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Press Release: Rokita’s Attack Ad Misleads Weinzapfel Record as Mayor of Evansville

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Monday, Oct 26,2020

EVANSVILLE, Ind. –The Weinzapfel for Indiana Attorney General campaign released the following statement refuting a recently released television advertisement attacking Jonathan Weinzapfel’s record as Mayor of Evansville.

“Former Congressman Rokita’s ad is based on questions asked by the Indiana State Board of Accounts in 2010 concerning the Director of THE DEPARTMENT OF Metropolitan Development who received compensation from both the City of Evansville and the Growth Alliance of Greater Evansville, the city and county’s non-profit economic development corporation.

An anonymous blog raised questions about the State Board of Accounts audit and the Chairman of the Vanderburgh County Republican Party asked then-Attorney General Greg Zoeller and Vanderburgh County Prosecutor Stan Levco to investigate. Neither office found enough evidence to warrant a response. The State Board of Accounts made no recommendations following its investigation.

The Evansville City Attorney found that the Republican Party’s accusations were based on a misinterpretation of the statute. To avoid any future appearance of impropriety, the city did make changes to the employee’s compensation structure as a result of the State Board of Accounts Audit. Rokita’s ad infers that Jonathan personally profited from this compensation arrangement for the city employee. Nothing could be further from the truth.

” For more information on Jonathan or his campaign for Indiana Attorney General, please visit www.WeinzapfelforAG.com. To schedule an interview, email media@weinzapfelforAG.com.

FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, editing, or bias.

UE Professor Awarded $300,000 NSF Grant for Genetics Research

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Joyce Stamm, PhD, professor of biology at the University of Evansville (UE), was recently awarded a $300,000 grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The grant, in which Stamm is a co-principal investigator, will be applied over three years to an ongoing genetics-focused research initiative.

The collaborative project, titled “A Multi-Institutional Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience in Genetics,” is led by Jacob Kagey, PhD, at the University of Detroit Mercy and has co-principal investigators from a total of four institutions, including UE. The grant funds plan to expand the research project to a total of 20 institutions. The overall goal is to make research experiences more accessible for students historically underrepresented in biomedical research. This includes programs at community colleges and universities with large minority populations.

The grant is part of NSF’s Improving Undergraduate STEM Education program, which seeks to enhance STEM education for undergraduate students by utilizing alternative methods to teaching and learning. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, employment in jobs related to STEM – or science, technology, engineering, and math – continues to be a rapidly growing, in-demand field.

Stamm, who has worked with Kagey on the project since 2016, incorporates a semester-long research project into her genetics course. Participating students map genetic mutations that cause tumor formation in fruit flies. These mutations can offer clues as to what goes wrong in similar diseases among humans. To date, two papers have been published describing the results of this work.

Over the last five years, nearly 100 students have benefitted from the research experience in genetics courses taught by Stamm and Julie Merkle, PhD, assistant professor of biology. Stamm said she is excited to continue this initiative and provide impactful opportunities for future biology students.

“I have a passion for developing college courses with opportunities for conducting original research because it increases student interest and retention in STEM majors and careers,” said Stamm. “Collaborative projects like this grant project are highly beneficial in higher education because they provide important infrastructure and support for professors. We can then turn around and pass on these opportunities to our students.”

In the past, Stamm has taken advantage of large national projects in genomics and microbiology to incorporate research projects into introductory and advanced courses. Now, she is excited to “pay it forward” through her direct involvement in this project, which will expand research opportunities for future students.

Students at the University of Evansville shape powerful and enduring change. UE is the first in Indiana to be designated as an Ashoka U Changemaker Campus, and its changemaking culture empowers students to improve the world around them as UE Changemakers. With over 80 majors in the arts and sciences and pre-professional programs, UE’s diverse student body represents 44 states and 52 countries. U.S. News & World Report recognizes UE as the #4 Best College in the Midwest among private schools. For more information, please visit evansville.edu.

