The University of Southern Indiana volleyball team defeated Lindenwood University in Great Lakes Valley Conference play, 26-24, 17-25, 25-14 and 28-26 on Saturday afternoon.
The Screaming Eagles (9-10, 3-4 GLVC) held their opponent to a .062 hitting percentage thanks to 15 blocks as a unit, with senior middle hitter Elexis Coleman (Joliet, Illinois) and sophomore right side hitter Sidney Hegg (Menasha, Wisconsin) each tying career highs with seven blocks apiece.
The Lions (8-8, 1-6 GLVC) kept the USI attack at bay with 92 digs to pull the Eagles’ hitting clip down to .108 for the match.
Freshman outside hitter Leah Anderson (Bloomington, Illinois) led the Eagles with 14 kills and added 13 digs for her third double-double of the season. Freshman libero Audrey Crowder (Avon, Indiana) continued her momentum from Thursday night with a USI-leading 19 digs.
USI Volleyball heads north to Indianapolis for the Midwest Region Crossover Friday. More information on the Crossover, including pairings, will be available at GoUSIEagles.com as soon as possible.
First Set: USI 26, Lindenwood 24
The Eagles and Lions combined for 11 tied scores and eight lead changes on their way to extra points in the opening game.
Coleman and Anderson combined for seven kills and three blocks. Anderson also collected six of her 13 digs.
Second Set: Lindenwood 25, USI 17
The Lions stole the second set despite the Eagles stuffing four Lindenwood attacks. Conversely, USI was charged with eight attack errors to just nine kills as a unit, seven of which were unforced.
Four Eagles tallied a pair of kills in the frame: Coleman, Anderson, Hegg and senior outside hitter Lindsey Stose (Elkhart, Indiana). Coleman also added another three blocks to her total.
Third Set: USI 25, Lindenwood 14
The Eagles exploded out of the gate, then dropped a 15-6 run on the Lions following a timeout at 10-8 to snag the third set.
USI put up a wall at the net, racking up six team blocks, with Hegg collecting five and senior middle blocker Amanda Jung (Belleville, Illinois) tallying four. The Eagles also posted a .233 hitting clip in the third, the highest by either team in any set.
Anderson and freshman right side hitter Katherine Koch (Bellevillle, Illinois) each posted three kills in the early portion of the frame, complimenting Jung and Hegg’s pair of blocks heading into the 10-8 USI timeout.
Fourth Set: USI 28, Lindenwood 26
The Lions gave USI everything they had in the final frame, including a whopping 16 kills to USI’s 12; both figures represented the two highest team outputs of any set.
Crowder found eight of her 19 digs in the final frame as Lindenwood was able to avoid USI’s dominance at the net late in the match.
Anderson led the Eagles with five kills in the fourth. USI overcame a tremendous seven-for-nine attack effort from Lindenwood’s Kat Finnerty, who made her first appearance in the third, then came off the bench again in the final game.
Sophomore All-American Titus Winders (Mansfield, Tennessee) posted a top-five finish to lead No. 8 University of Southern Indiana Men’s Cross Country to a fourth-place showing at the Lewis University Crossover Saturday morning.
Winders battled through cold and windy conditions to place fourth out of 420 runners with an eight-kilometer time of 25 minutes, 17.0 seconds. Senior Austin Nolan(Evansville, Indiana) was 19th with an 8k time of 25:52.3 as the Screaming Eagles concluded the race with 149 team points in a 34-team field that featured 10 nationally-ranked programs.
Junior Gavin Prior (Mattoon, Illinois) aided the Eagles with a 24th-place finish, while fellow classmate Grady Wilkinson (Mt. Carmel, Illinois) was 37th. USI’s top five was rounded out by junior Wyat Harmon (Fredericktown, Ohio), who crossed the finish line in 76th place; while senior Javan Winders (Mansfield, Ohio) and junior Michael Demeyer (Olney, Illinois) were 85th and 157th, respectively, to round out the Eagles’ top seven.
No. 4 Grand Valley State University won the team title with a score of 87 points, while No. 7 Missouri Southern State University was second with 114 points. No. 6 Augustana University edged USI by 16 points with its tally of 133 points, while No. 19 University of Alabama-Huntsville was fifth 171 points.
