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REBA MCENTIRE – LIVE IN CONCERT

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FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2020 FORD CENTER | EVANSVILLE, IN

Tickets Go On Sale Friday, November 22 at 10 AM at LiveNation.com

The legendary Reba McEntire is touring in 2020 and will make a stop in Evansville, Indiana on Friday, March 20, 2020 at Ford Center.

Tickets go on sale Friday, November 22 at 10:00 a.m. at LiveNation.com, the Ford Center box office and via Ticketmaster outlets.

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One of the most successful female recording artists in history, Reba has sold over 56 million

albums worldwide and is a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Hollywood Bowl

Hall of Fame. She has won 15 American Music Awards; 13 ACM Awards; 9 People’s Choice

Awards; 7 CMA Awards; 2 GRAMMY Awards; an ACM Career Achievement Honor; and is one

of only four entertainers in history to receive the National Artistic Achievement Award from the

U.S. Congress.

Reba’s reign of #1 hits spans four decades and Billboard, Country Aircheck and Mediabase

recognized her as the biggest female hitmaker in Country music history. She earned her 64th

Top 10 hit and her 35th #1 with “Turn On The Radio,” from her most recent album, ALL THE

WOMEN I AM. Reba’s run of sales successes has garnered her in the upper echelon of #1

albums in the Country genre.

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During her ALL THE WOMEN I AM TOUR, both Pollstar and Billboard’s Boxscore (the touring

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industry’s leading trade outlets) named Reba the #1 female Country touring artist, selling a

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combined total of over 9 million tickets.

The Oklahoma native is also an acclaimed actress with 11 movie credits to her name,

including Tremors, North & The Little Rascals. In 2001, she made her Broadway debut in Irving

Berlin’s Annie Get Your Gun which the New York Times hailed, “without qualification the best

performance by an actress in a musical comedy this season.” She has also starred in the

eponymous sitcom Reba, which ran for 6 seasons on the WB Television Network/The CW, and

Malibu Country on ABC.

EPA Continues Progress Under PFAS Action Plan

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As part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) extensive efforts to help communities address per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) under the PFAS Action Plan, last week the Agency released the Systematic Review Protocol for five PFAS toxicity assessments for a 45-day public comment period. The assessments are being developed under the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) Program. In addition to this assessment, EPA took an important step in September by sending two regulatory proposals on PFAS for interagency review. By the end of the year, EPA will issue its proposed regulatory determination for PFOA and PFAS which is the next step in the drinking water standard setting process outlined in the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA).

“EPA is following through on its commitment under the PFAS Action Plan to begin the IRIS process to identify the public health risks associated with a new set of PFAS,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “Today’s action seeks the public’s input on our approach to address five individual PFAS. This is another step in EPA’s commitment to proactively, and collaboratively tackle PFAS and provide the necessary tools to assist our communities with the tools and information they need to better monitor, detect and address PFAS.”

The Systematic Review Protocol EPA is issuing today is not a toxicity assessment itself, instead it describes how the five IRIS assessments will be conducted, including specific procedures and approaches. The five PFAS EPA is focusing on under this protocol are: perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDA), perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA), perfluorohexanoic acid (PFHxA), perfluorohexanesulfonate (PFHxS), and perfluorobutanoic acid (PFBA). Though the Systematic Review Protocol summarizes the methods in one document, there will be five separate IRIS assessments.

The IRIS assessments will identify the potential human health effects from exposure to each assessed PFAS and will develop toxicity values, as supported by the available evidence. Depending on data availability, the assessments will evaluate both cancer and noncancer effects, including potential effects on the endocrine, hepatic, urinary, immune, developmental, and reproductive systems. Systematic review protocols are released early in the IRIS assessment development process as an added effort to increase transparency, and to allow the public and stakeholders to understand how an assessment will be conducted. This includes defining what procedures will be used and describing any anticipated areas of scientific complexity that will be important to address in the toxicity assessment.

This Systematic Review Protocol will be available for a 45-day public comment period. Public input received on the protocol is considered during preparation of the draft assessments and any adjustments made to the protocol will be reflected in an updated version released in conjunction with the public release of the draft assessments.