New Sheriff’s Deputy Sworn In

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Deputy Davis will begin his training with the Indiana Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA) in early November. The Academy’s basic course for new law enforcement officers consists of over 600 hours of training in a variety of areas including criminal and traffic law, firearms, emergency vehicle operations, physical tactics, accident investigation, criminal investigation, domestic violence and sexual assault, standardized field sobriety testing, crime prevention, as well as drug and narcotics investigation.

After completing his training with the ILEA, Deputy Davis will attend a 160 hour Deputy Training School (DTS) at the Sheriff’s Office where he will receive agency specific training along with reality based scenario training.

Deputy Davis will then enter the 22-week field training program, where sheriff’s deputy instructors will guide him in the application of his training as he patrols the streets and neighborhoods of Vanderburgh County.

Pictured above: Deputy Steven Stuart being sworn in.

After successfully completing all aspects of his training (and receiving passing marks from his training instructors) Deputy Davis will be released from probationary status. The entire process (which includes a conditional offer of employment, background investigation, psychological screening, merit board review, academy training and field training) takes over a year.

Deputy Steven Stuart, who was sworn in this past July as a new deputy sheriff, will graduate from the ILEA on November 13 and return to the Sheriff’s Office for further training.

Pictured above: Chief Deputy Noah Robinson presented Deputy Taylor Davis with his first badge.

 

 

Virtual Open House Planned Nov. 12 to Announce Newest Program at Ivy Tech Tell City

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Virtual Open House Planned Nov. 12 to Announce Newest Program at Ivy Tech Tell City

 Tell City, IN – A Virtual Open House is planned to announce Ivy Tech’s newest career pathway in Tell City – Qualified Medication Aide (QMA). It will be presented live on Thursday, Nov. 12 from noon to 1 p.m. on the Ivy Tech Tell City Career & Technology Center Facebook page (@TCIvyTech) and through Zoom for those who do not have access.

To access the Zoom meeting, go to link.ivytech.edu/TellCityQMA at noon on Nov. 12.

Tours of the QMA lab and course discussions will take place. This coursework fills a need for workforce training in Perry and surrounding counties and allows employees to complete the next step in training for a rewarding career in healthcare.

A Qualified Medication Aide is a Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) who has completed additional training, annual in-service training and demonstrated competency in dispensing and passing medications and or applying/administering treatments under the direct supervision of a registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse.

“The QMA Program would not have been possible at this location without the generous support of our community partners,” said Katie King, site director.  “Those partners include the Community Foundation and the Perry County Development Corporation.”

Enrollment is now taking place for classes starting January 19, 2021.

“This is a high-demand field in our area and throughout Indiana, and there is an 8% growth rate projected in the next 10 years,” she added.

For additional information, please call 812-547-7915.

 

 

State Contractor Launches Investigation

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DCS Employee Uncovered Potentially Falsified Records

A State of Indiana contractor has stopped all referrals to subcontractor Tomo Drug Testing after the Indiana Department of Child Services discovered drug-screening records might have been falsified.

A DCS family case manager raised questions about Tomo Drug Testing’s records after a client who had been cooperative with the requirements of their case was listed as having failed to appear for a drug screen.

DCS notified contractor Redwood Toxicology Laboratory, which stopped all referrals to Tomo. Tomo Drug Testing is one of Redwood’s subcontractors. Tomo collects the samples to be tested; Redwood conducts the lab testing. The validity of the testing is not being questioned.

Redwood is conducting a comprehensive audit and internal investigation. The audit is expected to be complete and provided to DCS by mid-November. DCS is in regular contact with Redwood as the investigation progresses and is reviewing its own files for discrepancies in the meantime.

Out of an abundance of caution and to proactively address any concerns, courts are being notified that cases could be impacted. Communication will continue as DCS learns to what extent records were falsified.

DCS has utilized Redwood Toxicology Laboratory since 2015.

Moving to Canada Won’t Save You From Trump

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THE WORLD

Moving to Canada Won’t Save You From Trump

There are downsides to global hegemony.

Far from being harmless or innocent, the remark shows that Americans, even ostensibly cosmopolitan and liberal ones, really don’t grasp the pervasiveness of U.S. power. It relies on the assumption that American politics is a local, parochial problem that someone can simply escape the way you’d move to avoid a noisy corner of a restaurant, and that escaping American power just requires a little social distancing—a jaunt over the border.

