WVIK 11 new books in April offer a chance to step inside someone else's world WVIK

11 new books in April offer a chance to step inside someone else's world

The books we're spotlighting this month don't exactly radiate escapist good vibes — but they do offer the opportunity to step into someone else's life and get to know their view of our shared world.

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Road work to begin on Avenue of the Cities

Officials said the work zone is from First Street to Archer Drive.

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Downtown Moline gets River Edge redevelopment designation

Downtown Moline has been named a River Edge Redevelopment Zone, unlocking tax incentives aimed at boosting development along the Mississippi River corridor.

WVIK Democrats keep doing better in elections since Trump returned to office WVIK

Democrats keep doing better in elections since Trump returned to office

With elections in Georgia and Wisconsin Tuesday, Democrats continued to overperform, which the party started in 2025 when it regularly improved on its margins compared to the presidential race in 2024.

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

UnityPoint Health-Trinity honors Pritkin Cardiac Rehab Patients of the Year

UnityPoint Health – Trinity is celebrating the 2025 Pritikin Certified Intensive Cardiac Rehab Patients of the Year, recognizing people who have shown exceptional resilience, dedication and heart as they rebuild their health after a heart event. These patients embraced meaningful lifestyle changes and made inspiring progress in their recovery, demonstrating the lifechanging value of cardiac [...]

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Bettendorf man sentenced to 17 1/2 years in prison on child sex abuse materials charges

A tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has led to a federal prison sentence for a Bettendorf man for possessing and distributing child sex abuse materials.

OurQuadCities.com Departments respond to crash on 4th Avenue, Rock Island OurQuadCities.com

Departments respond to crash on 4th Avenue, Rock Island

Our Quad Cities News was on the scene of a car crash near the intersection of 24th Street and 4th Avenue in Rock Island. Crews from the Rock Island Fire Department, Rock Island Police Department and Rock Island Arsenal Ambulance have responded to the crash. There is no word on any injuries at this time [...]

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Iowa bars and restaurants report a decrease in alcohol consumption

Between 2018 and 2026, studies found a 25% drop in consumption among Generation Z. This statistic is prompting businesses to modify their menus.

OurQuadCities.com Dylan Doyle playing Bishop Hill Creative Commons OurQuadCities.com

Dylan Doyle playing Bishop Hill Creative Commons

Crossroads Cultural Connections is hosting an evening of live blues music with the Dylan Doyle Band on Sunday, April 12 at Bishop Hill Creative Commons, 309 Bishop Hill Street. The evening starts at 6 p.m. with an optional potluck dinner so guests can gather and connect before the performance. Attendees are welcome to bring a [...]

North Scott Press North Scott Press

5 financial building blocks to make long-term goals less daunting

5 financial building blocks to make long-term goals less dauntingBuilding your financial wealth is akin to building a house: You need the foundation before you can choose wallpaper, add a fireplace or decorate.When it comes to saving for your long-term goals like a down payment or a comfortable retirement, consistency is key. But before you can throw extra funds into a brokerage account or invest in real estate, there are building blocks you need to have in place — and even those can feel intimidating.“For many people starting out, any thought around personal finance can feel overwhelming,” says Hillary Stalker, executive vice president and financial advisor at CapWealth in Franklin, Tennessee. “With information coming at us through so many channels, it’s hard to know who to listen to and where to start.”Current, a consumer fintech banking platform, shares a few basic steps you can take to make it feel less daunting.1. Create a budgetThe first step is to assess your current financial situation and understand what you are bringing in as income and what is going out as expenses. Stalker says to start with your take-home pay after taxes and deduct any expenses you know are a must, such as your rent or mortgage, utilities, car payments, phone bill, student loans payments and groceries. Then, calculate how much of your income is left over each month. Whatever is left is what should be budgeted for savings and discretionary spending like entertainment and going out to eat, Stalker says.You can review your credit card and bank statements to get a sense of how much you're spending on categories like dining out, entertainment and transportation. Many consumer financial platforms offer tools on their websites or apps that will automatically break down your spending so you can easily analyze where your money is going each month, and whether you’re spending too much in one particular category. To create your budget, you can go old school with a spreadsheet or pen and paper, or use tools directly in your banking app, if they’re available.2. Build an emergency fundNo one wants to think about facing a financial emergency like unexpected job loss, a surprise medical bill or an accident that requires a car repair. But planning ahead could be the difference between being able to cover the cost of your everyday essentials and struggling financially.“As much as we like to believe we are all exempt from accidents, we need to set aside money ‘just in case,’” Stalker says. Most financial advisors recommend setting aside enough money to cover three to six months of your living expenses. “If you are just starting out, take some of the funds you have left after expenses are covered each month and move it to savings until you have the ability to build that account up.”You should keep your emergency fund in a liquid account that you can access as soon as you need it, such as a high-yield savings account, which allows your money to grow even as it’s sitting idly.3. Pay down debtNext, it’s time to tackle your debt. While it may make sense to pay off some debt — such as student loans or a mortgage — slowly over time while you pursue other financial goals, paying off high-interest debt like from credit cards should be a top priority. Credit cards’ annual percentage rates are often 20% or higher, which can make a huge dent in your wallet.There are two popular strategies that can help you chip away at balances: the snowball method and the avalanche method. With both methods, make sure you’re always making the minimum payments. Then the snowball method entails paying off the debt with the lowest balance first, then the second-lowest balance and so on. The idea is that getting small wins will encourage you to keep paying off your debt.The avalanche method involves paying off debts according to their interest rates, no matter the balance. You’d start by focusing on the debt with the highest interest rate, then moving on to the one with the second-highest interest rate and so on. This method typically allows you to save the most money on interest over time, and pay your debt off faster.4. Take advantage of retirement savings matchesSetting aside money now for retirement can make a huge difference for your golden years.“It may seem far off and something you do not have to worry about now, but the sooner you start saving, the faster it grows thanks to compound interest,” Stalker says. Many employers offer to match your contributions to a 401(k) or similar retirement account up to a certain amount, so it’s important to at least contribute enough to receive that full match. “Even if that is all you can afford to do, your future self will thank you.”You should also increase the amount of money you save in these accounts regularly, if you can.“If you get a 3% raise this year, raise your contribution rate by 3% too,” says Kyle Playford, an advisor at Freedom Financial Partners based in the greater Minneapolis-St. Paul area. “More dollars in the 401(k) means compound interest works harder for you.”Compound interest refers to the interest you earn on interest, and it’s what can power your retirement savings to grow significantly over time.5. Create an estate planFinally, Playford recommends developing an estate plan, which includes a will or trust as the most basic form. These plans can also include a financial power of attorney, which allows you to appoint someone you trust to manage your finances if you can’t, and a health care directive, which outlines how you want medical decisions made if you can’t make them on your own.Planning for the worst can feel scary, but doing so can help protect your assets and loved ones. Without a will or a trust, state law decides where your assets go should you pass away, Playford explains. Certain assets, such as life insurance and retirement savings plans, will pass directly to your beneficiaries, as long as you have filled out the associated forms correctly. But some assets, such as after-tax brokerage accounts or property, may not go to who you want them to go to unless you specify.“You own the asset now,” Playford explains. “Tell the state what you want to have happen with it versus the state telling your loved ones who gets it.”This story was produced by Current and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Noah Wyle visited a real Pittsburgh clinic before including it in 'The Pitt.' The real cases there are even more dramatic.

Noah Wyle visited a real Pittsburgh clinic before including it in ‘The Pitt.’ The real cases there are even more dramatic.About a year before "The Pitt" named North Side Christian Health Center on screen, Noah Wyle and show writers joined a conversation with CEO Bethany Blackburn to better understand what happens to uninsured patients in Pittsburgh after a health crisis.What she described closely mirrors what ended up on screen. As the show's April 16 season finale approaches, the clinic is still seeing the same patients, with the same impossible bills, every day.What is North Side Christian’s storyline in ‘The Pitt’?One of the show's ongoing storylines follows a construction worker who walks into a Pittsburgh emergency room with a sore shoulder. He leaves with a diagnosis of diabetic ketoacidosis, a life-threatening complication of diabetes, and a stack of bills he can't pay. One of the show's doctors offers a solution: a referral to North Side Christian Health Center.The patient is fictional. The clinic is not."I told them you can get preventive care, but as soon as you start needing specialty care or something more complex, you're getting into needing to make some more difficult choices," Blackburn recalled to Direct Relief. "We see patients who are pretty nervous entering the healthcare space because they don't know what it's going to cost them."How close is the show to reality?Very close: A chef at a local Pittsburgh restaurant had no health insurance through his job. He knew he had diabetes. He couldn't afford the medication to manage it.He was rushed to an emergency room in diabetic ketoacidosis, the same condition, the same crisis, the same impossible bill.The show's writers invented their construction worker. This chef was real. After a referral to North Side Christian, he received low-cost medication and a long-term wellness plan. He started walking his dog and lifting weights. His diabetes is now under control."It's fictional, but this is really what happens in real life," said Robert McGrogan, the clinic's development director. ‘The Pitt’ has done a great job of highlighting all things Pittsburgh, but to hear North Side Christian specifically called out, it was really validating.”What other cases come through the clinic?For Dr. Dallas Malzi, North Side Christian's chief medical officer, the show's storyline felt less like drama than like a Tuesday.One patient's severely blocked arteries required a triple bypass after a heart attack. Discharged with an expensive new medication regimen on top of existing prescriptions for diabetes and hypertension, he came to North Side Christian, where providers developed a treatment plan and connected him with a charitable pharmacy. He has not returned to the emergency room since."Patients truly are in crisis," Dr. Malzi said. "It's a lot more people out there than I think people really know about."What is North Side Christian Health Center?Founded in the 1990s by three physicians concerned about the health of Pittsburgh's lower-income residents, North Side Christian cares for about 3,800 patients each year. Seventy percent belong to racial and ethnic groups, 18% live in public housing, and virtually all fall within 200% of the federal poverty line. The clinic never turns patients away when they cannot pay.What keeps Dr. Malzi coming back?Many of his patients have spent years trying to avoid a health crisis by the time they walk through his door."You're worried, and you're hoping to God that something doesn't happen to you," he said. When they arrive, "there's a heaviness. They don't know where to turn. They don't know if they can trust you."What he can offer, from low-cost prescriptions and food boxes to legal services and long-term disease management plans, adds up to something his patients have often never encountered before."I can be the person who says yes to our patients when so many people can't say yes," he said.As the finale approaches, the clinic keeps working without fanfare."Not a lot of people know who we are," Dr. Malzi said. "We're used to working in a low-resource setting."For the patients who come through its doors, that low-resource setting is often the difference between a health crisis and a path to stability.This story was produced by Direct Relief and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

KWQC TV-6  Gov. Kim Reynolds signs foster care training measure into law KWQC TV-6

Gov. Kim Reynolds signs foster care training measure into law

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said a measure she signed into law Tuesday will help make it easier for Iowans to become foster parents by removing certain “barriers of entry” related to training and appropriate placements.

