Home Blog Page 23

Attorney General Todd Rokita and Governor Mike Braun update requirements for state contractors to make clear that discriminatory DEI practices are impermissible

0

Attorney General Rokita is charged with reviewing/approving all state contracts and enforcing False Claims Act 

In keeping with his firm commitment to root out discriminatory “DEI” practices, Attorney General Todd Rokita is announcing that, for contracts signed on or after July 1, all state contractors must certify that they do not engage in DEI practices that treat people differently on the basis of race and sex when recruiting, hiring, promoting and conducting other employment activities.

The acronym DEI — although it stands for diversity, equity and inclusion — is often used as a cover for policies that violate state and/or federal civil rights laws.

“No one gets a free pass for unlawful discrimination just because they claim to have good intentions,” Attorney General Rokita said. “Treating people differently in the workplace or at school based on race and sex is a destructive practice and illegal. We will continue to enforce the law against higher education institutions and working to eliminate this terrible Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion known as DEI nonsense.”

All state contracts now must include revised language that makes clear that contractors must not pursue DEI initiatives that are inconsistent with Indiana’s nondiscrimination laws. Attorney General Rokita is taking this action, in coordination with Governor MIke Braun and the Indiana Department of Administration, pursuant to his authority to review and approve all state contracts to ensure their compliance with state law.

Prohibitions on racial discrimination have long been included in all state contracts, as required by state law. The new subparagraph in state contracts concerning DEI practices clarifies and makes explicit that Indiana’s prohibition on contactors engaging in discrimination fully extends to DEI practices.

The revised contract language also makes clear that, if a state contractor is found operating any DEI programs that violate Indiana or federal civil rights laws — contrary to the terms of their contract with the state — then that contractor could be subject to enforcement action by the Attorney General under Indiana’s False Claims Act.

Both Governor Braun and President Donald Trump have also taken aim at discriminatory DEI programs as they work to uphold the principle of equal opportunity for all.

Governor Braun issued an executive order on Jan. 14 this year forbidding executive branch state agencies from using state funds, property or resources to “support diversity, equity, and inclusion positions, departments, activities, procedures or programs if they grant preferential treatment based upon one person’s particular race.”

“We must make every effort to ensure freedom and opportunity for all Hoosiers and with my decisive action by executive order, we have done just that,” Governor Braun said. “Replacing divisive diversity, equity, and inclusion policies with those that reward merit, excellence, and innovation is foundational to our success and honors my commitment to a level playing field for all.”

A week following Governor Braun’s order, President Trump issued an executive order — titled “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity” — in which he ordered federal agencies to require federal contractors to certify that they do not operate any programs promoting DEI that violate Federal anti-discrimination laws

Property Control Launches HOA Central, an All-in-One Operating System for Homeowners Associations

0

 

Parent company of Condo Control and HOA Sites introduces a

modern platform that cuts costs, automates busy work, and improves resident experience.

Property Control, the parent company of Condo Control and HOA Sites, today announced the launch of HOA Central, a mobile-first platform that unifies community operations, payments, compliance, and communications in one secure hub. The product is built to help boards and managers manage with confidence and residents live with ease.

“Running an HOA should not require multiple systems and a spreadsheet,” said Brian Bosscher, CEO of Property Control. “With HOA Central, teams move requests, payments, and records into one place so they spend less time chasing tasks and more time improving their communities.”

Built by the team behind Condo Control, trusted by more than 7,000 communities, HOA Central pairs consumer-grade mobile portals with AI-powered automation and deep integrations to tools HOAs already use, including QuickBooks, Yardi, and Stripe. Early customers can target up to 40% lower operating costs, 50% less manual work, and about 15 hours saved per week. Pricing is a transparent per-door rate with no storage or support add-ons.

Key capabilities

  • Expert onboarding and support: white-glove setup, a named customer success manager, unlimited refresher training, and an on-demand video library with a 95% CSAT resident help line.
  • Unified operations and compliance: maintenance, violations, documents, KPIs, meetings, elections, and payments in one place, with minutes and election records for audits.
  • Resident experience: a mobile-first portal with a digital bulletin, e-voting, surveys, and QR guest passes that drive 85% plus adoption.
  • No double-entry accounting and payments: syncs dues, late fees, and vendor invoices directly into QuickBooks, VMS, Yardi, or other accounting platforms.
  • AI-powered automation: instant answers to FAQs and a 24/7 chatbot.
  • Best-practice library: more than 50 state-specific templates covering announcements, ARC forms, violations, and election notices.

