Home Blog Page 2889

Guatemala Project Advances to Final Round

0

A University of Evansville student-produced documentary, The Guatemala Project: A Habitat for Humanity Mission, was selected for Manchester Lift-Off Film Festival, an international online film festival. After an initial round of audience voting, the film advanced to the final round at #4.

The documentary was made by Brea Mullen and Amanda Ackerman, junior multimedia communication majors at the University of Evansville. The film was previously awarded a Student Emmy by the Ohio Valley Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

“This project has been such a blessing from the very beginning,” said Mullen. “From its planning phases to now, it has been such a wonderful journey of growth both personally and in terms of beginning a career in filmmaking.”

Each year, students travel the globe with UE’s Habitat for Humanity chapter. In May 2018, Mullen and Ackerman traveled to Guatemala with the group to document the experience and came out with a moving testimonial of life-changing aid that UE Changemakers are providing all over the world.

“This was a life-changing trip for me because I got to experience a new culture and people I had never met before,” Ackerman said. “I stand firmly behind Habitat for Humanity’s mission of changing the world in a positive way, which is something I would like to continue to be a part of for trips to come.”

“In times like these when everyone is so isolated, we can lean on film as a universal connector,” Mullen added. “Habitat for Humanity’s mission is all about creating positive change and helping it expand and flourish throughout the world. This project is infused with hope, gratitude, and growth, and our hope is that everyone who has been so generous enough to watch the film is filled with these positive emotions when the end credits roll.”

The Guatemala Project has advanced to a final round of judging along with nine other films. Network members and Lift-Off’s Official Judges will score the films based on multiple aspects. The film with the highest overall score wins and will be selected to form part of one of the live screenings at an upcoming Lift-Off Film Festival.

The Guatemala Project: A Habitat for Humanity Mission can be viewed on YouTube.

Nursing Home Residents Account For 15% Of Indiana’s COVID-19 Deaths

0

Nursing Home Residents Account For 15% Of Indiana’s COVID-19 Death

 

Nursing home residents now account for 15% of all deaths in Indiana from the COVID-19 pandemic, and state officials on Wednesday ordered long-term care facilities to report any deaths or positive cases within 24 hours to try to protect the elderly and confined Hoosiers.

The Carmel mayor is also taking action to ensure nursing home residents in his city are tested.

Dr. Kristina Box, the state health commissioner, said 31 deaths have occurred in 12 long-term care facilities, representing a significant share of Indiana’s 203 deaths so far.

The new order requires any residential facility, jail, prison “or any other congregant setting” to report to local and state health departments if they have residents or employees with a known or suspected case of COVID-19,  if an individual dies of the disease, or if any employee tests positive.

In addition, the state is ordering laboratories to report all negative COVID-19 test results for Indiana residents to the state within 24 hours of completing the tests. Currently, only positive results must be reported.

Outbreaks at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities are serious because they can quickly spread through a confined space, often with elderly people who are at high risk of contracting the disease.

“This disease creates the potential for a perfect storm in a long-term care facility,” said Dr. Daniel Rusyniak, chief medical officer of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration, which oversees funding of nursing homes. “Large groups of vulnerable people living together, and a highly transmissible virus that may not cause symptoms, and those who care for them.”

Indiana has 735 nursing homes and standalone residential facilities that house about 65,000 people. As of Wednesday, the state’s “strike teams” of health workers have tested nearly 600 people at 200 facilities.

The strike teams, originally set up in 2017 to help slow a hepatitis outbreak, were adapted last month to deal with the coronavirus pandemic, Rusyniak said.

The state has 12 strike teams, each consisting of a coordinator, nurse surveyor, infection-control expert, and an epidemiologist. Their job is to respond to the pandemic in waves, he said.

The first wave is to go into a facility that has reported a COVID-19 problem and test all residents and staff thought to be ill. They also drop off masks, gowns and other personal protective equipment and assess the facility’s COVID-19 readiness plan, he said.

The second wave begins if positive cases are confirmed at a facility. In that case, the nurse surveyor assesses the facility’s plan and a specialist reviews the infection-control practices.

The third wave begins if additional cases are identified in a new area of the facility.

“In those facilities where there are multiple deaths, we will often go back numerous times to assist them in mitigating the spread,” he said.

