“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jabâ€Â February 25, 2020
ADOPT A PET
Meet our adorable little baked potato, extra cheddar cheese. This is Dodger! He’s a 10-year-old male Sheltie mix. He and his brother, Diesel, were surrendered to Evansville Animal Care & Control when their owner could no longer care for them. VHS pulled them because they had more open kennels. Dodger’s adoption fee is $110 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 Tuesday-Saturday for adoption details!
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Price named GLVC Player of the Week Second honor of the season for the junior forward.
Price started the weekend by posting his seventh double-double of the season with a team-high 20 points and 13 rebounds in USI’s 71-62 victory Illinois Springfield. He was seven-of-11 from the field and a perfect six-of-six from the stripe, while recording a pair of assists and two steals.
The Indianapolis, Indiana, junior forward completed the weekend by depositing 22 points and grabbing 12 rebounds for his second-straight double-double and eighth of the year in the 85-82 victory over Lewis. Price was 11-of-17 from the field, in addition to dishing two assists and making three steals.
The Eagles and Price enter the final week of the 2019-20 regular season, starting Thursday when they travel to Bellarmine University for a 7 p.m. (CST) tipoff. USI concludes the regular season with Senior Day Saturday when it hosts the 19th-ranked (NABC)/15th-ranked (D2SIDA) University of Indianapolis at Screaming Eagles Arena.
EPA at 50: Helping Address Emerging Water Challenges
This month, in celebration of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) 50th anniversary, the agency is highlighting progress in protecting America’s waters. This final week of February features EPA actions to meet emerging water challenges, including supporting innovative solutions like water reuse, recruiting the next generation of water sector workforce and helping states and local communities address PFAS.
“While acknowledging significant accomplishments the agency and its partners have made in providing Americans with access to safe water, we also see emerging challenges that require collaborative and creative solutions,†said EPA Assistant Administrator for Water Dave Ross. “Together, we are leading efforts to address these challenges to protect public health and the environment while supporting the economy—today and for future generations.â€
EPA is helping address a number of emerging challenges, including bolstering safe and reliable water supplies for human consumption, agriculture, business, industry, recreation and healthy ecosystems. While the U.S. uses less freshwater today than 25 years ago—even as population and productivity grow—40 states anticipate some freshwater shortages within their borders over the next decade. Diversifying the nation’s water portfolio is a priority for the Trump Administration and EPA is answering that challenge by advancing water reuse technology, which has the potential to ensure the viability of our water economy for generations to come. This week EPA will unveil the next step under the National Water Reuse Action Plan, a collaborative effort that represents the first initiative of its magnitude to be coordinated across the water sector. Actions taken under this plan will bolster the sustainability, security and resilience of the nation’s water resources. For more on water reuse, visit: https://www.epa.gov/waterreuse.
As EPA works to promote strategies and technologies to help address the country’s water challenges, the agency is also working to highlight the importance of recruiting and training the next generation of water utility operators to implement those approaches. With approximately one-third of drinking water and wastewater utility operators eligible to retire in the next 10 years, EPA is helping utilities attract and maintain qualified operators—everyday environmental heros who protect public health and the environment. On September 24, 2019, EPA announced its Water Workforce Initiative, which will support cities and communities facing critical staffing shortages. For more information on EPA’s efforts to support the water workforce, visit: https://www.epa.gov/sustainable-water-infrastructure/water-sector-workforce and https://www.epa.gov/dwcapacity/learn-about-workforce-issues.
Additionally, aggressively addressing per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is an active and ongoing priority for the EPA. One year ago, the agency announced its PFAS Action Plan—the agency’s first multi-media, multi-program, national communication and research plan to address an emerging environmental challenge like PFAS. EPA continues to make progress implementing this plan, including last week’s proposed regulatory determinations for perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) in drinking water. For additional information on this action, visit www.epa.gov/safewater.
IU Men’s Swimming and Diving Set to Host 2020 Big Ten Championships
The No. 4-ranked Indiana University men’s swimming and diving team will host the 2020 Big Ten Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships this week at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center in Bloomington, Ind.
The four-day meet will begin with on Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m. On Thursday through Saturday, the teams will swim a preliminary session in the morning at 11 a.m. with the championship session to follow at 6:30 p.m.
