“IS IT TRUE” OCTOBER 2, 2019
We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUEâ€Â will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?
MAYORAL CANDIDATE STEVE ARY RELEASES SPEECH HE MADE AT ROTARY CLUB
Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen, and thank you all for being here today, and for inviting us to join you. To the Rotary Club of Evansville, I thank you for this wonderful event and the opportunity to speak with some of the most active and influential members of our city, our businesses, and our community.
As you look around town, you will see that Evansville… is changing. And I applaud Lloyd Winnecke for bringing a new appearance to Evansville. Under Lloyd Winnecke, new buildings are going up. Old buildings are being restored. A new face has been brought to the downtown area, to Haynie’s Corner, and to the Arts District. A new penguin exhibit is coming to Mesker Zoo. And a new Aquatic Center is coming to Garvin Park.
Evansville has essentially been getting a facelift. Our wrinkles are being tucked away, and our features are being highlighted. Our gray hair has been dyed to a darker brown, and our bifocals… to contacts. We have spent hundreds of millions of dollars to change the outward appearance of our city… but we have to understand that when a man or woman gets a facelift… it may change their appearance, but it doesn’t change who they are on the inside.
The initial steps have been taken to make our city look better from the outside. For that, again, I applaud Lloyd Winnecke for investing in the downtown area. …But now it’s time to help our community feel better on the inside by investing… in them.
Sure, we can buy and build all the buildings we want, but if we don’t have the money left over to pay them off and to maintain them, the overall condition on the inside of our community will eventually pull those beautiful facial features into the frown lines and crows feet of yesterday.
Touting cosmetic accomplishments and stating surface-level successes will hold the line of our conversations and keep a smile on our collective face, but beauty is not found in appearance only, but it’s what is on the inside that determines… our true beauty.
So, just like the pioneers of this great country, we must not look only to the appearance of things but get to the heart of matters, to objectively recognize the problems, and bring forth much-needed solutions.
Solution-Oriented Pioneers is what we need in Evansville, to bring the positive changes we all desire. If we focus on the appearance of this city only… without recognizing our internal flaws, we will overlook the course and direction of our future, and we will have invested in a fleeting cause.
Let’s look at the problems for a moment, and recognize our need for change.
– Nearly 25% of our population lives in poverty. That’s 27,260 people. There is a need for change.
– While some will brag that chronic homelessness is on the decline, overall homelessness in Evansville has actually increased by 12% in the last year alone. Chronic-homeless-numbers do not matter to the more than 50 recently homeless individuals who are suffering through their newly-found situations. There is a need for change.
– 97% …that’s 97% of the cities in Indiana… is considered safer than Evansville in violent crime and property crime. There is a need for change.
– In the past several years, Evansville has been named the Meth Capital of the U.S., the Suicide Capital of America, the most depressed city, and the Most Miserable city in the country. There is a need for change.
– Heroine activity, drug overdose deaths, stabbings, and shootings have filled our local news in recent days. There is a need for change.
– A $20 million dollar hotel which stands at half the height which was promised us, remains at only a 47% occupancy rate. A Medical School which was projected to bring 2,000 students to Evansville has fallen drastically short. The vacancy rate of buildings in Evansville is through the roof but we continue to invest in more. There is a need for change.
– When the projections are high, but the results… are low, eventually it will be the taxpayers that have to pay the piper. There is a need for change.
– $4 million dollars in First Responder Medical bills remain unpaid. And the morale of our First Responders has plummeted over their Health Insurance and the lack of backing in our city. There is a need for change.
While the cosmetic appearance of Evansville is becoming more and more beautiful every day… if we continue to highlight that beauty and ignore the problems at the core, Evansville will continue in the way that it has if we don’t recognize that need for change.
If we ignore the problems, we will continue to fix what is not broken. We will take on unnecessary projects, we will spend money unnecessarily, and we will sacrifice our desired results.
Additionally, the overall condition of a city cannot be transformed if we only transform one part of the city. Residents and business owners feel neglected in parts of town that are not downtown. I will support and bring change to the West Side, the East Side, the North Side… and especially the South Side. And I will do it by working with developers, by working with organizations, and by working with the community.
Evansville’s focus has been cosmetic. My focus as mayor will be to bring the positive results we need to the very core of our city, to fill the empty buildings with value and character for the purpose of building our economy. To cause what’s inside to reflect the beauty of the outside.
I will work with organizations to find the best ways to bring in attractions that actually attract, which would also increase and better our economy. Simultaneously, I will focus on working with local businesses for the best options available to grow our city and to expand its population. I will only invest in capital improvement projects that actually improve capital. And I will bring conservative projections with high results.
As mayor, I will focus my efforts on bringing those results for the citizens of Evansville. I will cut unnecessary overspending. I will bring about full and absolute government transparency and accountability. And I will bring a fresh outlook to running a balanced budget with a focus on the bottom line.
I will be committed to keeping taxes low. I will work with developers to bring about more affordable housing. I will work with local businesses and business owners to help them succeed in this city. I also will work to attract potential residents to our community to bring forth a population growth that we haven’t seen in over 50 years.
