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Otters score early and often in Friday’s win

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The Evansville Otters became the first Frontier League team to reach 20 wins in the 2021 regular season, as they slugged their way to a 14-4 victory over the Southern Illinois Miners from Rent One Park in Marion, Ill. Friday night.

 

The Otters tagged Miners starter Michael Austin for two runs in the top of the first inning. J.R. Davis began a two-out rally with a base hit, followed by a double from Riley Krane, which set the table for Elijah MacNamee.

 

MacNamee smacked a two-out, two-run single to center field that gave the Otters their first runs of the night.

 

The Otters added four more in the top of the third when they sent nine men to the plate.

 

After Krane singled home Andy DeJesus, MacNamee would collect his third and fourth RBIs of the evening on a two-run triple to left-center field. Bryce Denton capped off the scoring in the frame with a two-out double that scored MacNamee from third. The score was then 6-0.

 

The Otters scored six runs through the first three innings in back-to-back nights.

 

Evansville added three more in the top of the fourth, thanks to a sac fly from Krane, and a two-out, RBI-single from Dakota Phillips. MacNamee also scored a run on a wild pitch. The Otters then led 9-0.

 

Still hungry at the plate, the Otters sent J.R. Davis to the plate with the bases loaded in the top of the fifth. He delivered the killing blow when he clobbered a grand slam to left field. The Otters extended their lead to 13-0.

 

The Miners broke into the run column with a two-out, run-scoring single from Anthony Brocato off of Otters starter Polo Portela in the bottom of the fifth.

 

Portela would allow another three runs to score in the bottom of the sixth, but he managed to work through the inning, turning in a strong, six-inning start and leaving his team with a nine run lead. The Otters led 13-4 after six.

 

Justin Lewis replaced Polo Portela on the mound in the seventh, and would go on to earn the three-inning, nine-out save, his first of the season, by pitching a scoreless back third of the ballgame.

The Otter did add another run in the top of the ninth, when Krane scored on a wild pitch. From there the final score would hold 14-4.

 

Polo Portela earned his third win of the season, while the Miners’ Michael Austin took his second loss.

 

The Otters will look to earn a series victory Saturday night and secure a winning road trip with a win in the second game of the set. First pitch will be at 6:05 p.m. Fans can catch an audio broadcast on the Evansville Otters YouTube channel with a 5:50 p.m. pregame show

Shooting in 1700 block of Judson St. Update

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 Around 3:30 P.M., 24-year-old Ashalique Williams was arrested for Battery with a Deadly Weapon and Criminal Recklessness. She admitted to investigators that she fired a handgun into a vehicle that struck a juvenile victim and caused injury to an adult victim. Williams was arrested and booked into the Vanderburgh County Confinement Center. 

 Shooting in 1700 block of Judson St. 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Joseph B. Parker

 

Count 1 – Criminal Confinement : 3F : Pending

 

Count 2 – Criminal Confinement : 3F : Pending

 

Count 3 – Intimidation : 5F : Pending

 

Count 4 – Intimidation : 5F : Pending

 

Count 5 – Pointing a Firearm : 6F : Pending

 

Count 6 – Criminal Mischief : BM : Pending

Joseph Lynn Young

 

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

 

Count 2 – Unlawful Possession of Syringe : 6F : Pending

Jennifer Nicole Vogt

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

Lucas Wayne Hardy

 

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

John W. Eckels

 

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

 

Count 2 – Possession of a Controlled Substance : AM : Pending

Senator Braun Resolution Honors 125th Anniversary Of Indiana Veterans Home Passes Senate

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A resolution introduced by Senator Mike Braun, Senator Todd Young, and Representative Jim Baird to recognize the 125th anniversary of the Indiana Veterans Home passed the U.S. Senate.

Since 1896, the Indiana Veterans home has maintained a strong tradition of providing care to Hoosier veterans and their families.

“The men and women who serve our nation and defend our values deserve the best care possible,” said Senator Mike Braun. “The Indiana Veterans Home has long been a cornerstone for veteran care in the Hoosier State and I am proud to recognize their 125 years of dedication to our military heroes and their families.”

“For over a century, the Indiana Veterans Home has provided Hoosier veterans and their families with the care and service they have earned,” said Senator Young. “I am honored to join Senator Braun and Congressman Baird to honor the 125th anniversary of the Indiana Veterans Home in West Lafayette.”

“Since its inception, the Indiana Veterans Home has been a refuge for our heroes and their families, providing a standard of care worthy of their service to this nation,” said Rep. Baird.  “For 125 years, the Indiana Veterans Home has proudly and faithfully served our Hoosier Veterans, and I am honored to work with my colleagues and Senators Young and Braun to recognize their service.”

