ADVERTISEMENT

In today’s episode of “Iowa’s Race to the Bottom”. . .

torbee

HR King
Gold Member
The Republicans are working hard to make the state’s hotels dirty and unsafe.

Bill eliminating regular health and safety inspections of hotels and motels in Iowa passes​

by Paul BrennanMar 20, 2024
https://littlevillagemag.com/bill-e...-and-motels-in-iowa-passes/?share=reddit&nb=1

motel-iowacity-emcclatchey.jpg

The Iowa Senate gave final approval on Tuesday to a bill that addresses the failure of the Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals and Licensing’s (DIAL) decade-long failure to follow state law and inspect hotels and motels once every two years by eliminating the law requiring those inspections.

HF 2426 repeals the biennial hotel inspection requirement, and instead requires a property only be inspected “pon receipt of a verified complaint signed by a guest of a hotel and stating facts indicating the place is in an insanitary condition.” This is what has already been occurring for the last 10 years.

DIAL stopped conducting the mandatory inspections in 2014, moving to a system where it conducts an inspection when a new hotel or motel opens, and after that, only in response to a complaint being filed. DIAL never publicized that change, and its decision not to follow state law didn’t become public knowledge until October 2022 when it was uncovered by Clark Kauffman of the Iowa Capital Dispatch.

DIAL Director Larry Johnson told Kauffman he couldn’t explain why the department made the decision to stop routine inspection, because it occurred during the Branstad administration and was in place when Johnson was appointed by Gov. Kim Reynolds in 2019. Johnson continued the practice in place when he took over, rather than follow Iowa Code.

Once Gov. Reynolds signs HF 2426 into law, Iowa Code will be changed to accommodate DIAL’s preferred practices.

During the floor debate on the bill in the House last month, Rep. Jeff Cooling pointed out that it’s “impossible to say what issues have gone undetected in Iowa’s uninspected hotels” since DIAL stopped routine inspection. The Cedar Rapids Democrat then read off a list of problems DIAL had reported in the inspections it has conducted in recent years. The list contained such health and safety violations as broken smoke detectors and bed bug infestations.

Rep. Craig Johnson, a Republican from Independence and the bill’s manager in the House, conceded that all the examples Cooling listed were real problems, but suggested market forces were more effective at making hotels comply with health and safety laws.


“I’m not sure where these hotels are at and those do sound horrible, yep,” Johnson said. “But I think in the big picture of things, those hotels that are operating like that, their clients probably aren’t returning. I’ve had bad experiences in hotels, out of state — I don’t go back. That is my consumer choice.”

The bill’s floor manager in the Senate, Republican Sen. Carrie Koelker of Dyerville, took a similar if slightly more upbeat approach to assuring her colleagues the businesses can handle their own problems.

“We need to have our hotels step up and take responsibility for their reputation, their bedbug problems, their own communities,” Koelker said on Tuesday.

Sen. Bill Dozler, a Waterloo Democrat, suggested a different solution to the inspections shortfall, one that would require DIAL to follow existing state law.


“I know that our inspectors are overworked,” he said. “Let’s add some inspectors.”

HF 2426 passed the Senate with just Republican support. One Republican, Sen. Sen. Rocky DeWitt of Lawton, joined all the chamber’s Democrats in opposing the bill. It passed the House last month on a party-line vote. It now goes to Gov. Reynolds for her signature.


 
Yeah, it pretty much does. Better than any other system known the mankind, actually.
The issue is that the “market” in this case the consumer may not be educated to look for issues. Do the smoke detectors work? Do you check those? Carbon monoxide detectors? Does the sprinkler system work? Are the exits not blocked? Does the fire alarm system work?

All of those things and dozens of others are examples of things a consumer cannot or does not look for in a hotel. The only way you find out is if there is a tragedy. Then the free market doesn’t matter if someone is incinerated in a fire.

One of the functions of a government is to ensure and protect the safety of the citizens. Republicans seem to think this duty is something that can be easily abdicated if it in any way inconveniences business or results in spending for inspections.
 