Quad-City Times Davenport man charged for allegedly sexually abusing 13-year-old girl Quad-City Times

Davenport man charged for allegedly sexually abusing 13-year-old girl

A Davenport man has been charged for allegedly sexually abusing a 13-year-old girl, police said.

KWQC TV-6  Davenport man accused of sexual abuse KWQC TV-6

Davenport man accused of sexual abuse

A Davenport man is charged after police said he groomed and abused a 13-year-old.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Neurodiversity Awareness Month: 6 ways leaders can help neurodivergent employees overcome bias

Neurodiversity Awareness Month: 6 ways leaders can help neurodivergent employees overcome biasImagine feeling excluded from your peer group at work to the degree that you are almost invisible. It’s unimaginable to most of us. Yet it captures the reality of many neurodivergent people in the workplace.April is Neurodiversity Awareness Month (also known as Neurodiversity Celebration Month). That means now is the perfect opportunity to recognize how media-driven stereotypes of neurodiversity shape the way employees with ADHD or autism are perceived by coworkers and leadership.This can be so pervasive that some choose to hide their diagnosis from their team, managers, and HR leaders to avoid being discriminated against or even bullied. Disclosing their neurodivergence is too risky. As a result, they suffer in silence and isolation.Many neurodivergent employees want to do well, meet expectations, and be like everyone else—while being liked by everyone else.Without the support of HR and people leaders, their existence in the office becomes a daily struggle against their condition’s unique challenges and limitations, combined with the self-blame formulated in their minds.Spring Health explores how workplaces can better support neurodivergent employees and reduce bias.What does it mean to be neurodivergent?In the simplest terms, being neurodivergent means having a brain that functions differently from the average or “neurotypical” person. The variance in cognitive functionality is most apparent in the unique ways that neurodivergent employees learn, perform, interact, communicate, and perceive the environment or their peers.While neurodivergent employees may struggle with things we take for granted, they also possess unique skills and strengths that enable them to realize profound success. But a supportive workplace environment is needed for them to flourish.The Cleveland Clinic captures the quintessence of neurodiversity: “People who are neurodivergent often excel at communicating in online spaces. That’s because nonverbal communication—such as eye contact, facial expressions, and body language—doesn’t have to be a part of online interaction. Experts often compare computers and other digital devices to prosthetics for those with difficulties in social communication.”Some of the most common disorders on the spectrum of neurodiversity include the following:Autism spectrum disorder (previously termed Asperger’s syndrome)Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)Down syndromeDyslexia (difficulty reading)Dyspraxia (difficulty with coordination)Intellectual disabilitiesMental health conditions like bipolar disorder or obsessive-compulsive disorderHow is systemic bias impacting neurodivergent employees?Employers in every industry are experiencing an exponential rise in neurodivergence among their workforce, primarily consisting of employees with ADHD, autism, dyslexia, and other learning differences.The systemic bias and discrimination that neurodivergent employees confront in the workplace is the byproduct of not fitting the norm (or sense of normality) as others view it. Sadly, it’s a systemic issue in professional work environments across the country in much the same way you may recall students with Autism or Asperger’s being bullied in school.Having to deal with workplace bias prevents employees from utilizing the special skills and talents that set them apart from everyone else. They are also faced with navigating the stigma around neurodiversity, which commonly prevents them from communicating their disorder diagnosis to anyone.HR leaders play a crucial role in promoting initiatives that communicate the benefits of diversity, equity, and inclusion for all employees in the workplace. Overcoming bias is a significant part of this effort.The challenge HR leaders faceUnfortunately, most workplaces aren’t adequately prepared or equipped to help neurodivergent employees overcome bias and realize success. It’s a dynamic challenge for HR and people leaders because there is no “one-size-fits-all” solution.No two neurodivergent employees are the same, as each experiences the symptoms and severity of their conditions uniquely. There are different subtypes—inattentive, hyperactive, and combined types—which present an employee’s strengths and weaknesses in the workplace differently.That’s why nurturing a sense of inclusion and belonging in your organization is important, empowering neurodivergent (and neurotypical) employees to achieve what’s possible. This starts with creating company policies inclusive of everyone.If HR leaders fail to put forth the effort to recognize the unique, nuanced experiences of the neurodiverse, they are destined to fail in their mission—because they lack the deep understanding and the tools to create truly welcoming work environments.6 ways to support neurodivergent employees facing biasResearch suggests that teams with neurodivergent professionals in some roles can be 30% more productive than those without them, according to an article in the Harvard Business Review.HR leaders play a key role in helping neurodivergent employees overcome bias and creating a workplace where all individuals can thrive and contribute to their full potential. It's essential to foster a culture of diversity, equity, and inclusion that benefits everyone in the organization.Here are six strategies you can put into practice to help employees overcome bias and realize success.1. Establish a neurodivergent affirming cultureNeurodivergent employees require a high level of comfort and trust in leadership to become a part of an organization. Reaching a “safe” space where employees will consider sharing their diagnosis with HR or People leaders requires even more. Most never reach this comfort level and keep their neurodivergence a well-hidden secret.A supportive and inclusive work culture enables the invisible to be visible. It empowers neurodivergent employees to thrive by persevering in the face of bias. A consistent support system established by HR and People leaders can help ensure success in their role without requiring the fulfillment of workplace accommodations.By taking the time to understand and embrace neurodiversity, in all its different shapes and sizes, HR leaders are creating a better work environment for everyone. An inclusive work culture that successfully integrates neurodivergent employees can result in more innovative approaches to work, creativity, and a boost to team morale in the office.2. Normalize open conversations around neurodiversityWhen neurodiversity evolves from something no one feels comfortable talking about to a topic that is embraced and appreciated, HR leaders can begin to see the stigma around neurodiversity begin to break down.Open and honest dialogue around neurodiversity needs to be a consistent effort that HR leaders bring to the surface every day. Ensuring it remains in the current conversation is critical to driving a broader understanding of why neurodivergent employees do things the way they do.When it comes to personal conversations between HR leaders and employees, leading with empathy and understanding is the most effective method to break through the stigma and encourage neurodivergent employees to seek the care they need.3. Coaching and mentorshipTrust is a prerequisite for effective coaching engagements between HR leaders, People leaders, and employees. It’s important for People leaders taking on a coaching role in the workplace to establish a sense of trust early in the relationship. This reinforces intent, goodwill, and ensures the protection of the employees’ privacy and sense of psychological safety.One proven approach for HR and People leaders is establishing more informal and collaborative conversations. The best outcomes involve both individuals openly and honestly sharing their experience with neurodiversity, strengths and weaknesses, and preferred ways of working that have delivered success.4. Immersive leadership trainingA long-term investment in educating and training your leaders and employees to better recognize, embrace, and support neurodiversity in the workplace will pay dividends for employers.HR and people leaders need to have a deeper understanding of the many dynamics of neurodiversity and apply that knowledge to how they manage and support neurodivergent employees.Neurodivergent employees who believe their organization’s leadership understands their struggles and challenges are typically more engaged, productive, and personally invested in the organization’s success.5. Neurodiversity Awareness Month workshops for employeesProvide training and awareness programs to educate all employees about neurodiversity and the specific challenges and strengths of neurodivergent individuals. Offer workshops and resources that promote empathy, understanding, and inclusion.Continuously update training materials and programs to reflect the evolving understanding of neurodiversity and inclusion.For example, it’s important for leaders to understand the methods of communication that work best for each of their employees. Most neurodivergent people prefer written communication, such as an email or instant message, instead of face-to-face conversation or a phone call. This is just one example of how training and education can help employees succeed in the face of bias.6. Expand access to mental healthcareOffering an enhanced EAP with expanded access to mental healthcare increases utilization while normalizing support for neurodivergent employees.Experience the opportunity for your organizationTraditional EAPs often fall short for neurodivergent employees and their families, leaving many without the tailored support they need. Offering an innovative EAP with expanded access to specialized mental healthcare can help close that gap while normalizing support across your organization.This story was produced by Spring Health and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

One Big Beautiful Bill Act income tax opportunities: SALT deduction and non-grantor trusts

One Big Beautiful Bill Act income tax opportunities: SALT deduction and non-grantor trustsThe recently enacted OBBBA introduces several compelling new planning opportunities for high-net-worth individuals and families to consider. Among the most impactful changes is the increase to the state and local tax deduction (SALT) cap. These provisions open new avenues for income tax planning, which can yield more immediate and widespread benefits than traditional estate tax planning strategies, Fifth Third reports.Estate tax changes under OBBBAThe estate and gift tax exemption was permanently increased to $15 million per person beginning in 2026, avoiding a scheduled reduction to approximately $7 million per person in 2026. In practical terms, this now increased permanent exemption reduces the urgency of certain estate tax planning strategies for many families. However, the OBBBA simultaneously enhances opportunities in income tax planning, which affects a broader segment of taxpayers and can result in the more immediate realization of tax savings.Expanded SALT deduction capOne of the most notable changes is the increase in the SALT cap from $10,000 to $40,000 per taxpayer (including a married couple), with a modified adjusted gross income MAGI phaseout from $500,000 to $600,000 (but never below $10,000). This change revises interest in non-grantor trust strategies, which allow families to "stack" multiple SALT deductions by creating separate taxpayers through trust structures.Non-Grantor trusts: A renewed strategyHistorically, grantor trusts have been favored in estate tax and wealth transfer planning. A grantor trust is not a separate taxpayer from the grantor (i.e., income and deductions are reported on the grantor’s income tax return), and the grantor pays any income tax liability attributable to the grantor trust. This is a feature of the grantor trust, not a bug, and effectively allows for the trust and its assets to grow "tax-free" while simultaneously reducing the grantor’s taxable estate. Conversely, a non-grantor trust is its own taxpayer, files its own tax return and is responsible for the payment of its own tax liability. While non-grantor trust planning has had its uses in the past (e.g., Qualified Small Business Stocks), the $10,000 SALT cap made certain planning opportunities impractical due to the costs associated with establishing and administering these trusts.A practical example: leveraging multiple trustsTo put this strategy into context, consider a scenario involving a married couple interested in making lifetime gifts to their children. A non-grantor trust strategy could provide meaningful advantages based on their specific situation. For example, a married couple with three children could create three separate non-grantor trusts, one for each child. Each non-grantor trust would be its own separate taxpayer, and would have its own $40,000 SALT cap. By structuring the gifting program in this way, it may be possible for the family to take advantage of an additional $120,000 in SALT deductions (3 x $40,000), assuming the trusts meet the MAGI threshold and generate sufficient SALT expenses.Additionally, shifting income to these trusts could help the couple themselves move to a lower tax bracket and/or get under the MAGI threshold, increasing their personal SALT deduction cap. This strategy requires careful, holistic planning, and must be weighed against the benefits of a grantor trust-based gifting program. Factors such as the nature of the assets, cash flow needs, applicable state law and location of the grantor and beneficiaries must be considered.Key considerations and risksWhile the potential tax benefits are compelling, there are important considerations to keep in mind. Since the increased SALT cap is set to expire in 2030, trust documents should be drafted with sufficient flexibility to adapt to this planned expiration or future legislative changes. Note that the IRS has traditionally scrutinized aggressive trust "stacking" due to its potential for abuse, and it is imperative to consult with appropriate legal and tax advisors before implementing such a program.Takeaways for high-net-worth familiesThe OBBBA marks a significant shift in the landscape of tax and estate planning. While the increased estate tax exemption reduces pressure on wealth transfer strategies, the expanded SALT deduction presents timely opportunities for income tax optimization. Non-grantor trust structures, once sidelined due to cost and complexity, now warrant renewed attention.Impacted individuals and families should work closely with their advisory team to evaluate whether these strategies align with their long-term goals and ensure that any planning incorporates flexibility to respond to future changes in tax law.This story was produced by Fifth Third and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com Illinois LICA awards scholarship to Walnut student OurQuadCities.com

Illinois LICA awards scholarship to Walnut student

Illinois LICA (Land Improvement Contractors Association) has established a scholarship program to help its members’ families offset rising costs connected with post-high school education and one of this year’s recipients is from the QCA. The scholarship program is open to high school seniors and upperclassmen pursuing any post-high school education, including two or four year [...]

