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Indiana Invests In Trying To Fix Mental Health Crisis

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INDIANAPOLIS—With the nation’s growing mental health crisis, Indiana is working to address the problem through programs and increased funding.

The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration is providing new funding through its Division of Mental Health and Addiction. The funding comes from the House Enrolled Act 1001, the federal American Rescue Plan Act, and other sources.

Dr. Rusyniak, M.D.  Photo by FSSA.

“One serious, lingering result of the COVID-19 pandemic that has been widely recognized by experts all over the country is a worsening of our mental health crisis,” said Dan Rusyniak, M.D., FSSA secretary. “This major infusion of funds, spread throughout Indiana, will provide more access to mental health care, expand the mental health workforce, and invest in our state’s mental health infrastructure.”

The largest investment in Indiana’s mental health is through the Community Catalyst Grants. These grants provide $54.8 million and include $22.3 million of local and grantee match dollars and $32.5 million in federal funds. These grants will be provided to 37 recipients.

The goal of these grants is to provide access to mental health prevention while enhancing the quality, treatment, intervention, and recovery services provided throughout the state. Some of the notable recipients include:

·   Dove House, to expand its inpatient and outpatient substance use disorder treatment for women in Marion and Dubois counties

·   La Porte Community Resource Intervention’s substance use, instability and suicidal support outreach program, for the formation and development of outreach teams as well as a crisis intervention team and cultural competency training for law enforcement officers

·   The Marion County Reentry Coalition for a holistic model using public defenders and the criminal justice system to help Hoosiers with mental health challenges as they reenter society

·   Courageous Healing in Allen County for a program to provide mental health treatment to uninsured and underinsured people

DMHA is partnering with the private sector, health care system, and other philanthropic organizations to support grassroots programs with funding, grant programs, and working to provide mental health care in pediatric care.

One of the ways Indiana is working to improve children’s mental health care is by entering an $8 million partnership with Riley Children’s Health. The funding will help provide mental health services to children by incorporating them into pediatric care and removing barriers to access to these services. The agreement includes $4 million in matching funds from Riley Children’s Health

Other mental health funding includes:

·   $27.6 million in workforce stabilization grants to community mental health centers around the state

·   $4.4 million was provided to the Indiana University School of Medicine to fund psychiatrist residency (training) slots, and fellowships for psychiatrists, and internships for psychology students.

·   $15 million in grants to help Indiana’s community mental health centers transition to the new Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic model.

The federal government is also addressing mental health, as they have changed the suicide hotline number to 988, making it easier to remember and quicker to dial. The old 800-273-TALK option will still work.

As of now, the hotline will connect those in need to a trained crisis specialist, but Indiana will eventually improve the service to include a response team that has locations for people to receive help. It’s estimated this expanded service will be available in the next seven to 10 years.

FOOTNOTE: Zachary Roberts is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. 

Braun Brings FLETC School Safety Assessment Training To Police In Region

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Senator Mike Braun Help Bring FLETC School Safety Assessment Training To Police In Region, Hosted By Valparaiso PD

AUGUST 30, 2022

Tomorrow, the Valparaiso Police Department will be holding the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center’s Physical Security Assessment Training, a 3-day program that provides an overview of how to conduct physical security assessments of schools, houses of worship, and other critical infrastructure.

This program trains law enforcement to better understand the threats that locations like schools and churches face, how to detect, delay, and respond to these threats, and how to evaluate existing physical security to provide a report to school administrators or other venue decision-makers about security deficiencies that can be improved.

This training will be attended by officers from the Valparaiso PD, as well as officers from Munster Police, La Porte County Sheriff’s Office, Cedar Lake Police, Griffith Police, Jasper County Sheriff’s Office, St. John Police, Hammond Police, and Chesterton Police.

Senator Mike Braun is proud to have played a part in bringing this training to the Region, and released the following statement:

“Our law enforcement works tirelessly to protect our communities, and they constantly have to adapt as the threats to public safety change. I was proud to help bring this school safety program by FLETC to the Region to help local police address threats to schools and churches and identify security deficiencies. I’d like to thank the Valparaiso PD for hosting this important training program that will help make our schools and churches safer.” – Senator Mike Braun

“This training is extremely important to our community as it brings many police departments together to get a standardized method of training in the physical Security Assessment field. This training will allow agencies to collaborate as they provide these assessments in schools, churches, and various other types of businesses. With critical incidents on the rise, the importance of this training is vital to all communities.” – Valparaiso Police Department Chief of Police Jeff Balon

BACKGROUND on FLETC:

A component of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, FLETC provides career-long training to law enforcement professionals to help them fulfill their responsibilities safely and proficiently. FLETC also makes training available on a host of topics to state, local, tribal, and territorial law enforcement nationwide.  Through strategic partnerships, FLETC prepares the federal law enforcement community to safeguard America’s people, property, and institutions.

