|
SECC To Highlight Hoosier Heroes
HEALTH DEPARTMENT ANNOUNCES LOCAL COVID-19 TESTING EFFORT
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Health is partnering with local health departments around the state to add nearly 100 community testing sites for COVID-19.
The state Department of Health is providing more than $30 million in funding to increase access to COVID-19 testing for Hoosiers over the next two years. All 94 local health departments in Indiana were invited to apply to the state for the grants to launch testing operations.
Three dozen local testing sites are scheduled to be open by the end of this week, with nearly 60 other locations scheduled to open by Oct. 1. Some counties are partnering with neighboring counties. More than 10 counties, including Lake, Porter, St. Joseph, Marion, Hamilton, and Allen, are opening multiple sites.
“Our goal throughout this pandemic has been to increase access to testing, and we developed this option as a way to get creative about offering to test for Hoosiers,†said State Health Commissioner Kris Box, M.D., FACOG. “We want every Hoosier to be able to find testing when they need it so that we can reduce the spread of COVID in our communities, and we are thrilled to be able to support those efforts through our local health departments.â€
The local health department sites will provide free testing. Click here for which communities are participating.
Hoosiers also can access no-cost testing without a physician’s note or symptoms at any of the 39 state-sponsored OptumServe sites currently in operation.
To find a testing site, visit www.coronavirus.in.gov and click on the COVID-19 testing information link.
BEN SHOULDERS IS OUR CHOICE FOR VANDERBURGH COMMISSIONER
DEMOCRAT BEN SHOULDERS IS OUR CHOICE FOR VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSIONER
The City-County Observer is pleased to announce that we are recommending Democrat Ben Shoulders for re-election to the Vanderburgh County Commission.
Four years ago Democrat Benjamin Shoulders ran for the Vanderburgh County Commissioner and was elected by a comfortable margin. We supported him then and we are supporting him now.
Since his election, he has been effective in promoting good public policy and has been a voice of reason and compromise. Mr. Shoulders has demonstrated that he can face difficult governmental challenges with an open mind. Â We also appreciate that Ben can be progressive on some issues but he has also exhibited sound financial judgment on other matters.
Mr. Shoulders and his COVID-19 Task Force members have done an excellent job in helping people get tested and providing masks to protect themselves against the deadly COVID-19 virus.
Mr. Shoulders’ campaign has been very positive, energetic, organized, and issues-based. He has worked very well with the other two County Commissioners. He’s a good listener and accessible.
He is a Commercial Lender III at Banterra Bank and has been in banking for 18 years.
Ben received his college degree from Indiana University (Bloomington) – Bachelor of Arts ’02 CJUS (College of Arts and Sciences). He was graduated from Harrison High School–Magna Cum Laude (College Prep classes).
He received his certification from Indiana Bankers Association – Bank Management Series in 2010 and the Indiana Bankers Association – Commercial Lending School (2011 Graduate).
Ben is married to former Shannon Perrette of Evansville for 11 years and they have three energetic (3) children. Â Emma who is 9 years old and 6 years old twins Parker and Sadie and they reside in Evansville.
Some of Ben’s favorite things he enjoys doing are coaching youth basketball and taking his family to a local restaurant and eating fish tacos and drinking slushies. He also enjoys joining his daughter Emma acting in local civic theater events. It’s been rumored that Ben drinks “Cappuccino” by the gallon.
His Community Involvement
Vanderburgh County Commissioner – District One (Elected – Nov 2016; took office – Jan 1, 2017)
“Corridor Of Champions” past Board President
GAGE (Growth Alliance of Greater Evansville) – Board Member (2018 – present)
A Former member of the Commission on Homelessness
Past Community Corrections – Board MemberÂ
Old Courthouse – Board Member (2017 – present)
Domestic and Sexual Violence Commission – Board Member (2017 – present)
IU College of Arts and Sciences Alumni Board (2014 – present)
Board member of the  Boys and Girls Club of Evansville – Past Board PresidentÂ
Former Board member of the EVSC Foundation Board of DirectorsÂ
United Way – Keel Club (2014 – 2018); Southern Indiana Campaign Cabinet Member (2016)
IU Alumni Association of Greater Evansville – Past President / Board memberÂ
Past member of the Habitat for Humanity of EvansvilleÂ
Harrison High School /Warrior Athletic Booster Club – Founder and Past President
Harrison High School Athletic Hall of Fame – Founder and Past Chairman
Past member of the Evansville African American Museum Gala – Auction CommitteeÂ
Board member of the Childen Thearter of Southern Indiana
WOODMERE DOG PARK board member
We respectfully ask that you consider casting your vote for Vanderburgh County Commissioner Ben Shoulders (D) in the upcoming November 3, 2020, general election because has earned the right to serve another 4-year term on this most prestigious board.
