Ross Nusser is a city council candidate running in the District C special election on March 4th. If you live in Iowa City you are eligible to vote in this election. KRUI staff members Amman Hassan, Amanda Moy, Julia Wilson, John Glab, and Will Clair got the time to interview Nusser live on the radio on February 26th to ask about campaign policies and his campaign progress.
This interview has been edited for clarity.
[Editor’s Note (3/3/25): The previous Editor’s Note said that we did not have access to the email sent from Maka Pilcher requesting Temple Hiatt to rescind her endorsement of Oliver Weilein. We have now gained access to this email through a Freedom of Information Act request. The entire contents of the email are included underneath the previous Editor’s Note in this article]
Will Clair: Alright, this is KRUI, and we are live here with Ross Nusser, City Council candidate.
Ross Nusser: Hello, and thanks for having me.
Will: let’s just get started here. You co-founded Urban Acres Real Estate and take part in your family business, Hans Jewelers. You also have worked with Successful Living and Housing Fellowship. What have you learned from these experiences and how they shaped your ability to serve on city council?
Ross: Yeah, so I love Urban Acres and I was one of the co-founders of Urban Acres Real Estate. It’s, sorry, I’m just distracted there. I love being one of the co-founders of Urban Acres Real Estate. As we founded it, we wanted it to be a cooperative of agents and so that’s really what we’ve done. We now have 60 some or so agents. All of the offices in our building are equal size and we just split expenses. We’re passionate about the community. My family’s business has been in downtown Iowa City for a very long time. I am not a part of that. My brother, luckily, took the horns on that and he’s running it. Then, yes, I have pretty extensive non-profit experience that has really helped shape me.
Will: That’s great. It’s a family business and you were born and raised in Iowa City. Has that helped you with campaigning at all?
Ross: No, it has not. It’s been one of those things that’s been interesting. It’s helped with campaigning in the sense that I know a lot of people from growing up, and it’s been a wonderful experience because I’ve been able to connect with people who I haven’t seen for years, or people who I just hadn’t had a chance to connect with on the level that I’ve been able to. So, I’ve really enjoyed getting out and being able to reconnect to some people from my past and to new people, and just love experiencing our wonderful community.
Amanda Moy: What do you think are the top three emergent issues you plan to address when on City Council?
Ross: Yeah, so the top three issues are my platform. It’s affordable housing, it’s mental health, and it’s behavioral health, which includes substance abuse treatment.
Amanda: Yeah, Oliver Weilein also states on his website that affordable housing is a top priority for him. How do you think the two of you differ in approach?

Ross: Yeah, so I have 15 years of real estate experience. So, that 15 years of real estate experience will help inform my housing approach. Also, during the 15 years of real estate experience, I’ve been involved with affordable housing and the nonprofit sector for 14 of those 15 years. I will use my past experiences and things that I’ve learned along my past to help inform how the city can be responsible and deploy money toward affordable housing initiatives. We have a lot of money that we have the ability to deploy.
In the city, we have around $15 million, which is not insignificant, and we have so many nonprofits. One is just right up the street from where we’re where we’re recording this right now or, or where this is being aired at Old Brick Housing Trust Fund at Johnson County. That’s an organization that gives forgivable loans, zero interest loans, and low interest loans to organizations who will commit to building affordable housing units. It’s empowering programs like these that we have in our community, with real people in our community with real strategies and real solutions that are really working right now.
Amman Hassan: So, to the question of non-enforcement, we’re obviously like a blue bubble in a sea of red and a red federal government. Oliver has made it very clear he doesn’t plan to cooperate with some of the orders given down from above, whether they’d be anti-trans, anti-drag laws, or cooperating with ICE. You have stated you have different intentions, particularly because with the threat of losing funding for other projects we have that might also benefit those minority groups, how do you plan to address cooperation or non-enforcement with the state or federal level?
Ross: Yeah, no, I appreciate that. This is something where I have been cherry-picked and mischaracterized on this. I’ll try and make it succinct and clear to avoid the cherry-picking and mischaracterizing. The Daily Iowan, I had reiterated this to them earlier, but they also decided to not put this in, is that our vulnerable populations are under significant threat right now, as you just stated. We need to fight smart. We have to. We have to fight smart. If we don’t do that, if we don’t fight smart, then we risk a misstep that could backfire, and it could totally further endanger our most vulnerable populations. So, we absolutely have to do something about it, but we can’t be brash about it. We have to fight smart.
