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UNITED STATES AND TOYOTA MOTOR COMPANY REACH AGREEMENT FOR DECADE-LONG NONCOMPLIANCE WITH CLEAN AIR ACT REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

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Antalya, Turkey. October 28th 2011. The roadside sign of Toyota Motors and local dealership building. Toyota is founded in 1937 in Japan. Its the worlds bigest automobile manufacturer. The company is popular with different cars: Corolla, Corona, Prius
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Department of Justice announced today that the United States has filed and simultaneously settled a civil lawsuit against Toyota Motor Corporation, Toyota Motor North America Inc., Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. Inc., and Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America Inc. (Toyota) for systematic, longstanding violations of Clean Air Act emission-related defect reporting requirements, which require manufacturers to report potential defects and recalls affecting vehicle components designed to control emissions.

In connection with the settlement, the United States has filed a consent decree, agreed to by Toyota, that resolves the government’s complaint through Toyota’s payment of a $180 million civil penalty and the imposition of injunctive relief. The $180 million penalty is the largest civil penalty for violation of EPA’s emission-reporting requirements. The consent decree remains subject to a period of public comment and court approval.

“For a decade Toyota failed to report mandatory information about potential defects in their cars to the EPA, keeping the agency in the dark and evading oversight,” said Susan Bodine, EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Assistant Administrator. “EPA considers this failure to be a serious violation of the Clean Air Act.”

“This settlement is yet another important milestone settlement for this Administration, and it continues our unwavering commitment to ensuring that our environmental laws as written, including EPA’s regulations, are rigorously enforced,” said Jeffrey Bossert Clark, Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division.

“For a decade, Toyota systematically violated regulations that provide EPA with a critical compliance tool to ensure that vehicles on the road comply with federal emissions standards,” said Audrey Straus, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. “Toyota shut its eyes to the noncompliance, failing to provide proper training, attention, and oversight to its Clean Air Act reporting obligations. Toyota’s actions undermined EPA’s self-disclosure system and likely led to delayed or avoided emission-related recalls, resulting in financial benefit to Toyota and excess emissions of air pollutants. Today, Toyota pays the price for its misconduct with a $180 million civil penalty and agreement to injunctive relief to ensure that its violations will not be repeated.”

The complaint filed in Manhattan federal court today alleges that from approximately 2005 until at least late 2015, Toyota systematically violated Clean Air Act automobile defect reporting requirements designed to protect public health and the environment from harmful air pollutants.

Clean Air Act regulations require manufacturers to notify EPA by filing an Emissions Defect Information Report (EDIR) when 25 or more vehicles or engines in a given model year have the same defect in an emission control part or an element of design installed in order to comply with emission standards and other EPA regulations. The regulations also require vehicle manufacturers to file a Voluntary Emissions Recall Report (VERR) with EPA when they perform a recall to correct defects in emission-related parts, and to update EPA on the progress of such recalls through Quarterly Reports. These mandatory reporting requirements are critical to the Clean Air Act’s purpose of protecting human health and the environment from harmful air pollutants: They encourage manufacturers to investigate and voluntarily address defects that may result in excess emissions of harmful air pollutants, and provide EPA with important information about emission-related defects for use in its oversight of manufacturers.

For 10 years, Toyota routinely failed to comply with these reporting requirements. During that time, Toyota materially delayed filing an estimated 78 EDIRs, filing many only when disclosing non-compliance to EPA in 2015, at which point some were as much as eight years late. These EDIRs related to millions of vehicles with the potential to exhibit emission-related defects. Toyota also failed to file 20 VERRs and more than 200 quarterly reports.

