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Dardis said he thinks legislators from unaffected parts of the state will support funding for flood recovery. "All I had to do was live it and see it from day to day," Dardis said. Olson said he expects the support of legislators from western Iowa and parts of the state unaffected by floods because it's essential to the state's economic survival. Horn agreed but said he doesn't expect legislators to simply throw money at the problem. Horn described some neighborhoods near downtown Cedar Rapids as a ghost town, "where you go for blocks and no one's living there, the windows are busted out, the basements have fallen in." Horn said he will consider this legislative session a success if by next fall there are people living in those houses
-- and paying income and property taxes. "This has a state impact, too," Horn said. "When people have lost jobs and no income, they're not paying sales tax, they're not paying property tax." So more than six months after the floods washed out swaths of southeast Iowa, Olson and Horn said it will be the responsibility of legislators from those areas to put flood recovery at the top of the state's agenda. "I think that's really going to be the main role of legislators from disaster-affected communities," Olson said. "Talking about the needs that are still pressing, and what the consequences are, long-term, of not meeting those needs." ___ On the Net: Rebuild Iowa Office: http://www.rio.iowa.gov/
[Associated
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