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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

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.

 Evansville to Conduct Annual Point-in-Time Count of Homelessness on January 25-26 

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – On January 25-26, 2023 Evansville will conduct its annual Point-in-Time (PIT) count of people experiencing homelessness in the community, including sheltered and unsheltered homeless men, women, children, and families. Mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the count provides a snapshot of the number and characteristics of people experiencing homelessness in Evansville. The Aurora Homeless Outreach Team conducts the count with support from area homeless shelters and agencies, in conjunction with the Region 12 Homeless Services Council and Commission on Homelessness for Evansville and Vanderburgh County. 

WHO – Aurora Homeless Outreach Team and other agencies, including United Caring Services, Ozanam Family Shelter, House of Bread and Peace, Evansville Rescue Mission, YWCA Evansville, Salvation Army and others. 

WHEN – The count begins Wednesday, January 25, 2023, at 7:30 p.m., and concludes the morning of Thursday, January 26, 2023 

WHERE 

• Shelters: Evansville initiates a white flag, so any and all can come to the shelter for the day (it makes counting the majority easier). The shelter staff completes the survey forms for each person and enters the info into HMIS (Indiana’s homeless data tracking system). Shelters not on the HMIS system receive paper forms to complete and send to Indianapolis for entry into HMIS. 

No. 12 Trailblazers hold off late comeback to win at Lewis & Clark

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GODFREY, Ill. – The No. 12-ranked Vincennes University Trailblazers hit the road to Godfrey for the ‘Battle of the Blazers’ against Lewis & Clark Community College a day later than originally scheduled and battled to come away with the 71-63 Region 24 road win.

The two teams traded baskets early Thursday night with the two teams remaining even on the scoreboard through the first part of the opening half of play.

VU was the first to break away after an 8-0 scoring run gave the Blue and Gold a 22-16 advantage.

Vincennes would grow their lead to nine points late in the first half before Lewis & Clark answered back late to cut the deficit to five heading into the locker room. VU led at the break 39-34.

VU came out of the break firing early in the second half, quickly grabbing their largest lead of the game at 57-41.

Lewis & Clark would again respond on their home floor, outscoring VU 13-1 to cut the Vincennes lead to four points midway through the second half.

This would be as close as the host Trailblazers would get however, as Lewis & Clark again cut the VU lead down to 65-61 late, before Vincennes closed out the game at the free throw line to come away with the 71-63 Region 24 road victory.

“I guess the biggest thing we did to win tonight was rebound,” VU Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin said. “I don’t know how many they had, but we had a ton of rebounds, so I think we probably dominated on the glass. Lewis & Clark didn’t score the ball well on us. They ended up with 63 and we gave them points off of turnovers. Defensively, we were probably holding them in the low 50’s if not for our offense giving them points.”

“Defensively, at times, we were not bad,” Franklin added. “There were times when we were getting enough stops, particularly early in the second half. But offensively it was a struggle, even though we ended up with 71 points. We turned it over. Shot poorly on the road again. It just didn’t seem like we were ever comfortable.”

“But, we probably won the game because we dominated on the glass,” Franklin said. “And defensively we didn’t let them score with any kind of consistency. We really let them back into it with turnovers that helped their offense.”

Vincennes was led offensively by sophomore Caleb Johnson (N. Preston, Nova Scotia) who finished with 16 points, three rebounds and a pair of assists.

Freshman Kris King (Washington, D.C.) came off the bench and nearly finished with a double-double, ending with 13 points, nine rebounds and a team-high three assists.

Freshman Michael Osei-Bonsu (Bolingbrook, Ill.) controlled the board for Vincennes on both ends of the floor, finishing with a team-high 13 rebounds, seven coming on the offensive glass to go along with five points.

“I thought Michael on the glass, after the start of the game, got revved up,” Franklin said. “We kind of got after him a little bit and got revved up and got on the glass pretty well. He got a couple of buckets in that time when we got a little bit of a lead, but we just couldn’t find him consistently inside. Part of it was the defense collapsing down and we had some opportunities to hit some shots and didn’t. But that would have loosened things up for him.”

“Offensively, I don’t know,” Franklin added. “We searched all night to find something that we could go to and we really just kind of hodgepodged it together to be honest. We didn’t shoot it very well from the field. We hit our free throws decently. We shot those fairly well and made those when we needed to. But offensively, individually, we didn’t really have anything where it needed to be tonight. We fought it all night. Give our guys credit, they fought it well enough to get the win. But it’s hard this time of year when I know we can play better and we have played better and we’ve played better at home.”

Simmons, Polakovich lead Eagles over Panthers Eagles winning streak moves to five

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball senior guard Jelani Simmons (Columbus, Ohio) and senior forward Jacob Polakovich (Grand Rapids, Michigan) combined for 41 points and led the Screaming Eagles to a 78-74 win over Eastern Illinois University Thursday evening in Screaming Eagles Arena. The Eagles go to 13-9 overall and 6-3 in the OVC, while the Panthers are 7-15, 3-6 OVC.  

With the victory, USI has won five-straight games and remains in a five-way tie for first in the OVC. USI is tied with the University of Tennessee at Martin, Morehead State University, Tennessee Tech University, and Southeast Missouri State University for the first place slot at 6-3 in league play. Southern Illinois University Edwardsville fell to sixth after falling to Tennessee Tech this evening.  

USI got off to a great start with an 8-1 run and that seven-point lead methodically grew to as many as 20 points, 44-24, before the end of the half. The Eagles would leave the court with an 18-point halftime margin, 47-31.

The USI first half surge was led by Simmons, who dominated with 20 first half points on six three-point field goals in eight attempts and pair of free throws.

