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FSSA Names Agency’s First Chief Health Equity And ADA Officer

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The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration announced today that Breanca Merritt, Ph.D., will serve as the agency’s first chief health equity and ADA officer, beginning January 4. Merritt is the founding director of the Center for Research on Inclusion and Social Policy at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, as well as a clinical assistant professor in IUPUI’s O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs, and adjunct faculty for the Africana Studies program.

FSSA recently created the chief health equity and ADA officer position to provide leadership in the evaluation of policy decisions that affect race equity, to build metrics for agency accountability, ensuring agency adherence to the Americans with Disabilities Act, and to serve at the executive level working to build a culture of equity across the agency. The position will report directly to the FSSA secretary and also be responsible for leading FSSA’s Office of Healthy Opportunities.

“Dr. Merritt has a long history as an academic and practitioner with real-world experience working among marginalized populations to understand racial and ethnic disparities and encouraging policies that promote equity,” said Jennifer Sullivan, M.D., M.P.H., FSSA secretary.

Dr. Merritt earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Oklahoma’s Gaylord College of Journalism before a master’s degree in political science from Texas A&M University. She then earned a Ph.D. in health promotion sciences from the University of Oklahoma’s Hudson College of Public Health with a specialty in health disparities.

“My career has always been dedicated to informing government efforts to improve outcomes for local communities, especially the populations served by FSSA,” said Dr. Merritt. “I look forward to working collectively to address racial and social equity for Hoosiers who receive services and interact with the agency.”

Dr. Merritt resides in Indianapolis with her husband. A photo of Dr. Merritt can be downloaded here.

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.

Dkaisha Minor: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Destin Jay Svestka: Attempt residential entry (Level 6 Felony)

Gary Dwayne Hagan: Residential entry (Level 6 Felony)

Donald Lee Durham: Carrying a handgun without a license (Level 5 Felony)

Denise Ann Hardiman: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony)

Tiffany Raye Anderson: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Dusty Wayne Chumley: Unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon (Level 4 Felony), Driving while suspended (Class A misdemeanor)

Angelia Rose Page: Theft (Level 6 Felony), Theft (Class A misdemeanor)

U. S. Senator Mike Braun Announces That He Will Reject Electors From Disputed States

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U.S. Senators Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), James Lankford (R-Okla.), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), John Kennedy (R-La.), Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), and Senators-Elect Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), and Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) announced today in a joint statement they will reject electors from disputed states, called for a commission to conduct an emergency 10-day audit of the election returns in those states, and for those states to convene special legislative sessions to certify their vote in a manner consistent with the findings of the commission’s audit.

“America is a Republic whose leaders are chosen in democratic elections. Those elections, in turn, must comply with the Constitution and with federal and state law.

“When the voters fairly decide an election, pursuant to the rule of law, the losing candidate should acknowledge and respect the legitimacy of that election. And, if the voters choose to elect a new office-holder, our Nation should have a peaceful transfer of power.

“The election of 2020, like the election of 2016, was hard fought and, in many swing states, narrowly decided. The 2020 election, however, featured unprecedented allegations of voter fraud, violations and lax enforcement of election law, and other voting irregularities.

“Voter fraud has posed a persistent challenge in our elections, although its breadth and scope are disputed. By any measure, the allegations of fraud and irregularities in the 2020 election exceed any in our lifetimes.

“And those allegations are not believed just by one individual candidate.  Instead, they are widespread. Reuters/Ipsos polling, tragically, shows that 39% of Americans believe ‘the election was rigged.’  That belief is held by Republicans (67%), Democrats (17%), and Independents (31%).

“Some members of Congress disagree with that assessment, as do many members of the media.

“But, whether or not our elected officials or journalists believe it, that deep distrust of our democratic processes will not magically disappear.  It should concern us all. And it poses an ongoing threat to the legitimacy of any subsequent administrations.

“Ideally, the courts would have heard evidence and resolved these claims of serious election fraud. Twice, the Supreme Court had the opportunity to do so; twice, the Court declined.

