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JUST IN: 2019 FOP PAC City Council Endorsements

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The Fraternal Order of Police, Evansville Lodge #73, is proud to announce its endorsements for the 2019 City elections. These endorsements were made after much consideration. Our Political Action Committee sent questionnaires to all candidates, the PAC held a candidates night at our Lodge and considered input from our members before making these endorsements. We believe that these candidates will be supportive of public safety in Evansville and will be an asset to the citizens of Evansville.

The F.O.P. Evansville Lodge #73, PAC endorses the following candidates: st

Ben Trockman-1st Ward 

Missy Mosby-2nd Ward 

Stephen Melcher-3rd Ward 

Jennifer Yasser-5th Ward Jonathan Weaver-At Large David Christmas-At Large

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

EVSC Special Education Unified Game Days

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EVSC students to participate in Special Education Unified Game Days
Tuesday, October 22 – Elementary Game Day
Wednesday, October 23 – Middle School Game Day
9 a.m. to noon each day
Central High School Track, 5400 First Avenue 

Students in the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will participate next week in the Special Olympics Unified Champion School Program. Students in EVSC elementary and middle school life skills classes have been training for the program that combines athletes and their peer partners to practice sports skills together.

The program fosters friendships and gives participants an awareness of their own worth, ability, courage, and capacity to learn and grow.

The elementary event will include various stations students will move through. The middle school event will function similar to a track and field meet.

Newspapers Fact Sheet

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Newspapers Fact Sheet

compiled by Pew Research Center of Journalism and Media

  • Audience
  • Economics
  • Newsroom investment
  • Find out more

MORE FACT SHEETS: STATE OF THE NEWS MEDIA

Newspapers are a critical part of the American news landscape, but they have been hit hard as more and more Americans consume news digitally. The industry’s financial fortunes and subscriber base have been in decline since the mid-2000s, and website audience traffic, after some years of growth, has leveled off. Explore the patterns and longitudinal data about U.S. newspapers below.

Audience

The estimated total U.S. daily newspaper circulation (print and digital combined) in 2018 was 28.6 million for weekday and 30.8 million for Sunday, down 8% and 9%, respectively, from the previous year.

Weekday print circulation decreased 12% and Sunday print circulation decreased 13%.

(Note that in this fact sheet and in the chart below, data through 2014 is from Editor & Publisher, which was published on the website of the News Media Alliance (NMA), known at the time as the Newspaper Association of America (NAA). Since then, the NMA/NAA no longer supplies this data, so the Center determined the year-over-year change in total circulation for those daily U.S. newspapers that report to the Alliance for Audited Media and meet certain criteria, as detailed in the note of the chart below. This percentage change was then applied to the total circulation from the prior year – thus the use of the term “estimated total circulation.”)

Total Estimated Circulation Of U.S. daily Newspapers

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Total circulation of U.S. daily newspapersWeekdaySundayWeekday (estimated)Sunday (estimated)19401950196019701980199020002010020 M40 M60 M80 M

Note: To determine totals for 2015 onward, researchers analyzed the year-over-year change in total weekday and Sunday circulation using AAM data and applied these percent changes to the previous year’s total. Only those daily U.S. newspapers that report to AAM are included. Affiliated publications are not included in the analysis. Weekday circulation only includes those publications reporting a Monday-Friday average. For each year, the comparison is for all newspapers meeting these criteria for the three-month period ending Dec. 31 of the given year. Comparisons are between the three-month averages for the period ending Dec. 31 of the given year and the same period of the previous year.
Source: Editor & Publisher (through 2014); estimate based on Pew Research Center analysis of Alliance for Audited Media data (2015-2018).

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Digital circulation is more difficult to gauge. Three of the highest-circulation daily papers in the U.S. – The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post – have in recent years not fully reported their digital circulation to the Alliance for Audited Media (AAM), the group that audits the circulation figures of many of the largest North American newspapers and other publications. Two of these papers report such digital circulation elsewhere: The New York Times in their financial statements and The Wall Street Journal in reports available on the Dow Jones website. (The Washington Post does not fully report digital circulation in any forum.) But because they may not be counted under the same rules used by AAM, these independently produced figures cannot easily be merged with the AAM data.

Taking these complexities into account, using only the AAM data, digital circulation in 2018 is projected to have risen, with weekday up 6% and Sunday up 8%. According to the independently produced reports from The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, both companies experienced substantial gains in digital circulation in the past year: 27% for the Times and 23% for the Journal, on top of large gains in 2017. If these independently produced figures were included with the AAM data in both 2017 and 2018, weekday digital circulation would have risen by 17%.