Vanderburgh County Health Department Update

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Vanderburgh County Health Department Update

June 25, 2021

The Vanderburgh County Health Department (VCHD) is continuing the partnership with the Mayor’s Reopen Task Force and METS to provide a mobile vaccine clinic at several different locations throughout Vanderburgh County and the City of Evansville.  This partnership has allowed the VCHD to vaccinate hundreds of individuals where they work, shop, and live by reducing barriers people might have to receive the vaccine.  Efforts to be accessible to the public with the METS mobile clinic will help to increase our vaccination rates in areas that have lower rates.  

Starting in July the locations of the METS mobile clinics are changing, and special events have been added to the calendar for July and August.  Please see the complete list of METS mobile clinics below.

Tuesdays July 6th, 13th, 20th, 27th and August 3rd, 10th, 17th, and 24th the mobile clinic will be at the Ruler Foods, 4624 N. First Ave. from 8:30 am to 12 pm, and Simpson’s Grocery, 1365 Covert Ave from 12:30 pm to 3:30 pm.

Thursdays July 8th, 15th, 22nd, 29th and August 5th, 12th, 19th and 26th the mobile clinic will be at 670 Lincoln Ave. across from Lincoln School from 8:30 am to 12 pm, and Economy Grocery, 1200 N. Fulton Ave from 12:30 pm to 3:30 pm.

The METS mobile clinic will also be at the Vanderburgh County Humane Society on July 17th from 10 am to 3 pm, and the Hola Latino Festival on August 29th at Bosse Field from 11 am to 3 pm.

The Vanderburgh County Health Department is willing to work with local businesses, community organizations, and other agencies to plan mobile clinics.  Those interested should contact the health department through our website, vanderburghhealth.org, or by calling our main office line 812-435-2400.

USI Student Athletes Prosper In The Classroom

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University of Southern Indiana Screaming Eagles student-athletes continued to prosper in the classroom during 2020-21, posting 228 individual and a school-record 12 team Great Lakes Valley Conference academic awards.

“The number of USI student-athletes and teams that are being recognized by the GLVC is truly outstanding!” said USI Director of Athletics Jon Mark Hall. “We celebrate these scholar-athletes while being very thankful for the faculty, staff, and coaches who guide and mentor them.

“What makes these statistics even more amazing is the fact that 2020-21 was so difficult to navigate due to COVID-19,” continued Hall. “Even though many of our student-athletes seasons were cut short, they continued to thrive in the classroom.”

The Eagles earned 181 individual 2020-21 Academic All-GLVC awards, which ranks second all-time in USI history.  The Academic All-GLVC honor is bestowed upon student-athletes who complete the two-semester academic year with a minimum 3.30-grade point average (GPA).

Of the 181 Academic All-GLVC honors, 28 Screaming Eagles earned the Brother James Gaffney Distinguished Scholar Award after completing 2020-21 with a perfect 4.0 GPA.

For those Eagles completing their collegiate careers in 2020-21, USI had 19 senior student-athletes recognized with the Council of Presidents’ (COP) Academic Excellence Award. Each honoree completed their intercollegiate athletic career and maintained a 3.5 or better GPA throughout their academic career.

USI set a program record for a second-straight year when 12 varsity programs were designated as an Academic All-GLVC Team with a cumulative 3.3 GPA or better. USI was led by Women’s Tennis and Women’s Soccer with team GPAs of 3.71 and 3.70, respectively. They were followed by Women’s Cross Country (3.58); Women’s Golf (3.58); Women’s Basketball (3.56); Softball (3.48); Volleyball (3.48); Women’s Track & Field (3.47); Men’s Soccer (3.40); Men’s Cross Country (3.38); Men’s Track & Field (3.36); and Men’s Golf (3.35).

USI’s Academic All-GLVC Honorees  

* Denotes the number of Academic All-GLVC honors

Baseball (24):
Sammy Barnett***
Nick Belcher
Sam Boese
Jacob Bowles***
Brady Bowling
Blake Ciuffetelli
Nolan Cook (4.0)
Wyatt Daly*****
Aaron Euler***
Austin Gossmann (4.0)**
Isaac Housman
Ethan Hunter
Bryce Krizan***
Daniel Lopez
Manny Lopez***
Lucas McNew***
Austin Moody
Gavin McLarty (4.0)
Trent Robinson
Carter Stamm
Kobe Stephens (4.0)
Drew Taylor
Garrett Welch***
Tyler Wheeler

Men’s Basketball (1):
Tyler Martin

Men’s Cross Country (11):
Todd Baxter
Nicholas Dombroski
Ethan Goddard
Wyat Harmon*****
Noah Hufnagel
Arie Macias (4.0)***
Taylor Mills**
Braden Nicholson
Gavin Prior**
Matthew Scales
Grady Wilkinson****