“On January 6, it is incumbent on Congress to vote on whether to certify the 2020 election results. That vote is the lone constitutional power remaining to consider and force resolution of the multiple allegations of serious voter fraud.

“At that quadrennial joint session, there is long precedent of Democratic Members of Congress raising objections to presidential election results, as they did in 1969, 2001, 2005, and 2017. And, in both 1969 and 2005, a Democratic Senator joined with a Democratic House Member in forcing votes in both houses on whether to accept the presidential electors being challenged.

“The most direct precedent on this question arose in 1877, following serious allegations of fraud and illegal conduct in the Hayes-Tilden presidential race. Specifically, the elections in three states — Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina — were alleged to have been conducted illegally.

“In 1877, Congress did not ignore those allegations, nor did the media simply dismiss those raising them as radicals trying to undermine democracy.  Instead, Congress appointed an Electoral Commission — consisting of five Senators, five House Members, and five Supreme Court Justices — to consider and resolve the disputed returns.

“We should follow that precedent. To wit, Congress should immediately appoint an Electoral Commission, with full investigatory and fact-finding authority, to conduct an emergency 10-day audit of the election returns in the disputed states. Once completed, individual states would evaluate the Commission’s findings and could convene a special legislative session to certify a change in their vote, if needed.

“Accordingly, we intend to vote on January 6 to reject the electors from disputed states as not ‘regularly given’ and ‘lawfully certified’ (the statutory requisite), unless and until that emergency 10-day audit is completed.

“We are not naïve. We fully expect most if not all Democrats, and perhaps more than a few Republicans, to vote otherwise. But the support of election integrity should not be a partisan issue. A fair and credible audit — conducted expeditiously and completed well before January 20 — would dramatically improve Americans’ faith in our electoral process and would significantly enhance the legitimacy of whoever becomes our next President. We owe that to the People.

“These are matters worthy of the Congress and entrusted to us to defend.  We do not take this action lightly. We are acting not to thwart the democratic process, but rather to protect it. And every one of us should act together to ensure that the election was lawfully conducted under the Constitution and to do everything we can to restore faith in our Democracy.”

INDIANA STATEWIDE POSITIVES COVID-19 CASE COUNTS IS 523,090

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New Ultrasound Requirement Helps Protect Women’s Health And Sanctity Of Life

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Attorney General Curtis Hill today issued the following statement:

“On Jan. 1, 2021, a new Indiana law goes into effect requiring ultrasounds at least 18 hours before women undergo abortions.

“My office successfully defended a challenge to this law by Planned Parenthood, which dropped a lawsuit against the state in exchange for the state’s agreement to refrain from enforcing the law until 2021 — giving clinics time to train staff on the proper use of ultrasound equipment.

“We held the line in our commitment to respect women’s health and the sanctity of human life. Planned Parenthood folded because they saw the likelihood that they would lose their lawsuit if they persisted in fighting Indiana’s very reasonable and well-grounded law.

“For women considering abortions, ultrasounds are an important part of informed-consent counseling. Anyone interested in protecting women’s health, including their mental health, should support giving them as much information as possible to aid their decision-making. This new law serves to empower women with knowledge.”

In a Widening News Desert on the Border, a Tabloid Start-Up Defies the Odds

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In a Widening News Desert on the Border, a Tabloid Start-Up Defies the Odds

People in Del Rio, Texas, complain that nothing ever happens there. Those are fighting words for the publisher of The 830 Times, though he admits that keeping his paper afloat might be the biggest news of all

DEL RIO, Texas — At the Chihuahuan Desert’s eastern limits, in a parking lot above Lake Amistad, Brian Argabright photographed anglers and their catch at the Border Bass Battle for The Del Rio News-Herald, a chronicler of the wind-swept border town since 1884.

Three days later, he would learn the tournament story would be his last for The News-Herald.