During the period of noncompliance, Toyota managers and staff in Japan knew that Toyota was no longer attempting to determine whether it was aware of 25 instances of the same emission-related defect in a model year – the threshold requirement for filing an EDIR. Rather than follow this legally required standard, Toyota unilaterally decided to file EDIRs principally when Toyota was independently required to file distinct reports with California regulators under a less strict standard – a standard that EPA had rejected as too lenient when Toyota had previously proposed to rely on it for federal reporting.  Time and again, Toyota managers and staff in Japan identified the discrepancy between Toyota’s procedures and the plain language of the federal requirements but failed to bring Toyota into compliance. And Toyota’s American unit, responsible for submitting the reports to EPA, was well aware of red flags indicating Toyota’s noncompliance, but did not address the problem. As Toyota’s key U.S.-based employee wrote in one email: “As long as EPA is not asking about EDIR[s] then I do not want to change.”

As a result of its conduct, Toyota deprived EPA of timely information regarding emission-related defects and recalls and avoided the early focus on emission defects contemplated by the regulations. Toyota’s conduct likely resulted in delayed or avoided recalls, with Toyota obtaining a significant economic benefit, pushing costs onto consumers, and lengthening the time that unrepaired vehicles with emission-related defects remained on the road.

Toyota admits, acknowledges, and accepts responsibility for what is included in the consent decree.

Between approximately 2005 and late 2015, Toyota routinely filed emission defect reports to EPA materially late and, in many cases, failed to file such reports at all until a self-disclosure of non-compliance in late 2015.

Representations to EPA

In March and May 2002, at EPA’s request, Toyota and EPA representatives met to discuss Toyota’s internal process for identifying whether 25 instances of a specific emission-related defect exist in vehicles or engines of the same model year, requiring an EDIR filing.

At a first meeting in March 2002, Toyota described its EDIR process in which Toyota would investigate whether it had 25 defects only upon receiving 25 “product reports” from its dealers, but would supplement that review by filing an EDIR upon receiving warranty claims for an emission-related part in 4 percent of Toyota’s California fleet (a threshold requiring a separate filing to state authorities under California law).

At the meeting, EPA rejected this EDIR process as not timely considering warranty claims, despite the incorporation of the 4 percent California trigger. Toyota’s notes of the meeting indicate that EPA program staff advised Toyota that if it came back with a revised proposal that the program staff were convinced would satisfy the regulations, then EPA’s enforcement arm would not need to get involved. Toyota then revised its process, noting internally that it “will be stricter than” California law.

At a May 2002 meeting with EPA, Toyota presented its revised process. Under that process, Toyota would commence an investigation to determine whether an EDIR filing was required when it had received warranty claims for an emission-related part for 1 percent of relevant vehicles nationwide; when it received 500 such warranty claims regardless of the percentage; or when it received twenty-five similar early warning reports.
Toyota noted internally that EPA seemed pleased with this approach, which EPA had described as “more stringent than California.” In 2003, 2004, and 2005, as part of an annual review, Toyota submitted its May 2002 process in writing to EPA as an overview of its EDIR reporting program.

Toyota’s Conduct from Approximately 2005 to 2015

Without notifying EPA, in approximately 2005, Toyota stopped following the May 2002 EDIR process. In approximately 2005, Toyota began filing EDIRs primarily when filing the California reports triggered by the 4 percent threshold. Toyota also filed EDIRs in a small number of instances when it was otherwise filing VERRs with EPA.

From approximately 2005 to 2015, Toyota stopped making any independent determination of whether 25 defects existed requiring an EDIR filing. Multiple times during this period, Toyota staff charged with preparing EDIRs identified that the plain language of the EDIR regulations called for filing an EDIR upon the identification of 25 defects, but that Toyota was not doing so. These staff did not cause Toyota to change its practice.

As a result of this conduct, Toyota filed at least 69 EDIRs materially late. Thirty-nine of these were filed materially late in the ordinary course of Toyota’s business. In late 2015, Toyota self-disclosed another 30 that had not been filed at all. Some EDIRs were ultimately filed as many as eight years after they were due.

Beyond EDIRs, Toyota also failed during this period to file 20 VERRs required for emission-related recall campaigns that it conducted and failed to file more than two hundred Quarterly Reports related to such campaigns. Between 2005 and 2015, Toyota failed to provide its employees with adequate training, resources, or oversight to ensure that Toyota complied with its reporting obligations to EPA. As a result of Toyota’s conduct, EPA did not timely receive mandated information regarding emission-related defects and recalls.