Men’s Golf (5):
Zach Breault***
Nate Caudle****
Jace Day
Matthew Kingston
Zach Williams**

Men’s Soccer (16):
Ian Bennett***
Sam Benoist
Justin Brooks (4.0)*****
Justin Faas (4.0)****
Dan Hartman
Luke Lindsay***
Braden Matthews
Graham Miller**
Ryan Nevins***
Aevar Ofjord
Ryan Olwig
Scott Ross**
Zach Schoenstein
Colten Walsh (4.0)***
Cade Walsh
Josef Winkler*

Men’s Tennis (3):
Parker Collignon (4.0)***
Marvin Kromer**
Lucas Sakamaki (4.0)**

Men’s Track & Field (18):
Todd Baxter
Jake Brantley
Tyler Garrett (4.0)***
Ethan Goddard
Wyat Harmon***
Noah Hufnagel
Josh Kaminski
Arie Macias***
Lee Moore
Taylor Mills**
Braden Nicholson
Tyrell Nickelson****
Austin Nolan (4.0)*****
Markus Poulsen**
Gavin Prior**
Matthew Scales
Grady Wilkinson (4.0)***
Javan Winders***

Softball (14):
Katie Back (4.0)***
Mary Bean**
Mackenzie Bedrick (4.0)
Elissa Brown***
Mikaela Domico***
Maddie Duncan
Lexi Fair
Allie Goodin
Emma Herron (4.0)
Rachel Martinez
Courtney Schoolcraft**
Jessica Tucker
Emma Tucher
Alicia Webb**

Volleyball (9):
Leah Anderson**
Abby Bednar
Casey Cepicky**
Lauren English*
Callie Gubera****
Sidney Hegg**
Taylor Litteken***
Ashlyn MacDonald
Abby Weber

Women’s Basketball (9):
Addy Blackwell**
Emma DeHart (4.0)****
Lexie Green
Hannah Haithcock**
Kenna Hisle
Ashley Hunter
Meredith Raley
Tara Robbe (4.0)**
Audrey Turner (4.0)***

Women’s Cross Country (13):
Emma Brown***
Mckenna Cavanaugh**
Audrey Comastri
Jennifer Comastri (4.0)*****
Aubrie Deal**
Hadley Fisher**
Delaynie Grove
Cameron Hough
Carmen Rodriguez
Adele Schnautz**
Aubrey Swart**
Megan Wagler**
Mallory Wittmer

Women’s Golf (6):
Allyson Armstrong
Grace Davis***
Halle Gutwein
Hannah Herma (4.0)***
Kaylan Hook***
Kelci Katterhenry**

Women’s Soccer (25):
Audrey Andrzejewski**
Morgan Beyer (4.0)**
Elizabeth Bowley (4.0)
Megan Brune (4.0)***
Skylar Brant***
Madison Crawford**
Lily Dahl  (4.0)
Jill DiTusa**
Maya Etienne (4.0)**
Peyton Ganz
Rachel Gray (4.0)***
Ashley Hayes***
Elizabeth Heidlage
Josie Huber
Madelyne Juenger (4.0)****
Elizabeth Lippert (4.0)***
Taylor McCormick  (4.0)****
Nya Olmsted
Emma Sabath
Avery Schone
Keely Thompson***
Paige Vanek
Madeline Weston***
Maggie Winter****
Alyssa Wright**

Women’s Tennis (7):
Elizabeth Cluck**
Lindsey McCord (4.0)***
Rachel McCorkle (4.0)
Chloe McIsaac (4.0)**
Jasmine Shireman**
Kylie Skepnek***
Lauryn Thompson***

Women’s Track & Field (20):
Emma Brown***
Mckenna Cavanaugh
Olivia Clark
Audrey Comastri
Jennifer Comastri (4.0)***
Aubrie Deal**
Hadley Fisher
Dakota Gates***
Katelyn Grell**
Delaynie Grove
Cameron Hough (4.0)
Hope Jones (4.0)*****
Emma Lasher
Gabrielle McGregor
Emily Papandria**
Carmen Rodriguez
Adele Schnautz**
Aubrey Swart**
Megan Wagler
Mallory Wittmer