Amanda: Do you have any comments on the results of the special election primary, especially given that you have raised a lot more funds for your campaign than Oliver has?
Ross: Yeah, so I’m not sure how many funds Oliver has raised for his campaign. That’s been ambiguous to me, but the results of the special election were not ambiguous to me. It shows, you know, first of all, two moved on, and so I was able to survive that and move on. It shows that I have to work, you know, nothing is going to be given to you. You have to get on the treadmill the next day, go to work, try and work hard, push out your message. At the end of the day, it’s up to the voters to choose. It’s not up to me. I want to run to serve this community. I got stomped in the primary, and that’s totally okay. I’m up to the challenge to work, and to get the community activated and in tune with this election.
Amman: At one of the more recent campaign events, you and your constituency mentioned historical preservation. That was one of your top priorities. I’ve often heard, you know, preserving historic buildings as like a dog whistle for nimbyism, preventing affordable housing from being built, infrastructure, stuff like that. How does Iowa City’s historical preservation commission fit into your vision for Iowa City, and what is that relationship with your plan for affordable housing and urban development?
Ross: Yeah, so the first thing is, I said that I was… Can you repeat the first part of that? Because that statement didn’t ring true to me.
Amman: One of your last campaign events you mentioned historical preservation was one of your campaign’s priorities.
Ross: That’s not been one of my campaign priorities. My campaign priorities have been affordable housing, mental health and behavioral health initiatives. I happen to be passionate about affordable housing too just because I’m in real estate and I love real estate. So, affordable housing and historic preservation, they can go hand in hand. A great example of this, we just talked about it o thanks for bringing it up, Old Brick. Old Brick is an example of a building right up the street from here that kind of started the historic preservation in Iowa City. And Old Brick is what houses the Housing Trust Fund of Johnson County. So these historic buildings can absolutely be repurposed and Old Brick has a free breakfast program and has venues. It’s a wonderful repurpose and it allows us to maintain our history while still providing to vulnerable populations as well as the community as a whole.

Amanda: So your competitor, Oliver, has made the decision not to accept campaign donations and is instead encouraging people to donate to local causes and charities. Given that you are accepting donations, do you feel that you will feel an obligation to donors or that you will prioritize your donors causes more quid pro quo?
Ross: You know, it’s very bizarre. So, in campaigning we have to file these ethics reports, right? We just hit a filing period. And I saw prior to coming in here, it turns out that I have not been the only one who’s been raising money. I’ve not been the only one. The reporting period was done February 22nd. There are two people who reported. One was Oliver, and one was myself. Oliver has been accepting contributions since January 7th, so I think that me disclosing all of my interactions to the ethics committee appropriately is a sign of me wanting to follow the rules, me respecting the rules that we have in place, and certainly not hiding the contributions that I’ve gotten.
Amanda: Is it true that you have been critical of Oliver’s social media posts dating back to 2019?
Nusser: Yes, it’s irresponsible for me to see violence being propagated by a leader. As leaders, we influence culture, and it goes back to this argument where I so sincerely believe that Oliver is a nice person who wouldn’t so much as hurt a fly, but I don’t believe that the concept is understood that just because you might not hurt a fly doesn’t mean there isn’t an army of people right behind you eager to destroy that same fly.
Amanda: So to clarify, you do believe that publicly available information is fair to be brought forward so that voters can assess the character of a candidate.
Ross: Yes, I do.
Amanda: All right. Would you agree that one of the roles of City Council is to develop a strategic plan to outline the city’s vision, values and strategies?
Ross: Yeah.
Amanda: Would you also agree another important role is to determine how the city spends its money by adopting a budget?
Ross: Yes.
Amanda: Would you be willing to comment on how you accumulated almost $55,000 in unpaid property taxes?
Ross: Yeah, so not property taxes. This is, again, this is part of the misinformation is that I was contacted by multiple news sources that have received an anonymous tip, and it was a federal tax lien that has since been released. It goes back to 2018. So in 2018, I started my journey into recovery, and so I hit rock bottom and I went to treatment, and I knew that I needed to get my life back together. The thing about it, we need to destigmatize mental illness. It’s the shaming of the alcoholic, the shaming of the person who is depressed. This is just, it does not have a place in our society and we’re Iowa City. We love people, and we need to understand how to support people.