Other nationally-ranked programs competing at the Lewis Crossover included No. 11 Michigan Tech University (19th); No. 17 Walsh University (9th); No. 18 California State University-San Marcos (7th); No. 20 University of Sioux Falls (6th); No. 22 Saginaw Valley State University (10th); and No. 25 Wayne State University (14th).
Missouri Southern State’s Gidieon Kimutai won the race with a time of 25:07.2, while Grand Valley State’s Tanner Chada was second with a time of 25:08.3. Sioux Falls’ Steven Brown was third with a time of 25:16.9, while Saginaw Valley State’s CarLee Stimpfell followed Titus Winders in fifth with at time of 25:19.8
Saturday’s meet was USI’s final tune-up prior to the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championships, which the Eagles host October 26 at Angel Mounds in Evansville, Indiana. USI also hosts the NCAA II Midwest Region Championships November 9 at Angel Mounds.
Junior Jennifer Comastri (Indianapolis, Indiana) finished fifth out of 402 runners to lead No. 13 University of Southern Indiana Women’s Cross Country to a sixth-place showing at the Lewis University Crossover Saturday morning.
Comastri trudged through cold, damp and windy conditions to finish the six-kilometer race in 22 minutes, 50.8 seconds. Senior Hope Jones (Cumberland, Indiana) was 26th with a 6k time of 23:21.1 to aid the Screaming Eagles, who finished with 226 points in a 36-team field that featured six nationally-ranked programs.
In addition to Comastri and Jones, USI was aided by freshman Presley Warren (Henderson, Kentucky), who finished 60th overall, as well as junior Doriane Langlois (Stains, France), who was 69th. Senior Ashley Lawhorn (Frankfort, Kentucky) was 92nd to round out the Eagles’ top-five competitors; while sophomore Emma Brown (Evansville, Indiana) and freshman Aubrey Swart (Noblesville, Indiana) were 114th and 126th, respectively, to complete USI’s top seven.
No. 2 Grand Valley State University won the team title with 32 total points, while Grand Valley State senior Allie Ludge was the individual winner with a time of 22:12.1. No. 5 Augustana University finished second with 119 points, while No. 12 Walsh University was third with 166 points.
The top five teams were respectively rounded out by Saginaw Valley State University (211 points) and Michigan Tech University (216 points), while No. 22 Wayne State University (259 points) and No. 17 Missouri Southern State University were seventh and 18th, respectively, to round out the performances of the nationally-ranked programs.
Saturday’s meet was USI’s final tune-up prior to the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championships, which the Eagles host October 26 at Angel Mounds in Evansville, Indiana. USI also hosts the NCAA II Midwest Region Championships November 9 at Angel Mounds.
INDIANAPOLIS—The Indiana Supreme Court will be heading out of its paneled courtroom at the Statehouse to Parke County where area students will get the chance to see the justices in action.
The case involves a fight in the parking lot of a bar in Schererville that happened in 2006 after the establishment closed. The issue for the state’s highest court to decide is whether it should assume jurisdiction in the case and decide under what circumstances the bar owner should be responsible for fights in the parking lot after the business has closed.
Parke Heritage High School in Rockville, Indiana will be the site of the arguments among lawyers for Cavanaugh’s Sports Bar and Eatery and the man who was injured, Eric Porterfield. The arguments will last 50 minutes and are open to the media and public, with nearly 400 students from schools around the area attending.
Porterfield, now an elected Republican delegate to the legislature in West Virginia, was among a group of patrons who exited into Cavanaugh’s parking lot after the bar closed early in the morning in December 2006. A fight broke out and in the course of the brawl Porterfield sustained a serious eye injury.
In his lawsuit, filed in Lake County Superior Court, Porterfield noted there had been other fights in the parking lot and the owner should have provided security to prevent his injuries. Lawyers for the bar argue the case should have been dismissed because the owner couldn’t foresee the fight.
Both the lower court and the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled against the bar owner, citing a 2003 case that said he had an obligation to provide security for patrons. Cavanaugh’s then appealed to the Supreme Court.
If justices decide to take the case, the high court will decide how case law should be applied and whether the lower court should have dismissed the case or allowed it to proceed to trial
The court holds about 60 oral arguments at the Statehouse in Indianapolis each year and travels twice a year to allow groups who cannot get to Indianapolis to see how it works. Since 1994, there have been 45 arguments heard outside to the Statehouse.