Brother James Gaffney Distinguished Scholar Award (28)
Grace Davis, Women’s Golf (4.0)
Nolan Cook, Baseball (4.0)
Kobe Stephens, Baseball (4.0)
Austin Gossmann, Baseball (4.0)
Gavin McLarty, Baseball (4.0)
Tyler Garrett, Men’s Track & Field (4.0)
Arie Macias, Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field (4.0)
Javan Winders, Men’s Track & Field (4.0)
Colten Walsh, Men’s Soccer (4.0)
Justin Faas, Men’s Soccer (4.0)
Justin Brooks, Men’s Soccer (4.0)
Parker Collignon, Men’s Tennis (4.0)
Lucas Sakamaki, Men’s Tennis (4.0)
Emma Herron, Softball (4.0)
Katie Back, Softball (4.0)
Mackenzie Bedrick, Softball (4.0)
Emma DeHart, Women’s Basketball (4.0)
Tara Robbe, Women’s Basketball (4.0)
Audrey Turner, Women’s Basketball (4.0)
Jennifer Comastri, Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field (4.0)
Hannah Herma, Women’s Golf (4.0)
Rachel Gray, Women’s Soccer (4.0)
Lily Dahl, Women’s Soccer (4.0)
Elizabeth Lippert, Women’s Soccer (4.0)
Madelyne Juenger, Women’s Soccer (4.0)
Morgan Beyer, Women’s Soccer (4.0)
Rachel McCorkle, Women’s Tennis (4.0)
Chloe McIsaac, Women’s Tennis (4.0)

Council of President’s Academic Excellence Award (19):
Audrey Andrzejewski, Women’s Soccer
Skylar Brant, Women’s Soccer
Megan Brune, Women’s Soccer
Ashley Hayes, Women’s Soccer
Madelyne Juenger, Women’s Soccer
Taylor McCormick, Women’s Soccer
Maggie Winter, Women’s Soccer
Nate Caudle, Men’s Golf
Zach Williams, Men’s Golf
Audrey Turner, Women’s Basketball
Callie Gubera, Volleyball
Wyat Harmon, Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field
Noah Hufnagel, Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field
Grady Wilkinson, Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field
Tyrell Nickelson, Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field
Javan Winders, Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field
Josef Winkler, Men’s Soccer
Lauryn Thompson, Women’s Tennis
Alicia Webb, Softball

Team GPA Awards (12):
Men’s Cross Country 3.38
Softball 3.48
Men’s  Golf 3.35
Volleyball 3.48
Women’s Basketball 3.56
Men’s Soccer 3.40
Men’s Track & Field 3.36
Women’s Golf 3.58
Women’s Soccer 3.70
Women’s Tennis 3.71
Women’s Cross Country 3.58
Women’s Track & Field 3.47