Additional information:  https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2019/11/08/2019-24350/availability-of-the-systematic-review-protocol-for-the-pfda-pfna-pfhxa-pfhxs-and-pfba-iris

Background

PFAS are a large group of man-made chemicals composed of one or more carbon atoms on which all hydrogen substituents have been replaced with fluorine atoms. The compounds are used in consumer products and industrial processes. In use since the 1940s, PFAS are resistant to heat, oils, stains, grease, and water—properties which contribute to their persistence in the environment.

The agency’s PFAS Action Plan is the first multi-media, multi-program, national research, management and risk communication plan to address a challenge like PFAS. The plan responds to the extensive public input the agency has received over the past year during the PFAS National Leadership Summit, multiple community engagements, and through the public docket. The PFAS Action Plan outlines the tools EPA is developing to assist states, tribes, and communities in addressing PFAS.

EPA continues to make progress under its PFAS Action Plan to protect the environment and human health. To date, EPA has:

Highlighted Action: Drinking Water

  • EPA is committed to following the national primary drinking water regulation rulemaking process as established by the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA).
  • As a next step, EPA will propose a regulatory determination for PFOA and PFOS by the end of this year.
  • The Agency is also gathering and evaluating information to determine if regulation is appropriate for other chemicals in the PFAS family.

Highlighted Action: Cleanup

Highlighted Action: Monitoring

  • EPA will propose nationwide drinking water monitoring for PFAS under the next UCMR monitoring cycle.

Highlighted Action: Toxics

  • The agency recently sent two actions that address per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) to the Office of Management and Budget for interagency review.
  • Advanced notice of proposed rulemaking that would allow the public to provide input on adding PFAS to the Toxics Release Inventory toxic chemical list.
  •  A supplemental proposal to ensure that certain persistent long-chain PFAS chemicals cannot be manufactured in or imported into the United States without notification and review under the TSCA.

Highlighted Action: Surface Water Protection

  • EPA plans to develop national Clean Water Act human health and aquatic life criteria for PFAS, as data allows.
  • EPA is examining available information about PFAS released into surface waters by industrial sources to determine if additional study is needed for potential regulation.

Highlighted Action: Biosolids

  • EPA will be developing risk assessments for PFOA and PFOS to understand any potential health impacts.

Highlighted Action: Research

  • EPA continues to compile and assess human and ecological toxicity information on PFAS to support risk management decisions.
  • EPA continues to develop new methods to test for additional PFAS in drinking water.
  • The Agency is also validating analytical methods for surface water, ground water, wastewater, soils, sediments and biosolids; developing new methods to test for PFAS in air and emissions; and improving laboratory methods to discover unknown PFAS.
  • EPA is developing exposure models to understand how PFAS moves through the environment to impact people and ecosystems.
  • EPA continues to assess and review treatment methods for removing PFAS in drinking water.
  • EPA is working to develop tools to assist officials with the cleanup of contaminated sites.
  • EPA is evaluating the effectiveness technologies and evaluating data on methods for managing the end-of life disposal of PFAS-contaminated materials.

Highlighted Action: Enforcement

  • EPA uses enforcement tools, when appropriate, to address PFAS exposure in the environment and assists states in enforcement activities.

Highlighted Action: Risk Communications

  • EPA will work collaboratively to develop a risk communication toolbox that includes multi-media materials and messaging for federal, state, tribal, and local partners to use with the public.

 

AG Curtis Hill: Abortion provider’s arguments against Indiana statutes ‘fail as a matter of law’

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Attorney General Curtis Hill has asked a federal district court to reject challenges brought by the Whole Woman’s Health Alliance (WWHA) and affiliated co-plaintiffs against Indiana laws designed to protect women seeking abortions.

“Unsurprisingly,” Attorney General Hill said, “there are not among the plaintiffs any pregnant women seeking to invalidate such safeguards. Plaintiffs attack nearly every Indiana abortion statute and regulation — from licensing to physical examination — including some that do not even affect them. And while plaintiffs invoke the rights of patients, their interests as abortion providers diverge from pregnant women.”

