EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana senior right-handed pitcher Austin Gossmann was named the Great Lakes Valley Conference Pitcher of the Week for his efforts in the Screaming Eagles opening game victory over the University of Illinois Springfield. The GLVC Pitcher of the Week award is the first of Gossmann’s career at USI and the first for the Eagles since Kyle Griffin earned the award twice in 2017.
Gossmann tossed eight strong innings with three strikeouts to hold off the Prairie Stars, allowing only four hits and one run to earn his second win of the season. The senior is 2-1 with 4.34 ERA in three games this season and 18.2 innings of work.
The Eagles and Gossmann return to the USI Baseball Field this weekend when they host Quincy University for a four-game conference series March 19-21. The first pitch Friday is set for 6 p.m.; Saturday’s doubleheader is 2 p.m.; and Sunday’s series finale is noon.
University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer sophomore goalkeeper Maya Etienne was named the GLVC Defensive Player of the Week for her efforts in the Screaming Eagles victories over Quincy University and Truman State University last weekend. The GLVC weekly award is the second of Etienne’s career at USI.
Etienne started her week with a 3-0 shutout of Quincy, making five saves after facing a total of 13 shots. The sophomore goalkeeper finished week by preserving a 1-0 victory over Truman State University, making a season-high six saves out of the 12 total shots faced.
For the season, Etienne is 4-1-0 between the posts, four shutouts, and a 0.40 goals against average (GAA). She also has made 20 saves in the five games this spring.
Etienne is 16-8-2 overall during her career with 15 of the 16 wins recorded as shutouts, while posting a 0.86 GAA and 133 saves.
The Eagles and Etienne return to the road in the GLVC this week when they travel to William Jewell College Friday at 5 p.m. in Liberty, Missouri, and Rockhurst University Sunday at noon in Kansas City, Missouri.
Spencer Wagner finished under par for the second day in a row on Monday in the second round of the Bobby Nichols Intercollegiate.
Sunday’s opening round for Wagner saw him pace the University of Evansville with a 1-under 71 and on Monday, Wagner backed that up with an identical score. His 2-under 142 has him in a tie for 11th place heading into Tuesday’s final round of 18.
Isaac Rohleder is second on the Purple Aces squad and tied for 23rd on the leaderboard with a 145. He carded a 1-over 73 in round two. Next up was Jessie Brumley. Following a 73 on Sunday, Brumley recorded a 78 today and is tied for 50th with a 151.
Brumley is closely followed by Henry Kiel and Carson Parker. Kiel notched a 77 on Monday and stands with a tally of 152 while Parker is one behind him with a 153. He shot a 78 in the second round. Nick Wolf of UT Martin leads the individuals with a 9-under 135. He finished Monday’s round with a 67.
On the team leaderboard, it is the Skyhawks holding a one-stroke lead over Morehead State. UTM sits with a 566 while MSU has a 567. Tennessee Tech is third with a 571. Evansville is 11th in the standings with a 590. The Aces are one behind UNI for 10th. On Tuesday, the final round of 18 will complete the event.
UE travels to Illinois State this weekend for pivotal series
For the first time since the season opener at Indiana State, the University of Evansville volleyball team earned a 3-0 sweep with the Purple Aces taking down Southern Illinois by a 3-0 final on Monday evening inside Meeks Family Fieldhouse.
Alondra Vazquez led everyone with 178 kills while hitting an efficient .385. Melanie Feliciano recorded 13 kills in the Aces (5-11, 4-10 MVC) winning effort. Elise Moeller and Hannah Watkins had strong games, recording 7 and 6 kills, respectively. Feliciano led UE with 15 digs while Allana McInnis notched 26 assists. Brooke Springer added three block assists and a solo block. Imani Hartfield led the Salukis (2-14, 1-13 MVC) with eight kills while Rachel Maguire had a game-high 36 helpers.
Game 1
Southern Illinois had the upper hand to begin game one, taking a 5-3 lead before extending that to a 10-6 advantage. Evansville came right back with Allana McInnis posting an ace before Alondra Vazquez added a kill and ace to tie it up at 11. Elise Moeller picked up a kill following a long rally that put Evansville in front at 12-11. The Aces continued to roll as a Hannah Watkins kill pushed the lead to 19-14. UE’s lead reached as many as six points before the Salukis cut the deficit to a pair before the Aces finished with the 25-21 win.