Pursuant to the consent decree, Toyota will pay a civil penalty of $180 million. The consent decree also requires Toyota to follow certain compliance and reporting practices designed to ensure timely investigation of emission-related defects and timely filing of EDIRs, VERRs, and quarterly reports with EPA. The consent decree imposes training, internal communication, and oversight requirements. Toyota will be subject to judicial oversight under this consent decree for at least three years, with additional reporting requirements to EPA for four and a half years.

Notice of this proposed consent decree will be published in the Federal Register and the public will have the opportunity to submit comments on the consent decree for a period of at least 30 days before it is submitted for the court’s approval.

To view the consent decree or to submit a comment, visit the Department of Justice website at: www.justice.gov/enrd/Consent_Decrees.html.

For more information about this case please visit: https://www.epa.gov/enforcement/toyota-clean-air-act-emissions-defect-reporting-settlement-information-sheet

The Justice Department thanked the attorneys in EPA’s Air Enforcement Division, the program staff at EPA’s Office of Transportation and Air Quality, and the agents at EPA’s Criminal Investigative Division for their critical work on this case.

This case is being handled by the Environmental Protection Unit of the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s Civil Division. Senior Trial Attorney Keith Tashima with the Environment and Natural Resources Division’s Environmental Enforcement Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Robert William Yalen, Dominika Tarczynska, and Jennifer Jude of the Southern District of New York are prosecuting the case.

 

Men’s basketball set for weekend series at Bradley

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Aces face Braves on Saturday and Sunday at 3 p.m

Looking to continue the best Missouri Valley Conference start in five years, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team travels to Peoria, Illinois for a weekend series at Bradley.  Games are set for Saturday, Jan. 16 and Sunday, Jan. 17 inside Carver Arena.  Both contests tip at 3 p.m. CT and will be carried live by ESPN3 and the Purple Aces Radio Network.

Setting the Scene

– For the second time in conference play, the Purple Aces take to the road; the team played its first league series at Southern Illinois, earning a split

– A unique scheduling nugget – this is just the second time since 2008 that the Aces have played a road game at Bradley before January 20

– The Braves have seen numerous schedule changes due to the pandemic with their opening two league series being postponed

– Bradley opened up their Valley slate last weekend, splitting two games at UNI

Last Time Out

– Hot shooting in the second half saw Illinois State finish with a 73-68 win over the Aces on Sunday at the Ford Center

– ISU hit 17 of its 23 attempts (73.9%) int he second half as they held on for the win

– Despite the offensive efficiency by the Redbirds, Evansville was able to stay within striking distance and got within four points in the final minute

– Noah Frederking hit five 3-pointers on his way to 15 points while Evan Kuhlman and Shamar Givance registered 13 and 12, respectively

– Givance and Jawaun Newton each had career highs in assists with Givance dishing out eight helpers while Newton finished the game with seven

– As a team, the Aces were credited with 20 assists; it was the highest tally since posting 22 on Dec. 7, 2019 against Miami Ohio

He Makes a Difference

– With his team sitting at 0-3, Jawaun Newton made his season debut and has led the Purple Aces to six wins in nine games since that point

– Newton came out of the gate strong, setting his career high with 19 points in his first contest of the year versus Eastern Illinois; he matched that total on January 9 against Illinois State where he hit 8 of his 12 field goal attempts while going 3-for-5 from long range

– His accuracy has been evident in the last four games with 21 of his last 36 shots finding the bottom of the net; inside the arc – 17 of his last 23 tries have been good

– The junior has scored at least six points in all nine of his games while totaling nine or more tallies on eight occasions

Presence Down Low

– Iyen Enaruna gave his team exactly what it needed in the series against Illinois State

– The junior posted eight points and two offensive rebounds in each game while playing a total of 35 minutes in the two contests

– Enaruna has taken his efficiency to a new level over the last five games, hitting 60% of his tries (12 out of 20) while averaging 5.6 PPG