Or state working to allow the market to police this sort of thing instead of government inspectors. The market is typically the best at weeding out the weak.
Yes, the old “Foxes do a better job guarding the henhouse” argument.

I knew some dolt would throw that old chestnut out 😂
 
The Republicans are working hard to make the state’s hotels dirty and unsafe.

Bill eliminating regular health and safety inspections of hotels and motels in Iowa passes​

by Paul BrennanMar 20, 2024
https://littlevillagemag.com/bill-e...-and-motels-in-iowa-passes/?share=reddit&nb=1

motel-iowacity-emcclatchey.jpg

The Iowa Senate gave final approval on Tuesday to a bill that addresses the failure of the Iowa Department of Inspections, Appeals and Licensing’s (DIAL) decade-long failure to follow state law and inspect hotels and motels once every two years by eliminating the law requiring those inspections.

HF 2426 repeals the biennial hotel inspection requirement, and instead requires a property only be inspected “pon receipt of a verified complaint signed by a guest of a hotel and stating facts indicating the place is in an insanitary condition.” This is what has already been occurring for the last 10 years.

DIAL stopped conducting the mandatory inspections in 2014, moving to a system where it conducts an inspection when a new hotel or motel opens, and after that, only in response to a complaint being filed. DIAL never publicized that change, and its decision not to follow state law didn’t become public knowledge until October 2022 when it was uncovered by Clark Kauffman of the Iowa Capital Dispatch.

DIAL Director Larry Johnson told Kauffman he couldn’t explain why the department made the decision to stop routine inspection, because it occurred during the Branstad administration and was in place when Johnson was appointed by Gov. Kim Reynolds in 2019. Johnson continued the practice in place when he took over, rather than follow Iowa Code.

Once Gov. Reynolds signs HF 2426 into law, Iowa Code will be changed to accommodate DIAL’s preferred practices.

During the floor debate on the bill in the House last month, Rep. Jeff Cooling pointed out that it’s “impossible to say what issues have gone undetected in Iowa’s uninspected hotels” since DIAL stopped routine inspection. The Cedar Rapids Democrat then read off a list of problems DIAL had reported in the inspections it has conducted in recent years. The list contained such health and safety violations as broken smoke detectors and bed bug infestations.

Rep. Craig Johnson, a Republican from Independence and the bill’s manager in the House, conceded that all the examples Cooling listed were real problems, but suggested market forces were more effective at making hotels comply with health and safety laws.


“I’m not sure where these hotels are at and those do sound horrible, yep,” Johnson said. “But I think in the big picture of things, those hotels that are operating like that, their clients probably aren’t returning. I’ve had bad experiences in hotels, out of state — I don’t go back. That is my consumer choice.”

The bill’s floor manager in the Senate, Republican Sen. Carrie Koelker of Dyerville, took a similar if slightly more upbeat approach to assuring her colleagues the businesses can handle their own problems.

“We need to have our hotels step up and take responsibility for their reputation, their bedbug problems, their own communities,” Koelker said on Tuesday.

Sen. Bill Dozler, a Waterloo Democrat, suggested a different solution to the inspections shortfall, one that would require DIAL to follow existing state law.


“I know that our inspectors are overworked,” he said. “Let’s add some inspectors.”

HF 2426 passed the Senate with just Republican support. One Republican, Sen. Sen. Rocky DeWitt of Lawton, joined all the chamber’s Democrats in opposing the bill. It passed the House last month on a party-line vote. It now goes to Gov. Reynolds for her signature.




Is this worse than packing hotels with filthy, unvaccinated ILLEGALS?
 
Honestly I don't really care on this one. It's pretty obvious what hotels are questionable and those that are not. And when in doubt, we the people are great inspectors. This is one of the most reviewed sectors of commerce. Get back to me when inspectors start shutting down places with 4.8 star ratings that have been fooling us. Otherwise I feel ill trust the masses to steer me in the right direction vs one person's opinion. The roach infested motel with a 1.8 rating on Google and reviews reporting heroine needles come standard in every room? I don't need an inspector to tell me not to stay there.