OurQuadCities.com OurQuadCities.com

Celebrating National Zoo Lovers Day with Niabi Zoo

It's National Zoo Lovers Day and we celebrated with Niabi Zoo. Niabi Zoo's opening day is Tuesday, April 21.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Athletic track surfaces: How to maximize longevity and minimize costs

Athletic track surfaces: How to maximize longevity and minimize costsPeople outside of the industry might be surprised to hear how much an athletics track costs. For those who know what goes into the construction of any track, let alone a high-performance track, the costs will be understandable.But that doesn’t mean facility managers and anyone else who might need an athletics track will relish the expense. Since there are so many variables, from materials and installation costs to the track’s size and location, it’s hard to estimate exactly how much an athletic track costs. However, many tracks will cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and larger premium tracks may even cost millions. So, it’s no surprise that you’ll want to get the most out of your investment.How do you get your track to last as long as possible and cost you less, all without compromising on its high-performance abilities? This handy guide by MONDO helps you maximize the longevity of your athletics track and minimize your costs.What Are the Different Types of Athletic Track Surfaces?Athletics tracks can be made from various materials. The material used in your track will impact its cost and longevity, so it’s important to understand your options. MONDO PorousPorous tracks are made up of two layers — a sub-base that consists of rubber granules, often recycled from old tires and held together with plastic resin, and a top-layer spray finish of colored plastic and rubber granules.Porous athletic tracks require more maintenance and repairs than many other types. Moss and plant growth are common, and since the material isn’t as durable as most other tracks, wear and tear are expected within 3-5 years of installation.Porous athletic tracks are best-suited for lower-performance clubs and community settings where they won’t experience as much use. Porous running tracks should last around five years before they require a respray.SandwichSandwich athletic tracks are cost-effective, which is why they’re often used in budget-conscious facilities like schools. However, they’re widely used in a range of facilities, not just those seeking low-cost options.These tracks are nonporous and made up of the same base layer as porous tracks. The top layer is made from polyurethane and combined with a rubber surface dressing.Sandwich athletic tracks can be relatively expensive to install, and excessive use can result in surface bubbling, delamination and separation from curbs.A sandwich running track’s lifespan is usually around seven years, at which point they’ll need to be re-topped.Solid Polyurethane (PU)Athletic tracks made from polyurethane are nonporous. Solid PU tracks use polyurethane in both layers, with the base also impregnated with rubber granules. The top layer is then finished with a rubber surface dressing. This construction prevents the track from absorbing water. To prevent standing water from causing damage, the track is designed to allow water to flow to either side. This makes biological growth unlikely.PU tracks are often used at high-level competitions thanks to their advanced performance, spike resistance and durability. These qualities make full-pour PU athletic tracks the premium, go-to choice and preferable to lower-quality alternatives like sandwich tracks.However, to remain at this high standard, PU athletic tracks require more extensive maintenance than many other types of athletic tracks. Without the required maintenance, or when the track is used too much or inappropriately, the track can experience issues with delamination, marking and reduced performance.Having a professional install your PU track properly is important for its longevity. A PU athletic track can often last 7-10 years before it needs to be re-topped.PrefabricatedUnlike the other types of athletic tracks, which are created as they’re laid, prefabricated tracks are made at an earlier time. Manufactured in specialized factories so that quality can be more closely controlled, prefabricated tracks are made up of nonporous rubber matting.Thanks to its high performance and extreme durability, prefabricated athletic tracks are used at the highest level for both training and competitions. That’s why they’ve been the chosen track for many Olympic Games, including the 2024 games in Paris. Its slip-resistant characteristics also make it the preferred choice for many Paralympic events.Prefabricated tracks also enjoy lower maintenance needs than other track types while still retaining their performance levels for many years. Depending on its usage, a prefabricated track can last 10-15 years without being resurfaced. What’s more, once the track is no longer needed, it can be recycled, making it an environmentally friendly option.Why Do Athletic Tracks Need to Be Replaced?Regardless of how much care and maintenance you give your athletics track, it will eventually reach a point where it’s no longer realistically usable. Your track may even become unsafe to use due to cracks, uneven surfaces and reduced grip, which is why World Athletics only certifies Class 1 tracks for 10 years, with a possible extension of two years. All Class 1 tracks will also require a repeat of site testing after five years, although following some backlash, many facilities hope that this rule will change.For professional clubs or high-end facilities, your athletes will require a track that allows them to perform at their highest level. Before it becomes unusable, a track will likely deteriorate in quality due to reduced grip and uneven surfaces. That’s why professional facilities may wish to resurface or replace their tracks sooner.How to Enhance the Lifespan of Your Athletics TrackWhen you invest in an athletics track, you want to be sure that you receive good value for money. One of the best ways to do this is to install a track that will last many years. While the type of track you choose will largely determine its longevity, there are other factors at play, too.Control UsageRunning tracks are built specifically for running and walking on. If your track is used for other sports, such as cycling, or if vehicles regularly drive across it, it could become damaged sooner. To extend your track’s lifespan, restrict its access to people who will use it for its intended purposes. You could also:Set limits on spike length.Implement lane rotation policies.Protect crossover zones.Cover the track when it’s not in use.Alternate the lanes while training.Use effective protection when other events, such as concerts, are taking place on the track.Deep clean the track at least twice each year.Even when your track is used properly, it will still experience wear and tear over time. The rate at which it deteriorates will depend on how often it’s being used. The more athlete hours it experiences, the faster it will lose its performance qualities.Get a Premium TrackNot all tracks are created or installed equally. That’s why choosing a reputable provider with a record of delivering top-performing athletic tracks can help you enjoy yours for even longer.Athletic tracks provided by a less experienced supplier could be installed poorly. Incorrectly installed tracks will likely deteriorate much faster. Purchasing your track from an unreliable supplier could also result in improper construction. Whether it’s made in situ or prefabricated at an earlier time, it’s important that your track is constructed to perfection.Maintain Your TrackHow well you maintain your athletics track will massively affect its longevity. Tracks that are maintained to the required standard:Perform better.Last longer.Look cleaner.Are safer.How you should maintain your track will depend on where it’s situated, what it’s made from and how often it’s used. To promote a longer lifespan for your athletics track, ask your supplier for advice on a maintenance schedule and stick to it.Consider Climate and ExposureFrom sweltering heat to torrential rain to frigid temperatures, outdoor tracks face much more challenging conditions than indoor tracks do. Even when the conditions are agreeable, humidity, temperature and rainfall will inevitably affect the track’s condition.Create and adapt your maintenance schedule based on the temperature, humidity and rainfall to combat the effect of these conditions on your track. For example, if your track faces frequent rainfall, consider covering it or brushing excess water from it.What Factors Affect the Cost of Athletic Tracks?While longevity affects the cost-effectiveness of your athletics track, you also need to consider the actual costs, too.Supply and InstallationThe sports surface cost will likely be the largest expense you’ll face. It costs suppliers to source the materials, prepare the site and install the track. The extent of this cost will depend on what type of track you get and who your supplier is.As with any product or service, a better-quality track from an industry-leading supplier will cost more. While you can choose the cheapest track on the market, your maintenance and repair expenses may increase since a lower-quality track is typically less durable. It also means that your athletes will be competing and training on a lower-quality track for several years. This could result in lower performance levels, more injuries and less satisfaction with the facilities.You may have to pay for additional features when you install your track. Some features, such as drainage, can directly support your track, while others may be expected by your track’s users. These features could include spectator areas, storage areas, locker rooms, fencing and lighting.The goal is to find the right balance between cutting costs and providing a track of satisfactory quality for your athletes.Permits and ApprovalsInstalling a new athletics track often involves several fees, licenses and permissions, such as:Design or architect fees: You’ll probably have to consult a designer or architect to ensure your track will be safe and compliant.Planning and building permits: You may have to get approval from the local government to build your athletics track.Regulatory checks: Your track might have to be assessed by regulators, which requires paying their administrative fees.RemovalIf you already have a running track in place, you may be able to respray or resurface it to keep your costs down. However, if this isn’t an option or you decide you’d like to change the type of track, you’ll have to remove your old track first. This removal process can be costly, particularly if you want to keep the damage to a minimum so that you can more easily install your new track.To reduce your costs, get quotes from several businesses. If you’re buying a new track, your supplier may offer to remove your old track at a reduced cost.Track MaintenanceMaintaining and cleaning your athletics track will probably cost you thousands of dollars each year. You can either choose to maintain it yourself and reduce your costs, or you can hire a professional third party to maintain it for you. Occasionally, you’ll have to bring in an expert provider to give your track a professional clean or some light touch-ups.The more effectively you maintain your track, the longer it’s likely to last. So, remember the potential long-term financial implications when deciding how much of the maintenance burden you’ll take on yourself. If you do choose to maintain your track yourself, your main costs will be labor and cleaning materials.Remember that some track types, such as prefabricated tracks, cost less to maintain, and may be the best option for those who want minimal maintenance costs. MONDO RepairsOccasionally, your athletics track will need repairs when it experiences certain problems, such as:Cracks: If your athletics track cracks, you’ll need to repair it before the crack gets larger and causes more damage.Loss of grip: Over time, your track will lose its grip, which can make it dangerous to use. When this happens, you’ll need to resurface your track.Pooling water: If water is pooling on your track, it means your track has leveled out, and water can no longer flow to the drains on either side.Bubbles: Another sign that your track isn’t draining water sufficiently, bubbles must be removed and the drainage issue fixed.Faded lines: Your track’s lines will inevitably fade, and when they do, you’ll need to repaint or respray them to keep your track at its best.To keep your overall costs low, don’t delay these repairs. Damage to your track will likely worsen over time, pushing the repair costs up further. It can also affect how long your track remains usable for.Insurance and WarrantyYou’ll almost certainly need some form of insurance for your athletics track. General liability insurance will cover most of your needs and protect you in the case of property damage and injury. When it’s necessary, your insurance will also cover your legal defense. If you need to pay the medical costs of someone who was injured while using your track, accident insurance can help cover these expenses.Many tracks come with a warranty, too. This provides an extra level of protection, should your track become damaged.While insurances and warranties may increase your costs, they could potentially save you from much larger expenses in the future.Best Maintenance Practices for Your Athletics TrackMaintaining your athletics track is one of the best ways to enhance its longevity, protect its performance qualities and help you get the most out of your investment. Some maintenance tips you can apply to any athletics track include:Schedule inspections: Regularly check your athletics track for signs of damage, as this can help you remedy issues before they get worse.Clean regularly: To prevent dirt from embedding itself in your track and protect its performance qualities, clean it regularly.Use gentle products: Use track-friendly cleaning products that won’t corrode or otherwise damage your athletics track.Carry out preventive repairs: If you notice any minor problems, repair them as soon as possible.Train your staff: To ensure your track is cleaned regularly and properly, it’s vital that your staff are trained on its maintenance.Enjoy Your Athletics Track for Longer and at a Reduced CostAthletic tracks are an investment. Different types of tracks are better suited to different settings and budgets. Whichever track you get, there are steps you can take to enhance its longevity and minimize your costs.An athletics track is expensive, so you understandably want it to last as long as possible. Many facility managers also wonder how they can reduce their costs without compromising on quality.The most important steps to achieve these goals are to get a high-quality track that suits your facility, use a trusted supplier and maintain it well.This story was produced by MONDO and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

