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Blaskovic Tabbed Big Ten Swimmer of the Week

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Indiana University junior Bruno Blaskovic was named Big Ten Swimmer of the Week, the league office announced on Wednesday afternoon.

The honor is the first of the season for Blaskovic and the fifth collected by a Hoosier this season. Senior Mohamed Samy (Big Ten Swimmer of the Week) and freshman Brendan Burns (Big Ten Freshman of the Week) each collected conference laurels on Nov. 27, 2019. Junior Mory Gould (Big Ten Diver of the Week) and sophomore Noelle Peplowski (Big Ten Co-Swimmer of the Week) each earned league honors on Jan. 15.

Blaskovic compiled three event victories in Indiana’s 171-129 team win over No. 10 Louisville. He won both the 50 free (19.95) and the 100 free (43.52). He also served as the leadoff leg of the winning 400 freestyle relay. He split a time of 43.76 to open the race.

All three of his times resulted in NCAA B Cut marks. His two individual event titles and three combined wins marked a season high for the Vodnjan, Croatia, native.

The Indiana men’s team will host an NCAA First Chance Meet on Feb. 22-23 before hosting the 2020 Big Ten Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships on Feb. 26-29 at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center.

 

Comastri named GLVC Women’s Track Athlete of the Week

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The Great Lakes Valley Conference named University of Southern Indiana junior Jennifer Comastri this week’s Women’s Track Athlete of the Week, announced by the league office on Wednesday morning.

Comastri made her case for the award by winning the mile by 16 seconds at the Greyhound Invitational with a time of 4 minutes, 56.88 seconds giving her third NCAA II provisional qualifying mark of the indoor season. Comastri’s now converted time of 4:53.97 moves her up to third in the GLVC and bumps her up to seventh nationally.

Comastri currently is the only NCAA II female distance runner to be ranked in the top 10 nationally in all three of her events; the 3000 meters (10th), the 5000m (fourth) and the mile (seventh). This is the first career GLVC track & field weekly award in Comastri’s career and the second of any kind for the USI women’s track & field team thus far in the indoor season.

Up Next: Comastri and the Screaming Eagles will make a short road trip to Greencastle, Indiana for the Depauw Indoor Invitational with events starting at 4 P.M. (CST).

Public invited to EVPL CEO-Director welcome reception

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Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library and the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library Foundation invite the public to a welcome reception for the library’s new CEO-Director Scott Kinney on Friday, February 21 from 4:00 – 6:00 pm in the Browning Rooms of EVPL Central.

Kinney began his position with EVPL on January 6, 2020. Prior to accepting his position with EVPL, Kinney was the Director of Mobile Public Library in Mobile, Ala. Before his tenure in Mobile, he served as Director of the Sweetwater County Library System in Green River, Wyo. and as the Director of the Chadron Public Library in Chadron, Neb. Scott received his Bachelor of Business Administration and Psychology from the University of Nebraska at Kearney and his Master of Library and Information Science from Florida State University.

Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library Foundation is 501(c)3 established to support Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library. Foundation Board Members are engaged and activated community members. Working in partnership with Library Leadership and Library Trustees, Foundation Board Members support the Library through fundraising, volunteering, and advocacy.

Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library has served our community for more than a century. With eight locations throughout Vanderburgh County, immediate access to hundreds of thousands of digital resources, and a dedicated team of library professionals, EVPL strives to create opportunities for you to discover, explore, and connect with your library. For more information, visit evpl.org.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

House Approves Bill That Could Slow The Closing Of Coal-Fired Energy Plants

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Haley Carney

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS— A bill that could slow the closing of the state’s coal-fired power plants now advances to the Senate after clearing the House by a relatively close 52-41 vote.

Rep. Ed Soliday, R-Valparaiso, authored House Bill 1414, which requires the state’s utilities to notify the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission if they plan to close an energy-producing plant. The IURC would then hold a hearing and issue findings, after which the utility could be free to close the facility.