Game 2
The first lead for UE came at 6-5 on a solo block by Brooke Springer. Moeller continued one of her top offensive performances, adding a kill that pushed the lead to 10-8. After SIU retook an 11-10 edge, the Aces jumped back in front at 14-12 on a Saluki service error. An exciting rally that saw clutch digs by Cecilia Thon and Laura Ruiz was capped off by a Vazquez kill that set UE up with a 17-13 advantage. Things continued to go the Aces way with the group pulling away for a 25-17 win that saw Moeller and Springer combine on the clinching block.
Game 3
A kill by Hannah Watkins helped the Aces take an early 6-3 lead. Two service aces helped SIU rally back to go up 7-6 before Evansville countered to retake a 14-12 lead on consecutive Melanie Feliciano kills. SIU got back within one before two Ruiz aces Evansville to a game-high 21-14 lead. From there, the Aces held strong and wrapped up the sweep with a 25-18 decision in the third frame.
A trip to Illinois State is up next for the Aces, who face the Redbirds on Sunday and Monday in a pair of 4 p.m. contests.
On 03-15-21, Members of the US Marshals Fugitive Task Force went to 1072 S. Lincoln Park Dr. in order to locate and arrest 43 year old Michael J. Mitchell of Evansville. Mitchell had three active Felony Arrest Warrants – Habitual Traffic Violator, Felony Failure To Appear, and Felony Resisting Law Enforcement. Mitchell was located in the 8-unit apartment complex where he made several attempts to escape through numerous attics throughout the building. Mitchell did eventually peacefully surrender to the US Marshals Fugitive Task Force, and Mitchell was the only person arrested.
Mitchell, a Convicted Serious Violent Felon from 2011, was arrested for arrested for the Felony Warrants plus being in possession of a 9mm handgun and for dealing methamphetamine. The US Marshals Fugitive Task Force consists of members of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office, Evansville Police Department and Indiana State Police.
Arrested:
Michael J. Mitchell 43 years old of Evansville, IN.
Felony Warrants- Habitual Traffic Violator, Failure To Appear, and Felony Resisting Law Enforcement
Count I: Serious Violent Felon in Possession of a Handgun (Level 4 Felony)
Count II: Dealing Methamphetamine with Prior Conviction and While Armed (Level 4 Felony)
INDIANAPOLIS—Parents in distress will soon be able to call emergency services to pick up their newborn baby if they decide to give up custody and cannot drop it at a designated “Safe Haven†location like a fire or police station.
To date, Indiana owns 53 out of the 60 nationwide baby boxes. The boxes provide parents with complete anonymity if they decide to give up custody of their newborn. No questions asked. Photo provided by The Safe Haven Baby Boxes.
Due to amendments made by the Senate, House Bill 1230will return to the House floor for review. The bill, authored by Rep. Ryan Lauer, R-Columbus, will allow parents to call 9-1-1 so emergency responders can take custody of a baby. Lauer said there might be circumstances in which parents can’t drop off the baby themselves, whether for transportation or other reasons, and calling emergency services will still give them the option to safely give up the newborn.
“[It’s] absolutely going to be the hardest thing that they’re ever going to do, and in these cases that we have, the parent believes it is in the best interest of the child, and the state has an interest in protecting those vulnerable children and to avoid the unthinkable,†Lauer said.
In 2016, baby boxes became an acceptable option for the Safe Haven law. If a parent does not want to be seen, they can drop off their baby in the box and leave; the boxes trigger an alarm that brings someone to collect the baby. At the moment, the boxes can only be installed in fire departments and hospitals.
House Bill 1032, authored by Rep. Randall Frye, R-Greensburg, could expand the locations where the baby boxes can be installed. The bill would allow any facility that has emergency staff on standby to be a location where babies can be dropped off. This would allow rural areas that don’t have hospitals or fire departments nearby to still provide a safe option for newborns.
Monica Kelsey, the founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, created the nation’s first baby box in Woodburn, Ind., in 2016, and to date, Indiana owns 53 of the baby boxes out of the 60 total boxes nationwide. Ohio falls second with four boxes. Indiana’s existing Safe Haven law offers baby boxes at fire departments and hospitals, where parents can give up custody of their newborn child anonymously without repercussions.
