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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
ADOPT A PET
Diesel is a beautiful brown Shepherd mix. He’s a 5-year-old male. He is housetrained and has lived previously with kids and other dogs. His adoption fee is $110 and he’s neutered, chipped, and ready to go home today. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt for details!
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AG Curtis Hill: Warrant for alleged animal abuser Timothy Stark’s arrest was no surprise
Attorney General Curtis Hill believes alleged animal abuser Timothy Stark, director of Wildlife in Need (WIN), got the result he wanted Wednesday afternoon when a judge found him in contempt of court. A warrant has now been issued for Stark’s arrest.
“Tim Stark has sought to hamper the wheels of justice at every step of the way,†Attorney General Hill said. “The court has shown extraordinary tolerance of his antics, but today it wisely decided that enough was enough in terms of Stark’s continuous attempts to thwart the judicial process.â€
Attorney General Hill and his staff have been working this month with Indianapolis Zoo officials and law enforcement to ensure that more than 150 animals are removed from WIN’s Southern Indiana properties. On Sept. 10, the Marion Superior Court appointed the Indianapolis Zoological Society as receiver of the animals and tasked the organization with placing the animals pending a final ruling in the case.
On Monday, the Attorney General filed an emergency motion asking a court to issue a judgment against Stark for allegedly removing and/or concealing animals from authorities. Â The court gave Stark until 4 p.m. Tuesday to tell authorities the location of all missing animals. Stark did not comply.
“Stark is the party who has had access and custody of the missing animals at times during which they have gone missing,†the court observed in its Wednesday order.
WIN’s directors have claimed over the years to rescue and rehabilitate wildlife before returning animals to their native habitats. In reality, Attorney General Hill said, the nonprofit organization has a history of allegations of animal abuse, including failure to provide basic necessities to animals and forcing them to live in deplorable conditions. Many of WIN’s animals have been exotic species native to other countries.
Further, contrary to its stated purpose as a nonprofit corporation, WIN allegedly has misapplied assets purportedly collected for animal care by allowing Stark to misapply WIN’s money and assets for his personal uses.
Attorney General Hill sued WIN in February over Stark’s misrepresentations of WIN’s activities. That lawsuit remains pending.
Spark Some Medieval Magic!
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HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS
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Man Crashes Stolen Motorcycle while Fleeing from Sheriff’s Office
An Evansville man is in jail after crashing a stolen motorcycle while fleeing from the Sheriff’s Office.
On Wednesday, September 16, 2020 at 12:21AM a Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office deputy observed a motorcycle traveling north on North Green River Road. When the deputy attempted a traffic stop, the operator stopped and had his female passenger dismount. The operator, later identified as Mr. Christopher Bradley Hall, then fled at high speed.
Hall failed to negotiate a turn on Millersburg Road and struck a curb, laying the motorcycle down. Hall rolled about ten feet from the motorcycle and landed in a grassy area. The deputy checked on Hall, who gave a false name. Hall sustained a laceration to the back of his head and road rash to the right side of his body. He was transported by ambulance to a local hospital.
A registration check revealed the motorcycle to be stolen. A records search revealed that Hall had a suspended driver’s license and was wanted on felony charges in both Gibson County and Warrick County.
A search of Hall’s belongings revealed nearly 3 grams of methamphetamine and a small amount of fentanyl.
Hall was later released from the hospital and booked into the Vanderburgh County Jail.
ARRESTED:
Christopher Bradley Hall (pictured above), 48, of Evansville. Possession of Stolen Vehicle, Possession of Fentanyl, Possession of Methamphetamine, Possession of Paraphernalia, Resisting Law Enforcement with a Vehicle, False Reporting, Reckless Driving, Driving with a Suspended License
Presumption of Innocence Notice: The fact that a person has been arrested or charged with a crime is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.
Gov. Holcomb to Provide Updates in the Fight Against COVID-19
Gov. Eric J. Holcomb, the Indiana State Department of Health and other state leaders will host a virtual media briefing to provide updates on COVID-19 and its impact on Indiana.
WHO:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Gov. Holcomb
State Health Commissioner Kristina Box, M.D., FACOG
Indiana Department of Transportation Commissioner Joe McGuinness
WHEN:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 2:30 p.m. ET, Wednesday, September 16
The livestream will become active approximately 30 minutes prior to the scheduled start time. Prior to the scheduled start time, the livestream will display the state seal and the current date and time. An on-camera alert will be given two minutes prior to the scheduled start time. The livestream will also be simulcast on Governor Holcomb’s social media pages, found at the following links:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/govholcomb/live
YouTube: https://youtube.com/govholcomb
Strained Rural Water Utilities Buckle Under Pandemic Pressure
Strained Rural Water Utilities Buckle Under Pandemic Pressure
The months leading up to the coronavirus pandemic already spelled trouble for the Rome Water System and the tiny community it serves in the Mississippi Delta.
A tornado tossed around several homes closed roads and left the community without power for two weeks. Lightning strikes on two separate occasions damaged pumps used to transport water and wastewater for about 75 connections serving about 220 people.
The system usually takes in about $3,400 a month. But since the pandemic hit, the system has been bringing in just over half as much. It can’t catch up until people start paying their bills, said the system’s treasurer, Irie Knighten.
“We ain’t doing so hot,†Knighten said.
Rural water and wastewater systems have largely been left out of federal and state pandemic relief, and yet they play critical roles in local economies. Homes rely on them, of course, but so do small businesses such as eateries and large companies such as manufacturers and processing plants.
As the virus stretches further into smaller communities, these systems are fighting for their survival under long-standing economic and structural weights.
Of 150,000 public water systems, 97% are in communities of 10,000 residents or fewer, according to the Rural Community Assistance Partnership, a national network of nonprofits whose work includes assistance to and training for water and wastewater systems.
“If the economics of the community are hit by an outside source like COVID, it impacts the water and wastewater systems and their ability to make sure those communities continue to grow and thrive,” said Nathan Ohle, CEO of the Rural Community Assistance Partnership.
To be sure, small and large systems share common challenges. They often have aging infrastructure and older operators who are at more risk should they contract the coronavirus. When the pandemic hit, many systems’ customer service offices closed, and businesses had to radically change their operations overnight. Wastewater operators put themselves at risk when COVID-19 can be detected in sewage. Some universities are surveilling their sewage to predict outbreaks.
But smaller systems have fewer resources. They are more likely to be serving populations with fewer and fewer people. With skeleton crews, they may not have anyone to look after the system if a water operator has to quarantine or falls ill.
With many states maintaining a moratorium on water shutoffs, water systems have fewer ways to deal with unpaid bills. Some advocates worry the moratoria are permitting customers to dig themselves into a deeper hole since they’ll be on the hook to pay their growing bill eventually. Meanwhile, systems are providing service for free without any assurance that a local government would step in to help.
Municipal and nonmunicipal systems are generally funded by user rates, not tax dollars. Small systems may not have the reserves to call on when customers facing hardship are unable to pay their bills.
Many utilities such as Rome are asking customers to pay what they can, and aren’t insisting on bills being paid in full, even if the state’s moratorium on shutoffs expired.
“If they don’t have the money, cutting them off ain’t gonna do no good anyway,” Knighten said.
The widely reported postal service delays have meant late payments for some rural utilities, according to Mike McGill, president of the communications firm WaterPIO. “Their bills are going to a main hub in the mail system, and they’re sitting there,” McGill said. “They’re sitting there for weeks.”
When the system in Tyrrell County, North Carolina’s smallest, lost its biggest customer, a prison, it teetered on the edge of bankruptcy before the state stepped in. Other rural municipalities in the state are reporting delinquency rates of 30-50%, according to Scott Mooneyham, director of political communications and coordination for the North Carolina League of Municipalities.
“The bottom line is that these rural communities were already struggling with 30, 40, 50 years of global trends that were working against them,” Mooneyham said. “COVID comes along and their biggest financial challenges, operating these utility systems — it massively affected that going forward. If this continues without additional help down the road, some of these communities will be basically unable to operate.”
Financial problems related to their aging water and sewage systems prompted North Carolina’s Local Government Commission to take over the town of Eureka and the Cliffside Sanitary District last year.
The commission, which is staffed by the Department of the State Treasurer, is developing a plan to address dozens of distressed small-town water and sewer systems, according to local news media.
“I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect that we could see a lot more Eurekas out there with their utility systems essentially bankrupt and bankrupting the town themselves if there’s not some effort made to help these communities,” Mooneyham said.
Impact Varies
If current conditions were to continue for a year, small water systems could face $3.6 billion-$5.5 billion in revenue losses, according to a May survey by the Rural Community Assistance Partnership. The figure represents water system respondents in 33 states.
In April, the National Rural Water Association estimated small water and wastewater systems would lose $998 million in revenue by mid-July. The losses do not include emergency operational expenses such as additional shifts, isolating staff and purchasing personal protective equipment.
The association surveyed 4,915 water and wastewater utilities in all states and U.S. territories. Those systems serve more than 29 million people and nearly 1.4 million businesses.
The pandemic’s effects on utilities are “extremely variable and uneven,” said Matt Holmes, CEO of the National Rural Water Association. They depend on factors such as location, the virus’s effects, the utility and local policies. Some systems have had revenue shortfalls from customer nonpayment.
“Others are selling a bunch of water because of the way the pandemic has affected their customer base,” Holmes said.
Data is hard to come by, even for those in need. Self-Help Enterprises, a nonprofit in California’s Central Valley, donated $4,700 to the Allensworth Community Service District because the system was forthcoming about its needs. The money covered a dozen accounts that were past due more than 60 days.
Other systems haven’t been as forthcoming, said Jessi Snyder, assistant program director for community development. Snyder points to poor book-keeping and a lack of motivation when there are few supports available.
“Everybody knows there’s nothing available, so they keep getting by,” Snyder said.
‘Help Them’
Federal dollars typically cover upgrades, infrastructure projects and new water pumps. They don’t cover operating grants or working capital costs.
Some rural water and wastewater systems benefitted from federal coronavirus relief to small businesses through the Paycheck Protection Program, often called PPP. But it initially had been unclear that wastewater cooperatives, typically 501(c)12s, were eligible for PPP alongside other types of nonprofits, Holmes said.
Although governmental units or municipalities were ineligible for PPP, they could have received money that flowed to states through the federal CARES Act.
The $2 trillion bill included direct appropriations to states and municipalities with populations greater than 500,000. Rural advocates would like more flexibility in any forthcoming federal relief, and direct funding to municipalities with smaller populations.
“I’m sure some states are doing a good job pushing that out to their rural communities, but that’s a 50-state challenge right now — to see how that process is going to go,” Holmes said.
About $1.25 billion in CARES Act money went to New Hampshire, which sent money to local governments. “Districts and precincts were mistakenly excluded from being eligible for that funding,” said Jason Randall, superintendent of the Plymouth Village Water and Sewer District. “Municipality can mean many different things, not just a town or city government, but the sub government or entities that surround it.”
Between March and June, the district lost 31% of its consumption revenue, or $235,000. Layoffs, reduced hours, reserves and a budget freeze have helped it continue operating.
Of the 552 municipalities in North Carolina, $4 billion from the CARES Act flowed to the state plus three counties and the city of Charlotte.
Some rural areas were not well-equipped to withstand the pandemic’s economic effects because of the long-standing trends in job, population and industry losses, said Mooneyham, with the North Carolina League of Municipalities.
“It’s disappointing in my position to hear politicians say, ‘You’re just asking for more money to fix an existing problem,'” Mooneyham said. “Well, yeah, there was an existing problem that was created through no fault of these communities themselves, which you’ve kind of ignored — and now you’re blaming them.
These are your constituents,” he added. “Help them.”
A bill introduced in the U.S. House would help by providing $1 billion in operational and revenue loss relief for small water systems through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Utilities Service.
Another bill would establish a permanent bridge loan to directly support the operational costs of water and other utilities that have experienced revenue losses because of the pandemic or future covered emergencies. The bills remain before House committees.
These types of programs also would help communities in east Texas and southern Louisiana recover from Hurricane Laura, said Ines Polonius, CEO of Communities Unlimited, an economic development agency and Community Development Financial Institution that serves seven Southern states.
