Governor Holcomb Wants To Curb Distracted Driving As Part Of 2020 Political Agenda
By Brynna Sentel
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS—Gov. Eric Holcomb is focusing on reducing distracted driving by barring all drivers from using hand-held devices and raising the smoking age from 18 to 21 in the 2020 legislative session.
Holcomb unveiled his top legislative priorities at a Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Terre Haute Tuesday. Initiatives in transportation, education and public health are on his list of new laws he is asking legislators to consider.
Holcomb wants to decrease incidents of distracted driving by enacting a hands-free device driving law banning drivers from using cell phones unless they are hands free. Under the current law, texting while driving is banned but the law is unenforceable because there is no way to prove a text was being sent. Several states have already enacted similar laws.
The proposed new law is not about issuing tickets and collecting fines but about making Indiana’s roads safer and saving lives, the governor told the packed room.
“So be prepared for an extra presence on not just 70 or 41 but throughout the state of Indiana,†he said.
Under public health, Holcomb has prioritized the Tobacco 21 law, which would raise the purchasing age from 18 to 21 for smoking and vaping products. Several states have enacted similar legislation.
Holcomb cited data showing that 20% of high school students and 5% of middle school students admit to vaping.
“I thought I was pretty cool when I was in middle school sneaking gum and now we got kids in the sixth grade vaping and many times we don’t even know what it is,†Holcomb said. “So we have got to attack this with greater force than it’s attacking us.â€
“We are especially pleased that the Governor has continued to make the health of Hoosiers a priority,â€Â Indiana Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Kevin Brinegar said in a press release. “With the Governor championing this policy, in addition to all the other groups, it strengthens the effort and should move us across the finish line.â€
House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, opposed a similar bill in the 2019 session but has said that he now supports raising the age to 21.
The governor’s proposal would also increase penalties for retailers who sell to underage consumers. But neither the governor nor lawmakers are proposing a ban of flavored vaping products.
In education, Holcomb is asking the legislature to remove the controversial mandate for teachers to complete 15 of their 90 professional growth points in an outside work activity so they better understand career opportunities for students.
He is also asking the General Assembly to not penalize schools for recent low ILEARN proficiency test scores, which would mean that the scores would not have an adverse effect on teacher evaluations or 2018-19 school letter grades.
Thousands of teachers rallied at the Statehouse in mid-November to urge lawmakers to drop the outside work requirement, not punish schools and educators for low test scores and raise educator pay.
The test score and work provision have wide support from lawmakers in both parties, but teachers will likely have to wait for action on the pay issue. Holcomb has said he will wait another year for recommendations from the teacher pay commission before acting.
Democrats in the House and Senate said agree with the “hold harmless†proposal, but say the governor should do more.
“Yes, we should pursue ‘hold harmless’ legislation, but we also must explore the obsession with testing pursued by this Governor and the Republicans that has led us into this mess,†said Indiana House Minority Leader Phil GiaQuinta, D-Fort Wayne, in a press release.
Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane, D-Anderson, called the agenda “nothing short of disappointing.â€
“We must hold schools harmless as well as decouple teacher evaluations from standardized test scores and ultimately restructure our accountability system for a long-term solution to this continuing issue that monopolizes our students’ time at the expense of learning,†Lanane said in a press release.
As part of his healthcare agenda, Holcomb proposes establishing an all-payer claims database to produce a more transparent healthcare system that would allow consumers access to hospital pricing and insurance reimbursement.
He also wants Hoosiers to be protected from surprise medical bills by requiring providers to give an estimate of care costs, including the patient share, two to five days prior to the service if requested by the patient.
Holcomb also prioritized establishing a relationship between school corporations and a community health provider by 2022. This is not required but will allow schools to be eligible for Secured School Safety Grants.
“Currently, about 60% of our schools are already doing that but we want to make sure that is in place so that there is a phone number and there is a connection should something tragic happen,†Holcomb said.
Reimbursing emergency medical service providers, even when transportation is not needed is another priority for Holcomb in the 2020 session. Currently, if a patient does not need to be taken to an emergency room and simply needs in home care, such as care for diabetic shock, EMS personnel will not be reimbursed for their time or efforts.
Holcomb hopes changing the law will acknowledge that the EMS community does more than transport patients. This could also help cut down on unnecessary emergency room bills should EMS personnel have an incentive to provide in home care whenever possible.
The governor wants lawmakers to consider legislation that would provide workplace accommodations to pregnant workers or new mothers, such as frequent breaks and temporary job restructuring as long as it does not place undue hardship on the business. This is something 27 states have already required.
Under a category he calls good government, Holcomb said he is hoping to save Hoosier taxpayers more than $125 million by reallocating funds and integrating Indiana 2-1-1 into the Family and Social Services Administration call center to connect all health and human services.
Brynna Sentel is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
AG Curtis Hill Asks U.S. Supreme Court To Review Lower Court’s Decision On South Bend Abortion Clinic
Attorney General Curtis Hill filed documents this week with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to affirm Indiana’s authority to enforce its own licensing requirements for abortion clinics. Such a decision would reverse a ruling by the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, which recently forced Indiana to allow the operation of a South Bend abortion clinic initially denied a license by the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH).
The ISDH found that Whole Woman’s Health Alliance, which is based in Texas, failed to provide requested documentation about the safety record of its affiliated clinics in other states.
Among many other red flags initially raised in Whole Woman’s Health’s license application was its plan to employ as clinic administrator an individual who had also been the clinic administrator for the notorious Dr. Ulrich Klopfer. This late physician’s license had been suspended for failure to report sexual abuse of minors on whom he had performed abortions, and he subsequently has been found to have been hoarding thousands of aborted fetal remains in his garage and automobiles.
In South Bend, Whole Woman’s Health now operates a clinic that provides chemical abortions. Patients are given one type of medication that kills the fetus followed by another medication that induces the woman to expel the deceased fetus.
After initially being denied a license, Whole Woman’s Health asserted that it should be allowed to operate a clinic based on the constitutional rights of hypothetical future patients — an argument ultimately accepted by the appeals court. But the very basis of Indiana’s licensure requirements is to protect such patients, Attorney General Hill noted.
“Only women seeking abortions, not abortion providers, have specially protected abortion-related rights under the Fourteenth Amendment,†Attorney General Hill said. “And in this case, a would-be abortion clinic seeks to avoid state licensing standards designed to protect patients from incompetent and unscrupulous providers.â€
The World’s First Human-Composting Facility Is Set To Open in 2021
The World’s First Human-Composting Facility Is Set To Open in 2021. Families Could Take Home ‘Human Soil’ For Their Gardens.
by Peter Dockrill, Science Alert
December 11, 201
When a human being’s time is up in Western countries, we generally have two main options for our mortal remains — burial or cremation. Now, a world-first facility has been set up to offer a unique alternative ritual to traditional choices: compost.
Recompose, which is scheduled to begin operations in Seattle, Washington, in 2021, bills itself as the world’s first human composting facility, offering to gently convert human remains into the soil in a process it calls “recomposition” or “natural organic reduction.”
The company, a public benefit corporation led by founder Katrina Spade, has been in the works for years but became a legally viable service this year when Washington passed a historic bill to become the first US state to allow human composting.
The law goes into effect in May 2020, enabling what Spade calls a “death-care revolution,” in which bodies of the deceased will transform into the soil in the company’s reusable, hexagonal “recomposition vessels.”
The process draws upon the traditional principles of natural or “green” burials, but takes place inside the reusable vessels, rather than being permanently interred at the same time.
“Bodies are covered with wood chips and aerated, providing the perfect environment for naturally occurring microbes and beneficial bacteria,” Recompose’s web site explains. “Over the span of about 30 days, the body is fully transformed, creating soil which can then be used to grow new life.”
Once the composting process is complete, family and friends of the departed are encouraged to take some or all of the cubic yard of soil generated per person (amounting to several wheelbarrows of soil) and can use it to grow their own gardens, with remaining soil being used for conservation purposes.
Conservation aims are a linchpin of the company’s overall purpose — and the law that will let companies like Recompose operate. The company’s goal is to provide a more environmentally friendly end-of-life ritual than burying embalmed corpses in wooden caskets, or burning remains in cremation, which is energy-intensive due to the high temperatures required, and produces carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions.
Recompose estimates each person who chooses their organic reduction process (at a fee of about $5,500) over cremation or conventional burial will save about one ton of CO2, thanks to the carbon sequestration which occurs at different points throughout the process — not to mention the benefits of producing useful soil, rather than taking up limited land.
“I think one of the things for me, in addition to [the] carbon savings, is just having a way to create useable soil,” Spade told Citylab in January. “Something that you can go grows a tree with and have sort of this ritual around that feels meaningful.”
FOOTNOTES:
- Earlier this year, Washington passed a bill that makes it the first US state to allow human composting. The law will go into effect in 2020.
- Seattle-based company Recompose intends to open the world’s first human -composting facility in 2021.
- The facility will convert human remains into the soil, then allow families to take the soil home and plant it in their gardens.
NATALIE RASCHER CITY COUNCIL PLANNED RECOUNT WITHDRAWNÂ
NATALIE RASCHER CITY COUNCIL PLANNED RECOUNT WITHDRAWNÂ
In response to the withdrawal of the City Council Ward 2 recounts petitioned by Vanderburgh County GOP Chairman, Wayne Parke, I would like to make the following statement. “First I would like to take this opportunity to once again thank all of my supporters and the residence of the second ward that believed in my aptitude to serve and vision for a better community.
After meeting with legal counsel both Mr. Parke and me agreed that while there were more than 40+ issues found in absentee ballot validity, a recount would not allow for those ballots to be properly challenged under the current Indiana State election law.
Therefore, I asked him to withdraw from this process. I plan on continuing to serve my community as a private citizen and look forward to my next endeavor, whatever it may be.â€
Natalie Rascher, a graduate of Leadership Evansville, has a long history of public service on local boards and in community organizations including the Junior League of Evansville, the Greenway Advisory Board, and the Vanderburgh County Alcoholic Beverage Board. She has served as a volunteer for the United Way of Southwestern Indiana, YWCA, and the Alzheimer Association.
Natalie and her husband Zac Rascher live in Evansville’s Second Ward with their three
HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY GOP
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USI Starts 5-Game Homestand Sunday
16th-ranked University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball begins a five-game homestand Sunday at 3 p.m. when it hosts Lincoln College (Illinois). Game coverage for USI Men’s Basketball in 2019-20, including live stats, video, and audio broadcasts, is available at GoUSIEagles.com. The games also can be heard on ESPN 97.7FM and 95.7FM The Spin.
The homestand, which continues through the start of 2020, also includes King College (December 21), Tiffin University (December 22), Drury University (January 2), and Southwest Baptist University (January 4) over the next three weeks. The USI-SBU match-up will be the first meeting between the two programs in GLVC play.
USI Men’s Basketball Week 6 Quick Notes:
USI goes to 5-1 after a rough start to GLVC play. USI fell short to open the 2019-20 GLVC schedule, losing 68-64 on the road at McKendree University. The Eagles, who opened the game with a 19-point first-half lead, saw their offense go cold in the second half against the Bearcats. Junior guard/forward Clayton Hughes led USI with 16 points and nine rebounds.
USI in the polls. USI fell 16th in the NABC Top 25 poll and to 23rd in the D2SIDA Top 25 polls. The Eagles have been as high as ninth in both polls.
Leading the Eagles. Junior forward Emmanuel Little leads five USI players averaging in double-digits with 18.8 points per game. Junior forward Josh Price follows with 14.0 points per outing and a team-high 7.7 rebounds per contest.
USI vs. Lincoln (December 15). The Eagles are playing and hosting Lincoln College (Illinois) for the first time in program history.
Lincoln in 2019-20. Lincoln is 5-8 overall, going 2-6 in the last eight contests. The Lynx play at Harris-Stowe State University December 14 before visiting the Eagles on December 15.
NABC Division II Top 25 Poll
1. Nova Southeastern (Fla.)
2. Bellarmine (Ky.)
3. West Texas A&M
4. Northwest Missouri State
5. Indiana (Pa.)
6. Alabama Huntsville
7. Lincoln Memorial (Tenn.)
8. Daemen (N.Y.)
9. Dixie State (Utah)
10. UC San Diego
11. Missouri Southern
12. St. Edward’s (Texas)
13. Dallas Baptist (Texas)
14. Southeastern Oklahoma State
15. Indianapolis (Ind.)
16. Southern Indiana Â
17. Ferris State (Mich.)
18. West Chester (Pa.)
19. Florida Southern
20. Queens (N.C.)
21. Augustana (S.D.)
22. West Liberty (W.Va.)
23. Pace (N.Y.)
24. St. Thomas Aquinas (N.Y.)
25. Dominican (N.Y.)
D2SIDA Men’s Basketball
1. Bellarmine
2. West Texas A&M
3. Nova Southeastern
4. Northwest Missouri State
5. Indiana (Pa.)
6. Alabama Huntsville
7. UC San Diego
8. Daemen
9. Lincoln Memorial
10. West Chester
11. Ferris State
12. Southeastern Okla. State
13. Dixie State
14. Missouri Southern
15. Queens (N.C.)
16. Indianapolis
17. St. Thomas Aquinas
18. Dallas Baptist
19. Embry-Riddle
20. Cal Poly Pomona
21. Shippensburg
22. Pace
23. Southern Indiana Â
24. Florida Southern
25. Belmont Abbey
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE AREA
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