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Board Of School Trustees Meeting Tuesday, May 30, 2023

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet for the regularly scheduled Board meeting Tuesday, May 30, 2023, at 5:30 PM in the Board Room of the EVSC Administration Building located at 951 Walnut Street, Evansville, IN. Board meetings can also be observed by tuning to EVSC’s radio station, 90.7 WPSR or live-streamed online at https://www.wpsrhd.com/.

Prior to the regularly scheduled Board meeting, three members of the Board, along with district administrators, will hold a Town Hall beginning at 5:00 PM. This Town Hall is for Vanderburgh County residents to speak directly with Board members in attendance about issues involving EVSC schools. The Town Hall will be held in the Technology and Innovation Center located at 951 Walnut Street, Evansville, IN. Members of the public who would like to attend the Town Hall should register by completing the Town Hall Registration Form located on our website at district.evscschools.com.

Indiana Educators Selected For Fellowship To Bring Creativity Into The Classroom 

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(INDIANAPOLIS) Today, the Indiana Arts Commission (IAC) announced that 20 educators from across the state have been chosen to participate in a new program centered on bringing arts and creativity into the classroom. This prestigious program invites top educators to participate in hands-on training sessions followed by the implementation of a full semester of arts activities in the classroom.

The Indiana Educator Fellowship for Creative Teachers is a program of the IAC in partnership with the Indiana Department of Education (IDOE) that celebrates and supports outstanding educators throughout the state in implementing creativity-centered innovation in the classroom. 

Research shows creative teaching strategies, also known as arts integration, improve student engagement, student learning retention, and student literacy skills. 

“We selected some of the most energetic, innovative educators across the Hoosier State to participate in this fellowship,” said Stephanie Haines, Arts Education and Accessibility program manager at the IAC. “It is exciting to meet with so many inspired educators who are ready to integrate arts and creativity into the classroom to the benefit of their students.”

The 2023-2024 Creative Educator Cohort is as follows: 

Anna Grant, Jasper High School (Dubois County)

Brittany Bleicher, Northside Middle School (Delaware County)

Darlene Rosario-Reese, Block Middle School (Lake County

Emily Crapnell, Noblesville West Middle School (Hamilton County)

Franklin Oliver, University High School (Hamilton County)

Hailey Hutzell, Fairview Elementary (Wayne County)

Heathar Bradbury, Clay High School (St. Joseph County)

Jacquelyn Greer, Muncie Central High School (Delaware County)

Jennifer Gonzalez, Clarence Farrington School 61 (Marion County)

Jennifer Stahl, West Washington Jr./Sr. High School (Washington County)

Josie Engdahl, Anderson Intermediate School (Madison County)

Kaylene Huntsman, Shelbyville Central High School (Shelby County)

Lori Vandeventer, Eastern Greene High School (Greene County)

Nicole Brubaker, Manchester High School (Wabash County)

Paul Satchwill, Batesville High School (Ripley County)

Rachel Campbell-Maher, Christ the King Catholic School (Marion County)

Rebecca Harris, White River Valley Middle School (Greene County)

Rita Eblin, Washington High School (Daviess County)

Stephanie Dodd, Franklin Central High School (Marion County)

Susan Stewart, Riverside Elementary School (Clark County)

The fellows will attend a series of virtual learning sessions and will receive two days of immersive, hands-on training in connecting creativity to state standards, access to a fully funded in-school creative arts residency, and a $1,000 honorarium.  

HOT JOBS

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Receptionist 
David’s Bridal 3.5 3.5/5 rating – Evansville, IN
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The Customer Service Representative (CSR) is responsible for interacting with all customers, maintaining a friendly, positive, authentic, empathetic, and…
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Office Staff Kia of Evansville 
Lou Fusz Kia of Evansville – Evansville, IN
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The Office Staff at Kia of Evansville, part of the Lou Fusz Automotive Network, Inc, is responsible for providing outstanding customer service to all visitors…
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OFFICE HELP 
B & M Electronics – Evansville, IN
$10 – $12 an hour
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We are looking for someone for receiving and shipping parts, scheduling, answering phones and customer service. Mon – Fri 8:30 am to 5 pm.
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Administrative Coordinator (Evansville, IN) 
RoadSafe Traffic Systems, Inc. 3.2 3.2/5 rating – Evansville, IN
This person will answer incoming calls, facilitate daily rental orders that come in working closely with managers to schedule our techs to do the work.
1 day ago
Hotel Front Desk Clerk (10am-6pm) 
Howard Johnson – Evansville, IN
$12.50 – $14.50 an hour
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We’re looking for a highly organized Front Desk Agent to help manage the check-in and check-out of hotel guests. Greet guests and explain hotel policies.
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Office Administrator 
Evansville Regional Economic Partnership – Evansville, IN
From $20 an hour
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Embedded in the E-REP offices, the SBDC Office Administrator is the SBDC first point of contact responsible for coordinating all aspects of the client intake,…
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Clinic Office Administrator 
Bionic Prosthetics and Orthotics 2.6 2.6/5 rating – Evansville, IN
$14 – $16 an hour
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We also offer on the job training, sick/vacation time, health benefits, paid holidays, and 401K with a company match! Must have professional phone etiquette.
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Office Assistant – Cardiology, Full Time, Days 
Ascension 3.6 3.6/5 rating – Evansville, IN
From $15 an hour
Schedule: Full Time, Days, Monday-Friday. Work in a customer service capacity providing administrative and clerical support to patients and customers in a…
2 days ago