On Nov. 18, the nationwide newspaper crisis touched Val Verde County when The News-Herald printed its final edition. The end was swift for the staff and a shock to residents, who had somehow expected their newspaper to last forever.

Leonard Woolsey, president of Southern Newspapers Inc., the corporation that owns The News-Herald, came to Del Rio to fire 10 employees. For him, it was the right thing to do it in person. Revenue could not cover payroll, even after the company secured a multimillion-dollar federal Covid-19 relief loan

The closure left Val Verde County without a trusted newspaper, another victim in a trend researchers at the University of North Carolina deemed “The Expanding News Desert.” An estimated 300 newspapers have closed and 6,000 journalists have lost their jobs over the past two years, according to their research, as circulation fell by five million readers

In Texas, 134 counties — a little more than half the state — have just one newspaper, and 21 have no newspaper at all. Del Rio, the Vale Verde County seat, teetered on becoming the 22nd.

Enter Joel Langton, a 56-year-old military public-affairs veteran who decided to turn an online events website he had started into a 16-page, ad-supported weekly tabloid, Del Rio’s 830 Times.

“The News-Herald had a great staff and a bad business plan,” he said. “Publishers came in from the outside every 18 months. Del Rio is a complicated culture. I’ve been here for 15 years and still don’t know everything going on.”

After The News-Herald closed, Mr. Langton stepped forward to turn his 5-month-old 830Times.com, named after the local telephone area code, into a newspaper. He had a web designer and knew someone who could make layouts. But he needed reporters to cover Del Rio.

He brought on Mr. Argabright and another former News-Herald writer, Karen Gleason, to fill his pages as freelancers.

“The fact they said yes makes me tear up because I have so much respect for both of them,” Mr. Langton wrote in the newspaper’s first issue. “We all share the same passion — Del Rio. We love this town and want to keep people informed.”

The 830 Times is a solution to Del Rio’s biggest problem, as Mr. Langton sees it — how to keep residents from moving away.

“People say there is nothing to do here, but that’s not true,” he said. “The 830 Times was originally set up to let people know about the fun things going on.”

Mr. Langton is right. There are entertainments to be had in Del Rio, though most of them are of the outdoor variety.

More than 200 men, women and children on horseback and ATVs and in pickup trucks snarled traffic along seven miles in Cienegas Terrace, a colonia between the Del Rio airport and the Rio Grande. A ranch cookout followed, with beer kegs, homemade tamales, a roping exhibition, and a norteño band playing behind a curtain of cigarette smoke.

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Diego’s uncle, Beto Torez, who grew up in Del Rio, was at the party with his young family. He lives 260 miles east, in Austin, where he works as a church music director. Del Rio is lovely to visit for the day, he said, but to raise his children here? No way. Austin has a better music scene.

The cabalgata made the news on Noticias Del Rio TV, a local bilingual Facebook page with nearly 85,000 followers. The 830 Times so far has 3,000 followers on its Facebook page. The disparate numbers hint at the obstacles Mr. Langton faces in his push to make The 830 Times succeed in a world dominated by Google and Facebook advertising and competitors with Spanish-language appeal.

“For now, I’m footing the bill,” he said. “Am I gambling on the print product? Yes. I could lose it all.”

At age 24, Mr. Langton was married, broke and desperate for work in Minnesota. The Air Force was hiring, so he enlisted.

The military moved him every three years or so, an itinerant life that mirrored his upbringing as a preacher’s son. He worked as a public-affairs specialist in Indiana, Maryland, Arkansas, Nebraska, Turkey and then Cocoa Beach, Fla., which he called “the perfect place to bounce back from a divorce.”

Mr. Langton remarried and moved with his wife to his final post in Del Rio at Laughlin Air Force Base, the largest pilot training facility in the United States.

Later, he transitioned from the military to a civilian public relations job at Laughlin.

Del Rio, population 35,700, is tiny compared with its sister city, Ciudad Acuña, on the Mexico side of Rio Grande, which has more than 200,000 residents. Acuña is a manufacturing town focusing on auto parts and appliances. Thanks to the Air Force base, the federal government is the largest employer in Del Rio.