Banterra Bank School of Business Lecture Series to Feature Global Leader in Transforming People, Organizations

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Banterra Bank School of Business Lecture Series
to Feature Global Leader in Transforming People, Organizations

EVANSVILLE, IN — Jeremie Kubicek, chairman of GiANT Worldwide and CEO of GiANT TV, will be the guest speaker for the Banterra Bank School of Business Lecture Series at 6 p.m., Sept. 12, in Vectren Auditorium, at Ivy Tech’s Evansville campus. The event is free to Ivy Tech students, faculty, and staff and is open to the public for $10 a ticket.

This presentation is a part of an annual series, sponsored by Banterra Bank. Extend Group, Evansville-based consultants specializing in human and organizational development partnered with Ivy Tech to bring Kubicek to campus for this event.

“We are delighted to welcome Jeremie Kubicek,” said Daniela Vidal, chancellor of the Ivy Tech Evansville region. “Through our work with EXTEND GROUP, Ivy Tech is already a beneficiary of Kubicek’s philosophy, and we are excited to make his personal message available to our students and business professionals in the community.”

Kubicek has built an international network of experts around bold, new thinking to attract and retain employees. He has made it his mission to provide the tools leaders can use to elevate people and transform their lives.

“In light of the last several years, I see that people are yearning for two specific things – hope and peace,” Kubicek said. “As leaders, we can’t give away something we don’t possess ourselves. I want to give people these practical tools, so they in turn can unlock the potential of people they lead.”

Shawn Collins, Founder of EXTEND GROUP and a certified GiANT consultant said, “This is a rare opportunity to hear an acknowledged master at crafting organizations everyone wants to work for. “If you have a responsibility for leading others, I urge you to put this event on your calendar.”

Two Additional Opportunities:

  • Sept. 13, 8 a.m.: Kubicek will join @530 on Main, a podcast hosted by Collins along with Mike Davis, VPS Architecture. The event will stream live via Youtube and Facebook.
  • Sept. 13, 11:30 a.m.: Kubicek will join attendees and be featured at the Evansville Rotary Club.

For additional information, contact Jamie Purcell, assistant professor of Business Administration, jpurcell26@ivytech.edu

Ivy Tech Community College is Indiana’s largest public postsecondary institution and the nation’s largest singly accredited statewide community college system, accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. Ivy Tech has campuses throughout Indiana and also serves thousands of students annually online. It serves as the state’s engine of workforce development, offering associate degrees, short-term certificate programs, industry certifications, and training that aligns with the needs of the community. The College provides a seamless transfer to other colleges and universities in Indiana, as well as out of state, for a more affordable route to a Bachelor’s degree.

UE Volleyball Welcomes USI For Home Opener

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – For the first time as Division I opponents, the University of Evansville and the University of Southern Indiana will square off in competition on Tuesday evening when the Purple Aces volleyball team faces the Screaming Eagles inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse at 6 p.m.

Facing USI

– Tuesday’s contest marks the first “official” meeting between the teams since 1992 when the Aces took a 3-1 win on Oct. 6

– In 24 meetings, UE has picked up 18 wins

Opening Weekend

– On Friday, the 2022 season opened at the Marshall Invitational

– Despite winning the first set in both contests on Friday, UE came out on the losing end in a 3-1 setback to Wright State and a 5-set defeat at Marshall

– The Aces came back strong on Saturday, earning a 3-0 road sweep over the Thundering Herd

– Alondra Vazquez led all players in kills in each of the first three matches

New Record

– UE’s opening weekend saw Alondra Vazquez move past Julie Groves for the most attempts in program history

– Vazquez currently has 4,440, which surpassed Groves’ mark of 4,401

– Groves played at UE from 1997-2000

Top Three Nationally

– Accumulating 63 kills and an average of 5.25 per set, Alondra Vazquez has established herself as one of the best in the NCAA

