LETTER TO THE EDITOR: THE RIGHT TO AN ABORTION IS MORE THAN A POLITICAL PARTISAN ISSUE
BY KAITIE (WEBSTER) RECTOR
SEPTEMBER 21, 2022
I was raised in Newburgh, and I spent the holidays with my grandparents in Evansville, attended college at USI, and started my teaching career at an EVSC middle school. Even though I no longer live there, Evansville will always be home to me. So it’s with a sinking heart and shaking head that I see proponents of Indiana’s draconian new abortion ban also call Evansville home. The level of cruelty and ignorance it takes to deny healthcare, dignity, science, and liberty to the citizens of Evansville – and Indiana as a whole – is a huge disappointment. I do not recognize this as the community that raised me. This ruling has been condemned by many Indiana businesses, as it will negatively affect Indiana’s ability to attract and retain talent, especially healthcare professionals. It has also been opposed by every major medical healthcare provider in the state.
Wendy McNamara, currently representing the west side of Evansville (district 76) co-sponsored the abortion ban. Perplexingly, she then voted against allowing pharmacists to prescribe birth control, though it is allowed in many states and of course would reduce the need for abortions in the first place.
Tim O’Brien currently represents much of the north side and the far east side of Evansville. Not only did he support the abortion ban, but he also opposed any exceptions to the ban; he would not have allowed victims of rape, including children, to have access to abortion, nor would he have allowed women to terminate pregnancies in which the fetus is suffering from a fatal condition. O’Brien also opposed allowing pharmacists to prescribe birth control. Cindy Ledbetter of district 75 voted like O’Brien, affording no measure of compassion or common sense to her fellow women seeking abortion care, even for women – girls – who have been raped. Even for women whose babies have fatal fetal anomalies, who are suffering and have no chance of living.
Those who have cheered the banning of abortion in Indiana are doing so to the detriment of democracy for us all. They have cast themselves as a noble savior of the unborn, but they’re too caught up in their own moral superiority to realize that what they have actually done is participate in the systematic dismantling of freedom and democracy. Because we cannot call ourselves the land of the free when half of us are held back. Abortion bans are the antithesis of freedom. By telling women how to use their bodies, their future is being controlled and limited. Their wishes, their hopes, their dreams, their health, their plans – it all doesn’t matter. Even corpses have rights to their bodies; we cannot harvest organs without the prior consent of the decedent, even if those organs would save lives.
I am calling on all conservative and moderate friends, family, and neighbors to help stop this extremism. You can be a religious person, and also recognize that abortion is a private matter between a woman and her doctor. You can be someone who “doesn’t like politics” and also agree that the government telling someone how to use their body is an authoritarian overreach. And of course, you can be saddened by the idea of abortions – no one likes abortions – but the idea of women dying from pregnancy-related complications, or being forced to have their rapist’s baby, makes you more upset.
So how did we get here? By not knowing who we were voting for. By too many of us being complacent. Too many of us simply vote for the same party that we always have, thinking that “the party of small government” would protect our rights and liberties. We were wrong. We were misled.
Now we have a chance to make things right for ourselves and our daughters, sisters, friends, and family. We have a chance to fight extremism with compassion and common sense. Wendy McNamara’s challenger is Katherine Rybak, a highly experienced retired civil legal aid lawyer. Tim O’Brien’s challenger is Jason Salstrom, Ph.D. Salstrom is an Army Airborne Infantry veteran. He is currently technology commercialization and business development expert who directed the Purdue@WestGate initiative. Zack Davis is an ironworker who is running against Cindy Ledbetter to represent Warrick County. Each of these candidates supports access to healthcare and protects our right to privacy, including abortion.
Readers, I hope that abortion is more than a partisan issue to you. For your daughter, your aunt, your mother, or perhaps even yourself, abortion could be something that you personally experience. For women experiencing miscarriage, abortion is often performed if that body is unable to completely process the remains. For other women, the choice to have an abortion comes out of desperation; she is not mentally or emotionally equipped to be a mother, she cannot afford a child, she was raped, or she is being abused. But no matter the reason why abortion should always be a woman’s choice. It’s a matter of freedom.
SINCERELY,
KAITIE (WEBSTER) RECTOR
FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer posted the letter Of KAITIE (WEBSTER) RECTOR without opinion, bias, or editing.Â
The City-County invites anyone who wants to write a letter in the agreement or in opposition to KAITIE (WEBSTER) RECTOR letter you may do so by writing to the city-countyobserver@live.com  We will publish your letter without basis, opinion, or editing. Â
Morales Tries To Make Campaign Messages Heard Over Ongoing Controversies
By Jack Sells, TheStatehouseFile.com
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By Tabby Fitzgerald, TheStatehouseFile.com.
