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State Rep. McNamara’s bill to focus resources for at-risk youth moves to the governor

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STATEHOUSE – State Rep. Wendy McNamara’s (R-Evansville) bill to improve Indiana’s juvenile justice system is now with the governor for consideration as a new law.

McNamara said through her bill, specific juvenile programs that receive grants must work together with local and regional justice reinvestment councils and stakeholders to make collaborative service plans.

“When working with at-risk youth, there is not a clear-cut answer or a one-size-fits-all solution,” said McNamara, chair of the House Courts and Criminal Code Committee. “By bringing all parties to the table, all of those working toward helping Hoosier children in need can collaborate and enhance our juvenile justice system.”

McNamara said her bill would also have the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute consider additional recommendations in adopting a funding formula for the Juvenile Diversion Grant Program, the Juvenile Community Alternatives Grant Program and Juvenile Behavioral Health Competitive Grant Program. The bill would also extend funding for certain juvenile programs to July 1, 2027 instead of July 1, 2025.

City Council Meeting

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City Council Meeting
APRIL 28, 2025

5:30 P.M.

AGENDA

I. INTRODUCTION

 

04-28-2025 Agenda Attachment:
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDUM

 

4-14-2025 Memo Attachment:
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS

 

IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

V. CONSENT AGENDA:  FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

VII. REGULAR AGENDA:  SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

A. ORDINANCE G-2025-10 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Vanderburgh County, Indiana Approving a Payment in Lieu of Taxes Agreement for Affordable Housing Project Sponsor(s): Trockman, Heronemus Discussion Led By:  ASD Chair Carothers Discussion Date: 4/28/2025 Notify: Nick Cirignano, ZSWS
G-2025-10 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE F-2025-06 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds Sponsor(s): Allen Discussion Led By:  Finance Chair Allen Discussion Date: 4/28/2025 Notify: Robert Gunter, Controller
F-2025-06 Attachment:
C. ORDINANCE F-2025-07 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Repeals and Re-Appropriations of Funds within the Department of Metropolitan Development Sponsor(s): Allen Discussion Led By:  Finance Chair Allen Discussion Date: 4/28/2025 Notify: Kolbi Jackson, DMD
F-2025-07 Attachment:
D. ORDINANCE R-2025-06 AMENDED An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 1031 Mount Auburn Rd Owner: Shellback Realty LLC Requested Change:  M2 to M1 w/ UDC Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: Matt Lehman, RLehman & Son Consulting
R-2025-06 Amended Attachment:
E. ORDINANCE R-2025-07 AMENDED An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 2, 4, 6,  6 1/2, 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16 Read St Owner: Fuzzy Dice LLC Requested Change:  R5 to C4 w/UDC Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: Bret A Sermersheim, Morley
R-2025-07 Amended Attachment:
VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET

 

IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

 

A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, May 12, 2025 at 5:30 p.m.
B. EVANSVILLE REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION 2024 ANNUAL REPORT; Kolbi Jackson, Executive Director, DMD
C. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
X. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

XI. ADJOURNMENT

VU Baseball splits Conference doubleheader with Spoon River College

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VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University baseball team returned to Jerry Blemker Field Saturday afternoon for the opening two games of their four-game weekend Mid-West Athletic Conference series with Spoon River College.

The Trailblazers got the weekend off to a great start by taking game one over the Snappers 10-4 before dropping game two 9-0 to even the series heading into the final doubleheader Sunday.

The Trailblazers started slow Saturday afternoon with Spoon River plating a run in the first three innings to take an early 3-0 lead.

VU would get on the board in the bottom of the third after loading the bases with back-to-back singles by sophomore Bradyn Douglas (Frankton, Ind.) and freshman Jevan Andrews (Hobart, Ind.) and sophomore Nate Montgomery (Lexington, Ind.) reaching on an error.

Vincennes got on the scoreboard with a bases loaded walk by Yancey Edlin (Pekin, Ind.) followed by a two-RBI single by sophomore Noble Johnson (Terre Haute, Ind.) to even the score at 3-3.