Brandon Barger is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalists.
CONSENT AGENDA:Â FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A.
ORDINANCE G-2019-13 An Ordinance Amending Chapter 5.40 (Taxicabs) of the Evansville Municipal Code Sponsor(s): Melcher Discussion Led By: ASD Chair Mosby Discussion Date: 10/28/2019 Notify: Josh Claybourn, Jackson Kelly
ORDINANCE F-2019-22 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Re-Appropriations within the Department of Metropolitan Development Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date: 10/28/2019
ORDINANCE R-2019-25 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 210 Waggoner Avenue Petitioner: Habitat for Humanity of Evansville, Inc. Owner: Habitat for Humanity of Evansville, Inc. Requested Change: C4 to R2 Ward: 5 Elpers Representative: Beth Folz, Habitat for Humanity of Evansville, Inc.
ORDINANCE R-2019-26 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 257 259 E Mulberry Street Petitioner: Sarah Schuler Owner: Albion Fellows Bacon Center Requested Change: C1 & R2 to C1 Ward: 4 Weaver Representative: Sarah Schuler, VPS Architecture
ORDINANCE R-2019-27 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 1807 & 1809 Stringtown Rd Petitioner:Jason Paul Owner:Jason Paul Requested Change: C4 to R2 Ward:3Melcher Representative:Jason Paul
REGULAR AGENDA:Â SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A.
ORDINANCE G-2019-12 An Ordinance Fixing the Salaries of Every Appointive Officer, Employee, Deputy, Assistant, Departmental and Institutional Head of the City of Evansville and the Evansville-Vanderburgh County Levee Authority for the Year 2020 and Establishing Salary Administration Procedures Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date: 10/14/2019
ORDINANCE F-2019-16 Amended An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana Appropriating Monies for the Purpose of Defraying the Expenditures of Departments of the City Government for the Fiscal Year Beginning January 1, 2020 Sponsor(s):Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date:10/14/2019 Notify:Russ Lloyd, Jr., Controller
ORDINANCE F-2019-17 Amended An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana Appropriating Monies for the Purpose of Defraying the Expenditures of Evansville-Vanderburgh Levee Authority District for the Fiscal Year Beginning January 1, 2020 Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date: 10/14/2019
ORDINANCE F-2019-18 Amended An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Approving and Adopting the 2020 Budget for the Port Authority of Evansville Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date: 10/14/2019
ORDINANCE F-2019-20 Amended An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date: 10/14/2019
ORDINANCE F-2019-21 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Appropriations and Repeal and Appropriations of Funds Within the Department of Metropolitan Development Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver Discussion Date: 10/14/2019 Notify: Kelley Coures, DMD
RESOLUTION C-2019-19 A Resolution Encouraging Changes to the 2020 Budget for Fire Station Maintenance Sponsor(s): Mosby Discussion Led By: Councilman Weaver Discussion Date: 10/14/2019
In support of the Trump Administration’s Executive Order on Promoting Agriculture and Rural Prosperity in America, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service and the Northern Border Regional Commission (NBRC) are announcing that they have selected 10 communities under the Recreation Economy for Rural Communities assistance program to help revitalize their Main Streets through outdoor recreation.
Several of the selected communities are in or adjacent to Opportunity Zones, economically-distressed areas that can be designated for preferential tax treatment under the president’s historic tax reform package. The 10 communities selected for assistance include: Cambridge, New York; Fryeburg, Maine; Giles County, Virginia; Glenwood Springs, Colorado; Gorham, New Hampshire; Grants, New Mexico; Jasper, Alabama; John Day, Oregon; Poultney, Vermont; and Thompson Falls, Montana.
“We are pleased to work with our federal partners to promote healthy outdoor activities and deliver on President Trump’s commitment to support and revitalize rural communities,â€Â said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “Together, we will develop strategies that rural communities can use to grow their economies and make wise use of their natural resources.â€
“What better way to sustain our nation’s forests, grasslands and watersheds than through partnerships that engage people directly in stewardship and foster community-driven economic opportunities,â€Â said USDA Forest Service Chief Vicki Christiansen.
“America’s Northern Border Region has some of the most beautiful and recreation-ready natural lands in the country. We’re thrilled to be part of this initiative, which aligns well with NBRC’s increased strategic interest in the outdoor recreation economy across our territory,â€Â said Harold B. Parker, Federal Co-Chair of NBRC.
