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EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

The Park Commissioners Will Make Recommendations For The Future Of Wesselman Par 3 Golf Course At Todays Meeting

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BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS REGULAR MEETING At KEVIN WINTERNHEIMER CHAMBERS IN ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX On WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 2019 AT 12:00 NOON

 AGENDA

 CALL TO ORDER

 MEETING MEMORANDUM   NOVEMBER 20, 2019

CONSENT AGENDA

             Request Re:  Approve and Execute the Swonder Ice Arena Use Agreement with the University of Southern Indiana. -Crook

              Request Re: Approve and Execute a Lease Agreement with Louis J. Koch Family Children’s Museum for “Millie the Dinosaur” at the Mickeys Kingdom. – Holtz

                                                    OLD BUSINESS 

 Request Re: Approve and Execute Board Recommendation for Wesselman Par 3 Golf Course – Stewart

 Request Re: Approve and Execute Contract with Alva Electric for Deaconess Aquatic Center. – Holtz

 Request Re: Approve and Execute Contract with Superior Concrete Constructors, Inc. for Deaconess Aquatic Center.- Holtz

   NEW BUSINESS    

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

REPORTS:  Brian Holtz, Executive Director

        ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMS

  ADJOURN

Adam Schiff Has Submitted His Recommendation on Whether to Impeach President Trump

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Adam Schiff Has Submitted His Recommendation on Whether to Impeach President Trump

UPDATE: The White House has issued a response through Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham. 

“At the end of a one-sided sham process, Chairman Schiff and the Democrats utterly failed to produce any evidence of wrongdoing by President Trump. This report reflects nothing more than their frustrations. Chairman Schiff’s report reads like the ramblings of a basement blogger straining to prove something when there is evidence of nothing.”

***Original post*** 

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff has released a report summarizing two weeks of impeachment inquiry hearings and months of investigation into President Trump’s July phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

“This report reflects the evidence gathered thus far by the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, in coordination with the Committee on Oversight and Reform and the Committee on Foreign Affairs, as part of the House of Representatives’ impeachment inquiry into Donald J. Trump, the 45th President of the United States,” Schiff released in a statement attached to the report.

“The decision to move forward with an impeachment inquiry is not one we took lightly.  Under the best of circumstances, impeachment is a wrenching process for the nation. I resisted calls to undertake an impeachment investigation for many months on that basis, notwithstanding the existence of presidential misconduct that I believed to be deeply unethical and damaging to our democracy.  The alarming events and actions detailed in this report, however, left us with no choice but to proceed,” he said.

Schiff calls the report “evidence,” but hours of testimony about “presumed,” “I heard,” “I felt,” etc. don’t hold up to that claim. The report is essentially 72 hours of testimony repackaged by Schiff and his staff to justify impeachment.

“As this report details, the impeachment inquiry has found that President Trump, personally and acting through agents within and outside of the U.S. government, solicited the interference of a foreign government, Ukraine, to benefit his reelection.  In furtherance of this scheme, President Trump conditioned official acts on a public announcement by the new Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky, of politically-motivated investigations, including one into President Trump’s domestic political opponent,” Schiff continued. “In pressuring President Zelensky to carry out his demand, President Trump withheld a White House meeting desperately sought by the Ukrainian President, and critical U.S. military assistance to fight Russian aggression in eastern Ukraine.”

As a reminder, Volodymyr has repeatedly stated he felt no pressure from President Trump to launch any kind of investigation into anyone, including the Bidens.

Schiff has promised to continue his own investigations, despite handing the report over to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler.

“There remain unanswered questions, and our investigation must continue, even as we transmit our report to the Judiciary Committee.  Given the proximate threat of further presidential attempts to solicit foreign interference in our next election, we cannot wait to make a referral until our efforts to obtain additional testimony and documents wind their way through the courts,” Schiff said. “The evidence of the President’s misconduct is overwhelming, and so too is the evidence of his obstruction of Congress.  Indeed, it would be hard to imagine a stronger or more complete case of an obstruction than that demonstrated by the President since the inquiry began.”