The Trailblazers grabbed their first lead of the game in the fourth on a two RBI single by sophomore Corbin Napier (Indianapolis, Ind.), with the Blazers scoring another run in the inning on a successful double steal to take a 6-3 lead over Spoon River.

Vincennes kept adding to their lead in the fifth after a two-out walk by sophomore Bryce Gross, followed by a walk by Bradyn Douglas and an RBI single by Jevan Andrews.

Spoon River would get a run back in the seventh and cut the deficit to 7-4 before the Blazers answered back in the bottom of the seventh with back-to-back walks by sophomore Brody Fessel (DePauw, Ind.) and Bryce Gross and an RBI single by Bradyn Douglas, his fourth hit of the game and fifth time reaching base safely in game one.

Jevan Andrews followed this with a two-RBI double to get the Vincennes lead to 10-4 heading into the final two innings.

The Blazers were able to hold Spoon River off the scoreboard down the stretch as Vincennes comes away with the game one victory by the final score of 10-4 over the Snappers.

Sophomore Carson Allen (Louisville, Ky.) got the start in game one of the day, settling in to throw six and one-third innings, allowing four runs, three earned on nine hits and striking out one.

Freshman Jacob Allen (Vincennes, Ind.) came in for the Blazers in relief, pitching the final two and two-thirds innings without allowing a run and only allowing one hit with two strikeouts.

The Trailblazers looked to keep this momentum going in game two of the day and once again found themselves playing from behind early after Spoon River scored four runs in the second to take the early lead.

The Snappers continued to add to their lead with a run in the fourth and another run in the sixth before adding three more insurance runs in the seventh to take a 9-0 lead.

The Trailblazers had opportunities at the plate throughout the game, getting runners in scoring position in four out of seven innings and had the bases loaded in the seventh but were unable to push a run across as Spoon River closed out the day with a 9-0 win in game two.

Freshman Eastin Whaley (Kokomo, Ind.) got the start in game two for the Trailblazers, working well around a tough second inning to throw four innings, allowing five runs on two hits and striking out one.

Freshman Jakob Hoyer (Georgetown, Ind.) was the first out of the bullpen in game two, throwing two-plus innings, allowing three runs, two earned on three hits with three strikeouts.

Bryce Gross came in from his shortstop position to close out the seventh inning, allowing one unearned run without allowing a hit and striking out one in one-inning on the mound.

The Trailblazers will look to bounce back and close out the weekend strong as the Blazers look to pick up the series win Sunday, April 27 with the final two games of this four-game series. First pitch Sunday is set for 12 p.m. eastern at Jerry Blemker Field.

Eagles 2025 season ends in Horizon League quarterfinals

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ANN ARBOR, MI.– University of Southern Indiana Men’s Tennis bows out of its first Horizon League Tournament in the Quarterfinals round after a 4-0 defeat to Youngstown State University Friday afternoon in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
 
The Screaming Eagles finish their historic season with a 5-10 (2-2 Horizon) record and a postseason appearance, the team’s first since transitioning to Division I. Head Coach Chris Crawford was named Horizon League Men’s Tennis Coach of the Year for the team’s turnaround. At the same time, freshman Jy Hibbert and junior Axel Sabourin earned the league’s doubles team of the week honors in early April.
 
Doubles
Southern Indiana dropped the first two doubles matches, securing the point for Youngstown. Freshman Adam Koon and junior Mathys Bove battled in the number three doubles match, but fell 6-4, while senior Quinten Gillespie and sophomore Eytan Michaeli dropped the number two doubles match 6-3.
 
Singles
The Eagles’ struggles continued into the singles matches. Bove lost the number one singles match 6-2, 6-0, before Michaeli lost in the number three singles 6-2, 6-4. Gillespie closed out his collegiate career in the number five singles, getting bested 6-2, 6-4.
 
Sabourin and Hibbert were ahead in the number two and number four singles matches before they were declared unfinished after Youngstown clinched the victory.
 

USI drops second game of the series, 12-3

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Baseball lost game two of the series with Eastern Illinois University, 12-3, Saturday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. USI is 20-23 overall and 9-8 in the OVC, while EIU is 22-18, 10-6 OVC.
 
The Screaming Eagles fell behind 2-0 when EIU scored a tally in the second and third innings. USI got one of the runs back in the third on a base hit by sophomore rightfielder Cameron Boyd to trail 2-1 after three frames.
 
The Panthers would build the lead to 4-1 with a pair of runs in the fourth, while the Eagles scratched a run across in the sixth on a double by junior shortstop Clayton Slack to make the score, 4-2.
 
EIU would explode for eight runs in the final three frames to pull away for the 12-3 final score.
 
Offensively, USI, which had 14 hits as a team, was led by the three-hit performances of Boyd and junior designated hitter Cole KitchensBoyd finished the day three-for-four and is hitting .632 for the week (12-19).
 
USI junior left-hander Jake Porter started and took the loss. Porter (2-4) allowed four runs, one earned, on four hits and three walks. He also struck out three in five innings of work.
 

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USI Student Government Association inducts members for 2025-26 academic year

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The University of Southern Indiana Student Government Association (SGA) inducted its 2025-26 Executive Board, Administrative Vice Presidents, Members-at-Large and College Representatives on Thursday, April 24 in a private inauguration ceremony. Students elected for the 2025-26 term are as follows:

Executive Board

  • President: Alicia Cotton
  • Executive Vice President: Leonna Benton
  • Attorney General: Keaira Richmond

Administrative Vice Presidents

  • Administrative Vice President of Recruitment and Retention: Mackenzie Hinton
  • Administrative Vice President of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion: Sophia Driver
  • Administrative Vice President of Campus Engagement: Delaney Anthis
  • Administrative Vice President of Environmental Protection: Bella Dilk

Members-at-Large

  • Housing: Emily Solorza
  • Commuter Student: Reegan Summers
  • Fraternity and Sorority: Ethan Shourd

College Representatives

  • College of Liberal Arts: Kennadi Scott, Cole Barnett and Cade Smithson-Cox
  • Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education: Joseph Cirrincione and Arya Shah
  • Romain College of Business: Wesley Brown and Michael Solliday

