Opening Night at Bosse Field This Evening
The full promotional schedule can be viewed at evansvilleotters.com.
Single-game ticket prices are $12 for VIP seats and $10 for Premium Field Box seats, which include an in-seat wait service. General Admission tickets are $6.
Discounted group tickets for a single game are $9 for Premium Field Box tickets and $4 in General Admission seating. Purchases of 20 or more tickets are required for discounted group ticket rates. Group tickets must be purchased via phone or at the Bosse Field box office to receive discounted rates.
Seating in VIP and Premium Field Box sections are limited.
There’s no place like Bosse Field, so get your tickets now to come on out to Bosse Field this season!
USI Softball lands two on Academic All-District Team
EVANSVILLE, Ind.—University of Southern Indiana Softball landed two student-athletes on the College Sports Information Directors of America Academic All-District IV team in a vote by the Midwest Region’s sports information directors. Senior designated player Katie Back (Indianapolis, Indiana) and sophomore outfielder Mackenzie Bedrick (Brownsburg, Indiana) garnered the accolade after posting strong resumes on the field and in the classroom.
Back, a second-team All-GLVC honoree, entered the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament with a team-leading .389 batting average to go along with nine doubles, two home runs and 28 RBI. In the classroom, Back recently graduated with a degree in psychology and a minor in health administration. She had a 3.93 grade point average heading into the spring semester.
Bedrick, an honorable mention All-American a year ago, was named second-team All-GLVC and NFCA All-Midwest Region after hitting .367 with three doubles, two triples, 16 RBI and 17 stolen bases. The nursing major has a perfect 4.00 GPA in the classroom.
Both Bedrick and Back advance to the national ballot for Academic All-America consideration.
USI is currently taking on Saginaw Valley State University in the opening round of the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament at the USI Softball Field.
Biden Administration Announces $254 Million to Tackle Polluted Brownfield Sites
EPA announces 265 communities to receive Brownfields Cleanup, Assessment and Revolving Loan Fund Grants to help build a better America while advancing environmental justice
WASHINGTON (May 12, 2022) – Today, the Biden Administration through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded $254.5 million in Brownfields grants to 265 communities. Today’s grants are supported by President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which provides a total of $1.5 billion to advance environmental justice, spur economic revitalization, and create jobs by cleaning up contaminated, polluted, or hazardous brownfield properties.Â
Brownfield projects can range from cleaning up buildings with asbestos or lead contamination, to assessing and cleaning up abandoned properties that once managed dangerous chemicals. Once cleaned up, former brownfield properties can be redeveloped into productive uses such as grocery stores, affordable housing, health centers, museums, parks, and solar farms.
The Brownfields Program advances President Biden’s Justice40 Initiative, which aims to deliver at least 40 percent of the benefits of certain government programs to disadvantaged communities.  Approximately 86 percent of the communities selected to receive funding as part of today’s announcement have proposed projects in historically underserved areas.
“With today’s announcement, we’re turning blight into might for communities across America,â€Â said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “EPA’s Brownfields Program breathes new life into communities by helping to turn contaminated and potentially dangerous sites into productive economic contributors. Thanks to President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, we are significantly ramping up our investments in communities, with the bulk of our funding going to places that have been overburdened and underserved for far too long.â€
EPA’s Brownfields grants and other technical assistance programs like the RE-Powering America’s Land Initiative are also helping to build the clean energy economy. Today’s announcement includes a former coal mine in Greene County, Pennsylvania, that will become a 10-megawatt solar farm, and a former dump site in the Fort Belknap Indian Community in Montana that will be converted to a solar farm, saving local residents an estimated $2.8 million in energy costs over 25 years, among many others.
Today’s announcement includes approximately $180 million from the historic $1.5 billion investment from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to help turn brownfield sites across the nation into hubs of economic growth and job creation, along with more than $75 million from Fiscal Year 2022 appropriations.Â
The funding includes:
- $112.8 million for 183 selectees for Assessment Grants, which will provide funding for brownfield inventories, planning, environmental assessments, and community outreach.
