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LESSONS FROM MOMS

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GAVEL GAMUT

By Jim Redwine

www.jamesmredwine.com

(Week of 23 June 2025)

LESSONS FROM MOMS

President Trump announced his main goals during his second inaugural address on January 20, 2025:

“We will measure our success not only by the battles we win but also by the wars that we end – and perhaps most importantly, the wars we never get into. My proudest legacy will be that of a peacemaker and a unifier.”

President Trump also declared:

“After years and years of illegal and unconstitutional federal efforts to restrict free expression, I will sign an executive order to immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to America.”

President Trump’s stated goals are the bedrock of our fragile democracy. It takes very little to get mired in endless wars, especially when voices calling for peace and reason are silenced. History is littered with great societies who charged headlong into their own destruction for the silliest of causes.

The most famous war of ancient western civilization was the Trojan War between Greece and Troy. It lasted ten years, cost countless lives and treasure and was started over one woman, Helen, whose face, according to the poet Homer, “Launched a 1,000 ships”.

World War I was often called the “war about nothing”, cost the earth millions of human lives, including over 100,000 Americans, and was started over the assassination of the Arch Duke of Austria-Hungary, Franz Ferdinand.

America’s Viet Nam War spanned over twenty years of conflict, but it was a questionable attack on a United States ship in the Tonkin Gulf in 1964 that was used to justify America’s involvement in the “endless war”.

The United States had no quarrel with Iraq but false intelligence alleging Iraq had “weapons of mass destruction” got us involved in the costly military slog that has continued since 1990. In this pointless and endless war America has expended and is still expending countless lives and treasure. What President Trump recognized in his inaugural address is that war can be slid into easily but may result in catastrophic consequences and never end.

Since his inauguration, President Trump has frequently compared the fighting between Israel and its neighbors to a school yard dustup between boys. As President Trump has frequently said, America has no reason to be involved. U.S.A. involvement might lead to another world war but it could lead to a permanent Middle East Peace if we put into practice the lessons of history or simply those from our mothers.

When I was in the first grade, for some never fathomed reason, another first grader and I developed a routine of fighting every day after school. As do most schoolboy contests, they amounted to little damage to either of us but did result in the destruction of numerous tee shirts. Well, our mothers banged our heads together and ended our “endless war”. He and I, of course, became good friends and still are today. Neither of us has a clue what we fought about back then. 

I respectfully suggest to President Trump that he tell Israel and Iran they should neither one have nuclear or atomic weapons and neither should attack the other or their neighbors. Instead of arming one country to attack the other, America should use its enormous motherly power and wisdom to sit Israel and Iran down with the stern warning that no more tee shirts will be lost by anyone, including us.  

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

Award given Paul Leingang

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Paul Leingang is an Evansville resident.

The Association of U.S. Catholic Priests will present one of two Saint John XXIII awards to Paul Leingang on June 26 during the association’s annual assembly in San Antonio, Texas. (Paul is a non-ordained member of the Glennon-Kenrick ordination class of 1969.) The award is named in honor of Pope John XXIII who convened the Second Vatican Council. This award recognizes individuals who have significantly promoted the spirit of Vatican II through their witness, ministry, and spirituality.

The second of two Saint John XXIII awards in 2025 will go to Ruben Garcia, director of Annunciation House, a nonprofit shelter system. Garcia has welcomed migrants and refugees arriving in El Paso for nearly fifty years.

 

The AUSCP issued the following release.

 

Since the founding of the AUSCP in 2011, Paul has been a devoted, resolute, and professional communicator of the mission of AUSCP and a herald of our Good News with the public in the spirit of the synodal council. He has been a faithful and dedicated communications link, web editor, and media advisor for the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests.

 

Paul’s professional life has focused on writing, reporting, broadcasting, and publishing. His broadcasting responsibilities have included beat reporting, radio anchoring, and management, including a stint as news director for WHBF AM FM TV in Rock Island, Illinois. He won a national award for his regularly scheduled noon radio newscast from United Press International and served as president for one term of the Illinois Associated Press News Broadcasters Association.

 

Paul was director of communications for the Catholic Diocese of Evansville, Indiana, and newspaper editor and columnist for The Message, a Catholic weekly published in Evansville from 1987 to 2012. His weekly column received a national award from the Catholic Press Association of the United States and Canada.

 

Paul will retire from the AUSCP at the end of June.

 

Red Cross issues advice to stay safe during extreme heat

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Heat can be dangerous for anyone. Stay hydrated, stay cool and stay connected.

