VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSION AGENDA
Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners – March 7, 2023 Draft Agenda
VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSION AGENDA
Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners – March 7, 2023 Draft Agenda
Gov. Eric Holcomb has commuted the sentence of a drug dealer with a terminal brain tumor.
Gov. Eric Holcomb on Monday granted clemency to Tommy Alsman, who was convicted in Posey County in 2019 with dealing methamphetamine.
He is currently serving a 10-year sentence but has been diagnosed with an inoperable stage four brain tumor.
The Indiana Department of Correction, through the warden and in agreement with the commissioner and chief medical officer, sought the clemency on Alsman’s behalf.
“With further attempts being considered futile, he is now considered to be in terminal condition with only weeks or a few months remaining to live,†the clemency executive order said. Alsman will require palliative and hospice care the rest of his life.
The Indiana Parole Board unanimously recommended the sentence commutation.
Holcomb essentially suspended the remaining part of the executed sentence and placed Alsman, 41, on parole.
“In the improbable event Alsman’s condition improves to the extent he becomes ambulatory, the original sentencing and commitment order of the trial court shall be reinstated,†the order said.
March 6, 2023
The Indiana Fallen Heroes Foundation has established an official memorial fund to honor Master Trooper, James R. Bailey.
On March 3, 2023, Master Trooper James R. Bailey was killed in the line of duty after being struck by a vehicle on I-69, south of Auburn in DeKalb County while trying to deploy stop sticks to de-escalate an incident in which a vehicle was fleeing from the Fort Wayne Police Department.
Donations can be made at this weblink under the “Master Trooper James R. Bailey†section: https://indianafallen.org/fallen-heroes
Donations can also be made on Venmo by sending them to @indiana-fallen
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CHARLES FORD RETIREMENT COMMUNITIES OF NEW HARMONYÂ TO PROVIDE HOSPICE CARE IN AN INDIANA, ILLINOIS REGION
New Harmony, Ind. –March 5, 2023 – The Charles Ford Retirement Communities of New Harmony board of directors is announcing its intent to expand services to include hospice care throughout the service area, specifically a designated radius in Indiana and Illinois. Currently, Charles Ford is an independent, not-for-profit, assisted living retirement community, located on Main Street in New Harmony, Indiana.
The hospice care exploratory study advanced to a 12-month accreditation phase with a unanimous decision made by the Charles Ford board of directors at its February meeting. During the six-month market study and hospice planning process, the board’s Alternative Services Committee sought the services provided by the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO) and Community Health Accreditation Partners (CHAP), along with the expertise of Hope Realized Coaching, LLC, in partnership with Staci Krueger, RN CHPN. According to the Charles Ford board president, Nathan Maudlin, “Each firm we consulted provided us with specific expertise in the exploration and development of a state-of-the-art hospice care program.â€
Amy Koch, the long-time executive director of Charles Ford Retirement Communities explained: “By extending our services of assisted living and adding the new service of hospice care, we will answer a specific need for more personalized, intimate, compassionate care in the market radius we’ve defined.
“In recent years,†Koch continued, “hospice care delivery has become nearly robotic as large corporations and insurance companies have acquired local and regional organizations to gain synergies toward the bottom line. Through our new endeavor, Charles Ford will continue its tradition of delivering more personalized, elevated services as we expand those characteristics and deliver end-of-life palliative care that’s focused on the comfort that can be depended upon when it’s provided by compassionate, highly qualified health care professionals.â€
“Above all,†Koch said, “Charles Ford is known for a unique culture that reflects its ongoing mission to preserve and enhance an individual’s personal dignity and respect while delivering exceptional care. These qualities will continue within our assisted living facility and be extended throughout the region in our hospice care program.â€
The Charles Ford Retirement Communities of New Harmony is committed to providing quality residential living services in residential surroundings, for individuals who need supportive care. To preserve and enhance a resident’s personal dignity and individuality, to promote and encourage independence, and to provide quality of life, while receiving professional assistance with personal and health care needs.
GH Foods NW, LLC, a Clackamas, Ore. establishment, is recalling approximately 106 pounds of ready-to-eat salad with chicken products due to misbranding and undeclared allergens.
FOOTNOTE: This recall was generated by the USDA.
SELMA, Ala. — President Biden came to this seminal site of the civil rights movement — one that led to the signing of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 — to try to inject urgency into changing the country’s voting rights laws once more.
Standing near the Edmund Pettus Bridge, where on March 7, 1965, marchers advocating for voting rights were attacked by police in a day that has become known as “Bloody Sunday,†Biden said that the right to vote “was under assault†by a conservative Supreme Court, a host of state legislatures and those who continue to deny the 2020 presidential election results.
“As I come here in commemoration, not for show, Selma is a reckoning,†Biden said. “The right to vote and to have your vote counted is the threshold of democracy and liberty. With it, anything’s possible. Without it, without that right, nothing is possible. And this fundamental right remains under assault.â€
Biden is attempting to elevate an issue that he unsuccessfully fought for since the start of his presidency, channeling evocative images to urge Congress to pass voting rights changes despite hardened political divisions on Capitol Hill.
He invoked the legacy of John Lewis, the late congressman and civil rights icon who was beaten on the bridge that Biden came to walk across 58 years later. The president and other leaders have pushed for legislation named after Lewis that would reauthorize parts of the 1965 Voting Rights Act that were struck down by the Supreme Court in 2013. The House passed a bill in 2021, but the measure failed to get a vote in the Senate. Prospects for the legislation this year appear grim after the GOP gained control of the House in the 2022 midterms.
After the speech, Biden walked with several dozen Black leaders, lawmakers, and others across the bridge, linking arms as an act of solidarity in a place once symbolizing strife. One member of the group led spiritual songs as they crossed and, once they crossed to the other side, the Rev. Mark Thompson offered a prayer to “make this the day we never leave Selma behind.â€
t was here in 1965 where demonstrators, Lewis among the leaders, gathered several weeks after an Alabama trooper shot a young Black man named Jimmie Lee Jackson. As a 25-year-old Lewis and 600 others walked across the bridge, they were beaten with whips and billy clubs by Alabama state troopers at the start of what was supposed to be a 54-mile walk to the state capital in Montgomery.
The images of police brutality galvanized the nation. Shortly after, President Lyndon B. Johnson introduced the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
It has been a place where others — including Biden himself — have come and called for a renewed fight for voting rights, pushing for more early voting or combating voter ID laws and other barriers that have been introduced since the 2020 election, particularly in states with GOP-controlled legislatures.
It was the first time Biden visited the site as president, and even in his long political career, he has only come here a handful of times. While civil rights had often been a point of pride for Biden in his early years in politics, it has also been a source of regret.
In 2013, when he delivered remarks as vice president to the nation’s first Black president, he made some unscripted remarks before joining the crowd in walking across the Edmund Pettus Bridge.
“I regret — and although it’s not a part of what I’m supposed to say — I apologize it took me 48 years to get here,†Biden said. “I should have been here. It’s one of the regrets that I have and many in my generation have.â€
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