OurQuadCities.com Winey Wednesday: Wine with our whine, with the help of Fergedaboudit Vineyard & Winery OurQuadCities.com

Winey Wednesday: Wine with our whine, with the help of Fergedaboudit Vineyard & Winery

"Wine" about it, you'll feel better, especially with wines from Fergedaboudit Vineyard & Winery in Hanover, Illinois. They sent us their Ba-da Bing, Bada Boom wines to try. Check out their great wines at https://www.fergedaboudit.com/

WQAD.com WQAD.com

Iowa traffic officers roll out new mobile alcohol testing unit

This secondary processing unit will begin operation during the Iowa State Fair and will be used to prevent impaired motorists from driving while intoxicated.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

News 8 welcoming visitors to donate food for Arc of the Quad Cities Area

Volunteers are looking to gather donations of shelf-stable food to support the Disability Awareness Coalition until 6 p.m.

OurQuadCities.com Alan Silas named new Moline Ward 1 Alderperson OurQuadCities.com

Alan Silas named new Moline Ward 1 Alderperson

Moline has a new Ward 1 Alderperson. Alan Silas was appointed by Mayor Sangeetha Rayapati to serve as Ward 1 Alderperson, filling a recent vacancy on City Council. He was sworn in on Wednesday, April 1 and will serve for the remainder of the unexpired term. Silas has been a Ward 1 resident for 12 [...]

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Why context engineering matters more than prompt engineering

Why context engineering matters more than prompt engineeringYour AI agent knows your product inside-out. You've written detailed prompts, uploaded your docs, and tested it dozens of times. Then a customer asks about pricing, and the agent quotes last quarter's rates. Or it recommends a demo to someone who's been paying you for three years. Or it cheerfully offers a discount code that expired two weeks ago.The frustrating part: The correct information was right there in your prompt. Line 347, clearly stated. The AI just ignored it.Researchers have a name for this: "lost in the middle." LLMs exhibit a U-shaped attention curve, processing information at the beginning and end of inputs reliably, while performance drops by more than 30% for anything buried in the middle. That carefully crafted rule you added after your last customer complaint? Good chance the model never sees it.Wharton's Generative AI Labs found something similar when they tested prompts the way scientists test hypotheses, running each question 100 times instead of once. At strict accuracy levels, most conditions "barely outperform random guessing." The outputs looked good individually. They just weren't reliable.Your prompt is probably fine. But prompt engineering has become one layer in a larger stack, and teams building AI that actually works in production now spend equal or more time on what surrounds the prompt: the context. Here, Zapier explains why context engineering matters even more.What is context engineering?The LangChain team paraphrases Andrej Karpathy, who helped build Tesla's AI and co-founded OpenAI: "LLMs are like a new kind of operating system. The LLM is the CPU, the context window is the RAM."I've found a simpler way to explain this to my marketing friends who glaze over at "tokens" and "inference."Your AI is an employee. The context window is their desk. Whatever's on the desk right now—the customer file on the screen, the campaign brief they printed out, the brand guide shoved in a drawer—that's what they can work with. Desks fill up. So does an AI's memory.Your prompt is the sticky note you handed them this morning. Important, sure. But the stack of folders on their desk? The CRM they have open? That's what determines whether they actually help the customer or fumble around asking questions the customer already answered.Anthropic wrote up their approach to context engineering in 2025. Their definition: "the set of strategies for curating and maintaining the optimal set of tokens during LLM inference." Translation: Give your AI the right information, in the right format, at the right time. Not more. Just what it needs.The evolution: From chatbots to context-aware agentsBefore diving into the how, let's understand where we are in the AI adoption curve.Phase 1 was copy-paste ChatGPT. Marketers discovered they could paste customer emails into a chat window and get draft replies. Exciting, but every session started from zero.Phase 2 was custom GPTs and assistants. You could pre-load instructions and documents. Better. But the context was frozen. No live connection to what was happening in your business.Phase 3 is agentic AI. Agents that take actions, not just generate text. They update your CRM, create tickets, send emails, and make decisions. This power requires a new discipline: You can't give an agent instructions and hope. You have to architect its knowledge.Most people are stuck in Phase 1 or 2. The ones pulling ahead are building for Phase 3.The context gap: Why your prompts aren't workingWhen an AI misbehaves, the instinct is to add more rules. The prompt grows. 200 lines. 400 lines. 500+. More instructions should mean better behavior.It doesn't work that way.The middle gets ignoredChroma's 2025 "Context Rot" study goes even further than the Stanford research. They tested a bunch of models and found that "models do not use their context uniformly; instead, their performance grows increasingly unreliable as input length grows." They discovered this while studying agent learning: on multi-turn conversations where the whole window gets passed in, the token count explodes and instructions clearly present in context get ignored anyway.Static vs. live informationA mega-prompt is frozen. You wrote it last month. Since then, pricing changed, a customer opened a support ticket, Marketing launched a new campaign this morning. The prompt doesn't know any of that. It can only contain what existed when you wrote it.Context window limitsEvery model has a context window. Some of them are in the millions—big numbers. But research shows most models start getting unreliable well before they hit those limits.In practice, your mega-prompt takes up space, conversation history piles on, and documents get loaded. It adds up fast. Hit the limit and older information gets pushed out. The AI forgets things it knew ten minutes ago.Manus, an AI agent company, found that their agents consume about 100 input tokens for every 1 output token. On a complex task with ~50 tool calls, that's roughly 50,000 tokens of context being processed just to generate 500 tokens of response. Most of that context is tool outputs, conversation history, and retrieved documents piling up.How context failsContext doesn't just run out. It fails in specific, predictable ways. Business application strategist Drew Breunig identified four failure modes worth knowing:Context poisoning: An early error or hallucination gets into context and compounds. The AI references incorrect information repeatedly because it's "in the record." Once context is poisoned, each subsequent decision builds on the mistake.Context distraction: Irrelevant information drowns out relevant information. You loaded ten documents, but only one matters for this question. The AI attends to everything, relevant or not.Context confusion: The model can't figure out which pieces of context apply to the current situation. You have pricing rules for enterprise and SMB customers in the same context. The AI mixes them up.Context clash: Contradictory information exists in context. Last month's pricing and this month's pricing are both there. Old campaign rules and new ones. The AI has to pick, and it might pick wrong.When your agent misbehaves, these categories help diagnose the problem. Is it poisoning (bad data got in early)? Distraction (too much irrelevant stuff)? Confusion (can't tell what applies)? Or clash (contradictory info)?What AI actually needs: Context engineering vs. prompt engineeringMost people treat AI like a very literal employee and try to fix problems with more instructions. More rules, more examples, more edge cases. But the issue runs deeper: AI needs better information architecture, not just better wording.Prompt engineering asks "what should I say?" Context engineering asks "what should I know?" Prompts are static, written once, frozen. Context is live, pulled in real-time based on who's asking and what they need. A prompt is text. Context is a data system.Think about onboarding a new hire. You don't hand them a 50-page handbook and say "memorize this before every call." You give them CRM access, point them to the knowledge base, and share the style guide with real examples. You make sure they know what campaign is running this week and which situations to escalate.Context engineering does the same thing for AI. Zapier The 4 strategiesLangChain's framework breaks context engineering into four strategies. This is useful for thinking about what your system actually needs:Write: Give the AI a place to save information outside its main memory. Scratchpads, notes, files. This way, it doesn't have to keep everything in its head.Select: Pull in only what's relevant. Not all your docs, just the ones that matter for this question. Not every customer field, just the ones that help right now.Compress: Summarize when context gets long. A conversation that's been going for 20 turns doesn't need all 20 turns in full. Keep the key points, trim the rest.Isolate: Split complex tasks across multiple agents with separate contexts. One agent researches, another writes, and a third reviews. Each has a clean, focused context instead of one agent drowning in everything.Context is finite. It has diminishing returns. Anthropic's engineering team puts it well: "good context engineering means finding the smallest possible set of high-signal tokens that maximize the likelihood of some desired outcome."Recent academic research confirms this: Strategic selection of relevant information consistently outperforms dumping in everything you have. More context isn't always better context.There's a difference between what you store and what the model sees. Your database can hold terabytes. But at any given moment, the AI should only see what matters for this conversation.Don't dump information upfront. Let the AI reach for it. Customer details when a customer asks. Product specs when features come up. Not everything, all the time.And the one that took me longest to learn: 500 tokens of the right stuff beats 50,000 tokens of everything you have.3 types of context that matterTo build agents that actually work, you need three types of context. Think of them as databases your AI always has access to. Zapier Brand context: who you areThis is your AI's personality. The rules, voice, and boundaries that make responses sound like you instead of generic ChatGPT.Most marketers miss something here: You cannot invent a brand persona by writing creative prompts. Research shows LLM-generated personas contain systematic biases: positivity bias, idealized profiles, and skewed viewpoints.So extract, don't invent. Take your best-performing emails, your highest-rated support responses, your most-shared social posts. Feed those to the AI as examples. Let brand context come from what you've already done well, not what you imagine your brand should sound like.Brand context includes voice guidelines ("direct and confident, not salesy"), anti-patterns ("never say synergy, ever"), approved terminology (especially product names people get wrong), and topics that are off-limits like competitor names or unannounced features. Also, add ten to twenty real responses that nailed the tone, plus escalation rules: when to hand off to a human, what promises the AI should never make.Customer context: who they areThis one changes with every conversation.Without customer context, every interaction starts from zero. The AI asks "What industry are you in?" when the customer already told you twice. With customer context, your AI can say: "Last time we spoke, you were evaluating our API integration. Did you get a chance to review the documentation I sent?"That sentence requires memory. Memory is what separates an assistant from a chatbot that makes customers repeat themselves. What goes in here?Company info and account tier (so it knows whether to pitch enterprise features)Industry (so it uses relevant examples)Whether they have open tickets (so it doesn't cheerfully ask "how can I help?" when they're mid-crisis)Purchase history and past conversations (so they never have to repeat themselves)Where they are in the funnel (so the AI adjusts how deep to go on product details)Strategic context: what you're trying to achieveYour AI doesn't know it's Q1. It doesn't know you're pushing annual plans or that your goal this quarter is demos, not free trials. Unless you tell it.This layer holds:Current campaigns (so the agent knows what pricing benefits to mention)Active offers (so it knows which discounts are real)Rules for different funnel stages, your conversion goalsCompetitive positioningThe kind of stuff that changes quarter to quarter and shapes what the AI should actually be pushing.How they work togetherA customer asks: "What makes you different from [Competitor]?"Brand context says never name competitors directly. Customer context shows they're an enterprise trial user in fintech. Strategic context indicates the current push is compliance features.Result: a response highlighting compliance capabilities (relevant to fintech), mentioning enterprise-grade security (relevant to their tier), positioning against competitors without naming them. All in your brand voice.No prompt engineering trick achieves this. It requires architecture.This story was produced by Zapier and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