What makes it different

HOA Central is designed for high adoption and reliability. Communities benefit from a resident-centric user experience that is 96% rated “easy to use,” average resident uptake of 85%, and 99.9% uptime with zero-downtime maintenance. Managers, boards, and residents all receive phone, email, and video support, and the product ships weekly improvements and new features.

Built for self-managed boards and management firms

Whether consolidating point solutions or launching a first digital program, both self-managed HOAs and community management companies can standardize workflows, records, and reporting across communities, and scale at their own pace.

About Property Control

Property Control is the parent company of Condo Control and HOA Sites. The company builds modern software that digitizes, streamlines, and automates community operations for boards, managers, and residents.

About HOA Central

HOA Central delivers a future-proof, all-in-one operating system that slashes workload, controls costs, and elevates the livability of every HOA it touches. The mission is to give HOAs the digital tools, guidance, and insight they need to reduce costs, stay compliant, and foster thriving neighborhoods.

 

Screaming Eagles lose 2025 season debut in

0

LOUISVILLE, KY.- University of Southern Indiana Men’s Soccer dropped the season opener 6-0 Thursday afternoon to the University of Louisville in USI’s first regular-season matchup with a major conference opponent since transitioning to NCAA Division I.
 
The Screaming Eagles were unable to find success in the offensive half, not recording a shot on a staunch Cardinal’s defense. USI’s pair of goalkeepers made some miraculous plays, with Freshman Jacob English recording seven saves in his collegiate debut and Junior Kael McGowan recording six in relief.
 
Freshman defender Joaquin d’Escoto was given a red card 3:34 into the game, leaving the Eagles down a man for the remainder of the match. The teams traded attacks early, unable to find the back of the net for the first 20 minutes.
 
The Cardinals opened the floodgates with their first score coming in the 22nd minute, rolling into a second goal two minutes later, then the final goal of the half at 34:56. USI went into the half down 3-0. English recorded five of his saves in the first half, on eight Cardinals shots on goal.
 
Out of the halftime break, Louisville matched its first-half production, scoring its final three goals in the first 19 minutes of the half.
 
For Southern Indiana, the Eagles opened the game strong, forcing a few offensive opportunities before Louisville found its rhythm in the match. USI’s defense dazzled at times, including a diving save from English and a beautiful slide tackle from freshman Kadiri Bello.
 
The Eagles return to Strassweg Field for their 2025 regular-season home opener against Rose-Hulman August 2; kickoff is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday’s contest will be streamed on ESPN+, and admission to the game will be free courtesy of ProRehab.

USI comes up short in road trip opener at Robert Morris

0

MOON TOWNSHIP, Pa.  – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer created numerous shot chances for the second consecutive match on Thursday afternoon, but the Screaming Eagles came up short, 2-0, at Robert Morris University to begin a two-game road swing.
 
Following a 21-shot performance at home last Sunday, USI produced 14 shot attempts in Thursday’s road contest at Robert Morris. Senior forward Emerson Grafton and graduate student Maggie Duggan, who are one and two in leading the Eagles in shots this season, combined for half of USI’s shots on Thursday. Grafton tallied four shots against the Colonials, while Duggan recorded three attempts. Grafton also had a shot on goal. Senior forward Peyton Murphy had a pair of shots.
 
On the defensive end, Southern Indiana redshirt goalkeeper Anna Markland matched her season total with five saves off 15 shots faced on Thursday. Freshman defender Tierney Mullady played 79 minutes in her first career start and notched one shot.
 
Grafton got USI going early with a couple of shot attempts. However, Southern Indiana ran into early adversity just past the 13-minute mark of the contest when a red card reduced the Eagles to 10 players on the field for the rest of the match. The Screaming Eagles nearly overcame the early setback in the 25th minute when a long-range shot by Grafton went off the crossbar and could not initially be hauled in by the Robert Morris goalkeeper.
 
The game remained scoreless until the 34th minute when Robert Morris got on the board off a lunging header on the back end of a long cross. The goal energized the Colonials to a handful of shots down the stretch of the opening half, but Markland and the Eagles kept the game to a one-goal differential going into halftime.
 
Nearly 10 minutes into the second stanza, Robert Morris doubled its lead to 2-0. The Colonials scored on a low cross that was poked into the corner netting.
 
Southern Indiana tried to cut into the deficit with a couple of corner kicks and a string of shots with nearly 20 minutes to go, but to no avail. Markland kept USI within two in the final minutes after a pair of saves with under eight minutes left, including a charging save coming off the goal line. Robert Morris went on to carry its 2-0 lead into the final whistle.
 