Live results for the swimming events can be found at IUHoosiers.com. Live results for the diving events can be found at DiveMeets.com. For more information on the Women’s Big Ten Championship, including a schedule of events, fans can click here.
The Big Ten Championships will be streamed live via BTN Plus on BTN2Go. Complimentary access to BTN2Go is available to viewers connected to the internet network of a Big Ten university. Fans elsewhere can sign up for the pay-per-view webcasts.
TEAM COMPETING
No. 3 Michigan, No. 4 Indiana, No. 17 Ohio State, No. 20 Iowa, No. 22 Northwestern, RV Wisconsin, Michigan State, Minnesota, Penn State, Purdue
SCOUTING THE HOOSIERS
Indiana enters this week’s Big Ten Championships ranked No. 4 in the latest CSCAA/TYR Top 25 Poll. The Hoosiers are one of four conference teams ranked or receiving votes in the national poll.
The Hoosiers finished the dual meet portion of the schedule with an 8-3 record against some of the best competition the NCAA has to offer. Indiana earned victories over No. 6 Michigan, No. 10 Louisville (twice), No. 12 Notre Dame, No. 23 Iowa, Kentucky, and in-state rival Purdue. The three losses came against No. 2 Texas (twice) and the Wolverines.
BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIP HISTORY
Indiana has compiled 27 conference titles on the men’s side, the second-best figure in the conference. The Hoosiers trail only the Wolverines (39) in league titles.
IU has finished inside the top-3 at the Big Ten Championships in nine-straight seasons, including victories in each of the last three campaigns.
2019 BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIPS
The Hoosiers, competing at the Campus Recreation & Wellness Venter Natatorium in Iowa City, Iowa, captured the Big Ten Championship for the third-straight season. The three-peat marked the first since the program achieved the feat from 1983-85. IU totaled 1,705 points to defeat Michigan (1,464 points). Ohio State collected 1,243.5 points to claim third place.
Over the course of the 2020 Big Ten Men’s Championships, the Hoosiers won a total of 24 medals – 13 gold, six silver and five bronze. Indiana also won four of the five relays at the Big Ten Championships for a second-straight year – a program first. Earning First-Team All-Big Ten honors for the Hoosiers were Zach Apple, Bruno Blaskovic, James Connor, Gabriel Fantoni, Ian Finnerty, Jack Franzman, Brandon Hamblin, Vini Lanza, and Mohamed Samy.
Indiana’s Vini Lanza became the first man in Big Ten history to be named Swimmer of the Championships for three-straight years. Lanza won titles in the 200 IM, 200 butterfly, 200 freestyle relay, 800 freestyle relay and 400 medley relay this week, along with two silver medals. He set the Big Ten record, Big Ten Meet record, school record and pool record with his winning 200 fly time.
Officer of the Month for December 2019
 Detective Michael Sides has been selected as Officer of the Month for December 2019. Det. Sides received this honor for his successful investigation into an Auto Theft Investigation that led to the clearance of multiple crimes in Kentucky, Illinois and Tennessee.Â
 Detective Sides developed information that led to the arrest of some local car thieves. While investigating these car thieves, he formulated information that they were involved in multiple robberies in neighboring states. After distributing information to these various jurisdictions, the local car thieves were ultimately arrested for four armed robberies in Kentucky, one armed robbery in Illinois, and one armed robbery in Tennessee.Â
 Detective Sides’ work is an excellent example of attention to duty and working quickly and efficiently with multiple agencies to stop the crime spree committed by local criminals.
Great job Mike!!Â
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Missing Person
 The Evansville Police Department is asking for help in locating the female pictured below. Her name is Bianca Morin and she’s 41 years old. To our knowledge, no one has seen or heard from her since last Thursday (02/20/2020). She might be traveling in a black 2009 Acura T1 with an Indiana License Plate of BFO471.Â
 When officers arrived at her residence, to check her welfare, the front door had been busted open and there was no sign of her.Â
 If located, or if anyone knows her whereabouts, they are asked to call the Evansville Police Department’s Detective Office at 812-436-7979.
