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EPA Announces 33 Members of the Environmental Financial Advisory Board

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the 33 members of the Environmental Financial Advisory Board (EFAB). EPA welcomes 19 new and 13 returning members along with the incumbent Chair. The EFAB provides ideas and advice to the EPA administrator, EPA Regions and the agency’s programs on innovative ways to lower the costs of – and increase investments in – environmental and public health protection.

“EPA values the insights provided by EFAB members, who bring a wealth of experience in finance and investment to the agency,” said U.S. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “I am grateful for their willingness to help us continue protecting public health and the environment using financially sound methods. I also thank the outgoing members for their many contributions to the work of the agency.”

Established in 1989, the EFAB is a chartered federal advisory committee that is convened by the agency to provide expert advice on environmental financing approaches from state and local governments, financial service companies, industry sectors and nongovernmental organizations. EFAB’s work focuses on lowering the cost of environmental protection, removing financial and programmatic barriers that raise costs, increasing public and private contribution in environmental facilities and services and building state and local financial ability to comply with environmental programs.

Following the agency’s request for EFAB nominations, EPA selected members for two- or three-year terms from a pool of more than 60 highly qualified candidates. Selections were made in accordance with the EFAB charter to achieve balance and diversity in terms of workplace sector, geographic location, gender, ethnicity, and stakeholder perspective. The Chairperson and members are drawn from all EPA regions and hail from 18 states.

The 33 EFAB members and their affiliations are:

  • Joanne Throwe, EFAB Chair (Incumbent), Throwe Environmental LLC, Bristol, R.I.
  • Ashley Allen Jones, i2 Capital, Washington, D.C.
  • Brent Anderson, RESIGHT, Littleton, Colo. (Returning member)
  • Janice Beecher, Institute of Public Utilities, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich. (Returning member)
  • Steven J. Bonafonte, The Metropolitan District of Hartford, Hartford, Conn.
  • Angela Montoya Bricmont, Denver Water, Denver, Colo.
  • Stacy D. Brown, Freberg Environmental, Inc., Denver, Colo.
  • Theodore Chapman, S&P Global Ratings, Farmers Branch, Texas (Returning member)
  • Zachary Davidson, Ecosystem Investment Partners, Baltimore, Md.
  • Jeffrey R. Diehl, Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank, Providence, R.I.
  • Sonja B. Favors, Alabama Department of Environmental Management, Montgomery, Ala.
  • Jon B. Freedman, Water Technologies & Solutions, Charlottesville, Va.
  • Phyllis R. Garcia, San Antonio Water System, San Antonio, Texas
  • Edward Henifin, Hampton Roads Sanitation District, Virginia Beach, Va. (Returning member)
  • Craig Holland, The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, Va. (Returning member)
  • Craig A. Hrinkevich, Robert W. Baird & Company Inc., Red Bank, N.J.
  • John L. Jones, New Mexico Rural Water Association, Albuquerque, N.M.
  • Margot M. Kane, Spring Point Partners LLC, Philadelphia, Pa.
  • George W. Kelly, Earth & Water Strategies, Denver, Colo.
  • Cynthia Koehler, WaterNow Alliance, San Francisco, Calif.
  • Colleen Kokas, Environmental Liability Transfer, Inc., Lahaska, Pa.
  • Pamela Lemoine, Black & Veatch Management Consulting, LLC, Chesterfield, Mo. (Returning member)
  • Eric Letsinger, Quantified Ventures, Chevy Chase, Md.
  • James McGoff, Indiana Finance Authority, Indianapolis, Ind. (Returning member)
  • Christopher Meister, Illinois Finance Authority, Chicago, Ill. (Returning member)
  • Kerry E. O’Neill, Inclusive Prosperity Capital, Inc., Stamford, Conn.
  • James (Tony) Parrott, Metropolitan Sewer District of Louisville, Louisville, Ky. (Returning member)
  • MaryAnna H. Peavey, Idaho Department of Environmental Quality, Boise, Idaho
  • Dennis A. Randolph, City of Grandview, Grandview, Mo.
  • Eric Rothstein, Galardi Rothstein Group, Chicago, Ill. (Returning member)
  • William Stannard, RAFTELIS, Kansas City, Mo. (Returning member)
  • Carl Thompson, Infiltrator Water Technologies, Old Saybrook, Conn. (Returning member)
  • David Zimmer, New Jersey Infrastructure Bank, Lawrenceville, N.J. (Returning member)

Additional information about EFAB: https://www.epa.gov/waterfinancecenter/efab

 

ADOPT A PET

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Female orange tabby. 2 years old. Super laid-back cat who got along great w/ cats AND dogs in her foster home! Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Get details at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!