In reality, American politics isn’t something you can opt out of any more than you can choose to be affected by gravity. The United States is a hegemon, a country so powerful that it can shape the rules of the international system. It routinely applies pressure to countries, especially those that most closely orbit its power, as when Washington recently pushed Canada to detain a Chinese executive accused of violating U.S. sanctions in Vancouver.

Weaker powers, however, have no such luxury. Their relationships with great powers, even friendly ones, carry the potential for great danger. Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau (father of the current Canadian leader) put it best five decades ago: “Living next to you is in some ways like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly or even-tempered is the beast—if I can call it that—one is affected by every twitch and grunt.”

Trudeau’s jest remains just as accurate today. Americans tend not to notice the disruptions their political cause for Canada.

Consider trade. Canada is the second-largest trading partner for the United States, while the U.S. is Canada’s most important trading partner. That imbalance means that American twitches and grunts can whipsaw entire Canadian industries.

“Every tariff Trump has thrown on goods has caused a panic up here, because it means we have to find alternative buyers for goods,” Jordan Carlson, a Ph.D. student in geography at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, told me.

For Carlson, like many Canadians, exposure to the U.S. economy isn’t academic but personal. He grew up in British Columbia, where pulp and lumber mills form a big part of the local economy. U.S. tariffs on softwood lumber disrupted the industry, causing his family to move repeatedly during his childhood.

Canada’s close relationship with—even dependence on—the United States means informed Canadians follow American politics closely because news from a foreign country can portend significant domestic repercussions. “When the stories coming from America are as big as they are, they just overpower everything,” said Jennifer Bonder, a junior fellow at the Munk School at the University of Toronto.

American political news can even overpower major Canadian stories. For example, within hours of the first Trump-Biden debate on Sept. 29, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government survived a confidence vote and passed coronavirus relief. “Which story had more relevance to Canadians—and which story do you think got all the coverage?” Bonder said.

Bonder observes that a poll of Canadians in the leading newsmagazine Maclean’s showed that 72 percent would support Biden over Trump, who polled 14 percent. “But I can’t find any polling that’s been done on Americans about which prime ministerial candidate they think should win,” Bonder said. “Because why would they?”

In other words, Americans joking about fleeing to Canada to escape American politics are in for a rude awakening. American politics and how to respond to them occupy practically as central a place in Canadian discourse, especially under Trump. The Canadian political scientists Philippe Lagassé and Srdjan Vucetic recently argued that a second Trump term could force Canada to “confront its dependence on the U.S. more directly and with greater urgency.”

The Canadian journalist Doug Saunders pursues similar themes in his book Maximum Canada, which urges Canada to boost its already sky-high (by rich-world standards) immigration levels in order to develop a larger internal market and cultural sphere that would help balance America’s unthinking domination.

(By the way, Saunders notes in passing that traditionally most migration between the United States and Canada has flowed the other way, with Canadians attracted by the greater opportunities afforded in the larger markets to the south. That pattern persists even today, albeit at lower levels. In 2018, official statistics show, 10,907 Americans achieved permanent residency in Canada, while in the same year the United States admitted 14,337 Canadians to that status.)

In the very long run, such options might bear fruit. Ironically, a continuation of Trumpian policies might even help Canada accomplish it, since his zealously xenophobic immigration policies have redirected the global flow of talent to the north, as the CBC noted a few weeks ago.

To be sure, there have been times when escaping to Canada has been a good choice for Americans facing serious persecution. From the American Revolution until the Civil War, for example, many Black Americans found Canada to be a comparative refuge from enslavement and other violations of their human rights.

After the American Revolution, several thousand formerly enslaved people found freedom in Nova Scotia and elsewhere thanks to British Governor-General Guy Carleton, who refused George Washington’s demand for the return of slaves who had supported the British. A similar story brought thousands more freed people to Canada after the War of 1812, while even more enslaved people escaped slavery by moving to Canada through the Underground Railroad. Later, up to 40,000 Americans moved to Canada to avoid the Vietnam War draft—and many stayed.

