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CenterPoint Energy encourages customers to participate in energy efficiency programs

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CenterPoint recognizes 2024 Energy Efficiency Day  

Evansville, Ind. – Oct. 2, 2024 – CenterPoint Energy is celebrating 2024 Energy Efficiency Day by reminding customers of ways to reduce their home energy use, save money and lower their carbon footprint. 

Established in 2016, Energy Efficiency Day raises awareness for the benefits of energy efficiency efforts. Using energy more efficiently is one of the fastest and most cost-effective ways to save money, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, create jobs and meet the growing demand for energy.

Over the past 30 years, CenterPoint customers have saved billions of dollars and avoided millions of metric tons of emissions through energy efficiency programs, including weatherproofing such as air sealing and insulation, and installing more efficient appliances for heating, cooling and cooking.

“At CenterPoint, we have tips, tools and programs to help customers save energy and manage their bills. We encourage our customers to take steps to increase the energy efficiency of their home so that they can continue to stay comfortable inside year-round while reducing their energy use,” said Tony Gardner, Senior Vice President and Chief Customer Officer at CenterPoint. “By taking some small and easy actions, customers can make a big difference in reducing their monthly energy bills.”

CenterPoint wants to remind customers of some actions and tips they can take to reduce their energy use:

  • Regularly perform furnace maintenance: Service your furnace annually and check the air filter monthly to increase the efficiency of your equipment.
  • Adjust your temperature: Use a programmable or smart thermostat to automatically adjust your cooling or heating temperature when you’re asleep or away from home to maximize potential savings.
  • Seal air leaks: Use caulking and weather stripping around windows and doors to seal air leaks to reduce drafts inside your home for more efficient heating and cooling.
  • Use the sun: When it’s hot outside, keep window coverings closed to keep a cooler indoor temperature. When it’s cold outside, open your window coverings to capture warmth from the sun during the day, and close your coverings at night to keep warmth inside.
  • Choose energy smart appliances: When upgrading appliances, look for ENERGY STAR®-certified products for optimal efficiency. Energy efficiency rebates may be available for qualifying appliances.

Customers can learn more about energy savings tips and tools in addition to ways to manage their monthly energy bills at CenterPointEnergy.com/SavingsTips.

Indiana Hospitals Pledge Support to ‘Health First Indiana’ Initiative

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Indiana Hospitals Pledge Support to ‘Health First Indiana’ Initiative

Work underway with local health departments to improve health outcomes

Oct. 1, 2024 (INDIANAPOLIS) — All member hospitals of the Indiana Hospital Association (IHA) have signed the State’s Health First Indiana pledge to coordinate with local health departments on improving health outcomes for Hoosiers.

This milestone comes six months since IHA made its statewide pledge during Public Health Day at the Indiana Statehouse in February, alongside the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH), local health departments, Hoosier business leaders, and community partners. Since then, all 92 counties have opted into receiving Health First Indiana funding.

“Having pledged to work closely with local health departments and community leaders throughout the state, Indiana’s hospitals are taking the next steps in creating a healthier tomorrow,” said Steve Holman, IHA Board Chair and president and CEO of Union Health. “Now begins the real work to ensure every Hoosier has access to the foundational public health services they need to achieve their optimal health, no matter where they live, thanks to the critical funding provided by the Indiana General Assembly.”

Created by Senate Enrolled Act 4 during the 2023 legislative session, Health First Indiana leverages $225 million in state funding for local communities to prioritize public health and safety. The initiative focuses on providing core public health services, including infant health, childhood lead screening, chronic disease prevention, trauma and injury prevention, and more.

Hospitals have pledged to act through collaboration and communication with local health departments to address key public health outcomes, focusing first on infant and maternal mortality, obesity, and smoking cessation.

“Health First Indiana is all about partnerships, and having the support of IHA and its members is essential to prioritizing health in Indiana,” said State Health Commissioner Lindsay Weaver, M.D., FACEP. “To fully realize our goal of improved health outcomes for Hoosiers, it will take the collaboration of multiple sectors including the hospitals. I am thrilled that 100% of our general hospitals have committed to this shared goal. We continue to call on others across the state — businesses, community organizations, and other leaders — to join us at the table and work together to make Indiana a healthier place for everyone.”

USI Engineers in Action chapter leads construction of largest pedestrian footbridge to date in South Africa

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Screenshot 2024-10-02 095437.png

Image copyright: USI EIA Chapter

In June, four University of Southern Indiana students from USI’s Engineers in Action (EIA) chapter, led by Dr. Susan Ely, Assistant Professor of Engineering, departed on a trip to Lubombo, Eswatini, in South Africa to build a pedestrian bridge as part of an EIA project to connect isolated communities to critical services such as shops, schools, clinics, co-ops, churches and more.  