– Against SEMO, Enaruna set his scoring high with nine points while adding six boards

 

 

ELLIS PARK NON PROFIT PPP LOAN

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Business Name Ellis Entertainment, LLC Loan Amount $350,000-1 million
Business Address 3300 US HIGHWAY 41 N Jobs Retained 64
City, State Zip HENDERSON, KY 42420 Date Approved 2020-04-28
Business Type Limited Liability Company(LLC) NAICS Code 711212
Race or Ethnicity Unanswered NAICS Description Racetracks
Gender Unanswered NAICS Category Arts, Entertainment, and Recreation
Veteran Unanswered Lender Field & Main Bank
Non-Profit Congressional District KY – 01ELLIS PARK   NON PROFIT

very important IS IT TRUE July 2020 reference Wimmecke

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” 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?

IS IT TRUE we are told that the Vanderburgh County Library Board only keeps a summary report of their official meetings?  …this Board receives their funding from the City and County taxpayers? …the taxpayers of Vanderburgh County expect that this Board to be transparent when it comes to providing accurate and detailed minutes concerning the important decisions made by this publicly funded Board?

IS IT TRUE that the Vanderburgh County Council meets next week?  …that the subject of appointing a new board member to the Vanderburgh County Library Board is on the agenda? …that a member of this board’s term ends this month?  …we have been told that the Vanderburgh County Council will not reappoint this Library Board member?

IS IT TRUE we are told that the potential Democrat candidate for Mayor of Evansville is a well-educated millennial with John F Kennedy good looks, great personality with some impressive professional achievements? …it could be possible that someone is trying to trick the CCO but Mole #3 tells us that there really is a person fitting this description who is pondering a run for the Mayor of Evansville?

IS IT TRUE we are told that in the event a challenger from the Democrat Party does come forward to oppose Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke there are hints that his opponent may allege that there are a couple of campaign contributions that has the smell of payola on them?

IS IT TRUE it is widely known that Mayor Winnecke is starting out with a $600,000 political war chest but what is not widely known is where the money is coming from?…in the most recent financial disclosure form there are 37 people or companies that made contributions of over $5,000 to the Friends of Winnecke fund and 30 of those generous fatcats were from other locations?…that means that only seven (7) local wealthy folks stroked the Mayor a check for $5,000 or more?…of those 30 out of town generous fatcats, many of them were listed as engineers or engineering companies?…engineering in the sense of political contributions almost always means construction contracts for civil engineering work?

IS IT TRUE attached below is the link of  Mayor Winnecke’s 74-page political campaign finance report for 2018?  …we urge you to take your time to read and analyze this extremely interesting report?    Mayor Winnecke’s campaign finance report.

IS IT TRUE that Scott Massey, a Purdue University graduate and founder of Heliponix, a company that makes an appliance that fits under a kitchen counter and grows produce year-round, is hoping to change that by bringing sustainable agriculture methods in Cameroon?  …that Scott Massey has been selected for a second Mandela Washington Fellowship to lead educational workshops at Cameroonian universities this month?  …that  Approximately 200 million hectares of suitable land remain unfarmed across Africa, causing many observers to wonder how African nations can unlock their full agricultural potential?  …we hope that Scott Massey will lead the way in achieving this lofty goal for Cameroon?

 

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

may 2020

IS IT TRUE that our favorite local TV Sports personality JO JO Gentry will be leaving Channel 44 News at the end of this month?  …we wish her well and thank her for a job well done?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Because of the annual bond payments do you feel its time that our elected officials admit that the Ford Center shall never make a profit?