INDIANAPOLIS—Diego Morales wants to tell voters why he’s running and what he’d do if elected as Indiana secretary of state.
But with a campaign beset by scrutiny and controversy, the Republican candidate is often forced on the defensive.
Morales immigrated with his family from Guatemala to Sellersburg, Indiana, where he attended high school, and he uses that to frame his run.
“It is important for me to make sure that all others will have the same opportunities as me to register to vote and be part of the election process,†Morales said. “And in order for me to continue to protect the American Dream that I’m experiencing, I believe it starts at the ballot box. I believe it starts at the polls.â€
Morales spoke with The Statehouse File on Friday before spending the weekend at the Republican leadership meeting for the 4th congressional district, the Brookston Apple Popcorn Festival, the Goshen Hispanic Heritage Festival, the Festival of Faiths, Indy Taco Fest, and the Johnson County GOP rally.
He prides himself on being a “grassroots guy†who has visited every Indiana county and is on the campaign trail “not six but seven days a week.â€
Morales’ Past Time In The Secretary Of State Office
Despite the long weeks during his campaign, reports of a questionable work record came up during his 2018 run for U.S. Congress and have resurfaced.
The Associated Press found that, a little over a decade ago, Morales had issues during two separate employment periods in the Indiana secretary of state office.
Records the AP obtained stated that, among other things, Morales had a “lack of focus†and “poor execution.â€
The first stint was when Todd Rokita, current Indiana attorney general, was secretary of state.
Rokita, however, has supported Morales’ run for office and described Morales’ exit as “on good terms†in a letter to Republican delegates prior to Morales winning the nomination, according to The Indianapolis Star.
Morales also pushed back, calling the documents detailing his supposedly subpar work ethic the result of office politics.
For the business services division, Morales would “streamline the way small businesses in Indiana will work with the secretary of state’s office,†making it easier for Hoosiers to start businesses.
“INBiz, the Secretary of State’s one-stop resource for registering and maintaining a business, has become a backbone of the Hoosier economy,†former secretaries of state Ed Simcox and Todd Rokita said in a Sept. 15 op-ed. “Diego has plans to expand INBiz’s offerings because, as a small business owner, Diego understands the unique and emerging needs of entrepreneurs and our state’s business community.â€
“With the auto dealers division, my goal is to make sure that we can get the title for the cars efficiently to this industry,†Morales said.
Morales also wants to teach financial literacy to young adults—“just bring back the basics to themâ€â€”such as balancing a checkbook. He’d also focus on helping ensure the elderly aren’t scammed when “they make their own investments.â€
Last is the election division.
“My No. 1 goal is to increase voter confidence,†Morales said.
Morales would strengthen voter ID laws and make it “easy to vote, harder to cheat.â€
(Studies have shown fraudulent voting is already rare. The Associated Press found between 400 and 500 potential cases for Biden in the 2020 election in the six states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, “represent[ing] just 0.15% of his victory margin in those states.â€)
Morales would also take county clerks abroad to be international election observers. In 2019, Morales spent time as one in El Salvador and Guatemala for each country’s presidential election.
One reason Morales gives for this is to expose county clerks to the fact that many Latin American and European countries require photo IDs to vote, showing it’s “natural†and “common sense.â€
A 2019 research paper from the right-leaning Crime Prevention Research Center found that an ID is mandatory to vote in every European country except the United Kingdom.
“During former Secretary of State Todd Rokita’s administration, Indiana became the first state in the nation to pass and implement photo ID laws,†Simcox and Rokita wrote in the op-ed submitted to REAL News Michiana by Morales’ campaign. “To further improve Indiana elections, Diego proposes applying these photo ID requirements to absentee voting.â€
“Additionally, he will update antiquated voting equipment with advanced machines that feature paper backup systems, making it easier to conduct audits when necessary,†Simcox and Rokita said.
Morales says he also wants to see more minorities voting—a goal tied to his identity as a Hispanic Latino.
And he’s not waiting to see if he’s elected, Morales said.
“You know, during the summer, during the Black Expo, I was registering voters,†Morales said. “During the Hispanic Expo, I was registering voters.â€
Before nabbing the Republican nomination from current Indiana Secretary of State Holli Sullivan, Morales said he would slash early voting time in half, from 28 to 14 days.