 

Sandy Allen was the Tallest Woman in the World

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August 9 – August 15

The Week in Indiana History


Zerna1889     Zerna Sharp was born in Clinton County.  Beginning as an elementary teacher in Hillisburg, Kirklin, and La Porte, she went on to become a textbook consultant.  In the 1930s, she created the Dick and Jane series of readers which gained major use in schools across the nation.  The books helped millions of children learn how to read, as they followed the adventures of the two main characters, their sister Sally, and their dog Spot.

school

100 YEARS AGO

1920     The Allen County School Board announced the new teacher salary scale.  “Class A” teachers with 12 weeks of Normal School training and no experience would earn $100 a month.  “Class B” teachers with 24 weeks of training and some experience would receive $120 per month.  Teachers with three-year licenses would qualify for “Class C” wages of $135 each month.  The top tier, “Class D,” would include those who have three-year licenses and at least two years’ experience.  At the top of the scale, they would earn $150 per month.


Bobbie1923     A family from Oregon was visiting relatives in Wolcott, Indiana, when their dog Bobbie was scared by other dogs and ran away.  After searching for him for several days, the family was forced to move on.  Six months later, Bobbie showed up at their home in Oregon, showing signs of having walked the entire 2,500 miles.  The two-year-old Collie mix was mangy and scrawny with toenails completely worn down.  He recovered and became a nationwide sensation, featured in newspapers everywhere.  Known as “Bobbie the Wonder Dog,” he played himself as the star of the silent movie, “The Call of the West.”  He lived until 1927 when he was buried with honors by the Oregon Humane Society.  The German Shepherd film star Rin Tin Tin placed a wreath at his grave.

Headline

1949     A Greyhound bus burst into flames when it slammed into a bridge abutment on Indiana Highway 37 four miles south of Bloomington.  Of the 29 passengers on board, 16 were killed and 11 injured.  At the time, it was called the worst highway accident in Indiana history.


Seiberling

1973     The Howard County Historical Society opened the Seiberling Mansion for public tours.  The 1891 home is a blend of Neo-Jacobean (Queen Anne) and Romanesque Revival architecture.  There are eight rooms on the first floor and seven on the second, with a grand ballroom on the third floor.  Ornate woodwork was created from a variety of native woods, including walnut, maple, cherry, mahogany, and butternut.  A magnificent porch overlooks the grounds.


Sandy Allen 2008  Sandy Allen died in Shelbyville at the age of 53.  At 7’7″, she was listed in the Guinness Record Book as the  tallest woman in the world.  Active in community affairs and public service, she often spoke to school groups on the theme, “It’s OK to be different.” She was featured in numerous newspaper and magazine articles and appeared on a wide variety of television shows.   Her life story is told in the book entitled Cast a Giant Shadow.  

HHH

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dome

Indiana Statehouse Tour Office

Indiana Department of Administration

Tours of the Statehouse have been temporarily suspended.  You are invited to take a “Virtual Tour” by clicking the link at the bottom of this page.

(317) 233-5293
touroffice@idoa.in.gov  


quiz

    “Bobbie, the Wonder Dog” visited Indiana, but he actually lived in Oregon.  However, Indiana can claim several celebrity animals.  Can you identify each one below?

1.  Marlon Bundo

2.  Arnold Ziffel

3.  Dan Patch

4.  Garfield

Answers Below


Hoosier Quote of the Week

quote

“You’ve got to be proud of yourself, no matter what you are.  Be proud of yourself and make the best of what you’ve got.”

– – – Sandy Allen (1955 – 2008)


Mask up

Did You Know?

     The Indiana Statehouse, under construction for 10 years, opened in 1888.  The building still houses the core offices of all three branches of government.  The governor’s office is in the same space it has occupied for 132 years.  The House and Senate chambers, although substantially remodeled over the years, still occupy the same sections of the building.  The Indiana Supreme Court, representing the judicial branch, is virtually the same.  Care has been taken to upgrade the beautiful courtroom while at the same time maintaining the classic beauty of the original chamber.


Statehouse Virtual Tour


ANSWERS: 

1.  Marlon Bundo is a rabbit and a member of the family of Vice President Mike Pence, former Indiana Governor.  Marlon’s adventures are described in books written by the Vice President’s daughter, Charlotte Pence Bond, and illustrated by his wife, Karen Pence.

2.  Arnold Ziffel was a pig from Mooresville, Indiana, and one of the stars on the TV show “Green Acres.”

3.  Dan Patch, a horse foaled in Oxford, Indiana, was a world-renown star of harness racing at the turn of the last century.

4.  Garfield, a mischievous cartoon cat created by Hoosier Jim Davis, can be found in the comic sections of newspapers around the world.

Death Investigation

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  This morning around 5:45 a.m. the Evansville Police Department was called to the 1500 block of Cumberland Avenue for a medical emergency assist. The caller advised that she fell asleep with her one and a half month old child in her bed. When she woke up this morning she discovered that her child was not breathing. 

  The Evansville Fire Department, along with an ambulance crew, attempted to resuscitate the infant. The infant was later pronounced deceased on scene.

  The incident is currently being investigated by the Evansville Police Department’s Crime Scene, Adult Detective, and Juvenile Detective Units. 

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATE WIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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 INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 1,253 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. That brings to 72,254 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s dashboard.

A total of 2,821 Hoosiers are confirmed to have died from COVID-19, an increase of 10 over the previous day. Another 202 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.

As of today, nearly 33 percent of ICU beds and nearly 81 percent of ventilators are available across the state.

To date, 817,104 tests for unique individuals have been reported to ISDH, up from 804,345 on Thursday.

To find testing sites around the state, visit www.coronavirus.in.gov and click on the COVID-19 testing information link.

Eviction Moratorium Ends Aug. 14 As COVID-19 Cases And Hospitalizations Rise

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By Erica Irish 
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — A statewide moratorium on evictions and utility shutoffs for those who can’t pay will soon expire as Indiana continues to face the COVID-19 pandemic.

But Gov. Eric Holcomb said at a weekly virtual update Wednesday there will be other support available to renters as the moratorium ends. For one, the state plans to spend an additional $15 million on a rental assistance program offering grants to renters in most Indiana counties. The state will also extend a mediation practice—typically used to help homeowners avoid foreclosure—to renters and their landlords before a dispute ends up in eviction court.

The rental assistance program started accepting applications on July 13. Jacob Sipe, executive director of the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority, said there have been 24,000 applicants so far. Many renters applied on the first day when the program received around 8,000 applications.

The program is not available in Marion County, which is offering its own assistance to area renters. But of the 91 counties that are eligible for the state program, just five make up almost 45% of the applications received so far, Sipe said.

Around 18% of the applications came from Lake County, for example, and another 10.5% came from St. Joseph County. Applications from Allen County made up almost 8.5% of those received, while Tippecanoe and Vanderburgh’s counties contributed around 4% each.

In addition to the expanded rental assistance program, the state is working to expand a free substitute to court for tenants at risk of eviction. The tenant and landlord would meet with a neutral person instead of a judge in what is called a settlement facilitation program. If the parties reach an agreement, that can end the dispute without having to go before a judge.

Jacob Sipe, executive director of the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority, described how the state is providing resources to out-of-work Hoosiers to meet rent payments at the governor’s weekly COVID-19 press briefing. TheStatehouseFile.com

This alternative closely resembles a mediation practice already used for homeowners at risk of foreclosure and is welcoming support from Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Loretta Rush, who did not appear at the press conference but did give a written statement on the new program.

“Since 2009, the Indiana Supreme Court’s Mortgage Foreclosure Trial Court Assistance Project has helped avert foreclosures by facilitating settlement conferences between homeowners and lenders,” Rush said. “We are expanding this vital program given the pandemic.”

State officials addressed other issues at Wednesday’s press conference, where health leaders revealed the number of COVID-19 cases in Indiana continues to rise. The state health department recorded 740 additional cases Wednesday, bringing the total to 69,975.

In addition to the case increase, the number of patients hospitalized because of the virus also continues to rise, said Indiana State Health Commissioner Dr. Kristina Box.

Education

School is now in session in Indiana, and many districts opted to offer some form of in-person instruction to students while introducing new restrictions to keep students safe, including physical distancing in classrooms and mandatory masks.

But the outcomes haven’t been perfect. Last week, several school districts reported students and staff members who had contracted COVID-19 came to school, potentially exposing other students and educators.

This prompted one of the state’s largest teachers’ unions, the American Federation of Teachers, to demand Tuesday the state do more to protect students and educators, noting their members would support safety strikes if necessary to send a message.

State leaders are choosing to encourage school districts to work with their local health departments to determine what’s best for them, leaving most decisions about how to educate students this school year up to their discretion. Box and Holcomb said it wouldn’t make sense for the state to give uniform requirements to all Indiana schools as they have different needs and face different challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There is simply no single benchmark that accurately represents the level of community spread for every community in our state,” Box said as one example.

Voting 

Indiana voters have several months until the Nov. 3 general election, and there are no plans yet to extend no-excuse absentee voting as state election leaders allowed during the delayed primary earlier this summer.

At Wednesday’s briefing, Holcomb said that in-person voting needs to be an option if the state is to have a fair and effective election. He pointed to several opportunities voters have to cast their ballots without going to a poll site on Election Day, including early voting 28 days before the election and a list of excuses that would permit them to vote absentee.

Holcomb also said claims that he is not changing the election at the direction of President Donald Trump, who has voiced sharp opposition to mail-in and absentee voting on platforms like Twitter, are “inaccurate.” Holcomb also said he’s heard no reports of voters contracting COVID-19 from the polls after asking election administrators about the June 2 primary.

“Folks need to understand that it is safe to vote,” Holcomb said. “There are a lot of people out and about, whether it’s working or going to the grocery or doing their life, and their doing it safely. And we can vote safely in person as well.”

Holcomb’s opponent in the general election, Democrat Dr. Woody Myers, criticized Holcomb’s stance on voting. Myers is a former state health commissioner and said in a statement it would be irresponsible to not guarantee no-fault absentee voting during a pandemic.

“Denying Hoosiers the right to vote in a safe manner is simply without moral or scientific compass,” Myers said. “Voting is the hallmark of our society and we should be able to vote safely with no excuse absentee voting, just as we did in June.”

Common Cause Indiana and the state conference of the NAACP filed a lawsuit last week to force Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson and members of the state election commission to extend the deadline to receive absentee ballots past the current noon deadline on Election Day. If the lawsuit succeeds, absentee ballots could be counted up to 10 days past the election, as long as they were postmarked by Nov. 3.

The lawsuit is currently before a federal judge, and Holcomb said the state is awaiting more details from an opinion before making any changes to the election.

FOOTNOTE: Erica Irish is the 2020 Russell Pulliam editor for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. 

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As COVID-19 Tanks the Economy, Eviction Moratoriums Expire

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As COVID-19 Tanks the Economy, Eviction Moratoriums Expire

It’s the beginning of the month, rent is due, the $600 in federal unemployment relief has lapsed and Congress seems far from agreeing on another coronavirus aid package. Meanwhile, the federal moratorium on evictions has ended, and similar mandates in many cities and states have expired or soon will.

This week, as pressure mounts on localities and protesters draw attention to a #CancelRent movement, President Donald Trump announced that he is considering a federal ban on evictions, which he said are “a big deal.”

“A lot of people are going to be evicted,” Trump said at a news briefing this week. “But I’m going to stop it because I’ll do it myself if I have to. I have a lot of powers with respect to executive orders and we’re looking at that very seriously right now.”

Also this week, Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, a Democrat, pushed back against efforts from housing advocates to reinstate his state’s eviction ban, which expired in June. An executive order, he told reporters, would just cause more problems. But he asked the courts to stay evictions through September.

And this week, Nevada lawmakers passed legislation that would allow courts to pause evictions for up to 30 days so tenants and landlords can work out an agreement. The state’s moratorium is slated to expire on Aug. 31. Democratic Gov. Steve Sisolak is expected to sign the legislation, according to the Las Vegas Sun.

In 24 of the 43 states and Washington, D.C., that enacted eviction moratoriums, the measures have expired, according to data compiled by Eviction Lab, a Princeton University research project, and Emily Benfer, a law professor at Wake Forest University School of Law.

Housing advocates fear a surge in evictions and homelessness. An estimated 19 million to 23 million renters risk being evicted by Sept. 30, according to the Aspen Institute.

“This is unspeakably bad. Great Depression bad,” said John Pollock, an attorney and coordinator with the National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel at the Public Justice Center, which advocates for free legal representation in housing court.

As of July 29, 43% of renters were unable to make rent and risked being evicted, according to a survey of renters by the National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel. That amounts to a $22 billion rent shortfall nationwide, the survey estimated.

Eviction bans in Maryland, Michigan and New Hampshire expired in July, according to the Eviction Lab.

Delaware Gov. John Carney, a Democrat, allowed court filings for foreclosures and evictions to resume July 1, but ordered a stay on evictions so court officials can determine whether tenants would benefit from court-supervised mediation or housing support services.

Last week, protesters in New Orleans and Kansas City, Missouri, blocked eviction proceedings at local courthouses, declaring “Evictions = Death” and “Shut It Down!”

And over the weekend, protesters in Los Angeles, many holding Black Lives Matter signs, blocked traffic and staged a demonstration outside Democratic Mayor Eric Garcetti’s home. The same day, in New York, protesters in Brooklyn and Queens also took to the streets.

Meanwhile, around the country, reopened housing courts are sorting through a backlog of eviction filings. Under social distancing norms, some housing courts have opted to reopen with in-person hearings, while others have resumed business remotely.

Either option is “an impossible choice” for tenants facing eviction, said Thomas Silverstein, associate counsel in the Fair Housing and Community Development Project at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights.

Many of the people fighting eviction come from communities that have been disproportionately affected by the coronavirus, he said, adding that in-person court appearances make social distancing difficult.

And remote court hearings can be a challenge for cash-strapped tenants who might be struggling to pay their internet and cellphone bills in addition to their rent, Silverstein said.

For some states, eviction bans have been a nonstarter. Arkansas, Georgia, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Wyoming never issued statewide stays against eviction proceedings, according to Eviction Lab.

“There are now [many] states that have little to no protections in place from eviction, despite the fact the public health and economic crisis is ongoing,” said Alieza Durana of the Eviction Lab.

In a handful of states, emergency protection orders shielding renters from eviction remain. Connecticut’s and Florida’s bans will expire on Sept. 1; Oregon’s on Sept. 30 and Arizona’s on Oct. 31.

California, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico and Washington, D.C., have more open-ended moratoriums, tying them to the end of the coronavirus emergency.

How Free Legal Help Can Prevent Evictions
Even in states with eviction moratoriums in place, renters are still on the hook for back rent, which could push struggling tenants further down a financial hole, housing advocates say.

“Eviction moratoriums, on their own, aren’t enough — they simply delay the inevitable as renters accrue debt and small landlords struggle to operate their properties without rental income,” Diane Yentel, president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition, told Stateline in an email.

Eviction moratoriums, Yentel wrote, “must be paired with substantial and sustained rental assistance.” At least $100 billion is needed to keep renters stably housed during and after the pandemic, she said.

As Yentel noted, landlords also have been hit hard by the pandemic. If renters don’t pay their rent, owners can’t pay their mortgages, utility bills, employees, taxes, and the extra building cleaning costs associated with COVID-19.

Just under half of all landlords are “mom and pop” operators, according to Alexandra Alvarado, director of marketing and education for the American Apartment Owners Association, a membership organization of professional property managers based in Calabasas, California.

Many are retirees who’ve invested their life savings into their property and depend on it for income, she said. Many landlords were able to pay their bills for a few months without income, but now they don’t know if they can make their mortgage payments, she told Stateline in an email. Moratoriums are just a Band-Aid, she said.

Coronavirus Eviction Rules Don’t Always Help People in Motels

Most renters “live paycheck to paycheck, so even with an eviction moratorium it could take years for them to catch up,” Alvarado said. “Landlords fear they will have to take the financial hit as a result, and they don’t think a moratorium is an answer.”

Landlords are taking renters to court as a last resort, but many don’t expect to see the money that is owed to them paid out by the tenant, Alvarado said. Instead, she said, they take tenants to court so they can vacate their apartments and fill them with a tenant who can pay the rent, she said.

Before the pandemic, evictions already were at crisis levels, Durana said. As an example, she said, in 2016, when the unemployment rate was less than 5%, there were still 3.6 million evictions.

COVID-19 has exacerbated racial disparities in housing. A disproportionate number of Black and Latino households have struggled with rent or mortgage payments during the pandemic, according to a July analysis of census data by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard.