Yet those circumstances are unlikely to be repeated. And, for what it’s worth, it’s not that easy to move to Canada anymore—even for an American. Even setting aside the closure of the U.S.-Canada border due to COVID, immigration restrictions are tough, even if you have an American passport. As the American comedian, Hari Kondabolu put it back in 2011, “I hate to break this to you, but Canada doesn’t have a special visa for American liberal cowards.”

Americans might be better off in a lot of ways if they stopped treating Canada as a joke and started taking it seriously. Canada scores are substantially higher than the United States on the Varieties of Democracy indexes, which measure the quality of each country’s government. It scores almost 30 spots higher on the Reporters Without Borders press freedom index. Its infant mortality rate is 25 percent lower than that of the United States.

The point isn’t that Canada is perfect. It’s not. It has its own histories of nativist and racial persecution, and the ongoing condition of its Indigenous First Nations is a scandal. (The CBC podcast The Secret Life of Canada extinguishes the myth of Canada as a “nicer” country.) It has seen its own violent attacks on women and Muslims. Given that Canadian politics faces its own instabilities and has a right wing of its own, Americans fleeing Trump might even end up ruled by politicians who resemble less the crunchy stereotype of the polite Canadian and more people like Ontario Premier Doug Ford who are more or less standard-issue American conservatives.

The point is that Canada is a real place, with its own history, society, and politics. And, like billions of people around the globe, Canadians’ lives are deeply shaped by the United States, even though they have no way to vote in U.S. elections.

Dreams of escaping U.S. politics reflect a desire to deny facing up to the fact that American power and American politics are inescapable—a structural condition, not a consumer choice.

Americans can’t avoid that responsibility, no matter where in the world they try to flee.

“Where could one go that would be free from, inter alia, U.S. influence on the trajectory of climate change, global trade policy, or liberal democracy and global institutions?” Will Greaves, a professor of international relations at the University of Victoria in British Columbia, told me. “If such a place exists, it definitely isn’t the country right next door where public policy, national interests, and general culture are intimately wound with those of the U.S.”

Despite calls like Vucetic and Lagassé’s for distancing between the two countries, Canada’s fate will remain entwined with America’s for a very long time to come. Taking that relationship—and responsibility—seriously stands the jokes about fleeing northward on their head. The way for Americans to be responsible neighbors isn’t to leave but to stay. If hegemony can’t be escaped, maybe we can at least fight to improve it.

FOOTNOTE: Dr. Paul Musgrave is a graduate of Reitz High School, a Wells Scholar at IU, a Marshall Scholar at University College Dublin, Ireland, and received a Masters and Doctoral degree from Georgetown University.  He is an Associate Professor of American Foreign Policy at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, MA.

Office Of Community And Rural Affairs Awards Planning Grants

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The Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs is awarding nine planning grants to communities to develop a variety of plans that will help improve the quality of life for their residents.

“Planning grants are invaluable tools that can help rural communities shape their vision for community and economic development,” said Matt Crouch, Interim Executive Director of OCRA. “I applaud the foresight by the community’s leaders and residents taking the time to plan for these significant investments within their communities.”

The State of Indiana distributes the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds to rural communities to assist units of local government with various community projects. Planning grants are one type of grants offered through OCRA’s CDBG Program.

The Planning Grant Program strives to encourage communities to plan for long-term community development with the aid of subject matter experts and community input. The applications being funded this quarter are aiming to address water infrastructure and comprehensive community planning.

Water Infrastructure grants allow communities to take a holistic view of potential issues and opportunities across the drinking, waste and stormwater infrastructure. By completing water infrastructure planning, communities will be able to make decisions regarding the most urgent water needs while understanding how each system works in context with other utility systems. The following seven communities are awarded the following grants:

  • The Town of Brookston is awarded $58,500;
  • The Town of Brownstown is awarded $50,000;
  • The Town of Center Point is awarded $35,000;
  • The Town of Chalmers is awarded $60,000;
  • The Town of Earl Park is awarded $69,300;
  • The City of Hartford City is awarded $90,000; and
  • The Town of Hebron is awarded $35,000.