​​​​​​​

Vincennes University And NBA Legend Bob McAdoo Receives NJCAA’s Highest Honor

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Vincennes University great and NBA Hall of Famer Bob McAdoo is truly a trailblazer, and the NJCAA is celebrating his outstanding contributions and accomplishments with a special honor.
McAdoo was inducted into the inaugural 2021 NJCAA Foundation Hall of Fame class on June 24. The NJCAA Hall of Fame seeks to honor individuals who have paved the way for opportunities at the two-year level, athletically, professionally, and those who have impacted the NJCAA through other areas of influence. McAdoo and six others received in a virtual ceremony the highest honor the NJCAA bestows upon individuals.
“It’s an honor to have been selected to the inaugural 2021 National Junior College Hall of Fame Class,” McAdoo said during his acceptance speech. “I’m extremely appreciative of my time at Vincennes and to be recognized with this prestigious award. My time in junior college helped me lay the foundation for my hall-of-fame NBA career. The two years I spent at Vincennes not only helped me mature as a student but also prepared me for the biggest stage of NCAA Division I basketball. I won my first national championship at Vincennes University.”
McAdoo is basketball royalty.
He was enshrined in the Naismith Basketball Memorial Hall of Fame in 2000 following an illustrious 14-year NBA career. In 1984, McAdoo was inducted into the NJCAA Men’s Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
Considered one of the game’s best shooting big men of all time, McAdoo played for VU from 1969 to 1971 and finished with 1,202 career points. His 27 points in the title game led the Trailblazers to their second NJCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship in 1970. He was named an NJCAA All-American in 1971.
“During my freshman year, we won the national championship in Hutchinson, Kansas,” McAdoo said. “It was a big deal for me and my teammates because it opened up a world of recruiting opportunities for me and my teammates. It was a big thrill for me because it marked the first time in my life playing in front of a packed arena of that size in Hutchinson. My teammates and I started receiving offers from prestigious Division I university programs, and I personally was invited to try out for the World Games and the Pan American Games where I was selected as a participant.”
VU Athletic Director and Hall of Fame Women’s Basketball Coach Harry Meeks grew up not far from McAdoo’s hometown of Greensboro, North Carolina.
“Being a kid whose whole life has revolved around basketball, I knew of Bob McAdoo for quite some time,” Meeks said. “Then when I came here and started coaching, I began to realize just how much influence on VU he had even though he had not been here in so long.”
Added Meeks, “I hope that the older generations in Vincennes will tell their children and their grandchildren stories about coming out and watching McAdoo play at Vincennes, and tell them that he was a player here, a member of the University family, and relay to them how proud we are that he was a student here, and what a good role model he has been for young aspiring basketball players.”
During his VU playing days, fans celebrated and cheered McAdoo in the historic Beless Gymnasium. His No. 50 currently hangs prominently over the court in the P.E. Complex down the street.
“Every player that comes in here gets a history lesson about the great players who have come through here, and they are all held to a standard that we now have to uphold, and it starts with Bob McAdoo,” VU Hall of Fame Men’s Basketball Coach Todd Franklin said. “Not only is he one of the 50 greatest players who ever lived, but he’s been the right kind of guy with it, too. The impact that has on Vincennes University, its name recognition, and being associated with that, it’s immeasurable for our basketball program.”
Added Franklin, “We’re probably the most famous junior college program in the country, and that’s because of guys like Bob. He would have to be at the very top of that pyramid of ‘Who are your greats’. You can’t put anybody else above Bob McAdoo. I don’t know how you put a value to what Bob McAdoo has done for this school and the men’s basketball program, but we are all indebted to him.”
Life Beyond VU
Following his VU career, McAdoo played for Team USA at the 1971 Pan American Games in Colombia, then returned to his native state, where he played for the renowned University of North Carolina Coach Dean Smith. McAdoo garnered First-Team All-America honors and helped the Tar Heels reach the 1972 NCAA Final Four.
“The level of competition in junior college prepared me so well to make the smooth transition into Division I University of North Carolina under the guidance of legendary coach Dean Smith,” McAdoo said. “I became the valuable piece to their puzzle that made the Final Four the year of my transfer. The lessons I learned at Vincennes never left me and helped carry me through a long and successful NBA career, including two NBA championships and a successful European career where I won two EuroLeague championships.”
Chosen by the Buffalo Braves, McAdoo was the second overall pick in the 1972 NBA Draft. He was the 1973 NBA Rookie of the Year and 1975 NBA Most Valuable Player and amassed three scoring titles, all in the first four years of his professional career. He won NBA championships with the Los Angeles Lakers in 1982 and 1985. The five-time All-Star scored 18,787 points and averaged 22.1 points during his NBA career, scoring in double figures in all but one season.
One of Franklin’s first basketball memories is of the Buffalo Braves with McAdoo.
“Bob McAdoo, to me, was a guy who was synonymous with basketball when I was a kid growing up,” Franklin said. “He is one of the pillars of basketball, period, so what does that mean for Vincennes? Here’s a person that not only helped to build this program at VU, but this is a guy who played in Final Fours and won titles in the NBA. The opportunity to have a guy like that, with your name attached to him forever, from a basketball standpoint can’t get any bigger. The fact that he has been a pillar in the NBA, in terms of being a highly respected guy, McAdoo is a guy who exemplifies what you want out of your great players.”
After the NBA, McAdoo played in Europe for seven seasons. He averaged more than 20 points or more in six of those seasons. He retired in 1992, yet his basketball journey continued.
He returned to the NBA as an assistant coach, winning three championships with the Miami Heat and helping them to five NBA championship series. McAdoo is currently the Heat’s scout/community liaison.
“He was, for a particular time, the best basketball player in the world, when he was playing in Buffalo and winning MVPs and scoring titles,” Meeks said. “Bob McAdoo’s association with Vincennes University has had a positive impact on the school, especially in the sports world. When I go back home in North Carolina and wear Vincennes University shirts and things with VU on them, even on the East Coast, everybody knows Vincennes, knows what Vincennes University is, and knows where it’s located. They know VU as a Midwest school that has a great basketball program, and it all emanates from that particular time in the 1970s when Bob McAdoo was here. From Vincennes to the East Coast, VU got a lot of notoriety and a lot of press because Bob McAdoo was here.”
Added Meeks, “I’ve seen in the NBA playoffs all the time this season where players are breaking his records, and I’ve seen Bob McAdoo’s face more in the last two weeks than I’ve seen in the last 10 years. Several times I’ve seen Vincennes University listed as one of his schools. That helps us and helps people recognize that Bob McAdoo did play here and that he is one of the greatest basketball players of all time.”
A Great In Every Way
McAdoo thanked his many coaches and teammates for helping him achieve the amazing levels of success that he has.
“I will continue my effort to be the best ambassador of basketball that I can be,” he said. “This accomplishment is not something I did alone. So many people helped me along the way. I will love to start by thanking my Vincennes coaches: Coach Allen Bradfield, Coach Jack Butler, and Coach Jerry Reynolds that scouted and brought me to Vincennes. My talented teammates helped also in this process with my development.”
In elevating the statures of VU and the NJCAA, McAdoo has made a lasting impact appreciated by many, many individuals.
“In juco athletics, basketball is the bell cow over the years,” Franklin said. “It gets so much attention, even more than football because there are so many less schools that play football. So basketball has been the prime deal in juco, and no one has ever been better at it than Bob McAdoo. Whatever I do for the rest of my career, I’m going to be best known for juco basketball. Bob McAdoo made it better to be a juco guy. How many people can say that they made an entire group as big as juco basketball better and gave them more credibility? That’s the biggest thing you can say about Bob, and all he did to uplift the reputation of Vincennes University, the reputation of junior college basketball, and the reputation of junior college athletics.”

