https://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
“IS IT TRUE” MARCH 15, 2021
We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUEâ€Â will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way.
Today’s “Readers Poll†question is:  How do you rate the proposed Institutional Realignment negotiations between the UE President/Board Of Trustees and members of the  the UE AAUP?Â
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Commentary: What A Difference A Word Makes
Commentary: What A Difference A Word Makes
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Sometimes, a simple pronoun can tell a whole story.


Years ago, Harvey Jacobs gave me a useful piece of advice. Harvey was the longtime opinion editor for The Indianapolis News and my mentor.
He told me always to start a job letter application with the pronoun “you†rather than “I.â€
“That one little world tells the people hiring that you’re interested in helping them—that you’ve taken the time to think about and consider what they need,†Harvey instructed. “That makes you the sort of person any enterprise would want to have working for it.â€
I thought about Harvey’s counsel when I watched President Joe Biden’s speech marking the first anniversary of the coronavirus pandemic. In it, Biden detailed key features of the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package he’d just signed and laid out a timetable for Americans to be vaccinated so they could begin resuming normal life again.
Biden’s address made for a welcome change.
The pronouns were at least one reason.
Speeches and remarks by Biden’s predecessor Donald Trump featured long marches of the first-person singular. Delivered in bombastic tones, his self-congratulatory pronouncements advanced to assault the senses.
“I alone can fix it.â€
“I think I know more about the environment than most people.â€
“I have a great relationship with African Americans, as you possibly have heard. I just have great respect for them. And they like me. I like them.â€
I.
I.
I.
Biden’s speech was different.
To be sure, “I†found its way into the text here and there. Generally, the president used it to emphasize something he had done in his role as the nation’s chief executive or to show he grasped and appreciated the struggles of suffering Americans at a personal level.
“You know, you have often heard me say before, I talk about the longest walk any parent can make is up a short flight of stairs to his child’s bedroom to say, I’m sorry, but I lost my job; I can’t be here anymore, like my dad told me when he lost his job in Scranton,†Biden said.
In that case, the first-person singular was pressed into service not to demonstrate the new president’s self-proclaimed prowess but his vulnerability. He used the “I†as an act of empathy. He didn’t do so to assert mastery but to form a connection with his listeners, one rooted in a shared experience of suffering.
But even in that way, Biden’s use of the first-person singular pronoun was sparing, overwhelmed by his generous sprinklings of the words “we,†“us†and “you.†He kept the focus not on what he had done—or how he had been treated—but instead on what the country needs.
What the American people need and what they are experiencing.
“But in the loss, we saw how much there was to gain in appreciation, respect and gratitude. Finding light in the darkness is a very American thing to do,†the president said.
“In fact, it may be the most American thing we do. And that’s what we have done. We have seen front-line and essential workers risking their lives, sometimes losing them, to save and help others, researchers and scientists racing for a vaccine, and so many of you, as Hemingway wrote, being strong in all the broken places.â€
There is more than rhetorical significance to Biden’s use of pronouns.
Republican attacks on his leadership during these early days of his presidency have been ineffective because they misunderstand this moment in America’s history and how Americans feel about it.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, responded to the passage of the pandemic relief measure by arguing Biden and his fellow Democrats couldn’t take credit for any economic recovery coming.
Trump reacted by claiming he was responsible for the vaccines inoculating 2 million Americans per day.
I.
I.
I.
Biden seems to realize most Americans care less about whether a Republican or Democrat solves the problem or helps them than that the solution is found and they receive the help they need. They yearn to know that, in this time of immense shared suffering, we face common difficulties together.
They want to be a “we,†an “us.â€
Not one disconnected I after another.
Harvey Jacobs was right.
Sometimes, a simple pronoun can tell a whole story.
FOOTNOTE:  John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
DEPUTY MAYOR TO STEVE SCHAEFER TO BE CCO “WORKING OUTSIDE THE BOX” GUEST SPEAKER
The City County Observer is pleased to announce that Evansville Deputy Mayor Steve Schaefer will be the City-County Observer ‘Working Outside The Box” guest speaker on April 21, 2021, at Tropicania-Evansville at noon.
The Chairman of the City-County Observer monthly speakers committee Steve Hammer said “we are are extremely excited to have Deputy Mayor Steve Schaefer to be our first  ‘Working Outside The Box” guest speaker since we had to postpone it for almost a year because of the COVID-19 Virus pandemic”.
“Steve has an arrears of experiences in both the public and private sector that will prove to be very informative and helpful to our attendees”.  “I will be announcing  more detailed information in the near future concerning how to get a reservation to this well attended community event”.
