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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
ADOPT A PET
Hopscotch is a 1-year-old female American rabbit. She and her 5 babies were transferred to VHS from Another Chance for Animals when VHS had more space. Her adoption fee is $50 after her spay! Apply online at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!
EPA Issues Final Rule that Helps Ensure U.S. Energy Security and Limits Misuse of the Clean Water Act
“EPA is returning the Clean Water Act certification process under Section 401 to its original purpose, which is to review potential impacts that discharges from federally permitted projects may have on water resources, not to indefinitely delay or block critically important infrastructure,â€Â said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “Today, we are following through on President Trump’s Executive Order to curb abuses of the Clean Water Act that have held our nation’s energy infrastructure projects hostage, and to put in place clear guidelines that finally give these projects a path forward.â€
EPA finalized this rule pursuant to the direction of Executive Order 13868, “Promoting Energy Infrastructure and Economic Growth.†In this Executive Order, President Trump directed EPA to review Section 401 and EPA’s related regulations and guidance to determine whether the agency’s policies should be updated or clarified. In this final rule, EPA conducted the first comprehensive analysis of the text, structure and legislative history of Section 401. The final rule:
- Specifies statutory and regulatory timelines for review and action on a Section 401 certification—requiring final action to be taken within one year of receiving a certification request.
- Clarifies the scope of Section 401, including clarifying that 401 certification is triggered based on the potential for a project to result in a discharge from a point source into a water of the United States. When states look at issues other than the impact on water quality, they go beyond the scope of the Clean Water Act.
- Explains EPA’s roles under Section 401.
- Reaffirms the agency’s statutory responsibility to provide technical assistance to any party involved in a Section 401 water quality certification process.
- Promotes early engagement and coordination among project proponents, certifying authorities and federal licensing and permitting agencies.
To read the final rule and to learn about the Clean Water Act Section 401 water quality certification process, please visit https://www.epa.gov/cwa-401.
HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP
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2020 Republican Primary Candidates
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 Find a Vote Center near you:
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  If you have any questions, please call the Election Office at 812-435-5122.
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 Join us after the Polls close election night, and watch the returns come in. Doors open at 6:00PM. Lite snacks and refreshments will be available.
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![]() VCRP Monthly Breakfast – Date: June 13, 2020 –CANCELLED
Time: 7:30 AM doors open / 8:00 AM Program
Location: C.K. Newsome Center , Room 118A-B
100 Walnut Street, Evansville, IN 47713
For more information contact Mary Jo Kaiser at 812-425-8207 or email beamerjo59@gmail.com
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 VCRP Central Committee Meeting – Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Time: 11:30 AM
Location: GOP Headquarters
815 John Street, Evansville
Meetings are open to all Vanderburgh County Precinct Committeemen
Contact Mary Jo Kaiser at 812-425-8207Â if you have any questions.
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EVSC Board of School Trustees Meeting-
 For more information visit the Board of School Trustees web page.
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 The Evansville Civic Center is CLOSED to the public until June 15, 2020.
 Visit www.evansvillegov.org for City of Evansville information.
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 City Council Meeting-
For more information visit the
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 County Council Meeting-
 For more information visit
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 County Commission Meeting-
 For more information visit
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Stay in touch with GOP state legislators representing our area (click links below):
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![]() President Donald J. Trump Is Protecting America From China’s Efforts To Steal Technology And Intellectual Property:
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Stay in touch with GOP members of Congress representing our area (click links below):
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 Mark Your calendar        CLICK on event for more information
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 Make sure you add vandygop@gmail.com to your address book so we’ll be sure to land in your inbox!
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If you have any questions, contact Mary Jo Kaiser, VCRP Political Director, at or (812) 425-8207.
Visit www.vanderburghgop.com
for more info. Thank you.HAPPENINGS AT THR VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP
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Gov. Beshear Provides Update On COVID-19
Gov. Beshear Provides Update On COVID-19
FRANKFORT, Ky. (June 1, 2020) – Gov. Andy Beshear on Monday updated Kentuckians on the state’s efforts to fight the novel coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19).
Case information
As of 4 p.m. June 1, Gov. Beshear said there were at least 10,046 COVID-19 cases in Kentucky. The Governor provided updated information about coronavirus newly confirmed Sunday and Monday in Kentucky.
“Kentucky has had 131 new positive cases with zero new deaths on Sunday and 214 new cases with eight new deaths on Monday,†reported Dr. Steven Stack, Commissioner for Public Health. “We continue our efforts to expand testing, ramp up contact tracing and urge the public to practice social distancing and wear cloth face coverings to reduce the spread of COVID-19.â€
The total number of reported deaths attributed to coronavirus stands at 439 Kentuckians.
The deaths reported Monday include an 84-year-old woman from Campbell County; an 82-year-old woman from Gallatin County; a 98-year-old woman from Grayson County; three men, ages 33, 53 and 75, from Jefferson County; a 90-year-old woman from Kenton County; and an 88-year-old man from Logan County.
The Governor reminded Kentuckians to light their homes, places of business and places of worship green for compassion.
At least 3,232 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: for Sunday’s information, click here; for Monday’s information, click here.
Monday morning
Monday, the Governor addressed an event that occurred when the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) and the Kentucky National Guard were dispatched to 26th and Broadway around 12 a.m. Monday. While working to disperse a crowd, LMPD and the Kentucky National Guard were fired upon. LMPD and the Kentucky National Guard returned fire resulting in a death.
“Given the seriousness of the situation, I have authorized the Kentucky State Police to independently investigate the event,†the Governor stated.
Gov. Beshear also joined Breonna Taylor’s mother, Tamika Palmer, along with attorney Lonita Baker to speak about the search for justice in Taylor’s death and the need for calm on the streets of Louisville. To view the news conference, click here.
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 accounts 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).
LETTER TO THE EDITOR: PEACEFUL PROTEST IS OUR RIGHTÂ
PEACEFUL PROTEST IS OUR RIGHTÂ
by Alfonso R. Vidal
Vanderburgh County
The tragic death George Floyd is appalling, seeing the video is painful, peaceful protests are understandable. In this short letter, I will not be able to express all my thoughts regarding this event. However, I do have something more to say about sources of the riots, destruction of property and looting that some are perpetrating.
Many of you do not realize the evil behind these so-called “protesters†that are hijacking a peaceful process of protesting. Many videos have surfaced showing communist/socialist agitators fueling the anger, even some paying others for violence.Â
Many groups are interfering with the peaceful protesters to destabilize the United States Judeo-Christian society with tactics that we have seen in Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Argentina, Spain, and others. I experienced it when I was growing up in Venezuela. The cultural and ideological warfare against the so-called Culture of the West is real. The US is under a cultural attack masked as progressivism and “democratic socialism†just like the old Venezuelan society experienced and lost.
The institutions are falling one by one, the news outlets, the education system, political parties, churches, etc. To say anything against any aspect of the “progressive†agenda is to immediately be labeled anti-something. In this case, if we speak against the violence within the protests, then we are racists or do not agree with justice for Floyd. I might also chant, “I can’t breathe†but I rather “breathe†justice, “breathe†civility, “breathe†a positive change that advances our society into equality that raises the standards for all.Â
Having said this, PEACEFUL protest is our right, but a peaceful protest that can show the world how changes are enacted in the United States of America. Floyd’s tragic and seemingly unwarranted death can be the catalyst for monumental changes. We need leaders that can stand up, denounce the violence, and organize a real lobbying effort that can push and achieve real changes. Otherwise, we are letting the communists/socialists hijack the process and defeat the “movement†before it even starts.
Commentary: Where The Grapes Of Wrath Are Born
Commentary: Where The Grapes Of Wrath Are Born
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – The train of events that led to George Floyd’s death and the spectacle of the great north’s Twin Cities scorched with flame and smoke didn’t begin when he – allegedly – passed a counterfeit $20 bill at a convenience store.


Nor did it begin when at least three police officers pressed him face-down to the ground, one with his knee and full body weight bearing down on Floyd’s neck while the pinioned man gasped that he couldn’t breathe and called for his mother.
Nor did that train even start when Floyd was born African-American 46 years ago in a state that once fought in defense of slavery – or when he grew to be a burly black man in a nation that long has feared such men.
No, the forces that led to the tragedy in Minneapolis took shape before America even was a country, back when one set of human beings decided they had a right to own another set of human beings.
That horror is as much a part of our nation as the Declaration of Independence, the flag, the mountains, and the prairies. The blood spilled by Americans’ tortured struggles to come to terms with race flows like rivers across the land.
Perhaps America’s most abiding myth is that ours is a land of new beginnings, a place where human beings could shrug off the burdens and shackles of the past and begin anew.
It’s a pretty dream.
Our history, though, has confounded that dream from the beginning.
Many noticed, early on, the rank hypocrisy of proclaiming our country, to use Jefferson’s phrase, “an empire of liberty†while denying freedom to so many.
“How is that we hear the loudest yelps about liberty from the drivers of negroes?â€Â Samuel Johnson wrote in 1775, just as we were about to plunge into the Revolutionary War.
Our early history was a series of one near calamity after another as we tried, again and again, and failed, again and again, to grapple with being a nation that sought to liberate but could not stop enslaving.
We fought what remains the bloodiest civil war in human history and hoped all the blood shed when cousins fought cousins and brothers fought brothers would cleanse the land.
It didn’t.
We’re now more than a century and a half past the end of the Civil War. We’re still bedeviled – haunted – by the question of race.
That’s not surprising.
Those who had passed through the war’s trial knew it would not be that easy for America and Americans to come to terms with the wrong we’ve done.
“If God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said ‘the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether,’†Abraham Lincoln said in his second inaugural address, just weeks before he was murdered by a man who could not abide the thought of slaves walking free in the supposed land of the free.
If anything, Lincoln’s assessment that we would need to spend another quarter of a millennium atoning for the evils we committed now seems optimistic.
We live at present in a time when white supremacists and white nationalists have worked their way, plainly and unapologetically, back into the mainstream. When leaders from the nation’s statehouses to the White House embrace them.
Perhaps this is as it should be.
Because there is no way we ever will come to terms with our legacy of wrong if we don’t confront it every bit as plainly and unapologetically as the white supremacists advocate for ongoing oppression.
Until we do, the battle between what we Americans say we want to be – apostles of freedom – and what we have been and too often still are will continue.
And the burden it imposes on our souls will remain as heavy as the weight upon a dying man’s neck and as sad as his cries for his mother while he gasped his last breaths on one of our American streets.
The judgments of the Lord, after all, are true and righteous altogether.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Code Enforcement Officers Will Be Returning To 10-Day Notices For Trash And Debris
Code Enforcement Officers Will Be Returning To 10-Day Notices For Trash And Debris
Effective June 1, Building Commission Code Enforcement Officers will be returning to 10-day notices for trash and debris. Residents will have 10 days to correct any violations.
The Building Commission previously relaxed notices to 45 days during Governor Eric Holcomb’s stay-at-home executive order.
Unique Election Day | Holcomb on Trump Calling Governors ‘Weak’
Unique Election Day | Holcomb on Trump Calling Governors ‘Weak’
The protests against police brutality toward black men and women add more uncertainty to an already fraught election coming amid the coronavirus pandemic.
With protests continuing Monday, Marion County will enforce a curfew this evening that will end at 4 a.m., two hours before the polls open. The clerk’s office says officials aren’t planning any modifications on Election Day.
In a news conference Monday, Gov. Eric Holcomb indicated that police would be ready on Election Day if necessary.
It’s a good bet more than half of you will have cast your ballots by the time the polls open because of the expansion of absentee voting amid coronavirus concerns. Many of you who do venture out Tuesday will find fewer polling places, workers wearing protective gear and lines stretching out longer than they look due to social distancing.
There’s also the potential for protests, though those generally have started and stayed downtown.
There’s cause to worry some of those absentee ballots will arrive too late to be counted. With an increasing number of Marion County voters complaining their ballots arrived late this week or haven’t come at all, Clerk Myla Eldridge sent a letter Thursday to the secretary of state urging the Indiana Election Commission to extend the deadline to receive ballots back by mail.
She says it’s clear thousands of voters will be disenfranchised, but at this point, the deadline remains noon Tuesday. In an evolving public spat, Secretary of State Connie Lawson blamed Marion County for a lack of preparation and said she won’t change deadlines for one county.
While some of those voters who planned to vote absentee might now vote in person, no one is expecting record-shattering turnout because the top-of-the-ticket races are uncontested.
President Donald Trump and Joe Biden wrapped up their nominations months ago. Gov. Holcomb is running unopposed for a second term, and Dr. Woody Myers’ potential Democratic opponents dropped out long ago.
The top races for some Hoosiers will be for Congress — especially in the districts of the retiring Susan Brooks and Pete Visclosky. For others, the most interesting names on the ballot will be for the county office.
Dr. Woody Myers addresses the protests
Myers, the presumptive Democratic nominee for governor, released a statement Saturday to support the peaceful protests.
“Last night, Hoosiers across the state practiced their 1st Amendment rights in protesting the tragic and brutal death of George Floyd,” Myers said. “The numbers don’t lie; the black community has been disproportionately affected by this brutality, both here in Indiana and across the United States. Law enforcement officers took an oath to serve and protect, and their violence against Black Americans is not only wrong but criminal.
“The actions that perpetuated these events have exposed the racial inequities in our society, and require us to confront these injustices honestly and openly. While the initial protests were peaceful, the opportunistic looting that followed does little to further the righteous cause intended by the original protesters and activists. Our nation needs to progress into a more equitable tomorrow. IÂ join the world in its outrage and anger at the recent murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and Dreasjon Reed.
“We cannot accept that injustice remains the status quo in 2020 – the fight to provide better future land upon all of our shoulders to find a path together to justice.”
Trump calls governors ‘weak’Â on a conference call
Holcomb took part in a conference call with President Trump and the nation’s governors today, with Trump reportedly calling them “weak” for their response to protests and riots in cities across the country.
He also told them to arrest those who act violently and destroy property.
“You have to dominate,” Trump said, USA Today reported, citing audio of the meeting obtained by CBS News. “If you don’t dominate, you’re wasting your time. They’re going to run over you.You’re going to look like a bunch of jerks. You have to dominate.”
Asked about the call at a press briefing, Holcomb didn’t address the president’s tone or allegations that governors are weak. He said the president didn’t want governors to “get caught watching the paint dry.”
Christina Hale enters election week with ‘incredible advantage’
Weeks before voters were poised to choose a Democratic nominee in Indiana’s 5th Congressional District, candidate Christina Hale showed signs that she was focusing on the general election, not just the primary.
Hale, a former state lawmaker, aired her first TV ad in the middle of May, criticizing “partisan bickering,†boasting about the passage of bills in the Statehouse with “bipartisan support†and emphasizing her support for lowering health care costs, a vague policy proposal that has appeal on either side of the aisle.
Hale could be difficult to beat in the primary. She already had raised at least 16 times the amount of money that her fellow Democratic opponents had by the middle of May and has the backing of party insiders. Plus, because the coronavirus ruined candidates’ chances to campaign door-to-door and shifted voters’ attention off the election, pricey ad buys — the kind that Hale can afford— became all that much more important.
Also running are scientist Jennifer Christie; Andy Jacobs, the son of former Indiana congressman with the same name; Ralph Spelbring, a former 6th Congressional District candidate; and Dee Thornton, a Carmel corporate consultant.
Republicans try to stand out in crowded Indiana 5th District race
From the onset, Indiana’s 5th Congressional District Republican primary race promised to be unique.
The Republican Party has a deep bench in the district, so after U.S. Rep. Susan Brooks announced her retirement last year, plenty of candidates were ready to jump in.
A total of 15 Republicans filed to run — the largest number in any of the 2020 Indiana Congressional district primaries. With a large field and no clear early front-runner, candidates struggled to break through the noise and raise large sums of money.
It’s anyone’s guess who will win, but IndyStar reporter Kaitlin Lange breaks it down for you.
Open seats in the Indiana General Assembly add intrigue to the primary vote
Several seats in both chambers of the Indiana General Assembly have come open this year because of incumbents retiring or not seeking re-election to pursue other offices, which is adding some intrigue to the primary election Tuesday.
All 100 Indiana House of Representative seats and half of the 50 seats in the Indiana Senate are up for election in November. But voters will select most of the Democratic and Republican nominees in next week’s primaries. They were rescheduled from May 5 to Tuesday because of the coronavirus.
Here is a closer look at three state races to watch.
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Hoosier Politics is compiled and written by the IndyStar politics and government team. Send us tips or let us know what you think of the newsletter by emailing chris.sikich@indystar.com.