EPA Announces $50 Million to Fund Environmental Justice Initiatives

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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today announced that it will provide $50 million dollars for Environmental Justice (EJ) initiatives through funds allocated to EPA under the American Rescue Plan (ARP). In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress designated this funding for grants, contracts, and other agency activities that identify and address disproportionate environmental or public health harms and risks in underserved communities through a range of local initiatives.

“We know how important it is to put funding to work in environmentally overburdened, economically underserved areas, and today we’re excited to let our communities know that thanks to the American Rescue Plan, help is here,” said Administrator Michael S. Regan. “EPA is drawing on its many years of experience working with communities and organizations that strive for environmental justice to ensure these funds will deliver real-world results for those who need it most.”

At an event today at the Ashburton Filtration Plant in Baltimore, Maryland, Administrator Regan announced that $200,000 is going to the YH2O mentoring program in Baltimore City – an on-the-job training program that prepares young adults to be employed in full-time jobs within the water industry. Participants are involved in water quality monitoring, sampling, and reporting as they develop skills to improve water quality in urban and rural communities and ultimately transition into water infrastructure jobs.

Moving forward, EPA will also work to award an additional $50 million provided under the ARP for enhanced air quality monitoring, including plans to use a portion of these funds to solicit proposals from community groups, state, local and tribal air agencies to conduct monitoring of pollutants of greatest concern in communities with health outcome disparities.

“Taking on environmental injustice is necessary for present and future generations to thrive. I thank the EPA for recognizing this and bolstering our local efforts to build a cleaner, greener, more equitable Baltimore. This investment will support Baltimore YH2O, a six-month program that extends opportunity to young adults through full-time employment in the water industry,” said Baltimore Mayor Brandon M. Scott.

“We must always see investments in our infrastructure as investments in our communities, including not only roads and bridges and pipes and drains, but also people. Infrastructure means jobs. Infrastructure means opportunities – opportunities to make a lasting difference, and opportunities to learn and refine the skills on which strong careers are built. That’s why I am excited to help underscore the importance of the EPA American Rescue Plan grant announced today to the Baltimore DPW YH20 mentoring program, which prepares young adults for full-time jobs in the drinking water and wastewater services industry.  These are exactly the type of targeted, community-focused investments we need to continue making in this city and country alike,” said Senator Ben Cardin.

“Every Marylander needs access to clean, safe drinking water. This federal investment will support critical workforce training in preventing and reducing water pollution, which will not only help us protect public health by ensuring safe drinking water but also prepare more Marylanders for careers in this field. I was proud to help secure these funds within the American Rescue Plan and will continue working in Congress and with Administrator Regan to provide resources to upgrade our water infrastructure and address environmental inequities across our state,” said Senator Chris Van Hollen.

“The Hogan Administration is proud of the environmental progress we’re making and the bipartisan partnerships we’re building with EPA Administrator Regan and Congress on clean water and energy infrastructure, public health, environmental equity, community revitalization, and green jobs in Maryland,” said Maryland Secretary of the Environment Ben Grumbles.

“Clean air and clean water should be American birthrights. President Biden and Vice President Harris share this perspective and are committed to having the EPA active in every community across America, no matter the zip code. I welcome their presence in my District and their grant toward mentoring programs in Baltimore,” said Congressman Kweisi Mfume.

“The American Rescue Plan provides dedicated federal funding to support projects in Baltimore and across the country that advance environmental justice and equity. Too many communities in America have been denied equal access to clean drinking water, healthy air and accessible green spaces. Working closely with the Biden Administration and my colleagues in Congress, I will continue to prioritize environmental justice efforts that lift up every community and improve the health and well-being of all Americans,” said Congressman John Sarbanes.

“The American Rescue Plan continues to deliver for communities like Baltimore – in this case, by providing young adults the opportunity to receive on-the-job-training for careers in the water infrastructure industry. This effort is a smart, common sense way to create quality jobs so that more Marylanders can support their families today while ensuring our communities have safe roads, bridges and pipelines for the economy of the future,” said Congressman C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger.