“[Communities] need something that is going to give women a last-resort option to keep their child safe, and when people understand the program and they understand the success that’s happening here in our state, they want to be a part of that,†Kelsey said.
According to U.S. News and World Report, as of July 2, 2018, there had been 1,419 babies illegally abandoned nationwide, with only a third of them found alive.
The Safe Haven law only applies to babies who are 30 days of age or younger. If the parent does not change their mind and come back for the baby, then the medical staff will take custody of the baby and proceed with the Indiana Department of Child Services, according to the child welfare manual, the procedure guide for the Safe Haven law and abandoned infants.
The North Vernon Fire Department in North Vernon, Ind., is the owner of baby box No. 6. Fire chief Michael Cole said that a child was abandoned at a church’s steps, only two blocks away from their fire station, in 2015. That event encouraged him to contact Safe Haven Baby Boxes and start the installment process.
“We wanted to build the baby box, raise community awareness that this was here, so that a situation like 2015 wouldn’t happen again that could have been a very tragic situation,†Cole said. “This allows the community to bring a child to a safe place where it can be treated, taken care of and evaluated with what hopefully was a positive ending and not a tragic ending.â€
The Safe Haven Baby Box sign that shows next to all baby boxes. This sign is located next to the Ocala Fire Rescue’s baby box. Photo provided by the The Ocala Fire Rescue.
Cole said the department paid for the box through community donations and with the help of the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic organization for men.
In 2018, three newborns were left in baby boxes in Indiana and 49 parents gave up custody of their babies by directly handing them to a firefighter or hospital nurse.
The Safe Haven laws are known by multiple names across the nation, such as the Abandoned Infant Protection Act, Haven Infant Protection Act, the Baby Moses law, the Infant Haven Law and Daniel’s law, among others. Each state handles them differently.
In Texas, for example, the law says the parent must directly hand the baby to an employee who works at a hospital, fire department or emergency medical service. In New Jersey, the parent can remain anonymous and must drop the baby at a hospital emergency room or police station.
According to a brochure from the Child Welfare Information Gateway, as of 2016, around 16 states and Puerto Rico allow parents to drop off newborns only at a hospital or emergency service provider, but 27 states allow fire departments to be a location to drop off babies too. Five states allow parents to call 9-1-1 to take custody of a baby, and five states allow churches to be a drop-off location as long as people are in the facility.
Regardless of state, the laws offer medical attention to the newborn and then allow child services to take custody of the baby. As long as the baby does not show signs of abuse, there won’t be questions asked.
The Ocala Fire Rescue in Ocala, Fla., installed Florida’s first baby box in 2020. Chief Shane Alexander, originally from Indiana, said he knew about two babies being abandoned in his area, one of them being left at a rest stop. According to A Safe Haven for Newborns, a foundation to eliminate infant abuse and abandonment through education and prevention, in 2020, Florida saw 14 newborns given up through the state’s Safe Haven law.
“If we can get the word out and educate the community that this is available to them anonymously, well then hopefully that will prevent children from being left in dumpsters, being left in areas, you know, basically to not survive,†Alexander said. “If a mother has an anonymous way of giving their child up, that removes that stigma from whatever issues that they may have.â€
Example of a Baby Box that is located in The Ocala Fire Rescue, in Ocala, Fla. This is the first baby box in the state as they aim to install more boxes in the upcoming years. Photo provided by the The Ocala Fire Rescue.
It took six months for the OFD to install the baby box in the department. The cost of the baby box averages $10,000 and includes an air conditioner, heater, generator backup, silent alarms to notify dispatch and an automatic lock. There’s an annual fee of $200-$400 for checkups.
The box gives the parent between 60-90 seconds to leave the scene before dispatch retrieves the baby. Alexander said firemen check the box every four hours to make sure there have been no malfunctions and no babies dropped off.
According to New Jersey Safe Haven’s history of Safe Haven law, Alabama was the first state to have a pilot program of a Safe Haven law in 1998. Then Texas became the first state to pass the legislation for parents to give up custody of their newborn anonymously in 1999. In 2000, Louisiana, Alabama, Minnesota, Indiana and many other states passed Safe Haven legislation as well. To date, all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have enacted a Safe Haven law.
