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HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 1,051 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 71,015 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s dashboard.

A total of 2,811 Hoosiers are confirmed to have died from COVID-19, an increase of six 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, more than 32 percent of ICU beds and nearly 82 percent of ventilators are available across the state.

To date, 804,345 tests for unique individuals have been reported to ISDH, up from 792,225 on Wednesday.

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

Mother Arrested for Impaired Driving while Transporting Two Children

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Last night at approximately 10:05, Trooper Hurley stopped a motorist on SR 64 east of CR 100 North for driving left of center. The driver was identified as Deana Hoffman, 48, of Crossville, IL. The driver displayed signs of impairment. Hoffman’s two children, ages 15 and 4, were also in the vehicle. Further investigation revealed Hoffman was under the influence of morphine. Hoffman was arrested and taken to the Gibson County Jail where she is currently being held on bond. Hoffman’s two children were released to a family member.

Arrested and Charges:

Deana Hoffman, 48, Crossville, IL

  • Operating a Vehicle while Intoxicated with Passengers less than 18 years of age, Class 6 Felony
  • Neglect of a Dependent, Class 6 Felony

Arresting Officer: Trooper Tanner Hurley, Indiana State Police

“IS IT TRUE” AUGUST 6, 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, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
IS IT TRUE we give five (5) cheers to the Reopen Evansville Task Force for launching a  Rent & Utility Assistance portal?
IS IT TRUE that The Resource and Awareness Task Force will conduct a third neighborhood drive up testing site Wednesday, August 12, at 4100 Covert Ave? …we also give them a five (5) cheer shoutout?
IS IT TRUE that unbeknownst to the powers that be, who were so busy celebrating an $18 million renovation project on North Main Street, the only grocery store in Jacobsville was planning to close?
IS IT TRUE that a grocery store is a vital part of any redevelopment effort and to lose one is a serious loss to a community for many reasons?… that closing of the IGA on North Main has set the stage for more degradation and for less possible gentrification?…whether one likes it or not, gentrification is the source of money to sustain a retail business including a grocery store and more importantly a population that does not feel so entitled to the inventory on the shelf that they will steal it on a daily basis?…once again for those who didn’t learn last time, if you want to clean up places like Jimtown and Jacobsville, the first step is to get rid of the Jims and Jacobs who rob and pillage everything that is out there? …good-paying jobs, reliable public transportation,  affordable and livable housing, good schools, affordable daycare services, a quality grocery store, and accessible and affordable healthcare would go a long way in helping people in that area?
IS IT TRUE we are sick and tired of hearing our elected officials talking about community blight but doing very little about it?
IS IT TRUE its time that our local elected officials stop relying on money generated from Tropicana as their own political slush fund?  …it’s also time that our elected officials stop dogging Tropicana to give them advancement on projected revenue to offset their bad spending habits?
IS IT TRUE we wonder how many people have received a summons to appear at the Warrick, Posey and Vanderburgh County Superior Court-Small Claims Division to dispute the validity of medical debts allegedly owed by them for medical services provided by the two major hospitals located in our area?
IS IT TRUE that several years ago ProPublica news publication claims that Hospital medical bills are often riddled with errors? …that they also suggest that you should ask your medical provider if they have a financial assistance policy, which could result in a sliding scale discount?
IS IT TRUE that the EPA has allowed the City of Evansville to pussyfoot around with the lead contamination issue in the Jacobsville and Jimtown area for over 20 years? …the real tragedy is that lead poisoning can be treated, but any damage caused by contaminated lead cannot be reversed? …we hope that before the City builds the new $28 million dollar Aqua Center at Garvin Park they will do extensive testing of possible lead contamination and toxic cleaning chemicals issues in the Garvin Park?
IS IT TRUE we are very thankful that the professionals of Albion Fellows Bacon Center and Holly’s House are available to help victims of domestic violence and sexual assaults? …we encourage domestic violence or sexual assault victims not to be afraid to report acts of violence against them no matter how politically connected or wealthy their attacker maybe?
IS IT TRUE that years ago Mayor Winnecke formed a task force to address what to do with Mesker Amphitheater? …we look forward to seeing what they recommend to do with the Amphitheater?
IS IT TRUE that the city streets have never been worse? …we are in the heart of the paving season and see very little being done to re-pave streets.?  …in every corner of this town, the streets are awful?
IS IT TRUE that officials at the Evansville Water And Sewer Department Utilities seemingly think that they are part of the United States Government by the way they are planning to add additional frills to the new multi-million dollar Waste Water and Treatment facility on Water Works Road?
IS IT TRUE we are told that a fair amount of Evansville city employees medical payments over the last several years to area healthcare providers are being deferred for payment?

IS IT TRUE its time that our local elected officials stop relying on money generated from Tropicana as their rainy day slush fund?  …that our elected officials should stop dogging Tropicana to give them an advancement on projected revenue to offset their bad spending habits?