- $18.2 million for 36 selectees for Cleanup Grants, which will provide funding to carry out cleanup activities at brownfield sites owned by the recipient.
- $16.3 million for 17 selectees for Revolving Loan Fund grants that will provide funding for recipients to offer loans and subgrants to carry out cleanup activities at brownfield sites.
- $107 million for 39 high-performing Revolving Loan Fund Grant recipients to help communities continue their work to carry out cleanup and redevelopment projects on contaminated brownfield properties. Supplemental funding for Revolving Loan Fund Grants is available to recipients that have depleted their funds and have viable cleanup projects ready for work.Â
View the list of selected applicants here.
Since its inception in 1995, EPA’s investments in brownfield sites have leveraged more than $35 billion in cleanup and redevelopment. This has led to significant benefits for communities across the country. For example:
- To date, this funding has led to more than 183,000 jobs in cleanup, construction, and redevelopment and more than 9,500 properties have been made ready for reuse.
- Based on grant recipient reporting, recipients leveraged on average $20.43 for each EPA Brownfields dollar and 10.3 jobs per $100,000 of EPA Brownfields Grant funds expended on assessment, cleanup, and revolving loan fund cooperative agreements.
- In addition, an academic peer-reviewed study has found that residential properties near brownfield sites increased in value by 5% to 15% as a result of cleanup activities.
- Finally, analyzing data near 48 brownfields, EPA found an estimated $29 million to $97 million in additional tax revenue for local governments in a single year after cleanup—2 to 7 times more than the $12.4 million EPA contributed to the cleanup of those brownfields sites.
“EPA’s Brownfields Program is the true embodiment of turning adversity into opportunity— it takes contaminated and potentially hazardous places and turns them into thriving generators of economic prosperity,†said Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works Chairman Tom Carper. “Today’s announcement is great news for the nation, as we unveil vital investments from our Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to help more communities benefit from this transformative program.â€
“Today’s announcement is welcome news for the 149 million Americans who live within three miles of a brownfields site,†said House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone. “These funds, predominantly from our Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, will allow families across the country to rest a little easier knowing that some of the most contaminated sites in their area will soon be cleaned up, revitalized, and generating new jobs and economic opportunities. I’m grateful to Administrator Regan and the Biden Administration for working so closely with Congress to prioritize the Brownfields program and I’ll keep fighting to ensure every community – particularly those that have been historically overlooked and underserved – receives the resources they need.â€
“Last year, President Biden signed the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act into law, which provided once-in-a-lifetime investment that is fundamentally transforming our critical infrastructure,†said House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman Peter DeFazio. “This Bipartisan Infrastructure Law also included significant funding to EPA’s Brownfields program for the cleanup of legacy toxic contamination that scars our communities with hazardous, blighted, or underutilized properties and threatens the health of our families and our environment. The grants being announced today continue the successful tradition of the brownfields remediation program while targeting resources to those communities, both urban and rural, that haven’t been able to participate in the program due to lack of local-technical capacity or lack of local matching resources.â€
Additional Background
Ivy Tech Community College Evansville Region Commencement May 13
Evansville, IN – More than 1,125 students will graduate from Ivy Tech Community College on Friday, May 13. The annual Commencement Exercise begins at 7 p.m., at the Ford Center. The public is invited to attend.
Students graduating are earning a total of 1,895 associate and associate of applied science degrees; and certificates and technical certificates. Of those graduating, approximately half are graduating with honors.
Ivy Tech also has more than 200 high school students who are graduating even before they graduate with their high school diploma, through dual credit and dual enrollment classes they have taken with the college; and through the many Early College High Schools in Vanderburgh, Perry, and Spencer counties that Ivy Tech sponsors. There are also 248 high school students who have earned their Indiana College Core, allowing them to transfer their credits to any college in Indiana and start as a sophomore.