An outdoor recreation trade association representative welcomed the Recreation Economy for Rural Communities planning assistance program. “We applaud this effort,” said Jessica Wahl, Outdoor Recreation Roundtable (ORR) Executive Director. “ORR looks forward to working with the EPA, USDA and the Northern Border Regional Commission to help more communities invest in the recreation economy and time spent outside.”
Through Recreation Economy for Rural Communities assistance, a planning team appointed by EPA and its federal counterparts will help the partner communities create an action plan to grow the local outdoor recreation economy in ways that promote sustainable resource management and environmentally friendly community development.
The selected communities are planning to revitalize their communities in a variety of ways, including building new trail connections, boosting downtown amenities, connecting nearby hiking-biking trails to downtown, and working to attract recreation-related economic opportunities.
The planning process will take place over four to six months, with a two-day facilitated community workshop as the focal point. Participants will work together to identify a vision, goals, and specific actions to realize the locally set goals.
MAPLE VALLEY, Wash. — Standing amid cottonwood trees and a thicket of other vegetation, Jon Hansen looks out over a sunlight-dappled ribbon of crystal water running over a rocky bed. He’s standing on a site that until recently was filled with houses and mobile homes — properties that flooded six times in 20 years when the Cedar River spilled over its banks.
Hansen, the capital project manager for King County, Washington, is showing off the 40-acre site as an example of the county’s floodplain restoration — removing human development rather than engineering bigger and costlier fixes to the flooding that is likely to get worse as a consequence of climate change. The strategy, in other words, amounts to: Get out of nature’s way.
“The river has gravity on its side,†Hansen said. “Water and gravity will eventually knock down all of these things that we build. It’s just a matter of time. As you repair and fix things in a bad place, how long does it take before you say, ‘Wait a minute — why would we spend $2 million [on a levee] to protect a $300,000 home?’â€
Buyouts have long been a tool for federal, state and local officials to encourage homeowners to retreat from flood-prone areas. But in the past, buyouts often occurred after major disasters, such as the Missouri River floods of 1993 or Hurricane Floyd in 1999, using investments from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Washington is one of the rare states to have its own state-funded buyout and restoration program, one that is set up to remove development from flood-prone areas on an ongoing basis, not just as federal relief money becomes available in the wake of a massive disaster.
Working from lists selected by local partners, the state grant program, established in 2013, pours money into projects that have been identified as subject to persistent flooding. The projects it funds don’t just remove vulnerable residents, they enlist nature as an ally. By restoring floodplains to their natural state, they help to lessen the risk of flooding elsewhere.
While the Washington program shows promise, few other states have set up their own dedicated funding for this type of work, even as climate change threatens to worsen flooding in many parts of the country.
“We’ve really constrained the rivers, and there’s just not a place for water to go during flood events,†said Bob Carey, the Nature Conservancy’s strategic partnerships director, who works closely with the state program, known as Floodplains by Design.
“We’re understanding that our historic approach to river management was ineffective,†Carey said, “trying to hem rivers in and control flooding, particularly in a changing climate when we’re seeing increased volume and frequency. You can’t build levees a mile high.â€
After taking years to buy out and remove nine houses and 55 mobile homes here, King County tore down the levee that had been built along the Cedar River’s bank and allowed the river to refill the channel. Already, the small stream has become one of the biggest hotspots for Chinook salmon spawning in the entire Cedar River.
In climate-speak, this strategy is known as managed retreat, removing human development from areas made less habitable by changing conditions. Scientists say managed retreat is crucial to dealing with climate change, particularly as rising sea levels threaten to displace as many as 13 million Americans by 2100.
But despite efforts in Washington and elsewhere, it’s clear that new development is far outpacing efforts to get people out of harm’s way. On the Jersey Shore, nearly 2,700 homes were built between 2010 and 2016 in areas expected to flood at least annually by 2050, one study by Climate Central and Zillow found. Statewide, another study by the groups showed, more than 4,500 New Jersey homes were constructed during that same period in areas expected to flood about once a decade.
Florida saw more than 2,600 homes built in flood-risk areas during that time, and seven more states exceeded 500 new homes, the study found.
In the year after Hurricane Harvey, 1 in 5 new homes permitted in Houston was in the floodplain. And in South Carolina, unchecked coastal development in the three decades since Hurricane Hugo has left more than 350,000 homes in areas predicted to be at risk of storm surge flooding during a Category 5 hurricane.
“This river is young, it wants to move, it doesn’t like being pinned. We like orderly flow. The river doesn’t.”
Helmut Schmidt, civil engineerPIERCE COUNTY, WASHINGTON
Officials often use the term “floodplain†as shorthand for an area predicted to flood during a high-water event that’s expected to occur about once a century. Most lenders require homeowners in floodplains to maintain a flood insurance policy.
“The biggest crime we do is we keep rebuilding in the same places,†said Peter Kasabach, executive director of New Jersey Future, a nonprofit that advocates for smart growth strategies.
New Jersey’s state-run Blue Acres Buyout Program has been hailed as a success story, working toward converting more than a thousand flood-prone properties into open space. The program was launched in 1995, and it was bolstered by an influx of federal dollars in 2012 after Superstorm Sandy. New York also committed hundreds of millions of dollars to buyouts in the wake of Sandy. Still, in many places, the retreat has been more than offset by new development, which Kasabach attributed to two factors: lack of funding and lack of political will.
“There is no buyout program that’s going to be expansive enough to effectively deal with this issue. There’s just not enough money to do that,†he said. “And not many mayors say, ‘I want to oversee the retreat and dissolution of my town.’â€
Buyout programs have not been without their own foibles. An NPR investigation earlier this year found that FEMA buyouts were disproportionately given to white communities with higher property tax values. And not every resident is eager to leave their home. Some feel it’s not the government’s place to tell them how much risk they should assume, let alone pressure them to relocate.
Local officials have perhaps the most difficult role in managed retreat scenarios, as relocating homeowners and businesses means relocating property and sales tax revenue as well. But floodplain experts note that buyout efforts will be a losing battle if local governments don’t also do their part to limit future growth in flood-prone areas.
“One of the real weaknesses of the program is community officials not enforcing their regulations,†said Chad Berginnis, executive director of the Association of State Floodplain Managers, a Wisconsin-based coalition of flood hazard specialists. “If they would, we’d break the cycle of damage-repair-damage. Engineered systems will fail because Mother Nature always builds a bigger storm.â€
One culprit regularly cited for the status quo is the National Flood Insurance Program, known as the NFIP, which provides insurance through the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Although there’s a small private market, the vast majority of flood insurance in the United States is through NFIP. Critics say it has incentivized high-risk development, backstopping builders even after repeated flooding.
About 150,000 “repetitive loss†properties make up just 1% of NFIP policies but more than a quarter of claims. Florida, Louisiana, Texas, New York and New Jersey each have more than 10,000 repeat offenders. Many observers, ranging from members of Congress to analysts in the nonprofit sector, would like to see FEMA put more emphasis on buyouts. The agency’s current buyout program lacks the funding and efficiency to be effective, critics say.
“We need to scale [buyouts] up by an order of magnitude if we’re going to deal with the problem of sea-level rise alone,†said Rob Moore, a senior policy analyst with the Natural Resources Defense Council. “The only thing [NFIP] knows how to do is put people back in the same vulnerable situation, at great expense.â€
Beginning noted that any effort to step up buyouts will be extremely costly. Even targeting just the 30,000 repetitive loss properties nationwide labeled the most severe, at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece, would require billions of dollars. And that doesn’t account for the likelihood that climate change will send that number ever higher.
FEMA does conduct some direct buyouts, and it has provided funding for states to do buyouts of their own. But with NFIP paying out repeated claims to frequently flooded properties, many critics think the program is working at cross purposes with attempts to remove risky development.
Not everyone thinks NFIP is a failure. French Wetmore, a floodplain consultant who has worked with communities around the country, noted that the program has reduced flood losses, helped improve building standards and provided a better model than paying flood victims out of disaster relief funds. However, he said FEMA’s buyouts could be more effective if the agency moved faster.
Flooding on the Cedar River in 1990 inundated homes in King County, Washington, a site that has now been restored to a natural floodplain.
Courtesy of King County, Washington
“There is a flood amnesia. Six months later — ‘What flood?’†he said. “When the community’s ready to move and they deal with the public and build a case for it, that’s when things have happened. … More people are buying into the fact that you don’t want to go back to normal.â€
David Maurstad, the FEMA official who oversees NFIP, did not respond to a request for comment.
King County’s Cedar River project was completed in 2013, the same year the state launched its Floodplains by Design program. Next year, the county is set to conduct a similar project on a site just downstream, this time bolstered by funding from the state.
King County says it surveyed the residents who were bought out and found they largely felt they were treated fairly and were able to find a better location. Still, in a fast-growing part of the country, with housing already in short supply, taking properties off the map isn’t an easy thing to do.
“It takes a lot of political courage to do that,†said Helmut Schmidt, a civil engineer in neighboring Pierce County’s Floodplain & Watershed Services department. “We’re the fastest-growing area in the Western United States. You’ve got to put those people in someplace.â€
Floodplains by Design has thus far funded 36 projects throughout the state, many of which helped relocate residents in high-risk flooding areas. So far, 700 residences have been removed from floodplains as part of the grant program’s work. Floodplains by Design has 10 more projects ongoing in the current 2-year budget cycle, funded to the tune of $50 million by the state legislature.
“When you build a levee, it doesn’t get rid of the flood problem, it shifts it. Long term, it’s a lot more costly to keep doing the same thing when the levees and the houses are in the wrong place.â€
Jon Hansen, capital project managerKING COUNTY, WASHINGTON
Pierce County is conducting similar projects along the Puyallup River, which spills from a glacier on Mount Rainier before running through industrialized Tacoma and into the Puget Sound. On one 5-mile stretch of the Puyallup, the meandering river was forcing the county to replace a mile of its levee every year, an expensive proposition. If the county can secure buyouts from two remaining holdouts, it will be able to remove some of the levee system and set the river free in the floodplain again.
“This river is young, it wants to move, it doesn’t like being pinned,†Schmidt said. “We like orderly flow. The river doesn’t.â€
Although the funding has not yet matched the need, Hansen, the King County official, said it’s important to recognize that buyouts are a better long-term investment than rebuilding houses and putting in more levees.
“When you build a levee, it doesn’t get rid of the flood problem, it shifts it,†he said. “Long term, it’s a lot more costly to keep doing the same thing when the levees and the houses are in the wrong place.
Several years before King County began work on the Cedar River project, longtime residents Jon and Darlene Miller accepted a buyout and said goodbye to the place they had called home for nearly 40 years. After being flooded twice, the couple was open to relocating when they were approached by local officials.
“I couldn’t see how it was going to get any better,†Jon Miller said. “We just saw a future where we were going to have to be dealing with that every five years or so. We didn’t want to dig our way out from that again.â€
Since selling the property in 2007, the Millers have seen two flood events that they think would have put their old house underwater. They say they’re happy to see the river returning to its natural state, even though they were wistful about leaving their longtime home.
The University of Evansville’s Clay Club is set to present the annual Chili Bowl sale on Thursday October 17 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The event will be held outside at the Hyde Hall Lawn. The rain location will be inside Eykamp hall on the second floor of Ridgway.
Chartwells, the food service provider at UE, is co-sponsoring the event and providing chili.
For $10, customers can buy a one-of-a-kind ceramic bowl and fill it will chili. Paper containers will be available for those who prefer not to put chili in their newly purchased bowls. Larger bowls from $15-$50 will also be for sale. Some more artistic larger bowls will be sold at a silent auction as well ranging in price from $60-$100.
The bowls are being made by members of the Clay Club and other UE students, faculty members, staff, alumni, and members of the community.
Half of the proceeds will be donated to Bread of Life Ministry INC. The Clay Club officers chose this organization for their work with education and feeding the less fortunate in the Evansville Community. The rest of the proceeds will be used by the Clay Club to attend conferences, visit museums and galleries, and host visiting artists.
Grand Prize drawing announced on election night (Nov. 5)
It’s not too late to get your name in the draw – just call Cheryl Schultz at 812-459-7645
Every ticket has a chance in every draw – if you win on the first day, your ticket goes back into the mix for the next draw. You can win multiple times!!Please consider purchasing a ticket!! Your support means we will have funds to organize county-wide, support our candidates and elect Democrats.
Vanderburgh County Democrat Party
P.O. Box 3208
Evansville, IN 47731
812-550-3812 vancountydems@gmail.com