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“IS IT TRUE” MAY 17, 2020

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

(Recently we detected an issue where our subscribers may have not been getting breaking news alerts from the City-County Observer. This notification is to let you know that starting today you have been added to receive future news alerts.  If you no longer want to receive future news alerts please opt-out by clicking the  link in your e-mail to unsubscribe)

IS IT TRUE we would like for you to stop what your doing at noon today and join us in a moment of prayer asking God to protect, grant them wisdom, give guidance and direction.  and the power of healing to our health care professionals, first responders, elected officials, members of law enforcement and parents who are preparing to do battle against the Coronavirus-19? …prayer is power?

IS IT TRUE with the exceptions of the Surgeon General of the United States, Infectious Diseases doctors working at nationally-ranked teaching and research Hospitals and Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and his close associates it’s obvious there is a shortage of people with total knowledge about the transmission of viruses making off the cuff public comments about the Coronavirus-19 is astonishing?…if there has ever been a time for competence to step forward and charismatics to keep their mouths shut, this is the time?

IS IT TRUE that the founding CEO of the Growth Alliance for Greater Evansville, Joe Wallace has found himself in the spotlight with his new position as the CEO of the Coachella Valley Economic Partnership?

IS IT TRUE the reason why Coachella Valley is in the public spotlight because they are overly dependent on tourism and hospitality?…every spring event from the BNP Paribas tennis tournament to the internationally renowned Coachella and Stagecoach music festivals has been canceled?…the total of lost retail spending in the valley is estimated to be on the order of a billion dollars that translates into nearly $100 million in tax revenue for local governments?

IS IT TRUE last week Mr. Wallace was interviewed by the Los Angeles Times, the Wall Street Journal and most recently Time Magazine about the economic impacts of seeing these festivals canceled?…the economic fallout for regions that are dependent on fun and games will be much more severe than regions with a balanced economy?…even though most of the events have been rescheduled for fall, the immediate impact of layoffs and deferred revenue will be devastating to many people?…the reality is that it is just people that matter in times like these when negative impacts happen through no fault of anyone

IS IT TRUE we would like to respectfully request that local hospitals public relations departments send us current medical bulletins up-dates so our readers can be prepared to address future medical challenges created by the Coronavirus-19?
IS IT TRUE that The World Health Organization has finally acknowledged that the Coronavirus-19 outbreak is now officially characterized as a pandemic”?
IS IT TRUE one of the reasons why Coronavius-19 is considered to be deadly is because currently there are no known vaccines to protect us against It?
IS IT TRUE that the Coronvius-19 doesn’t discriminate against natural origin, race, color, creed, educational background, gender, blue or white-collar workers, religion, political affiliation, age, sexual preference, rich or poor, type of neighborhood you live in, or mental or physical challenges?
IS IT TRUE it’s projected that around 40 percent of Americans only have just $400 for emergencies?
IS IT TRUE in order for the health care professionals to take the Coronvius-19  head-on they need space, staff, supply, and systems?
IS IT TRUE that many people feel that the 2020 edition of the Evansville City Council has become extremely controversial?  …where is Curt John when we need him?
IS IT TRUE that Vanderburgh County Commissioners Cheryl Musgrave, Ben Shoulders, and Jeff Hatfield were responsible for co-sponsoring the anti-discrimination ordinance via the Human Relations Commission in 2017?
IS IT TRUE that Ellen Horan recently resigned as the Executive Director of GAGE to take a job in Texas?  …we hope that this “E For Everyone” group will not pay big bucks to hire an out town agency to find an out-of-towner to replace Ms. Horan?
IS IT TRUE when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny!  When the Government fears the people we have Liberty?

IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS” are non-scientific but trendy?