Ivy Tech continues to serve the workforce in a wide variety of ways, including the 48 graduates completing the Achieve Your Degree program, working with their employers who offer tuition reimbursement; and 118 apprentices in the trades in the region who earned their Associate of Applied Science degree, as well as multiple other credentials this year.
Ivy Tech Evansville offers more than 50 programs of study that may be completed in two years or less. The Evansville region includes the main campus in Evansville, and two sites in Gibson and Perry counties, the Princeton and Tell City Career & Technology Centers.
MAYORAL PROCLAMATION & PRESS CONFERENCE THIS FRIDAY, MAY 13 AT 9:00 AM CST FOR SATURDAY’S 30TH ANNUAL STAMP OUT HUNGER FOOD DRIVE
After a 2-year hiatus due to the pandemic, the National Association of Letter Carriers and Tri-State Food Bank are thrilled to once again team up for the 30th Annual STAMP OUT HUNGER FOOD DRIVE this Saturday, May 14, 2022. Â
The Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive is conducted nationally, and is the country’s largest one-day food drive, providing residents with an easy way to donate food to those in need. Residents can simply leave their donation of non-perishable food items next to their mailbox before the delivery of the mail this Saturday, May 14. Letter carriers will collect these food donations as they deliver mail along their postal routes. All donated items will be distributed by Tri-State Food Bank to local food banks, pantries, shelters and other feeding programs.
In its 30-year history, the food drive has collected approximately 1.82 billion pounds of food nation-wide for struggling residents. In Evansville alone, over two million pounds of food has been collected since the first Stamp Out Hunger in 1983.Â
Tri-State Food Bank and The National Association of Letter Carriers would like to invite the public to attend the official kick-off of this year’s food drive this Friday, May 13th at 9:00 AM CST on the back dock of the Evansville Main Post Office at 800 Sycamore Street in Downtown Evansville. Among those in attendance will be representatives of the National Association of Letter Carriers, who will read the STAMP OUT HUNGER FOOD DRIVE DAY Mayoral Proclamation, which has been issued by Mayor Lloyd Winnecke.
Lt. Gov. Crouch, FSSA Accepting 2022 Golden Hoosier Award Nominations
STATEHOUSE (May 11, 2022) – Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, in collaboration with the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration’s Division of Aging has announced nominations are now being accepted for the 2022 Golden Hoosier Award. This is the 15th year for the program.
“Our state is filled with generous Hoosiers who are constantly giving back to their neighborhoods and communities,” Crouch said. “I am excited to once again partner with FSSA and AARP Indiana to honor those who are going above and beyond to better their town and our state. The best thing about Indiana are her people, men and women who find ways to leave Indiana in a better place for their children and future generations.”
Crouch said that the award began in 2008 and annually honors older Hoosiers for their lifetime of service and commitment to their communities.
To be eligible for the Golden Hoosier Award, the nominee must currently be an Indiana resident, aged 65 or older and have been a volunteer in the community for the past three years.
The deadline for submitting applications is Friday, June 10, 2022. Nomination forms can be accessed electronically by clicking here. A ceremony honoring those selected will be held later this year at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center.
Since 2008, more than 200 Hoosiers have received the Golden Hoosier Award.