Schiff’s language about obstruction indicates the Judiciary Committee will draw up articles of impeachment on that issue.
The Democrats’ impeachment inquiry is not the organic outgrowth of serious misconduct; it is an orchestrated campaign to upend our political system. The Democrats are trying to impeach a duly elected President based on the accusations and assumptions of unelected bureaucrats who disagreed with President Trump’s policy initiatives and processes. They are trying to impeach President Trump because some unelected bureaucrats were discomforted by an elected President’s telephone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. They are trying to impeach President Trump because some unelected bureaucrats chafed at an elected President’s “outside the beltway” approach to diplomacy.
The sum and substance of the Democrats’ case for impeachment is that President Trump abused his authority to pressure Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, President Trump’s potential political rival, for President Trump’s benefit in the 2020 election. Democrats say this pressure campaign encompassed leveraging a White House meeting and the release of U.S. security assistance to force the Ukrainian President to succumb to President Trump’s political wishes. Democrats say that Mayor Rudy Giuliani, the President’s personal attorney, and a “shadow” group of U.S. officials conspired to benefit the President politically.
The evidence presented does not prove any of these Democrat allegations, and none of the Democrats’ witnesses testified to having evidence of bribery, extortion, or any high crime or misdemeanor.

 

Commentary: What the Amazon Story Should Be About

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Someone died.

His name was Phillip Lee Terry. He was killed in a forklift accident at Amazon’s Plainfield warehouse in September 2017.

Terry was 59 when he died. He left behind a grieving wife, son, two grandchildren, father and sister. He was an avid swimmer and a devoted Auburn football fan.

His death ought to be at the center of the dispute dividing Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb, The Indianapolis Star and Reveal for the Center for Investigative Reporting.

Somehow, though, it doesn’t feel like that’s the case.

Holcomb is upset with Reveal and the Star for publishing a lengthy story that says, among other things, says the governor and the state tried to cover up details surrounding Terry’s death in order to minimize or eliminate any responsibility for the accident on Amazon’s part. The company initially was fined in the tragedy, but a later decision overturned the fine.

Holcomb and other state officials did so, the story goes, as part of a campaign to secure a second Amazon headquarters, which would have brought many jobs and much money to Indiana.

Holcomb objected to the story.

On the day after Thanksgiving, he had his general counsel, Joe Heerens, send cease-and-desist letters to Reveal and the Star demanding a retraction and an apology to Holcomb.

Heerens’ letter to Reveal focused its attention on undermining the credibility of one of the piece’s main sources, a former Indiana Occupational Safety and Health Administration inspector named John Stallone.

Heerens asserts that Stallone fabricated a meeting with Holcomb and Indiana Labor Commissioner Rick Ruble in which the governor and the commissioner told Stallone to resign if he wasn’t willing to go easy on Amazon.

Heerens also says Stallone didn’t resign from his IOSHA job but instead was fired for poor performance. And the governor’s counsel maintains that Stallone was wrong about the number of safety violation citations – the state says four, Stallone says eight – the inspector wanted to report.

Heeren’s argues that Reveal and the Star easily could have ascertained these facts.

That’s a matter of some contention, given that the governor and state officials refused to be interviewed for the stories. Instead, they issued blanket denials.

And that undercuts their credibility because Stallone apparently recorded a conversation in which the head of IOSHA counseled Amazon officials on how to evade any responsibility for Terry’s death.

The story and the dispute have prompted demands from Democratic state legislators and candidates for governor that an independent investigation is conducted into Terry’s death.

Indiana’s chattering class has dismissed these calls as a political stunt – just more Democrat-and-Republican fun ‘n’ games as the state heads into another election cycle.

Doubtless, Democrats do have partisan motives.

But that doesn’t mean the idea of doing an independent investigation isn’t a good one.

It’s clear that there are real and important issues in dispute here.

If Reveal and – by publishing the story – the Star made errors of fact, those should be corrected immediately. Any journalist’s first and foremost duty is to the truth.

But, if anyone in the state government attempted to cover up anything related to Terry’s death, the people of this state should know about it.

And Holcomb’s should be the loudest voice demanding that they do know about it.

Because, just as journalists have a duty, so does he.

That duty isn’t, as his general counsel’s letter to the Star implies, to protect his reputation or the reputations of state employees. Nor is it simply to preserve the state’s “positive business climate.”

Eric Holcomb isn’t just the governor for the business community. Nor is he just the governor for Republicans or hardworking state employees.

He is – or at least he should be – every Hoosier’s governor.

He was Phillip Lee Terry’s governor, too.

That ought to mean something.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is the director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP

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Central Committee:
Wayne Parke, Chairman
Mary Jo Kaiser, Political Director
Dottie Thomas, Vice Chairman
Lon Walters, Secretary
Farley Smith, Treasurer
Kevin Harrison, Editor
 
News and Upcoming Events for December 3, 2019

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December VCRP Breakfast CANCELLED
The VCRP will not hold a Breakfast Meeting for the month of December.
The next scheduled Breakfast will be Saturday January 18, 2020.