Missing Person
Audit Demands That Two Virtual Schools To Repay State $85 Million In Misspent State Funds
A special investigation by state auditors found that officials from two Indiana virtual charter schools misspent more than $85 million in state funding by inflating enrollment and funneling millions to a tangled web of related companies.
In what has become one of the nation’s largest virtual charter school scandals, Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy officials showed “substantial disregard†for following the rules and may have “focused on maximizing profits and revenues by exploiting perceived vulnerabilitiesâ€Â in local oversight and state funding processes, the report said.
The state auditors’ scathing report, released Wednesday, follows a series of Chalkbeat investigations revealing financial conflicts of interest at Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy and their dismally low academic results. The two virtual charter schools shut down last summer after allegations of enrollment fraud first emerged.
According to the report, the misspent funds include more than $68 million that the schools improperly collected from the state — far more than initially reported — by recording inactive students more than 14,000 times over eight years.
In some cases, those were people who merely requested information through the schools’ website or students who had moved out-of-state — and in one instance, a student who had died.
“Taxpayers are literally paying tens, if not hundreds of millions of dollars to a school for students who aren’t even there,†said Todd Ziebarth, senior vice president for state advocacy and support for the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools.
Virtual school officials have denied wrongdoing, but they have offered little explanation for the discrepancies and deflected blame. After Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy closed, board members said they were no longer responsible for the schools, despite these institutions owing millions to the state, being under investigation, and still needing to transfer student records.
But the Board of Accounts report outlines a ledger of who was responsible for each instance when enrollment was misreported or a check was improperly cut — and how much each misappropriation was worth.
The report places blame on virtual school administrators, including Superintendent Percy Clark and administrative director Phillip Holden, for signing off on inflated enrollment counts. It puts the responsibility on officials for writing checks to related parties or without proper invoices. Those officials include founder Thomas Stoughton and Merle Bright, who owned or was part of a dozen companies that contracted with the schools.
Bright had access to the schools’ bank accounts and could approve payments despite never holding a position at the schools that would have justified that authority, the report noted — and he signed checks for more than $6.8 million to companies he was associated with.
Chalkbeat could not reach Bright, Clark, or Stoughton for comment. An attorney for Holden declined to comment.
The problems at Indiana Virtual School prompted state lawmakers to take steps recently to cut virtual school funding and tighten regulations on how virtual schools count active students. But some worry that lawmakers didn’t go far enough to ensure that public money is being well spent on virtual schools.
For charter school supporters, virtual schools have presented a particular quandary: how to improve school quality and oversight, while also preserving what they see as a critical school option. But for charter school critics, the Indiana Virtual School scandal embodies their worst fears — that private organizations can profit off public dollars meant to educate students.
The State Board of Accounts sent its report to local and federal law enforcement agencies “due to the potential violations of federal and state law.†Federal authorities have already been investigating Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy. No charges have been filed.
It’s particularly difficult to verify enrollment — and continued engagement — at full-time online schools, where teachers don’t necessarily see students in their classroom every day. But since public schools in Indiana receive state money for each student they enroll, that also opens the door to potential abuse of how virtual schools report enrollment.
The investigation found the school officials “enrolled students that had not expressed any intention to enroll.†School officials were aware that many of the students on their rolls were inactive, the report said: Every two weeks, teachers received a report of “active†students in their classes, which included just a few of the students registered.
The messy accounting by Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Pathways Academy detailed in the report shows what can happen when financial conflicts of interest meet limited oversight.
Out of nearly $100 million paid to the schools’ largest vendors, almost every expense raised some type of red flag. The schools hardly ever received details about what they were paying for — sometimes shelling out money for duplicative services — and the school boards “had no meaningful oversight,†the report said.
The schools paid vendors to recruit 93 teachers and to run 765 background checks on teachers — at a time when the two schools had 54 teachers combined, the state report said. The schools spent money on consulting services for a 401(k) provider, despite not offering or contributing to a 401(k) plan. They hired a political lobbying firm, even though 501(c)(3) nonprofits are limited in their ability to lobby.
In addition to calling for reimbursement for inappropriately collected and misspent funds, the report also holds school officials and vendors responsible for another expenditure — the cost of the state’s special investigation.