WVIK Oil prices plunge and stocks soar after U.S. and Iran agree on ceasefire WVIK

Oil prices plunge and stocks soar after U.S. and Iran agree on ceasefire

Investors around the world breathed a sigh of relief at the prospect of peace — and an easing of the global energy crisis.

WVIK WVIK

Oil prices plunge and stocks soar after U.S. and Iran agree on a ceasefire

Investors around the world breathed a sigh of relief at the prospect of peace — and an easing of the global energy crisis.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Skinny isn’t the same as strong

Skinny isn’t the same as strongWeight loss has become easier to achieve, but the tradeoffs aren’t always apparent right away. For many patients starting GLP-1 medications, the early results can feel drastic, even disorienting, NutraBio reports.Taryn J. Mitchell, a 54-year-old banker from Greensboro, North Carolina, began losing weight rapidly after starting Wegovy, without the strict diet and exercise routine she had relied on for years. But alongside that progress came something less expected. “It got scary,” she said, as the pace of weight loss raised new concerns about strength and muscle.Clinicians say the concern is not unfounded, even if the science is still evolving. Weight loss has always included some reduction in lean mass. However, what is changing is the speed and scale. The drugs change appetite. But now patients must change their nutrition as well.Why NowThe scale of adoption helps explain why this tension is gaining national attention now. A November 2025 KFF Health Tracking Poll found roughly one in eight American adults currently taking a GLP-1 medication, with nearly one in five having used one at some point. Use is highest among adults aged 50 to 64, a group already navigating changes in muscle and metabolism.As use expands, attention is turning to body composition rather than weight alone. Early evidence suggests a meaningful share of weight lost can include lean mass, with outcomes shaped by diet, activity, age, and the pace of loss. That reality is beginning to influence behavior beyond the clinic.Justin Bina, an assistant professor at Arizona State University, notes that GLP-1 adoption is already reshaping demand. "We find that GLP-1 adoption directly increases what users are willing to pay for protein products," he said, adding that manufacturers and restaurants are responding with "GLP-1-friendly" products positioned around nutrient density and protein.What The Science Actually SaysIn the STEP-1 trial — the foundational study behind Wegovy's approval — a subgroup of participants underwent dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, an imaging technique that separates fat from lean tissue with more precision than a standard scale.Among those participants, semaglutide produced an average 15% reduction in body weight over 68 weeks, with fat mass dropping roughly 19% and lean body mass declining about 10%. Notably, the proportion of lean mass relative to total body weight actually increased, because fat dropped more.A similar pattern emerged in the SURMOUNT-1 trial examining tirzepatide: Participants lost an average 21% of body weight over 72 weeks, with approximately 75% of that loss attributable to fat and 25% to lean mass — a ratio consistent across age, sex, and weight-loss magnitude subgroups.Both findings carry an important qualifier. The DXA analyses were conducted on small subsets of each trial population — 140 participants in STEP-1, 160 in SURMOUNT-1 — making them indicative rather than definitive. And the pattern itself is not unique to GLP-1-based weight loss."No matter how much weight you lose, about 25% of that will be from muscle," says Dr. Caroline Apovian, co-director for Weight Management and Wellness at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital. "And if you lose a lot of weight quickly, as can happen when you use GLP-1s or follow an extreme low-carb or low-calorie diet, you can lose even more muscle and at a faster rate."The stakes of that loss matter beyond appearance. "Skeletal muscle is not just tissue that helps us move," says Dr. Sangeeta Kashyap of New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. "It's our most metabolically active organ. It burns 80% of glucose post-meal and 20-30% of fat at rest, regulates insulin sensitivity, supports immune health, and helps maintain our resting metabolic rate."Research on mitigation points consistently in two directions: higher protein intake and resistance training.Reviews and meta-analyses generally support protein intakes in the range of 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight per day during energy restriction, substantially higher than standard dietary recommendations.In controlled hypocaloric trials, higher protein intake preserved lean mass more effectively than lower protein intake. Meta-analytic evidence, particularly in older adults, further supports pairing resistance exercise with adequate protein to improve muscle mass and strength outcomes, though results vary by population and protocol.Much of the data comes from substudies, short-term trials, or specific populations, and results vary depending on protocol and adherence. The broader takeaway is less about eliminating lean-mass loss and more about managing it, with approaches that need to be adapted to individual health status, including age, comorbidities, and overall treatment goals.The “Protein Problem” with GLP-1sAppetite suppression is the mechanism that makes GLP-1s effective, and it is the same mechanism that makes adequate protein intake difficult to sustain. Patients eating significantly smaller portions are often not prioritizing protein — they are eating whatever feels tolerable, which tends to mean bland, carbohydrate-heavy foods that are easier on a sensitive stomach.GI side effects, including nausea and early fullness, compound the pattern. The result is that many users are losing weight while quietly undereating the one macronutrient most critical to preserving what they are trying to keep.Clinical guidance published in 2025 reinforces that point, noting that adequate protein may be difficult to achieve for GLP-1 users due to reduced appetite and taste aversions, and recommending a protein-first approach at meals alongside structured resistance training at least three times per week.Yet many patients are focused on the number on the scale, not on strength, and are skipping the resistance work entirely."The goal is fat loss, not muscle loss," says Dr. Soohan Mansuri, a board-certified primary care physician with the Torrance Memorial Physician Network. "Without intentional protein intake and resistance exercise, muscle mass declines — and so does metabolism."The stakes are not equal across populations. Older adults and postmenopausal women often enter treatment with lower baseline muscle mass, meaning the same proportional loss carries heavier functional consequences."When calories are restricted, adequate protein becomes essential to maintain muscle," says Dr. Kashyap, who recommends working with a nutritionist to make every meal count as appetite patterns change during treatment.The boom: supplements, shakes, and “GLP-1 food”As GLP-1 adoption has scaled across nearly 12% of U.S. adults, food manufacturers, supplement brands, and restaurant chains have moved aggressively to meet the appetite-suppressed, protein-conscious consumer — with products explicitly built around the medication's side effects and nutritional demands.The response on store shelves has been concrete. Nestlé launched Vital Pursuit, a frozen meal line designed around the nutritional profile of GLP-1 users, and later added "GLP-1 Friendly" labeling after customers requested it.Conagra followed, adding its "On Track" badge to 26 Healthy Choice products in early 2025.Smoothie King built a GLP-1 Support Menu in partnership with a registered dietitian.Danone reported that yogurt consumption is nearly three times higher in households using GLP-1 medications. It responded with new protein shakes carrying 30 grams of protein per serving, a cultured dairy drink formulated to support muscle retention, and a plant-based milk with added protein.Restaurant chains, including Chipotle and Shake Shack, cited GLP-1 users when debuting protein-forward menu items.Protein from whole foods combined with resistance training remains the evidence-based foundation for lean mass preservation. The question the market has not answered is whether reformulated packaging addresses a genuine nutrition gap. Or monetizes the anxiety around one.“GLP-1 medications are powerful tools, but they don’t replace the fundamentals of nutrition and physical activity,” says Matt Weik, BS, CSCS, CPT, CSN from NutraBio.What should users do?For anyone currently on a GLP-1 medication, the clinical guidance points in a consistent direction. Prioritize protein at the start of meals, when appetite is highest, and spread intake across the day rather than concentrating it in one sitting.Reviews and meta-analyses on weight loss and lean mass preservation generally reference intakes in the range of 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight daily during energy restriction, well above the standard dietary recommendation.If nausea or low appetite make eating whole-food sources difficult, protein supplementation is a practical bridge, not a permanent solution.Resistance training forms the other half of that equation. "Muscle acts as your body's engine for burning calories and managing blood sugar," says Dr. Sangeeta Kashyap. "The more muscle you have, the more efficiently your body processes energy." Most clinical guidance recommends at least two full-body strength sessions per week, building gradually from baseline.For people with kidney disease, older adults managing frailty, or patients on complex diabetes regimens, these targets are not one-size-fits-all. "Talk to your doctor about your specific health goals," says Dr. W. Scott Butsch, an obesity medicine specialist. "Together, you can come up with a plan that works best for you."Beyond the Scale in the Age of GLP-1 MedicineMuscle reduction during weight loss is not a GLP-1 phenomenon. It is a weight loss phenomenon. But the speed and scale of these medications have pushed it to the center of nutrition science, consumer behavior, and a rapidly expanding market that is still catching up to the evidence.Taryn J. Mitchell, from North Carolina, lost 40 pounds in under a year. She lost some muscle along the way, too, but followed her doctor's guidance, picked up resistance bands and light weights, and kept moving.As the weight came off, she found herself doing Pilates, moving with ease, and joining her daughters on the slopes rather than watching from the sidelines. "It's honestly given me a sense of freedom," she said.Her story is one version of what informed GLP-1 use can look like. It also illustrates why the science matters more now than ever, and why research, clinical education, and honest public conversation need to grow as fast as the prescriptions do.This story was produced by NutraBio and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

WVIK Netflix does Nordic noir right in 'Jo Nesbø's Detective' series WVIK

Netflix does Nordic noir right in 'Jo Nesbø's Detective' series

A tortured Oslo police detective may be on the trail of a psycho killer in this genuinely suspenseful screen adaptation of Jo Nesbø's The Devil's Star.

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Why maintenance data is the missing ingredient for accelerated innovation in manufacturing

Why maintenance data is the missing ingredient for accelerated innovation in manufacturingThe relationship between engineering and maintenance has always felt out of sync.Product engineers are being asked to iterate on computer-aided design (CAD), finalize specs, and release designs faster and faster so new products can get to market. However, maintenance is rarely factored into this process. That means they often inherit the consequences of designs that look technically sound, but can fall apart in real-world conditions. They end up having to keep lines running while continually planning for new equipment specs, operating contexts, and edge cases.This disconnect is getting harder to afford, MaintainX reports. Product variations are exploding as customers demand more options and shorter lead times. Every new SKU impacts maintenance schedules, parts management, and capacity planning. When maintenance isn’t factored into the design conversation, manufacturers pay later in downtime, scrap, rework, and delays.In a recent Wrench Factor conversation, Rush LaSelle, CEO of Fathom Manufacturing, discusses why bridging this gap will provide manufacturers with a big competitive advantage.If manufacturers want to accelerate new product introductions (NPIs) while maintaining quality, we have to tear down the wall between product design and maintenance. Maintenance needs a seat at the table and to inform the design process from day one.Key takeawaysQuality is moving upstream to the design process. Maintenance needs to move with it.Maintenance data is design feedback. Work orders, maintenance logs, parts usage, and changeover notes should inform product and process decisions before design freeze.Maintainability is a speed strategy. If PMs, access, and changeovers are hard, reliability slips and your NPI timeline collapses under downtime, scrap, and rework.Connected data is essential. The best insights can’t stay trapped in technicians’ heads or scattered systems if you want them to influence design.AI helps turn messy maintenance history into usable signals.Why maintenance data is a game-changing design tool for manufacturersAs Rush pointed out, quality is a competitive differentiator for today’s manufacturers.“Quality has to permeate all the way through [the NPI process],” he said, “and I just think it’s moving further up the ideation channel than it’s ever been in the past.”That’s exactly why maintainability can’t be treated as a downstream concern, especially as product variation accelerates. When you’re introducing more SKUs and more frequent design tweaks, you’re creating more opportunities for small design decisions to turn into big production problems.And no one has a clearer view of those problems than maintenance.Maintenance teams spend more time than anyone living with the consequences of product and process decisions, many of which never show up in the design process, like the failure that happens when humidity spikes or what happens when operators start making small adjustments. That experience isn’t just a collection of work orders, purchase orders, and notes—it’s also valuable design feedback.Product design is all about how reliably a product can be produced, how stable it stays as variations stack up, and how quickly you can recover when something drifts out of spec. Any advantage you have with the speed of product development is wiped away if failures chip away at production capacity, product quality, and on-time delivery.That’s where maintainability becomes a quality lever. When you pull maintenance data into the ideation phase, especially for high-value or high-variation products, you’re not just making life easier for the people turning the wrenches. You’re building a production system that’s more predictable, more scalable, and less fragile as the pace of change increases.How to incorporate maintenance data into the NPI processEven if you have the intention to include maintenance in the NPI process, there’s a practical problem: the insight exists, but they’re often in no shape to be used quickly and effectively.This is a fundamental roadblock because, as Rush put it, speed is king when introducing high-value products.“If you go back 20 years, to iterate on a design took weeks, if not months,” says Rush. “Now … you can do that in hours and days. Winning in manufacturing is going to be all about speed.”The most useful insights from maintenance teams are often scattered across work orders, maintenance logs, purchase orders, and changeover notes. If that data stays siloed in spreadsheets or, worse yet, the minds of technicians, it can’t be incorporated in the design process fast enough, or at all.This is where AI can help accelerate the digitization of this data and translate it into useful insights for the NPI process. As Rush points out, “You’ve got to get your data … using AI, ready to move through that [process] at an increasingly fast pace.AI can help turn scattered maintenance data into actionable insights for design teams by:Prompting technicians and operators to submit clearer, context-rich notesTurning voice notes/photos into structured fieldsSummarizing technician notes and identifying common failure modesFinding edge case failures and root causes from work requests, photos, and work ordersTranslating information in other languages so key details aren’t lostGenerating procedures that track the right inputs for a valuable feedback loopA real-world example of how to accelerate the NPI process in manufacturingRush outlined an interesting example of a manufacturer that has combined speed and quality to optimize its NPI process.A medical devices manufacturer started with additive manufacturing to design products with complex fluidics. This allowed the team to “move really quickly, see changes, and see the characteristics of the new products” during early testing, says Rush.But additive wasn’t the end state—it was the learning engine. Rush noted the team used additive manufacturing for rapid iterations and to validate performance, then transitioned into a hybrid of injection molding and some CNC. In other words, the company prototyped to learn, then designed to endure.Maintenance strengthens that handoff by capturing what early builds reveal: what wears out first, what drifts out of spec, and what makes changeovers painful so iteration cycles don’t turn into instability once product scales.Maintenance is the missing piece to introducing high-value products in manufacturingThere is a massive shift in how products get to market. Speed is king, but speed without reliability is the surest way to wipe out any gains you build during the NPI process.The most successful manufacturers of the next five years will be the ones who realize that the person closest to the machines that produce products is one of the best people to help design them.This story was produced by MaintainX and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

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Warmer, wet days ahead for the Quad Cities

Our week kicked off with highs only in the 40s and 50s. It'll turn windy and warmer today and the warmer temperatures stick around for more days to come. A few showers and storms move in tonight and a heavier rain event is on tap Thursday evening and Thursday night. Here's your full 7-day forecast.

Quad-City Times YMCA Water Park at the Landing in Bettendorf sees more than 70,000 visits in first season Quad-City Times

YMCA Water Park at the Landing in Bettendorf sees more than 70,000 visits in first season

The YMCA CEO thinks the waterpark could've reached close to 90,000 visits in 2025 if a thrown beer bottle hadn't shattered and forced the pool to close for a week.

OurQuadCities.com G-ALES-Burg Beer Fest pours into Reserve Artisan Ales OurQuadCities.com

G-ALES-Burg Beer Fest pours into Reserve Artisan Ales

The fourth annual G-ALES-Burg Beer Fest pours into Reserve Artisan Ales, 185 S. Kellogg St., Galesburg, with more than 30 breweries, wineries and meaderies, as well as a variety of food, ticketed raffle items, a jumbo beer pong game and more. Most tickets will include a food voucher to use at the RAA Food Trolley [...]

Quad-City Times Two Muscatine firefighters promoted to captain Quad-City Times

Two Muscatine firefighters promoted to captain

“Mike Collins and Eric Joslyn have demonstrated exceptional professionalism, technical skill, and dedication throughout their careers,” Chief Mike Hartman said.

Quad-City Times Rock Island workers, local politicians call for increased wages and tax reform Quad-City Times

Rock Island workers, local politicians call for increased wages and tax reform

Home health care and child care workers met with local legislators in Rock Island last week to talk about wages and taxes.

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Cinemark, with a multiplex in Davenport, achieves record Easter weekend box office

Cinemark, one of the largest theatrical exhibition companies in the world, has announced it achieved an all-time high five-day Easter weekend domestic box office, "driven by a diverse slate of compelling films and strong consumer engagement across the entire movie-going experience," a news release says. Cinemark's Davenport theater is at 3601 E. 53rd St. Audiences delighted [...]

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Don Wooten

This is Roald Tweet on Rock Island.This coming Sunday, May 19th, at approximately four in the afternoon, Augustana College will confer upon Don Wooten an…

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Movies and TV shows casting across the US

Media_Photos // Shutterstock Movies and TV shows casting across the US The glitz and glam of Hollywood captures the attention of Americans starting from an early age. Beyond celebrities' Instagram Stories and red carpet poses, there are actors out there paying their dues and honing their craft in pursuit of a sustainable career or a fulfilling sideline. Submitting to casting calls is a big part of that journey.Whether you're a working actor or an aspiring one, you might be curious to know which movies and TV shows are casting roles near you. Backstage compiled a list of projects casting right now across the U.S., and which roles they're looking to fill. Media_Photos // Shutterstock High-Impact Vertical Drama Series - Project type: vertical series- Roles: --- Lead Female (lead, female, 18-35)--- Lead Male (lead, male, 18-40)- Roles pay up to: $6,400- Casting locations: nationwide- Learn more about the vertical series here Media_Photos // Shutterstock 'Lights Out: Who's Out' Vertical Thriller Series - Project type: vertical series- Roles: --- Richard (lead, male, 40-50)--- Mia (lead, female, 25-30)--- Liam (lead, male, 25-30)- Roles pay up to: $4,800- Casting locations: Worldwide- Learn more about the vertical series here KinoMasterskaya // Shutterstock Amazon Prime's Competition Show 'Fallout Shelter' - Project type: reality TV- Roles: --- Single Men and Women (real people, 21+)--- Professional Actors (lead, 21+)--- Professional Models (models, 21+)- Casting locations: Worldwide- Learn more about the reality TV show here Grusho Anna // Shutterstock 'Faugi - India,' Feature Film - Project type: feature film- Roles: --- William Flask - British Agent (supporting, male, 45-55)- Roles pay up to: £12,000- Casting locations: Worldwide- Learn more about the feature film here Grusho Anna // Shutterstock 'I Dream of Pizza' - Project type: feature film- Roles: --- Roberto (lead, male, 25-35)- Roles pay up to: $17,000- Casting locations: Worldwide- Learn more about the feature film here Grusho Anna // Shutterstock 'Between Us And The River (BUATR)' - Project type: feature film- Roles: --- Young Military Veterans (background / extra, male, non-binary, trans male, 18-30)- Roles pay up to: $187- Casting locations: Brooklyn, NY; New York City, NY; Queens, NY- Learn more about the feature film here guruXOX // Shutterstock 'Out The Kitchen' - Project type: scripted show- Roles: --- Photo Double for White male Actor, 5'10"-6', Brown Hair, Tent. Work Apr. 28 (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, male, 25-35)--- Photo Double for White Male Actor, 5'10"-6', Brown Hair, Tent. Work Apr. 28 (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, male, 30-45)- Roles pay up to: $262- Casting locations: New York City, NY- Learn more about the scripted show here Gorodenkoff // Shutterstock People to Portray African American Male Pedestrians & Event Guests (NON SAG AFTRA COVERED) - Project type: scripted show- Roles: --- African American Male Peds & Event Guests (NON SAG AFTRA COVERED) (background / extra, male, 18-50)- Roles pay up to: $187- Casting locations: New York City, NY- Learn more about the scripted show here Gorodenkoff // Shutterstock 'The Gilded Age,' Season 4 - Project type: scripted show- Roles: --- Male Photo Double (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, male, 45-65)- Roles pay up to: $262- Casting locations: New York City, NY; Manhattan, NY; Queens, NY; Brooklyn, NY; Jersey City, NJ- Learn more about the scripted show here Grusho Anna // Shutterstock 'The Gilded Age' Season 4, Newport, RI - Project type: scripted show- Roles: --- Child of Principal/Twins, Ages Newborn-5 Mos (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, 1)--- Child of Principal, Ages Newborn-5 Mos. (SAG-AFTRA (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, 1)--- NEWPORT, RI General 1880 Background (SAG-AFTRA COVERED) (background / extra, 18-65)- Roles pay up to: $500- Casting locations: Newport, RI; Providence, RI; Boston, MA; Hartford, CT- Learn more about the scripted show here Tikkyshop // Shutterstock 'Whitechapel' - Project type: feature film- Roles: --- Edmund Reid (lead, male, 35-60)--- Donald Swanson (lead, male, 40-70)--- Dr. Thomas Bond (supporting, male, 24-40)- Roles pay up to: $12,000- Casting locations: Worldwide- Learn more about the feature film here Grusho Anna // Shutterstock 'Pagans,' Role of Alice, Female Lead 12-13 Years Old, Open Ethnicity - Project type: scripted show- Roles: --- Alice (lead, female, 10-14)- Casting locations: Worldwide- Learn more about the scripted show here muratart // Shutterstock Untitled H Movie - Project type: feature film- Roles: --- Photo Double for White Female Actor, Brown Hair, 5'7-5'9 (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, female, 21-38)--- Photo Double for White Female Actor, Brown Curly Hair, 5'5-5'7 (SAG-AFTRA COVERED) (background / extra, female, 21-38)--- Photo Double for White Female Actor, Very Blonde Hair, 5'10-6'1 (SAG-AFTRA COVERED) (background / extra, female, 21-38)- Roles pay up to: $262- Casting locations: New York City, NY; Hoboken, NJ; Jersey City, NJ; Newark, NJ; Wayne, NJ- Learn more about the feature film here Grusho Anna // Shutterstock Netflix Film 'AIG' - Project type: feature film- Roles: --- Chic Party Guests (Celebrities, Musicians, Politicians etc.) (background / extra, all genders, 18-75)- Roles pay up to: $224- Casting locations: New York City, NY; Jersey City, NJ; Hoboken, NJ- Learn more about the feature film here Dpongvit // Shutterstock 'The Gilded Age,' Season 4, Troy, NY - Project type: scripted show- Roles: --- Event Guests (Non-SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, 18+)--- Event Guests (SAG-AFTRA Covered) (background / extra, 18+)- Roles pay up to: $224- Casting locations: Troy, NY; Albany, NY; Schenectady, NY- Learn more about the scripted show here This story was produced by Backstage and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