So yes, in 2018 I started my long journey in recovery, and I’m still not perfect. What that means though, what the journey in recovery means is that in 2018 I made a decision to stop drinking alcohol. You don’t get better overnight. It’s not something that happens. To think so or to proclaim so would just be false. It has taken years, and I still go into the rooms. It’s very important for me, and I love, I love my recovery journey, but you don’t start off and make the decision all of a sudden you’re better. That’s not how it works. So during 2018, that was a very difficult period of my life, and I’ve had other very difficult periods of my life too. I don’t shy away from it. I don’t want to relive it either. I don’t see any way how that has anything to do with the city budget.
Amanda: I would like to confirm you have agreed that important roles on City Council are to establish a budget and work on a strategic plan. Due to both this unpaid tax lien and-
Ross: Not unpaid.
Amanda: Due to the taxes you were sued by American Express on credit card debt due to these issues. A history of not establishing a plan to address the lack of these payments in a reasonable time frame, you know, if you couldn’t manage your finances on a personal level, why should you be trusted to manage finances on behalf of the city?

Ross: I mean, this is another point where it is unrealistic for someone to think of someone who’s going through substance use disorder that they’re going to have their life together. So, the assertion that I couldn’t manage my personal finances in 2018, I mean, that’s like saying, “How could an alcoholic not manage their life in the time that they were an alcoholic?” It’s not a fair question.
Amanda: So, say a tenant listed this as a reason for nonpayment of rent, would you evict them?
Ross: Oh, so I’d love to answer that because I’ve been in real estate for 15 years. How many evictions do you think I’ve done? I’ll just give you a guess.
Amanda: Maybe two.
Ross: Zero. Zero evictions. So, I don’t know how to evict a tenant.
Julia Wilson: Some tenants from around Iowa City have been receiving texts from their landlords encouraging them to vote for you. If the landlords believe that you best represent their interests, interests probably being profit, why should a tenant vote for you?
Ross: Well, why is the interest profit?
Julia: People are landlords, as their career, it’s to make money. That’s why people are landlords.
Ross: What’s the assertion behind that, can you rephrase that? I’m not understanding the layer.
Amman: Citizens are worried that there may be coercion involved with landlords asking their tenants or encouraging them to vote for you. I guess what we’re asking is were you aware that these landlords were communicating with them to make this encouragement, and can you address these concerns that there may be coercion or other elements involved?
Ross: I’m not aware of this at all. I can tell you that I’ve been in real estate for 15 years, and so I’ve been around a lot of real estate people. It probably doesn’t take a huge leap to think that if someone who is invested in real estate, that they might support the candidate who is also invested in real estate in the form of his career.

Julia: So if you had to choose values wise, who do you think you represent more, the landlords or the tenants?
Ross: If elected, I will represent all citizens of Iowa City.
Will: Looking at the city’s 2023-2028 strategic plan, outdoor spaces in the Iowa River are mentioned. Many people in the city are concerned about environmental pollution and the water quality of the city, especially given the fact that Iowa has the second highest and fastest rising cancer rate in the United States. Do you have any plans to address this?
Ross: Yeah, I can’t wait to be part of the conversation if I’m allowed. Since I’ve been a kid, I’ve grown up in Iowa City. Since I’ve been a kid, we’ve tried to revitalize our waterfront in a number of different ways, a number of different times. One time we tried to put sand and have a beach, but then the beach washed out. Another time, it was thought that maybe we could get some rapids going and have a small whitewater rapid course here. I’d love to see the Iowa River be a more prominent part of the community. I don’t know what that looks like. A lot of this ground around here is university owned, so I’m not sure exactly what the city can do, but I’d love to be part of the conversation.
Will: Would you possibly look into working with the university as a member of City Council?
Ross: Always the University of Iowa and Iowa City are two peas in a pod. You can’t have Iowa City without the university, and arguably you can’t have the university without Iowa City, or at least it’d be very hard.
Will: On your website, I also noticed that you had an endorsement from the director of the Community Inclusion Club. Could you talk about some of your time with them?
Ross: Yeah, Tom Braverman is who you’re referring to. I’ve known Tom my entire life, and he has been a wonderful para-educator and person in the community. I’ve really enjoyed just seeing him and the efforts that he’s made in the community and he’s really done a fantastic job.