Despite the razor wire-topped fences and border guards dividing the two cities, most residents see Del Rio and Acuña as one place.

Into that international mix has recently stepped a third player — a Chinese company proposing a major and hotly debated new enterprise outside Del Rio that has become one of The 830 Times’s biggest news stories.

GH America Energy quietly bought 140,000 acres in Val Verde County over the last five years to build a massive wind farm not far from the pilot training base. A Chinese billionaire and former army officer, Sun Guangxin, controls the company, a Guanghui Energy Company subsidiary, through an investment group.

In 2018, concern that giant wind turbines could disrupt flight training routes that are crucial to the county’s biggest employer began prompting apprehension all over Val Verde County and from Texas’ representatives in Washington. Del Rio’s mayor, Bruno Lozano, and the county’s senior administrator, Judge Lewis Owens, sent a letter to Trump administration officials early in 2020, warning that the energy project “will result in unacceptable risk to national security of the United States.”

It is in Del Rio’s interest to keep the military happy. According to the Texas comptroller, Laughlin contributes $2 billion to the Texas economy and more than 3,000 jobs each year.

“It’s the most underreported story here,” Mr. Langton said. “The Communist Chinese are one of the largest landowners. But because of my position at the base, I need to keep walls up between me and that story. I’ll hire a writer to cover it.”

Mr. Langton operates his news empire from a sideboard he uses as a desk in his dining room, dealing with his reporters and the company that prints the paper, 153 miles away, by cellphone.

On a Wednesday morning last month, it was 5:30 a.m., The 830 Times’s inaugural edition was late, and Mr. Langton was dialing the phone.

“I hate calling people this early, but I have to get my stuff out,” he said, bemoaning the troubles of his new venture. It was inspection week at the Air Force base, and he could not be late.

Moments later, a delivery driver arrived in the cold, pre-dawn darkness and unloaded 2,000 copies.

“The banner color is off,” Mr. Langton said. “It should be blue. This looks purple.”

A full-color photo on the front page captured the annual “Nutcracker” performance at a downtown theater. Inside, a note “From the Publisher Dude” teased an article penned by Norris Burkes, a retired Air Force chaplain, recalling his “wacky marriage proposal.”

With the newspapers stacked in his S.U.V., Mr. Langton tuned his radio to the Outlaw Country station and drove down Veterans Boulevard, an area where Del Rio began to expand northward on open savanna after the Plaza Del Sol Mall opened in 1979.

Big-box stores and strip malls followed as the historic downtown declined, killing the Guarantee department store, the first permanent commercial structure on Main Street when it was a cow trail in 1905.

Mr. Langton dropped his newspaper off at Roberts Jewelers, River City Donuts, a Rudy’s Bar-B-Q, a Ramada hotel, an IHOP, the Bank & Trust, gas stations and laundromats, all places where readers could pick it up for free.

Plenty of people are counting on Mr. Langton to make a go of it. Steven T. Webb, a former Del Rio police officer who won a runoff in December for the City Council, said the fact that only 12 percent of voters turned out in the general election was partly attributable to the News-Herald shutdown. “Social media, friends, that’s the only way we get the news now,” he said. “It hurt us, the newspaper closing.”

For now, Mr. Langton is focusing on advertising and editing, leaving the story ideas and writing to Mr. Argabright and Ms. Gleason. Del Rio’s 830 Times is crawling, he said, but he hopes soon the newspaper learns how to walk and run. Mostly, Mr. Langton wants the residents to love his publication as their own.

“The 830 Times is a leap of faith,” Ms. Gleason said. She had known Mr. Langton all of two days before the first issue was finished. “I just want this paper to be a voice for the community, interesting and truthful stories about people in Del Rio.”

Mr. Langston concedes that his efforts to provide Del Rio with a newspaper it can hold in its hands are probably temporary. He believes the printed word is going extinct.