Now, Morales says, “the 28 days is working great and is gonna continue to stay the same.â€
When asked again why he changed his mind, Morales repeated himself: “The 28 days is working.â€
In a statement provided to the Indiana Capital Chronicle, Morales said, “In addition to talking with voters, I am meeting with county clerks. Based on those conversations, I believe the current 28-day early voting timeline is working.â€
Vocation, Vehicle And Veteran Controversies
In the same article regarding Morales’ work record in the secretary of state office, the Associated Press also reported he called himself an adjunct professor when “adjunct instructor†is the more correct term and has given fuzzy details involving his business.
Currently, Morales’ LinkedIn says he’s been a “Business Executive, Consultant, Entrepreneur†since 2018 but doesn’t list any specific places of work.
Two months ago, Indy Politics reported Morales’s campaign spent over $40,000 on a vehicle.
“Trust between voters and candidates is based on transparency. The need for a reliable vehicle to run a campaign is a valid need that requires no explanation,†libertarian candidate Jeff Maurer told Indy Politics. “But we would like to understand the thought process of using campaign funds to purchase a vehicle for a four-month long campaign when borrowing, and especially leasing, would have been a much more practical use of campaign funds. Transparency requires answers.
Diego Morales, Republican candidate for Indiana secretary of state. Â TheStatehouseFile.com archive.
Political science professor Gregory Shufeldt told The Indianapolis Star it was a “bad look to be continually tied in unnecessary controversy, especially I would say the lavishness of the price of the car when in general, even if a campaign needed transportation, most Hoosier families aren’t buying cars for $43,000.â€
The Star reported the campaign said it will sell the SUV post-election, putting the money back into the campaign.
Morales’ use of the descriptor “veteran†was called into question last week as he is considered one by Indiana code but not federal code.
By regular parlance, to most, Morales is a veteran, Teresa Mankin said.
The former executive director of the National Guard Association of Indiana suggested Morales may inflate his bio as a veteran, however, and Star opinion columnist James Briggs did the same.
2020 Election Confusion
As Morales drives across the state, county to county, looming in the rearview mirror is the 2020 presidential election.
Morales authored a searing op-ed, taking to task Sullivan for not commenting on the election.
“It is stunning and incredibly regrettable that Holli Sullivan wants to be elected as the chief election officer of the Hoosier State, and she will not even acknowledge the most controversial election in American history,†Morales wrote.
The 2000 presidential election between George Bush and Al Gore came down to a Supreme Court decision and led to conspiracy theories from the left. (Morales called the 2020 election “Bush v. Gore on steroids.â€) There are still accusations of voter fraud in the 1960 election that saw John F. Kennedy narrowly beat Richard Nixon. And the 1876 election was settled through an informal compromise in which House Democrats upheld the Electoral Commission decision putting Republican candidate Rutherford B. Hayes in the White House, as long as Hayes removed troops from the South, thereby ending Reconstruction.
Morales, comparatively to Sullivan, was more than willing to take on the topic, writing, “The 2020 election was flawed and the outcome is questionable.â€
His reasoning came down to some states changing election laws last minute, in-person voters on Election Day faced more “scrutiny,†and social media platforms trying to hide a NY Post report about Hunter Biden’s laptop.
In the March 8 op-ed, Morales said, citing a CNN article, that “Among enthusiastic, motivated [Republican] midterm voters, 86% of them do not believe that Biden won legitimately.â€
Six months after the op-ed and three after winning the Republican nomination on June 18: “I’ve been clear to say that President Biden is the legitimate president,†Morales said to FOX59.
Morales told the Indiana Capital Chronicle at the end of June, “As I have said many times, Joe Biden is the President of the United States.â€
“I can tell you this: Biden is the legitimate president,†Morales told The Statehouse File on Friday.
When asked if he thought there was voter fraud but not enough to overturn the election, Morales didn’t give an answer, instead repeating himself and saying Biden is a “horrible†president.
Morales ended his interview with The Statehouse File by expressing the hope that “the next generation of Hoosiers, perhaps within the Latino community,†see him rise to the office of the secretary of state and see that they can also be anything from a mayor to a president.
“So I am trying to give back, creating some hope and open the doors for others,†Morales said. “So, for me, it’s easy and simple. You know, it’s never been about me. And I should hope people will see that the American Dream is still alive and well in Indiana.â€
FOOTNOTE: Jack Sells is a reporter at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Evansville, Indiana – Chief Deputy Noah Robinson, a 22-year law enforcement veteran of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office, will be the new Sheriff of Vanderburgh County starting January 1, 2022. elected Sheriff of Vanderburgh County.
Sheriff-elect Robinson’s campaign started in earnest back in January of last year, when he held an unorthodox, drive-in style campaign launch event during which he announced his candidacy for Sheriff of Vanderburgh County. Outside of the Vanderburgh County 4-H Center Auditorium, Robinson was introduced by City Councilman Ben Trockman to an impressive gathering of onlookers watching and listening from their vehicles. Trockman praised Robinson’s commitment to public service and his dedication to helping others.
Robinson took the stage and thanked Councilman Trockman for his support, as well as commended his campaign treasurer, Knight Township Trustee Kathryn Martin. Also sharing the stage with Robinson were Councilwoman Kaitlin Moore, City Clerk Laura Windhorst, City Councilwoman Missy Mosby, and Darmstadt Clerk-Treasurer Mallory Lowe.
Robinson touted his 22 years in law enforcement as having allowed him the opportunity to learn what it takes to successfully run a Sheriff’s Office.
At his announcement event, Robinson lamented the polarized nature of social media, stating that, “it seems that every issue we confront has no middle ground.” Robinson described himself as a pragmatist, eager to work with anyone interested in solving problems.
Robinson criticized the “Defund the Police” movement, calling it “misguided” and “divisive.” He called such talk a “false choice” and stressed that we can improve police response to people in crisis through a variety of measures that do not involve cutting the budgets of law enforcement agencies.
Robinson pledged that he will aggressively pursue drug dealers who hook people on opioids, heroin, and methamphetamine while also showing compassion to the addict and providing intensive treatment to support their recovery. He stated, “We can hold people accountable for criminal behavior and provide justice to victims while also reducing recidivism through job training and life skills development.”
Sheriff-elect Robinson made it clear that he supports and defends the 2nd amendment. Robinson stated he wants to, “ensure the ability of legal gun owners to defend their families, while also promoting responsible gun ownership and encouraging gun owners to keep their firearms away from children and secure from access by criminals.” Robinson stressed that he supports the protection of our children in schools with highly trained school resource deputies who know how to form connections with kids and establish positive mentorship with students.
Robinson pledged to seek out the criminal elements within Vanderburgh County, while also listening to and respecting the concerns of the community. He further resolved to hire qualified candidates as deputy sheriffs, while also ensuring the formation of a staff that represents the diversity of the community.
Robinson ran a grassroots-style campaign throughout 2021 and into the May 2022 Primary. Overcoming a 2-to-1 fundraising disadvantage against his rival, Sheriff’s Office Major Jason Ashworth. Â Robinson won the Democratic Primary with an amazing 59 percent of the vote.
He then focused his attention on the November General Election and his Republican challenger, retired Evansville Police Department Detective Jeff Hales. While Hales sought to paint Robinson as a liberal whose policies would harm public safety, Robinson struck a more moderate tone that emphasized collaboration.
The voters of Vanderburgh County apparently agreed with Robinson’s message of moderate collaboration, as he was the only Democrat in a contested county-wide race to win in the November general election. Mr. Robinson amazing walked away with 71 percent of the non-straight ticket vote.
Sheriff-elect Noah Robinson is a Newburgh, IN native and Castle High School graduate who moved to Vanderburgh County with his family nearly twenty years ago. Robinson attended the University of Southern Indiana, where he received an Associate’s Degree in Social Science and a Bachelor’s Degree in Sociology with an emphasis in Criminal Justice Studies. In 1998, Robinson was admitted to the Golden Key National Honor Society, an organization that extends membership invitations to students in the upper 15% of their class. In 1999, he was admitted to the Alpha Kappa Delta International Sociology Honor Society.
Following university, Robinson joined the Owensboro Police Department in 1999 and graduated from the Kentucky Department of Criminal Justice Training Center in Richmond, KY. Robinson served the City of Owensboro until his appointment as a deputy with the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office in March of 2001.
Robinson became a field training deputy in 2003, where he spent eight years assigned to Motor Patrol. In February of 2004, Robinson received an award from the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S. for his actions on January 24th, 2004. Robinson entered a frozen lake to check for occupants in a partially submerged vehicle. In March of 2007, Robinson received a Certificate of Appreciation from the Vanderburgh Humane Society for assisting animals in danger during a house fire. In 2009, Robinson was promoted to the rank of sergeant and spent the next five years assigned to the Professional Standards Unit, where he developed policies and procedures for the agency as well as conducted internal investigations.
Robinson was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in June of 2014, assigned to headquarters, and placed in charge of information technology, public information, and grants. In October of 2018, Robinson was promoted to the rank of major and served as the executive commander of the Administration Division.
In December 2019, Sheriff Dave Wedding promoted Robinson to the rank of colonel and named him his new Chief Deputy Sheriff and second in command of the agency.
Sheriff-elect Robinson is a board member of the Highland Hills Challenger League Baseball Program and an active supporter of Youth Resources, the Salvation Army, the Evansville Rescue Mission, and many other local organizations too numerous to mention.
Sheriff-elect Noah Robinson met his wife Janie during high school. The two have been married for over 20 years, and together have three children, Kayla, Katie, and Kyle, as well as one grandchild, Adeline.
Indiana Faces Abortion Lawsuit From Planned Parenthood And ACLU
By Tabby Fitzgerald, TheStatehouseFile.com
The State of Indiana is facing a lawsuit from the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana and Planned Parenthood.
Pro-abortion protesters stack signs in front of the Indiana Statehouse at a protest during the special session in summer 2022.Photo by Haley Pritchett, TheStatehouseFile.com.
The lawsuit was filed recently in Monroe County Circuit Court and claims the ban “strips away the fundamental rights of people seeking abortion care in Indiana in violation of the State Constitution.â€
In a press release from the ACLU announcing the filing of the lawsuit, Ken Falk, the legal director of ACLU of Indiana, said that whether Indiana’s elected officials personally agree with abortion access or not, it is not up to the government to make these decisions for Hoosiers.
“This ban on abortion will force Hoosiers to carry pregnancies against their will, leading to life-altering consequences and serious health risks,†Falk said. “Deeply private, personal, and unique decisions about reproductive health should be made by women in consultation with their doctors.â€
In the same press release, Planned Parenthood Federation of America President and CEO Alexis McGill Johnson expressed support for the lawsuit, saying that “the abortion ban that the legislature rushed through during a special session—nearly immediately after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade—is both dangerous and incredibly cruel. We demand more for patients and providers, and we will continue fighting for everyone’s right to make their own decisions about their bodies, lives, and futures.â€
Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawaii, Alaska, Indiana, and Kentucky, agreed with Johnson that the ban is “dangerous and cruel.â€
Attorney General Todd Rokita, in an emailed statement, said, “We don’t need the warped opinions of organizations like the ACLU and Planned Parenthood dictating how we do things in Indiana.
“The Left is notorious for fighting to erase all of the progress and protections secured by the pro-life movement,†Rokita said. “Hoosiers respect and value all lives, including the lives of the unborn. This is why our legislators voted to stop these inhumane practices, and it’s why my office is dedicated to defending this life-saving law.â€
Indiana’s ban on abortion is set to take place on Sept. 15. Once in effect, all abortions at any stage of pregnancy will be prohibited except for “preventing the death or serious risk of substantial and irreversible impairment of the patient, if the fetus is diagnosed with a lethal anomaly, and in situations of rape and incest.â€
Indiana was the first state to pass a ban after the overturning of Roe v. Wade on June 24. Since then, the Attorney General’s Office has claimed four court wins regarding abortion, according to a press release on the AG’s website.
It reads, “On July 7, a federal district court granted his motion to lift an injunction on dismemberment abortions. On July 11, a U.S. appellate court vacated judgments in the Whole Woman’s Health Alliance v. Rokita case that had invalidated several other Indiana laws. On July 18, a U.S. district court vacated a judgment against an Indiana law prohibiting abortions sought on the basis of the unborn child’s race, sex or disability.â€
As of the writing of this article, according to The New York Times, there is a full ban in effect in Idaho, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Missouri, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. Abortion is banned after six weeks in Georgia and Ohio. Abortion is banned after 15, 18, or 20 weeks in North Carolina, Florida, and Utah.
Indiana is the only state that has a ban scheduled to take effect. Legislation has been blocked from taking effect in Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming, Utah, Iowa, Arizona, Michigan, West Virginia, and South Carolina.
FOOTNOTE: Tabby Fitzgerald is a reporter at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
The University of Southern Indiana has announced the approval of an online Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering (BSEE) degree completion program. The program, housed within the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education, will be offered beginning in the 2023 Spring Semester. Applications are being accepted now through October 7.
The BSEE program is designed specifically for non-traditional students who already hold an associate or bachelor’s degree in a technology-related field, and will allow them to extend their education to an ABET-accredited engineering degree.
“We receive numerous inquiries from working adults who are seeking to complete an engineering degree but need to work full-time,†says Dr. Paul Kuban, Chair of the Engineering Department and Professor of Engineering. “This program will allow us to accommodate these students.â€
Within the degree completion sequence, seven to nine credit hours will be offered per semester, ensuring the program is suitable for students who need to maintain full-time employment. The course sequence includes offerings in the Spring and Fall Semesters and in both Summer Terms. The program is designed for degree completion in five-and-a-half years if all courses are taken during the Fall and Spring Semesters and both Summer Terms annually.
“We had a very successful outcome with a previous program that was designed specifically for Crane Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) where we graduated 10 new Crane engineers in December 2021,†says Dr. Ronald Diersing, Associate Professor of Engineering. “We’re excited to provide this opportunity to the general public.â€
         LEGO & WOODEN TRAINS                                                        Â
        Free Admission
      SATURDAY September 24rd 2022; 10:00 AM-5:00 PM
         SUNDAY September 25th 2022; 1:00 – 4:00 PM          Â
Influenza And COVID-19 Drive-Through Vaccination Clinic
Vanderburgh County Health Department
SEPTEMBER 21, 2022
The Vanderburgh County Health Department will be hosting a drive-through vaccine clinic on Saturday, October 1, 2022, from 8:30 am-12 pm at Ivy Tech. It will be held in the large parking lot on the north side of the facility. Participants should enter off of Tremont Drive. Seasonal flu vaccine and bivalent COVID-19 vaccine (Pfizer) boosters will be offered.Â
Staying up to date on recommended COVID-19 vaccine boosters and getting an annual flu vaccine offers the best protection against serious respiratory illness, hospitalization, and death.
You are eligible for a bivalent COVID-19 vaccine booster if you areÂ
12 years old and older
Have completed a primary COVID-19 vaccine series (at least 2 doses of either Moderna or Pfizer, or 1 dose of Johnson and Johnson vaccine)
It has been at least 2 months since your most recent COVID vaccine dose
COVID vaccines can be given regardless of insurance status
Flu vaccines are recommended for all people ages 6 months old and older. Vanderburgh County Health Department accepts children and adult clients with no insurance, Medicaid, and some private insurance. Clients may call to verify if their insurance plan is accepted. Â
SENATE CANDIDATE SCENIAK TO APPEAR AT WARRICK COUNTY MEET THE CANDIDATES EVENT
September 18, 2022
James Sceniak, the Libertarian Party of Indiana’s candidate for United States Senate, will appear at the Warrick County Farm Bureau Meet the Candidates event.
James will be speaking at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22, which will be held at the Warrick County Fairgrounds. He will be joined by other local, regional and statewide candidates. He will be sharing his vision for fresh, modern, approachable governance.
James Sceniak is the Libertarian Party’s candidate for U.S. Senate, running on a platform of medical freedom, and individual freedom – including the right to self-defense, improving veterans’ health care, and bringing the Hoosier values of fiscal sanity and restraint to Washington.
James is a native of Goshen and a current resident of Greenwood, where he is a behavioral therapist.
WHO: James Sceniak, Libertarian Party of Indiana candidate for U.S. Senate
WHAT: Speaking at Warrick County Farm Bureau Meet the Candidates event
WHERE: Warrick County Fairgrounds, 133 County Road 100N, Boonville
WHEN: 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22
FOOTNOTE: James Sceniak is available for interviews and looks forward to discussing his campaign and legislative priorities with you. To schedule an interview or to have James as a guest on your radio or TV program, please contact info@sceniakforsenate.com or comms@sceniakforsenate.com with your desired times and locations.
(Evansville, IN) – Starting Monday, September 26, through Friday, September 30, the Evansville Water and Sewer Utility Customer Service window at the Civic Center will temporarily close while improvements are made to better serve the public.
Utility customers will still be able to conduct business with an EWSU Customer Service Representative by sending an email to ewsu.com/contact or calling 812-436-7846 Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. Customers who must conduct business in person may send an email or call Customer Service to schedule an appointment.
On Monday, October 3, the Customer Service window will resume regular hours weekdays from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.