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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS
The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today announced that 511 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 27,778 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 38 percent of ICU beds and more than 80 percent of ventilators were available as of Sunday.
A total of 1,607 Hoosiers have been confirmed to have died of COVID-19, an increase of 11 over the previous day. Another 144 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record, following a correction to the previous day’s total. Deaths are reported based on when data are received by ISDH and occurred over multiple days.
To date, 177,243 tests have been reported to ISDH, up from 171,358 on Saturday.
Marion County had the most new cases, at 154. Other counties with more than 10 new cases were Allen (14), Bartholomew (12), Delaware (17), Dubois (30), Elkhart (29), Hamilton (10), Hendricks (12), Johnson (12), Lake (32), St. Joseph (24) and Tippecanoe (12). 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.
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.
 Testing locations can be found through the COVID-19 testing link at www.coronavirus.in.gov.
Woman On Probation For DUI Strikes Home With Vehicle
An Evansville woman on probation for Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated has been arrested on new charges related to drunk driving after striking home with her vehicle.
On May 15th, 2020 at 11:11 pm, the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office responded to the 8400-Block of Rainier Drive in the Town and Country Mobile Home Community off North Saint Joseph Road upon the report of a motor vehicle that had struck a residence. The driver was described by the 911 caller as attempting to flee.
Sheriff’s deputies arrived in the area and located Ms. Robin Jeanne Bates near the crash. Additional arriving deputies checked the surrounding homes and verified that no one was injured during the crash. German Township Fire Department firefighters were summoned to the scene to check for structural damage and any possible natural gas leaks from the crash. Deputies asked Bates what happened and she stated she backed out of the residence across the street and lost control of her vehicle. Bates was crying and stated several times that she was drunk. When speaking with Bates, deputies noticed that she had slurred speech and a very strong odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from her person.
Deputies asked Bates if she would submit to a field sobriety test and she stated she was too drunk to conduct them and requested to go to jail. Bates attempted to walk away from deputies and began yelling obscenities at neighbors that had been awoken by the crash. Bates eventually agreed to take field sobriety tests, but then refused to cooperate.
Bates submitted to a portable breath test, which showed she was over three times the legal limit in Indiana of .08. Bates later provided a breath sample for a certified breath test, which confirmed her breath alcohol content was .247.
Deputies checked Bates’s criminal history and discovered that she was on probation, having pleaded guilty to Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated (OMVWI) in Vanderburgh County on January 9th, 2020. Bates’ driver’s license was also suspended and she was unable to provide any proof of insurance for her vehicle.
Bates was subsequently arrested and booked into the Vanderburgh County Jail. Her next scheduled court appearance will be on Monday.
Robin Jeanne Bates (pictured above), 45, of Evansville. OMVWI with a Prior Conviction as a Level 6 Felony, OMVWI-B A C .15% Or More as a Class A Misdemeanor, OMVWI as a Class A Misdemeanor, Driving with License Suspended as a Class A infraction, Operating Without Insurance as a Class A Infraction.
Presumption of Innocence Notice: The fact that a person has been arrested or charged with a crime is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.
Trump, Biden Gear Up For Battle In Florida, Where Coronavirus Isn’t The Only Thing On Voters’ Minds
Trump, Biden Gear Up For Battle In Florida, Where Coronavirus Isn’t The Only Thing On Voters’ Minds
The electoral picture in the crucial swing state heading into November seems to resemble any other presidential election year.
Miami resident Elisaul Herrera, who became an American citizen along with his wife earlier this year, will cast his first-ever presidential ballot this November for Donald Trump.
Elisa Mora, a high school counselor from Orlando and a registered independent voter, says she’ll support Joe Biden.
Neither sees the coronavirus crisis — which has killed at least 1,700 people in the state and wreaked havoc on parts of the economy — as a factor in their decision. Herrera said his choice would be motivated by the administration’s policies toward his native Venezuela, while Mora said she was motivated by Biden’s approach to immigration and his message of inclusiveness.
Interviews with Floridians — as well as numerous current and former lawmakers, political strategists, politics watchers, and academics in Florida — paint a picture of a battleground state largely unmoved by the Trump administration’s disjointed pandemic response and Biden’s myriad proposals to handle things differently.