Southern Indiana will continue to work toward its first score and result of the season on Sunday afternoon when the Screaming Eagles conclude their two-game road swing at the University of Akron. Kickoff Sunday is slated for Noon CT and can be seen with a subscription to ESPN+.


UE Bookstore Features Bath & Body Works Kiosk

0
U E

EVANSVILLE, IND. (08/21/2025) The University of Evansville (UE) has been selected as one of a limited number of colleges nationwide to bring Bath & Body Works directly to campus. Beginning this Fall, students, faculty, and visitors will be able to browse a Bath & Body Works kiosk inside the UE Bookstore, offering a convenient new way to access the brand’s most popular products.

The addition is part of Bath & Body Works’ new partnership with Barnes & Noble College, which operates more than 600 campus bookstores across the nation. Through this collaboration, kiosks will offer top-selling fragrances, body care items, and seasonal favorites, giving students the opportunity to enjoy Bath & Body Works’ signature products without leaving campus.

The new kiosk reflects the University’s ongoing commitment to enhancing the student experience and providing added convenience for the campus community. Bath & Body Works is a brand that students already know and love. Bringing it into the UE Bookstore makes these products more accessible than ever.

The Bath & Body Works kiosk will join other bookstore offerings, including textbooks, school supplies, UE apparel, and campus essentials. UE’s bookstore is located on the first floor of Ridgway University Center. Browse the bookstore’s full lineup by visiting in-store or shopping online.

The University of Evansville is a private, comprehensive university with a solid foundation in the arts and sciences and professional schools in business, engineering, education, and health sciences. Established in 1854, UE is recognized across the globe for its rich tradition of innovative, academic excellence and dynamic campus community of #Changemakers.

 

Vincennes University Board of Trustees updated on positive enrollment growth

0

JASPER, Ind., August 21, 2025 –As the 2025-26 academic year opened this week, the Vincennes University Board of Trustees met at the VU Jasper Campus on Wednesday, Aug. 20, to review promising enrollment figures and new opportunities shaping the University’s impact in Indianapolis.

 

Director of Admissions Sarah McLin shared encouraging enrollment gains. She reported that the Fall Semester 2025 enrollment at the Vincennes Campus rose to 2,481 students, a 5% increase and the highest since 2023. At the Aviation Technology Center in Indianapolis, enrollment surged 39% over last year.

 

VU Jasper is also demonstrating significant momentum. Assistant Vice President and VUJ Dean Adam Watkins shared that the Jasper Campus exceeded its new full-time student enrollment target, achieving a 23% increase. Attendance at PreVU events rose an impressive 133%, and applications increased 19% over the previous year.

 

Watkins also highlighted VUJ partnerships, including with the Patoka Valley Career and Technical Cooperative, where high school students will again collaborate with Habitat for Humanity to build a home for a local family as part of their coursework. He noted that another partner, Deaconess Memorial Medical Center, has been instrumental in helping develop VU Jasper’s new Emergency Medical Services/Paramedic certificate program, which has its first cohort for Fall Semester 2025.

 

Vice President of Government and Legal Affairs Tony Hahn highlighted VU’s role in the Riverside Education and Innovation District (REID), a bold initiative led by Marian University that will transform the former Larue Carter state hospital campus in the Near Northwest Area (NNW) of Indianapolis into a hub for lifelong learning that supports literacy, early childhood education, and workforce development as a way of revitalizing the neighborhood and advancing educational attainment. VU plans to offer a mix of career and technical education (CTE) programs, including dual enrollment programs for high school students, adult education programs outside of traditional school hours, and apprenticeship programs with major companies in the Indianapolis area.

 

VU is experiencing promising growth in its bachelor’s degree programs, especially online offerings, fueled by targeted marketing campaigns that highlight the flexibility and value of a VU education. These initiatives, introduced by Senior Director of External Relations Sarah Fortune, reflect a larger commitment to brand consistency through compelling video storytelling and unified messaging. At the same time, VU is leaning into its powerful origin story: founded by U.S. President William Henry Harrison, whose father, Benjamin Harrison, signed the Declaration of Independence. This legacy positions VU as the true “original Trailblazers,” carrying forward a tradition of bold leadership while driving innovation and growth in higher education today.

 

In other business,

  • The Trustees approved Vice President for Financial Services Conya Wampler as the Treasurer for the Board of Trustees.
  • The Board voted to promote Caleb Levi Ramsey, Director of IT Security, to Professional Staff Level IV, and Jennifer Holscher, Director of Institutional Research, to Professional Staff Level III.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

0
EPD

 

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

UE Men’s Soccer Plays to Draw in Season Opener

0

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Evansville men’s soccer team opened their 2025 campaign on Thursday night, playing to a 1-1 draw against the Bellarmine Knights at Arad McCutchan Stadium.