WWHA operates a South Bend clinic that provides medication abortions, in which patients are provided medications that cause fetal death and then cause the patients to expel the deceased fetuses after they leave the clinic.

Key arguments put forward by Attorney General Hill challenge the plaintiffs’ standing to sue, and Hill laments that WWHA treats as trivial the very real threats to women’s mental and physical health inherent in abortion procedures. In documents filed as part of Indiana’s Nov. 8 motion for summary judgment, multiple women’s testimonies are included to help shed light on the experience of obtaining abortions.

One woman, speaking of an abortion induced by medication in which the patient expelled the deceased fetus at home, said: “The thing I remember most is when I passed the baby. . . . I sat on the bathroom floor and cried. Then I had to flush my baby down the toilet because that was what the clinic had told me to do.”

A meta-analysis of research cited in Indiana’s motion showed that women with a history of abortion experienced an 81% increased risk for various mental health problems compared with women who had not had an abortion. It also documented a 55% increased risk of mental health problems associated with abortion compared with women who took an unplanned pregnancy to term.

Besides mental-health concerns, women face significant threats to their physical health. Surgical abortion features such risks as “bleeding, infection, or injury to the cervix, vagina, or uterus,” as described in one physician’s testimony. Medication-induced abortions also carry risks to women’s physical health, with many women experiencing far worse pain and bleeding than expected. “There was so much pain and blood that I thought I might die,” one woman testified.

Indiana’s motion for summary judgment also highlights the importance of licensed physicians for all abortions; the need for abortion physicians to have hospital admitting privileges; the need for physicians to report abortions; the importance of hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers for late-term abortions; and abortion clinic licensing. Further, Indiana’s motion delves into appropriate content and procedures of informed consent, covering such topics as Indiana’s abortion brochure; required disclosure of information; the 18-hour waiting period; the fetal ultrasound; and in-person counseling.

Beyond WWHA’s disregard for the clear need for measures to protect the health and safety of women, Attorney General Hill said, the challenge brought by WWHA is simply based on a faulty legal premise.

“Plaintiffs’ claims fail as a matter of law,” Attorney General Hill said. “Their broad theory is that, under Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, the benefits and burdens of all abortion restrictions are subject to judicial fact-finding and rebalancing. But as already confirmed in this very case, controlling precedents upholding abortion restrictions remain good law.”

FOR KING AND COUNTRY WILL BE AT FORD CENTER ON APRIL 16. TICKETS GO ON SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 AT 10AM

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for KING & COUNTRY

burn the ships | world tour: North America: 2020 Encore

April 16 – Ford Center

Tickets go on sale Friday, November 15 at 10 a.m.

Evansville, IN – After the overwhelming response to their 36-date fall tour and thousands of requests by fans, two-time GRAMMY® Award winners for KING & COUNTRY have announced 14 new North American dates to extend their world tour into 2020. The burn the ships | North America: The 2020 Encore will kick off on April 16th at The Ford Center in Evansville, IN, and will see the award-winning duo bring their unprecedented live show to fans in brand-new markets. Tickets will go on sale on Nov. 15 at 10am local time, click here for more information.

Just one day prior to their highly anticipated CMA performance with world renowned entertainer Dolly Parton, for KING & COUNTRY are set to appear on “Good Morning America” co-anchor Robin Roberts’ ABC special “Dolly Parton: Here She Comes Again!” In the hourlong special, Joel and Luke Smallbone have a chance to divulge their extraordinary & sparkling collaboration on the duo’s No. 1 hit “God Only Knows.” The pre-CMA Awards special airs TUESDAY, NOV. 12 (10:00–11:00 p.m. EST), on The ABC Television Network.

for KING & COUNTRY is set to join nine-time CMA Award winner and world-renowned entertainer Dolly Parton to perform themassive No. 1 hit “God Only Knows” at “The 53rd Annual CMA Awards.” Country Music’s Biggest NightTM will be hosted by Dolly along with Reba McEntire and Carrie Underwood, and will air live from Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Wednesday, Nov. 13 at 8/7c on the ABC Television Network.