On Friday, Carmel Mayor Jim Brainard announced the city would begin coordinating COVID-19 testing at local assisted living facilities and nursing homes through Aria Diagnostics, a local lab.

On Monday, Brainard sent an email to his police chief, asking an officer to deliver a note to one nursing home that was being “obstinate.”

The note said, in part: “I do not have the authority to order you to do testing. I do believe, however, that failure to test your staff on a weekly basis now that the tests are readily available constitutes extreme negligence as well as putting you personally at risk for reckless homicide if someone dies as a result of you not testing your staff.”

He pointed out that reckless homicide carries a prison term.

A city spokesman said that nursing home in question changed its mind on Tuesday and agreed to conduct testing.

 

Indianapolis ‘Restart’ Schools Try To Build Trust And Hire Teachers — From A Distance

0
Indianapolis ‘Restart’ Schools Try To Build Trust And Hire Teachers — From A Distance

 

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” APRIL 9, 2020

0

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” APRIL 9, 2020

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

USI Softball ends season ranked No. 19

0

University of Southern Indiana Softball finished the COVID-19 shortened 2020 season ranked No. 19 in the final National Fastpitch Coaches’ Association Top 25 poll, which was released Wednesday morning.

The Screaming Eagles finished the year with a 15-4 overall record. USI was set to open Great Lakes Valley Conference play against the University of Indianapolis when it learned that the NCAA and GLVC Championships were being canceled in an effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. The season was completely canceled shortly after those announcements.

USI ended the year by winning 11 of its final 12 games, including its final five contests. Of the Eagles’ four losses, two were by one run, another was an 11-inning loss, and the other was to the University of North Georgia, which finished the year ranked No. 3.

In the Eagles’ final game, senior pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt racked up 15 strikeouts in a 3-2 win over Winona State University at The Spring Games. Leonhardt went 7-3 in the circle this year with a 1.63 ERA, 76 strikeouts and a .174 ERA. She also led USI with a .386 batting average, five doubles, a triple, two home runs and 16 RBIs.

While it remains uncertain whether Leonhardt or any of USI’s three seniors return in 2021, the Eagles’ senior class, which also includes shortstop Taylor Ricketts and outfielder Allison Schubert, has left its mark on the USI Softball Program in the last four years.

The Eagles seniors accounted for a 137-62 overall record, 53-27 in GLVC play; and were major catalysts in USI’s regional championship runs in 2017 and 2018 as well as the Eagles’ 2018 national championship.

Leonhardt ends the 2020 season ranked first all-time in career wins (83), strikeouts (787) and complete-game shutouts (35). She also ranks second all-time at USI in innings pitched (730.2), fourth in complete games (85) and sixth in career ERA (1.76).

The three-time All-American is tied for 11th all-time at USI in both hit-by-pitches (10) and triples (6); and is 18th in RBI (87).

Schubert, an All-Midwest Region honoree as a sophomore in 2018, ended the year in a tie for ninth all-time at USI in career home runs (18) and 16th in career RBI (91); while Ricketts has started all of USI’s 138 games at shortstop throughout the last three seasons.

USI’s underclassmen also played a huge role in the Eagles’ early successes this season, with five rookies posting batting averages of .300 or better. Pitcher/infielder Allie Goodin and infielder Rachel Martinez led the Eagles’ freshmen. Goodin hit .358 with five doubles, a home run and 10 RBI, while going 4-0 in the circle with a 2.47 ERA and 26 strikeouts. Martinez hit .356 with four doubles, two triples, a home run and 10 RBI.

The Eagles also saw marked improvement from sophomore pitcher Katie Back and Elissa Brown. Back was 3-1 with a 2.84 ERA and .234 opponent batting average, while Brown was 1-0 with a 1.50 ERA.

USI’s No. 19 ranking marks the fourth straight season the Eagles have ended the year ranked inside the NFCA Top 25. USI was No. 25 a year ago, No. 7 in 2017 and No. 1 in 2018.

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

0
‌
ELIGIBILITY ASSISTANT WORKING LEAD- Region 7
Knowledge Services 3.1/5 rating   136 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Knowledge Services has an opportunity for individuals drawn to the social service industry with the FSSA/Division of Family Resources as an Eligibility…
Sponsored
Administrative Assistant
Thomas Companies of Evansville – Evansville, IN
Please send salary requirements along with your job application. We are searching for an enthusiastic Administrative Assistant to join our team!
Apr 7

IUSD Claims 31 CSCAA All-America Selections

0

The Indiana Hoosiers swimming and diving teams has 31 athletes selected to the College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) 2019-20 All-America teams, the publication announced on Wednesday.

Due to the cancelation of the 2020 NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships, the CSCAA Board adjusted the selection criteria for each Division. The result was an unprecedented number of selections in what is largely acknowledged as unprecedented circumstances.

For a Division I competitor to be selected, he/she had to hit the following criteria: all relays achieving “A” standards, individuals selected to the NCAA Championships, and divers entered in uncontested events from the Zone C Diving Qualification meet are named All-American. Additionally, the school represented by the athlete must be a current CSCAA member.

After claiming a third-place finish in both the 2020 Men’s and Women’s Big Ten Swimming and Diving Championships, the Hoosiers were primed to send 11 men’s swimmers and 10 women’s swimmers to the NCAA Championships prior to the cancelation of the event.

The men’s and women’s diving team sent seven divers to the NCAA Zone C Championships before the abrupt end to the season.

 

2019-20 Men’s CSCAA All-Americans

Zane Backes

Bruno Blaskovic

Brendan Burns

Mikey Calvillo

Gabriel Fantoni

Jack Franzman

Will Gallant

Mory Gould

Brandon Hamblin

Spencer Lehman

Van Mathias

Mohamed Samy

Seamus Scotty

Jacob Steele

Cole VanDevender

2019-20 Women’s CSCAA All-Americans

Taylor Carter

Cora Dupre

Laurel Eiber

Carla Gildersleeve

Grace Haskett

Maria Paula Heitmann

Cassy Jernberg

Abby Kirkpatrick

Mackenzie Looze

Kayla Luarde

Noelle Peplowski

Zain Smith

Ashley Turak

Maggie Wallace

Alyssa Wang

Emily Weiss

The 31 selections obtained by the Hoosiers rank tied for fifth nationally, and Indiana is one of only eight school in the NCAA to garner at least 30 All-America nods. IU ranks tied for second in the Big Ten, trailing only Michigan’s nation-leading 41 selections.

 

Michigan Wolverines – 38 selections (21 men, 17 women)

  1. Texas Longhorns – 34 selections (23 men, 11 women)
  2. Louisville Cardinals – 33 selections (16 men, 17 women)
  3. Stanford Cardinal – 32 selections (13 men, 19 women)

t-5. Indiana Hoosiers – 31 selections (15 men, 16 women)

t-5. Ohio State Buckeyes – 31 selections (13 men, 18 women)

t-5. Virginia Cavaliers – 31 selections (13 men, 18 women)

  1. Cal Golden Bears – 30 selections (14 men, 16 women)

Founded in 1922, the College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) – the first organization of college coaches in America – is a professional organization of college swimming and diving coaches dedicated to serving and providing leadership for the advancement of the sport of swimming & diving at the collegiate level.

Meeting Cancellation Notice

0

Due to the closure of the Civic Center Complex, the Evansville Police Merit Commission scheduled meeting for 

Monday, April 13, 2020 has been cancelled.

The next scheduled meeting of the Police Merit Commission will be on 

Monday, April 27, 2020, in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex at 4:00pm.

Notice submitted by Sgt. Doug Schneider,

 Liaison to the Evansville Police Merit Commission

EPA to Maintain WaterSense Program Specifications

0
After a review of WaterSense specifications as directed by America’s Water Infrastructure Act (AWIA) of 2018, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is announcing that the agency will not make updates or changes to the program specifications.

“Today’s action is yet another example of the Trump Administration following through on its promise to uphold consumer choice for the American people,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “By maintaining the existing WaterSense specifications, EPA is ensuring responsible conservation of our Nation’s water supply without adding unnecessary specifications or creating undue burdens on the economy.”

Additionally, EPA is announcing next steps in the agency’s ongoing process of assessing and improving its WaterSense program. EPA will be engaging with WaterSense stakeholders and the public to ensure that WaterSense products continue to help protect our nation’s water supplies while saving consumers money and performing as well as or better than regular models.

EPA is issuing a federal register notice determining that, after a review of WaterSense specifications as directed by AWIA, the agency will not make updates or changes to the product specifications. Additionally, the federal register notice provides next steps in the agency’s ongoing process of assessing and improving its WaterSense program.