This is USI’s first year serving as the solo Lead Institution, a role that leads the EIA project in design, construction and quality control. USI previously served as a co-lead. In addition to USI, this year’s project included students from Eastern Mennonite University and the University of Iowa.  

“The designing and planning of the project equates to the workload of one of the College’s engineering courses,” says Ely. “In fact, many of the students utilize their Senior Design to complete the work necessary for this project.” 

USI students worked with volunteer engineers from October 2023 to April 2024 to complete the final design, which received an official Principals and Practice of Engineering (PE) seal upon completion. The bridge was the largest pedestrian footbridge ever built by USI’s chapter, spanning 106.5 meters, and took almost two months to complete. The previous bridge was in a state of disrepair after seasonal flooding. The new bridge ensures a year-round safe passage for members of the communities. Over 4,000 residents and more than 1,800 children have been impacted by the project. 

“We spoke to children that hadn’t been able to go to school during the rainy season and parents who couldn’t get to work because the river was too dangerous to cross,” says Ely. “While the bridge only took eight weeks to complete, lives in these communities are forever changed because of the work that was done.” 

During the eight-week project, the team worked, ate, slept and socialized with the local community, learning the language and customs of its people. Each team member played a unique and important role.  

Melanie Cedeno ’24, electrical engineering major, served as Project Manager, overseeing every aspect of the build for all of the participating institutions. This included working with each member of the student teams to ensure they worked efficiently, communicated well and collaborated with the community and other project stakeholders. Cedeno also was the main point of contact for EIA and the community leaders. She completed her role with excellence, earning the annual EIA award for “Builder of the Year,” the highest honor EIA bestowed to a student team member, and she was hired to become a fellow with EIA, stationed in eSwatini, upon her graduation. This was Cedeno’s second bridge build during her time at USI. 

“I am deeply inspired by the ongoing opportunity to support individuals through engineering,” says Cedeno. “Seeing the excitement of a community as a new bridge connects them to vital resources and opportunities fulfills me immensely.” 

Miguel Pinto ’25, electrical engineering major, served as Cultural Relations Manager, which focused on the interactions between the university teams and the local community. To help foster collaboration, Pinto assisted in organizing community soccer matches, leading students and community members in singing and dancing together and helping to introduce local community members to American foods like pancakes and banana bread. This was his third bridge build during his time at USI. 

Josiah Hollis ’25, electrical engineering major, served as Construction Manager. This role included managing the construction schedule and ensuring that each day, the correct tasks were completed on time. Hollis worked with the professional masons on site, the community leaders and the student teams to make sure the correct materials and supplies were available on hand, as well as assigned the appropriate people to each task. Under Hollis’ leadership, the bridge was completed as scheduled. This was Josiah’s third bridge build during his time at USI. 

Jonas Hollis ’27, manufacturing engineering major, served as Quality Manager. This role included verifying and validating all critical construction points throughout the building process. Jonas worked closely with the other members of the student teams, independently validating measurements, material quality and process steps during construction. This was Jonas’ first bridge build with USI, and he will be serving as the USI Project Manager for the upcoming 2024-25 build year. 

USI’s EIA chapter is a part of the national EIA organization which improves the lives of thousands of people every year by building critical infrastructure in their communities including bridges and access to clean water. USI has sent student teams to Eswatini in South Africa in 2023, Bolivia in 2022, West Virginia in 2021 and Eswatini in South Africa in 2019.     

Students of all majors are invited to participate in EIA and bridge project events. For more information about EIA, contact Ely at sely@usi.edu. For more information about USI’s accredited Engineering Department, visit USI.edu/engineering.     

VANDERBURGH COUNTY REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSION MEETING

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The Vanderburgh County Redevelopment Commission will hold a meeting on Thursday, November 7, 2024, at 10:00 a.m. in Room 301 of the Civic Center Complex at 1 N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana.

The meeting will be hosted virtually on Webex pursuant to IC 36-7-14-3.1 and IC 36-7- 14.5-9.5. Participants will be provided registration instructions.

To Watch the Meeting Via Granicus:

https://www.evansvillegov.org/egov/apps/services/index.egov?view=detail;id=13

 

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD DAILY ACTUCY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

Eagles drop a nail-biter in five sets to UT Martin

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EVANSVILLE, Ind.- University of Southern Indiana Volleyball (6-9, 1-2 OVC) falls in a nail-biter against University of Tennessee at Martin (3-9, 1-2 OVC) in five sets (15-25, 25-21, 20-25, 25-21, 13-15).
 
Junior Keira Moore had a special night eclipsing 1,000 career digs. Moore reached this mark in only her third year becoming the 15th Screaming Eagle to achieve this remarkable achievement. The Castle product also earned a season-high 29 digs tonight.
 
Set 1: UTM 25, USI 15
USI came out flat falling behind early, 12-6 on six USI attacking errors. Senior Jasmine Green tried to help the Eagles dig themselves out of the hole with two big kills. However, the Skyhawk offense overwhelmed the Eagles with a set high .229 hitting percentage compared to USI’s -.026 percentage. The Eagles dropped their 11th first set of the season.
 
Set 2: UTM 21, USI 25
USI minimized the self-inflicted mistakes in set two with only five errors. Sophomore Leah Coleman, senior Paris Downing, and sophomore Ashby Willis came alive smashing two kills each to give the Eagles a 13-11 lead. The senior duo of Carly Sobieralski to Downing connected to clinch the set two victory. Junior Bianca Anderson, Coleman, Downing, and Green all tallied multiple kills to keep the Skyhawks guessing. The second set victory marked the Eagles ninth second frame win of the year.
 
Set 3: UTM 25, USI 20
USI struggled to start the set once again falling behind 14-8 committing seven attack errors. Coleman led the Eagles on a charge with three consecutive kills from Sobieralski. However, the early deficit became too steep to overcome. The Skyhawks dominated blocking the Eagles at the net through three sets with 12 total blocks opposed USI’s two.

Set 4: UTM 21, USI 25
The Eagles reversed the early trends jumping out to the hot start, 8-5. Anderson swatted home her patented kill straight through the middle to extend the Eagles lead, 12-9.  She continued to feast with her fourth kill of the set to maintain a four-point lead. Moore frustrated the Skyhawk attack tallying nine set digs leading the Eagles with 23. USI forced game five after only committing four errors.
 
Set 5: UTM 15, USI 13
USI fell into another hole as the Skyhawks took the first five points. The Eagles roared back on a four-point run off emphatic kills from Downing and Green. Moore led another USI run of five points with a rare kill off a dig, along with a service ace making it 9-6 Eagles. After a UT Martin timeout, the Skyhawks erupted on a 7-1 run to lead 13-10. Willis answered with a kill and service ace to draw within one. However, USI failed to mount another late run falling in five sets.
 
Downing lead the Eagles offensively for the first team this season with 13 kills at a season high. Sobieralski finished with 46 assists and 13 digs in another double-double. Moore tallied a monstrous 29 digs, missing a career high by three digs. Downing also excelled defensively with four blocks.

As a team, USI finished with 55 kills, 51 assists, 80 digs, four aces, seven blocks, and a .134 attacking percentage. The Skyhawks earned 62 kills, 59 assists, 92 digs, six aces, 15 blocks, and a .147 hitting percentage.
 

Trailblazers building momentum after Region 24 road sweep at Frontier

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FAIRFIELD, Ill. – The Vincennes University volleyball team hit the road Tuesday night for another Region 24 road showdown, this time heading to Fairfield, Ill. to take on Frontier Community College.

The Trailblazers handled business against the Bobcats, coming away with a big sweep 25-12, 25-11, 25-10 ahead of the 2024 Showdown on the Wabash tournament.

VU got the night started off strong by quickly building a 14-5 lead over Frontier in the opening set.

Frontier would cut the deficit to six after three unanswered points but Vincennes was able to rebound and pull away late with a 6-0 run to take set one 25-12 and gain a 1-0 match lead.

Set two began as more of a back-and-forth affair, with Frontier gaining their first lead of the night at 5-2 before Vincennes answered back with six straight to take the lead back at 8-5.

Vincennes would hold on to this lead, closing out the second set with a massive 13-2 scoring run to take set two 25-11 and earn a 2-0 match lead.

The Trailblazers continued to show their strength in set three, looking to close out the sweep, Vincennes only allowed Frontier to score consecutive points once in the set as VU again pulled away late with a 10-1 scoring run to take set three 25-10 and complete the three set sweep.

“We wanted to play hard and to play hard respectfully,” VUVB Head Coach Gary Sien said. “We talked about being on task in all parts of the game and especially do better in our offense, which was way off last week.”

The Trailblazer offense was led by sophomores Laura Tavares (Merida, Venezuela) and Elisa Dalla Pozza (Vincenza, Italy) who each recorded nine kills in the match.

Tavares also added one block, while Dalla Pozza led the Blazers with three blocks, two aces and two digs.

Sophomore Isadora Dias (Rio Grande de Norte, Brazil) and freshman Martyna Sadowska (Pila, Poland) each finished the night with five kills, with Dias adding four digs and one block and Sadowska adding two blocks.

Sophomore Allison Czyzewski (Louisville, Ill.) finished her night with four kills and two blocks, while freshman Paulina Fister (Tuszyn, Poland) came away with four kills, four digs, three set assists and one block.

Freshman Karen Kodi (West Carrollton, Ohio) rounded out the VU offensive numbers with a pair of kills on the night.

Sophomore setter Libby Mehringer (Jasper, Ind.) ran the VU offense very well, distributing the ball to 17 set assists, three digs and two aces.

Freshman Rylee Edwards (Fairfield, Ill.) put on a show for her hometown crowd, finishing with 12 set assists and five digs.

Sophomore Dylan DeCoursey (Montgomery, Ind.) entered the match in the third set and finished her night with seven set assists and three digs.

Sophomore libero Grace Flexter (Oblong, Ill.) led the Vincennes back row defense with a team-high 11 digs and one ace, while freshman Ashley Earp (Mattoon, Ill.) added four digs and a pair of aces.

Freshman Julianna Rettig (Antioch, Ill.) closed out the VU box score with a pair of digs and one ace on the night.

“I thought Paulina swung very well tonight and we need her to,” Sien added. “I thought our setters, Dylan, Libby and Rylee made some great setting choices, especially in the middle. Allison and Elisa had some great swings in the middle as we hit over .300 percent tonight.”

“Laura swung well too and Grace was on point in serve receive as well,” Sien said.

 

USI ties for sixth at Bubba Barnett Intercollegiate, Vertanen shoots one off USI career mark

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JONESBORO, Ark. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Golf finished in a tie for sixth place this week at the Bubba Barnett Intercollegiate hosted by Arkansas State University.
 
As a team, Southern Indiana shot 863 (292-280-291) over three rounds and 54 holes of competition. Senior Sam Vertanen led the Screaming Eagles in red numbers by shooting four under par and 212 (71-70-71), earning a tie for 17th on the individual leaderboard. Vertanen was one stroke off his 54-hole USI career best.
 
Round 1
The opening round saw Vertanen finish atop the scoresheet with a one-under 71. In addition to Vertanen, junior Carter Goebel finished second on the team at 73 (+1).
 
The Screaming Eagles carded 292 (+4) as a team, putting them in ninth place after the first round.
 
Round 2
Senior Jason Bannister and Goebel each logged a four-under 68 in round two, the best individual round scores by USI in the tournament.
 
After an impressive first round, Vertanen improved further in round two by shooting one stroke less with a two-under round of 70.
 
USI made its team leaderboard jump in the second round, going from ninth to sixth place. The Eagles improved by 12 strokes in round two by shooting 280 (-8) collectively, three strokes ahead of Ohio Valley Conference foe University of Tennessee at Martin.
 
Round 3
Southern Indiana cooled off a bit in round three Tuesday but held its spot in sixth. The Screaming Eagles posted a 291 (+3) in the final round. UT Martin started the day hot to catch USI but cooled off to tie the Eagles in sixth on the team leaderboard.
 
Sophomore Hunter Reynolds and senior Wade Worthington, who each notched an eagle in the opening round Monday, saw their best round in round three shooting 73 (+1). Vertanen tied his first-round performance at 71 (-1), earning him the top spot for USI.
 

Andres Rodriguez leads UE men in Arkansas

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 Aces finish in 15th place

 JONESBORO, Ark. – With a 2-over 74 in the final round of the Bubba Barnett Intercollegiate on Tuesday, Andres Rodriguez picked up the top finish for the University of Evansville men’s golf team at RidgePointe Country Club.

After carding scores of 74 and 71 in the opening rounds, Rodriguez posted a 74 in round three.  His 219 tied him for 40th place.  Completing the tournament two behind Rodriguez was Omar Khalid.  He matched Rodriguez’ team low for the day, registering a 74.  His final tally of 221 tied him for 48th.

Finishing third on the Purple Aces squad was Daniil Romashkin.  He shot a 79 on Tuesday, giving him a 229 for the weekend.  His scored tied him for 69th.  Following him was Mason Taylor.  Highlighted by a 74 in the first 18 holes, Taylor wrapped up the tournament with a 232.  Making his debut for UE, Jamison Ousley posted an 80 in the third round and finished with a 242 over the course of 54 holes.

Evansville’s final tally of 898 put them in 15th place, just four behind Eastern Illinois.  Arkansas State cruised to the team and individual wins.  Their team final of 822 bested Oklahoma Christian by 15 strokes.  Thomas Schmidt of ASU was the medalist with a 197.  He matched his tournament-low round of 65 on Tuesday.

Just two more fall events remain for UE.  Next week, the team will be in Lexington, Ky. for the Cullan Brown Collegiate.  It will take place on Monday and Tuesday.