Steve Schaefer serves as the 1st Deputy Mayor of Evansville, Indiana, while maintaining the duties of Chief of Staff for Mayor Lloyd Winnecke.
Schaefer has helped oversee and manage substantial transformation throughout the city. Together with Mayor Winnecke, he coordinated funding and development of a new downtown convention hotel, secured a full cloverleaf interchange at U.S. 41/Lloyd, worked with economic development officials to recruit/retain thousands of jobs, retained the LST 325 here in Evansville, and leads the Mayor’s Aquatic Center Task Force that is responsible for construction of a new aquatic center.
Prior to his work on behalf of the city, Schaefer worked extensively in the public sector with business, education, government, and community initiatives. As Vice President of Public Policy for the Chamber of Commerce of Southwest Indiana, Schaefer closely worked with Governor Mitch Daniels and state legislators on the passage of the Major Move legislation and assisted in writing the government modernization statute, which grants any local unit of government the ability to consolidate functions.
During this time with the Chamber, Schaefer completed the 4-year Institute of Organizational Management (IOM) program through the U.S. Chamber of Commerce for non-profit executives.
In 2006, Schaefer was named Executive Director of the Hoosier Voices for Interstate 69 (I-69) coalition and spearheaded advocacy efforts at the Indiana Statehouse that led to the historic groundbreaking in 2008.
Schaefer has also served on the legislative staffs of U.S. Congressman John Boehner (OH-08), John Hostettler (IN-08) and Dr. Larry Bucshon (IN-08).
In 2010, Schaefer was selected as a member of the inaugural “20 Under 40†class by the Courier & Press and was recognized as a United Neighborhood of Evansville Sparkplug of the Year in 2017.
Schaefer holds a Bachelor of Science (BS) degree in Public Administration from Indiana University and a Masters of Public Administration (MPA) from the University of Southern Indiana (USI). He has worked as an Adjunct Professor teaching Political Science at Ivy Tech and various core subjects in the MPA program at USI.
He serves as Chairman of the Evansville Sports Corporation Board, Co-Chair of the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament Committee, Chairman of the YMCA Downtown Building Task Force, member of the YMCA Board of Directors, member of the Evansville Industrial Foundation Board of Directors, and Past President of the Evansville Convention & Visitors Bureau Board of Commissioners
Schaefer currently resides in Evansville with his wife Ashley and sons Jack & Leo. He coaches youth basketball and is an active member of several community organizations.
Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Agenda
AGENDA OF THE Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners AT 3:00 pm, Old In National Events Plaza Exhibit Hall A
- Reconvene Emergency Meeting
- Attendance
- Pledge of Allegiance
- Permission to Open Bids: VC21-02-02: Milling and Resurfacing of County Roads
- Discussion Items:Â
- Amy Devries: CAJE Presentation, Ark Crisis Center
- Frontier Geospatial Old Courthouse Geosync Site Presentation
- Action ItemsÂ
- Health Department
- COVID-19 Vaccination Update
- Naloxone Distribution Grant
- Memorandum of Understanding with Deaconess Health System
- First Reading of CO.03-21-006: An Ordinance Amending Vacation Time Policies of the Vanderburgh County Code
- Public Hearing and Final Reading of CO.V-03-21-002: An Ordinance to Vacate a 12’ Public Utility Easement at 601 Lemay Drive
- Final Reading of Ordinance CO.03-21-004: Amending Ch. 10.24.060: Weight Restrictions on Certain Bridges
- Public Defender:Â
- Agreement for Professional Services for Special Public Defenders
- Agreement for Professional Services for Appeal Attorneys
- County Auditor: Midwest Behavior Health for Professional Services Contract
- Cooperative Extension: 2021 Contractual Services and MOU for Purdue Cooperative Extension
- County Clerk: Official Records Online Service Agreement with Fidlar Technologies
- Superintendent of County Buildings: Fosse and Associates Lease Renewal
- Health Department
- Department Head Reports
- New Business
- Old Business
- Consent Items
- Approval of March 2, 2021 Emergency Meeting Minutes
- Approval of the 2021 Road Hearing Minutes
- Employment ChangesÂ
- County Engineer: Department Report Claims
- Southwestern Behavioral Healthcare Financial Report
- County Auditor: Claims Voucher Reports 3/1/2021 through 3/5/2021 & 3/8/2021 through 3/12/2021
- Public Comment
- Recess Meeting
Yesteryear: Banking In Evansville
City National Bank
Main Street, 300 Block
Old State National Bank
ADOPT A PET
Elvis is a beautiful white male! He’s 2 years old. He was transferred in to VHS from Evansville Animal Care & Control recently. His adoption fee is $70 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Get details at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!
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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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