– Her total of 63 kills ranks second in the country while her average of 5.25 is third nationally…both lead the MVC

– She set an early season mark of 26 kills in Friday’s 5-set contest at Marshall before hitting .367 with 16 more

Making Her Debut

– Freshman Kora Ruff opened her collegiate career at the Marshall Invitational and completed the weekend with 10.17 assists per set

– Her total of 122 kills ranks 24th in the NCAA

– Ruff posted 45 assists in her debut against Wright State while contributing 10 digs on the defensive side

– Over the weekend, she registered four service aces, second on the UE team

COMMENTARY: Tennis And My Son      

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Tennis And My Son

       By Richard Moss MD

AUGUST 30, 2022

It was not a sport I grew up with, being, as it was, well beyond the financial ken of my struggling family back in the Bronx.  And there were not many tennis courts anyway in those crowded, teeming neighborhoods. I accommodated myself early to the three working-class sports that we could afford: baseball, basketball, and football, and so knew nothing of tennis.

The first inkling of my abiding ignorance occurred watching my son on the Junior Varsity at Jasper High School.  The system and language of keeping score and determining winners was, I thought, inscrutable, and I spent the first couple of years catching up with the vast chasms in my grasp of the sport.  I soon learned of singles, doubles, ones, twos, and, of course, the very bizarre scoring method, such as “love” (for “zero”), fifteen, thirty, and forty (points one through three), “deuce,” “set point,” tie-breaker, and so on, all quite alien to someone who grew up knowing only of the New York Yankees and the peculiar traditions of our national pastime.

There were also tennis lessons, which seemed interminable.  In baseball, football, or basketball, one didn’t have “lessons,” rather one just played. Not so tennis.  In this sport, lessons apparently were required if one wanted to be “good.”  Between the year-round lessons and tournament, the time requirements were not insubstantial. My weekends no longer belonged to me, nor my summers.  And, if one’s children were also involved in marching band, well then there was no such thing as a free weekend or summer – ever.

There was the “tennis family:” the other boys, the coaches, parents, and their families.  This, too, was novel.  Overnight, I grew a much larger family.  And we saw each other regularly, especially during the season.  And this became the family of my son too.  He swore fealty and allegiance to them.

The physical training requirements of tennis were not insignificant.  Cardiovascular fitness was a must if one were to endure those long, grueling matches. Especially singles.  Tennis was demanding not just in terms of skill, nuance, and artistry, but equally so in stamina, quickness, and power. And so, I observed a pudgy kid become lean, swift, and very strong.

There was also the crucial element of will.  In all of the sports, there was, I thought, nothing as punishing as singles tennis; facing one another across that vast, green expanse, the two young gladiators thrashing one another remorselessly, each swing a titanic effort, pouring one’s full measure into the return, struggling savagely even for a single point, a form of brutal, hand to hand combat, only across a court and using a ball and racket instead of a lance or sword. And here too I watched an often distracted child become focused, intense, and able to muster a great force of will and determination.

It was not my choice, tennis.  I preferred baseball.  My sport. And he had earlier shown much promise.  Furthermore, he was a switch hitter, like Mickey Mantle, my boyhood idol whom I had watched as a boy at Yankee Stadium.  Baseball to me was life itself, and so it seemed for him.  But, in the end, he chose tennis.  At the time, I was disappointed, but on this, it turned out, that his instincts were correct.

The early morning matches in late summer and early fall were spectacular.  There were the warm-ups, announcements, introductions, and anthem, which were stirring; before us, then, appeared the broad savannahs of sparkling, emerald courts, marked off in white, the braided nets rimmed in ivory, the black and red score cards, which we watched breathlessly to determine who was ahead; so splendid a meadow, as I had never beheld, all residing beneath a canopy of blue and an ascending sun, radiant like a medallion; here, young men battled, with honor and mastery, they, the pride of their families and schools, the best of their year; yes, these were sublime moments.

Then came the sectionals, regionals, semi-state, and, state, in Indianapolis.  There was a separate track for One Singles and One Doubles, and my young ward and his neighbor represented our school and community with passion and flair, falling in the end only to mighty Carmel, finishing at number two in the state.  Yes, a regret for them, but for me an accomplishment that ranks amongst my most cherished memories.