Unlike in Pennsylvania, a swing state where Trump’s re-election hopes seem more closely tied to the fallout of the pandemic, the electoral picture in Florida heading into the fall appears to resemble any other presidential election year: a diverse, 50-50 state that will be won at the margins, driven largely by the economic picture and by how well each campaign is able to reach independent and undecided voters.
Because the economic toll in Florida, by some metrics, has not been as devastating as in other states — and because the Biden campaign has struggled with its efforts to reach voters virtually — the president may end up being spared from major pandemic-specific political consequences, sources told NBC News.
“The election here, more than anyone in recent memory, is going to be an ‘us versus them’ on both sides,” Alan Clendenin, the southern caucus chair for the Democratic National Committee and a resident of Tampa said. “I don’t know who’s left as a persuadable voter. Folks have their minds made up, regardless of what happens with the pandemic, and it’s going to be a get-out-the-vote campaign.”
Rick Wilson, a Florida-based veteran Republican strategist, added, “You might say that Trump’s head is on the chopping block, but that he’s nowhere near being executed.â€
Positive Signs, And Possible Pitfalls, For Trump
Florida — the country’s third-most-populous state and, as of October, the president’s official permanent residence — has hardly been spared the devastation of the coronavirus. As of Saturday night, the state had the eighth-most confirmed cases of COVID-19 and the 10th-most deaths from the virus in the U.S.
But its COVID-19 per capita death rate of 8 people per 100,000 is better than about half of other states and is well below the rates of other states its size. Statewide, the curve of new cases appears to have flattened in recent weeks, even as the state reopened its economy on Monday.
In addition, about 60 percent of all cases in the state have occurred in the solidly blue trifecta of southern Florida counties Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach — a concentration that could blunt electoral damage for Trump, sources told NBC News.
Meanwhile, the economic data can tell different stories depending on the interpretation. Since March 14, about 1.7 million workers in the state have lost their jobs.
That total is the third-highest number in the country, behind only California and New York. But how the figures break down as a percentage of the state’s workforce who have filed for unemployment actually puts Florida squarely in the middle of the pack: 16.2 percent, or a little less than 1 in 6 workers, have sought unemployment.
Because the pandemic is more likely to be painted as an economic issue in Florida, and not a public health matter, Trump may actually have an easier time recalibrating his general election message, strategists said.
“He had a very simple message to run on before, which was that he created a great economy and that the country was booming under his leadership,†said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist who worked on Florida GOP Sen. Marco Rubio’s 2016 presidential campaign.
“Now, it’s a nuanced message, which is that he grew the economy before and that he can do it again,†he added. “The question again becomes who do voters trust more to create jobs, which favors Trump.â€
On the other hand, Florida has been beset by extraordinary problems relating to its state unemployment benefits system, for which voters may end up assigning blame to Trump, strategists and lawmakers said.
“They will punish Trump for that in the fall,†said Florida Democratic state Rep. Shev Jones, a Biden surrogate. “People will not forget how Florida Republicans treated them.â€
At the moment, polls reflect a close race in the state fueled by modestly negative approval ratings for Trump, who narrowly won Florida in 2016 by 1.2 percentage points.
The latest RealClearPolitics polling average shows Biden leading Trump 46.5 percent to 43.3 percent — inside all the comprising polls’ margin of error. An April 22 Quinnipiac poll showed 51 percent of registered Florida voters disapprove of the way the president was handling his pandemic response, with 46 percent saying they approve. On the other hand, 45 percent of respondents said they approve of the overall job he is doing as president — his highest-ever mark in a Quinnipiac survey.
Political strategists from both parties, however, said Florida polling has often underreported GOP enthusiasm on models in previous elections due to a robust state party that is particularly skilled at turning out voters late in the race.
“If you’re a Democrat in a Florida poll and you’re ahead, it means you’re tied. I’m not bullish on Biden until I see him up eight, 10 points here in a poll,†Wilson said.
Biden Tries To Makes A Push — And Stumbles
Only twice since 1928 — Bill Clinton in 1992 and John F. Kennedy in 1960 — has the winner of the general election not carried Florida’s crucial 29 electoral votes, making it, arguably, the most critical battleground state.
Subsequently, the Biden campaign, mired in a virtual campaign that has seen the apparent nominee forced to rely on television appearances from his home studio in Delaware, has made Florida the genesis of its first state-specific virtual campaign events. He held a virtual roundtable with local lawmakers Thursday afternoon in Jacksonville and a virtual rally later in the day in Tampa.
But if the events were designed to show that Biden meant business in Florida, they fell short.
The afternoon roundtable was not broadcast. The evening rally featured several long-winded and awkward introductions from Florida lawmakers and a 65-year-old DJ named Jack Henriquezplagued by technical glitches, including audio delays and a total blackout that lasted several minutes.
When Biden finally came on 35 minutes after the event began, he appeared unprepared, saying, “Did they introduce me?â€
Biden only spoke for about 10 minutes, giving a brief spiel that included a nod to the shrinking economy — as well as an apology for the event’s flaws and a closing message drowned out by loudly chirping birds.
The campaign, however, has recently held other Florida-specific virtual events, including a virtual climate roundtable geared toward the state and a virtual town hall with gun control activist Fred Guttenberg, whose 14-year-old daughter was killed in the 2018 Parkland, Florida, high school shooting.
A campaign spokesperson told NBC News that Biden planned to hammer the economic troubles in Florida that have resulted from the pandemic and his campaign would “continue, and expand, our aggressive outreach in Florida to turn that vision into votes.”
Democratic lawmakers in south Florida, however, told NBC News they had, so far, not been satisfied with the Biden virtual campaign’s outreach, especially to one key bloc of Florida voters: Latinos.
“He is not reaching them at all at the moment,†said Florida Democratic state Sen. Annette Taddeo, who represents a Miami-area district.
Meanwhile, Trump Victory, the joint operation between the Trump re-election campaign and the Republican National Committee, told NBC News since the campaign went digital-only on March 13, it has hosted at least 480 virtual training for campaign volunteers in Florida and made about 4 million “voter contacts†online in Florida.
“Our campaign efforts in the state have not missed a beat,†said Trump Victory spokesperson Rick Gorka.
Political strategists told NBC News that, assuming that Biden carries the reliably blue counties in the southeastern part of the state and Trump carries much of northern and central Florida, the likeliest path to victory in November would go through the so-called I-4 corridor, the area of the state running along the interstate between Tampa and Orlando that Floridians say is loaded with undecided and independent voters.
Among voters in those key counties is Christopher Talley, a 36-year-old resident of St. Petersburg, a city in Pinellas County, which Trump won in 2016 by 5,500 votes and Barack Obama won in 2012by about 26,000.
Talley, a registered Democrat who has voted Republican in state races previously, said he’ll vote for Biden, citing the balance of the Supreme Court as his motivating issue.
“Seeing how Trump can fill seats is terrifying,†Talley said.
Not on his mind, however, is the pandemic. Talley didn’t even mention it.
FOOTNOTE: Adam Edelman reported from New York. Carmen Sesin reported from Miami.  Adam Edelman is a political reporter for NBC News and Carmen Sesin also contributed.
City-County Observer Posted this article without opinion, bias, or editing.
WEEKLY RECAP BY SENATOR MIKE BRAUN
Senator Braun joined Fox & Friends to react to the testing discussion at the Senate HELP hearings with Dr. Anthony Fauci as well as the Democratic House’s proposed $3 trillion “bargaining ploy.”

Senator Braun joined Chuck Todd and Katy Tur on Meet the Press Daily to react to the Senate HELP Hearings with Dr. Anthony Fauci, FDA Commissioner Hahn, and CDC Director Redfield.

Senator Mike Braun joins Major Garrett’s Debriefing the Briefing podcast to discuss the Fauci hearings.

When it comes to treatments and lifesaving cures, the U.S. healthcare system is second to none. This is why, when a loved one receives a cancer diagnosis, or a parent is told her child has diabetes, we can bear such unsettling news with a sense of hope.
However, we constantly hear from constituents who are struggling to afford their prescription medicines. The current drug pricing regime is leaving too many people behind.
The coronavirus pandemic lends even more urgency to our efforts to ensure lifesaving cures are affordable.

Senator Mike Braun of Indiana talked with Fox News Radio’s Guy Benson about today’s virtual Senate hearing on the government’s COVID-19 response. Senator Braun also commented on the proposed three trillion dollar relief packaged proposed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Saying “I Think It’s Politically Risky, Because It To Me Is Like The Green New Deal.”
For Coronavirus Assistance, please visit braun.senate.gov/coroanvirus-assistance.
To subscribe to this newsletter and see other updates from Senator Braun, visit his official website.Â
To unsubscribe from Senator Braun’s Weekly Update, click below or contact press@braun.senate.gov.Â
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION PRESENTATION TO TAXING UNITSÂ
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION PRESENTATION TO TAXING UNITSÂ
The Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission will hold a meeting on Wednesday, May 20, 2020, at 1:00 p.m. in Ballroom BC, Second Floor, Convention Center in the Old National Events Plaza at 715 Locust Street, Evansville, Indiana for presentation to the taxing units in each of the four economic development areas within Vanderburgh County. The meeting will also consider a resolution regarding the capture of tax increment financing (“TIFâ€) revenues and notification to the overlapping units of the 2021 budget year determination for TIF revenues in the Azteca, US Highway 41/Baseline Road TIF EDA, the Phoenix Commerce Center/Vanderburgh Industrial Park TIF EDA, the University Parkway TIF EDA, and the Burkhardt Road TIF EDA.
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 emergencyÂ
- 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 mediaÂ
- Attendance will be limited to the first twenty-five (25) 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
- The meeting can be viewed on the Vanderburgh County Commissioners’ Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/Vanderburgh-County-Commissioners-310890699061752/
- The meeting can also be viewed on the Old National Events Plaza LIVE page at https://www.facebook.com/pg/oldnationaleventsplaza/videos/?ret=pageinternal.Â
Notices and agendas for public meetings may be posted solely by electronic means during the duration of the Governor’s Emergency Declaration.
VANDERBURGH COUNTY
REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION
David L. JonesÂ
Jones • Wallace, LLC
BATTLE FATIGUE
BATTLE FATIGUE
 Gavel Gamut by Jim Redwine
We are at war. The actual combat began in January 2020. A declaration of war was not made by Congress as required by the United States Constitution. But virtually every member of the House of Representatives and the Senate, along with the President, has publicly asserted America is at war with COVID-19. Almost 90,000 of us have paid the ultimate price and almost 1.5 million are causalities. Many more losses are predicted.
While wars of any description are great stressors on people, our enemy in this war is truly virulent. If we were fighting another country we would know where to direct our fear and fire. With the Coronavirus, we cannot even identify our enemy without a microscope and it is not wearing a uniform. Further, it often attacks us by attaching itself to casual social contacts, businesses, friends, and even our loved ones. COVID-19 is a Mata Hari’s dream. Few are immune from its insidious, silent, unseen, and sometimes deadly infection and even those who suffer no ill effects themselves can operate as Typhoid Marys.
Another major stressor people feel from the virus is the uncertainty we experience from the fear there is no end in sight. Most people can muster enough courage to combat major stressors if it is fairly certain they will end, even if that end is far off. However, with COVID our scientists keep cautioning us that we may never find a vaccine. After all, the first polio outbreak in America was in 1894 and we did not have a reliable vaccine until 1953.
In our war against COVID-19, we have already been in live-fire combat for at least two months. An official United States government report on battle fatigue among American soldiers in World War II declared:
“There is no such thing as getting used to combat.
…
“The general consensus was that a man reached his peak of effectiveness in theÂ
first 90 days of combat [and] that after that his efficiency began to fall off …â€
“Psychiatric casualties are as inevitable as gunshot and shrapnel wounds …â€
“Most men were ineffective after 180 or even 140 days.â€
As cited in John Keegan’s The Face of Battle at p. 335
America’s “Combat Exhaustion†over our war with COVID-19 is manifesting itself throughout the United States. A majority of Americans still fear the virus more than they question our multilayered, hodgepodge governmental response to it, whether federal, state, county, or local. However, the stress of only 60 days or so of fighting the virus is already exposing fissures in our goodwill toward one another. Unless we come up with a successful Manhattan Project type response to the virus fairly soon perhaps we should develop some new strategies.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
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