Comprehensive Planning grants are designed to aid communities in assessing assets and identify opportunities to address current needs. Each comprehensive plan includes a holistic view and potential opportunities to improve in the following areas: land use, government capacity, public services, placemaking, economic development, housing, transportation, agriculture, natural resources, broadband access and historic resources. The Town of Hudson and the Town of Otterbein are each awarded $40,000 grants.

Applications are accepted on a quarterly basis. The next quarter opens Monday, Nov. 9, 2020 with applications due Friday, Jan. 15, 2021. For more information, visit in.gov/ocra/2371.htm.

YESTERYEAR: During Prohibition Congress Had A Private Country Club Where They Drank Liquor Openly.

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SUBMITTED BY GAIL RIECKEN 
EVANSVILLE
It was on this day in 1919 that Congress overrode President Woodrow Wilson’s veto and passed the Volstead Act, which provided for enforcement of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, prohibiting the sale of alcohol.
The prohibition movement had been led largely by women, who still had a hard time making a living on their own, and many had seen their lives ruined when their husbands squandered the family income on alcohol.
It’s commonly believed that prohibition didn’t really stop anyone from drinking and merely gave a boost to organized crime. That was true in big cities because they refused to enforce the law, but in rural America, prohibition was extremely effective.
Both cirrhosis death rates and admissions to state mental hospitals for alcoholism fell by more than fifty percent, and arrests for public drunkenness and disorderly conduct went way down. But city newspapers focused on how easy it was to find alcohol. Even members of the United States Congress had a private country club where they drank liquor openly.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Jazmine Cree Howard: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Jarvis Cortez Ward: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Richard Eugene Krietemeyer: Intimidation (Level 5 Felony), Intimidation (Level 6 Felony), Domestic battery (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor)

Christopher Jordon Dingus: Attempt auto theft (Level 6 Felony)

Sommer Beth Sheahan: Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor), Disorderly conduct (Class B misdemeanor)

Toby Lee Luster: Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Level 6 Felony)

Audra Raelynn Johnson: Aiding forgery (Level 6 Felony), Aiding theft (Class A misdemeanor)

Jashaun Lamont Mitchell: Forgery (Level 6 Felony), Attempt theft (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor)

Amanda Ann Porter: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class A misdemeanor)

Marcus Larone Green: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of a firearm by a domestic batterer (Class A misdemeanor), Carrying a handgun without a license (Class A misdemeanor), Operating a motor vehicle without ever receiving a license (Class C misdemeanor), Disregarding stop sign (C infraction), Speeding (C infraction)

Dacx Jeremy Brinton: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Antonio Lamont Taylor: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Maurice L. McRae: Strangulation (Level 6 Felony), Domestic battery (Class A misdemeanor), Criminal mischief (Class B misdemeanor), Interference with the reporting of a crime (Class A misdemeanor)

 Daily Scriptures 

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MONDAY 

“But to you who are willing to listen, I say, love your enemies! Do good to those who hate you. Bless those who curse you. Pray for those who hurt you.” Luke 6:27-28 NLT 

TUESDAY 

“If someone slaps you on one cheek, offer the other cheek also. If someone demands your coat, offer your shirt also.” Luke 6:29 NLT 

WEDNESDAY 

“Give to anyone who asks; and when things are taken away from you, don’t try to get them back. Do to others as you would like them to do to you.” Luke 6:30-31 NLT 

THURSDAY 

“If you love only those who love you, why should you get credit for that? Even sinners love those who love them!” Luke 6:32 NLT 

FRIDAY 

“And if you do good only to those who do good to you, why should you get credit? Even sinners do that much!” Luke 6:33 NLT 

SATURDAY 

“And if you lend money only to those who can repay you, why should you get credit? Even sinners will lend to other sinners for a full return.” Luke 6:34 NLT 

SUNDAY 

“Love your enemies! Do good to them. Lend to them without expecting to be repaid. Then your reward from heaven will be very great, and you will truly be acting as children of the Most High, for he is kind to those who are unthankful and wicked. You must be compassionate, just as your Father is compassionate.” Luke 6:35-36 NLT 

Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen SeltzerÂ