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 HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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Gov. Holcomb to Provide Updates in the Fight Against COVID-19

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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:             Gov. Holcomb

State Health Commissioner Kristina Box, M.D., FACOG

Executive Director of the Indiana Housing and Community Development Agency Jacob Sipe

Katie Jenner, Senior Education Advisor to Gov. Holcomb

 

WHEN:           2:30 p.m. ET, Wednesday, August 19

“IS IT TRUE” August 19, 2020

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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.
City-County Observer Comment Policy: Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language and/or insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
IS IT TRUE the City-County Observer has always strived to serve as a “Community Watchdog” by sounding the alarm when our citizen’s rights are in danger of being violated by large Corporations, Federal, State, and Local Governmental agencies as well as elected or appointed officials?
IS IT TRUE we realize that a community can have no greater ambassador of goodwill than one which keeps its citizens informed about the accomplishments, failures, and triumphs of individuals, the business community, church, hospitals, and community groups, educational institutions, and elected and appointed officials?
IS IT TRUE that the Coronavirus pandemic and the deficit spending habits of elected officials have devastated future revenue sources to the point that the financial pain will be felt for several years?
IS IT TRUE that the City of Evansville has a “Rainy Day Fund” of exactly $3,092,861?
IS IT TRUE that the City Of Evansville Employees Hospitalization fund has a negative balance of  $3,025,865?
IS IT TRUE that the City Of Evansville will have to find a creative way to make up an $8.5  million dollar deficit in the 2021 budget?  …to continue to build a penguin exhibit at Mesker Park Zoo with the current budget restraints isn’t the answer?
IS IT TRUE that budgets rely on funding sources? …it’s obvious that the City and County governments don’t have the funding sources to pay for additional budget increases during times like these?
IS IT TRUE that one of the functions of all Convention and Visitors Bureaus is to promote financially successful community events and put heads in beds?…with large gatherings not feasible due to the coronavirus pandemic places like the Ford Center, the Old National Bank Plaza, and the Victory Theater are sitting empty most every night?…the only people in those buildings now are the skeleton crews assigned to do maintenance?
IS IT TRUE we wonder when was the last time that your boss gave you a 36% raise?  …we wonder when was the last time did any members of the current CVB Board of Directors receive a 36% increase in pay?  …we wonder if any elected official in local government ever received a 36% increase in pay?
IS IT TRUE when someone interviews someone for a job the most financially prudent thing for them to do is tell the prospective employee that you can’t pay him or her “what they think they are worth but only pay them what you can afford”?
IS IT TRUE the Evansville Convention and Visitors Bureau Board Of Directors is asking the Vanderburgh County Council to approve a $50,000 salary increase for their CEO during the time of a pandemic that has essentially shut down the convention business? …such a large increase of 36% is usually not even considered unless some performance has merited it?…with large gatherings forbidden, similar organizations all over the nation are seeing budget cuts of 50%, little or nothing to do, and layoffs of senior staff?…there are even cases where the CEO has taken 20%+ pay cuts?
IS IT TRUE we been told that the proposed $50,000 salary increase for the CEO (beginning his 2nd year of employement} of the CVB was agreed upon at the time he signed his employment contract?
IS IT TRUE we are also told that the CVB employee’s pay increases listed in the proposed 2021 budget request were misleading because longevity benefits were mistakenly included in the employee’s salary figures?  …we wonder why most of the employees of the CVB are scheduled to receive a  longevity check since the majority of them have been working there for less than a year?
IS IT TRUE we hope that members of the Vanderburgh County Council will ask someone from the CVB to explain what does the $15,000 of incentives request listed in the proposed budget cover?
IS IT TRUE we are told if someone in the mainstream media would get a copy of the employment contract of the CEO of the CVB they may find it an interesting read?
IS IT TRUE people in the know are predicting that after this pandemic, there may not be any new arenas or stadiums built for at least 2 decades?…the reality with the Ford Center is that the payments will continue whether a single event is held or not? …the Ford Center has been losing close to $10 million per year since the day it opened and it is about to get worse?
IS IT TRUE that yesterday United States Postmaster General Louis DeJoy said that “To avoid even the appearance of any impact on election mail, I am suspending these initiatives until after the election is concluded”? …all we can say about this is “BIG RED TRUCK”?
IS IT TRUE we are extremely pleased with the way EPD Special Projects Coordinator Philip Smith is conducting himself?
Today’s “Readers Poll” question is: Do you think that the Vanderburgh County Council should approve the proposed 2021 budget request as submitted by the Evansville/Vanderburgh County Convention and Vistors Bureau?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE FILES, LAW ENFORCEMENT, “READERS POLL”, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS”, EDUCATION, OBITUARIES and “LOCAL SPORTS”.
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EPD Back To Schoo l’20 Reminder

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As school resumes tomorrow, the Evansville Police Department wants to remind all motorists to be mindful of students that are school day walkers, obeying traffic laws always but especially in school zones, extended bus STOP signs, and school crossing guards.

Officers will heavily enforce traffic laws in school zones to ensure that our students are as safe as possible. The safety of student’s school day travel is very important and something that all local law enforcement takes very seriously.

Please do your part in making sure that this school year is a safe one.

   More EWSU Customers Make Payment Arrangements and Avoid Service Shutoffs

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More EWSU Customers Make Payment Arrangements and Avoid Service Shutoffs

 (August 18, 2020) – More Evansville Water and Sewer Utility (EWSU) customers with delinquent accounts are setting up payment arrangements, giving them more time to resolve unpaid bills without a disruption in service. As of Monday, August 17, there were 2,128 delinquent accounts, down from 2,740 delinquent accounts on July 24, 2020. Payment arrangements increased from 191 to 663 during the same period. That includes 21 account holders who set-up payment plans at the Rental & Utility Re-Open House hosted by the Mayor’s Reopen Evansville Task Force and the Evansville City Council last Saturday at the CK Newsome Community Center.

The moratorium on utility shutoffs, by order of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission and Gov. Eric Holcomb, expired on August 14, 2020. In response, on August 18, 2020, the Evansville Water and Sewer Utility Board approved a motion to resume normal shutoff protocols on delinquent accounts for non-payment. The Board also waived late fees, disconnection/reconnection fees, and deposits for residential customers through October 12, 2020.

Starting tomorrow, August 19, 2020, Evansville Water and Sewer Utility will begin service disconnections based on the shutoff date received by customers with their account statement. The disconnections will occur throughout the monthly billing cycle and will not all happen simultaneously.

Services will not be disrupted for non-payment if the account holder makes payment arrangements. Payment arrangements may be requested online at www.ewsu.com.

Click the “Payment Arrangement” tab, answer a few basic questions, and submit. The website includes information on local Assistance Agencies that may be able to provide financial assistance. Customers may also send an email to EWSUCustomerService@ewsu.com or call EWSU Customer Service at 812-436-7846.

 

Vanderburgh County Clerk Takes Delivery of First New Voting Machines

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Vanderburgh County Clerk Takes Delivery of First New Voting Machines

Evansville, Ind.— On Tuesday, August 18, 2020, Vanderburgh County Clerk Carla Hayden announced that the first of the new voting machines have arrived. Hayden said, “These initial machines will be used for training and demonstration purposes. The balance of the voting machines will be delivered over the next few weeks for use in the 2020 General Election.”

On August 11, 2020, Vanderburgh County Commissioners signed contracts for the purchase of the Unisyn OpenElection FreedomVote Tablet. The new machines replace the iVotronic, a paperless voting system that Vanderburgh County has used since 2004. “When I became clerk, one of my goals was to bring new voting machines with a voter-verified paper audit trail to the voters of Vanderburgh County,” Hayden said, “When we purchased the iVotronics sixteen years ago, they were state of the art.

Today, they are relics.”Voters will still make their selections on a touchscreen as they have for the past sixteen years, but the voter will perform the final review of their choices on a paper ballot. “The paper is the ballot, so the voter has not voted until they deposit the ballot into the ballot box,”

Hayden said, “The touchscreen does not record votes. It is for selection purposes only and then a ballot with these choices is printed. Once a voter is satisfied with their choices, they run the paper ballot through a scanner that reads the ballot and then it drops into a ballot box for retention.”

The entire purchase totaling $2,012,121 was made using federally appropriated 2020 HAVA Election Security Grant funds. Hayden said, “If we had to rely on local funding for this purchase, it would have been cost-prohibitive. By working with Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson, we were able to access federally appropriated funds and provide the new equipment at no cost to the taxpayers of Vanderburgh County.” In addition to the purchase price, Vanderburgh County will receive a refund of $248,070 for election support expenses incurred by the county year-to-date.

Demonstrations of the new voting machines will be available in the Vanderburgh County Election Office, Room 216 of the Civic Center during normal business hours.

Gov. Holcomb Delivers Address on Equity and Inclusion

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Creates state equity chief, requires state police body cams

Governor Eric J. Holcomb today announced steps he will immediately take in state government to address equity and inclusion.

The full text of Gov. Holcomb’s address is attached.

“What I’ve laid out today are actions in a broad effort to make sure Indiana is a place where every Hoosier has an equal opportunity and access to achieve our founders’ vision of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” Gov. Holcomb said. “Achieving that vision requires we address root causes and remove barriers that have built up for centuries.”

Gov. Holcomb will create Indiana’s first-ever Chief Equity, Inclusion and Opportunity Officer. The officer will focus on improving equity, inclusion and opportunity across all state government operations as well as drive systemic change to remove hurdles in the government workplace and services the state provides.

Additionally, the officer will help state agencies develop their own strategic plans to remove barriers. The officer will be a member of the Governor’s Cabinet and report directly to the Governor.

Gov. Holcomb also announced he will require the use of body cameras for every frontline Indiana State Police trooper by the spring of 2021.

Gov. Holcomb will require a third-party review of state police and law enforcement academy curriculum and training at the Indiana Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA). He also committed to working with the state legislature to add more civilian representation to the ILEA Training Board.

ILEA provides the basic training for the majority of law enforcement officers in the state. 65 percent of the state’s law enforcement officers — including sheriff’s deputies, municipal law enforcement officers, Indiana State Police troopers, and conservation officers — receive some form of training at the academy.

To better monitor overall progress, the Governor will direct the state’s Management Performance Hub to create a Public Disparity Data Portal to show how our state programs are working.

The Governor will continue working with legislators, the judiciary, local sheriffs and prosecutors on potential legislation including sentencing reform and jail overcrowding. He also has asked the Commission for Higher Education, the Department of Workforce Development and the Governor’s Workforce Cabinet to submit recommendations on how the state can adjust policies for workforce programs.

“For my part, I commit to you that I will work to be a barrier buster. I commit to bring greater equity and opportunity within your state government and the services you entrust us to provide, so that every Hoosier can take full advantage of their gifts and potential,” Gov. Holcomb said.

 

COVID-19 testing continues at CK Newsome Center through September

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The Reopen Evansville Task Force announced another extension of COVID-19 testing at C.K. Newsome Center.

Testing — which is administered by OptumServe — was set to expire at the end of July. It has been extended thanks to a collaboration with Mayor Lloyd Winnecke and the Reopen Evansville Task Force, the Vanderburgh County Health Department (VCHD) and the Indiana State Department of Health.

“This program has provided convenient and consistent testing for all in our community,” said Steve Schaefer, Deputy Mayor & Chair of the Reopen Evansville Task Force. “We will continue to work with our state and federal partners to provide the tools needed to safely reopen Evansville.”

Registration is required. Those needing a test can register at lhi.care/covidtesting or call 888-634-1116.

Testing is free to all and no medical insurance is necessary. However, residents with existing insurance are asked to provide that information during the scheduling process.

In addition to local hospital and VCHD neighborhood testing, ISDH testing is available at:

  • CVS Pharmacy on Saint Joseph Avenue
  • Deaconess Clinic Lynch

 

Commentary: History’s Conflicted Heart

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Commentary: History’s Conflicted Heart

 

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

ALBANY, New York – History is not meant to comfort us.

Contemplation of the past informs us about how we got to where we are and, thus, who we are. That means it often will prod us to confront truths – hard truths – that pain, rather than comfort, us.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

But that’s the path to maturity – to understanding the world as it is and the conflicted nature of human beings.

Albany is having such a moment now.

Amid the national protests over the death of George Floyd and the accompanying emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement, Albany’s mayor, Kathy Sheehan, announced a few weeks ago that a statue of Philip Schuyler would be removed.

Outside of the New York Capital Region, Schuyler now is remembered primarily as the father-in-law of Alexander Hamilton – thanks, of course, to the explosive success of the musical “Hamilton.”

But here in the Empire State, Schuyler is something more. He was a genuine Revolutionary War hero, a member of both the Continental Congress and the first U.S. Congress, a man of great means and significant influence. He was one of the figures who helped transform a collection of sparsely populated colonies into a nation.

But he was also a slaveholder.

In fact, he enslaved more human beings than anyone else in New York.

The decision to remove Schuyler’s statue from outside Albany City Hall and place it instead in a museum has provoked fierce debate here.

Some argue that removing the statue dishonors those who risked much to create the nation Abraham Lincoln called “the last best hope of earth.” Others contend that honoring a man who subjugated other human beings for profit and denied them the blessings of liberty insults the enslaved, their descendants and the idea of freedom itself.

It’s a complicated question – part, obviously, of a much larger debate about how we Americans should view our homeland’s tortured history regarding race.

Schuyler is the local stand-in for America’s founding generation.

Few, if any, of our founders have legacies untainted by attitudes and actions regarding members of other races that we find abhorrent today. An alarming number of the men – a collection of demigods, Thomas Jefferson called them – who gathered to draft our Constitution were slaveholders.

And the others were willing to craft a deal – the notorious three-fifths compromise – that not only denied slaves the vote but made them unwilling collaborators with their own oppression.

But, if the founders hadn’t struck that bargain, we likely wouldn’t have had either a Constitution or a country.

We built our nation, which Jefferson called “an empire of liberty,” on the backs of human beings who were denied freedom.

There must be a reckoning for that.

That reckoning also must be more than either a simple-minded celebration of the Founders’ achievements and virtues or a blanket condemnation of the betrayals of their avowed sacred principles and their fellow human beings. To see our country as it is, we must see the contradictions that have plagued it – and us – from the beginning.

Jefferson is a prime example.

Only Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. are his peers in eloquently articulating America’s fundamental promise, that of the blessings of liberty. Yet, he enslaved other human beings, bought and sold them as if they were tools or pieces of furniture.

Among his slaves were the mother of his children – she was the half-sister of his late (White) wife – and some of his children.

His story is the story of America in microcosm, a tale of high-minded yearnings to preserve and advance the human spirit and base, mean-spirited transgressions against decency and human dignity.

Am I grateful that Jefferson gave voice to and labored to bring about humanity’s fondest aspiration, to live unshackled and free?

Yes.

Am I appalled that he enslaved and degraded other human beings, including those who should have had the greatest claims on his respect and consideration – his mate and his children?

Again, yes.

But that’s the way it is with history. It is as conflicted and contradictory as human nature itself.

History isn’t meant to reassure us. It’s meant to teach us about how we got to where we are.

And it’s our job to learn from the experience.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

The City-County Observer posted this letter without opinion, bias, or editing.

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