Tennis is an elite sport, a bracing, yet the gentlemanly form of competition that, perhaps more than any other, is won or lost as much in the minds of the players as on the field; it requires fanatical focus, intensity, and drive; and on the court, particularly for singles, it is based squarely on the individual.  It is competition at its most elevated, sport at its most ideal, both transcendent and exacting, equally athletic and cerebral.

Like any great endeavor, it stands on a platform of strong families, personal responsibility, discipline, and initiative.  It is a microcosm of what is good in our fair city, of its strong values and local institutions.

I salute our school, its students, coaches, and faculty, its traditions and history, and the many opportunities it provides for our sons and daughters to mature, succeed, and become leaders.

FOOTNOTE: Dr. Richard Moss is a board-certified head and neck cancer surgeon practicing in Jasper, Indiana for more than 30 years.  He was a candidate for Congress in 2016 and 2018. He has written A Surgeon’s Odyssey and Matilda’s Triumph available at amazon.com.  Find more of his essays at richardmossmd.com. Visit Richard Moss, M.D. on Facebook, Twitter, Parler, GAB, Gettr, Truth Social, and Instagram.

A Fresh Team Of Student Journalists Joins TheStatehouseFile.com

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A Fresh Team Of Student Journalists Joins TheStatehouseFile.com

(Franklin students staff TheStatehouseFile.com is year-round, providing content to their website as well to the CITY-COUNTY OBSERVER and 35 other media partners throughout Indiana)
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    From left, Jack Sells, Sydney Byerly, and Tabby Fitzgerald pose for a photo in downtown Franklin.  Photo by Colleen Steffen, TheStatehouseFile.com.

    Franklin College’s fall semester started Monday and with it a new Statehouse File team.

    Tabby Fitzgerald, Sydney Byerly, and Jack Sells are all returning reporters who will complete a full-time immersion, setting all other classes aside to tell the stories of the November elections, the fallout from the abortion ban, lead up to the 2023 session, and much, much more.

    Fitzgerald, from Southside Indianapolis, is a senior set to graduate in December. A former campus newspaper editor, she most recently completed a marketing internship with SpringHill Camps. She was also on the team that published some 25 stories and 400 photos at the Indiana State Fair this summer. She’s an avid photographer beginning a job search in social media.

    Byerly is a junior from New Albany who will spend this year as editor of The Franklin on top of her duties at the Statehouse. A graphic designer with a knack for features, she’ll be exploring hard news in more depth this fall.

    Sells is also a junior, from Indianapolis. He covered this summer’s special session and still somehow found the energy to return to Franklin’s track team. He’ll be looking to add some features to his large news portfolio.

    FOOTNOTE: Franklin students staff TheStatehouseFile.com year round, providing content to their website as well as 35 paid media partners.

    Subscriptions make it possible for anyone to participate, with the help of professional journalist mentors. Statehouse File alums can be found in Indiana Business Journal, CNN, and many other small and large media outlets.

    In 2020, it produced Indiana’s Student Journalist of the Year and, in 2021, six of 10 Keating feature-writing competition finalists.

 

USI Events And Updates For September

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Now Through September 9

USI MAC/Pace Galleries hosting two summer sculpture exhibitions

There’s still time to catch the two summer sculpture exhibitions on display at USI’s McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries.

SAVE THE DATE

September 23

Annual Pharmacology Update for Healthcare Professionals workshop returns in person, virtual on September 23

The University of Southern Indiana Center for Health Professions Lifelong Learning is hosting the annual Pharmacology Update for Healthcare Professionals, an all-day workshop on September 23 in the University Center on the USI campus.

September 28

Inaugural Edward D. and Regina Rechnic Holocaust Series speaker set for September 28

The USI Foundation will host the inaugural speaker, Charles L. Berger, for the Edward D. and Regina Rechnic Holocaust Series from 7-8 p.m. on September 28 in Carter Hall on the USI campus.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT

Released Thursday, August 25

Volunteer USI recognizes award recipients and tallies more than 2.3 million volunteer hours

Volunteer USI, the University of Southern Indiana’s volunteer organization, celebrated its 2022 award recipients and dedicated volunteer community during the annual Volunteer USI Recognition Dinner on Wednesday, August 24.

USI CALENDAR

A collection of events on campus and in the community sponsored can be found on the USI events calendar by clicking here.

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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