Please go to our link of our media partner Channel 44 News located in the upper right-hand corner of the City-County Observer so you can get the up-to-date news, weather, and sports

IS IT TRUE Vanderburgh County Democratic Party Chairman, Scott Danks, City Councilman Dr. Dan Adams and County Commissioner Ben Shoulders played a major role in convincing Ben Trockman to enter into the 1st District City Council race?  …many expect that Mr. Trockman will prove to be a major asset to the At-Large City Council Democrats listed on November’s ballot?  …that Democratic Party Chairman Scott Danks recently said; “that Ben Trockman is extremely popular, intelligent and an inspiration for other persons with disabilities?”
IS IT TRUE that the Vanderburgh County Democrat Party will be sponsoring a big-ticket political fundraiser? ….Commissioners Ben Shoulders and Jeff Hatfield will be co-hosting this “Political Fundraiser Gala” to help raise money for the candidates running in the upcoming city election?  …this event will be held this coming Thursday’s evening at Party Central downtown Evansville? …we are told around 300 tickets has been sold for this event so far?
IS IT TRUE that we have now learned that Michelle Mercer with be joining Dr. Dan Adams Dan McGinn, John Hayden-CPA, and Connie Robinson in not seeking re-election to the Evansville City Council?  …we find it extremely interesting that 5 out 9 current Evansville City Council members have decided not to run for re-election?  …we wish them well and thank them for their public service to the citizens of Evansville?
IS IT TRUE around a year and a half ago the Vanderburgh County Party Chairman Scott Danks predicted that his party will become very competitive once again?  …the Democratic Party of Vanderburgh County now controls the County Commission?  …it looks like the Democrats will not only have a candidate running for every City Council seat but may also have a candidate running for Mayor of this great city?  …it looks like Chairman Danks kept his word?

 

Driver Using Cell Phone Causes School Bus Crash

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A driver distracted by a cell phone caused a collision with an Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation bus on Diamond Avenue.

On Friday, January 15, 2021 at approximately 07:33 AM, the Sheriff’s Office responded to a three vehicle crash on State Road 66 (Diamond Ave) at Resurrection Drive. Upon arrival deputies found a grey Mercury Grand Marquis, a Buick Envision, and an EVSC school bus wrecked in the roadway. Witnesses reported that the Grand Marquis was eastbound on SR 66 before entering the intersection under a red signal.

The Grand Marquis struck the Envision, which was traveling southbound thru the intersection. The Envision then collided with the EVSC bus, which was traveling northbound across the intersection.

A single child was on the school bus at the time of the accident but was not injured. The driver of the school bus and the Grand Marquis did not require medical attention on scene. The driver of the Envision was taken to Deaconess Hospital for non-life threatening injuries.

The driver of the Grand Marquis admitted to deputies that he was using a cell phone at the time of the accident. The driver was cited for Use of a Telecommunications Device While Operating a Vehicle and Disregarding a Traffic Control Device.

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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Eagles stunned by Greyhounds, 62-61

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  •  University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball was stunned by the University of Indianapolis, 62-61, Thursday evening in Indianapolis. USI, which missed a chance to move into first in the GLVC East, sees its record to go 4-3 this season, while UIndy ends the evening 1-7.

    USI had to dig out of a hole in the first half as UIndy built a 7-2 advantage after the Screaming Eagles started the game one-of-five from the field. Senior forward Josh Price had USI’s only bucket in the first six minutes of the contest.

    After junior guard/forward Glen Rouch broke the Eagles scoring drought with a bucket at 14:31, the USI offense started to gain momentum. The Eagles knotted the game at 8-8 on a pair of free throws by Price, while USI got the go-ahead bucket, 11-8, at 10:04 with a three-point bomb by Rouch from the corner.

    Those five points ignited a 24-15 USI run to the intermission and a 30-23 halftime advantage. The Eagles led by as many as 13 points, 28-15, when senior guard Mateo Rivera hit a bucket from downtown with 2:58 to halftime.

    Price, senior guard Clayton Hughes, and senior forward Emmanuel Little finished the opening 20 minutes with six points each to lead the way.

    The seven-point halftime lead shrank quickly to open the final 20 minutes as the Greyhounds made a run to take a 42-41 lead with 11:18 to play. Price quickly gave USI back the lead, 43-42, as the Eagle regained their halftime lead, 50-43, when Hughes drained a three-pointer with just over nine minutes remaining.