EPA is assisting under-resourced communities by quickly getting out ARP funding to leverage important programs that improve air quality, drinking water, revitalization of brownfields, diesel emissions from buses in low income communities and communities of color. Under EPA’s State Environmental Justice Cooperative Agreement (SEJCA) program, the agency is awarding its first competitive grants focusing directly on the unequal impacts the COVID-19 pandemic has had on communities of color, low income communities, and other vulnerable populations. Projects include training, developing citizen-science tools, pollution monitoring, and educational campaigns to enable EJ advocates, scientists, and decision-makers to address pollution and create thriving communities.

Funding currently being distributed totals approximately $2.8 million for 14 EJ-focused projects, with more to be announced soon throughout the country. In addition to the Baltimore City grant, today’s announcement includes funding for the following projects in underserved communities:

  • City of Milwaukee, Wisconsin – for outreach and education through a Healthy People, Homes and Neighborhood campaign.
  • City of Fort Collins, Colorado – for a housing intervention program targeting indoor air quality.
  • South Coast Air Quality Management District, California – to establish an Air Quality Academy to provide resources and training to improve environmental literacy and air quality data.
  • Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles, California – for a community health worker pilot program on asthma awareness.
  • Public Health-Seattle & King County, Washington – for community health worker training on healthy homes and home assessments.
  • Tohono O’odham Tribal Nation, Arizona – for developing local plans to address air quality issues.
  • Virginia Department of Environmental Quality – for developing and implementing an EJ training academy and EJ map-based tool.
  • Alabama Department of Environmental Management – for public education on air pollution and disinfectants.
  • City of Houston, Texas – to launch the Houston Inspires/Houston Inspira public education campaign to creatively engage with communities about clean air and COVID-19.
  • City of Madison, WI – to implement Intervene Against COVID-19, a public education, training, and emergency planning program.
  • City of Hartford Department of Health and Human Services, Connecticut – to implement a new strategy to increase outreach on asthma and environmental hazards.
  • City of San Pablo, CA – to deploy an afterschool internship program for disadvantaged high school students to raise awareness and mitigate the impacts of COVID-19.
  • Massachusetts Department of Health – to support the Asthma Prevention and Control Program which seeks to improve asthma outcomes in multiple underserved communities.

The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 was signed into law in March 11, 2021. It provides funds to address health outcome disparities from pollution and the COVID–19 pandemic. To learn more about the ARP, visit: https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/1319/text 

EPA is also announcing today for the first time how the agency will distribute the $50 million in ARP funds. A breakdown is provided below:

  • $16,650,000 will be used to fund EJ grants. This includes State EJ Cooperative Agreement awards (SEJCA), EJ collaborative problem-solving (EJCPS), and EJ small grants (EJSG). Tribes and territories are eligible for each of these programs and the application requests have closed for this fiscal year. This funding also helps with capacity building, training and assessments, the Puerto Rico drinking water systems capacity assessment, and a new Appalachia Initiative for Revitalization. It will provide technical assistance and environmental youth STEM training in overburdened communities.
  • $7,000,000 will fund a tailored use of the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) rebate program to address priority EJ issues for reducing diesel pollution. This DERA rebate program will fund electric school buses using screening criteria with the goal of reaching fleets in underserved communities with multiple air quality and health challenges.
  • $5,130,000 will be used to expand civil and criminal enforcement to include monitoring near low-income communities and drinking water sources for pollution including air toxics and hazardous metals. It also supports EJ analyses related to oil and gas production and refining, along with support for environmental crime victim outreach.
  • $5,000,000 will help communities tackle the challenge of assessing, cleaning up and preparing brownfield sites for redevelopment.
  • $4,850,000 will go to children’s health issues and will fund the Children’s Healthy Learning Environments Grant and Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units (PEHSUs). PEHSUs build capacity in vulnerable communities to reduce children’s environmental exposures in child-occupied settings and address children’s COVID-19 environmental health risks.
  • $4,700,000 will be used for drinking water and compliance monitoring in rural and tribal areas. This supports small and underserved public water systems and wastewater treatment facilities through in-person technical assistance, including a circuit rider program, and supports integrating EJ into EPA permit-writing.
  • $2,150,000 will support the agency’s community driven solutions effort to collaboratively build community capacity to address air and water issues in underserved communities. Specialized technical assistance will help align school reopening investments with clean air and neighborhood cooling shelter needs and promote equitable resilience and revitalization.
  • $1,600,000 will support the Tribal General Assistance Program. This program supports efforts by tribes to engage their community members on priority EJ water and air quality issues. Tribes and indigenous organizations will also be eligible for all the above support mechanisms.
  • $720,000 will be used to enhance the development of EJSCREEN, the EJ analysis tool and support related resources.
  • $700,000 is allocated for a climate protection program to advance data analytics work in the Office of Air and Radiation to identify cumulative burdens and improve equity outcomes for vulnerable communities, and to advance regulatory analytics and policy modeling to better incorporate environmental justice considerations.
  • $500,000 will support new methods of outreach and support for those performing analysis and outreach related to critical EJ issues in the oil and gas sector.
  • $1,000,000 will be used for administrative costs pursuant to the 2% reserved in the law for this purpose.