Fifty-two percent of renters lost income during the pandemic, compared with 39% of homeowners, the analysis found.

The downturn has had the greatest impact on Latino renters, 64% of whom have lost employment income. Fifty-seven percent of Black renters have lost income, while 51% of Asian American renters and 47% of white renters are in that situation.

“It’s a race equity disaster,” Pollock said.

A legacy of racism and discrimination in American society and the housing market contributes to the disparities, Durana said. Even before the pandemic, she said, communities such as domestic violence victims, who often lose housing after violent incidents in their homes, were at disproportionate risk of eviction because of discrimination.

And Black renters, particularly Black mothers with children, are more likely to be evicted, she said.

Evictions devastate families. A 2018 New York University study found that evictions increased homelessness and housing instability — and contributed to increased emergency room use.

“We call it the ‘Scarlet E’ because it can make it difficult to get other housing and it ruins a person’s credit,” Durana said.

Reopened Schools Can’t Avoid COVID-19 Cases, Indiana’s Top Health Official Says

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Reopened Schools Can’t Avoid COVID-19 Cases, Indiana’s Top Health Official Says

In a first-grade classroom at Tindley Summit Academy in Indianapolis, empty desks sit spaced out in rows with plastic shield dividers so students can take off their masks while working.
Indiana Health Commissioner Kristina Box says she still believes schools can reopen safely with precautions, including by requiring social distancing and masks.
 Stephanie Wang/Chalkbeat

Indiana’s top health official said it’s impossible to keep COVID-19 out of the state’s schools as they reopen — but that doesn’t necessarily mean they should close their doors again.

“Having a case of COVID in schools should not be a reason for panic … or for schools to close,” Health Commissioner Kristina Box said Wednesday. “It’s a reason to take action.”

Her comments come after a growing number of districts statewide reported positive cases among students and staff within the first week of classes. In Central Indiana, that included the Greenfield, Warren, Avon, and Brownsburg school districts, according to the Indianapolis Star.

Box said she still believes schools can reopen safely with precautions, including social distancing, grouping students, and requiring masks. She called on families to do their part by screening their children before sending them to school and having them stay home while waiting for test results.

The conversation is different now than in March when Gov. Eric Holcomb closed school buildings statewide, she said. In March, the state was worried about COVID-19 cases overwhelming the state’s health care system. While hospitalizations statewide are rising, Box said the focus now is on avoiding an outbreak.

“This does not mean that our schools will be free of COVID,” she said. “What it means is that we all need to take steps to limit the spread.”

The state has declined to set a statewide benchmark — such as a number of cases or community positivity rates — for when a classroom or entire school must close. That should be handled case by case basis, Box repeated.

As for how the state will report and track cases in schools, Box said officials are working to figure that out, including whether releasing data would violate child privacy laws. Schools should ask families to self-report positive cases, she said, and state contact tracers will ask every person who tests positive whether they have been to a school.

“I promise you, I am working very hard to try to get to yes on this,” she said.

Lt. Gov. Crouch Announces 24 Communities To Receive More Than $15 Mllion

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Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch and the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs today announced 24 rural Hoosier communities will receive more than $15.3 million in federal grant funding to improve water infrastructure.

“By investing in our state’s water infrastructure, we are laying the foundation for regional growth and prosperity,” said Lt. Gov. Crouch. “These grants are supporting projects that are crucial to rural communities’ continual economic development and improving the quality of life for its residents.”

The State of Indiana distributes Community Development Block Grant funds to rural communities, which assist units of local government with various community projects such as: infrastructure improvement, downtown revitalization, public facilities and economic development.

“The leadership of these grant recipients embodies strategic planning, hard work and dedication to improving their communities,” said Matt Crouch, Interim Executive Director of OCRA. “Proper planning is necessary to ensure Hoosier’s quality of life can grow as we are coping through a pandemic.”

The second round of the 2020 CDBG program begins on August 24, 2020, with proposals due on September 24 and final applications due November 20. Additionally, the suspension of the Blight Clearance Program, Main Street Revitalization Program and Public Facilities Program will continue. Therefore, only Wastewater/Drinking Water and Stormwater Improvement Program applications will be accepted for round two.

Funding for OCRA’s CDBG programs originates from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Community Development Block Grant program and is administered for the State of Indiana by OCRA. For more information, visit www.in.gov/ocra/cdbg.htm.