https://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
“Back On Track Stage 3” Begins Friday, May 22
“Back On Track Stage 3” Begins Friday, May 22
Governor Eric Holcomb will fast-track most of Indiana — including Evansville — into Stage 3 of the Back on Track Indiana plan starting Friday, May 22.  For a list of Stage 3 guidelines, visit backontrack.in.gov (PDF).
Department of Parks & Recreation staff will start work immediately to reopen our basketball, tennis/pickleball courts, and playgrounds for the weekend holiday.
As City employees return to work at the Civic Center starting Tuesday, May 26, they will notice a number of changes to city offices as a result of the pandemic.
Acrylic sneeze guards have been installed in areas dealing directly with the public, and the Building Authority has installed more hand sanitizing stations and social distancing reminders.
Every administrative employee will be given two cloth masks and a personal supply of hand sanitizer. Each office will have cleaning supplies in stock so that employees can clean their individual work stations.
Face coverings will be required upon entrance to the building and in all common areas.
Each employee will be given a no-contact temperature scan outside the complex.
Early Voting
Although the Civic Center will still be closed to the general public on May 26, voting at the Civic Center will begin at 8 a.m. that day.
Voters will be allowed into the building for voting purposes only.
Access will be limited to a voting location on the first floor near the Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard entrance rather than in the Election Office on the second floor as in previous elections.
City offices, including the Civic Center, will re-open to the public on Monday, June 15. At that time, and for a period until at least July 6, all visitors to the Civic Center will be required to have a temperature scan and wear a face covering. Visitors whose temperature registers higher than 100 degrees will not be allowed into the building. Disposable masks will be distributed to those visitors who arrive for city/county business but have no face covering.
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CDC Quietly Releases Detailed Plan For Reopening America
CDC Quietly Releases Detailed Plan For Reopening America
Restaurants and bars should consider installing sneeze guards at their registers. Mass transit workers should close every other row of seats on their buses. Students should eat lunch in their classrooms instead of congregating in cafeterias.
These are among the social distancing measures that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention listed in a document it quietly released on its website this week outlining recommendations for reopening restaurants, mass transit, schools and child care programs across the United States during the coronavirus pandemic.
The detailed 60-page document, which was posted on the CDC’s website with no accompanying announcement from the public health agency, comes weeks after many states have already ended or partly ended their lockdowns.
Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak
It also comes amid reports of strife between the CDC and the White House: While the White House released a plan called Opening Up America Again in April that incorporated some CDC suggestions, it largely left reopening decisions up to governors and local officials.
Meanwhile, the CDC’s coordinated, national approach — with more details and restrictions — had been shelved by Trump administration officials for being too specific, The Associated Press reported last week after obtaining parts of the CDC guidance.
Not all businesses and institutions should reopen yet, depending on the number of coronavirus cases in their local areas, the CDC cautioned. It recommended a three-phase approach for each community, each one more permissive than the last, provided rates of transmission do not spike.
In Step 1 of the plan for schools, for example, schools that are closed should remain closed. In Step 2, they could be open with “enhanced social distancing measures” and attendance should be restricted to those who live in the local area only. In Step 3, they could be open with distancing measures and attendance restricted to areas with the limited transmission of the coronavirus.
“While some communities will progress sequentially through the reopening phases, there is the possibility of recrudescence in some areas,” the CDC acknowledged, referring to the possibility of a new outbreak. “Given the potential for a rebound in the number of cases or level of community transmission, a low threshold for reinstating more stringent mitigation standards will be essential.”
For all institutions, the CDC recommended thorough disinfection for high-traffic areas: door handles of businesses, turnstiles in mass transit stations, playground equipment at schools. It urged face coverings anywhere it would be impossible to practice social distancing, including among staff members in child care settings and among older children in schools. And it encouraged plentiful hand sanitizer in schools, as long as it was safely stored away from children, and on tabletops at restaurants.
Tener Goodwin Veenema, a professor and visiting scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, welcomed the federal guidelines but said she felt that in some cases, the CDC’s wording was too weak — citing examples where the document called the measures “considerations.” (For restaurants and bars, for instance, the document advises, “Consider assigning workers at high risk for severe illness duties that minimize their contact with customers and other employees.”)
“When we have a pandemic of this nature, people need facts, and they need definitive action statements: ‘This is what needs to happen in the presence of an ongoing outbreak,'” Veenema said.
That is especially important, she said, given the mixed messages the federal government has sent about reopening as politicians and public health officials tangle over stay-at-home orders to stop the spread of the disease, which has sent the economy into a free fall.
The tension among agencies “has created a lot of confusion,” Veenema said. “It’s perpetuated fear, and it’s led to some ambiguous decision-making.”
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the guidelines.
All 50 states have either opened or partly reopened, even though there is no vaccine or cure for the coronavirus. As of Wednesday, there had been more than 1.5 million cases of COVID-19 in the U.S., with about 93,000 deaths.
Indianapolis Streets To Be Closed To Expand Seating For Restaurants
Indianapolis Streets To Be Closed To Expand Seating For Restaurants
By Victoria Ratliff
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Indianapolis restaurants will be able to reopen their dine-in services as Marion County slowly lifts some of the city’s restrictions.
Marion County officials announced last week that restaurants will be allowed to offer dine-in services with new guidelines that include outdoor seating only.
But to allow for more outdoor dining options, some road segments in the city will be closed beginning May 22 to allow restaurants to extend tables into sidewalks, streets or even parking lots.

“We may not get everything correct right off the bat, and for each business, we may have to work together to find unique solutions for problems that may arise,†Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett said at a virtual press conference Tuesday.
The city is following Gov. Eric Holcomb’s statewide reopening plan, just at a slower pace than the rest of the state. Dine-in services at restaurants statewide opened at 50% capacity statewide in every county except Marion, Vas’s, and Lake starting May 11. Hogsett previously said that it is because of the city’s unique needs when attempting to limit the number of COVID-19 cases in the city and county.
Since the beginning of the pandemic in early March, Indianapolis and Marion County have had a larger number of COVID-19 cases and deaths than any other part of the state.
Tuesday, Indiana State Department of Health data showed that of the 481 new cases of the virus reported statewide, 145 were in Marion County. The county now has 8,541 total cases and 497 deaths, more than any other county. Statewide, 28,705 people have been diagnosed with COVID-19 and 1,678 have died of the disease with another 146 deaths of people who had symptoms but had not been diagnosed.
Hogsett said that his concern is making sure there isn’t a surge in cases by opening too soon, adding that limiting seating to outdoor dining can decrease the likelihood of the spread of COVID-19 as the city moves forward with its reopening plan.
“As we begin to reopen our city, our ongoing commitment to the overall public health of the residents and the citizens of Indianapolis will require that we continue to think creatively about how to help our small business community,†he said.
Portions of Massachusetts Avenue, Broad Ripple Avenue, Georgia Street, South Monument Circle, and Illinois Street will be closed Friday, with crews beginning their work Wednesday. Dan Parker, director of the Department of Public Works, said the roads were chosen based on density, pedestrian traffic, transit lines, and the ability to manage traffic during the closures.
“The road closures that the mayor has mentioned represent the ability to create safe pedestrian corridors in our main dense commercial areas,†Parker said.
Restaurants looking to open dine-in services can apply for a permit on indy.gov/dineout. They can also submit their reopening plans where they can be reviewed to ensure restaurants are following social distancing guidelines.
Hogsett said pedestrians are encouraged to use the closed-off streets as sidewalks don’t offer proper space for social distancing. Because of this, restaurants will be able to extend seating to sidewalks.
As restaurants reopen, workers are encouraged to use personal protective equipment, including gloves and masks, to help prevent the spread of COVID-19. Because of the additional cost to businesses, Hogsett announced the start of a grant program to reimburse small businesses in the county for PPE.
In partnership with the Indy Chamber of Commerce, the RESTART Grant Program will provide up to $5,000 to businesses with fewer than 150 employees. Businesses can sign up to learn more about the RESTART Grant Program at response.indychamber.com/restart.
FOOTNOTE: Victoria Ratliff is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Oakland City University Prepares To Reopen Main Campus And APS Campus In FallÂ
Oakland City University Prepares To Reopen Main Campus And APS Campus In FallÂ
May 20, 2020 – Oakland City University is preparing to welcome back students to its campuses this fall. Planning and preparations are underway to hold in-class sessions for the fall semester at its main campus in Oakland City and its multiple Adult Professional Studies campuses. Planning for the reopening includes the following best practices to ensure our students, faculty, staff, and visitors are as safe as possible. The campuses return to normal staff operations on June 1 and have instituted a series of protocols for social distancing and use of PPE as well as increased requirements for cleaning and disinfecting. Returning to normal staff operations will allow the university to test its preparedness and make adjustments before students and faculty return.
Students, faculty, and staff will encounter new procedures when they return to maintain the safest environment possible. “One advantage of a smaller student population is that we can better monitor, detect quickly, and quarantine our campus community,†said President Ron D. Dempsey. “We also can be nimbler in our class distribution and course scheduling. In addition, the university is in an area of southwest Indiana that has had a smaller number of cases reported and has excellent health care facilities with ample capacity. I do not believe it is possible to prevent campus constituents from contracting the virus but we will employ all efforts and resources to limit any spread of the virus.â€
The university understands that this new environment will be especially difficult for its incoming students. The university has established success communities for all incoming students where students will be in weekly small groups led by faculty and staff members as well as returning student mentors for their entire first year. The university is confident that these success communities will help elevate student success among our incoming students.Â
More complete plans for reopening will be made available in June 2020. Â
ABOUT OAKLAND CITY UNIVERSITY
OCU is a Christian university that offers high quality, career-focused degree programs in a Christ-centered, campus secure environment. Our Christ-centered values and relationships create a supportive environment that encourages students to live a life of Christian service in their chosen careers. Our talented faculty equip our students with the knowledge and expertise they need to lead healthy, productive lives and successful, fulfilling careers. Founded by the General Association of General Baptists in 1885, U.S. News and World Report has recognized Oakland City University as one of the top universities in the Midwest and #2 in the Midwest for Social Mobility.Â
CCO Media Partner Honored In State Journalism Competition
TheStatehouseFile.com Honored In Journalism Competition
Staff report
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Nine reporters and an editor for TheStatehouseFile.com won honors Monday in the 2019 Indiana Pro SPJ Best in Indiana Journalism competition.
TheStatehouseFile.com also claimed second place for Best News Website in the category of publications, websites, and news services with circulations of more than 30,000.
Reporter Erica Irish captured two first-place awards.
The first for Irish was for “Is your family complete?: Experts say Indiana surrogates need legal protections and social visibility†in the Best Business or Consumer Affairs Reporting competition. The story explored the challenges faced by Hoosier gestational surrogates.
Irish’s other first-place award came in the Best Criminal Justice Reporting category for her stories on Indiana’s public defender system. The judges wrote about Irish’s reporting: “Irish tackles the state of indigent defense decades after the Supreme Court’s Gideon decision and finds it sorely wanting in Indiana.â€
Mary Beth Schneider, an editor for TheStatehouseFile.com, also claimed second place in the Best Column Writing competition.
And nine reporters for TheStatehouseFile.com captured third-place honors in the Best Documentary competition for “The Children’s Crusade Revisited: Slaughterhouse-Five at 50,†a joint production of TheStatehouseFile.com and WFYI Public Media.
The nine reporters are Irish, Emily Ketterer, Ariana Lovitt, Haley Pritchett, Carolina Puga Mendoza, Victoria Ratliff, Zach Roberts, Hope Shrum, and Taylor Wooten.
“Once again, Franklin College journalism students have demonstrated they are capable of competing with anyone and accomplishing remarkable things,†said John Krull, director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com.
This was the eighth straight year that staff members for TheStatehouseFile.com have won awards in the SPJ competition.
The StatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students that provide stories and other content for roughly 35 news partners in Indiana. Individual subscriptions also are available for either $5 per month or $50 per year.
FOOTNOTE: TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Everyone’s Mental Health Matters!
Mental Health Tips for All
There is a lot going on that can affect our mental health. Equally, there are a lot of ways to help cope and manage stress during these difficult times. We want Hoosiers to know that whatever they are feeling is valid, and there is hope. From those practicing social distancing, to parents navigating the pandemic with kids, to essential workers providing their services, we’re all in this together.
At BeWellIndiana.org, Hoosiers can learn tips to help them work through mental health challenges with children or teens, as well as seek support for themselves. Sometimes folks are so busy taking care of others, they forget to take care of themselves. We want to encourage everyone to check in with loved ones and their own mental health regularly.
Now it’s easier than ever to connect with Be Well Indiana! We recently launched a new Facebook page that serves as a social media go-to for updates, announcements, tips and more. We encourage you to follow, like and share the posts with your online community.
Join Be Well Indiana as we provide essential mental health resources to Hoosiers during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.