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About Us
Lynn Fallon
was a stay-at-home mom for 14 years and
was active in church, community and school
activities during that time. She has
three children: Jessica Heuss, a veterinary
medicine student at Iowa State University; Alec
Heuss, a student at DMACC-Urban in Des Moines;
and, Samantha Heuss, a student at DMACC in
Ankeny. In 1996 she attended Grand View
College part-time, eventually moved to
full-time and received her bachelor's degree in
religion in December, 2002. She has also
done post-graduate work in Theology at the
University of Notre Dame.
In mid-2003,
she was hired as the executive director of The
Connection Cafe', a volunteer-operated
free-meal program for the homeless, low-income
and working poor of Des Moines. This
ministry was an ecumenical effort of four
downtown churches working to address the needs
of the poor. The program began by
providing lunch three days a week, and
increased to four meals a week after one
year. There are approximately 30
organizations involved with over 200 people
volunteering each month to provide and serve
the meals. In 2006 she left to work in
politics on Ed Fallon's gubernatorial campaign
as press secretary and scheduler. When Ed
was defeated in the primary, she went to work
for Denise O'Brien, the Democratic candidate
for Secretary of Agriculture, and helped
several other candidates throughout the
state. In 2008 she was the campaign
manager in Fallon's bid for Congress.
Lynn is motivated by her passion for
justice and the common good. She is
especially interested in working with others to
restore the resilience and vitality to local
neighborhoods and communities through
sustainable practices.
Ed
Fallon attended Marlboro College in
Vermont for two years, after which he traveled
the world for six years. He worked on two
farms in Nova Scotia, hiked the Pilgrims Way in
southern England, stayed for three weeks with
Carmelite nuns at a monastery in Cairo, spent
time on a kibbutz in Israel, and served as a
Franciscan Volunteer on an Indian reservation
in northern Wisconsin. In the mid 1980s,
he attended Drake University, where he received
a degree in religious studies.
From 1986 to 1992,
Ed worked in the peace movement. He
organized the Iowa stretch of The Great Peace
March and founded a local peace group to work
on a nuclear test ban, reducing military
spending, and providing instruction in conflict
management in the schools. Well-versed in the
writings of Mahatma Gandhi, Ed traveled to
India in 1995 to study ways in which modern
Indians continue to use Gandhi’s ideas of
non-violence to address contemporary social and
political problems.
From 1993 to 2006,
Ed served seven terms in the Iowa Legislature,
representing residents of downtown Des Moines,
the surrounding neighborhoods and the City’s
northeast side. Ed’s focus as a lawmaker was to
champion the needs of constituency groups
treated unfairly by government or neglected by
the majority of policy makers. He also
became a leader on land-use, the environment,
reforming tax increment financing (TIF), and
opposing corporate welfare.
In 1998, Ed helped
found 1000 Friends of Iowa, a land-use and
anti-urban sprawl group. He served as executive
director for five years. In 2006, he ran
for governor in a four-way Democratic Primary,
receiving 26% of the vote – far more than the
5% - 10% pundits predicted. In 2008, he
ran for Congress.
Ed is an
accomplished musician on many instruments and
speaks French and Spanish. Ed was raised
Catholic and considers himself staunchly
ecumenical. He lived in the inner-city of
Des Moines for nineteen years and now resides
in the Sherman Hill neighborhood. He is
an avid gardener and for many years grew much
of his family’s food on land reclaimed from a
clay parking lot. He also established a
community garden in the inner-city and
maintains strong connections to his family’s
farm in Ireland, where he organized the
planting of 25,000 oak trees in 1999.
Ed’s
passion for justice inspires him, and his life
is committed to working for progressive reform,
both within and outside the political
process. While Ed feels he has been able
to accomplish much during his years as a state
lawmaker and through other venues of public
service, what gives him the most satisfaction
is when someone says, "Years ago, you helped me
and my family with a problem and our lives are
better for it."
I'M for Iowa
is a partnership set up by Lynn and Ed in
2006. The business structure provides a
broader scope for social and political activism
than is allowed under a non-profit
structure. I'M for Iowa is supported by
people who share Ed and Lynn's vision for
progressive reform and who want to invest in
their work.