The addition of these figures would also change the overall picture for combined print and digital circulation. The digital boost was driven by these two large, national brands would still result in an overall drop in circulation year over year, but a smaller one: Overall weekday circulation would have fallen by 1% in 2018 rather than 8%.

Unique Visitors Of Newspaper Websites

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Average monthly unique visitors to the top 50 U.S. newspapers by circulationQ4 2014Q4 2015Q4 2016Q4 2017Q4 201802.5 M5 M7.5 M10 M12.5 MQ4 2015Average monthly unique visitors: 9,709,071

Note: For each year, the average traffic for each website for October/November/December was calculated; the data point represents the overall average of those numbers. An analysis is of the top 49 newspapers by average Sunday circulation for Q3 2016, Q3 2017 and Q3 2018, according to Alliance for Audited Media data, with the addition of The Wall Street Journal. For each newspaper, the Comscore entity matching its homepage URL was analyzed.
Source: Comscore Media Metrix® Multi-Platform, US, Unique Visitors, October-December 2014-2018.

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Gauging digital audience for the entire newspaper industry is difficult since many daily newspapers do not receive enough traffic to their websites to be measured by Comscore, the data source relied on here. Thus, the figures offered above reflect the top 50 U.S. daily newspapers based on circulation. In the fourth quarter of 2018, there was an average of 11.6 million monthly unique visitors (across all devices) for these top 50 newspapers. This is nearly the same as in Q4 2017 (11.5 million) and 2016 (11.7 million); following two years of growth from 2014 to 2016, newspapers’ website traffic has leveled off. (The list of top 50 papers is based on Sunday circulation but also includes The Wall Street Journal, which does not report Sunday circulation to AAM. It also includes The Washington Post and The New York Times, which make the top 50 even though they do not fully report their digital circulation to AAM. For more details and the full list of newspapers, see our methodology.)

Visit duration of newspaper websites

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Average minutes per visit for the top 50 U.S. newspapers by circulationQ4 2014Q4 2015Q4 2016Q4 2017Q4 20180123

Note: For each year, the average minutes per visit for each website for October/November/December was calculated; the data point represents the overall average of those numbers. Analysis is of the top 49 newspapers by average Sunday circulation for Q3 2016, Q3 2017 and Q3 2018, according to Alliance for Audited Media data, with the addition of The Wall Street Journal. For each newspaper, the Comscore entity matching its homepage URL was analyzed.
Source: Comscore Media Metrix® Multi-Platform, US, Average Minutes Per Visit, October-December 2014-2018.

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Average minutes per visit for the top 50 U.S. daily newspapers, based on circulation, is about 2 1/3 minutes in Q4 2018. This is down 5% from Q4 2017.

Economics

The total estimated advertising revenue for the newspaper industry in 2018 was $14.3 billion, based on the Center’s analysis of financial statements for publicly traded newspaper companies. This is down 13% from 2017. The total estimated circulation revenue was $11.0 billion, compared with $11.2 billion in 2017.

Estimated Advertising And Circulation Revenue Of The Newspaper Industry

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Total revenue of U.S. newspapers (in U.S. dollars)AdvertisingCirculationAdvertising (estimated)Circulation (estimated)196019701980199020002010020 B40 B60 B1968Advertising: $5,232,000,000

Source: News Media Alliance, formerly Newspaper Association of America (through 2012); Pew Research Center analysis of year-end SEC filings of publicly traded newspaper companies (2013-2018).

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

In the chart above, data through 2012 comes from the trade group formerly known as the Newspaper Association of America (NAA), now known as the News Media Alliance (NMA). Data from 2013 onward is based on the Center’s analysis of financial statements from publicly traded U.S. newspaper companies, which now number seven and account for more than 300 U.S. daily newspapers, from large national papers to midsize metro dailies and local papers. From 2013 onward, the year-over-year percentage change in advertising and circulation revenue for these companies is calculated and then applied to the previous year’s revenue totals as reported by the NMA/NAA. In testing this method, changes from 2006 through 2012 generally matched those as reported by the NMA/NAA; for more details, see our 2016 report.

Share Of Newspaper Advertising Revenue Coming From Digital Advertising

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Percent of newspaper companies’ advertising revenue coming from digitaladvertising201120122013201420152016201720180102030402012Advertising revenue coming from digital advertising: 19%

Source: Pew Research Center analysis of year-end SEC filings for publicly traded newspaper companies that break out digital advertising revenue for each year.

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Digital advertising accounted for 35% of newspaper advertising revenue in 2018, based on this analysis of publicly traded newspaper companies. The portion stood at 31% in 2017 – but at 17% in 2011, the first year it was possible to perform this analysis.

Newsroom investment

According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment Statistics, 37,900 people worked as reporters, editors, photographers, or film and video editors in the newspaper industry in 2018. That is down 14% from 2015 and 47% from 2004. Median wages for editors in 2018 were about $49,000, while for reporters, the figure was about $35,000.

Employment In Newspaper Newsrooms

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Total number of newsroom employees in the newspaper sector20042006200820102012201420162018020k40k60k80k2006Total: 74,410

Note: The OES survey is designed to produce estimates by combining data collected over a three-year period. Newsroom employees include news analysts, reporters, and correspondents; editors; photographers; and television, video, and motion picture camera operators and editors.
Source: Pew Research Center analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics data.

PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Find Out More

This fact sheet was compiled by Senior Researcher Michael Barthel.

Read the methodology.

Find more in-depth explorations of U.S. newspapers by following the links below:

Tax Vaping And Tobacco Products To Curb Youth Smoking, Committee Told

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Tax Vaping And Tobacco Products To Curb Youth Smoking, Committee Told

By Brynna Sentel
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS—Health officials and business owners told a legislative committee the only way to curb Indiana’s increase in smokeless tobacco usage is to tax and regulate vaping products like Juul.

With a smoking rate that’s 50 percent higher than the U.S. average and 327 percent increase in the number of youth using e-cigarettes, the state needs a 24 percent tax on vaping products, said Kevin Brinegar, president, and CEO of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce.

Brinegar testified Tuesday before the Interim Study Committee on Fiscal Policy, which heard more than two hours of testimony about vaping and tobacco use. He cited studies showing that Indiana has the third-highest rate of e-cigarette usage in the nation and ranks as 44th worst in nicotine use among all 50 states.

Dr. Lisa Hatcher of Columbia City described how a few weeks ago she had an eighth-grader in her office who was trying out for the football team.

“I asked him about smoking and he said no and I asked him about vaping and he said no,” she said. “And I said ok how about juuling? Well, yes. I said how many pods do you juul a day? One sometimes two.

“Ladies and gentlemen, he is smoking more than one to two packs of cigarettes a day in terms of nicotine content. That is damaging his blood pressure. That is damaging his blood vessels. That is putting him at risk for long-term tobacco use.”

Hatcher said she is advocating for high taxes on e-cigarettes and other smokeless tobacco products because of her encounter with students like that eighth-grader. She noted that other states have imposed substantial taxes on tobacco and related products and as a result, the usage rate has dropped.

“We need to get on that bandwagon and we need to urgently,” she added.

Business owners, however, fear that high taxation will instead create a black market for the products, taking away their business and the ability to tax consumers who buy the products.

Mason Odle, a business owner and the vice president of the Indiana Smoke-Free Alliance, opposes a tax on vape products. But he said his group, a vaping industry trade association, believe a nicotine cap should be in place to deter the youth from using products like Juul to get a “quick buzz” caused by the high levels of nicotine.

When asked if Juul should be eliminated altogether, Odle, owner of two vape shops, said that it would have a positive impact on the industry.

“No single policy measure is going to adequately address this epidemic,” Nick Torres, from Tobacco Free Indiana, told members of the study committee.

He advocated for taxing e-cigarettes in the same way all other tobacco products are taxed, as well as taxing the actual devices as if it were a tobacco product. Tobacco products have a 24 percent tax.

Torres hopes to deter youth from using these products with a higher tax. But some lawmakers don’t think that is enough.

“I’m very interested in using the tax system to send signals to people. In this case, I want people to understand that vaping is bad and some types of vaping are worse.” Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis, said.

The committee is expected to develop recommendations for legislation that would be considered in the 2020 session of the General Assembly.

FOOTNOTE: Brynna Sentel is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

AG Curtis Hill Announces $116.9 Million Multi-state Settlement With Johnson & Johnson And Subsidiary Ethicon Inc.

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Attorney General Curtis Hill today announced a multistate settlement involving 41 states and the District of Columbia requiring Johnson & Johnson and its subsidiary Ethicon Inc. to pay nearly $116.9 million for their deceptive marketing of transvaginal surgical mesh devices.

A multistate investigation found the companies violated state consumer protection laws by misrepresenting the safety and effectiveness of the devices and failing to sufficiently disclose risks associated with their use. Indiana will receive more than $4.4 million under the settlement.

“My office will continue to hold accountable companies that cause harm to consumers through improper practices,” said Attorney General Hill. “Women in Indiana and across the country have suffered as a result of the actions of Johnson & Johnson and Ethicon Inc.”

Transvaginal surgical mesh is a synthetic material that is surgically implanted through the vagina to support the pelvic organs of women who suffer from stress urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse.

Evidence shows the companies were aware of the possibility of serious medical complications but did not provide sufficient warnings to consumers or surgeons who implanted the devices.

Besides the monetary penalties, the settlement also provides injunctive relief, requiring full disclosure of the device’s risks and accurate information on promotional material, in addition to the product’s “information for use” package inserts.

Among the specific requirements, the companies must:

  • Refrain from referring to the mesh as “FDA approved” when that is not the case.
  • Refrain from representing in promotions that risks associated with mesh can be eliminated with surgical experience or technique alone.
  • Ensure that product training provided to medical professionals covers the risks associated with the mesh.
  • Omit claims that surgical mesh stretches after implantation, that it remains soft after implantation, that foreign body reactions are transient and that foreign body reactions “may” occur (when in fact they will occur).
  • Disclose that mesh risks include: fistula formation, inflammation, as well as mesh extrusion, exposure and erosion into the vagina and other organs.
  • Disclose risks of tissue contraction, pain with intercourse, loss of sexual function, urge incontinence, de novo incontinence, infection following transvaginal implantation and vaginal scarring.
  • Disclose that risks include that revision surgeries may be necessary to treat complications, that revision surgeries may not resolve complications and that revision surgeries are also associated with a risk of adverse reactions.

 

AG Curtis Hill helps launch Jail Chemical Addiction Program to serve Fountain and Warren counties

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Attorney General Curtis Hill announced today that Fountain County in western Indiana will receive a $50,000 grant from the Indiana Drug Enforcement Association for the purpose of starting a Jail Chemical Addiction Program (JCAP) that will also serve neighboring Warren County. The award is made possible through seed funding from the Office of the Attorney General, which also helps administer the grant process.

Through JCAPs, inmates with substance abuse issues are enrolled into quality long-term treatment programs that begin during incarceration and continue upon the inmates’ release.

“The best correctional models not only penalize offenders for their crimes but also aim to improve their character,” Attorney General Hill said. “Through targeted services, we must address social, emotional, spiritual, educational, physiological and family issues. The JCAP model puts this philosophy into practice.”

Fountain Circuit Court Judge Stephanie Campbell said she is eager to watch the JCAP program improve the lives of local residents.

“Both Warren and Fountain counties are small rural counties that lack services for defendants suffering from chemical addiction,” Judge Campbell said. “The recidivism rate is disheartening and devastating. Through the JCAP program, we can help defendants begin recovery while in jail.”

The grant will be used to pay for mental health, substance abuse and individual services provided to inmates, she said.

Besides Attorney General Hill and Judge Campbell, other officials appearing at today’s announcement in Fountain County included Fountain County Prosecutor Daniel Askren, Fountain County Sheriff Terry Holt, Warren County Judge Hunter Reece, Warren County Prosecutor John Larson and Warren County Sheriff Russell Hart.

Administrator Wheeler Announces Membership for the Science Advisory Board Following Public Comment Period

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Andrew Wheeler announced the appointment of members who will serve on the Science Advisory Board (SAB). Decisions on the SAB’s four standing committees are still pending.

“After an open and transparent public process, EPA has appointed or reappointed experts from a wide range of scientific disciples who reflect the geographic diversity needed to ensure the SAB represents all ten EPA regions,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler.

Those nominees willing to serve have been vetted for potential conflicts of interest and each has committed to remain financially independent from EPA grants during their tenure.

The Process

The nomination period for the SAB closed on June 26, 2019. The SAB Staff Office identified 33 candidates that have confirmed interest to serve on the board. Each of the candidates has submitted bio-sketches and their curricula vitae. The list of candidates was posted on the SAB website for a 21-day public comment period that closed on Oct. 9, 2019.

The Science Advisory Board

In FY 2019, the SAB had 45 members. Of those, 33 members had terms that do not expire and thus remain on the board. Of the remaining members from FY 2018, four completed their terms of service, one resigned, and seven – appointed during the Obama administration – are timing out of the first term and will be reappointed by Administrator Wheeler to serve for a second three-year term (listed in Table 1 below).

In addition, Administrator Wheeler is reappointing Dr. Peter Wilcoxen, for a one-year extension. Dr. Wilcoxen’s extension will allow him to finish serving as the chair of a recently initiated panel on Computational General Equilibrium. Dr. Wilcoxen will continue to lead an important review currently underway assessing and analyzing an Economic Model used in regulatory analyses. Three new board members (one each from the federal government, a state, and a non-governmental organization) were selected by Administrator Wheeler (listed in Table 2 below). This brings the total SAB membership to 44 for FY 2020. Dr. Michael Honeycutt will remain as the SAB Chairman.