    The Greyhounds, however, were not done and went on an 11-1 run to take a 54-51 lead with under four minutes to play. USI rallied to tie the game 57-57 with 2:01 left on a jumper by junior guard Jelani Simmons, only to see UIndy regain the advantage, 60-57, twenty seconds later.

    Rivera revived the Eagles again with a three-point bomb to knot the game, 60-60, with 87 ticks left on the clock before the Greyhounds muscled their back into the lead, 62-60. USI missed a chance to tie the game at 62-62 when Price missed the first of two shots at the line and left the Eagles down one, 62-61 with 22 seconds remaining.

    The Eagles got two more looks at the bucket in the final 12 seconds, but Rivera and Rouch could not get the ball to fall in the 62-61 loss.

    Price led the way for the Eagles in the box score with his fourth double-double of the year, 16 points and 12 rebounds. Rivera followed Price on the glass with a season-high 11 rebounds, one short of tying a career-best.

    USI returns to Screaming Eagles Arena for the first time since December 12 when it comes home to host UIndy Saturday at 3:15 p.m. The Eagles are looking to payback the Greyhounds after stumbling on Senior Day last spring, 88-76, despite the 31-point performance by Little.

JUST IN: Senator Tomes Unlawful Assembly Bill Faces Likely Death In Committee

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Senator Tomes Unlawful Assembly Bill Faces Likely Death In Committee

By Alexa Shrake

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—The Black Lives Matter movement took off over the summer after the murder of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man in Minneapolis who died in police custody. Many Hoosiers assembled in Indianapolis and other cities across the state during the summer to push for political change.

According to Time magazine, 93% of the protests across the nation were peaceful while 7% displayed their anger by shattering windows, vandalizing buildings and more. The protests in Indianapolis lasted for 14 continuous days during the summer.

Now, Sen. James Tomes, R-Wadesville, and Sen. Michael Crider, R-Greenfield, are promoting an 18-page bill that could impose steep punishments on protestors charged with rioting and police officers for negligence, including barring them from government jobs and some public assistance.

Sen. Jim Tomes, R-Wadesville, addressing questions about a bill in the 2016 legislative session. Photo by Shayla Jones, TheStatehouseFile.com

“For generations in America, we’ve seen protests and demonstrations that have sparked change, but the message can be lost as soon as violence begins to occur and citizens’ property is destroyed,” Tomes said in a statement.

However, the bill is drawing some controversy. The local BLM Indy 10 chapter posted about the bill on Twitter, saying, “Good morning to everyone except the authors of SB34, which will not go before Committee for a hearing. Rest in pieces to this awful bill.” A representative could not be reached for further comment.

Executive director of Indy Pride Chris Handberg also disagrees with the bill.

“Gay liberation protests all the way to last summer’s Black Lives Matter protests—those were because people were being oppressed,” Handberg said.

Handberg said the protest last week on Capitol Hill seemed to be more about political opinion and not fighting to protect the core characteristics of who people are and that they can’t change. The LBTQ+ community wouldn’t be where it is today without protests, Handberg said.

“All throughout Black Lives Matter protests and even gay liberation protests, you never saw people trying to seize, kidnap and hold hostage lawmakers,” Handberg said.

Senate Bill 34 references the definition for rioting that is already part of Indiana law. The code states that rioting consists of a person who is aware and intentionally causes harm while protesting, which is a class A misdemeanor. If one is armed with a deadly weapon while protesting, then it is a level 6 felony.

Katie Blair, the advocacy and public policy director of the Indiana American Civil Liberties Union, is worried about what this bill may mean for Hoosiers.

“It chills free speech because no one is going to go out to a protest to let their voice be heard and speak out against the government if you think you could lose your job or your health care or your housing because of your engagement with that protest,” Blair said.

Blair described the bill as “completely unnecessary and harmful to the community.”

The bill removes protection for police officers under the Indiana Tort Claims Acts for failing to enforce the bill if it is made law. If an officer would fail to arrest a citizen for unlawful assembly, the officer would face a negligence charge.