WVIK Your sarcasm is showing — and its history is surprisingly violent WVIK

Your sarcasm is showing — and its history is surprisingly violent

Some people use sarcasm jokingly. But funnily enough, we tend not to find it witty when we're on the receiving end.

WVIK Colleges are trying to boost student voting. A Trump probe freezes data for that work WVIK

Colleges are trying to boost student voting. A Trump probe freezes data for that work

To figure out how to boost student voting, colleges have relied on a study about campus voter registration and turnout rates. A Trump administration investigation has cut schools off from new data.

WVIK U.S. and Iran agree to 2-week ceasefire WVIK

U.S. and Iran agree to 2-week ceasefire

As part of the agreement, set to take effect immediately, Trump said the U.S. and Israel would suspend bombing Iran for two weeks, subject to Iran following through on its commitment to reopen the Strait of Hormuz for safe passage during the ceasefire period.

Tuesday, April 7th, 2026

North Scott Press North Scott Press

Say 'Yes, Please' to The Grilled Cheese of the Year: Gooey Goodness with a Protein Punch

(Feature Impact) A grilled cheese sandwich isn't just a lunchtime staple; it's a beloved cultural icon. There is a universal magic in the combination of ooey-gooey cheese, golden bread and a little butter - but in 2026, this comfort food classic is getting a functional upgrade. It's also safe to say nostalgia is delicious and addicting, which is why Borden Cheese is sharing not one, but two, prize-worthy recipes, one of which packs a protein punch and another that's a pure classic, perfect for spreading smiles and happy bellies. Protein, Please: The Protein Powerhouse is the Grilled Cheese of the Year, and it's easy to see why. It's a protein-packed masterpiece designed for the modern appetite. Featuring a creamy, dual-cheese combo of mild cheddar and Borden Mozzarella Cheese Melts, the sandwich is melted over 5 ounces of tender sliced chicken breast and delivers more than 40 grams of protein and about 8 grams of fiber when paired with the right bread. Served with a tangy Greek yogurt and Dijon mustard "powerhouse sauce" and pressed between golden, crispy bread, this grilled cheese isn't your ordinary melt. It has been transformed into a massive protein boost. Tried n' True: While modern flavors and trends are delicious, nostalgia is too. In fact, a whopping 20,000 fans cast their votes for America's Favorite Grilled Cheese, asserting a fervor that's unmatched when it comes to their perfect melt, and awarded The Classic the title of "America's Favorite." This comforting recipe pairs extra sharp melts with American singles on sliced white bread for a perfect, ooey-gooey bite that reminds you the cheese truly "makes" the sandwich. VisitBordenCheese.com/grilled-cheese-day for other ooey-gooey grilled cheese recipes created for 2026.   The Protein Powerhouse 1          tablespoon butter, softened 2          slices bread fortified with protein and fiber 2          Borden Mild Cheddar Slices 1          slice Borden Mozzarella Melts 5          ounces sliced chicken breast (deli-shaved or thinly carved) "Powerhouse" Sauce: 2          tablespoons non-fat Greek yogurt 1          teaspoon Dijon mustard 1/2       teaspoon garlic powder 1/2       teaspoon smoked paprika Heat griddle to medium heat. Butter bread. Layer cheeses and chicken on top of bread. Place bread on griddle and cook until lightly toasted. Flip and cook other side. Remove sandwich from skillet or griddle. To make powerhouse sauce: Mix Greek yogurt, Dijon mustard, garlic powder and smoked paprika until well blended. Slice sandwich in half and drizzle with Powerhouse sauce. The Classic 1          tablespoon butter, softened 2          slices white bread 2          slices Borden Extra Sharp Melts 2          slices Borden American Singles Heat skillet or griddle over medium heat. Spread butter on one side of each slice bread. Place cheese slices on unbuttered side of bread. Top with other slice of bread with butter facing upward. Place sandwich on skillet or griddle and cook 3-4 minutes on each side. Using spatula, lightly press sandwich down gently while cooking to melt cheese better. Remove from skillet or griddle and slice in half.

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Lawfare Disjustice for HHS Secretary RFK Jr's Childhood Vaccine Schedule from 17 to 11 Jabs

Massachusetts-based Federal U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy suspended Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.'s (RFK Jr.) reduction of the CDC's Childhood Schedule of Vaccines from 17 to 11, including both Hepatitis A and B; Influenza; Rotavirus; Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV); and Meningococcal vaccines – all absurd inoculations that have no more conclusive science behind them than most of the other vaccines populating the Childhood Schedule on behalf of Big Pharma.

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City of Moline looking to build more starter homes

A proposal from Alderman Matt Timion would have the city build four or five market-rate homes, then use money from the sales to fund more construction.

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Food Truck Fridays returning to LeClaire

Food trucks will gather in downtown Moline every Friday between April 10 and Oct. 23 from 5-8 p.m.

OurQuadCities.com Clinton supportive housing project finished; 24 units for people who are unhoused OurQuadCities.com

Clinton supportive housing project finished; 24 units for people who are unhoused

Ten years of planning and nearly $7 million later, the Clinton YWCA finally has opened an apartment complex set to help those without a home. The 399 Housing complex will be a first for the city. "(Homelessness) absolutely exists in every community throughout our county," said Dan Srp, Clinton County supervisor. A 2022 University of [...]

OurQuadCities.com Efforts continue to address Iowa farmers' demands OurQuadCities.com

Efforts continue to address Iowa farmers' demands

Iowa farmers are raising concern for what some state lawmakers are calling an agriculture economy downturn. A timely issue for farmers revolves around their access to fertilizer supplies. Nitrogen is a key import for fertilizer. According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the war in Iran has disrupted fertilizer production and trade. John [...]

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Despite pushback, Moline City Council moves ahead with phasing out liquor licenses of gaming cafes

Gaming cafe owners in Moline spoke out as Class K liquor licenses face elimination by 2027, raising concerns about jobs, revenue and business survival.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

Despite pushback, Moline City Council moves ahead with phasing out liquor licenses of gaming cafes

Gaming cafe owners in Moline spoke out as Class K liquor licenses face elimination by 2027, raising concerns about jobs, revenue and business survival.

OurQuadCities.com Moline City Council votes to dispense with Class K liquor license OurQuadCities.com

Moline City Council votes to dispense with Class K liquor license

There are six businesses in Moline that fall under the gaming salon/cafe category. Every year they must renew their Class K liquor licenses to continue their gaming and alcohol serving business. In 2022, the city council voted to remove that specific license for gaming and alcohol, although the existing businesses were grandfathered in. This came [...]

KWQC TV-6  Food Truck Fridays return to LeClaire KWQC TV-6

Food Truck Fridays return to LeClaire

Every Friday, three food trucks will be in downtown LeClaire from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

WVIK Telehealth abortion will remain available for now, after a federal judge's ruling WVIK

Telehealth abortion will remain available for now, after a federal judge's ruling

The abortion pill mifepristone must undergo a safety review by the FDA, the judge said. Louisiana's case seeking to ban its use through telemedicine will proceed after that review.

Quad-City Times Quad-City Times

Moline gaming cafes to close in 2027 after council rejects amendment to keep them open

Gaming cafe customers, employees and owners filled nearly every seat and into an overflow room at Tuesday's meeting to urge the city council to allow the cafes to stay open.

KWQC TV-6  ‘Absolutely,’ public will learn details of state investigation, governor says KWQC TV-6

‘Absolutely,’ public will learn details of state investigation, governor says

Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds discussed the investigation into two top officials at the Iowa Public Employees Pension Retirement System.

OurQuadCities.com Promotions to captain strengthen Muscatine Fire Dept. leadership OurQuadCities.com

Promotions to captain strengthen Muscatine Fire Dept. leadership

The Muscatine Fire Department has announced the promotion of two veteran firefighters, Mike Collins and Eric Joslyn, to the rank of captain. Both individuals bring extensive experience, leadership, and a deep commitment to serving the Muscatine community, a news release says. Fire Chief Mike Hartman said the promotions reflect the department’s continued focus on strengthening [...]

KWQC TV-6  Moline targets housing gap with plan to build starter homes on empty lots KWQC TV-6

Moline targets housing gap with plan to build starter homes on empty lots

The City of Moline is proposing a new pilot program aimed at addressing a shortage of affordable housing by building starter homes on underused lots.

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New transitional housing complex opening in Clinton

YWCA Clinton's 399 Housing will provide housing to those experiencing homelessness, along with access to case management and support for long-term stability.

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7Brew to open in Bettendorf on April 27

In addition to coffee, the chain offers smoothies, shakes and teas.

KWQC TV-6 Camping season is here: Updates for Quad-Cities parks KWQC TV-6

Camping season is here: Updates for Quad-Cities parks

Camping season has officially arrived in the Quad-Cities. Nearly all campgrounds across the region are now open or preparing to welcome visitors for the 2026 season.

WVIK Scott County residents pack Iowa Utilities Commission meeting on CIPCO plant WVIK

Scott County residents pack Iowa Utilities Commission meeting on CIPCO plant

The Iowa Utilities Commission held an informational meeting on the plan, attended by dozens of concerned local citizens, Monday, April 6, at Rhythm City Casino Event Center, Davenport.

KWQC TV-6 East Moline launches effort to ‘Get the Lead Out’ of drinking water KWQC TV-6

East Moline launches effort to ‘Get the Lead Out’ of drinking water

The city is in the process of removing all private water service lines with lead.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

City of Moline appoints Ward 1 alderperson

Mayor Sangeetha Rayapati has appointed Alan Silas to fill the Ward 1 vacancy left after Alderperson Debbie Murphy stepped back to focus on family.

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Baseball is back! Quad Cities River Bandits celebrate 2026 opening day!

Jonah Krell joined The Current live from Modern Woodman Park to talk about all the action in downtown Davenport.

Quad-City Times Davenport schools names new executive director of learning and results Quad-City Times

Davenport schools names new executive director of learning and results

Bernadette Brustkern is set to start in her new role July 1, pending board approval.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

The Arc of the Quad Cities Area Food Drive to be held at WQAD

The food drive will be held Wednesday, April 8 from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. at 3003 Park 16th Street.

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Deere & Co agrees to pay $99 million to settle 'right to repair' lawsuit

A class action lawsuit accuses the farm equipment giant of monopolizing repair services.

WQAD.com WQAD.com

Military museum closures paused

The museum at the Arsenal was targeted for closure but is getting a second look after the National Defense Authorization Act of 2026 is forcing review.

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

The Rock Orchestra by Candlelight, April 23

Featuring a touring collective of classical musicians who breathe beautifully dark energy into legendary rock and metal anthems, The Rock Orchestra by Candlelight comes to Davenport's Adler Theatre on April 23, this wildly popular stage event by impresario and producer Nathan Reed featuring high-energy favorites complemented by a stunning Gothic visual world.

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MetroRock Housing Connection works to acquire Hoffman school building

MetroRock officials said they hope to use the property for a potential housing development.

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Steel Panther, April 18

Winners of two Loudwire Music Awards for Live Act of the Year, and one of the only groups to achieve top-five Billboard success on both the Hard Rock and Comedy charts, Steel Panther brings its unique blend of glam metal and hilarious lyrics back to East Moline's The Rust Belt on April 18, the California musicians appearing on their "Twenty Twenty $ex Tour" and lauded by Metal Sucks, which stated that "Steel Panther’s concept is genius" while their songwriting is "preposterously snappy – and relatable.”

WVIK The Artemis II crew saw parts of the moon never seen before. Here's what they said WVIK

The Artemis II crew saw parts of the moon never seen before. Here's what they said

The astronauts on Artemis II observed parts of the moon humans had never seen before. Their findings provide a scientific baseline — and sense of wonder — for future missions.

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Bettendorf to hold snowplow naming contest

Ahead of its annual Public Works Day, the Bettendorf Public Works Department is holding a snowplow naming contest.

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Larry Keel's Electric Larry Land, April 18

Delivering simultaneously gritty and suave original music applied to an electric format, the Larry Keel’s Electric Larry Land headlines an April 18 concert at Davenport's Redstone Room, the outfit praised by C-ville Weekly for "doing for bluegrass what Hendrix did for rock, what Miles did for jazz – exploring the unchartered possibilities, defying the limitations of a deeply established musical form."

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

“Up Close with Violins of Hope,” April 18

On April 18, guests of Davenport's Figge Art Museum are invited to experience powerful masterpieces paired with emotionally resonant works embodying remembrance and resilience, the concert event Up Close with Violins of Hope boasting the exquisite musicianship of Quad City Symphony Orchestra members Hillary Kingsley and Erik Rohde on violin, Nick Munagian on viola, and Hannah Holman on cello.

WVIK Congressional Democrats raise alarm over Trump's comments on Iran WVIK

Congressional Democrats raise alarm over Trump's comments on Iran

Dozens of Congressional Democrats raised alarm Tuesday over President Trump's rhetoric about Iran. Most Republican lawmakers have been silent.

WVIK ICE acknowledges it is using powerful spyware WVIK

ICE acknowledges it is using powerful spyware

In a letter sent last week, ICE's top official indicated to members of Congress the agency is using a spyware tool to intercept encrypted messages of fentanyl traffickers.

KWQC TV-6 KWQC TV-6

Scammers selling land they don’t own, sheriff’s office says

The scammers claim to be out of state or overseas and may provide fake documents to appear more legitimate, the sheriff’s office said.

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Flatfoot 56, April 18

Boasting the talents of Tobin Bawinkel (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Kyle Bawinkel (bass, vocals), Dan Alfonsi (drums) and Josh Robieson (bagpipes, mandolin), the Chicago-based Celtic-punk musicians of Flatfoot 56 return to the Quad Cities on April 18, their headlining engagement at Davenport's Raccoon Motel sure to fill the Davenport venue with what IndieVision Music called “their rambunctious style that their fans have come to love.”

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Temptress, April 19

With Doom Charts raving about the ensemble's "dueling male/female vocals, killer riffs, and ... element of looming danger," the touring rockers of Temptress headline an April 19 concert at Davenport's Raccoon Motel, their 2023 recording SEE hailed by mxdawn's Sierra Light as "an album that is sure to leave a lasting impression."

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

R.A.P. Ferreira, April 23

With Pitchfork magazine praising the musician's 2020 recording Purple Moonlight Pages for its "shifty rhythms, twinkly brass, and keys," Wisconsin-based rapper, poet, and producer Rory Allen Philip Ferreira – performing under his stage moniker R.A.P. Ferriera – headlines an April 23 concert at Davenport's Raccoon Motel, the artist's recent professional offerings including the 2024 album OUTSTANDING UNDERSTANDING and last year's collaborative studio album The Night Green Side of It, performed with Kenny Segal.

OurQuadCities.com East Moline's former Hoffman School may become housing OurQuadCities.com

East Moline's former Hoffman School may become housing

The site of a former school building in East Moline that has been closed for decades may soon see new life as affordable housing. MetroRock Housing Connection is working with the East Moline School District 37 to acquire the former Hoffman school building in East Moline for housing development. The school has been closed since [...]

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Alash, April 18

Internationally acclaimed throat singers whose American credits include touring with Béla Fleck & the Flecktones to promote the Grammy-winning album Jingle All the Way (featuring the Russian talents as guest artists), the musicians of Alash make an eagerly awaited return to Rock Island's Rozz-Tox on April 18, the trio noted for their subtle infusion of modern influences into traditional folk music.

River Cities' Reader River Cities' Reader

Heads in Motion: A Talking Heads Tribute, April 18

A Quad Cities-based tribute act dedicated to free-spirited and energetic concert experiences from the Stop Making Sense era, the tour de force of musicians known as Heads in Motion play Rock Island's RIBCO on April 18, show with the 10-piece ensemble celebrating Oscar, Grammy, and Tony Award winner David Byrne and his iconic rock outfit Talking Heads.

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Bettendorf man gets 17.5 years for child sexual abuse images, videos

A 26-year-old Bettendorf man has been sentenced to 17.5 years in federal prison following a conviction for receiving and distributing illegal child sexual abuse material.

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“An Evening with Suzy Bogguss,” April 18

Its headliner a native of Aledo, Illinois, who became one of the most acclaimed female country singers of the 1980s and '90s, An Evening with Suzy Bogguss enjoys an April 18 performance at Galesburg's Orpheum Theatre, the artist a living legend who earned eight Top 10 hits in the 20th century before exploring new influences – including jazz, Western swing, and the Bakersfield sound – during the current one.

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512: The Selena Experience, April 23

Performing all of the artist's hits including "Como La Flor," "Amor Prohibido," "Si Una Vez," and "Bidi Bidi Bom Bom," the tribute talents of 512: The Selena Experience bring their tour to Galesburg's Orpheum Theatre on April 23, the group having played for the Chicago Bulls and United States Marine Corps in Okinawa, Japan, and the show a dynamic touring celebration of the legacy and dance-tastic hits of the late, great pop and Tejano chanteuse Selena.

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“Peace in the Valley: A Gospel Tribute to Johnny Cash & Elvis Presley,” April 18

With the concert event's list of inspiring songs including “How Great Thou Art,” “Swing Down Sweet Chariot,” “It Was Jesus,” and “I’ll Fly Away,” Peace in the Valley: A Gospel Tribute to Johnny Cash & Elvis Presley will enjoy an April 18 performance at Mt. Carroll's Timber Lake Playhouse, showcased singer Jonathan Lyons creating an evening of timeless music filled with hope, reflection, and peace.

KWQC TV-6  Tuesday’s adoptable pet: Meet Dozer KWQC TV-6

Tuesday’s adoptable pet: Meet Dozer

Meet Dozer! A 1-year-old hound mix who is full of adventure, according to the Clinton Humane Society.

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“The Highwaymen Live,” April 18

With the show chockful of upbeat, honky-tonk hits including "Ring of Fire," "Dukes of Hazard," and "On the Road Again," the tribute talents of The Highway Men Live land at Maquoketa's Ohnward Fine Arts Center on April 18, the ensemble having performed country-music to millions of fans around the country, and emerging as perhaps the greatest country-music super-group in America.

OurQuadCities.com Bernadette Brustkern named Davenport Schools' Executive Director of Learning and Results OurQuadCities.com

Bernadette Brustkern named Davenport Schools' Executive Director of Learning and Results

Davenport Community School District has a new Executive Director of Learning and Results. The district selected Bernadette “Bernie” Brustkern as the District’s new Executive Director of Learning and Results, pending Board approval. Brustkern has nearly 20 years of experience in education and brings extensive expertise in teaching, instructional leadership and curriculum development. Brustkern began her [...]

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“Very Still & Hard to See,” April 23 through 26

With author Steve Yockey's work hailed by LA Weekly as a "series of haunted tales ... strung together with expert eeriness," the creepy vignettes of Very Still & Hard to See enjoy an April 23 through 26 staging at Bettendorf's Scott Community College, Stage Scene LA adding that Yockey's presentation is "the theatrical equivalent of Disneyland’s Space Mountain: i.e. equal parts excitement, terror, and glee."