“We have to take the tragedy that these women are going through and make it better for them,†Kelsey said. “And that’s what Safe Haven Baby Boxes is all about, it’s taking the crisis and helping these mothers walk through it, whether it be by a safe surrender or by an adoption plan or maybe even a parenting plan.â€
FOOTNOTE: Carolina Puga Mendoza is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
CenterPoint Energy Urges Customers To Evaluate Billing And Payment Options As Winter Rules Expire March 15
Evansville, Ind. – March 15, 2021 – As the end of the winter heating season approaches, CenterPoint Energy wants to remind its customers that the regulatory moratorium, which prevents energy companies from disconnecting customers who meet low-income guidelines and have received federal and state utility heating assistance, expires today. Customers who have received a disconnect notice or need bill payment assistance are urged to contact the company online or call 1-800-227-1376 to make payment arrangements and avoid potential disconnection.
“As part of our commitment to our customers, we offer several programs and payment options to help those experiencing financial hardship effectively manage costs,†said Richard Leger, Vice President of Natural Gas Distribution, Indiana and Ohio. “Those customers experiencing financial difficulty are encouraged to notify CenterPoint Energy as soon as possible to make arrangements to avoid a possible interruption in service.â€
With the expiration of the moratorium, those customers currently under a disconnect order who have failed to make arrangements with the company will be subject to disconnection. Customers can choose from the following free Vectren billing and payment options, as well as energy-efficiency programs:
·        Payment Arrangement: Customers who are having difficulty paying bills in full can request a payment arrangement to fulfill the obligation in smaller increments over a set period of time. Eligible customers can request a payment arrangement by calling 1-800-227-1376.
·        Energy Assistance Program (EAP): Contact the local Indiana Community Action Agency, which administers the Indiana Energy Assistance Program (EAP) for income-eligible customers, and can provide intake information about the application process and program requirements. EAP is available to Indiana customers with Vectren natural gas service and/or Vectren electric service.
·        Universal Service Program (USP): A program for Indiana natural gas customers, the USP provides a monthly discount on residential gas charges during the heating season. By enrolling in EAP, customers are automatically enrolled in USP. The monthly discount of 15 to 32% applies from December through May 31.
·        Energy Efficiency Resources: CenterPoint Energy has a wide offering of energy efficiency programs for customers, which can be found at www.centerpointenergy.com/smartsavings. Customers are also encouraged to apply for all residential (home ownership or rental) weatherization programs, including programs available through the local service provider.Â
About CenterPoint Energy
As the only investor-owned electric and gas utility based in Texas, CenterPoint Energy, Inc. (NYSE: CNP) is an energy delivery company with electric transmission and distribution, power generation and natural gas distribution operations that serve more than 7 million metered customers in Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma and Texas. As of December 31, 2020, the company owned approximately $33 billion in assets and also owned 53.7 percent of the common units representing limited partner interests in Enable Midstream Partners, LP, a publicly traded master limited partnership that owns, operates and develops strategically located natural gas and crude oil infrastructure assets. With approximately 9,500 employees, CenterPoint Energy and its predecessor companies have been in business for more than 150 years. For more information, visit CenterPointEnergy.com.
BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERSÂ REGULAR MEETINGÂ In The KEVIN WINTERNHEIMER CHAMBERSÂ In ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEXÂ On WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2021Â At 12:00 NOON
 AGENDA
1.   CALL TO ORDER
2.   MEETING MEMORANDUM MARCH 3, 2021
3. Â Â Â CONSENT AGENDAÂ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
     a. Request Re: Approve and Execute Park Property Use Permit with Glamour & Gowns forÂ
       Prom in The Park at Garvin Park. – Lauer Â
     b. Request Re: Approve and Execute Park Property Use Permit with SWIRCA & More forÂ
       a Bourbon Raffle Drawing at Garvin Park. – Spencer   Â
4.   OLD BUSINESSÂ
5. Â Â Â NEW BUSINESSÂ
     a. Request Re: Any Other Business the Board Wishes to Consider and Public Comments.
6. Â Â Â REPORTS
     Tim Fulton, Director of Sports Facilities
     Brian Holtz- Executive Director    Â
7.    ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMSÂ