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Public Notice of Reconvening Emergency Meeting

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The Vanderburgh County Commissioners will reconvene its emergency meeting on Tuesday, March 31, 2020, at 10:00 a.m. in the Locust Meeting Rooms “BC” of the Old National Events Plaza at 715 Locust Street in Evansville, Indiana to receive information, deliberate, and act on emergency matters concerning public health.

  

The meeting will be held in compliance with the guidelines of the CDC, ISDH, and Governor Holcomb’s Executive Orders regarding the COVID-19 emergency declaration:

  • No members must be physically present for a public meeting for the duration of the COVID-19 emergency 
  • Governing bodies may hold a public meeting by videoconference or by telephone conference if: (1) a quorum of members participate; and (2) any meeting is made available to members of the public and media 
  • Attendance will be limited to the first ten (10) persons, including participants, with a preference given to members of the media.
  • All persons desiring to attend will be subject to health screening for symptoms of COVID-19
  • No public comment will be allowed
  • The meeting can be viewed on the Vanderburgh County Commissioners’ Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/Vanderburgh-County-Commissioners-310890699061752/

Notices and agendas for public meetings may be posted solely by electronic means during the duration of the Governor’s Emergency Declaration.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

Senator Mike Braun’s Praises House Of Reps. For Passing CARES Act, Releases Resource Guide For Small Businesses & Employees 

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Senator Mike Braun’s Praises House Of Reps. For Passing CARES Act, Releases Resource Guide For Small Businesses & Employees 

JASPER, IN – Today, U.S. Senator Mike Braun (R-IN) released the following statement praising the House of Representatives for passing the Senate’s relief package which will provide much-needed relief for Hoosier small businesses and workers.

Senator Mike Braun is also releasing a resource guide to help Hoosier small businesses and employees navigate the state and federal efforts to combat the economic crisis created by the public health battle being waged against the novel coronavirus. The resource guide can be found below.

“I am proud that the House of Representatives quickly passed the CARES Act, which will give our hospitals the tools they need to combat the coronavirus, provide immediate help to those who have lost their jobs, and give small business owners the largest relief package ever to keep their doors open, which I was personally involved with securing.

“Additionally, my office has created a small business and employee resource guide and my office is working around the clock to help Hoosiers who have been affected by the coronavirus.

“I am also pleased to announce that General Motors will be making 10,000 ventilators a month at their facility in Kokomo and I am humbled by the countless number of Hoosiers who have stood up to help our country during this time.”

Senator Mike Braun’s COVID-19 Affected Business & Employee Resource Guide

The resources contained within this document are a culmination of state and federal efforts to combat the economic crisis created by the public health battle being waged against the novel coronavirus.  For help on any issues related to COVID-19 please contact my office using CoronavirusHelp@braun.senate.gov.

Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES Act)/H.R. 748

Small Business Paycheck Protection Program

The CARES Act allows the Small Business Administration to begin making loans of up to $10 million under the Paycheck Protection Program with an overall authorization level of $349B.  This section is effective February 15, 2020.

  • Qualifications: The Paycheck Protection Program will be conducted as part of the SBA 7(a) Loan program, general qualifications can be found here. The PPP also includes 501(c)(3) nonprofits, 501(c)(19) veteran organizations,  tribal businesses described in section 31(b)(2)(C) of the Small Business Act, sole-proprietors, independent contractors, and other self-employed individuals.
  • Loans: Loans can used for payroll support, paid leave, insurance costs, mortgage/rent payments, and utility payments. They do not have borrower, lender, or prepayment fees and are 100% government guaranteed. Repayment may be deferred for up to one year.
  • Forgiveness: All Paycheck Protection Program Loans are eligible for forgiveness in an amount equal to the payroll cost and costs related to debt obligations.

General Business Financing

The CARES Act appropriates $500 Billion to the Department of Treasury’s Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF), including a 13(3) facility to provide targeted support to nonprofits and businesses between 500 and 10,000 employees.

  • Provides $454 billion for unforgivable secured loans through the Federal Reserve 13(3) authority to larger businesses, states, and municipalities.
    • Funds lent to nonprofits and businesses between 500 and 10,000 employees must be used to retain at least 90 percent of the recipient’s workforce, among other requirements.

General Business Tax Provisions

  • Employee retention credit for employers:  A refundable payroll tax credit for 50% of wages paid to employees during the COVID-19 crisis is available to those whose operations were fully or partially suspended due to a COVID-19-related closure order or gross receipts declined by more than 50% compared to the same quarter in the prior year.
  • Delay of payment of employer payroll taxes: Employers and self-employed individuals are allowed to defer payment of the employer share (generally 6.2%) of the Social Security tax they otherwise are responsible for paying with respect to their employees.

The Cares Act modified a number of tax provisions in an effort to allow corporations and small businesses access to liquidity:

  • Qualified Improvement Property (QIP) fix: This fix from the TCJA provides businesses, especially in the hospitality industry, to write off immediately costs associated with improving facilities instead of having to depreciate those improvements over the 39-year life of the building.
  • Net Operating Losses (NOL) Credit:  A net operating loss (NOL) arising in a tax year beginning in 2018, 2019, or 2020 can be carried back five years and the taxable income limitation is temporarily removed to allow an NOL to fully offset income.
  • AMT Credit: Companies are now allowed to recover AMT credits immediately rather than extending until 2021.
  • Limitation on business interest:  Increases to 50% the limitation of taxable income for 2019 and 2020.

Unemployment Insurance Enhancements

  • Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program provides payment to those not traditionally eligible for unemployment benefits (self-employed, independent contractors, those with limited work history, and others) who are unable to work as a direct result of the coronavirus public health emergency.
  • Includes an additional $600 per week payment to each recipient of unemployment insurance or Pandemic Unemployment Assistance for up to four months and an additional 13 weeks of unemployment benefits to those who need it.
  • Provides funding to support “short-time compensation” programs, to pay 100% of costs incurred when employers reduce employee hours instead of laying them off.

Amendments to Employee Mandates

The CARES Act placed caps on paid leave provisions within the FFRCA (described below).

  • An employer is not required to pay more than $200 per day and $10,000 in the aggregate for each employee on paid FMLA and is not required to pay more than $511 per day and $5,110 in the aggregate for sick leave or more than $200 per day and $2,000 in the aggregate to care for a quarantined individual or child.

Families First Coronavirus Response Act (Public Law No: 116-127)

Paid Leave

American businesses with fewer than 500 employees have access to funds to provide employees with paid leave, either for the employee’s own health needs or to care for family members.

  • Employees of eligible employers can receive two weeks (up to 80 hours) of paid sick leave at 100% of the employee’s pay where the employee is unable to work because the employee is quarantined, and/or experiencing COVID-19 symptoms, and seeking a medical diagnosis.
  • An employee who is unable to work due to a need to care for an individual subject to quarantine, to care for a child whose school is closed or child care provider is unavailable for reasons related to COVID-19, can receive two weeks (up to 80 hours) of paid sick leave at 2/3 the employee’s pay, and, may in some instances receive up to an additional ten weeks of expanded paid family and medical leave at 2/3 the employee’s pay.

Link: Fact Sheet for Employees

Employer Assistance

  • Employer Reimbursement: Eligible employers will receive a dollar-for-dollar credit for the paid sick leave and family leave that they provide under this program. Self-employed individuals receive an equivalent credit.
  • Prompt Payment for the Cost of Providing Leave: The Treasury will use its regulatory authority to allow businesses to utilize employment tax withholdings that have already been deposited to pay sick leave wages. In the event that such withholdings are insufficient, the Treasury will implement a system to accelerate payment of credits to cover such costs.
  • Eligible employers who pay qualifying sick or child care leave will be able to retain an amount of the payroll taxes equal to the amount of qualifying sick and child care leave that they paid, rather than deposit them with the IRS.
  • The payroll taxes that are available for retention include withheld federal income taxes, the employee share of Social Security and Medicare taxes, and the employer share of Social Security and Medicare taxes with respect to all employees.
  • If there are not sufficient payroll taxes to cover the cost of qualified sick and child care leave paid, employers will be able file a request for an accelerated payment from the IRS.  The IRS expects to process these requests in two weeks or less. The details of this new, expedited procedure will be announced soon and our office is monitoring for updates.

Small Business Protection: Businesses with less than 50 employees are eligible for an exemption through the Dept. of Labor from the sick leave and family leave provisions where those requirements may create serious financial hardship

Links: Fact Sheet for Employers, Department of Labor Questions and Answers

Non-Enforcement Period

  • Department of Labor will be issuing a temporary non-enforcement policy that provides a period of time for employers to come into compliance.

Small Business Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) 

The Small Business Administration is offering low-interest federal disaster loans for working capital to Indiana small businesses suffering substantial economic injury as a result of the Coronavirus (COVID-19). Maximum amounts lent to businesses of any size under the disaster loan program are $2M, carry an interest rate of 3.75% for small businesses with terms up to 30 years.

The CARES Act expands eligibility to the EIDL program to tribal businesses, cooperatives, and ESOPs with fewer than 500 employees or any individual operating as a sole proprietor or an independent contractor.

This document was prepared as an informational resource and should not be considered legal or business counsel.  Please do not hesitate to reach out to CoronavirusHelp@braun.senate.gov for questions, concerns, or additional assistance.

Click here to download Senator Braun’s COVID-19 Affected Business & Employee Resource Guide

In a 10-Day Span, ICE Flew This Detainee Across the Country — Nine Times

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In a 10-Day Span, ICE Flew This Detainee Across the Country — Nine Times

Even as the Trump administration discouraged the public from flying, Sirous Asgari was shuttled from Louisiana to Texas, New Jersey and back on chartered flights full of migrants. He still hasn’t been deported

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Less than two weeks ago, the Trump administration urged Americans to avoid nonessential travel to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Major airlines slashed their routes. All the while, Sirous Asgari took nine different flights around the country.

None of them was by choice.

Asgari bounced around on chartered jets from Louisiana to Texas to New Jersey — a circuitous journey arranged by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which has custody of the 59-year-old Iranian man. The federal agency continues to shuffle detainees around the nation, exposing them and others to possible infection.

As panic grows inside ICE facilities over the potential spread of the virus, some immigration attorneys said they were promised by local ICE officials last week that detainee transfers would halt temporarily. But the government has continued the practice anyway, data and interviews show.

In fact, two air charter companies known to be used by ICE continue to fly between airports known for detainee transfers, a ProPublica analysis of flight records shows. The charter companies, Swift Air and World Atlantic Airlines, have operated at least 16 flights between those locations since March 16 — the date when U.S. officials implored travelers to avoid discretionary travel and not gather in groups larger than 10 people. Asgari boarded at least one commonly used Swift Air passenger jet, a Boeing 737.

ProPublica’s findings raise new concerns as health experts urge minimizing travel. Once a coronavirus infection takes hold in a detention center — often a cramped facility with limited health care — experts and detainees alike worry that its spread becomes inevitable. (ICE has announced two confirmed cases of COVID-19 among those in its custody, both in facilities in New Jersey, and three cases among ICE detention staff, in New Jersey, Colorado and Texas. Late on Thursday, a federal judge ordered the release of 10 ICE detainees held in New Jersey jails where COVID-19 cases had been confirmed.)

The risk goes beyond the 38,000-plus ICE detainees. It extends to detention center guards, people at local jails used for ICE detention and pretrial detainees who haven’t been convicted of a crime.

“It’s quite dangerous” to fly detainees around while much of the country is locked down, said Dr. Robert Greifinger, a New York physician who used to inspect ICE facilities as a Department of Homeland Security contractor. “In many states, particularly the states along the coasts, there are stay-at-home rules, and for ICE to be moving people to those areas or from those areas is dangerous not just for the detainees but for the staff and the communities into which the detainees are brought.”

ICE did not respond to questions from ProPublica for this story. On its website, ICE said it follows guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on screening and testing for the coronavirus.

Federal immigration officials have long transported detainees across America by air and bus depending on the demand for beds and to respond to medical needs and security concerns. “For the most part, ICE’s tempo has been to move detainees in a way that thinks of them more as widgets, or as supply chain issues, than human beings,” said a former senior ICE official, who asked for anonymity to speak candidly.

In Asgari’s case, the recent disruption in international air travel appears to have contributed to his numerous flights and delayed his deportation.

Asgari — who has a history of lung infections and pneumonia — has been held at four detention facilities in three states (Ohio, Louisiana, and Texas). He’s also been placed on at least nine ICE flights across the country just since March 17. ProPublica used flight records to confirm Asgari’s account of his cross-country travels via Swift Air.

ProPublica discovered additional detainee trips, like Asgari’s, by analyzing flight patterns from aircraft-tracking services like FlightAware and ADS-B Exchange. Mapping software showed no significant slowdown in recent journeys between the Alexandria Staging Facility in Louisiana and similar detention facilities near Miami and Newark, New Jersey, as well as Laredo and Brownsville in Texas.

Some ICE transfers came before the epidemic erupted, but their timing offered opportunities for infection. (In one case on March 1, a detainee was sent from El Paso, Texas, to Tacoma, Washington, via the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, as the state saw its first coronavirus deaths.) The flights have continued even as many of the areas where detainees are held have gone into lockdown.

“This back-and-forth, massive movement of detainees under this coronavirus is absolutely dangerous,” Asgari said in a phone interview this week from Louisiana, where he is held pending deportation. “They are endangering the lives of all these people, including myself, and nobody cares. Why?”

Asgari, a materials science, and engineering professor were arrested by ICE agents in November after his acquittal on federal charges of divulging trade secrets. He, his family and his lawyers have pleaded with ICE to release him as the virus spreads because of his age and health history.

ProPublica discovered additional detainee trips, like Asgari’s, by analyzing flight patterns from aircraft-tracking services like FlightAware and ADS-B Exchange. Mapping software showed no significant slowdown in recent journeys between the Alexandria Staging Facility in Louisiana and similar detention facilities near Miami and Newark, New Jersey, as well as Laredo and Brownsville in Texas.

Some ICE transfers came before the epidemic erupted, but their timing offered opportunities for infection. (In one case on March 1, a detainee was sent from El Paso, Texas, to Tacoma, Washington, via the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, as the state saw its first coronavirus deaths.) The flights have continued even as many of the areas where detainees are held have gone into lockdown.

“This back-and-forth, massive movement of detainees under this coronavirus is absolutely dangerous,” Asgari said in a phone interview this week from Louisiana, where he is held pending deportation. “They are endangering the lives of all these people, including myself, and nobody cares. Why?”

Asgari, a materials science and engineering professor, was arrested by ICE agents in November after his acquittal on federal charges of divulging trade secrets. He, his family and his lawyers have pleaded with ICE to release him as the virus spreads because of his age and health history.

ICE officials have said they will scale back arrests in response to the coronavirus, but they told ProPublica on Monday that they have not yet reevaluated policies regarding those currently in detention.

Transfer decisions are often made by regional ICE field offices, the former senior ICE official said, sometimes without the knowledge of headquarters.

According to lawyers, ICE officials in at least two field offices said last week that they would pause detainee transfers but didn’t follow through.

“A week ago, [the El Paso ICE field office] told us they wouldn’t be transferring anybody else,” said Heidi Cerneka of Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center. “And then the very next day, we had a client enter in contact with us in a panic because they told her she was going to be transferred.”

Last Friday, Las America’s attorneys say, a different Las Americas client was transferred without notice from El Paso to a nearby detention center in Otero, New Mexico. On Monday, a 60-year-old client told Las Americas she was placed on a full plane of detainees to be transferred to Louisiana, then removed by ICE officers and returned to El Paso without explanation.

In northern Florida on March 18, an ICE official told Mary Yanik, a lawyer with the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice, that a detainee’s scheduled March 19 transfer had been postponed because they were canceling “all movement of anybody for at least another week,” according to lawyer’s notes shared with ProPublica. On March 25, the detainee was transferred and Yanik was not notified.

Neither the El Paso nor Miami ICE field offices replied to a request for comment.

Detainees are supposed to be medically evaluated at each new facility, but the detention centers often do not have interpreters or medical records are not passed along.

At the Krome Processing Center, a Miami-area facility where detainees are often sent shortly before deportation, lawyer Bud Conlin said recently transferred detainees reported only temperature checks. Accounts suggest that when detainees are quarantined for coronavirus symptoms, it’s often after they’ve been in transit with others.

In a sworn statement filed this week as part of a federal lawsuit, attorney Keren Zwick of the National Immigrant Justice Center recounted one California detainee’s report.

After sleeping eight to a cell in an Otay Mesa detention center, the detainee was bused nearly three hours to Adelanto with 30 other men, two of whom were “coughing and visibly sick.” The sick detainees were separated only after arriving at Adelanto. (On Monday, the detainee was brought back to the Otay Mesa facility. He told his lawyer he received no medical checks after either transfer.)

For three months, Asgari was held at a facility in Youngstown, Ohio, and transferred in mid-February to the crowded Seneca County Jail, also in Ohio. Dozens of people shared one shower and four bathroom stalls, he said. The Seneca County Sheriff’s Office did not respond to a voicemail requesting comment.

While at Seneca, Asgari fell ill but recovered after treatment with antibiotics, he said.

Around March 10, Asgari was transferred from Seneca County to the Alexandria facility, a 400-bed ICE site in central Louisiana used as a deportation hub. Asgari believed that his deportation was imminent.

Dozens of people move in and out each day in the bare-bones facility with no outdoor space, Asgari said. “This facility, if the virus gets in, it would be a disaster,” he said. On Thursday, a sign saying the area was under medical observation was put on the door of Asgari’s pod, and a nurse took the temperatures of everyone in that pod. Detainees grew scared and frustrated, and the nurse did not explain.

A spokesman for GEO Group, which runs Alexandria, did not answer specific questions, but the company has said in a statement that its facilities have access to hand-washing facilities and soap, and include coronavirus screening during intake.

ICE facilities have a long history of mishandling infectious diseases that can rapidly spread outside their walls, endangering both detainees and the communities in which they are located. In audio obtained by ProPublica, an immigrant detained by ICE in New Jersey complained that he and other detainees are on a hunger strike to try to obtain soap and toilet paper in the midst of the pandemic.

Asgari said he was flown on March 17 from Louisiana to the Boston area, where some immigrants disembarked and others came on board. They then flew to New Jersey, where Asgari said he was supposed to disembark for an eventual flight from New York to Iran.

Instead, the plane was held for hours in New Jersey, and he could not exit. Asgari said he was told by an ICE officer that his flight to Iran had been canceled. From New Jersey, Asgari and the other immigrants flew to Texas, and from Texas to Louisiana.

iAero Airways, which acquired Swift Air in 2018, did not respond to requests for comment. World Atlantic Airlines, another ICE flight operator, also did not respond. Neither company has contracts that show up in federal spending databases, which would disclose how much the operations cost taxpayers.

Several days later, Asgari traveled from Louisiana to Pennsylvania, where he said dozens of immigrants boarded the plane, and on to Brownsville. While most other passengers were deported to Mexico, he and a handful of others were transferred to ICE’s Port Isabel Detention Center, where they slept on a concrete floor.

The next morning, March 24, he flew from Brownsville to Toledo, Ohio, where he was supposed to disembark. At the last minute, he said ICE officials kept him on the plane, which then went on to Richmond, Virginia, and finally back to Louisiana. At each stop, he said the plane picked up more immigrants and was full when it finally landed late on Tuesday in Louisiana.

The ICE deportation officer assigned to Asgari’s case did not respond to a voicemail requesting comment. The officer, Scott Wichrowski, told Asgari’s attorney, Edward Bryan, on Thursday that his deportation is scheduled to occur “no later than early April,” according to an email seen by ProPublica.

But Bryan said Asgari’s experience demonstrates that ICE can’t guarantee his deportation date and that he should be released on bond in the meantime.

Asgari said he would be happy to arrange his own travel back to Iran if ICE would release him.

FOOTNOTE: David McSwane and Perla Trevizo contributed reporting.

 

The Indiana Primary Election Has Officially Been Delayed To June 2

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By Erica Irish
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—The Indiana primary election has officially been delayed to June 2 while rules to vote by absentee ballot have been eased in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic that continues to take a toll on every aspect of Hoosier life.

The four members of the Indiana Election Commission held a 20-minute public meeting over the video conferencing platform Zoom Wednesday morning to cast an official vote adopting an order authorizing the measures as the coronavirus outbreak spreads across the state.

Paul Okeson, the co-chair of the Indiana Election Commission, leads the online meeting Wednesday. Photo by Janet Williams, TheStatehouseFile.com

As the commission was meeting, the Indiana State Department of Health was updating its website with the newest information about the virus, also known as COVID-19. Wednesday’s numbers—477 cases of the virus confirmed in Indiana and 14 deaths.

Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb first asked the commission to move the primary from May 5 to June 2 last week in a press conference with Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson.

More than 100 people listened to the commission’s virtual meeting Wednesday, the same day on which a statewide stay-at-home order took effect. While public comments were taken on the order in advance of the meeting from several groups, participants did not have the option to speak during the Zoom conference.

“This is obviously unprecedented territory,” said Paul Okeson, chair of the election commission, as the meeting began.

The commission members praised the bipartisan effort behind the order to postpone the primary and widen absentee voting opportunities.

In addition to delaying the primary election, the order asks the bi-partisan Indiana Election Division to develop an online portal on Indiana’s existing voter registration website where voters can submit absentee ballot applications. The order also authorizes family members and caregivers to deliver ballots to county election boards on behalf of people unable to leave their homes.

“This is a comprehensive order,” said election commission member Zachary Klutz. “It’s as comprehensive as possible, I think, to ensure the most voter turnout while protecting the health of the voters generally.”

Indiana Democratic Party Chairman John Zody called the decision a “historic expansion of Hoosiers’ voting rights” in a statement released shortly after the commission meeting.

“I’m grateful for the action taken to remove barriers to the ballot box and protect Hoosiers’ safety,” Zody said. “Hoosiers shouldn’t have to choose between putting their health at risk and exercising their constitutional right to vote.”

The order was also supported by several nonpartisan groups, including the Indiana Citizen, a nonprofit working to increase voter turnout in the state.

“The Indiana Citizen believes this online option would spare voters the need to print out an absentee ballot application and then to mail it to their county election office,” said Bill Moreau, co-founder, and president of the Indiana Citizen Education Foundation. “Our group stands prepared to help in streamlining this process in any way possible.”

The election commission will hold another meeting on April 22 to determine if they should consider another postponement to the primary as the outbreak develops. Comments from the public are welcome and should be submitted in writing by April 10 to elections@iec.in.gov.

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

AG Curtis Hill Warns Hoosiers To Beware OF Fake Coronavirus (COVID-19) Tests

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Attorney General Curtis Hill is warning Hoosiers of scammers taking advantage of the scarcity of COVID-19 tests by falsely claiming to be able to provide testing.

“Consumers are at risk not only of losing money from these scams,” Attorney General Hill said, “but of getting dangerously false information about their infection status. We’re working to protect Indiana residents and ensure better outcomes.”

There are currently no tests that can be self-administered at home to find out whether someone has COVID-19.

The only tests currently available in Indiana require a doctor’s order and specimen collection done by a medical professional. At this time, there is no FDA-approved blood test to determine whether someone has COVID-19.

Because conditions are constantly changing regarding the availability of testing and decisions about who qualifies, Hoosiers should keep up with the latest information by consulting credible sources.

The Indiana State Department of Health’s COVID-19 Call Center can be reached 24/7 at 877-826-0011, and the agency regularly updates the coronavirus.in.gov website.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention maintains online information about testing, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration also provides in-depth information related to these topics.

As always, if you encounter suspected scams, you may report them online to the Consumer Protection Division of the Office of the Indiana Attorney General. If you need additional information regarding the Office’s Consumer Protection Division, please call 1-800-382-5516.

University Of Evansville To Offer Prorated Room And Board Refunds

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University of Evansville President Christopher M. Pietruszkiewicz announced today that students who have vacated University housing will be refunded the charges for room and board for the remainder of the spring semester on a pro-rated basis. Pietruszkiewicz said the decision is a response to the evolving situation related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the transition to classes being delivered through online instruction.

“Over the course of the last few weeks, we have made several important decisions – and always with the best interests of our students,” Pietruszkiewicz said. The decision was collaborative and supportive and included input from University administration, trustees, and the Board of Directors.

Students at the University of Evansville shape powerful and enduring change. UE is the first in Indiana to be designated as an Ashoka U Changemaker Campus, and its changemaking culture empowers students to improve the world around them as UE Changemakers. With over 80 majors in the arts and sciences and pre-professional programs, UE’s diverse student body represents 44 states and 52 countries. U.S. News & World Report recognizes UE as the #6 Best College in the Midwest among private schools. For more information, please visit www.evansville.edu

View Online: http://evansville.meritpages.com/news/University-of-Evansville-to-offer-prorated-room-and-board-refunds/14945

EPA Continues Efforts To Help Increase The Availability Of Disinfectant Products For Use Against The Novel Coronavirus

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) took steps to provide additional flexibilities to manufacturers of disinfectants and other pesticides. EPA intends for these flexibilities to increase the availability of products for Americans to use against the novel coronavirus. After meeting with stakeholders last week and discussing supply chain challenges posed by the pandemic, EPA is allowing manufacturers to obtain certain inert ingredients—or inactive ingredients like sodium chloride or glucose—from different suppliers without checking with the agency for approval.

“EPA is committed to doing our part to help ensure American families, communities, business and hospitals have access to as many effective surface disinfectant products as possible,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “There is no higher priority for the Trump Administration than protecting the health and safety of Americans, and the steps we are taking today are helping put more products on the shelves without sacrificing important public health and environmental protections.”

Commodity inert ingredients are individual inert ingredients—there are approximately 280 total—that can be obtained from different producers with no significant differences in the ingredient. Applicants for pesticide registration or registration amendments can obtain commodity inert ingredients from various commercial sources without having to provide EPA with the supplier name and address. Only those inert ingredients designated as commodity inert ingredients would be eligible for this reduced Confidential Statement of Formula (CSF) reporting.

The agency is also continuing to expedite the review of submissions from companies requesting to add emerging viral pathogen claims to their already registered surface disinfectant labels. In many cases, the agency continues to be able to approve claims within 14 days, as resources allow, compared to the 90-day window these claims typically take. Today, EPA added 70 new surface disinfectants to EPA’s List N: Disinfectants for Use Against SARS-CoV-2 (List N), bringing the total number of products on the list to more than 350.

It is important to note that List N only includes surface disinfectants registered by EPA. Other disinfection products like hand sanitizers and body wipes are regulated the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Using an EPA-registered product in ways other than what is specified in the label is against the law and unsafe.

For more information about EPA’s List of commodity inert ingredients, visit: https://www.epa.gov/pesticide-registration/commodity-inert-ingredients

For information and guidance on alcohol-based hand sanitizer products, please see FDA’s website: https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/coronavirus-covid-19-update-fda-provides-guidance-production-alcohol-based-hand-sanitizer-help-boost

For EPA’s coronavirus website, visit: https://www.epa.gov/coronavirus

 

A SWIFT CURE

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A SWIFT CURE

Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

In 1729 Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) published his two-fold solution to the problems of Irish poverty and a shortage of meat among wealthy British. Swift proposed poor Irish parents could eliminate their cost of feeding their children by selling them to wealthy British for food. The title to Swift’s essay illustrates why he published it anonymously:

A Modest Proposal For preventing the children of Poor People From being a Burthen 

to Their Parents or Country, and For making them Beneficial to the Publick.

Swift’s satirical cure for the pandemic of his time, the great disparity between the few rich and the many poor, is probably not a reasonable recipe for how America might encourage its youth to self-quarantine until COVID-19 is brought under control. However, other less dire approaches may be worth considering. 

Jonathan Swift pointed out he could not profit from his idea as he had no young children to sell and his wife was past child-bearing age. In like manner Peg and I are hardly affected by any of the following suggested measures. We are in our seventies, we receive Social Security checks and we live in the middle of nowhere by ourselves. Our nearest beach is the mud around our pond and we have to share it with the cattle. Isolation for us is simply a fact of life. Be that as it may, I submit the efficacy of these ideas should be evaluated on their own merit.

The general topic of discussion in America and the world today is how do we encourage people, especially our youth, to self-quarantine? I say especially the young because Spring Break type activities usually do not involve folks such as Peg and me. And that leads us into my proposed solutions. Perhaps we should look to our own youthful memories to help us understand how we can encourage young people to do the right thing for all of us. And such altruistic behaviors by the young should be encouraged, not demanded. After all, we are Americans. None of us reacts well to someone else ordering us around. A spoonful of sugar is more likely than a threat to get any of us to do what’s best for all of us, at least for a short while.

So, let’s consider how anyone who is young can be encouraged to forego beach parties and similar group exercises. I remember one sure way to get me as a young person to not do something was to have an older person tell me it was for my own good. Maybe first we could have all parents encourage their children to congregate on the beaches so they could get more Vitamin D to help them fight off the virus.

Another sure turnoff was for an old person to tell me how he or she used to do something and how well they did it. We could station kiosks with six foot perimeters on the beaches where old people would loudly and continually regale anyone within earshot of the old person’s one-time youthful exploits.

Of course, the surest way to have younger people not engage in a certain behavior is to have older people offer to engage in such behaviors with the young themselves. So we could have old men and women threaten to flood the beaches, while maintaining six foot intervals, and attempt to cavort with the young as much as arthritis will allow. To complete the program of negative reinforcement we could have the old people wear thongs and fake gold chains and drink prune juice instead of alcohol. You know, something similar to a 1960’s Love-In but without the love or the pot. That should assure young people will voluntarily abandon the beaches and the crowds for the thirty to sixty days we need to flatten the COVID-19 curve.

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