Polakovich was nearly as dominating in the first 20 minutes with a double-double before the intermission. He had 11 points on five field goals and a free throw in addition to grabbing 13 rebounds on seven offensive and six defensive boards.

The second half saw the Eagles and the Panthers trade buckets for the first 13 minutes until EIU used a 22-7 run to climb back into the game and cut USI’s margin to three points, 70-67, with 2:18 to play. USI would regain control down the stretch, helped by a big three-point field goal by sophomore guard Isaiah Swope (Newburgh, Indiana) to make the score 75-69 with 34 seconds to play

USI would seal the 78-74 victory with three free throws in the final seconds, one each by Swope, Simmons, and junior guard Gary Solomon (Detroit, Michigan)

The Eagles finished the game with four players in double-digits, led by Simmons, who finished with 21 points after adding one more in the second half. Simmons was six-of-12 overall, six-of-10 from long distance, and three-of-six from the line

Polakovich, who posted his second 20-20 game of the season, concluded the evening with 20 points, adding nine in the second half, and 24 rebounds, adding another 11 in the final 20 minutes. The senior forward had four 20 rebound games this season (most in NCAA Division I) and nine double-doubles this season

Swope and graduate forward Trevor Lakes (Lebanon, Indiana) rounded out the double-digit scorers with 11 points and 10 points, respectively

USI junior guard Tyler Henry (Brooklyn, New York) highlighted the evening by reach 1,000 career points with his five points in the first half. Henry has scored 578 at USI (2020-Present) and 422 points with Lane College (2019-20).

Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch testifies on Senate Bill 1

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STATEHOUSE (Jan. 26, 2023) – Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch testified in front of the Senate Appropriations Committee today in support of Senate Bill 1 (SB 1), legislation which will strengthen the direction Indiana takes in assisting Hoosiers suffering with behavioral health issues, including mental illness and addiction.

Authored by Sen. Michael Crider, R-Greenfield, SB 1 will transform the current 988 Crisis Hotline into 988 Response Centers and direct Indiana’s Family and Social Services Administration to apply for support from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to expand the network of Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics (CCBHC) in Indiana.

It is unusual for a sitting Indiana governor or lieutenant governor to testify in front of a committee on behalf of a specific piece of legislation.

“As co-chair of the Indiana Roundtable on Mental Health, I could have justified speaking on behalf of this bill. But for personal reasons, I was compelled to testify,” said Lt. Gov. Crouch, who also is Indiana’s Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development. “One in five Hoosiers suffers from mental illness or addiction, and my family is no exception. My mother suffered from depression throughout her life, and my younger sister died by suicide in her 20s.”

If enacted, SB 1 will create 988 Crisis Response Centers, allowing mobile crisis teams to be dispatched to assist in a severe mental health crisis. SB 1 also addresses funding and sustainability for CCBHCs, which are designed to ensure access to coordinated comprehensive behavioral health care. There are currently 19 pilot CCBHC sites in Indiana.

“The cost of untreated mental illness and addiction cases to the state of Indiana exceeds $4 billion annually,” said Crouch, who has been an outspoken supporter of behavioral and mental health initiatives throughout her career. “In addition to the cost of life, can Indiana afford not to do more for Hoosiers suffering from mental illness and addiction?”

The Senate Appropriations committee is expected to vote on SB 1 at its next meeting.

Another Morning Cup Of “Coffee News” The Circus Returns To Washing, D.C.

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By Dannie McIntire

January 18, 2023

If you watched the spectacle of Representative Kevin McCarthy finally ascending to the role of Speaker of the House after 15 rounds of voting then you are well aware that the circus is back in Washington.

As a republican I was dismayed witnessing the dysfunction within the Republican Party that was on full view in front of the American public. After the recent election I would have hoped the Republican Party could take control of the House as a unified party. 

Well at the moment if doesn’t appear that will happen. To obtain the House leadership role Kevin McCarthy had to surrender too many demands of the extreme right faction of the Republican Party.  

One procedural rule change he had to agree to in order to secure the support of the extreme right of the party was to allow any one House member to make a motion to elect a new speaker.  The old procedure required a minimum of five house members to file a motion to elect a new speaker.

The old five member rule was reasonable. Now you will have the one member rule and you can expect having constant motions from both sides of the aisle to elect a new speaker.  If you thought the House was dysfunctional before I believe instead of getting down to work for the American people much time will be spent on frivolous motions to elect a new speaker. 

Another concession by Kevin McCarthy was to agree to bring to a vote on term limits. Many people are for term limits while many are against having a limitation on terms. The downside to having a term limit is “retiring” a member who may be an effective and fair lawmaker. In my opinion a term limit already exists, it’s called elections. The “people” just have to have the collective will to vote the bad apples out of office.

However, in my opinion not all the concessions Kevin McCarthy had to make were bad concessions.

I was happy to see that the right wing of the Republican Party stood firm or a promise that no bill would be brought to the floor for a vote until 72 hours had passed. That gives lawmakers time to read the proposed bill to know what’s actually is in it.  No more “Pelosi” you have to pass it to know what’s in it.

I also like that the speaker elect had to agree to try and adopt a budget resolution that would balance the budget in ten years and a cap on fiscal year 2024 spending that would not exceed the 2022 level.

Our national debt is out of control and needs to be lassoed and brought back into the “sensible corral”. Our current national debt stands at 31ttiliion dollar;’ that’s a debt of $94,257 per U. S. citizen.  Our government operates on borrowing and that needs to be controlled.  The current rate of excessive government spending is saddling our future generations with unsustainable debt.  

One thing is certain; you can look for the 118th Congress to be another year of “welcome to the circus”.   

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