 

First day of declaration of candidacy for 2020 Primary Election is Wednesday, January 8, 2020
Wednesday, January 8, 2020 is the first day a declaration of candidacy for major political party primary nomination (or election as a Republican Party precinct committeeman, or state convention delegate of either major party at the primary) may be filed. It is also the first day a major party primary candidate for President or Governor may file a petition of nomination with a county voter registration office for verification of petition signatures. Refer to the Indiana Secretary of State Election Division’s Candidate Information web page for candidate forms and additional information.

Candidates for precinct committeeman must be a Qualified Elector of the precinct and a Qualified Primary Republican (or obtain authorization from the County Chairman). Candidates for precinct committeeman must file a CAN-37 form with the county clerk between Wednesday January 8, 2020 and noon Friday, February 7, 2020.  Form CAN-37  can be found on the Secretary of State Election Division’s Candidate Information web page.

Republican State Convention Delegate Candidates must be a resident of the Election District and a Qualified Primary Republican. A declaration of candidacy for election as a state convention delegate (form CAN-37) must be filed with the county election board no earlier than January 8, 2020 and no later than noon February 7, 2020. All delegates will be assessed a $100 fee payable to the Indiana Republican State Committee to help defer State Convention costs.

Contact VCRP Political Director Mary Jo Kaiser at beamerjo59@gmail.com or 812-425-8207 for more information.

 

 County Council Meeting-   Date: Wednesday, December 4, 2019

 

 
   Time: 3:30 PM
Location: Room 301, Civic Center Complex
                1 NW Martin Luther King Blvd, Evansville
 For more information visit

County Council

EVSC Board of School Trustees Meeting-
  Date: December 9, 2019
             Time: 5:30 PM
 Location: Board Room, EVSC Administration Building
                  951 Walnut St., Evansville

 County Commission Meeting- Date: Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Time: 3:00 PM
Location: Room 301, Civic Center Complex
                1 NW Martin Luther King Blvd, Evansville
 For more information visit

County Commissioners

VCRP Central Committee Meeting – Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Time: 11:30 AM
Location: GOP Headquarters
815 John Street, Evansville
Meetings are open to all Vanderburgh County Precinct Committeemen

 City Council Meeting-   Date: Monday, December 16, 2019

 

 
   Time: 5:30 PM
Location: Room 301, Civic Center Complex
                1 NW Martin Luther King Blvd, Evansville
 For more information visit

City Council

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The 2020 Congress of Counties is a two-day training conference for Republican Party leaders, candidates and grassroots activists. This year’s Congress of Counties is scheduled for January 31 – February 1 in downtown Indianapolis at the Crowne Plaza Hotel. 

Registration will be $100 per person. The full conference line-up — including break-out training sessions and special events — will be announced soon!  For more information and to register click HERE.

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President Trump Spends Thanksgiving with  the Troops-

  Mark Your calendar                CLICK on event for more information
December 4 (3:30 pm)
December 9 (5:30 pm) EVSC Board of Trustees Meeting
December 10 (3:00 pm)
December 14 (10:00 am)
Bill of Rights Celebration
December 16 (5:30 pm)
January 8, 2020
 First day to file a Declaration of Candidacy for 2020 Primary
January 18, 2020
 VCRP Monthly Breakfast
January 31, 2020 Congress of Counties

Toyota U.S. Open: 17 Current, Former Hoosiers to Compete

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Toyota U.S. Open: 17 Current, Former Hoosiers to Compete

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – The Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming teams will be well represented in the 2019 Toyota U.S. Open. A total of 17 current and former Hoosier swimmers will compete in the four-day meet in Atlanta.

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

The long-course meet will begin on Wednesday evening with the men’s and women’s 800 freestyle races. The women will begin at 6 p.m.

Action on both Thursday and Friday is slated, to begin with, preliminary races at 10 a.m., while Saturday will kick off at 8 a.m. with the preliminary rounds of the 200 backstroke event.

For each event, 24 athletes will advance through the prelims and into the finals. Each set of finals will be broken down into three heats with the bonus final, consolation final, and championship final.

COMPETING ATHLETES

Zach Apple – 50 freestyle; 100 freestyle; 200 freestyle

Marwan El Kamash – 200 freestyle; 400 freestyle; 800 freestyle

Ian Finnerty – 200 freestyle; 100 breaststrokes; 200 breaststroke

Kennedy Goss – 100 freestyle; 200 freestyle; 400 freestyle; 200 backstroke

Zane Grothe – 200 freestyle; 400 freestyle; 800 freestyle; 1,500 freestyle

Lilly King – 100 breaststroke; 200 breaststroke

Annie Lazor – 100 breaststroke; 200 breaststroke

Cody Miller – 100 breaststroke; 200 breaststroke

Laura Morley – 100 breaststroke; 200 breaststroke; 200 IM

Justin Winnett – 50 freestyle; 100 breaststrokes; 200 breaststroke

Bruno Blaskovic – 50 freestyle; 100 freestyle

Brendan Burns – 100 freestyle; 200 freestyle; 100 butterflies; 200 butterfly

Mikey Calvillo – 400 freestyle; 800 freestyle; 1,500 freestyle; 400 IM

Cora Dupre – 50 freestyle; 100 freestyle; 200 freestyle

Jakub Karl – 100 freestyle; 200 freestyle; 400 freestyle

Mohamed Samy – 100 freestyle; 200 freestyle; 100 backstrokes; 200 IM

Emily Weiss – 100 breaststroke; 200 breaststroke; 200 IM

 

Academy for Innovative Studies Family & Community Coordinator Receives November Cause for Applause

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Academy for Innovative Studies Family & Community Coordinator Receives November Cause for Applause

Academy for Innovative Studies Family and Community Coordinator Cynthia Bennett is the December recipient of the EVSC’s Cause for Applause award. The award seeks to recognize individuals who go above and beyond their normal job responsibilities.

Bennett was nominated by two coworkers at the Academy for Innovative Studies where she has worked the past eight years.

“As a 45-year EVSC employee, I know the professionalism and caliber expected of all employees. Without a doubt, Ms. Cynthia Bennett is the epitome of all the aspects EVSC – a highly progressive school system – holds dear,” wrote one of her nominators. “Dedicating long hours and endless counseling sessions to each and every student at school or in the community, her responsibilities and obligations are endless.”

Another nominator wrote about her commitment to her students and families. “She goes over and above to welcome families – staying late in order to meet a family’s needs and to make it convenient for families when enrolling students. She makes house visits outside of work hours and goes out to eat with families and students, again outside of work hours, simply because she cares and genuinely wants to help them be successful both in and outside of school. She is so talented at building relationships and making everyone that she comes in contact with feel important, cared for and loved.”

Anyone can nominate an employee of the EVSC for the award. The deadline for nominations is the third Friday of each month. To nominate an EVSC employee, go to www.evscschools.com and click on About Us and see Cause for Applause under Community. Paper forms are available at the schools for those without access to the Internet.

ASCENSION/ ST. VINCENT GIVING TUESDAY

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Monica reflected, From the moment I walked in, I knew Ascension St. Vincent Cancer Center was where I needed to be. The staff working the registration desk was friendly, patient, and helpful. My appointment with Dr. Stephens left me feeling reassured and confident about my chemotherapy treatment.
Sitting in an infusion room for many hours on a weekly basis for six months can be a dreadful and lonely experience, but at Ascension St. Vincent Cancer Center, I looked forward to my treatment each week because I had formed meaningful friendships with the staff, other patients and my Chemo Buddies. Ascension St. Vincent Cancer Center became part of my extended family, and the sense of community I felt while undergoing treatment left me feeling inspired and optimistic about my future.
Now, whenever I hear of somebody needing cancer treatment, I recommend Dr. Stephens and Ascension St. Vincent Cancer Center with glowing enthusiasm. Being diagnosed with cancer and going through treatment can be and is frightening, but it doesn’t have to be joyless. I knew I could always count on the wonderful team at Ascension St. Vincent Cancer Center. The Chemo Buddies provided a smile and their heartfelt support reminding me daily to celebrate the life I have yet to live.
Countless patient and family reflections around the compassionate care received can be found throughout our health ministry. Please consider a gift to the Cancer Care Fund, which will go to support Ascension patient experience as they receive infusion services, such as chemotherapy and other IV medications needed in the treatment of their illness. It is our goal to make our patients as comfortable as possible during the course of their treatment. Through your gift, designated to Cancer Care, we can enhance an atmosphere of healing and hope. You may choose to designate your gift to a specific program or service or support our ministry’s Greatest Needs located on the attached card.
When you give, you help impact the lives of patients, just like Monica, and forever affect families on their journey of healing with their loved ones. Together we can make a difference – but without you, it isn’t possible. Thank you for your consideration in support of our healing ministry.