FOR KING AND COUNTRY WILL BE AT FORD CENTER ON APRIL 16.  TICKETS GO ON SALE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 AT 10AM

 

“We’ve heard you! And on the heels of one of the most meaningful tours we’ve ever been a part of it’s with great enthusiasmthat we announce our burn the ships | North America: 2020 Encore! We’ll be coming to 14 more arenas across the UnitedStates, with the bow of the ship and more music than ever in-tow, including every song off our new album. Let’s set sail!”

The duo is currently finishing up the second leg of the burn the ships | World Tour 2019: North America, which produced 9 SOLD-OUT shows thus far. Those attending these upcoming shows will get a chance to see for KING & COUNTRY take the stage at the top of each show and play more music than ever before. In honor of the band’s 3rd album release burn the ships, the stage and lighting design will be conceptually inspired by the bow of a ship, and fans will now be able to stand within the “bow” for a complete and immersive experience of one of the most exciting concert events around. The tour is set to hit major markets in Washington, DC; Tulsa, OK; Pittsburgh, PA, and others.

USI Women’s Runners earn at-large bid to nationals

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Cross Country was awarded an at-large bid into the NCAA Division II National Championships Monday.

The No. 15 Screaming Eagles are making their first trip to nationals as a team since 2016 and their 12th in program history after finishing sixth in a leaded NCAA II Midwest Region Championship meet that featured nine nationally-ranked teams. Eight of the 34 teams that qualified for the national meet are from the Midwest Region, by far the most selections of any of the eight regions.

Junior Jennifer Comastri paced USI at the NCAA II Midwest Region Championships with her 13th-place finish, while senior Hope Jones was 18th. Both earned All-Midwest Region accolades with their finishes.

USI Women’s Cross Country joins the men’s squad, who earned an automatic bid to the national meet, when it competes at the NCAA II Championships November 23 at Arcade Creek Cross Country Course (at Haggin Oaks) in Sacramento, California. The women’s six-kilometer race is set to begin at noon (CST), while the men’s 10k is slated for a 1:15 p.m. start time.

JUST IN: 11032 North 3rd Ave. Homicide Affidavits

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The Coroner has positively identified the victim. The information in the attached affidavits is available for full release.

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VANDERBURGH COUNTY CORONER  HOMICIDE REPORT 

An autopsy has been completed on the human remains recovered from N. Third Ave. as a result, the death has been ruled a homicide from blunt force trauma. Additionally, a dental examination by Dr. Crunchy Wells made a positive identification of the victim as being Evonne Marie Pullen’s age, a resident of the address. The Evansville Police Department can provide additional updates on the investigation.

 

JUST IN: Officer Assaulted by Jail Inmate

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The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office has charged an inmate who assaulted a confinement officer in the jail.

On Sunday, November 10, 2019, at 4:05 PM a female confinement officer was attempting to speak with an unruly female inmate when she was assaulted and injured. The inmate, Alexius Neal, shoved the confinement officer against a fence and punched her multiple times in the face. The officer fell to the ground and was then kicked in the face by Neal. Neal continued to punch the officer in the face as the officer attempted to restrain Neal. Two female inmates came to the officer’s aid. Neal was further restrained by responding to confinement officers.

The injured officer received lacerations above her left eye and was later diagnosed with a concussion. She was treated and released from the emergency room and then driven home where she is presently recuperating.

Neal was already in custody on charges of Domestic Battery, Battery on Law Enforcement, Resisting Law Enforcement, Intimidation, Disorderly Conduct and a Petition to Revoke Probation. Neal was housed in an all-female unit at the time of the assault. The female housing unit is one of eight housing units of the jail. Each individual housing unit contains anywhere from 64 to over 100 inmates and is staffed by just one confinement officer.