EPA Encourages Schools and Universities to Use EPA-Approved Products and Disinfectants to Keep Students Safe
“There is no higher priority for the Trump Administration than protecting the health and safety of Americans, especially as our nation’s children head back to school,â€Â said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “EPA is providing robust information and tools to help school districts and universities properly clean and disinfect surfaces in order to fight the spread of this coronavirus so they can safely reopen.â€
EPA is working to combat imposter disinfectant products from being marketed online with potentially dangerous claims of protection against the novel coronavirus. In some cases, there are statements that products will provide protection from COVID-19 for up to 90 days. To date, EPA has approved only one product  that has long-lasting effects against COVID-19 and is expeditiously working to review additional products. EPA’s approval is limited to Texas and permits only American Airlines airport facilities and planes at specific locations and two Total Orthopedics Sports & Spine Clinics to use SurfaceWise2 under certain conditions.
EPA’s approval allows Texas to permit only American Airlines airport facilities and planes at specific locations and two Total Orthopedics Sports & Spine Clinics to use SurfaceWise2 under certain conditions.
To stop products from being illegally sold in the United States, EPA is also working with the Department of Justice and other federal agencies to bring the full force of the law against those selling fraudulent or unregistered products.
Cleaning products that claim to kill and/or be effective against viruses are pesticides and must be registered with EPA prior to distribution or sale. These products may not be sold or distributed unless they have been properly tested and then registered by EPA. The agency will not register a product claiming to be effective against coronaviruses until it has determined that it will not pose an unreasonable risk and will be effective when used according to the label directions.
EPA continues to add products to List N  that are expected to kill SARS-CoV-2. There are currently 486 approved products currently on List N. When using an EPA-registered disinfectant, follow the label directions for safe, effective use. These directions include, but are not limited to:
- To ensure safety, always follow the product label. This includes making sure to follow the contact time, which is the amount of time the surface should be visibly wet.
- Keep disinfectants out of reach of children. Children should not apply disinfectants. While disinfectants are powerful tools for controlling the spread of disease, they can harm children’s health if used or stored incorrectly. The risk disinfectants pose to human health increases if the label is not followed.
- Only use fogging, fumigation, and wide-area or electrostatic spraying to apply EPA-registered products designed and labeled for use in this way. Unless the pesticide product label specifically includes disinfection directions for these application methods, it may not be effective when applied in these ways.
- Do not apply disinfectants to skin, food or cloth face coverings. Do not mix disinfectants with other chemicals. Use disinfectants only at the concentrations specified in the label directions.
If an EPA-registered disinfectant from List N is not available, diluted household bleach can be used to disinfect surfaces. Users should closely follow the bleach dilution directions on the CDC’s website , including precautions.
Yesteryear: Carpenter House
Yesteryear: Carpenter House
by Pat Sides
This image of the Carpenter House was recorded when it functioned as a Red Cross hospital during the Great Flood of 1937, one of the historic structure’s many “lives†over the years. Constructed in 1849 by philanthropist and pioneer Willard Carpenter, who also built the city’s first public library, the former mansion is now one of Evansville’s oldest buildings.Â
In the house’s earliest years, a stone tunnel led from the cellar to the Ohio River, presumably used as a passageway for the Underground Railway. Carpenter’s heirs finally relinquished ownership of the property in 1934 to the Funkhouser Post of the American Legion.Â
The next owner was WTVW television station, who acquired the building in 1958. Later occupants included the Medco Corporation, as well as WNIN, who purchased the property in 1985 for the station’s radio and television studios. Vacated about three years ago, the old building now stands vacant at 405 Carpenter Street.
AG Curtis Hill Continues Defending Indiana Law Requiring Reporting Of Abortion Complications
Attorney General Curtis Hill has appealed a U.S. district court’s ruling against an Indiana law requiring physicians, hospitals and abortion clinics to report complications arising from abortions.
In July, a U.S. district court upheld an Indiana law requiring that abortion clinics be inspected on an annual basis but struck down as “unconstitutionally vague†another requirement that doctors report complications arising from abortions.
In particular, the court found the term “arising from†to be overly vague, questioning whether causal links could be established between abortion procedures and the 25 conditions that medical professionals would be required to report when experienced by women following abortions.
The language of Indiana’s law, however, uses terminology already established in other statutes as meeting constitutional standards, Attorney General Hill said.
“Concerns regarding the causal relationship between an enumerated medical condition and an abortion procedure,†Attorney General Hill states in the brief, “are remedied by precedents holding that whether a medical outcome ‘arises from’ a particular cause must be determined by reasonable medical judgment.â€
Further, such wording is hardly unique in U.S. law, he adds in the brief.
“Notably, state and federal statutes — even criminal statutes, and even statutes governing abortion procedures — commonly use the words ‘arising from’ to denote a causal relationship,†he writes. He adds that “the district court has cited no case holding that ‘arising from’ is unconstitutionally vague in any other context.â€
Ultimately, Attorney General Hill said, Planned Parenthood is continuing its nonstop determination to seize on any means by which it might weaken Indiana’s abortion regulations.
“While Planned Parenthood continues working to protect the financial profits of the abortion industry,†Attorney General Hill said, “we will continue working to protect women’s health and the lives of unborn children.â€
“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab†SEPTEMBER 10. 2020
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 JABâ€Â 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.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|