Ty Rushing

Ty Rushing is the former Chief Political Correspondent for Iowa Starting Line. He is a trail-blazing veteran Iowa journalist, an Emmy-nominated filmmaker, and co-founder and president of the Iowa Association of Black Journalists.


Latest from Ty Rushing

  • News

    Chuck Grassley’s Political Career Is Older Than Barbie, The Grammys, And More

    Chuck Grassley turned 89 on Sept. 17 and, if re-elected, Iowa’s senior US senator would be 95 at the end of his next term and become the second-oldest person in history to hold that position. Grassley was first elected to the Iowa House in 1958—Grassley’s son, Robin, was 2 years old at this time, and…


  • News

    Paralympics Basketball Star Josh Turek Takes A Shot At Representing Council Bluffs

    Josh Turek represented America on the international stage and now he’s ready to represent his hometown in the Iowa Legislature. The 43-year-old, two-time gold medal-winning Paralympian was born and raised in Council Bluffs and is the Democratic candidate for Iowa House District 20, covering northwest Council Bluffs and all of Carter Lake. Iowa House District…


  • News

    How The Right’s Hatred Of Electric Vehicles Is Growing In Iowa

    Over the last few months, the Starting Line team has noticed an interesting trend in Iowa social media: Stories about electric vehicles drive huge engagement and draw intense debate among supporters and detractors, mostly on Facebook. And while wild comment threads on Facebook stories is nothing new, the sheer ferocity on EV-related stories, even if…


  • News

    Despite Outcry, Zearing Won’t Fire Clerk Who Cost Town Almost $200,000

    Zearing City Clerk Karen Davis, who filed the city’s budget almost four months late and blamed it on Juneteenth, will not lose her job despite pressure from residents on city officials to dismiss her. This decision was announced Wednesday during a special Zearing City Council meeting; this was the third special Zearing City Council meeting…


  • News

    Explainer: The Iowa Law That Requires Pieper Lewis To Pay Her Abuser’s Family

    After finding out that Pieper Lewis, a 17-year-old sexual assault survivor from Des Moines who killed her rapist, would have to pay $150,000 in restitution to his family, thousands of people across the internet raised close to $400,000 to free her of a burden they felt was unjust. Pieper’s attorney argued during Tuesday’s sentencing that…


  • News

    Zearing, Iowa, Failed To Submit Budget, Residents Will Pay No Property Taxes

    Residents of Zearing, Iowa, won’t pay property taxes this fiscal year, but they aren’t exactly happy about it. “I hope the taxpayers in this town understand that, ‘yes,’ your taxes were reduced, ‘yay, we got some more money in our pockets,’’” said one Zearing woman sarcastically at Monday’s city council meeting. “…In the meantime, what’s…


  • News

    A Nazi Drove Around Des Moines On 9/11 In Swastika-Decorated U-Haul Truck

    A self-proclaimed Nazi drove around Des Moines on Sept. 11 in a U-Haul truck that he dubbed the “9/11 Hate Bus” with signage that blamed Jewish people for the terrorist attack. The truck had a Swastika flag specific to an Iowa Nazi group attached to the front of it and signage on the sides targeting…


  • News

    This City Was Voted Iowa’s Best Weekend Getaway

    In what some might consider a stunning upset, Des Moines and not Lake Okoboji is considered the weekend getaway destination of choice for Iowans, according to a poll conducted on behalf of Iowa Starting Line. According to the poll, 28% of respondents said Des Moines is their favorite weekend getaway followed by Northwest Iowa’s Lake…


  • News

    How ARPA Funds Will Help This Northwest Iowa City Build A New Water Tower

    If all goes well, the city of Sheldon will have a new $3.5 million water tower up and running by June 2024, almost a decade after Public Works Director Todd Uhl first mentioned the need to the city council. For years, the new water tower was a mainstay on Sheldon’s five-year capital improvement plan but…


  • News

    Rushing: Why I Needed Student Loans To Go To School

    Depending on your primary news sources, I’m either an “elitist” or one of the 429,000 Iowans burdened with a collective $13.3 billion in student loan debt who will have a portion of it forgiven by an executive order from President Joe Biden. Biden announced Wednesday that up to $20,000 in federal student loan debt will…