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AGENDA
I. | INTRODUCTION |
05-10-2021 Agenda Attachment:
II. | APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDUM |
Draft Memo Attachment:
III. | REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS |
IV. | SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY |
V. | CONSENT AGENDA:Â FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS |
A. ORDINANCE F-2021-07 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): Heronemus Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Heronemus Discussion Date: 5/24/2021 Notify: Russ Lloyd, Jr., Controller F-2021-07 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE F-2021-08 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds Within Various Departments Sponsor(s): Heronemus Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Heronemus Discussion Date: 5/24/2021 Notify: Kelley Coures, DMD F-2021-08 Attachment:
VI. | COMMITTEE REPORTS |
VII. | REGULAR AGENDA:Â SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS |
A. ORDINANCE F-2021-06 An Ordinance Establishing an Account to Deposit Funds Received by the City of Evansville Under The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARP) Sponsor(s): Heronemus Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Heronemus Discussion Date: 5/10/2021 Notify: Marco Delucio, ZSWS F-2021-06 Attachment:
VIII. | RESOLUTION DOCKET |
A. RESOLUTION C-2021-06 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Ratifying the 2021 Annual Action Plan Sponsor(s): Heronemus Discussion Led By: President Beane Discussion Date: 5/10/2021 Notify: Kelley Coures, DMD C-2021-06 Attachment:
IX. | MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS |
A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, May 24, 2021 at 5:30 p.m.
B. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
X. | COMMITTEE REPORTS |
XI. | ADJOURNMENT |
AGENDA Of  The Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners
May 11, 2021Â at 3:00 pm, Old National Events Plaza Exhibit Hall A
50,000 Scholarships Are AvailableSIn Support Of Hoosier Workers And Their Children
INDIANAPOLIS – Today the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration announced the Build, Learn, Grow initiative, which is making 50,000 scholarships available to help connect Hoosier children from working families to high-quality early education and out-of-school-time programs. The scholarships will be funded by more than $101 million provided to Indiana by the federal Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act, or CRRSA.
Through the Build, Learn, Grow scholarship fund, Hoosier families working in essential industries with qualifying incomes can receive scholarships for each child age 12 and younger toward their early care and education, summer learning or out-of-school care. Scholarships run from May through October 2021 and will cover 80% of the early care and education program’s tuition. Information is available at www.BuildLearnGrow.org.
“Access to high-quality early care and education is essential to Hoosier families and children,†said Jennifer Sullivan, M.D., M.P.H., FSSA secretary. “These scholarships will help connect hard-working Hoosier families and their children to programs that prepare them for success in school, help reverse learning loss and provide additional support to the families who kept us going during the pandemic.â€
For families to qualify for Build, Learn, Grow scholarships, an adult in the household must work in an essential business (examples include health care, human services, retail, restaurant and foodservice, essential infrastructure, media, manufacturing and logistics, religious and charitable organizations and many others) and meet income eligibility guidelines as outlined here. Families will qualify for The Build, Learn, Grow scholarship with incomes of up to 250% of the federal poverty level. For a family of four, that equates to an annual income of about $66,000. Qualifying families should complete the Build, Learn, Grow Scholarship Fund application found here and submit it to their early care and education provider. Families not currently connected to an early care and education program will be able to find a list of participating programs on the Build, Learn, Grow website as they enroll and become qualified. All providers who currently accept federal child care assistance are encouraged to enroll.
To administer the Build, Learn, Grow scholarship program, the Office of Early Childhood and Out-of-School Learning has partnered with Early Learning Indiana and Indiana Afterschool Network, the state’s leading organizations supporting early care and education and out-of-school-time programs.
Early care and education and out-of-school-time programs interested in receiving children with Build, Learn, Grow scholarships can learn more at www.BuildLearnGrow.org.
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HAPPY MOTHERS DAY
by Tom Purcell for Cagle, Inc
Scientific American describes my mother to a T.
An article titled “The Incredible Importance of Mothers,” by social scientist Melanie Tannenbaum lays out the argument that a mother’s comfort – not just meeting basic needs, such as providing food and shelter – is essential to the development and wellbeing of children.
Tannenbaum cites the work of social scientist John Bowlby, who in the 1950s “determined that our attachment to parental figures (in particular, he argued, to mothers) plays a huge, critical role in our ability to learn, grow, and develop healthy adult relationships.”
She also cites the work of psychologist Harry Harlow, who was strongly influenced by Bowlby’s attachment theory. Harlow believed that we humans have a core motivation for love and affection as children and that a mother’s comfort is what develops our sense of security – which is the key to living a happy, productive and well-adjusted life.
I have many fond memories of being comforted by my mother.
I’m the third child and only boy in a family of six children, so there was a lot of competition for my mother’s attention.
But I vividly remember one warm, sunny spring day while my two older sisters were at school and I got to have my mother all to myself.
I must have been four at the time and she was pregnant with my sister, Lisa.
As I played with my red wagon, which I loved, she was whistling as she tended to the flowers in the backyard.
She was happy by nature and loved to whistle – a skill she learned from her father and passed down to me.
I remember being completely content because she was nearby, comforting me with her sunny presence, as I was left free to roam and explore the art of playing.
I was very lucky to grow up as I did at a time when even a large family could get by on one income.
This allowed my mother to stay home, live her dream of having a big family and devote her entire life to caring for and comforting her children.
Her extended family is still blessed daily by her comforting skills.
She has 17 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren and her home is a wonderland to each of them – a place of unconditional love and laughter.
At her 80th birthday party four years ago, all of her family members shared stories about how her nurturing and love had touched their lives in a video masterfully edited by one of my nephews.
It was eye-opening – and at times laugh-out-loud funny – to see the profound and varied impact she has had on each of us.
I’m extremely blessed to still have my mother in my life – still comforting me when the challenges and setbacks of life affect me.
She still cheers me on when the risks that I take in business – risks I’m able to take because of the deep sense of security she and my father gave me – blossom into success.
Since the beginning of time, the love and comfort of mothers have been the key to all things great and good in the world – the very best gift a mother can give to her child.
I hope and pray every child can be as comforted as my mother still comforts me. Happy Mother’s Day!