Bellarmine got the scoring started early, as Johan Nissen-Lie found the ball at his feet inside the 18 and converted the chance to put the Knights on top. Pablo Calvete (Ponferrada, Spain/UNIR) put up the first shot of the season for the Aces in the 8th minute, followed by Tancredi Fadda (Monza, Italy/University of Milan) getting up the first shot on goal in the 14thminute. The Aces continued to create chances throughout the remainder of the first half, with Martin Warschmidt (Stavern, Norway/Thor Heyerdahl VGS) and Andres Escudero (San Sebastian de los Reyes, Spain/IES Joan Miro) putting shots on goal, but Bellarmine remained in the lead heading into the break.

Evansville continued to push on the attack in the opening minutes of the second half and was able to break through in the 54th minute when freshman Ben Zec (Carmel, Ind./Carmel) drew a foul in the box to earn his team a penalty kick. Fadda stepped up to the spot to take the penalty and calmy buried a shot into the upper left corner of the goal to even the score at one apiece.

Momentum continued in the Aces’ favor for the next 15 minutes, but the tide turned when Evansville had a player sent off for picking up his second yellow card, forcing them to play a man down for the final 20 minutes.

However, the Aces were able weather the storm, keeping the Knights off the board as the night ended in a 1-1 draw.

“We were resilient,” said UE head coach Robbe Tarver. “I thought we were unfortunate to give up the goal that we did and played really well the rest of the first half, just didn’t create enough chances.”

“We drew the penalty and I thought we were really growing into the game, and then unfortunately we got a second yellow card. I thought we showed a lot of resilience from the early goal that we gave up as well as the red card.”

Evansville out-shot Bellarmine 10-4 overall, including a 4-2 edge in shots on goal. Fadda led the way in shots with three, as well as in shots in goal at two. Michal Mroz (Elk Grove, Ill./Elk Grove) made one save in goal for the Aces.

With the draw, Evansville sits at 0-0-1 on the year. The Aces will be back on Sunday, traveling to Macon, Ga. for a meeting with Mercer.

 

Jones drives in four as Otters extend streak to eight

0

WASHINGTON, Pa- The Evansville Otters (35-52) extended their Frontier League-leading eight-game win streak with a 7-6 extra innings victory over the Washington Wild Things (47-40) Thursday night. They now have two straight sweeps and have completed their first one on the road.

Evansville jumped out in front early after a mistake from the Washington defense. LJ Jones started out his big game by knocking in the first run of the game.

Ryan Wiltse made the start, but a three-run home run put Evansville behind early.

Stephen Paolini hit his second home run during his young Otters career to lead off the second and Evansville followed with a big third. After two quick outs, JT Benson got his 100th professional hit. Jones followed with a long home run to jump the Otters out in front 4-3. Keenan Taylor followed with a home run of his own to double the lead.

Wiltse settled in with a couple of scoreless innings but Washington struck for two in the fourth. Jackson Malouf relieved Wiltse and used one pitch to get out of the fourth. He stayed in the game, shutting down Washington for three innings without allowing a hit.

Nolan Thebiay entered and finished the seventh and got the first two batters of the eighth. Gunnar Dennis was called on to get the final out of the inning and did just that.

Both bullpens stifled the offense as we got into the ninth inning still tied at five. Darryl Jackson made himself 3-3 in ninth inning at-bats with a lead off single. After stealing a bag and a couple of outs, Washington intentionally walked Benson to set up a clutch at-bat with Jones for the second straight night. Jones came through with a rocket through the infield, scoring Jackson and giving Evansville a 6-5 lead.

Alex Valdez came in to pitch the ninth and after two quick outs, a two-strike single kept the game alive. A pinch hit double tied the game and sent the Otters to extra innings for the third time this year in Washington.

Paolini led off the tenth and laid down a sacrifice bunt with the help of some heads up baserunning from Taylor. JJ Cruz squeezed a ball just inside the first base bag to jump the Otters out in front 7-6.

Nick McAuliffe entered the tenth and gave up a single to start the inning. He followed that with back-to-back strikeouts and got a groundout to secure Evansville’s eighth straight win. He earned his third save of the year as Valdez received the win.

Benson and Jones both finished off their big series with big performances. Benson’s three-hit game finished off his nine hit series and he reached in 13 of his 14 plate appearances. Jones’ four-RBI night finished his nine RBI week.