“Whether that’s coal or rabbits on a treadmill, we need the lights to come on when we flip the switch,” Soliday said. “We’re in transition. Not the first time, won’t be the last. But we’re in transition. All we’re asking to do is manage it.”

But critics of the bill said it is aimed at saving or at least slowing the decline of the coal industry by stopping the state’s utilities from transitioning to other sources of fuel like natural gas or renewable like wind or solar. The bill united utilities, environmentalists and the Indiana Chamber of Commerce in opposition.

Rep. Carey Hamilton, D-Indianapolis, said the bill sends the wrong message.

“When I think about our state, we’re great manufacturers,” she said. “We should be working actively to grow electric cars, solar panel and wind turbine manufacturing in our state. This bill will send a message that they are not welcome.”

Soliday argued that the bill provides a pause as a study committee examining how the shift to renewable and other energy sources finishes its work. The legislation would expire May 1, 2021, he said.

Rep. Ryan Hatfield, D-Evansville, was against the bill because he said it would not be helping anyone from Indiana, but instead hurting them.

Hatfield said most utility companies do not source their coal from Indiana, but from Wyoming, because it is cheaper to do so. He believes this bill helps Wyoming marketers and not Indiana coal miners.

“Text your utility company right now and ask them where they get their coal sourced from,” he said. “Most of them source low-sulfur coal from Wyoming. Utility and public proceedings are stating so, they told us as much, and it’s cheaper down there.”

Hatfield listed off many companies who do not support the bill, saying they support the bill because it is a direct increase rate to constituents.

Rep. Bruce Borders, R-Jasonville, said he wanted to see HB 1414 pass because he said he believes coal is not only a thing of the present, but very likely a thing of the future as well.

He said Indiana is in the top five as far as the electricity that’s produced by coal.

“[Coal] is not exactly like this orphan that just needs to get out of the way,” Borders said. “I mean, the fact of it is, it’s still the majority driver of our electricity.”

Borders said he thinks it would be foolish to treat coal as something whose day has come and gone because it is still a major source of our electricity in Indiana.

“This bill is basically saying, ‘Hey, we realize you’re still a big player at the table,’” he said. “’We realize that you are still the primary reason that not only Hoosiers but people throughout the United States still have affordable electricity.’”

Jesse Kharbanda, executive director of the Hoosier Environmental Council, issued a statement after the vote saying the HB 1414 “is based on the inaccurate assumption that Indiana cannot thrive, in terms of reliability and cost, if it rapidly diversifies away coal-electric power.  The facts are that four fellow conservatives, historically fossil fuel-dominated states (Iowa, Kansas, North Dakota, and Oklahoma) are thriving with 30% plus renewable energy, lower electricity prices than Indiana, and reliable electricity.”

FOOTNOTE: Haley Carney is a reporter with TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

 

Angela Davis To Deliver 2020 Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day Keynote At USI

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WHO: Dr. Angela Davis, distinguished professor, activist and social justice advocate. Davis is the author of nine books and has lectured throughout the United States as well as in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia and South America. She draws upon her own experiences in the early 1970s as a person who spent 18 months in jail and on trial, after being placed on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted List” for a crime she did not commit. Davis has also conducted extensive research on numerous issues related to race, gender and imprisonment. Her most recent book is Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement.

WHAT: Keynote address for the University of Southern Indiana’s Nelson Mandela Social Justice Day.

WHEN: 6 p.m. Wednesday, February 5

WHERE: Carter Hall, located in University Center West on USI’s campus. A map of campus highlighting Carter Hall can be found at USI.edu/map.

RECORDING: Members of the media are encouraged to attend the event, but video recording of the address itself will be limited to the first five minutes of the address and no access to direct audio will be available. Please contact Ben Luttrull with any questions regarding the keynote address.

