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USI Men’s Basketball inks a pair for 2020-21

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University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball announced the signings of six-foot-nine junior forward Jacob Polakovich and six-foot-three sophomore guard Tyler Henry for the 2020-21 season. The pair are the first to sign with USI and new Head Coach Stan Gouard this spring.

“USI is beyond excited to have Jacob and Tyler join the Screaming Eagles family,” said Gouard. “Both of these young men are high character guys and both align with our core values.”

Polakovich transfers to USI after two seasons with the University of Indianapolis, averaging 5.7 points and 5.0 rebound per game in 56 games and 31 starts. The junior forward, who will redshirt in 2020-21 and have two seasons of eligibility, posted a career-best 8.7 points and 6.4 rebounds per contest. He scored a career-high 17 points versus Truman State University and grabbed a career-best 14 boards at Maryville University.

“Jacob brings GLVC experience after spending two seasons with me at UIndy,” said Gouard. “Our personal relationship goes way beyond basketball and I am honored that I will continue to mentor Jacob.

“Jacob’s athletic abilities along with his work ethic make a really good fit for our program,” continued Gouard. “He will give us a presence in the paint at six-foot-nine with the ability to rebound, protect the basket, and score inside are areas that Jacob will provide us with in the years to come. Jacob, who will be a sit one and play two student athlete, will help our bigs this year in practice with his physical presence, work ethic, and GLVC experience.

Henry comes to USI after making 27 appearances in his collegiate debut at Lane College in 2019-20. He posted a team-best 15.6 points, while grabbing 3.7 rebounds and dishing 1.1 assists per game. The incoming sophomore guard also posted a season-high 30 points versus Spring Hill College; seven rebounds versus Morehouse College; and three assists versus Kentucky State University.

“USI will benefit greatly from Tyler’s experience on both ends of the floor,” said Gouard. “Tyler joins our program after a successful season at Lane.

“He is a dynamic three-way scorer, who has the length, athleticism, and versatility that allows him to excel in a multitude of areas,” continued Gouard. “Tyler has the ability to be effective on both ends of the ball and is a tremendous rebounder from the guard position. My staff and I thought it was important to add a perimeter shooter, as well as a scorer. Our team got better today.”

The Screaming Eagles were 22-8 last season, 13-7 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference, and return All-GLVC senior forward Emmanuel Little (Indianapolis, Indiana) and senior guard Mateo Rivera (Indianapolis, Indiana).

Wagenaar’s The Spinning Place named 2020 Poetry Award winner by Midland Authors

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The Spinning Place, a book of poetry by Chelsea Wagenaar published by Southern Indiana Review (SIR) Press, has been named the winner of the 2020 Poetry Award by Midland Authors as the best poetry book published by a Midwest author in 2019.

In their judge’s statement, poetry judge George Bigere said “I’d be hard-pressed to think of a book that explores the relationship of a mother and her child more intelligently, more capaciously or more beautifully. I love Wagenaar’s wide-ranging curiosity and verbal inventiveness.”

The Spinning Place, released on November 1, 2019, considers the body as the origin of ecstasy and agony, revealing how language—its possibilities and limits—bridges us to one another, but also shatters intimacy. The collection’s three sections examine origin, exile, and the reconciliation of praise and sorrow with lyric precision and the heart of storytelling.

Wagenaar was the 2018 recipient of the Michael Waters Poetry Prize from SIR, awarded annually for a collection of poetry written in English. She is also the author of Mercy Spurs the Bone, selected by Philip Levine as the winner of the 2013 Philip Levine Prize, and some of her recent poems appear or are forthcoming in Poetry Northwest, The Normal School and The Southern Review and her recent nonfiction writings appear in Grist.

SIR is published by the University of Southern Indiana through the support of the USI College of Liberal Arts, the Indiana Arts Commission and National Endowment for the Arts. For more information, including purchasing links, visit the SIR website at USI.edu/sir.

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 409 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 25,473 the total number of Indiana residents known to have the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous day’s total.

Intensive care unit and ventilator capacity remain steady. More than 42 percent of ICU beds and nearly 81 percent of ventilators were available as of Wednesday.

A total of 1,482 Hoosiers have been confirmed to have died of COVID-19, an increase of 38 over the previous day. Another 137 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.

                                                      To date, 154,083 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 150,510 on Tuesday.

Marion County had the most new cases, at 91. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (12), Clinton (11), Elkhart (23), Hamilton (10), Jackson (15), Jennings (10), Lake (70), Porter (11), St. Joseph (13) and Tippecanoe (15). The Lake County totals include results from East Chicago and Gary, which have their own health departments. A complete list of cases by county is posted at www.coronavirus.in.gov, which is updated daily at noon. Cases are listed by county of residence.

Beginning today, more than two dozen additional testing sites will open around the state as part of Indiana’s large-scale testing effort for COVID-19. Locations and registration have been added to the COVID-19 testing map at www.coronavirus.in.gov. Counties include Jasper, Marshall, Noble, Lagrange, Allen, Fountain-Warren, Clinton, Boone, Hancock, Hamilton, Marion, Randolph, Grant, Howard, Parke, Putnam, Greene, Lawrence, Jackson, Monroe, Clark, Decatur, Dearborn, Ripley, Harrison, Posey and Perry. Additional sites will be added once locations are finalized.

Hoosiers who have symptoms of COVID-19 and those who have been exposed and need a test to return to work are encouraged to visit a state-sponsored testing site for free testing. Individuals without symptoms who are at high risk because they are over age 65, have diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure or another underlying condition, as well as those who are pregnant, live with a high-risk individual or are a member of a minority population that’s at greater risk for severe illness, also are encouraged to get tested.

 Individuals should bring proof of Indiana residency such as a state-issued ID, work ID or utility bill.

“IS IT TRUE’ MAY 13, 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?
Footnote: City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall 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 the “Mayors Reopen Task Force” is beginning to coordinate the opening of select businesses in the Evansville area? …we wish them well and hope that they are approaching this re-opening project with cautious optimism, rational thinking, objective data-driven planning, and prayerful thought?  …after the doom and gloom news out of Washinton yesterday, it looks like the “Mayors Reopen Task Force” have their hands full in finding a creative, safe, and financially beneficial plan to re-reopen local business within the new COVID -19 virus Federal and State guidelines?
IS IT TRUE yesterday morning the Vanderburgh County Commissioners voted unanimously (3-0) to not open Burdette Park pool for this swim season?  …some people considered this move as a blow to the plans of the “Mayors Reopen Task Force” because they wanted to open things not close to them?  …by this move, it announces that members of the Vanderburgh County Commissioners are favoring the health and public safety of the community over leisure activities?
IS IT TRUE yesterday afternoon a surprising announcement was made by the Evansville Parks Director, Brian Holtz when he duplicated the Vanderburgh County Commissioners decision?  …he announced they will also not be opening the City Pools (Lloyd, Hartke, Helfrich, Rochelle-Landers, Mosby, and Lorraine)  for this coming swim season?  …Mr. Holltz also stated that this decision has the blessings of the Mayor and his Park Board?
IS IT TRUE we are told that many people are confused why Mayor Winnecke and his Evansville Park Director decided to close public swimming pools throughout the city for health concerns but are leaving the city golf courses, parks all over the city open?

IS IT TRUE that Americans have always been called the “STEPUP” people?  …we are beginning to take the COVID-19 virus head-on and it proves that this statement is correct?

IS IT TRUE that the medical experts are predicting that the National COVID -19 testing program will last for at least 12 months? …some of the reasons why the COVID -19 testing program is lasting so long is tests are in short supply, it takes to long to retrieve the results of the tests and only 2 1/2% of the American public have been tested for this deadly virus?

IS IT TRUE that the Flu epidemic killed 24,000 people and the COVID-19 virus has so far killed 82,000 plus Americans and is increasing by large margins every day?

IS IT TRUE that yesterday Dr. FAUCI looked United States Senator Paul (KY) in the eyes and told him that the schools should remind close until further notice because we need to be very careful when it came to well be of our children?  …after that comment by Dr. FAUCI, all we heard from Senator Paul was crickets?  …it’s good to see a scientific decision to trump a political decision?

IS IT TRUE a few of our Civic Center buddies tell us that the City of Evansville officials is talking about raising our taxes in 2021?…we wonder how on earth can a city that has zero population growth and serious unemployment challenges feel that they can collect more tax money from its huddled masses than it did the year before?  …it looks like it time for the elected officials of the City Of Evansville to start living within their means because we are?

IS IT TRUE that all eyes are on the City of Evansville cash cow? …we are hearing that Tropicana Evansville is currently looking for a safe and creative way of resuming their gaming offerings?
IS IT TRUE we highly recommend before you consider re-opening your business in the next several days you talk with your attorney and insurance carrier and see if you and your business are covered by any malfeasance lawsuit concerning a COVID -19 virus issues?
IS IT TRUE that the top 10 areas saw surges of 72.4 percent or greater over a seven-day period compared to the prior week, according to a set of tables produced for the task force by its Data and Analytics unit?  …they include Nashville, Tennessee; Des Moines, Iowa; Amarillo, Texas; and — atop the list with a 650 percent increase — Central City, Kentucky.
IS IT TRUE in Indiana there were 566 new positive cases of the COVID-19 virus between 03/23/2020 and 05/11/2020
IS IT TRUE between 05/06/2020 and 05/10/2020 25,127 total positive cases have been recorded in Indiana?
IS IT TRUE in Indiana between 05/06/2020 and 05/11/2020 33 new deaths have been recorded?
IS IT TRUE between 03/17/2020 and 05/11/2020 a disappointing 4,697 COVID -19 virus test has been given in Indiana?
IS IT TRUE as of 05/10/2020 150,510 COVID -19 virus test has been given in Indiana?  …that 16.8 % Hoosiers tested positive with the COVID -19 virus?
IS IT TRUE in Indiana there are a total of 3,033 positive cases in Long-Term Care (LTC) facilities7   …so far that 584 deaths have been reported in Long-Term Care (LTC) facilities in Indiana7
IS IT TRUE that the Indiana Supreme Court suspended the law license of Attorney General Curtis Hill Jr. for 30 days starting May 18, 2020?  …that Governor Holcomb is attempting a backroom political powerplay by asking the courts to replace Hill with one of his political cronies?  …if the Governor gets his way it will cause a serious split within the Indiana Republican party just before election time?
IS IT TRUE we been told that several influential Republicans are highly disappointed that Governor Holcomb hasn’t allowed our popular Lieutenant Governor Suzanne Crouch to play a major role in the upcoming General election?
IS IT TRUE we would like to thank Kemberie Weightman for sending us the daily “EPD Activities Police” reports in a timely manner?
IS IT TRUE when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny!  When the Government fears the people we have Liberty?

IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS” are non-scientific but trendy?

Today’s “Readers Poll” question is: IF THE ELECTION FOR DISTRICT ONE (1) VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSION RACE WHO WOULD YOU VOTE FOR?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE FILES, LAW ENFORCEMENT, “READERS POLL”, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS”, EDUCATION, OBITUARIES and “LOCAL SPORTS”.
You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com
Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

 

Despite Lost Support, AG Hill Seemingly Pushes Forward

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Despite Lost Support, AG Hill Seemingly Pushes Forward

 

Statewide political leaders, including Republican leaders, are withdrawing support of embattled Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill, who next week begins a 30-day suspension for two ethics violations. But Hill so far has not indicated plans to step down from his role or leave the 2020 campaign trail once the suspension is over, even though his competition may be growing.

The Republican AG on Monday received the 30-day suspension with automatic reinstatement from the Indiana Supreme Court, which unanimously found that he violated Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct 8.4(b) and (d).  Those violations stem from nearly-two-year-old allegations that Hill drunkenly groped four women in March 2018: Democratic State Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon and current and former legislative staffers Gabrielle McLemore Brock, Niki DaSilva, and Samantha Lozano.

The suspension means Hill, who’s had no prior discipline, cannot practice from May 18 until June 17. During that time, he has said his chief deputy, Aaron Negangard, will oversee the Office of the Attorney General. But that was cast into doubt Tuesday, when Gov. Eric Holcomb moved to intervene in Hill’s attorney discipline case, asking the court to clarify whether Hill’s suspension created a vacancy in the office. A ruling in Holcomb’s favor could permit him to appoint a successor attorney general.

“I accept with humility and respect the Indiana Supreme Court’s ruling of a 30-day suspension of my license with automatic reinstatement,” Hill said in a statement Monday. “… I offer my deepest gratitude to my family, friends, and the entire staff of the Office of the Attorney General. My staff has worked tirelessly and without interruption and will continue to do so on behalf of all Hoosiers.”

If and when Hill returns to the office, though, it’s unclear what the future holds for the longtime prosecutor.

In November, Hill entered the already-crowded 2020 race for attorney general, coming alongside Indianapolis attorney John Westercamp in seeking the GOP nomination. 

Former Revenue Commissioner Adam Krupp was briefly in the Republican race, but he dropped out last month and put his support behind Decatur County Prosecutor Nate Harter, a one-time Hill supporter now seeking the nomination to run as the Republican AG candidate in November.

The Indiana Republican Party will select its nominee at its convention next month. Up to this point, party leaders have stayed mum on the disciplinary action clouding Hill’s campaign and have declined to endorse — or not endorse — any of the three candidates.

That changed, however, when Hill’s suspension came down.

“Hoosiers would be best served by having a new attorney general,” GOP Chair Kyle Hupfer said in a statement Monday, though he did not specifically endorse a candidate. “I have faith in our delegates.”

Harter — who was the person who put Hill’s name forward to become the Republican attorney general candidate in 2016 — said Monday that the Supreme Court’s order “reflects the unavoidable fact that my friend Curtis Hill has lost the trust of Hoosiers and has compromised his ability to do the important work we deserve.”

Westercamp was more reserved in his response, saying the discipline order “doesn’t change the focus of my campaign — bringing the broad-based, private-sector experience to the office, fighting government overreach, and eliminating unnecessary office spending.”

Now, former Indiana Rep. Todd Rokita says he is seriously considering throwing his hat in the GOP ring.

“Our incumbent is very badly wounded,” Rokita said in a statement posted to Facebook. “This is no longer conjecture or something just contrived by Curtis’ political enemies. This is reality as delivered by the highest impartial third party in the state — the Supreme Court.

“There is too much at stake for us not to consider other alternatives for our state’s top lawyer,” Rokita said, referencing the possibility of a Democrat taking the office. “… My family and I will be deciding in the next several days how I can best contribute to keeping our party, our state, strong.”

Indiana Lawyer submitted questions to Hill’s campaign regarding his reelection bid, asking whether the impending suspension, Harter’s entrance into the race or Hupfer’s comments had led the incumbent to consider leaving the campaign trail. A staffer said Hill’s team was not immediately available to respond.

On the Democratic side, State Sen. Karen Tallian and former Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel are competing for their party’s AG nomination. Both noted the suspension will end in time for Hill’s name to be put forward at the GOP convention.

“This needs to end. And I can make that happen,” Tallian said in a statement posted to Twitter. “Now, it is even more imperative that Indiana women, and Indiana men who support them, must say no. Now, more than ever, we need a strong woman to be the nominee for attorney general. His infamous behavior was unacceptable, and we need to send a clear message that sexual harassment and battery are never acceptable.”

Weinzapfel likewise said Hill’s conduct toward the four women is “as undeniable as it is inexcusable.”

“He has embarrassed himself and the office which he holds,” Weinzapfel continued. “It is now up to the voters to hold him accountable and I will work every day through November to make sure that happens.”

The Indiana Democratic Party offered harsher words for Hill, calling him a “disgrace” and criticizing the GOP for failing to remove him from office.

“His conduct as an elected official was repulsive and will be a lasting stain on the office and the party he serves,” Lauren Ganapini, executive director of the Indiana Democratic Party, said in a statement. “Now the uncertainty created by his punishment could tip the state into a constitutional crisis.”

When the groping allegations became public in July 2018, then-House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, and then-Senate President Pro Tempore David Long, R-Fort Wayne, called on Hill to resign. But their successors have been less outspoken, with Sen. Rod Bray, R-Martinsville, declining to comment and Rep. Todd Huston, R-Fishers, not responding to a request for comment.

The leaders of the minority caucuses, however, have been more outspoken.

“While I am pleased that Attorney General Hill will finally face consequences for the disgraceful actions he committed more than two years ago, I can’t help but feel this punishment is mild given the Court’s finding that Hill committed battery against a legislator and multiple legislative staff members,” House Democratic Leader Phil GiaQuinta, D-Fort Wayne, said in a Monday statement. “As I have stated many times before, I continue to believe that Attorney General Hill should resign from his post, given his actions and his betrayal of the public trust as Indiana’s top law enforcement officer. (Monday’s) the decision now leaves Indiana in a legal quagmire, where the Attorney General’s ability to hold public office remains in question.”

Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane, an Anderson Democrat, likewise repeated his initial call for Hill’s resignation and pointed to the “host of unresolved legal issues as to the legality and operation of the office of Attorney General… .”

“In addition, the ruling points out one thing clearly: All of this occurred because of Curtis Hill’s poor decision-making and deplorable actions.”

Legislation was introduced in the General Assembly this year that would have disqualified any lawyer who had been disbarred or suspended for at least 30 days from being attorney general. Likewise, any lawyer who was disbarred or suspended for at least 30 days could not run for the office.

That legislation, however, died on the last night of the 2020 session of the Indiana General Assembly. 

Former Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller, Hill’s predecessor, told Indiana Lawyer the question of Hill’s eligibility to serve rests with the state Supreme Court, not the General Assembly. State statute requires the AG to be a lawyer in “good standing,” and it is up to the courts to determine what “good standing” means in the statutory context.

“When I was elected as the state’s attorney general, I felt a higher responsibility to uphold not only the professional requirement of the office but also to my demeanor so that I didn’t reduce the reputation of that office that I was elected to maintain,” Zoeller added.

The Indiana Supreme Court’s disciplinary order gave no guidance on what the suspension means for Hill’s ability to remain in office.

Holcomb, a fellow Republican, told reporters Monday that he was looking into the authority he has to respond to the suspension. Holcomb was among those who called for Hill’s resignation in 2018, and he said Monday his position has not changed.

Asked whether he would appoint a replacement AG, Holcomb said he was seeking a quick turnaround of his legal team’s research into what executive authority he has in this situation.

“With this current decision, it has led to another set of questions that I am seeking guidance and answers to,” the governor said. “We won’t allow grass to grow underneath as we get those answers.”

The attorney discipline case, begun in March 2019, is not the only repercussion Hill has faced from the groping allegations.

In 2018, he was the subject of a criminal and ethical investigation by a special prosecutor and the Indiana inspector general. Though special prosecutor Dan Sigler said he believed the women, he declined to bring criminal charges.

The women have also seek redress in the form of a federal civil lawsuit. The case was filed in 2019,  and the plaintiffs are represented by JBJ Legal attorneys Hannah Joseph, B.J. Brinkerhoff, and Kim Jeselskis.

Hill’s accusers and their lawyers declined interviews, but the lawyers did release a statement saying they were “pleased” with the Supreme Court’s finding that Hill committed misdemeanor battery against their clients.

“The discipline issued (Monday) by the Indiana Supreme Court and the confirmation of Hearing Officer (Myra) Selby’s factual findings again establish, without question, our (clients’) credibility, and the legal significance of their accounts,” the attorneys said in a joint statement. “Two years later, Representative Candelaria Reardon, Ms. DaSilva, Ms. McLemore Brock, and Ms. Lozano continue to deal with the effects of going public with their stories, but remain steadfast in their commitment to helping Hoosiers feel safe in the workplace.”

Those “effects” have included workplace intimidation, discrimination, and harassment, the women argue in their civil suit.

Indiana Southern District Chief Judge Jane Magnus-Stinson dismissed the first amended complaint in March, finding the state of Indiana was not an appropriate defense against the plaintiffs’ Title VII claims. Additionally, claims under the Equal Protection and Substantive Due Process clauses brought against Hill in his official and individual capacity were not cognizable.

Magnus-Stinson also declined to exercise jurisdiction over the women’s state-law claims, including battery, defamation, and invasion of privacy. But she dismissed those allegations without prejudice with leave to refile in state court.

But the women instead chose to file a second amended complaint naming the Indiana House and Indiana Senate as defendants for the Title VII allegations. Hill was also named as a defendant in his individual capacity for the state-law claims.

Hill’s legal team has already moved to dismiss the second amended complaint, arguing the women did not seek leave to file it. His defense has also moved for sanctions — including dismissal of the state-law claims with prejudice and the award of attorney fees — on similar grounds.

The federal case is DaSilva, et al. v. Indiana House, et al., 1:19-cv-2453.

The discipline case is In the Matter of Curtis T. Hill, Jr., 19S-DI-156.

FOOTNOTE: IL senior reporter Marilyn Odendahl and reporter Katie Stancombe contributed to this report. For more on the disciplinary action against Hill, read the May 13 edition of Indiana Lawyer.

Some States Let Vulnerable Workers Turn Down Jobs

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Some States Let Vulnerable Workers Turn Down Jobs

DENVER — As governors start to allow businesses to reopen, they’re under pressure to clarify whether people can refuse a job offer and stay on unemployment if they’re afraid of catching the coronavirus at work.

States generally cut residents from their unemployment insurance rolls if they turn down a job offer that matches their skillset and work history. But the coronavirus pandemic has raised new questions about whether it’s safe for people — particularly older, sicker people — to return to work, and what employers must do to keep workers safe.

“We’re kind of in uncharted territory here,” said Rachael Kohl, director of the Workers’ Rights Clinic at the University of Michigan Law School. She noted that there’s not yet any case law on unemployment benefits and COVID-19.

As confusion swirls, worker advocates are urging state officials to spell out policies and legal aid groups are gearing up to defend workers in court.

Some state labor departments, such as Missouri’s and Iowa’s, have announced that workers will lose unemployment benefits if they refuse a job, except in certain circumstances set by Congress in March when it approved emergency unemployment aid. Under that law, people can refuse to return to work if they are ill with the coronavirus, caring for a family member ill with the virus or unable to find child care because of the virus.

Many state labor departments also are telling employers that they must report workers who turn down job offers.

Fear of getting sick isn’t a sufficient reason for someone to refuse to work, the U.S. Department of Labor has said and states such as Georgia have reiterated.

But some lawmakers argue that at this stage of the pandemic, the danger of infection remains so high that fear of getting sick should be a valid reason for anyone to stay on unemployment. No governor has gone that far, though some are allowing people to stay on unemployment if they have a health condition that makes them vulnerable to a serious infection and has been offered an unsafe job.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, told state regulators in April to make sure that people over age 65, people who have certain chronic diseases and other vulnerable people won’t be forced off unemployment if they turn down a job that’s likely to put their health at risk.

The Colorado Department of Labor and Employment last week issued emergency rules for determining whether a person refused a suitable offer of work or quit because of hazardous conditions during the coronavirus pandemic. Regulators must consider the person’s vulnerability to the coronavirus, their health, and safety risk in returning to work or remaining on the job, and the normal level of risk in the industry before the pandemic.

The Colorado Department of Labor and Employment did not respond to requests for comment.

More states likely will follow Colorado’s lead, said Gary Burtless, a senior fellow in Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution, a Washington, D.C., think tank.

“If you have a legitimate fear that you are going to a job that is unhealthy, puts you at risk, puts your family at risk of getting sick with a possibly fatal infectious disease — I think a lot of states are going to accept that that’s a legitimate reason for not going back,” he said.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, took a step in that direction last week, announcing that workers 65 or older and people living with an elderly household member will not be kicked off unemployment if they refuse a job offer.

Workers who have been diagnosed with the new coronavirus, have a family member ill with the virus, are in quarantine after exposure to the virus or have no access to child care also will be excused, he said. The Texas Workforce Commission will review other situations case by case.

“This flexibility in the unemployment benefits process will help ensure that Texans with certain health and safety concerns will not be penalized for choosing not to return to work,” Abbott said in a statement.

Some worker advocates say Abbott’s announcement doesn’t go far enough.

There are still outstanding concerns around people who are immunocompromised or are at higher risk because of a health condition, and around workplaces not providing enough safety protections, said Jonathan Lewis, senior economic opportunity policy analyst at the Center for Public Policy Priorities, an Austin-based nonprofit, in an email to Stateline.

Lewis’s group and 13 other unions and worker-friendly organizations sent the Texas Workforce Commission a letter last week asking it to clarify what jobs are suitable and what reasons workers can give for quitting a job.

Nationwide, workers have some protections in place under existing state and federal law. Although people generally must be out of work involuntarily to qualify for unemployment benefits, they also can qualify after quitting an unsafe job, Kohl said. To do so, they need to document their health and safety concerns and prove that they talked to their employer but couldn’t agree on a reasonable solution.

What workers can’t do — but some business owners and state officials fear they’ll try to do — is turn down a job merely because they’d prefer to receive unemployment benefits.

Congress has approved an additional $600 weekly benefit for workers through the end of July, which means many low-paid workers will make more money on unemployment than they would on the job. People who earn the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, for instance, earn $290 in a typical 40-hour workweek.

The U.S. Department of Labor says that workers who turn down a job will lose some federal benefits, except in the limited circumstances set by Congress, such as when the worker is ill with the coronavirus.

Georgia state Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick and 20 other House Democrats in late April asked the state labor department whether Georgians who turn down job offers out of fear for their safety will lose unemployment benefits, what precautions employers are required to follow and how to ensure unemployment claims are promptly processed.

Kendrick told Stateline that in her view, all Georgians have a legitimate reason to fear returning to work because Republican Gov. Brian Kemp has asked businesses to reopen before it’s safe.

“Even the president thinks that Georgia is moving too fast,” she said. “It’s not like we’re in the mean of states that are opening up. We’re essentially one of the last to close and the first to open.”

Allowing only medically vulnerable people to refuse job offers penalizes young, healthy people, she said. “There are still a lot of [coronavirus] cases where people are not in those categories.”

The agency responded to Kendrick’s letter with a statement reiterating federal guidelines for coronavirus-related unemployment claims, such as being ill with the virus or caring for a sick family member. In such cases, the agency said, workers can refuse a job offer and stay on unemployment.

Georgia employers and employees should work together to figure out whether a given person can be safely called back to work, Commissioner of Labor Mark Butler said last week on a conference call with reporters. He noted that regulators are allowing workers to earn up to $300 a week without reducing their unemployment benefits.

With so many people struggling to get unemployment benefits, let alone keep them, some workers will end up taking their complaints to court, said Anne Carder, a managing attorney for the Atlanta Legal Aid Society, which offers free civil legal aid to low-income residents of the metro area.

“All of these things that we’re talking about,” Carder said, “we expect that we’ll have to litigate at some point.”

Indiana Attorney General’s Law License Suspended for 30 days

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Indiana Attorney General’s Law License Suspended for 30 days

By Lacey Watt
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—The Indiana Supreme Court suspended the law license of Attorney General Curtis Hill Jr. for 30 days starting May 18 — which means he’ll be reinstated just before the state Republican Party convention where he is competing to run for a second term.

The unanimous 19-page opinion issued Monday concludes that, in spite of his denials, Hill committed a crime when he grabbed and groped four women at a party in March 2018 celebrating the end of the legislative session.

Attorney General Curtis Hill at his October 2019 disciplinary hearing. Photo by Brynna Sentel, TheStatehouseFile.com

“In sum, we find and conclude, as did the hearing officer, that the Commission proved by clear and convincing evidence that Respondent committed the criminal act of battery,” the unsigned opinion says.

Hill, who is completing his first term as attorney general, faced a disciplinary hearing last fall where the four women—three legislative staff members, Samantha Lozano, Gabrielle McLemore and Niki DaSilva, and one lawmaker, state Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon, D-East Chicago—testified that he was drunk when he grabbed them in the crowded downtown Indianapolis bar.

The hearing officer, former Supreme Court Justice Myra Selby, had recommended a 60-day suspension with no automatic reinstatement. But Monday’s order allows for Hill to get his license back automatically after the 30-day suspension is up.

The five justices, in their ruling, said they weighed whether Hill’s criminal acts of battery against the four women during the event at the bar have an impact his fitness as a lawyer under the court’s rules.

The justices answered yes: “(Hill’s) own testimony brings his criminal conduct directly within the ambit of the performance of his professional duties. Respondent went to the party with the purpose of discussing a bill affecting his office with key legislators and nurturing goodwill, he spent time at the party doing precisely these things, and while there he committed battery against a legislator and three legislative staffers.”

Hill has repeatedly denied that he did anything wrong and did not grope the women the way they described. He has so far has resisted calls from Republican Party leaders, including Gov. Eric Holcomb, that he resign.

Later Monday, Hill issued a press release saying, “I accept with humility and respect the Indiana Supreme Court’s ruling of a 30-day suspension of my license with automatic reinstatement.”

In his statement, Hill said that beginning next Monday, Chief Deputy Aaron Negangard will take over the operation of the office until his license is reinstated on June 17. He concluded with a thank you to his friends, family and office staff.

With Hill still refusing to step aside despite the 30-day suspension of his law license by the state’s top court, Holcomb said he is reviewing his legal options.

“As far as does the punishment fit the crime, we’ll see. Obviously this decision bolsters the case of the victims going forward on the route that they’re on,” Holcomb said, referring to the lawsuit the women have filed.

Asked by reporters Monday at his daily coronavirus briefing about his options — and whether they include him appointing a replacement for Hill — Holcomb said this is an “unprecedented time” to have the state’s top law enforcement official suspended for “ethical wrongdoing.”

“I’ll make any and all decisions that I have the authority to do so and this is … something that is in question,” Holcomb said, adding that he will seek a “quick turnaround” on his legal options.

Pressed on how he wasn’t prepared to know those options now, since Selby had recommended months ago that he be suspended, Holcomb bristled and said: “Yeah, because that question was not before the court… The answer is I’m not omnipotent.”

Neither he nor his office interfered in the Supreme Court’s deliberations nor ask any additional questions, Holcomb said. That includes not seeking clarification on what steps a governor can take to remove an attorney general that, for the next month, has no license to practice law.

During the session of the General Assembly that ended in March, the Indiana House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at potentially removing Hill. The measure, Senate Bill 178, was amended in the House to add the provisions targeting Hill and specified that if an attorney general is disbarred or suspended for at least 30 days, he forfeits the office and a vacancy exists.

However, the Senate balked at the change and the bill died in the final hours of the session.

“I said at the time it would be helpful and it would clarify this exact question, but it wasn’t addressed legislatively. I would have signed that bill into law,” Holcomb said.

Now, he said, Hill’s suspension “has led to a number of other questions that I am seeking not just guidance to but answers to… We won’t allow grass to grow underneath as we get those answers and after my discussions with my legal team we’ll be sharing those on a more public basis.”

Democratic leaders in the House and Senate, Rep. Phil GiaQuinta of Fort Wayne and Sen. Tim Lanane of Anderson, as well as state Republican Party Chairman Kyle Hupfer renewed their calls for Hill to resign.

Hill faces two challengers for the Republican Party nomination at the convention on June 20—Decatur County Prosecutor Nate Harter and Indianapolis lawyer John Westercamp. Convention delegates, not primary voters, select their party’s nominee for attorney general.

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

Gov. Beshear: ‘Just Because Summer Is Nearly Here Does Not Mean Virus Is Gone

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Gov. Beshear: ‘Just Because Summer Is Nearly Here Does Not Mean Virus Is Gone’

Governor asks Kentuckians to be resolute or risk erasing hard-fought gains

FRANKFORT, Ky. (May 12, 2020) – Gov. Andy Beshear on Tuesday said Kentuckians need to be resilient, resourceful, and resolute in the fight against the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), even as warmer weather brings new opportunities for gatherings – and virus transmission.

“We’re going to get through this together because we’re strong enough, we’re resilient enough and at the end of the day, we’re going to make good decisions,” the Governor said. “At different times we’re going to be tempted. We’re at the beginning of summer and we all want it to be a normal summer. But we don’t get a normal summer in the midst of a worldwide health pandemic.”

The Governor provided updates on two children being ill, positive cases, testing, and urged Kentuckians and businesses to remain vigilant of Healthy at Work guidance.

Gov. Beshear praised the hard work and sacrifices that make us Team Kentucky but warned that warmer weather and Memorial Day weekend coming up in a couple of weeks will bring new temptations to drop our guards.

“This is going to be something that is burned on our psyches, on our memories,” he said. “It will probably change a little bit how we interact and in our world going forward.”

Even with the easing of some restrictions, however, Dr. Steven Stack, commissioner of the Kentucky Department for Public Health, stressed that workplaces will not be reopening to business as usual. Likewise, he said, no one should expect summer activities to run as usual this year.

“Early reports suggest that warm weather may not help us with this virus,” Dr. Stack said. “We were hoping that we might have some diminishment of the disease in the summer months, like with seasonal influenza, but early signs are we may not be able to count on that.”

Case information
As of 5 p.m. May 12, Gov. Beshear said there were at least 6,853 coronavirus cases in Kentucky, 191 of which were newly confirmed Tuesday.

Unfortunately, Gov. Beshear also reported 10 new deaths Tuesday, raising the total to 321 Kentuckians lost to the virus.

The deaths reported Tuesday to include a 74-year-old woman from Boone County; a 59-year-old man from Fayette County; an 85-year-old woman from Hopkins County; two women, ages 57 and 77, and an 85-year-old man from Jefferson County; and three women, ages 91, 89 and 91, and an 85-year-old man from Kenton County.

“It hurts to lose 321 people to this. So let’s remember that it’s real. Let’s remember that it’s taken people from us. This isn’t made up. It’s a lot worse and a lot more deadly than the flu,” the Governor said. “I believe every Kentuckian has value. I believe every Kentuckian counts. I mourn for these 321 people and I’m going to do everything I can to make sure we don’t unnecessarily lose people going forward.”

At least 2,546 Kentuckians have recovered from the virus. For additional information, including up-to-date lists of positive cases and deaths, as well as breakdowns of coronavirus infections by county, race and ethnicity, click here.

Child illness
Gov. Beshear and Dr. Stack provided an update on the coronavirus in children after one young Kentuckian was apparently suffering from a rare, but not unknown complication related to COVID-19.

The Governor said Monday that a 10-year-old child in Kentucky was on a ventilator after becoming ill with COVID-19. On Tuesday, he said the child was improving.

“Doctors are hopeful that in the days to come the child can be removed from the ventilator,” the Governor said.

In discussing the symptoms that children might experience with the virus, Dr. Stack provided examples of symptoms and said that additional guidance and information is likely coming tomorrow.

“This is a serious disease and it spreads very easily, and while the statistics are good for children, most are going to be perfectly fine, the statistics are not perfect,” Dr. Stack said.

Unfortunately, he said a 16-year-old Kentuckian has been hospitalized with the virus but is not relying on a ventilator to breathe.

Dr. Stack said the new syndrome is being recognized in young people related to the coronavirus that causes their immune systems to become overactive, sparking an inflammatory response in their bodies.

Phase 3 of health care reopening
Wednesday marks the next step in the reopening of the state’s health care sector. The Cabinet for Health and Family Services issued directives governing the opening of hospitals and other health care facilities. Beginning May 13, hospitals and care facilities can begin doing non-emergency surgeries and procedures at 50% of their pre-COVID-19-era patient volume. Facilities will determine their own patient capacities starting May 27, as long as progress continues.

Governor urges continued telework
Gov. Beshear said that while Kentucky businesses are being encouraged to safely restart on a staggered schedule, owners and operators should continue to allow employees to telework when possible. Encouraging telework is the first of the 10 rules of staying healthy at work. Gov. Beshear’s administration is providing industry-specific guidance on reopening.

Several sectors have reopened. Houses of worship reopened May 9. Horse racing, manufacturing, and distribution, office-based businesses, construction, pet grooming and boarding, photography, and vehicle or vessel dealerships have followed. On May 18, government offices and agencies are set to reopen, and retail and funeral services are scheduled to reopen May 20. See the full reopening schedule here.

Child care options
Gov. Beshear said child care options would expand on June 15, but would still not be back to normal until we have a vaccine or a cure. Parents can expect more limited capacity, and guidance will be issued in advance of the reopening.

Pools
The Governor answered a question about the reopening of public and commercial pools. Estimated 25-plus states have not yet announced plans for reopening pools.

“None of our kids want to have to grow up knowing that, maybe going to see a grandparent, after they’ve gone to a pool, maybe is the reason that grandparent isn’t here anymore,” Gov. Beshear said.

More information
Read about other key updates, actions, and information from Gov. Beshear and his administration at governor.ky.gov, kycovid19.ky.gov and the Governor’s official social media account Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Kentuckians can also access translated COVID-19 information and daily summaries of the Governor’s news conference at tinyurl.com/kygovespanol (Spanish) and tinyurl.com/kygovtranslations (more than 20 additional languages).

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Unreleased White House Report Shows Coronavirus Rates Spiking In Heartland Communities

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Trump’s claim that cases are falling everywhere is contradicted by his own task force’s report, obtained by NBC News, showing the virus spreading far from the coasts.
By Jonathan Allen, Phil McCausland and Cyrus Farivar

 

Coronavirus infection rates are spiking to new highs in several metropolitan areas and smaller communities across the country, according to undisclosed data the White House’s pandemic task force is using to track rates of infection, which was obtained by NBC News.

The data contained in a May 7 coronavirus task force report are at odds with President Donald Trump’s Monday declaration that “all throughout the country, the numbers are coming down rapidly.”

The data contained in a May 7 coronavirus task force report (seen here) are at odds with President Donald Trump’s Monday declaration that “all throughout the country, the numbers are coming down rapidly.”

The top 10 areas saw surges of 72.4 percent or greater over a seven-day period compared to the prior week, according to a set of tables produced for the task force by its Data and Analytics unit. They include Nashville, Tennessee; Des Moines, Iowa; Amarillo, Texas; and — atop the list with a 650 percent increase — Central City, Kentucky.

On a separate list of “locations to watch,” which didn’t meet the precise criteria for the first set: Charlotte, North Carolina; Kansas City, Missouri; Omaha and Lincoln, Nebraska; Minneapolis, Minnesota; Montgomery, Alabama; Columbus, Ohio; and Phoenix, Arizona. The rate of new cases in Charlotte and Kansas City represented an increase of more than 200 percent over the prior week, and other tables included in the data show clusters in neighboring counties that don’t form a geographic area on their own, like Wisconsin’s Kenosha and Racine counties, which neighbor each other between Chicago and Milwaukee.

So far, more than 80,000 people in the U.S. have died because of the coronavirus, and the rate of new cases overall has not yet subsided. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that there were 23,792 new cases on May 10 — lower than the number for each of the previous four days but more than on May 4 and May 5.

The spiking infection rates suggest that the pandemic is spreading quickly outside major coastal population centers that were early hot spots, while governors of some of the states that are home to new hot spots are following Trump’s advice to relax stay-at-home restrictions.

Missouri, Kentucky, Alabama, Iowa, Nebraska and Tennessee, for example, have no stay-at-home orders, according to a task force map. In other states where restrictions are being put in place or repealed at the local level, some counties are experiencing surges. Dallas and Fort Bend counties in Texas, where decisions are made locally, are on a “locations to watch” list because they have seen an increase in the number of cases of 116.8 percent and 64.8 percent, respectively.

On Monday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., whose state included the nation’s highest-surging geographic area, said he has “felt no urgency” for Congress to approve another coronavirus response bill.