Today’s “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that President Trump is finally getting a grip on how to contain the Coronavirus?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE FILES, LAW ENFORCEMENT, “READERS POLL”, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS”, EDUCATION, OBITUARIES and “LOCAL SPORTS”.
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CURRENT UPDATES ON THE STATUS OF THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC-19

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QUICK FACTS ON THE CURRENT STATUS OF THE CORORAVIUS-19 PANDEMIC

(this link was updated a few minutes ago.  Not all countries are updated at the same time)

https://ncov2019.live/data

(FOOTNOTE: Special thanks to the former Evansville City Councilman and retired Heart Surgeon Dr. Dan H. Adams for providing this important Cororavius-19 graft to the City-County Observer) 

 

Should I Quarantine Because of Coronavirus? It Depends on Who You Ask

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Should I Quarantine Because of Coronavirus? It Depends on Who You Ask.

Agencies, local authorities, and national governments do not agree on who should be quarantined or what that should actually look like. Here’s what we do know.

Profile of Retired Superior Court Judge Robert “Jeff” Tornatta

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Profile of Retired Superior Court Judge Robert “Jeff” Tornatta

After 22 years as a Vanderburgh County Superior Court Judge Robert Jeff Tornatta retired on April 3, 2020, because of health reasons.

In April Governor Eric Holcomb will appoint a replacement for Judge Tornatta. Judge Tornatta’s replacement will complete serving his term through Dec. 31, 2024.

Earlier in his life, most who knew him would have assumed that Robert “Jeff” Tornatta would be taking over and running his family’s business, Warrick Beverage.

Understanding Tornatta’s desire to serve the public his father Robert, a retired Evansville Police officer, encouraged and supported Tornatta’s decision to pursue a career in law. Robert enrolled in Indiana University in 1977. After receiving his undergraduate degree from IU in 1982, Tornatta entered Indiana University’s School of Law in Bloomington, graduating in 1985 with honors. Tornatta wasted no time putting his degree to work and in 1986 he became the law clerk for, then, U.S District Judge Gene Brooks.

In 1988 Judge Tornatta began working with the Trimble & Jewel law firm and did so until he joined Phil Hayes, former 8th District Congressman, to practice law in 1990. Tornatta took the place of Richard Young who had been appointed as a circuit court judge, replacing William H. Miller. Young was later appointed by President Bill Clinton to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana in 1997.

Tornatta did not particularly care for private practice, “he confessed with a smile, as most of his clients did not pay him nor did most follow his legal advice”. Fortunately for Tornatta, he was appointed administrator to the Superior Court by the seven Superior Court judges in 1991. While serving as administrator Tornatta was able to work in the different offices of all seven Superior Court judges, giving him an excellent opportunity to learn from and pick up qualities of the judges he worked under.

Tornatta recognizes Judge Lockyear as having the largest impact on him personally, professionally and as a mentor. He did pick up traits from the other Judges as well. From Judge Dietsch, he was able to see just how a judge’s temperament should be. He gets his organizational skills from Judge Bowers, and his thorough, conscientious approach to the law was honed by Judge Knight. He continued to serve as administrator until 1995 when he was appointed as one of the court’s magistrates.

In 1997 Judge Thomas Lockyear resigned after 12 years of service, closing a door in his career and opening one for Tornatta’s. Governor at the time Frank O’Bannon had a tough decision to make. Among twelve other local attorneys who had submitted their names to O’Bannon for consideration, Tornatta finished a close second in the Evansville Bar Association rankings for the job. Two-hundred thirty attorneys filled out a survey ranking each applicant in fields such as legal experience, legal knowledge, judicial temperament, the ability to understand and apply legal principles, industry, and efficiency, and the ability to be impartial and objective. Tornatta finished second to only, now a highly respected judge, Wayne Trockman. With a jest filled smile, Tornatta said, “Everybody recognizes Judge Trockman for his work in the Drug Court, but little recognize him for probably his most notable accomplishment in the Superior Court; an ice machine he had installed after he was appointed judge.”

With high scores reflected in his ability to be impartial and objective, judicial temperament, legal knowledge, and experience, Evansville was fortunate enough to have O’Bannon officially name Tornatta to be Judge Lockyear’s replacement on the bench on the 11th of December, 1997 at the ripe age of 38. I use the term “fortunate” because of the values and integrity that Tornatta possesses and calls upon when making decisions that affect many lives every day.

Tornatta is married to the love of his life, Sharon, whom he met while she was a legal secretary for Lopp, Lopp & Grampp. They have three children; Scott and daughters Molly and Katie.

Tornatta approaches his responsibilities as a Judge much as he approaches life, doing unto others as he would have done unto him. A very humble man, Tornatta admitted: “Without our riding bailiffs, bailiffs, and court reporters the court system itself would be dysfunctional, they are the backbone.”

Ask anyone to critique Judge Tornatta and they would more than likely tell you that his only flaw is that he is too kind of a man.  Seeing as Tornatta did not know Governor O’Bannon at the time of his appointment, we think it is safe to say that his reputation for temperament, experience, level-headedness, and humble and hard-working attitude was all O’Bannon needed to make the right decision for the people of Evansville.

We ask you to join us in praying for Judge Tornatta heath to quickly improve so he can enjoy a quality of life during his retirement years.

We also thank the most Honorable Vanderburgh County Superior Court Judge Robert Jeff Tornatta for being an outstanding public servant.

 

YESTERYEAR: AMERICAN THEATER

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American Theater

Yesteryear by Pat Sides

The American Theater opened in 1915 at 626-628 Main Street, in the same block where the Victory Theater would open six years later. It was one of several movie houses that populated the downtown district during this era, such as the Grand, the Majestic, the Princess, and the Strand. Smaller neighborhood theaters had already begun to sprout up on the city’s north and west sides.

A newspaper article boasted that the new “moving picture theater” would be luxurious and embody modern features. A seating capacity of one thousand would make it Evansville’s largest theater, but with more than the required number of exits, the building could be vacated in two minutes. Its prime location on Main Street, coupled with an admission price of a dime, guaranteed the theater’s life for several decades. 

The American Theater is seen here during the 1937 flood. The building was finally razed in 1961 as the urban renewal movement began to take hold of downtown Evansville.

 

 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Office Manager
Visiting Angels 3.6/5 rating   2,602 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$12 – $14 an hour
We are excited to announce our business is growing. We are expanding our company. We are looking to open an office in the Jasper area where we will service…
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Front Desk Receptionist
Familia Dental 3/5 rating   301 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$7 – $14 an hour
Dental Receptionist must be able to listen to patients and other healthcare workers and follow directions from a Dentist or supervisor.
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Mar 15
Office Manager
Visiting Angels 3.6/5 rating   2,602 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$12 – $14 an hour
We are excited to announce our business is growing. We are expanding our company. We are looking to open an office in the Jasper area where we will service…
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Mar 13
Front Desk Receptionist
Talley Eye Institute – Evansville, IN
Talley Eye Institute is seeking an enthusiastic front desk receptionist to join our group. The Medical Receptionist manages efficient patient flow through…
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Mar 10
Front Desk Receptionist
Visiting Angels 3.6/5 rating   2,602 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$9 – $11 an hour
Our company is growing and we could not be more excited. We are opening an office in the Jasper area. We will begin to service Pike, Perry, Knox, Dubois,…
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Mar 13
Small Claims Secretary
Vanderburgh Superior Court, Small Claims Division – Evansville, IN
$15 an hour
A Small Claims Secretary position is currently available in the Small Claims Division of the Vanderburgh Superior Court. Answer telephone and greet visitors;
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Mar 10
Administrative Assistant
SWIRCA & More – Evansville, IN
$11.50 an hour
A job for which military experienced candidates are encouraged to apply. SWIRCA & More is seeking to fill an Administrative Assistant to help with coordinate…
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Mar 9
FRONT DESK ASSOCIATE
Hokanson Companies, Inc. – Evansville, IN
Is seeking a part time Front Desk Associate for a Class A building located in downtown Evansville, IN. The ideal candidate will have a minimum of 2 years’…
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Mar 10
Office Coordinator
WSCC Lantern Childcare and Preschool – Evansville, IN
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Complete a minimum of 20 training hours a year. Experience in Early Childhood Education preferred. Willing to obtain and maintain 1st aid, CPR, and Universal…
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Receptionist – Financial Firm – Evansville, IN
Advisor Employee Services – Evansville, IN
Send the following to clients, but not limited to: Are you dependable and highly detail-orientated with great interpersonal skills and a passion for client…
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Mar 13
Front Desk Service Representative
Baymont by Wyndham Evansville East – Evansville, IN
We are looking for a friendly, outgoing individual who enjoys working with the public and making each and every stay memorable. High school diploma or GED.
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Mar 13
Dental Office Assistant – Business Assistant
Heartland Dental 2.8/5 rating   599 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Dental Office Assistant – Business Assistant. Come Join our Successful Dental Practice as an Office Assistant – Business Assistant.
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Mar 14
Office Manager
Chapel Hill – Henderson, KY
Generates new ideas for ways to bring increased efficiency to the administration of the church. The Office Manager oversees the work of the church office and…
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Mar 13
Full Time 3rd shift Attendant (Front Desk/Laundry)
Extended Stay America Hotel 3.2/5 rating   2,017 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$10 – $12 an hour
The night guest laundry attendant position must demonstrate and promote a strong commitment to providing the best possible experience for our guests and…
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Mar 9
Administrative Assistant
Mitchell Trucking – Wadesville, IN
Mitchell Trucking is seeking an administrative assistant with quick books experience. Knowledge of trucking and excavating business preferred.
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Mar 10
Administrative Associate, Risk Management-N20016N1
University of Southern Indiana 4.3/5 rating   113 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$13.51 an hour
The University of Southern Indiana’s Risk Management department is seeking applications for an Administrative Associate.
Mar 11
Medical Office Assistant
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   463 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Maintains positive patient oriented services in the provision of medical office services to the patient, family members, visitors and physicians in the office…
Mar 11
Executive Assistant
PIA Automation US – Evansville, IN
PIA Automation US seeks *Executive Assistant*. Who will work directly with the company president and members of the leadership team in a variety of…
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Clerical Associate
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   463 reviews  – Newburgh, IN
We are looking for compassionate, caring people to join our great staff of health care providers. The Clerical Associate (CA) coordinates daily unit functioning…
Mar 12
Medical Billing/Administrative Assistant
HSC Medical Billing & Consulting LLC – Evansville, IN
ï‚· 2 years of office clerical administration experience. HSC Medical Billing & Consulting LLC is currently seeking a candidate to fill our.
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Medical Receptionist
Confidential – Evansville, IN
$12 – $15 an hour
Our very busy Ophthalmology office has an opening for a Medical Receptionist. This position facilitates the patient registration and check-in process of the…
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Sponsored
Administrative Assistant
SWIRCA & More – Evansville, IN
$11.50 an hour
A job for which military experienced candidates are encouraged to apply. SWIRCA & More is seeking to fill an Administrative Assistant to help with coordinate…
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Sponsored

ADOPT A PET

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Aigis is a female American rabbit! She’s estimated to be about 2 years old. She was dumped in Garvin Park along with 16 other domestic rabbits (don’t *EVER* do that, by the way!!) and thankfully Animal Care & Control rescued them. VHS pulled some of the bunnies to our facility to help with space. Aigis’ adoption fee is $50, and she’s already spayed & microchipped, ready for her new home! Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

 

BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS REGULAR MEETING

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BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS

REGULAR MEETING

KEVIN WINTERNHEIMER CHAMBERS

ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 2020

12:00 NOON

 

 AGENDA

1. CALL TO ORDER

                     

2. MEETING MEMORANDUM   MARCH 4, 2020

3. CONSENT AGENDA

             a. Request Re: Approve and Execute Rental Agreement with Great Swimming Inc. for Hartke

                 Pool.- Holtz

                              

4.        OLD BUSINESS 

                                                                                                                                                   

5.         NEW BUSINESS 

            a. Request Re: Permission to cancel a public skating session, if needed during the weeks of 

                April 6th and 13th in order to host SPHL playoff games at Swonder Ice Arena. -Crook   

            b. Request Re: Any Other Business the Board Wishes to Consider and Public Comment

6.         REPORTS

            Brian Holtz, Executive Director

7.         ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMS

 

8.         ADJOURN

Trump Paints A Bleak Coronavirus Outlook

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Trump Paints A Bleak Coronavirus Outlook. Now Can He Fix It?

(Analysis: The president wasted valuable time that could be costly in terms of the health and economic standing of the nation. Now come signs he may be looking to play catchup)

 
By Jonathan Allen
(Jonathan Allen is a senior political analyst for NBC News, based in Washington)
WASHINGTON — For the first time Monday, President Donald Trump laid out a truly bleak picture of America in the time of coronavirus — pointing to an “invisible enemy” he said could plunge the nation’s economy into recession and possibly even require quarantines of geographic “hot spots,” if not the whole country.
The abrupt shift in tone matched a more gradual acceptance by the president that his response to the pandemic so far has failed to inspire confidence in the public, investors and lawmakers. Last week, he delivered an Oval Office address and a Rose Garden press conference that sent the mixed-signal he was taking the threat of the disease more seriously, yet still didn’t fully grasp the risk at hand.

His salesman’s tendency to minimize the downside and play up the bright side left him looking like he couldn’t judge the gravity or complexity of a situation that his own aides described in catastrophic terms.

By Monday, with more experienced federal and state officials proposing new restrictions on public interactions and economic relief packages in the hundreds of billions of dollars, Trump had largely dispensed with the happy talk. But given his own dire forecast, the time it took for him to understand the problem may have been costly in terms of the health and economic standing of the nation.

“We’d much rather be ahead of the curve than behind it,” he said at a briefing for White House reporters.

He was talking about the administration’s response to the spread of the virus itself, but he might as well have been speaking to the various consequences of failing to adequately prepare the public for the toll that could be taken in terms of lives and economic destruction. The less ready, the more damage — in terms of health, the economy and, as a result of the first two, Trump’s political fortunes.

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

That is, all the facets are inter-related. Trump’s trouble communicating the seriousness of the pandemic to the public — for weeks, he assured Americans it wasn’t a big threat — may have been costly in terms of raising awareness about the best protocols to contain the spread.

“When you’re dealing with an emerging infectious disease outbreak, you are always behind where you think you are if you think that today reflects where you really are,” Anthony Fauci, the head of the National Institute on Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said while standing near Trump.

As they spoke, the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished the sharpest single-day point drop in its history, falling nearly 3,000 points, or almost 13 percent, to close at 20,188.52.

It shouldn’t have been a surprise to the president that casting the crisis in darker terms might rattle investors immediately. For three-plus years, he’s spoken only in the most optimistic terms about the stock market and the economy. That changed Monday.

Download the NBC News app for full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

“Well, it may be,” he said when he was asked if the economy was headed for a recession. Later, he added that “the best thing I can do for the stock market is we can get through this crisis.”

Save for giving himself a perfect “10” on handling the response to coronavirus, the words coming out of Trump’s mouth were hardly recognizable. He praised the media for being “fair” in its coverage and clarified that when he said that things were “under control” Sunday he only meant the government’s efforts were coordinated.

The other major shift was Trump’s emphasis on stopping the virus to the exclusion of concerns about the health of the economy. He announced a new set of guidelines for the public to combat the spread of the pandemic, including educating kids from home, limiting social gatherings to 10 or fewer people, avoiding bars and restaurants, and ending discretionary travel.

“We have an invisible enemy,” he said. “My focus is really on getting rid of this problem, this virus problem. Once we do that, everything else is going to fall into place.”

From what administration officials and outside experts have said, there was no time to waste in grasping the severity of the crisis and concentrating on fighting it. Trump seemed to get that Monday. The question, given the damage already done, was how easy it would really be to get “everything else” to “fall into place” later.