.9 Million Hoosiers May Have Missed Out on Free Individual Tax Filing in 2019

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Don’t let one of those be you, look into Indiana free file for 2020

INDIANAPOLIS — Choosing to pay for something instead of getting it for free – who does that? Well, last year 1.9 million Hoosiers may have, by not taking advantage of the Indiana free file (INfreefile) program to file their individual taxes.

Nearly 2 million Indiana individual income tax return filers, with adjusted gross incomes of $69,000 or less, may qualify to file both their state and federal taxes for no cost with INfreefile. In partnership with the IRS and industry-leading tax preparation software vendors, INfreefile has been offering free online tax filing services to Hoosiers for 17 years and uses the same electronic question-and-answer style vendor software most electronic filers pay to use.

“Electronic filing is far superior to paper filing, offering a faster and higher-quality filing experience. It also results in refunds being issued up to five times faster. In 2020 we want to encourage all qualifying Hoosiers to participate in the INfreefile program,” said Commissioner Bob Grennes. “While nearly 60% of Hoosiers qualified for at least one INfreefile offer in 2019, only about 3% took advantage of this filing option.”

The six participating 2020 INfreefile vendors include (in alphabetical order, not by preference):

  • FreeTaxUSA
  • H&R Block
  • OLT
  • TaxAct
  • TaxSlayer
  • TurboTax

Each participating vendor has different free filing criteria, so Hoosiers should do their research. To access INfreefile software along with a complete list of qualifications by a vendor, visit DOR’s website at freefile.dor.in.gov.

Customers with questions about INfreefile or individual income tax season may visit DOR’s website at dor.in.gov. Our team of customer service specialists is also hearing to help at 317-232-2240 or in all of our 11 Indiana district office locations, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m., EST.

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“The Decline in Newspapers: A Closer Look”

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“The Decline in Newspapers: A Closer Look”

by Joseph Ahrens with the Wake Review Literary Magazine & Club

It is not a surprise that newspapers have been failing in the past few decades. The birth of the internet manifested several different ways companies, groups, and individuals could reach out to others. News outlets saw the internet as a new opportunity. Media outlets grew profits by giving out the news through online articles via the internet because it was the cheapest and quickest way to make a buck. As a result, newspaper sales declined dramatically. Nobody seemed interested in reading paper printed news anymore; it seemed tedious and a waste of money. In a single household, copies of print newspapers would stack and pile up in the corner of a room each and every day. The daily task would be to pile paper up once more in the recycling bin to pave way for newer papers. With the use of the internet, however, all of that has changed. Readers can now read an article with a click on a mouse or a tap on a screen without having to waste countless pieces of paper and risking paper cuts. There are more reasons for the decline in newspapers, though, for good reasons and bad. In recent years, the decline has dazed many journalists as readers do not seem too interested in reading papers. The reason is that internet access, advertising, corporate ownership, and social media are playing as huge contributors to the decline in newspaper production.

The invention of the internet meant losses in revenue in print newspapers. According to Michael Barthel’s “Newspaper: Fact Sheet” in his research on newspaper sales at the Pew Research Center, weekday and Sunday newspaper circulation fell approximately 7% and 4% respectively in 2015, the biggest decline since 11% and 8% in 2010. Although a rise in 2013 displays a makeup for a portion of the losses, the decline resumed afterward, and circulation went down much more rapidly in 2014 and 2015 compared to the losses from 2004 to 2010. In short, newspaper circulation has been declining for the whole decade. In an interview with William Welch, a retired journalist from USA Today, he mentions that as the internet grows, advertisers will want to change their tactics on where and how they want to advertise to gain further profit. Digitally communicating information is cheap and fast, so it appeals to advertisers. Given a reason why newspaper circulation is declining, he says, “The lower cost and data available from digital advertising has been attractive to businesses who once advertised regularly in newspapers. That decline in advertising has meant a decline in revenue.” Advertisers become unwilling to sell their ads in print newspapers due to the popularity of digital media. It is new, it is fast, and it is trending. Any business not willing to take advantage of such a scenario would simply not succeed.

Advertisers are the real customers for newspapers as advertising accounts for most of their income. Companies rely heavily on the income coming from advertisers because readers tend to not have the incentive to pay for information that can be easily found free elsewhere, despite the possibility of consuming faulty information. Some companies like The New York Times have been successful in having consumers pay for subscriptions to its news, but many other companies have failed. Craigslist, a free commercial site for small businesses and individuals, started advertising for free and outcompeted newspapers. Those who would normally have to pay a price to receive a section of a newspaper would instead be able to do it for free on Craigslist. Naturally, advertisers would capitalize on a free advertising website. Welch mentions that “newspapers failed to respond to Craigslist until it was too late. Now no one would think of buying a classified newspaper ad to sell an item, or hire a worker, or seek customers for their business.” As a result, print newspaper revenue has met with consistent declines. In addition, people receive many news stories from extremely popular social media platforms like YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook. Aggregator sites like The Huffington Post, BuzzFeed and many others run their businesses by creating summaries and stories using reports of other news sites. These aggregators have risen sharply in popularity and through advertising, make millions of dollars. Without newspapers, corporations will also receive losses since newspapers had earned them large profits in the past. Now corporations that own newspapers are forced to look for other sources for profit. To milk out as many dollars as they can to support their business, regular news websites have come up with ways that tend to discourage readers from their sites. Things like auto-play videos, pop-up ads, and articles with multiple pages give more power to click from consumers to make a further profit, but it only helps so much.

Corporate ownership within the industry incapacitates the ability to provide the community with essential information and journalism to support a democracy. In Frank Blethen’s article “The Consequences of Corporate Ownership,” he talks about the “disinvestment and lack of community connection that ownership concentration has brought us” by essentially arguing that because financial investors and owners must maximize profits and keep stock prices high, true journalism and community service lose their value. He explains that his employer, The Seattle Times, profit is necessary for financial stability in order to keep the business alive. For other companies, profit is to be maximized for personal wealth and stock price boosts. Publishers and editors for journalism do not get rewarded for their services, and newspaper CEOs and other leaders are being hired while lacking a background in news. Another factor goes into the question of what readers want: whether to read about a tedious topic or an exciting heart-wrenching story. Blethen accentuates, “‘If it bleeds, it leads’ is truer today than ever.” A variety of opinions and voices are required to contribute to democracy for it to function well. An independent press will need a staff that is decentralized from the corporation they work in. If they merely speak out what they are only allowed to in order to make sales, then only a narrow range of opinions will be said and heard. Blethen further emphasizes that the biggest issue in the industry is the lack of coverage of important topics. He says, “I believe the concentration of newspaper ownership, the control now wielded by financial-institution investors and its impact and implications, is one of the most important stories of our time.” He talks about the lobbying of the FCC and regulatory agencies and the repealing of the “limited ban on cross-ownership of newspapers and television stations in the same community,” then further questions why larger newspaper corporations do not talk about the issue.

On a side note, social media has been a turning point for all news, including how it is conveyed and how people interpret the news on social media platforms. People are now able to record what they see and hear by posting on their walls about an event that has occurred. Facebook and Twitter allow people to talk to each other as things happen in real-time. Doug Stanglin and Greg Toppo’s “When News Breaks, Social Media Often There First” talks about the amazing way social media can talk to the masses about real-time news. An airplane crashes and people are able to talk about it as it is happening before their eyes. They talk about a man in the midst of the crash texting: “I just crash landed at SFO. Tail ripped off. Most everyone seems fine. I’m ok. Surreal….” According to Stanglin and Toppo, they even mention the man included a photo of the airplane in ruins, receiving over thirty-thousand retweets in the post. They say that not only does social media get there first, “it can often provide critical information in the first moments of a tragedy.” Social media gives people the amazing ability to talk to one another while events occur as well. Such an amazing piece of technological platforming would disadvantage traditional news media, which cannot respond as quickly. More people are finding that social media is much more exciting than the average, bland newspaper because of the real-time experience. But there is a downside to how people use social media for news. Welch establishes that users can adjust their online experience to align with their viewpoints, rather than what they dislike seeing. “It allows people to think they are getting a broad view of information when in fact they are seeing only a narrow slice, and sometimes one driven by ideological extremists,” he asserts. For the most part, social media is not a credible source for the news.

The newspaper business is, without a doubt, declining slowly as time passes by. Newspaper publishers have tried, in their desperation, different ways to manage production and make a profit at the same time, though proving fruitless in the end. With the advancement of the internet, baits for advertising, profit plans for corporate owners, and social media, not only newspapers but news and journalism as a whole are subject to change. How citizens want to see their news is entirely up to them, but the media not only reflects upon what the readers want but it also shapes it. So perhaps prospects may not look so bad for print newspapers if they use their influence as an opportunity. However, with all the free information accessible on the internet, it is possible that readers may never want to pay a cent for news sites. Advertising will most likely stay attracted to what the internet offers and move further away from print newspapers. Based on Welch’s examination of the industry, some companies have a strategy to pick newspapers back up, but according to him, “At best, that is a play to wring the last dollars out of print before it is no longer profitable.” Overall, the print newspaper business looks very bleak.

Works Cited

Barthel, Michael. “Newspapers: Fact Sheet.” Pew Research Center: Journalism & Media, Pew Research Center, 15 Jun. 2016, www.journalism.org/2016/06/15/newspapers-fact-sheet/.

Blethen, Frank. “The Consequences of Corporate Ownership.” Nieman Reports, Ann Marie Lipinski, www.niemanreports.org/articles/the-consequences-of-corporate-ownership/.

Stanglin, Doug, and Greg Toppo. “When News Breaks, Social Media Often There First.” Gannett News Service, 7 Jul. 2013, SIRS Issues Researcher, sks.sirs.com.ezproxy.waketech.edu/webapp/article?artno=0000354567&type=ART.

Welch, William. Interview. By Joseph Ahrens. 1 Nov. 2016

 

The Southwest Indiana Chamber To Send A Delegation To Indianapolis For Chamber Day At The Statehouse, February 12, 2020.

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The Southwest Indiana Chamber To Send A Delegation To Indianapolis For Chamber Day At The Statehouse, February 12, 2020.

Southwest Indiana Chamber President and CEO, Tara Barney will lead a delegation to the Indiana Statehouse to meet with Legislators on their turf. This will be a great opportunity to meet and discuss the important public priorities of the Southwest Indiana Chamber directly with our state’s elected leadership.

Sponsored by Alcoa Warrick Operations, those in attendance include Mayor Lloyd Winnecke; Nate Hahn, Executive Director Evansville Regional Airport; Michael Schopmeyer Managing Partner, Kahn, Dees, Donovan & Kahn, LLP; Kari Fluegel, Communications Leader, Alcoa Warrick Operations; Kathy Briscoe, Owner, FC Tucker Emge Realtors; and Jeff Knight, Chief Legal Counsel, EVP, Old National Bank Headquarters.

The cost of this event (includes lunch) is $50 for Chamber members and $60 for non-Chamber members.

Registration contact Vicki Schmitt at 812-345-8147; vschmitt@swinchamber.com.

About Southwest Indiana Chamber

Since 1915, the Southwest Indiana Chamber has been a trusted ally of the regional business community. Today we are one of the state’s largest, strongest, and most impactful nonprofit business organizations, representing a total membership of more than 1,400 businesses, organizations, and agencies. About one-third of members have invested in our organization for 10 or more years. While nearly all major employers in our region invest in the Southwest Indiana Chamber, 71% of our member businesses have 25 or fewer employees.

Learn more about the Chamber, our members, and the Southwest Indiana regional business community at www.swinchamber.com. 318 Main St., Suite 401, Evansville, IN 47708.