IS IT TRUE we are hearing that many citizens are extremely pleased with the way State Representative Wendy McNamara is conducting herself?
Today’s trendy CCO “Readers Poll” question is: If the election was held today for the President Of United States who would you vote for?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.
EDITOR’S FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers

 

THE JOURNEY

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THE JOURNEY

by Ron Cosby

Publisher of the City-County Observer

As a fatherless child of color is born in a “Privileged Town,” his mother does everything to protect him from the obvious hurt, pain, and despair that awaits him at day’s dawn. With little food, money, or a defined plan to improve their station in life each day, she begins the most difficult journey for a better life. Years of heartbreak and despair, buffered by substandard subsidized public housing, food stamps, and governmental healthcare from a failing health system, she conquers each day with the grace of God and the determination of a saint.

The mother of the child of color begins her day’s journey to catch an early morning bus to earn a non-sustainable wage. She continues to find a way to provide her child of color with the love and protection of a saint, taught by her biblical upbringing. With the burden of a broken marriage and a lost child during birth, she continues her daily chores with the songs of praise dancing in her head throughout the day.

Years of receiving food stamps, and government commodities of dry milk, less than nourishing processed cheese, a yearly trip to the County Health Department for yearly check-ups and shots, a Salvation Army Holiday feast, and care packages became a way of life.  This way of life has taken a toll on her emotional and physiological well-being. She, too, had the same dream that Martin Luther King had, and she instilled it in her son of color.

A rat, drug, and crime-infested jungle greet a struggling soul every morning. Without a nourishing breakfast, her son of color puts on his mixed matched soiled clothes and journeys on foot in all kinds of weather to an ill-equipped school to seek the truth.  At school, his classmates practice one-upmanship and flaunt their trophies of privilege to anyone who listens or cares. He focuses on the real prize that one-day he would become an acceptable member of “Privileged Town.”  At school, he negotiates a landmine of corruption and lawlessness, while he burdens to seek the truth of the world on a half-empty stomach.

His heroes were few. There were no mentors available for help and guidance. With the spirited heart of a lion, his mother’s biblical teachings, and the wings of an Eagle, he continually looked to the mountains for his flight toward the sun.

It’s an unwritten rule that the only way to survive the ghetto is to leave.  With years of disappointment, pain, hurt, and despair, the child of color begins the journey to becoming an acceptable member of a “Privileged Town”.  He understands that his journey shall be long and challenging, but with God’s guidance, his goal is achievable because adversity has brought him strength.

Later, another “Privileged Town” greets the fatherless adult of color with less than open arms. The adult of color takes on a (not so obvious) foe of racial discrimination. With the confidence of a warrior going into battle, failure isn’t an option. With his soul intact and prayerful resolve, he struggles forward to improve his station in life in the same way that he excelled academically and athletically when he was young.

The fatherless adult of color now has a sustainable job and is living in a nice area of “Privileged Town” with his mother, a wife, and two children.

The fatherless adult of color knows that racism and discrimination are alive and well in America. He wants the self-serving career politicians and ineffective bureaucrat’s to step aside so the voiceless can be heard by the sincere and compassionate advocates of the downtrodden. He feels that future government programs should stop offering the disadvantaged handouts, but instead provide them with programs that provide a helping hand.

The adult of color recognizes it is time that the area clergy, advocates of the poor, business leaders, and ordinary citizens band together and take on racism, poverty, blight, and discrimination — head-on with fearless abandon.

FOOTNOTE: This journey has also been taken by many people of color over the years.  The fatherless adult of color believes that black lives matter.  He also believes that the lives of all people matter. We agree with him!

 

Reopen Evansville Task Force Launches Rent & Utility Assistance Portal

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The Reopen Evansville Task Force launched the Rent & Utility Assistance Portal.

The portal connects residents who have been impacted by COVID-19 with rent and utility financial assistance, payment arrangement programs, and legal help.

The state-issued moratorium for evictions, foreclosures, and utility shut-offs expires August 14. 2020.

The task force will update the portal as more assistance becomes available.

Reopen Evansville Task Force Launches Rent & Utility Assistance Portal

To learn more about these programs, visit assistance.reopenevansville.com.

Activists Sue Indiana State Police For Preventing Anti-Death Penalty Protest

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Activists Sue Indiana State Police For Preventing Anti-Death Penalty Protest

and written By Andrea Rahman
INDIANAPOLIS—A group of anti-death penalty activists sued the Indiana State Police for constructing roadblocks to prevent them from protesting executions at the Federal Correctional Institution in Terre Haute.
The Indiana chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed the suit on behalf of Indiana Abolition Coalition, Providence of Saint-Mary-of-the-Woods Indiana, Death Penalty Action, and multiple individuals who protested the executions Tuesday in the Southern District of Indiana. The ACLU is seeking a preliminary injunction to allow the advocates to protest executions scheduled in late August and September outside the main entrance of the federal prison on public property or on private property with permission from owners.
Aerial photo from Google of the General Dollar store across the road from the federal prison at Terre Haute was anti-death penalty activists want to protest.

Indiana State Police erected barricades and closed the surrounding roads to prevent protesters from standing within almost two miles of the execution site in early July when three federal inmates were put to death. The ACLU argues that the barricades violated their right to protest.

The anti-death penalty advocates had planned to stand on public property at the entrance to the prison to voice their opposition to the executions. They had also received permission from the management to stage their protest on the grounds of the Dollar General located on Prairietown Road and across the street from the institution.

Because of the roadblocks, protestors were forced to gather in the parking lot of a car dealership a few miles away from where they could not see the prison and were far removed from the execution chamber.

“There is absolutely no justification for keeping plaintiffs’ members and the individual plaintiffs this far from the entrance to the institution and doing so severely compromises their ability to express themselves and to express their opposition to the death penalty while in sight of the prison,” the lawsuit states.

Three inmates were executed on July 14, 16, and 17 in Terre Haute, which were the first federal executions since 2003. The first was Daniel Lewis Lee, a white supremacist who murdered a family in Arkansas; the second was Wesley Ira Purkey, who raped and murdered a 16-year-old girl; and the third was Dustin Lee Honken, who murdered five people in Iowa.

U.S. Attorney General William Barr announced earlier in the year that the government would go forward with federal executions, 17 years after the last man was put to death.

The next execution is scheduled for Aug. 26 when Lezmond Mitchell, the only Native American on the federal death row, is set to die for killing an Arizona woman and her 9-year-old granddaughter in a carjacking.

When asked to comment, Public Information Officer Sgt. Matt Ames for the Putnam District said it was against policy to discuss pending litigation.

FOOTNOTE: Andrea Rahman is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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Peyton Manning PSA Launches In Support of Pediatric Care Across Ascension

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As Ascension St. Vincent maintains vigilance in COVID-19 response and recovery, we continue to encourage those we serve not to delay and get the care they need today.

To support pediatric care and essential services particularly for those most vulnerable among us across our ministry, we have been blessed to work with Peyton Manning, former Indianapolis Colts quarterback and longtime partner of Ascension St. Vincent and Peyton Manning Children’s Hospital in Indianapolis, on a new series of public service announcements.

Ascension and Peyton Manning have launched their first video in a series of PSA-style messages supporting the need to schedule pediatric checkups and immunizations for the children in our lives. The video is live across various digital platforms in Indiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Wisconsin and New York, and marks the first time Peyton has been featured in advertising that has been used across Ascension ministries.

In the weeks to come, Ascension will be launching more messages from Peyton and his father, Archie Manning, that emphasize Ascension’s commitment to safety, promote appointment availability, and underscore the importance of not delaying the care you need for you and your family.

IBEW Local 16 Endorses County Commissioner Ben Shoulders For Re-Election

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IBEW Local 16 Endorses Ben Shoulders For Re-Election
It was recently announced that Vanderburgh County Commissioner Ben Shoulders has received the IBEW LOCAL 16  endorsement for re-election.
Mr, Shoulders told the City-County Observer that “It’s a great honor to earn the endorsement of IBEW Local 16”. “The local IBEW has been around for over 120 years, and covers 14 surrounding counties, and has been a vital component to the growth and stability of our region’s workforce for decades.”
He further stated, “that as Vanderburgh County Commissioner, I will continue to work closely with IBEW Local 16 to attract and retain good-paying jobs because their work is critical in training our skilled workforce  for future jobs.”  “I’m humbled by their support of my re-election and who like to thank Paul Green, Brandon Wongngamnit, and the entire local IBEW 16 membership for their support”
Since his election, he has been extremely effective in promoting good public policy and has seemly been a voice of reason and compromise. Mr. Shoulders has demonstrated that he can face difficult governmental challenges with an open mind.
Commissioner Shoulders is extremely outgoing and is from a well respected and prominent political family of this area.

He is a Commercial Lender III at Banterra Bank and has been in banking 17 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).

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 (3) children.  Emma who is 10 years old and 7 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.

 

YESTERYEAR: 100 Block of Main Street

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YESTERYEAR: 100 Block of Main Street

by Pat Sides

The group of stylish women, who worked for the Evansville Courier, lingers outside the entrance to the newspaper’s offices at 125-127 Main Street in the early 1920s. The man posing with his camera a short distance from them is William Deeds, one of the Courier’s photographers. 

Located near the riverfront, this city block, like most of the rest of downtown in the early twentieth century, was a hub of activity. Crowds often gathered in front of the Courier building for updates on the “breaking news” of the day, which was posted on signs in the front windows, such as those visible behind the women.

Next to the newspaper building is Henry Hermann’s candy store, which operated in Evansville for over a century. Next to it was perhaps one of the first restaurants to offer Chinese cuisine in Evansville, Y. K. Yee’s short-lived Victory Inn at 121 Main, which in this photo advertises chop suey on its sign.Â