Will: Would you also care to comment on your campaign manager provoking Oliver Weilein’s endorsers?
Ross: I don’t know. Who’s my campaign manager that you’re referring to and what provocation are you referring to?
Will: Let me find a name right here.
Ross: My campaign manager is my brother and my wife, so it’s one of those two that you’d be referring to.
Will: All right, well, we had a report that there was an alleged campaign manager reaching out to people who had endorsed Oliver and provoking them, Maka Pilcher.
Ross: Maka who is not my campaign manager. See this again, this is like the fifth piece of information that we’ve discussed in this short period of time that’s obviously false and based off of false pretense. I know Maka well. She has been helpful to me. She has been helpful to our campaign. She’s not my campaign manager and I’m not sure exactly what you’re referring to.
Amanda: We just have received a tip that Maka has been emailing multiple people who have endorsed Oliver, asking that they rescind their endorsement and also CC’d the county attorney and the sheriff on those emails.
Ross: That’s interesting. I mean, again, these tips are so fantastical. It’s amazing to me how much and how blown up this is getting and being made. And so, I don’t know what to say because I’ve never heard of that before.
[Editor’s Note: The claim about emails from Maka Pilcher asking Temple Hiatt to rescind an endorsement for Oliver Weilein have not been outrightly confirmed by KRUI. Johnson County Sheriff Brad Kunkel and Attorney Rachel Zimmerman were CC’d on the email. We filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the Johnson County Sheriff’s department, but were told that it was, “More difficult to fulfill a request for specific terms.” We are still looking for the exact content of this email.]


Julia: We can move on then. So, people feeling that their voice isn’t heard is a big issue in politics. If elected, how do you plan to make yourself available to constituents?
Ross: Yeah, so as I’ve said, after March 4th, I’d like to make myself available to anyone who wants to meet. As a city council member, you’re the closest link to government that people have, so I will have a lot of time after March 4th to focus on things other than my campaign. The time prior to March 4th is reserved for my campaign, but it’s Iowa City and I have a flexible job. I’d be able to meet with whomever would like to meet with me.
Amman: Thank you for speaking to us. Are there any upcoming events you’d like to make the public aware about? Or any ways they can contact you?
Ross: Hawk the vote on the 28th here at 4:30 PM I believe is when I get started at the Iowa Memorial Union.
John Glab: I just wanted to ask, with not talking to people before March 4th wouldn’t it be important for them to know your policies so they know what decision to make when it comes to the vote on Tuesday?
Ross: So, it’s not that I’m not talking to people, I’m talking to as many people as I can and as many people who are on the fence or who are really wanting to know information about this election. What I’m not doing is I am not engaging with or talking to people who are very obviously a part of my opponent’s campaign. I need to spend my time getting votes from my people in Iowa City and it is totally okay to have your choice of political preference, but it is one of those things that I need to be filling my calendar with my constituents and with events that can help me be put in front of people to get more constituents.
Julia: Who are your people because earlier you said you want to represent every single citizen of Iowa City?
Ross: My people are every single citizen of Iowa City. During this campaign, my people are people who are supportive of my campaign or wanting to learn more about my campaign in a way that is not totally defaming or derogatory toward myself.
Amanda: So when you say you want to fill your calendar with your constituents, are you referring to all of the people of Iowa City or are you selectively excluding people who have publicly endorsed Oliver but may be curious to talk to you as well?
Ross: No, if someone expresses a genuine curiosity and it doesn’t seem like it’s gonna be underhanded or again, in this interview by everyone in this room, the five in this room, I’ve received multiple questions that have just been straight out false to some degree. My people are absolutely all of Iowa City, if anyone wants to meet with me who genuinely has not made up their mind or has a question, they can contact me. For people who are part of the other campaigns who have questions about my policies, it’s a reasonable thing for them to be concerned or wondering about my policies. As I’ve stated repeatedly, they can certainly email me, and we can certainly give an email response.

Will: Well, with those concerns, do you have any plans to address the rumors being spread about you?