Ultimately, I will return the eyes and the heart of this city from the high-dollar projects… back… to the most valuable assets we have… our people.
Thank you.
Steve Ary
Mayoral Candidate for the City Of Evansville
FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer will post other Mayoral candidates Evansville Rotary Club speeches without editing, bias or opinion. Â
HAPPENINGS AT THE VANDERBURGH COU NTY REPUBLICAN PARTY
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Vectren Celebrates Energy Efficiency Day With Jacobsville Jamboree Energy Savings Block Party
In recognition of the fourth annual national Energy Efficiency Day, Vectren, a CenterPoint Energy Company, is joining regional and national organizations, businesses, utilities, universities and individuals in promoting energy efficiency – the easy, quickest way to meet energy needs, cut utility bills and reduce pollution.
The company is celebrating Energy Efficiency Day in partnership with The Dream Center of Evansville, the Jacobsville Area Community Corporation and Habitat for Humanity of Evansville during the Jacobsville Jamboree energy savings block party, which is taking place Wednesday afternoon on N. Lafayette Ave in Evansville from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Mayor Lloyd Winnecke will be in attendance to deliver a proclamation.
What: Jacobsville Jamboree energy savings block party
 When: Oct. 2, 2019 from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
 Where: N. Lafayette Ave between E. Delaware Street and E. Iowa Street
 Why: Vectren is joining organizations nationwide in recognizing Oct. 2 as the fourth annual Energy Efficiency Day.
Holly’s House Receives A $70,000 Grant From The Allstate Foundation
The Allstate Foundation will present a check for $70,000 to Holly’s House, a non-profit organization that provides services for victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, and child abuse in southwest Indiana. Holly’s House is a non-residential victim advocacy center whose mission is to empower victims of intimate crime by providing support, promoting justice, and preventing violence.
Since opening its doors in September of 2008, Holly’s House has facilitated interviews for more than 3,600 adults and children while bridging connections between families and services with more than 6,000 recommendations and referrals to various community agencies each year. Holly’s House has also provided child abuse prevention education to more than 50,000 elementary school children. The agency’s services are now reaching eleven southwest Indiana counties.Â
Since 2006, the Allstate Foundation has contributed more than $600,000 dollars to Holly’s House. This grant supports the collaborative services offered by Holly’s House, Albion Fellows Bacon Center and the Lampion Center. Each organization provides unique expertise. By working together, with the support of the Allstate Foundation, these organizations ensure a continuum of services is available for survivors of family violence and other intimate crimes in southwest Indiana.Â
Andy Garza, Field Senior Vice President for Allstate and Vincennes Allstate agency owner Pete Barry will present the check to Holly’s House Executive Director, Holly Edmond on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 11-11:15 a.m.
WHERE: Cambridge Golf Course located on 1034 Beacon Hill in Evansville.
CONTACT: Holly Edmond Executive Director of Holly’s House at 812-306-1544.
EPA Requests Applications for Grants to Help Reduce Diesel Emissions from School Buses
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is announcing the availability of approximately $10 million in rebates to public school bus fleet owners to help them replace older school buses. Upgrading buses with older engines reduces diesel emissions and improves air quality. Tomorrow marks the start of Children’s Health Month, and today’s announcement is an important part of the agency’s commitment to protecting children’s health and their future.
“Children’s health is a top priority for EPA, and these grants will help provide cleaner air and a safer, more reliable ride to and from school for America’s children,†said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “This DERA funding reflects our broader children’s health agenda and commitment to ensure all children can live, learn, and play in healthy and clean environments.â€
EPA standards for new diesel engines can make them more than 90% cleaner than older ones, but many older diesel engines still in operation predate these standards. Older diesel engines emit large quantities of pollutants such as particulate matter (PM) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), which have been linked to serious health problems such as aggravated asthma and lung damage.
EPA will accept applications from Monday, Sept. 30, 2019, to Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019.
This is the seventh rebate program to fund cleaner school buses offered under Diesel Emission Reduction Act (DERA) appropriations. Nearly 30,000 buses across the country have already been made cleaner as a result of DERA funding.
UE Offers UExplore Engineering Program For High School Students
The College of Engineering and Computer Science at the University of Evansville is offering a UExplore Engineering Program for high school students. The program is designed to give participants a better understanding of the fields of civil, mechanical, electrical, and computer engineering and computer science through activities, hands-on projects, and tours of local industry.
The sessions in the program are October 14, November 4, November 25, January 20, February 10, March 2, March 30, and April 20. All sessions will be from 6:00-7:15 p.m. in the Koch Center for Engineering and Science on UE’s campus.
James Allen, UE associate professor of mechanical and civil engineering, is the advisor for the program. A registered professional engineer in the states of Indiana and Ohio, Allen has extensive work experience in industry. Allen will be assisted with the program by UE engineering students.
The registration fee for the program is $50.
Register online at www.evansville.edu/uexploreengineering or contact Kimberly Higgins for more information at 812-488-2661 or kh209@evansville.edu.
View Online: http://evansville.meritpages.com/news/UE-to-Offer-UExplore-Engineering-Program-for-High-School-Students/11446