“I hate to tell you this, buddy,” he said. “But in five or 10 years, newspapers won’t exist anymore.”

He figures he has five years to prove himself wrong.

FOOTNOTE:  Thanks to our special friend Joe Wallace for sharing this article with us.

 

 

HOOSIER HISTORY HIGHLIGHTS

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January 3 – January 9

The Week in Indiana History


Yeats

1904     Irish poet and dramatist William Butler Yeats was the guest speaker at the Athenaeum on the campus of Butler University in Irvington.  He spoke on the topic, “The Theater and What It Might Be.”  He said modern audiences demand expensive stage settings but care little for the worth of the play.


White House

1927     The Notre Dame Glee Club performed for President Calvin Coolidge at the White House.  Earlier in the day, they had entertained in the ballroom of the Mayflower Hotel.  The 40 singers presented a variety of classical and religious music, as well as college tunes, such as the “Hike Song” and “Victory March.”


Olympians1951     After six overtimes, the Indianapolis Olympians defeated the Rochester Royals in the longest NBA game in history.  Played at Edgerton Park Arena, the contest ended with a close Olympians victory. The final score was 75 to 73. Two of the overtime sessions were scoreless, and in one neither team launched a shot.  The Olympians, in existence from 1949 to 1952, were founding members of the NBA.  Their home arena was Butler (now Hinkle) Fieldhouse.

Sesquicentennial

50 YEARS AGO

1971     The Indianapolis Sesquicentennial celebration began at the Murat Theater with a musical extravaganza entitled “We Celebrate Our City.“  IUPUI student Diana Buchanan was crowned Sesquicentennial Queen as Mayor Richard G. Lugar cut a giant, tiered cake for the occasion.  The 90-minute musical, based on the city’s 150th birthday, included 150 actors, singers, and dancers.  The show was written by Randy Galvin and was later presented on the stage of his Black Curtain Theater.


Myra Selby1995     Governor Evan Bayh appointed Myra Selby to the Indiana Supreme Court.  She was the first woman and the first African American to serve on the state’s highest court.  During her years on the bench, she authored more than 100 majority opinions, including important decisions regarding tort law reform and medical malpractice claims.

Arthur Carter2015     Arthur Carter died in Indianapolis at age 92.  He was the last Indiana member of the famed Tuskegee Airmen, an African American Army Air squadron which fought in World War II.  A graduate of Crispus Attucks High School, he attended Indiana University before joining the service.  In 2007, he received the Congressional Gold Medal from President George W. Bush.

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Indiana Quick Quiz

     Indiana is home to five minor league baseball teams.  Match the team to the home city.

1.  Tin Caps     2. Southshore Railcats   3.  Indians    4.  Cubs    5.  Otters

A.  Gary    B.  Evansville   C. South Bend   D.  Indianapolis    E.  Fort  Wayne

Answers Below


Eva Kor

Did You Know?

     The most recent mural to be completed in downtown Indianapolis pays tribute to Eva Mozes Kor, who survived the Holocaust and became a life-long advocate for hope and forgiveness.  She lived the final 59 years of her life in Terre Haute.  An author and world traveler, she was twice honored as a Sagamore of the Wabash.  In 2017, Governor Eric Holcomb presented her with the Sachem Award, Indiana’s highest honor.  The mural is on the east side of the 500 Festival Building on Virginia Avenue.  It is the work of Hoosier artist Pamela Bliss.


Hoosier Quote of the Week

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“Forgive your worst enemy.  It will heal your soul and set you free.”

– – – Eva Mozes Kor (1934 – 2019)


Video Links

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HOOSIERS HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS, hosted by Governor Eric Holcomb and First Lady Janet Holcomb

STATEHOOD DAY: Learn about the three branches of government and more!

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ANSWERS:  1. E     2.  A     3.  D     4.  C    5.  B

“RIGHT JAB AND MIDDLE JAB AND LEFT JAB” JANUARY 3, 2021

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Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.

The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.

We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer posted this political in order to generate a rational discussion.