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

 

 

FOOTNOTE:  EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

DRAFT OF CAROUSEL RESTAURANT “HOME OF THE BLUE SPECIAL”

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The Carousel Restaurant story began in the summer of 1991 when a young Dilip Patel purchased the Monroe Avenue location of Merry-Go-Round Restaurant. With that purchase, the name was changed to The Carousel Restaurant. Long-time manager Kenny Ward is the new owner and appreciates the opportunity his friend and mentor provided. The restaurant’s 29-year history is best understood by the faithful loyalty of satisfied diners hungry for good food … served fresh with time-friendly and gracious hospitality for a fair price.

“It has been the joy of my life to host and serve our customers. We sincerely appreciate your patronage and loyalty and look forward to many years to come.”

WELCOME TO THE CAROUSEL

The Carousel Restaurant has been a locally-owned favorite Evansville Restaurant for over 15 years. The Carousel’s home cooked menu offers great selections for breakfast, lunch and dinner. In addition, we have specials each and every day that are value priced so that you get great tasting food, in hearty portions, and for pennies on the dollar.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (WFIE) – The Carousel Restaurant is moving into a new era after nearly three decades under the same ownership.
The restaurant on Monroe Avenue has a new owner, and it looks like its staying within the family.
New owner Kenneth Ward says he has been working for the restaurant since he was 14-years-old, and he was surprised when the current owner asked him to take over the reins.
Ward says what he enjoys the most is the customers and his employees, and that he is looking forward to keeping the restaurant’s tradition alive.

McCarthy’s National Debt Fecklessness

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Even after years of writing about politics, the depth of the contempt some officeholders have for the people who put them in power and whom they are supposed to serve still stuns me.

The costly—and perhaps soon-to-be tragic—showdown over raising the federal debt ceiling is one of those times.

The disingenuousness and hypocrisy displayed by U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-California, and the firebreathers in the House Republican caucus is astounding. The things they are willing to conceal, even to lie about, reveal how little they care about the concerns of their constituents.

They suggest, for example, the debt is held by faceless entities, likely foreign. They fulminate about China and the threat that nation poses to the U.S. economy.

The reality is that the overwhelming bulk of our nearly $32 trillion national debt—78 percent—is owed to the American people.

A little more than $6 trillion of it is in federal reserve notes. Another $2.6 trillion or more is in mutual funds. Just under $2 trillion is in pension funds. Banks, savings and loan operations and insurance companies hold another $2.2 trillion. And, together, state and local governments and possessors of savings bonds own around $10 trillion of our debt.

Foreign interests do have some of it.

Japan has a little more than a trillion, China a bit less than a trillion and the United Kingdom just under $700 billion. Another 30 or more countries own much smaller pieces of our debt with Belgium leading the pack at about $325 billion.

What does this mean?

Well, when our leaders play games with the notion of defaulting on the debt, they won’t just be sticking it to others.

They’ll be stiffing us.

They’ll be refusing to pay back the money we loaned them in good faith, many of us planning to use the interest on those loans to fund retirements, put children through college, care for elderly parents in their old age or buy homes. They’ll be sacrificing our interests to serve other masters.

This is where the hypocrisy comes in.

McCarthy and his cohort—I can’t call them his followers because there’s a legitimate question regarding who is leading whom in the House Republican caucus—say they’re holding the debt ceiling hostage and flirting with the default because they’re worried.

Terribly worried.

What they fret about, they claim, is the way the debt has grown because of ongoing federal budget deficits.

What they refuse to acknowledge, though, is the role their own actions and policies played in that trend.

Nearly a third of the more than $30 trillion in national debt is the product of the tax cut packages adopted during the presidencies of George W. Bush and Donald Trump and favored by Republicans in Congress.

Those tax cuts were tilted heavily toward the wealthy. The theory was that the wealthy would reinvest in the U.S. economy and the resulting growth from that investment would erase the deficits.

We’re more than two decades and $10 trillion in additional debt into that experiment.

So far, it isn’t working.

If those tax cuts hadn’t been adopted, tax revenues would have kept pace with spending and the debt ratio—the percentage of the economy for which the debt accounts—would be declining.

The fervor with which McCarthy and crew, though, approach the tasks of deficit and debt reduction does not extend to rolling back any of those tax cuts. They will fight to the bitter end to make sure that the uber wealthy still can afford that desperately needed fifth luxury yacht.

McCarthy and his gang love to tout that they’re remodeling the Republican Party, transforming it away from being the party of Wall Street into the party of Main Street.

Where do they think the people with those pensions, mutual funds and savings bonds live? Who do they think is going to be hurt the most by a national debt default—the poor beleaguered billionaire or the retiree trying to live on a lifetime of hard-earned invested savings, the multinational corporation or the family trying to pay for their kids’ education?

The fact is that McCarthy and his feckless bunch seem to care not a bit about the damage they’re doing to the very citizens who gave them control of the people’s house.

There’s only one word that can describe that level of contempt.

Stunning.

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.