Aces hit first back-to-back home runs of 2025 at Missouri State

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The Purple Aces last back-to-back long balls came against the Bears in 2024
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. – The University of Evansville baseball team took an early lead on Saturday afternoon but ultimately fell to the Missouri State Bears 7-2.
The Purple Aces added their 19th and 20th home runs of the season in their second game against Missouri State. But the long balls from left fielder Charlie Longmeier (Seymour, Ind. / Seymour HS) and infielder Cal McGinnis (Kimberly, Wis. / Bradley) weren’t enough to push UE past the Bears. McGinnis, along with catcher Evan Waggoner (Bedford, Ind. / Bedford North Lawrence HS), led Evansville at the plate with two hits each while Waggoner and first baseman Jake McGhee (Fenton, Mo. / Christian Brothers Academy) had two walks.
“Our offense didn’t have an answer for their two pitchers today,” said Head Coach Wes Carroll following the loss. “It’s tough to lose a series on a Saturday. But tomorrow is an important game in the big picture of the conference season.”
The Aces got on base early Saturday afternoon as UE had a batter reach first in three straight innings. Evansville’s first hit didn’t come until the top of the second when shortstop Drew McConnell (Blue Springs, Mo. / Blue Springs HS) put a single into right center. But the Aces’ defense kept Missouri State quiet early to give the offense time to bring in a run.
And bring in a run, UE did as Longmeier hit his fourth home run of the year to right field. The homer gave Evansville a 1-0 lead early, and the team soon got another run on the board. McGinnis took two pitches from Bears starter Jason Schaaf before hitting his own bomb past the right field fence.
McGinnis’ third home run of the season gave the Aces a 2-0 lead after only two and a half innings on Saturday. Two more batters reached base for UE in the third as McGhee walked, and Waggoner added his fifth double of the year. But the two runners remain stranded as Evansville went into the bottom of the frame with its first lead of the series.
The Aces’ defense took Missouri State down in order to close out the first third of the game on top. But UE’s offense struggled the next two innings, going down in order twice. While the Bears cut Evansville’s lead by a run in the bottom of the fourth with a lead-off solo home run. The Aces held onto their lead through the fourth with three straight outs after the lead-off run.
Missouri State was able to tie the game in the bottom of the fifth with another solo shot to begin the frame. The Bears quickly took over on offense in the inning as they put a fielder’s choice and four straight hits into the field to score three more runs. The game score remained 5-2 for the next two and a half innings.
UE added two more hits and loaded up the bases on two separate occasions through the sixth and the eighth. McGhee and Waggoner again went back-to-back on base in the top of the sixth with a single each. Evansville didn’t have another hit in the inning but did load the bases with a hit-by-pitch. But with two outs on the board already, the Aces stranded three with a strikeout.
The second loaded bases situation of the game for UE came in the top of the eighth inning. McGhee and Waggoner were walked by Missouri State reliever Max Knight to begin the eighth. A third walk to pinch hitter Brodie Peart (Markham, Ontario) after a strikeout put Evansville into another bases-loaded situation. But again, the Aces left all three runners stranded on base with a strikeout and a flyout.
The Bears added two more runs in the bottom of the eighth with their own back-to-back home runs. UE’s defense got the next three batters down in order, heading into its final chance at the plate. McGinnis got his second hit of the day in the top of the ninth with a one-out single to right center. But Evansville wasn’t able to bring McGinnis home, falling to Missouri State 7-2.
The Aces will try to steal a game from the Bears on Sunday in the series finale. The rubber match is currently set for a 1 p.m. first pitch on Sunday, April 27.

EVSC MEETING

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet inexecutive session at 4:00 PM. on Monday, April 28, 2025 in the Schroeder Conference Centre located in the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1. The purpose of the meeting is: collective bargaining, (b)(2)(A) initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing,(b)(2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (b)(2)(D); receive information about and interview prospective employees (b)(5); and to train school board members with an outside consultant about the performance of the role of the members as public officials (b)(11).

Attorney General Todd Rokita and Secretary of State Diego Morales continue work to verify that Indiana voters are U.S. citizens 

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Attorney General Todd Rokita and Secretary of State Diego Morales continue pressing the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to help verify the citizenship status of voters who registered in Indiana without providing state-issued forms of identification.

Despite first receiving Indiana’s written requests last October, federal officials have failed to provide information that would enable Indiana to verify that only eligible voters participated in elections. This month, Attorney General Rokita and Secretary Morales filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security — of which USCIS is part — to compel federal cooperation.

“Following the Biden administration’s obstruction here, I expect that President Trump’s team will resolve this matter,” Attorney General Rokita said. “This lawsuit is another important step in ensuring the integrity of our elections. Hoosiers have a right to know that legitimate ballots are not being diluted by noncitizens. I promised that I would get citizenship information from USICS, and that is exactly what I am doing by filing this suit.”

Last year, Attorney General Rokita and Secretary Morales sent then-USCIS Director Ur M. Jaddou lists of certain voters who registered without state IDs — along with a joint letter formally requesting the agency’s assistance in verifying those individuals’ citizenship status. No response ever came.

“As Indiana’s Chief Election Officer, ensuring the integrity of our elections is non-negotiable. This legal action is a continuation of our efforts for Indiana to lead the way in election integrity. Since we never received a response from the Biden administration, we know that under President Trump’s leadership and based on his recent Executive Order, there’s a stronger commitment to the election process. Hoosiers deserve nothing less than full confidence in the security of their vote,” said Diego Morales, Indiana Secretary of State.

Federal law requires USCIS to respond to inquiries from state government agencies “to verify or ascertain the citizenship or immigration status of any individual within the jurisdiction of the agency for any purpose authorized by law.”