Ross: No, rumors are rumors. I don’t need to fall into that category. It’s not a productive conversation. It does not advance the ideals of mental and behavioral health. The whole idea is that social media right now is such a toxic, toxic place, and we don’t need to model that toxicity and propagate it further. So on social media, we have a policy where if you’re throwing a comment out there that is derogatory, defaming, if it’s trying to paint a narrative that is other than true, then there’s no place for it right there. If I’m elected to public office, the rules totally change there. In public office, you want to be able to hear, you want to be able to provide an outlet, but right now, and throughout this campaign, there has been so many rumors, so much false information that I don’t want them to use my platform. Them being people who are not supportive of me, to use my platform to try and tear me down further with lies.
Amanda: Do you have any message for people who do support your campaign, people who do support and endorse you? Do you have a message for them, specifically to those who are making derogatory and insulting comments towards Oliver, especially on social media?
Ross: Yeah, so I mean, I think that I don’t know what comments you’re referring to. So, I can’t answer that specifically because it’s a very broad statement there. What I can say is that we need to tone it down, you guys. This is Iowa City. We love each other. Come on. Like this is something where, especially this race, it’s crazy how negative it has gotten. So, what I would just say to everyone is empathy goes a long way. Empathy, understanding, and at the end of the day, these are two people, myself included, who are trying to do a service to the community, and I think that that’s lost. Oliver’s work in this community is also very valuable. I mean, the whole fact that either of us is being demonized is not something that I’m about. I’m not about shoving people’s face in the dirt. I’m about building people up.
Amanda: In our interview with Oliver, he made a point purposefully to say that, you know, he used the term, you are not dumb, and he was very kind and supportive of you. Given that you’re saying this is Iowa City, we need to be empathetic towards each other, do you have a comment on the fact that you said there’s no place for Oliver’s kind of extremism in our local politics?
Ross: I don’t remember making that exact quote, but I do remember talking about the extremism of posts that he made. There’s no place for that in our politics. So, Oliver has made the decision based on honesty, wanting to have the perception of honesty by not taking these posts down. Again, to me, these posts are just so negative and so destructive, and I just wish he’d take them down. Unless he still wants to stand behind them and stand behind the violent and just negative vitriol that’s in there. I don’t personally think that’s productive. I don’t personally think that that’s what’s gonna get us into our solution. We have a very tough four years coming, and I don’t think we can fight negativity with anything other than positivity.
Amanda: I understand that your personal opinion may be not agreeing with Oliver’s old social media posts, the most commonly cited ones I’ve seen are his posts from 2019 to 2020. But given that you have also had your own struggles in the past, do you think it’s fair to keep talking about Oliver’s social media posts and political decisions from years ago?
Ross: So, it’s interesting that you are now drawing a comparison between my recovery journey and my sobriety to social media posts and a long pattern of that. In 2018 I started my journey of recovery and sobriety, and I’m still evolving that. It’s still very true to me. I still do things every day to reiterate and to help my recovery. Oliver’s done the same thing with the social media since 2019 or whenever the first post was. Consistently he has posted negative and violent photos as recently as December of this past year. That is just not compatible with what I think, and again if you don’t agree with me that’s okay. I’m not saying that Oliver is a bad guy for doing this. I’m saying that as a leader this is not something that should be in the place of leadership. This is not something that we should promote as a community. Violence is not something that we should tolerate as a community.
Amanda: To be fair, I was not trying to directly compare substance recovery and Oliver’s social media, I was more so pointing to the fact that people can grow and change. People can evolve since 2019.
Ross: Correct, but if you show that consistent pattern where it’s still coming, where those images still kept going through Twitter or whatever the source is, through the end of last year from 2019, that is evolving in a particular way. I mean, it’s evolving to keep that belief alive, to hold that belief true, to not disown that belief, just like I don’t disown my substance use. It’s very much a part of me. It’s very much a core. Regardless of how it was intended to come out, it did come out that way. This is part of destigmatizing mental illness. I really do appreciate the opportunity to talk about this, to talk about the struggles in recovery and in mental illness. I am not the only person out there who’s affected by substance use disorder or mental illness, and it doesn’t discriminate. It goes across all socioeconomic spectrums. This has been a good opportunity to show what this journey looks like in part, where it can lead you, and how it can inform your life and life choices.

Glab: What are your thoughts and feelings on the recent Iowa legislator bills that have been passed through subcommittees that strip civil rights away from trans people?
Ross: Yeah, it’s so disappointing for Iowa. I mean, Iowa, we used to be a leader in civil rights, and now we’re a leader in the backwards movements of civil rights. It’s abhorrent, it’s awful, and we have to, as a community, figure out ways to fight smart.
Glab: Also, do you see trans people as part of your constituents to vote for you, or where do you see them as?
Ross: Absolutely. 100% unequivocally, absolutely.
Glab: What have been some of like the things that they’ve expressed to you as you were campaigning in terms of like their wants and needs.
Ross: I’ve heard a lot of personal stories, and the personal stories, just again, bringing it back to recovery, that’s how we relate our journey. So, I’ve heard many personal stories that have intimately related their journey. I’m not at liberty to share those stories on the air. It wouldn’t be respectful for me, but I can tell you that I have a deep sense of empathy. They are so very much a vital part of our community, and I fully intend on protecting them as much as I can.
Glab: With these bills kind of seem more likely than not to go through, what are you going to do if you were elected to City Council to protect the trans members in our community?
Ross: We’re gonna look at them, we’re gonna analyze them, them being the bills, and we’re gonna fight smart. Like I said, we are going to be resourceful, we are going to be thoughtful, we are gonna look into the future, we are gonna look at possible implications, any sort of action that could happen that would either go against us or for us, and we will make the best possible decision at the time. We will make sure that we are fighting for the needs of our most marginalized communities.
Glab: I know you’re not on City Council yet and probably haven’t fully fleshed out ways to do that, but do you have any ideas of how you would do that, I guess looking from an outside-in perspective at the moment.
Ross: Yeah, I’ve not been on City Council as you put, but I have been on leadership roles, and I have had to be in places where tough decisions are needed to be talked about and consensus is needed to be gained. So, this position is one of seven council members. This is just this is something where I will collaborate with my council members. We will figure out how to best address it at the time. I think that it’s hard to do anything and hard to make commitments to anything. Also, part of it is giving away the playbook, right? Like we want to fight smart. We want to be people who can actually protect, actually make a difference.
Amman: Do you have any ideas of what you would do in the present for when these bills pass and what you would do in the future?
Ross: So these bills have not passed, I’m not on council, and so I’m not sure.
Glab: Do you have ideas of what you would do though?
Ross: Collaborate.
Amman: Could you elaborate.
Ross: Collaborate with my fellow counselors.
Will: In addressing these questions, you’ve used the term fight smart a lot. Could you define that a little bit more?
Ross: Yeah, fighting smart, not taking it as anything other than what it is, seeing what’s coming at us, reacting in a way that’s responsible, evaluating what exactly is coming at us, and then figuring out what exactly our solutions can be. What are our options here? There are some things that we can do, there are some things that we can’t do. There are some things that we can do that draw more attention to us, there are some things that we can’t do that also draw more attention to us. So, fighting smart means fighting smart, it means looking, it means thinking before acting.
Will: Is there anything you would like to say to your constituents? Or possible constituents?
Ross: Thank you for listening. Please vote on March 4th.
Amanda: Is there any question we did not ask that you would have liked to have been asked?
Ross: I’m not sure, I think that we’ve covered a lot of a lot of the rumor mill. We’ve not talked a whole lot about the issues, we’ve not talked a whole lot about affordable housing or behavioral health but that’s okay, it seems like the rumor mill is what’s going to be the focus here and that’s okay with me and again I will be here at the Iowa Memorial Union on Friday.
Glab: All right. so, our old news director, Case Fenner, just sent me a text that he saw from somebody. Of course, this is all alleged, but we want to get your side of this. They said in October of 2023, as they were delivering beer to George’s bar in downtown Iowa City, there was a parking dispute. It looks like they alleged that you yelled at them and like chased them down. What do you have to say about that?
Ross: This is, again, obviously very much part of the rumor mill. What? I mean, if you have more context, but you just got a text, you walked out of the room, said, I need to vet this, come back in the room, and then say that? No, I’m on air. You’re wanting me to read something that you just vetted and react to it. Is that the question that you’re asking me?
Glab: Well yeah, it’s a Reddit post.
Ross: Oh, that makes it so much more credible. Thank gosh, it’s a Reddit post.
Glab: I mean, this is going to be going around, so if you want to just read through it, just to get ahead of it.
Amman: Thank you for tuning in to KRUI 89.7 FM Special Election. Thank you for listening.
Note: We do not speak on behalf of the University of Iowa or the Board of Regents.