Southern Indiana River City Rodeo Returns to Evansville May 19-21
Southern Indiana River City Rodeo Returns to Evansville May 19-21
Returning to the Vanderburgh 4-H Center for three nights, the Southern IndianaRiver City Rodeo will feature the best of professional rodeos in the country. This exciting Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) sanctioned event serves as a qualifier for the 2022 National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. Â
Competition over three nights includes: bull riding, saddle bronc riding, team roping, barrel racing, steer wrestling, calf roping, mutton busting, and more. Friday and Saturday nights will also feature live music with Kentucky Dom and John King on May 20, and Elecktrohorse and Leah Turner on May 21. Food trucks, shopping, and children’s activities will also be available.Â
 Advance ticket prices start at $10 for kids and $30 for adults. 3-day admission passes are also available. For more information and to buy tickets, please visit rivercityrodeo.org. A portion of all proceeds will go to Point Man of Newburgh and Rolling Thunder, two nonprofit organizations supporting local Veterans.Â
 What: Southern Indiana River City RodeoÂ
When: Thursday, May 19, 2022 – Saturday, May 21, 2022Â
Doors Open at 5 PMÂ
Mutton Busting for Kids at 6:30 PMÂ
Rodeo at 7:30 PMÂ
Live Music at 9:30 PM (Friday and Saturday only)Â
Where: Vanderburgh County 4-H Center
 210 East Boonville New Harmony Road, Evansville, IN 47725Â
Tickets:Â Adults:Â $30 ($35 day of show), or $72 for 3-Day Admission
Kids ages 7-12: $10 ($15 day of show), or $24 for 3-Day AdmissionÂ
Available at rivercityrodeo.org or the Vanderburgh County 4-H CenterÂ
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Cops Cycling for Survivors 21st Anniversary Ride
The link below will take you to a press release that is being sent at the request of, and in cooperation with Cops Cycling for Survivors.
Cops Cycling for Survivors 21st Anniversary Ride
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UE Track & Field Heads To MVC Championships This Weekend
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Evansville track and field teams will head west to Des Moines, Iowa this weekend to take part in the 2022 Missouri Valley Conference Outdoor Track & Field Championships. The MVC Championships kick off on Friday morning at 10 a.m. with the multi-events competitions at Drake Stadium, and will continue on both Saturday and Sunday.
The Purple Aces will head to the Valley Championships off of a track season in which UE has set over 16 school records and 135 personal-best marks. UE has set at least four personal-best marks on every day of competition this season between both indoor and outdoor track season, and the Purple Aces have set a school record in nine of their 10 combined indoor and outdoor meets this spring.
“This track season has been fun to watch the growth,” said UE head coach Don Walters. “To see over 16 school records broken and 135 personal-best marks set is amazing. That has been our goal and our focus all year long, and it has been fun as a coach to see that hard work pay off for the various student-athletes.”
Junior thrower Zach Dove (Princeton, Ind./Princeton Community) has helped lead UE’s record-breaking charge, as he has set a school record five different times this spring. Dove broke the indoor weight throw record in the winter, and has broken the hammer throw record three times and broke the discus record in UE’s last meet at the Sycamore Open in Terre Haute on April 30. It comes as part of a season in which he has added almost 10 meters to his hammer throw marks from previous years.
From a Valley perspective, UE has four individuals ranked in the Valley’s Top 10 entering the championships. Senior Joey Rucinski (Ft. Wayne, Ind./Concordia Lutheran) ranks the highest of any Purple Ace, ranking fifth in the conference in the decathlon, having posted a school-record score of 5,906 already this season. Freshmen Preston Riggs (Ft. Branch, Ind./Gibson Southern) and Denzel Lasam (St. Louis, Mo./De Smet Jesuit) both rank eighth in the Valley in the decathlon and triple jump events, respectively, while Rucinski also ranks 10th in the Valley in the pole vault. Graduate student Anna Lowry (Taylorville, Ill./Taylorville) is also the reigning MVC champion in the 10,000-meter event.
The Missouri Valley Conference Championships will also mark the end of an era at Evansville, as it will mark the final meet as head coach for Don Walters. Walters began coaching cross country at UE in May, 2000 and has served as the cross country coach for the last 23 seasons. He also was a driving force behind Evansville bringing back the track and field program in 2018, after it was dormant for over 33 years.
“It really doesn’t seem like it has been 23 years, as I have really enjoyed my time at UE,” said Walters. “Hopefully, we can go out and set some more school and personal records this weekend and go out the right way.”
The MVC Championships will be streamed on ESPN3.