The bill would prohibit a person from being released on bail without a hearing in an open court and also requires money for bail. Courts would be forced to consider how their bail requirements compare to local guidelines.

It would up the penalty for those charged with rioting, obstructing traffic, criminal mischief and disorderly conduct.

The bill would also prevent local governments from defunding police departments without reason, whether the community is seeing a decline in crime or tax revenue.

The killing of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and others ignited a debate about defunding police departments around the country. Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett has included roughly $261 million for IMPD in his 2021 budget.

“Looting, firebombing and throwing objects at citizens are violent and destructive activities that will not lead to a solution,” Tomes said in a statement. “Hoosiers are entitled to go about their lives without being victims of the violence that goes along with riots. I believe this legislation will protect innocent Hoosier bystanders from dangerous activities while still allowing groups to lawfully protest.”

After the first reading on Jan. 4, the bill was referred to the committee on corrections and criminal law. Committee chairman Sen. Mike Young, R-Indianapolis, said he has decided the bill will not be put on the schedule to be heard and will die in committee.

“The reasoning behind my decision is between the authors of the bill and myself,” Young told News 8 in a statement.

There is not a hearing set for the bill.

FOOTNOTE: Alexa Shrake is a reporter at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. 

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JOE HARRISON JR. CCO SECOND “MOLE AWARD” WINNER

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The City-County Observer is excited to announce our Second “Outstanding Community Services Award” (“MOLE AWARD”) winners for 2015. This years awards luncheon is held at Tropicana-Evansville Walnut rooms A and B. The registration begin at 11:30 am, the event officially starts at 12 noon on October 26, 2015. Reservations for this event may be obtain by calling Mollie Drake Schreiber at 812-760-4233 or e-email her at mdarke07@yahoo.com.  Deadline for registration is October 15, 2014.  Last years event was a sellout.

THIS YEARS SECOND OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY SERVICES (MOLE AWARD) WINNER is Vanderburgh County Commission Attorney  Joe Harrison  Jr.

EDUCATION:

* Reitz Memorial High School – Evansville, IN (1977)

* B.A., DePauw University, B.A. (1981)

* J.D., Indiana University School of Law, J.D. (1984)

LEGAL BACKGROUND AND EXPERIENCES:

* Attorney/Of Counsel, Massey Law Offices, LLC (September 2010 to Present)

* Partner, Bowers Harrison, LLP (2000 – August 2010)

* Partner, Bowers Harrison, Kent & Miller (1993 – 2000)

* Associate, Bowers, Harrison, Kent & Miller (1985 – 1993)

BAR ADMISSION:

* Indiana Supreme Court (1985)

* United States District Court, Northern and Southern Districts of Indiana (1985)

* United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit (1999)

PRACTICE AREA:

* Business and Corporate Matters

* Civil Litigation and

* Wills and Estates

* Personal Injury Law

* Zoning Matters

* Employment Law

* Governmental Law

COMMUNITY  AND  GOVERNMENTAL INVOLVEMENT

* Past attorney for the Vanderburgh County Board Of Commissioners

* Attorney, Evansville – Vanderburgh County Building Authority (2002 to Present)

* Commissioner, Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission (2014 to Present)

* Attorney, Area Plan Commission of Evansville – Vanderburgh County (2002 to 2012)

* Attorney, Evansville – Vanderburgh County Building Authority (2002 to Present)

* Attorney, City of Evansville (2002 – 2009)

* Attorney, Vanderburgh County Election Board (2001- 2002)

* Attorney, Vanderburgh County Council (1991 – 1997)

* Chairman, Vanderburgh County Republican Central Committee (1993 – 1997)

PERSONAL:

Joe has one son,  Joseph, III,  who is a practicing attorney in the Indy area.

Please take time and vote in today’s “Readers Poll”. Don’t miss reading today’s Feature articles because they are always an interesting read. Please scroll at the bottom of our paper so you can enjoy our creative political cartoons. Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without our permission.