JUSTICE LONG DELAYED

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JUSTICE LONG DELAYED

GAVEL GAMUT By Jim Redwine

I grew up in Osage County, Oklahoma but until 2006 I had never heard of the Tulsa Massacre nor the Black man whose head was chopped off and thrown into a spring north of Pawhuska. I lived in Posey County, Indiana for many years before 1990 which is when I first learned of the Black men who were murdered on the campus of the Posey County Courthouse. 

While I occasionally heard the whispered rumors of murdered Osages when I lived in Pawhuska I only learned of the 19th-century massacre of a band of peaceful Shawnee Indians in Posey County about the same time I began to investigate the lynchings at the courthouse. My personal experiences in Osage County, Oklahoma and Posey County, Indiana drew me into the colliding similarities of how the legal systems of Oklahoma and Indiana dealt with the victims and the perpetrators as minor inconveniences.

I began research into the Posey County murders while I was the sitting Circuit Court Judge in the courthouse that was the scene of the injustices done in the autumn of 1878. In 2006 my childhood friend, Dick Surber, who had bought the ranch property that included the spring, told me the story of how a white woman and a Black man had an affair while Oklahoma was still Indian Territory. According to Dick, who was a school teacher and an amateur Osage County historian, the woman’s husband caught the lovers at the spring and murdered them. The cuckolded husband chopped off the Black man’s head and threw the head in the spring, ergo the politically incorrect name the locals gave to the spring.

In 2008 Peg and I published our historical novel JUDGE LYNCH! in which some of the survivors of the 1878 Posey County pogrom had fled to Indian Territory. Fairly soon after the publication of JUDGE LYNCH!, Peg and I began to work on a sequel. This new historical fiction novel draws upon events in both states. When Crystal Collins, who worked in the Posey County Clerk’s Office, heard I was working on a sequel to the book that had taken me 17 years to write, Crystal asked, “Judge, do you have another 17 years?” As Crystal is a friend and a sweet person I am sure she did not mean anything untoward. Regardless, it turned out I did complete the sequel LAST WEEK!

Unanimous for Murder carries on with the characters from JUDGE LYNCH! plus the new ones from Oklahoma. Peg and I will be signing copies at the Redwine Family Jam Session and Jamboree at the Constantine Theater in Pawhuska between 12:00 noon and 6:00 p.m. on Friday and Saturday the 16th and 17th of July 2021. My family and some friends will be playing music and singing songs as well as showing my sister Shirley Redwine’s fabulous Cavalcade Rodeo themed paintings! Shirley is our family’s rodeo cowgirl who competed in the Cavalcade herself a year or two ago!

The beautifully restored Constantine Theater will have its doors open to the public for free with concessions for sale to help support the Constantine. Please come by and visit or join in, and as always, you can check out our website, www.jamesmredwine.com, “Like/Follow” us on Facebook & Twitter at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting or find the new book at www.Amazon.com.

Hope to see you at the Constantine Theater, 110 W. Main Street, Pawhuska, Oklahoma

July 16 and 17, 2021 from 12:00 noon to 6:00 p.m. during the Cavalcade!

Free Public Jam Session July 17, 2021 from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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– Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Quinyatte Jarmaine Harrell

Count 1 – Failure to Register as a Sex or Violent Offender : 5F : Pending

Robert Ortiz Jr.

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 4F : Pending

 

Count 2 – Resisting Law Enforcement : AM : Pending

Kevin Vanshawn Profit

Count 1 – Resisting Law Enforcement : 6F : Guilty

 

Count 2 – Neglect of a Dependent : 6F : Guilty

 

Count 3 – Resisting Law Enforcement : AM : Guilty

 

Count 4 – Reckless Driving : CM : Guilty

 

Count 5 – Operating a Motor Vehicle Without Ever Receiving a License : CM : Guilty

Stephanie Lynn Folz

 

Count 1 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 6F : Pending

Jocelyn Stanton

 

Count 1 – Dealing in Methamphetamine : 2F : Pending

 

Count 2 – Possession of Methamphetamine : 4F : Pending

Gregory Austin Allison

Count 1 – HC – Dealing in Methamphetamine : 2F : Pending

 

Count 2 – HC – Possession of Methamphetamine : 4F : Pending

 

Count 3 – Intimidation : 6F : Pending

 

Count 4 – Possession of a Controlled Substance : AM : Pending