“What we saw after [Hurricane] Harvey, in some cases 50% of the community was gone and stayed gone,” Polonius said. She pointed to Nome, in east Texas. “It was struggling before Hurricane Harvey, and now it’s a shell of itself.”
Getting By
As the pandemic continues, utilities are doing what they can to carry on.
The Rural Community Assistance Corporation serves rural communities in 13 Western states. In recent months, it’s deployed technical assistance to tribal communities in Arizona and California.
The reservations had closed their borders, and needed help fixing a water break or retrieving chlorine to continue treating their water, said Ari Neumann, director of community environmental services.
“An emergency pre-COVID was usually major equipment failure, whereas now [an emergency] is often something that would normally be no big deal,” Neumann said.
In Hartshorne, Oklahoma, water operators are short on vehicles, said Gaylene Riley, a technical assistance provider for the local utility.
“They’ve got vehicles that are out of commission and they don’t have the revenues to replace them because their revenues are being cut,” Riley said.
The town of Allensworth, in California’s Central Valley, was meant at its founding in 1908 to be a utopian Black community. It was founded by Lt. Col. Allen Allensworth, who was born into slavery in Kentucky, fought for the Union during the Civil War and rose to become the highest-ranking Black member of the military. But the town has had dangerous levels of arsenic in its water on and off for decades. Today it’s a poor area whose demographics have shifted from mostly Black to mostly Latino.
“The district has been in worse situations and I think we will get through this,” said Valerie Contreras, general manager of the Allensworth Community Services District.
In Mississippi, Rome is working on repairs to its wastewater pump. But the repairman Knighten typically would recommend contracted COVID-19. So the town is turning its wastewater pump on and off at different times of the day because it doesn’t have the money to continue the repair, Knighten said.
Parchman Penitentiary is Rome’s nearest large employer. The town’s median household income is about $28,000 a year, according to Communities Unlimited.
Rome Water System has faced financial troubles over the past 15 years, Knighten said. He is essentially a volunteer.
“It’s a burden, but hey, eventually we’re gonna work this thing out some type of way,” Knighten said. “I know it sounds, ‘Why are we doing this?’
“I mean, somebody has to do it. So, we do the best we can.”
“IS IT TRUE” September 16, 2020
IS IT TRUE when we take a step back and analyze the core issues that polarize our society, it’s evident that class conflict explains the tone-deafness felt by both the elites and working-class Americans alike?
IS IT TRUE if you are in need of a low-interest loan or development grant, need a facade grant, in need of a new exterior sign for your business, or want to sell a vacant lot or dilapidated building at a premium price in the Downtown, North Main Street, and Haynie’s Corner area with very little public scrutiny we highly recommend that you contact the good folks at the Evansville DMD?
IS IT TRUE that the Vanderburgh County Public Defender’s Agency plays an important role in our social fabric by ensuring that those who can least afford legal representation in our Courts are fully protected?
IS IT TRUE when County Commissioner Jeff Hatfield was first elected to office he promised that he would not appoint any members of his immediate family to serve on influential local Boards and Commission? …he is stated that is also against the practice of nepotism in the public sector? Â …we give five (5) cheers to Commissioner Hatfield for keeping his campaign promises?
IS IT TRUEÂ the IRS documented that there has been a massive migration of high earning individuals from high tax states to low tax states?…the big winners have been Florida with the losers being made up of Illinois, New Jersey, and New York?…we doubt that the people running these states with notice until their checks start to bounce?
IS IT TRUE if only the powers that be would have listened to past County Commissioner  Dave Mosby, Vanderburgh County wouldn’t be experiencing the current jail overcrowding problem today?  …Mr. Mosby wanted an additional pod added to the jail plans that would have housed 250 more inmates about 20 plus years ago?
IS IT TRUE we were told several years ago if the Vanderburgh County Council increases the County Income Option Tax (CIOT) and the Wheel Tax that Vanderburgh County would have the money to fund a reasonable expansion of the county jail? Â …all we can say to members of County Council is that it’s time to put up or shut up?
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