In an interview with WEVV 44 News today Sheriff Wedding stated, “I am a proponent of taking care of jails in the State of Indiana. It is time for our state government to address jails and fund it properly, staff it properly and build properly.” Sheriff Wedding added, “I’ve been fighting this for four years and its falling on deaf ears. We need people to wake up and understand that we deal with a very tough population and we need help…. We are housing the worst of our society and most people don’t care. It’s kind of like lock them up and forget about them. We need help from our community to protect our staff and to protect people in jail as well.”

Neal is currently in jail on a $25,000 bond with a next court appearance scheduled for November 14, 2019.

ARRESTED:

Alexius Dededrianna Neal (pictured above in August 2019), 24, of Evansville. Aggravated Battery as a Level 3 Felony, Battery on a Law Enforcement Officer as a Level 5 Felony, Resisting Law Enforcement as a Level 6 Felony.

Presumption of Innocence Notice: The fact that a person has been arrested or charged with a crime is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

DeAndre Williams named MVC Newcomer of the Week

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Williams debuted with 26 points against Ball State

Scoring 26 points in his debut for the University of Evansville, sophomore DeAndre Williams was named the Missouri Valley Conference Newcomer of the Week on Monday.

Williams made a debut for the ages as the University of Evansville men’s basketball team faced Ball State in the season opener on Saturday.  Williams recorded a game-high 26 points on 11-of-14 shooting.  He was 3-for-4 from outside.

He also led all players with 9 rebounds while recording 3 assists and a pair of steals in 28 minutes of work.  Williams’ effort was the best for an Evansville player in their program debut since December 1, 1986.  That night, Marty Simmons scored 27 points versus Montana State.  Interestingly enough, teammate Scott Haffner also made his debut that evening and scored 26.

“I am very proud and excited for his future as an Ace,” UE head coach Walter McCarty said.  “Knowing him, I know he will continue to challenge himself to continue getting better.  He loved making plays for his teammates, so it is awesome that he is recognized for the award.  It is very fitting.”

VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP HAPPENINGS

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News and Upcoming Events for November 12, 2019

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Vanderburgh County Republican Party Breakfast
Saturday, November 16, 2019
WHERE: C.K. Newsome Center, Room 118A-B
100 Walnut Street, Evansville, IN 47713

 

7:30 am – Doors Open (Complimentary Continental Breakfast)

8:00 am – Program

> Guest Speaker: City Controller (& former Evansville) Mayor Russell Lloyd
will provide an analysis of the 2019 Municipal Election
> Chairman Parke provides an update on political happenings

9:00 am- Adjourn

For more information contact Mary Jo Kaiser: phone  812-425-8207 or email beamerjo59@gmail.com

 The 2019 Municipal Election –
  • Congratulations to Evansville Mayor  Lloyd Winnecke for becoming the first 3 terms Republican mayor of the city of Evansville in landslide fashion.
  • Congratulations to Ron Beane for his election to the Evansville City Council At-Large, receiving the most votes of any candidate in the At-Large race.
  • Congratulations to Justin Elpers for his re-election to the City Council Ward 5 seat.
While these victories are the reason for celebration, the close losses in several City Council races are disappointing, particularly when it is evident that voter apathy played a roll. If you are a Republican voter living in the city of Evansville and did not vote, you provided an assist in the Democrat gains on the City Council.  Anyone that believes that how you vote at the local level does not matter with regard to party affiliation is running a fool’s errand.

64,384 Evansville registered voters did not take the time to vote in the 2019 City Election. That is scary.

ELECTION RESULTS

SUMMARY REPORT           MUNICIPAL GENERAL ELECTION             UNOFFICIAL TOTALS
  VANDERBURGH COUNTY, IN
          NOVEMBER 5, 2019

VOTES PERCENT

VOTE CENTERS COUNTED (16 OF 16)
REGISTERED VOTERS – TOTAL . . . . . . . . 80,422
BALLOTS CAST – TOTAL. . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16,038

VOTER TURNOUT – TOTAL . . . . . . . .                     19.94

STRAIGHT PARTY
Vote for not more than 1
REPUBLICAN (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,508    45.74
DEMOCRATIC (DEM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,518    45.87
LIBERTARIAN (LIB). . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . . .       40       .52

INDEPENDENT (IND). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       603   7.86

MAYOR EVANSVILLE
Vote for not more than 1
LLOYD WINNECKE (REP). . . . . . . . . .      11,711   80.75
NO CANDIDATE FILED . . . . . . . . . . . . . .          0
BART GADAU (LIB) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 672    4.63

STEVE ARY (IND) . . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,119  14.61

CLERK EVANSVILLE
Vote for not more than 1
NO CANDIDATE FILED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .         0

LAURA BROWN WINDHORST (DEM) . . . . 11,043  100.00

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER AT-LARGE EVANSVILLE
Vote for not more than 3
RON BEANE (REP) . . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7,335  18.82
DAVID CHRISTMAS (REP) . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . .6,176   15.85
ALEXANDER (ALEX) R. SCHMITT (REP) . . 5,492   14.09
KAITLIN E MOORE MORLEY (DEM) . . . . . . 6,477  16.62
GINA ROBINSON UNGAR (DEM) . . . . .  . . . . 6,431  16.50

JONATHAN WEAVER (DEM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7,055  18.11

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER 1ST WARD
Vote for not more than 1
TIMOTHY A. O’BRIEN II (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . 1,605  47.28

BEN TROCKMAN (DEM) . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . .1,790  52.72

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER 2ND WARD
Vote for not more than 1
NATALIE RASCHER (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,269  49.40

MISSY MOSBY (DEM). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,300  50.60

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER 3RD WARD
Vote for not more than 1
STEPHEN R. MELCHER (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,035  48.64

ZACHARY HERONEMUS (DEM). . . . . . . . . . .1,093  51.36

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER 4TH WARD
Vote for not more than 1
ARCHIE M. CARTER (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 672   26.46

ALEX BURTON (DEM). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,868  73.54

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER 5TH WARD
Vote for not more than 1
JUSTIN K. ELPERS (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,724  57.54

JENNIFER YASER (DEM). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,272  42.46

CITY COUNCIL MEMBER 6TH WARD
Vote for not more than 1
PAUL ABRAMSON (REP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 735   37.83
JIM BRINKMEYER (DEM). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,208   62.17

 County Commission Meeting-   Date: Tuesday, November 12, 2019

 

 
   Time: 3:00 PM
Location: Room 301, Civic Center Complex
                1 NW Martin Luther King Blvd, Evansville
 For more information visit

County Commissioners

EVSC Board of School Trustees Meeting-
  Date: November 12, 2019
             Time: 5:30 PM
 Location: Board Room, EVSC Administration Building
                  951 Walnut St., Evansville

VCRP Central Committee Meeting – Wednesday, November 13, 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, November 18, 2019

 

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

City Council

  Annual Christmas tree lighting set for November 21
Mayor Lloyd Winnecke will welcome the start of the holiday season with the lighting of the City of Evansville’s official Christmas tree in front of the Civic Center on Thursday, November 21, at 5 p.m.
The North High School Varsity Choir, led by Choir Director Drew Gray, will perform and Mayor Winnecke will offer a few remarks before starting the countdown to turn on the Christmas tree lights.
 Everyone is welcome to attend.
                                                                               Learn more

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Indiana GOP Establishes All-Time Record With 70 Mayoral Wins
Republicans now hold 23 more mayoral offices than Democrats, another record.
The Indiana Republican Party achieved a new record in this year’s municipal elections, ending the 2019 cycle with 70 Republican mayors throughout Indiana. This involved flipping 19 mayoral offices, including those in traditional Democrat strongholds Kokomo, Muncie, Logansport, and Michigan City.

“It was a historic night for Republicans throughout Indiana as voters in the city after city elected Republicans mayors,” said Indiana GOP Chairman Kyle Hupfer. “Never in the history of Indiana have Republicans held this many mayoral offices or had this wide a margin over Democrats.”


Read more

 Reflections on Veterans Day –

Veterans Day Remembrance
(from 11/08/19 newsletter)

Another anniversary of Veterans Day – a very prestigious day in the history of this great country which calls to mind the blessing of being an American – is upon us once more. There have been many changes since 1776. When it comes to fighting equipment, the muzzle-loading flintlock musket and cannon were the norm some 200 years ago; now we have modern systems such as the ADAPTIV camouflage system that can make a tank virtually invisible to thermal imaging.

The training for the fighting men in the country’s early wars was crude in comparison to the rigors of today’s requirements for our military men and women. But though the equipment and preparation have changed, the dedication, commitment, courage, and loyalty is as branded into the spirit of our warriors today as it was in days gone by. Those brave men and women who carry out their duty to our nation are still driven to serve and for that America must always be indebted, and we are.
God has blessed America and we continue to pray for the protection of our armed forces. Thank you, comrades.

Celebrating Veterans Day
(from 11/08/19 newsletter)

Every year on Nov. 11, Americans celebrate Veterans Day to commemorate and give thanks to the brave men and women who have served our country.

Armistice Day began in 1919 when President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed Nov. 11 as a day to celebrate the anniversary of the end of World War I, which was dubbed “The War to End All Wars.” Several years later, in 1954, Armistice Day became what we now call Veterans Day after President Dwight D. Eisenhower announced the change, “in order that a grateful nation might pay homage to the veterans of all its wars who have contributed to the preservation of this Nation.”

The commitment to serve our country has deep roots in our Hoosier heritage, with nearly 500,000 veterans living in our state. Each year, lawmakers look for ways to continue our support for these brave men and women, whether it be through financial, tuition, health care or counseling assistance. In this session, we passed a measure that phases in an exemption for military retirement benefits by 2022. In addition, Indiana launched a new online portal to help veterans and their families access state benefits.
Since our country’s founding, generations of Americans have reaffirmed their dedication and loyalty to our country by serving in our military.  May we never take our freedom – and their sacrifices – for granted. When you see a veteran, please take the time to thank them for their service.

Thanking our veterans for their service

(from 11/08/19 newsletter)

Nov. 11 is an opportunity for us to recognize and honor the 18.2 million veterans in the United States and thank them for their service to our country. This Veterans Day, we honor our heroes for putting their lives at risk to make our nation safer and bring about a more peaceful world.

A number of businesses offer discounts and specials to our active and retired service members on Veterans Day. Click here to view a complete list of opportunities and discounts.

We are fortunate to have had so many brave men and women stand for freedom since our country’s founding. We owe it to them to ensure that their service and sacrifice is always remembered.
Please take a moment today and every day to thank our veterans and recognize them for the sacrifices that they have made for our nation.

State Sen. Jim Tomes (R-Wadesville, right) joins State Rep. Wendy McNamara (R-Evansville, left) and Thurman Carnal (middle), a 103-year-old World War II veteran, at the Southwest Indiana Regional Council on Aging (SWIRCA) Veterans Day Celebration on Thursday, Nov. 7, in Evansville.
Tomes Attends Veterans Day Celebration
(11/08/19 Press Release by R. Kommes)

SWIRCA’s 11th annual Veterans Day Celebration honored veterans with a meal, entertainment and local vendors offering resources.

“As a veteran, I am honored to have the opportunity to attend events like these and talk about the significance of Veterans Day, especially to those who are veterans themselves,” Tomes said. “On the 101st anniversary of the end of World War I, it is just as important now as it was then to be grateful to those who have made sacrifices for our freedom.”

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  Stay in touch with GOP members of Congress representing our area at these links:

Visit the Vanderburgh GOP 

page for daily updates.

  Mark Your calendar                CLICK on event for more information
November 12 (3:00 pm)
November 12 (5:30 pm)
November 16 (7:30 am)
VCRP Monthly Breakfast
November 18 (5:30 pm)
December 4 (3:30 pm)

  Make sure you add vandygop@gmail.com to your address book so we’ll be sure to land in your inbox!

         If you have any questions, contact Mary Jo Kaiser, VCRP Political Director, at

or (812) 425-8207.
for more info. Thank you.