[INDIANA – Experts are warning that dangerously high temperatures are expected in our area this weekend. The American Red Cross of the Indiana Region urges everyone to take three critical actions to stay safe:

  1. Stay hydrated by drinking a cup of water every hour, even if you don’t feel thirsty. Avoid sugary, caffeinated and alcoholic drinks.
  2. Stay cool by spending time in air-conditioned places. If your home is too hot, go to a mall, library or cooling center.
  3. Stay connected by checking on others and asking for help if you need it. Make sure pets have access to fresh water and shade.

WHAT YOU SHOULD DO Remind everyone to drink water, even if they don’t feel thirsty. Aim for a cup of water every hour and encourage people to avoid sugary, caffeinated or alcoholic drinks. Babies should be breast-fed or bottle-fed often. Fewer wet diapers or darker urine can be signs of dehydration.

Encourage athletes and outdoor workers to take breaks in the shade. They should drink a cup of water every 20 minutes and take frequent water breaks.

 

Help those without air conditioning find a safe place to go like a mall, library or cooling center. They can also take cool showers or baths to help cool off. Remind people to wear lightweight, loose-fitting clothes in light colors.

 

Never leave a child or pet alone inside a parked car, and make sure pets have access to fresh water and shade.

 

HEAT ILLNESS SIGNS Anyone can become ill during extreme heat if their body can’t cool down properly. It’s critical to act fast as some types of heat illness can be deadly.

Heat cramps are signaled by heavy sweating and muscle pain. Take action by stopping what you’re doing, resting in a cool place and slowly sipping water. Don’t drink if you feel sick, and get medical help if cramps last over an hour or you have heart problems.

 

Heat exhaustion is signaled by heavy sweating, weakness, cool and clammy skin, muscle cramps, dizziness, fainting, nausea or vomiting. Take action by stopping what you’re doing, resting in a cool place and slowly sipping water. Don’t drink if you feel sick. Loosen your clothes and place a cool wet cloth on your body. Get medical help if you don’t feel better, vomit or have heart problems.

 

Heat stroke is a deadly condition signaled by high body temperature, rapid heartbeat, confusion, headache, dizziness, fainting, nausea or vomiting. Call 911. Move to a cooler place, remove extra clothing and use a wet cloth or a cool bath to cool down. Don’t drink anything.

To learn more about who is at greatest risk and how to stay safe, visit redcross.org/HeatCheck.

 

IF THE POWER GOES OUT When a heat wave and a power outage happen at the same time, it can be even more dangerous. Stay in air conditioning either at home or at a mall, library or cooling center. Keep an ice-filled cooler stocked with food, water and medicine, so that they don’t spoil. More information is available here.

Finally, download the free Red Cross First Aid app so you’ll know what to do if emergency help is delayed and the free Emergency app for real-time weather alerts and heat safety information. Content is available in English and Spanish with an easy-to-find language selector. Find both apps in smartphone app stores by searching for the American Red Cross or going to redcross.org/apps.

About the American Red Cross Indiana Region:
The American Red Cross of Indiana Region serves 6.9 million people in 104 counties in Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky and Ohio through its chapters: Northeast, Northwest, Southeast, Southwest, and Greater Indianapolis (Regional Headquarters). The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies about 40 percent of the nation’s blood; teaches skills that save lives; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a not-for-profit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit us at Redcross.org/Indiana or follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @indianaredcross

Non-Profit Trains Rescue Dogs to Be Police K9s

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From Shelter to Service: Redemption Ranch K9 Celebrates First Year of Rescuing and Training Working Dogs for Police Departments
PLAINFIELD, IN, June 20, 2025 – In just one year, Redemption Ranch K9 has transformed the lives of shelter dogs and the law enforcement departments they now serve. The nonprofit rescues high-drive dogs from shelters and trains them to become working K9s for budget-constrained police agencies.
Founded by law enforcement officer Rob Prichard, Redemption Ranch K9 fills a critical gap for budget-limited departments while giving second chances to shelter dogs with strong working potential.
“We’re proud to say that every dog we’ve placed so far was once at risk of being overlooked or euthanized,” said Officer Prichard. “Now they’re protecting schools, communities, and their handlers.”
Since launching in 2024:
  • Redemption Ranch K9 has placed 10 trained K9s across 9 agencies
  • K9s from the rescue have supported the removal of over 200 kilos of meth and 15 kilos of cocaine from the streets
  • The rescue has trained and equipped dogs for duties such as narcotics detection, gun detection, ballistics detection, tracking and as service dogs
  • Operated entirely through donations, sponsorships, and volunteer support
Dogs are provided to agencies at no cost to them. Redemption Ranch K9 provides the dog, the training, equipment, initial vet costs, food, monthly in-service training and yearly recertification thanks to fundraising and donor support.
“This is more than rescue, it’s redemption for dogs and departments alike,” added Prichard.
About Redemption Ranch K9
Redemption Ranch K9 is a nonprofit organization based in Indiana that rescues shelter dogs and trains them to become working K9s for law enforcement departments that otherwise couldn’t afford one. Founded by a police officer with a passion for both public safety and second chances, the organization is dedicated to reducing shelter euthanasia rates while increasing access to highly trained K9 partners in underfunded communities. Through expert-led training, public education, and advocacy for animal welfare reform, Redemption Ranch K9 is redefining what it means to serve and protect – on both ends of the leash.
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700 N Carr Rd Box 213
Plainfield, IN 46168, United States

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

Offense arrives late in doubleheader defeat

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Evansville Otters (16-19) dropped both games of the doubleheader to the Washington Wild Things (21-15) on Thursday night.

Game one saw Parker Brahms get his sixth start of the year and he pitched a gem. He faced the minimum through three innings but was matched on the other end by the Wild Things starter.

The offense struggled to jump start things as through the first three innings, the only marks were a Graham Brown single and LJ Jones walk.

After another 1-2-3 inning from Brahms, he stranded two runners to keep the shutout. He entered the sixth, still knotted at zero. Washington loaded the bases with two outs off of two hit batters and a walk. After it appeared he had gotten a fly out, he was called for a balk that scored the runner from third.

Evansville threatened in the bottom of the sixth after a Dennis Pierce single and a couple of wild pitches that allowed him to reach third base. G. Brown hit a sharp grounder to first and as the first baseman tossed the ball to the pitcher, Brown dove for first and appeared to beat it out, but was called out by the first base umpire, keeping the score at 1-0.

Brahms worked a clean seventh inning to finish off the first complete game by any Otter this year. Evansville came to bat in the seventh but couldn’t push across Pavin Parks after his one out single and fell in game one of the doubleheader 1-0.

Game 2
In game two, the Otters sent out Ryan Wiltse to start. He worked a clean first two innings, which included two strikeouts.

In the home half of the second, the Evansville offense got it going. David Mendham walked to lead off the inning. He was followed by a Jones two-run home run that wrapped around the left field foul pole to put the Otters up 2-0. Later in the inning, G. Brown drove in two on a single to extend it to 4-0.

A couple of innings later in the fifth, the Wild Things were able to get one back. Wiltse was relieved in the fifth. His final line was four and two-thirds, three hits given up, just one run, a walk and five strikeouts.

In the sixth, Washington opened it up with five to take the lead 6-4. They then hit a two-run home run to make it 8-4.

The Otters would fight back in the final frame. They loaded the bases with nobody out and scored on an RBI groundout from Logan Brown and an RBI single from Keenan Taylor. The final would be 8-6 in favor of Washington.

Veterans Coliseum Preservation Foundation to Host Inaugural Gala

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Celebrating Restoration and Honoring Veterans

Evansville, IN – June 18, 2025 — The Veterans Coliseum Preservation Foundation proudly announces its Inaugural Gala, a USO-style celebration honoring our community’s veterans and supporting the continued and renovation of one of Evansville’s most iconic landmarks — the Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

The gala will be held on Saturday, November 1, 2025, at 6:00 p.m. at the Old National Events Plaza in downtown Evansville. Guests will enjoy an evening inspired by the spirit of homecoming, featuring dinner, entertainment, a silent auction, and opportunities to support the Foundation’s mission through sponsorship and community involvement.

“This event is more than a fundraiser — it’s a tribute to the service and sacrifice of our veterans and a celebration of the Coliseum’s next chapter,” said Amy Canterbury, Board of Commissioners Vice President. “We invite the public to join us in honoring those who served and in supporting the future of this historic space.”

Event Details:

What: Inaugural Gala – “In the Mood: A USO-Style Homecoming Celebration”

When: Saturday, November 1, 2025, at 6:00 p.m.

Where: Old National Events Plaza, 715 Locust Street, Evansville, IN, 47708

Attire: Cocktail or Patriotic Attire

Tickets: Available online at Veterans Coliseum Preservation Foundation Inaugural Gala

CenterPoint Energy is actively monitoring forecasted severe weather and preparing for potential system impacts in southwestern Indiana  

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – June 20, 2025 – CenterPoint Energy is actively monitoring severe weather forecasts and preparing for any potential impacts of strong storms expected to move through southwestern Indiana today. The company is coordinating with emergency and agency partners and mobilizing resources across its service area to be prepared to respond to impacts and outages.  

 “We are closely monitoring the forecast and have taken steps to position crews, equipment and support teams across our service territory. We have a plan and we are executing our plan,” said Shane Bradford, CenterPoint’s Vice President, Indiana Electric. “Our teams are prepared to respond, if needed, and will work safely and efficiently to restore service once conditions allow.”  

Actions CenterPoint is Taking to Prepare 

The actions CenterPoint is taking to prepare and respond include:   

·         Pre-staging crews and equipment: CenterPoint crews and equipment are positioned across our service area to quickly respond to potential storm impacts once conditions have cleared. 

·         Coordinating with government officials: Providing regular updates to state, county and city officials about our pre-storm activities and readiness posture. 

·         Sharing information and updates: Providing safety and preparedness information directly with customers via email, phone or text, across social media platforms and other channels to keep customers informed and prepared. 

·         Organizing additional call center staffing: Securing additional call center staff to handle a higher volume of calls during the storm and limit wait times.  

 Responding to Potential Impacts Across Service Territory 

Across its Indiana Electric service area, CenterPoint is carefully monitoring severe weather and preparing to deploy frontline crews to efficiently clear storm debris, repair the grid and restore service to impacted customers as quickly and safely as possible.  

Important Information for Electric Customers 

CenterPoint electric customers are encouraged to enroll in the company’s Power Alert Service® to receive outage details, estimated restoration times and customer-specific restoration updates via phone call, text or email. Customers can also stay up-to-date on outages with CenterPoint’s new and improved, cloud-based Outage Tracker, now available in English and Spanish, which allows customers to see outages by county and zip code. The new tracker is capable of handling increased traffic during storms and is ADA- and mobile-friendly.   

CenterPoint Encourages All Customers to Have a Plan to Stay Safe 

CenterPoint is encouraging all customers to prepare and have a plan to stay safe during severe weather. Customers can get storm-related safety tips at CenterPointEnergy.com/ActionCenter. Additional preparations and best practices are available at Ready.gov.  

 

“Indiana is Leading the Nation in Health Care Reform” — Governor Braun Holds Ceremonial Signing for Historic Health Care Solutions

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“Indiana is now the national leader in reforming the broken health care system and lowering prices.”

INDIANAPOLIS – Today, Governor Mike Braun held a ceremony to sign 10 health care bills that will bring substantial reform to health care in Indiana: lowering prices, leading the nation in health care price transparency, and eliminating the anti-competitive practices and misaligned incentives that drive up hospital prices, among many other notable health care solutions.

“I promised Hoosiers I would take on the big health care industry and get solutions to the problems making health care unaffordable. My partners in the General Assembly and I have enacted landmark health care solutions to bring transparency, accountability, and competition to our health care system. Indiana is now the national leader in health care reform and lowering prices for patients.” — Governor Mike Braun

Governor Mike Braun stated in his first State of the State address that health care reform for Hoosiers would be a top priority of his Freedom and Opportunity agenda this legislative session.

The bills celebrated today address systemic problems with the health care industry with solutions like full hospital price transparency so patients know what something costs upfront, ending anticompetitive practices in physician non-compete agreements to increase market competition, reforming how pharmacy benefit managers operate to drive down prescription drug prices, establishing that health plan administrators have a fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of the patients they act on behalf of, and ensuring that nonprofit hospitals actually act like nonprofits with new accountability measures.

Laws celebrated:

HEA 1003, Patient-centric, landmark health care solutions package

This patient-centric, landmark legislation was one of Governor Braun’s priority agenda bills and incorporates a number of provisions intended to bring transparency, accountability, and enforcement mechanisms to the health care industry. Specifically, this legislation:

  • Requires nonprofit hospitals with a net patient revenue above $2 billion to apply Site of Service payments to outpatient office settings located off-campus from a hospital. This will ensure that outpatient facilities are only charging professional fees for providing health care services to  Hoosiers enrolled in Medicaid or commercial insurance plans;
  • Empowers Hoosiers with rare and terminal diseases by expanding Indiana’s right to try statute to include individualized treatments;
  • Codified federal protections against surprise medical bills and clarified enforcement authorities available to the State;
  • Prohibits insurers from denying coverage for eligible care on the basis that the patient was referred by an independent or out-of-network provider;
  • Clarified that patients and employers have an absolute right to access their health information and claims data at no cost;
  • Reduced the turnaround time from 5 days to 48 hours in which providers and insurers must provide a good faith estimate for a patient’s anticipated out-of-pocket costs for the services scheduled for the patient’s in-patient or out-patient treatment; and
  • Empowers the Indiana Attorney general to designate law enforcement officers within the Medicaid fraud control unit to investigate waste, fraud, and abuse, as well as develop improved intra-government data sharing standards to support investigating alleged overpayments, duplicative claims, and claims or billings detected through the State’s fraud detection process.

HEA 1004, Lowering hospital prices for Hoosier patients

This legislation introduces a number of initiatives aimed at lowering hospital costs and addressing Medicaid financing and reimbursement, including:

  • Hospital cost transparency
  • Requires a nonprofit hospital system to submit audited financial statements and provides for a $10,000 per day penalty for failure to submit the statements to the state
  • Requires the office of management and budget to develop a methodology to be used in conducting a study of commercial inpatient hospital prices and outpatient hospital prices and to determine Indiana’s statewide average inpatient and outpatient hospital prices
  • By 2029, requires an Indiana nonprofit hospital system’s aggregate average inpatient and outpatient hospital prices to at least be equal to or less than the statewide average.
  • Established a Medicaid state directed payment program for hospitals
  • Directed payments to be included in the managed care capitation rates (not separate payment term)
  • Allows FSSA to designate provider classes in a way to incentivize hospitals to lower ACR and using data from the hospital audited financial statements submitted to the state
  • Established a managed care assessment fee
  • Allows for FSSA to submit a request for a tax waiver for the creation of the assessment fee
  • The assessment fee may be used to fund the Medicaid program
  • Revises disproportionate share (DSH) payments
  • Pauses most DSH payments when a state directed payment program is in effect
  • Allows FSSA to submit a SPA to develop and implement DSH payments for state

SEA 2, Making Medicaid more sustainable

This legislation creates several Medicaid reforms around eligibility, reporting, work requirements and presumptive eligibility.

SEA 3, Fiduciary Duty in Health Plan Administration

This legislation requires pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) and third party administrators (TPAs) to have a fiduciary duty to the plan sponsor that the PBM or TPA is acting on behalf of. Fiduciary duty obligates PBMs and TPAs to:

  • Allows FSSA to submit a SPA to develop and implement DSH payments for state
  • Act with loyalty and care in the best interest of the plan sponsor;
  • Ensure all fees, costs, and commissions are disclosed to the plan sponsor;
  • Avoid self-dealing and conflicts of interest; and
  • Maintain transparency in all financial and contractual arrangements related to the plan sponsor’s health insurance coverage, including prescription drug benefits.

SEA 140, Reforming Pharmacy Benefit Managers

This legislation prohibits PBMs from utilizing anti-competitive contracting and business practices against pharmacies, including retroactively denying, reducing reimbursement, or seeking refunds or recoupments for a dispensing claim paid to a pharmacy, penalizing a pharmacy for selling a lower cost alternative to an insurer, limiting or preventing a patient from obtaining medication from a non-affiliated pharmacy, including specialty drugs, discriminating against pharmacies located within the health plan’s geographic coverage area and is willing to participating in the health plan’s network, including all-or-nothing clauses in contracts with pharmacies to require additional contracting with affiliates of the insurer, PBM, or administrator, and reimbursing a pharmacy at a net amount that is either less than what the insurer or PBM would reimburse itself or an affiliated pharmacy for the same prescription drug by national drug code number or the national average drug acquisition cost (NADAC) plus a fair pharmacy dispensing fee.

SEA 118, 340B Drug Program Report

This legislation requires covered entities participating in the 340B Discount Drug Program, as well as contract pharmacies and child sites, to annually report certain information and financial transactions to the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH). Failure to report the required information will result in the issuance of a civil monetary penalty of $1,000 per day.

SEA 475, Ending anti-competitive practices in physician noncompete agreements 

This legislation prohibits hospitals, including a parent company or affiliated manager of a hospital and hospital systems, from requiring a physician to enter a noncompete agreement after July 1, 2025.

HEA 1604, Cost Sharing; Out-of-Pocket Expense Credit

This legislation requires health plans to credit the amount paid for a lower cost, out-of-pocket health care service towards and individual’s deductible, regardless of whether the service was provided by an in-network or out-of-network provider. Additionally, insurers and health plan administrators are required to apply the annual cost sharing limitation prescribed under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act for prescription drugs that are covered under the health plan, are life-saving or intended to manage chronic pain, and do not have an approved generic equivalent.

HEA 1666, Ownership of Health Care Providers

This legislation requires hospitals, insurers, PBMs, TPAs, and entities that accept Medicaid and Medicare to report ownership information to the State, and authorizes the Indiana Attorney General to investigate market concentration of a health care entity and review the ownership information submitted to the State.

SEA 480, Prior Authorization

This legislation revises Indiana’s prior authorization regulatory framework to better protect the provider-patient treatment plan and timely access to care.