Streamline the process to instead to follow up in a timely fashion on legitimate complaints instead of just going through the motions of those checklist annual inspections that everyone prepares for anyways. Unless things changed they're not random surprise visits anyways.
 
Honestly I don't really care on this one. It's pretty obvious what hotels are questionable and those that are not. And when in doubt, we the people are great inspectors. This is one of the most reviewed sectors of commerce. Get back to me when inspectors start shutting down places with 4.8 star ratings that have been fooling us. Otherwise I feel ill trust the masses to steer me in the right direction vs one person's opinion. The roach infested motel with a 1.8 rating on Google and reviews reporting heroine needles come standard in every room? I don't need an inspector to tell me not to stay there.

Streamline the process to instead to follow up in a timely fashion on legitimate complaints instead of just going through the motions of those checklist annual inspections that everyone prepares for anyways. Unless things changed they're not random surprise visits anyways.
What if you can only afford the hotel with a 1.8 rating? Thats all you can afford. Or that’s the only room after a snowstorm? Shouldn’t the state ensure that the smoke detectors work?
 
Kim Reynolds could remind Iowans to please be kind to kittens, puppies and the elderly and the libs would be outraged that she’s taking the focus away from homeless veterans.

Not all veterans, mind you, just the good kind that have had their guns confiscated.
 
Kim Reynolds could remind Iowans to please be kind to kittens, puppies and the elderly and the libs would be outraged that she’s taking the focus away from homeless veterans.

Not all veterans, mind you, just the good kind that have had their guns confiscated.
Like I understand what these words all mean by themselves, but strung together like this is just jibberish
 
What if you can only afford the hotel with a 1.8 rating? Thats all you can afford. Or that’s the only room after a snowstorm? Shouldn’t the state ensure that the smoke detectors work?
I see smoke detectors quoted in the article but I call bullshit on that. Fire departments do their own inspections regularly on commercial places for necessary safety items such as that.
 
The issue is that the “market” in this case the consumer may not be educated to look for issues. Do the smoke detectors work? Do you check those? Carbon monoxide detectors? Does the sprinkler system work? Are the exits not blocked? Does the fire alarm system work?

All of those things and dozens of others are examples of things a consumer cannot or does not look for in a hotel. The only way you find out is if there is a tragedy. Then the free market doesn’t matter if someone is incinerated in a fire.

One of the functions of a government is to ensure and protect the safety of the citizens. Republicans seem to think this duty is something that can be easily abdicated if it in any way inconveniences business or results in spending for inspections.

Cmon, it's not like there's ever been hotel fires caused by things no one would/could look for that killed a bunch of people.
 
Honestly I don't really care on this one. It's pretty obvious what hotels are questionable and those that are not. And when in doubt, we the people are great inspectors. This is one of the most reviewed sectors of commerce. Get back to me when inspectors start shutting down places with 4.8 star ratings that have been fooling us. Otherwise I feel ill trust the masses to steer me in the right direction vs one person's opinion. The roach infested motel with a 1.8 rating on Google and reviews reporting heroine needles come standard in every room? I don't need an inspector to tell me not to stay there.

Streamline the process to instead to follow up in a timely fashion on legitimate complaints instead of just going through the motions of those checklist annual inspections that everyone prepares for anyways. Unless things changed they're not random surprise visits anyways.
So poor people deserve to have to stay in squalor and unsafe conditions if they can’t afford a 4 star hotel?

Seems like an asshole position.
 
I see smoke detectors quoted in the article but I call bullshit on that. Fire departments do their own inspections regularly on commercial places for necessary safety items such as that.
The insurance carrier for the hotel does require that so I think the alarms are okay. It’s the creepy crawly bugs and dirty bathrooms that give me concerns.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT