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USI Announces Roster Additions For 2019-20

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USI Announces Roster Additions For 2019-20

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball announced the roster additions for the 2019-20 campaign. The seven new Screaming Eagles – junior guard Charles Wilson (Louisville, Kentucky), junior forward Clayton Hughes (Jackson, Tennessee), senior guard Joe Laravie (Kettering, Ohio), junior forward Justin Carpenter (Mt. Carmel, Illinois), senior guard Darnell Butler (Lafayette, Indiana), freshman guard Tyler Martin (Bowling Green, Kentucky), freshman guard/forward Joey Waling (Williamsport, Indiana) – includes five transfer players and a pair of freshmen.

Transferring to USI for their senior seasons are Laravie and Butler.

Laravie (6-foot-3, 180 lb.) will conclude his college career at USI, following three seasons at Christian Brothers University. He was named NABC All-Region, first-team All-Gulf South Conference and GSC Player of the Week three times in 2018-19 after averaging a career-best 18.7 points and 3.1 rebounds per game as a junior in 2018-19.

Laravie also had a three-year career average of 14.8 points, 2.6 rebounds, and 1.9 assists per game during his tenure at CBU.

Butler (6-foot-4, 210 Ib.) joins the USI program after spending last season at Middle Tennessee State University. He played one season at Seminole State College (2017-18), posting 19.2 points and 5.5 rebounds per game as a sophomore.

Carpenter, Hughes, and Wilson join the Eagles for the next two seasons.

Carpenter and Wilson journey to USI after spending last season at Wabash Valley College. Carpenter (6-foot-9, 230 lb.), who also averaged 8.5 points and 4.7 rebounds per game as a freshman at Southeast Missouri State University in 2017-18, posted 7.6 points and 4.0 rebounds per game as a sophomore for WVC.

Wilson (6-foot-2, 170 lb.) averaged 9.1 points and 2.4 assists per game as a sophomore at WVC in 2018-19, following a year at Three Rivers College, recording 11.0 points and 3.1 rebounds as a freshman in 2017-18.

Hughes (6-foot-6, 206 Ib.) comes south to USI after two seasons at Indiana State University, averaging 3.9 points and 1.5 rebounds in 54 games for the Sycamores. He posted a two-year high 4.4 points per game as a sophomore in 2018-19 that included a career-best 23 points versus San Jose State University.

Martin and Waling begin their college basketball careers at USI in 2019-20.

Martin (6-foot-2, 180 lb.) lettered in baseball and basketball at South Warren High School (Bowling Green, Kentucky) where he was named All-Region (second-team in 2019; third-team All-Region in 2018) and All-District (2018, 2019) twice. He also finished his prep career as the all-time leading scorer and rebounder at SWHS. Martin is the son of former USI Men’s Basketball player, Craig Martin, who was a member of the 1994 NCAA II Tournament finalist team and a graduate assistant coach on the 1995 NCAA II National Championship team.

Waling (6-foot-5, 205 lb.) earned letters in basketball at Seeger Memorial High School (West Lebanon, Indiana), where he was named honorable mention All-State, first-team All-Conference, and first-team All-Area as a senior after averaging 19.8 points and 4.0 rebounds per contest in 2018-19. He also earned second-team All-Area and honorable mention All-Conference as a junior in 2017-18.

The Eagles reached the NCAA Division II Elite Eight semifinals in 2018-19 after capturing the program’s fourth NCAA II Midwest Region championship. USI concluded the campaign with a 26-9 overall mark and a 13-5 record in the GLVC.

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University of Southern Indiana, 8600 University Boulevard, Evansville, IN 47712 United States

HOOSIER HISTORY HIGHLIGHTS

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Hoosier History Highlights


August 18 – August 24

The Week in Indiana History


Will Cuppy

1884     William “Will” Cuppy was born in Auburn, Indiana.  He graduated from Auburn High School and went on to the University of Chicago.  A talented writer, he became a popular humorist and literary critic, remembered best for his satires on nature and history.  His best-known work is The Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody.  


1889     President Benjamin Harrison returned home toIndianapolis to help lay the cornerstone for the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument on the Circle.  While he was in the city, he spoke at Tomlinson Hall to Civil War veterans who had been members of his 70th Indiana Regiment.


1928     Alvin “Shipwreck” Kelly was on stage at the Lyric Theater in Indianapolis.  The champion pole sitter had recently completed a 100-hour stay at the top of the flagpole of the nearby Denison Hotel.  Flagpole sitting, a fad in the 1920s, required the participant to perch atop a pole for hours and sometimes days.

Shipwreck Kelly

Paramount Theater1929     The Paramount Theater opened in Anderson.  Designed by famous architect John Eberson, the lavish interior is in the style of a Spanish village.  The theater, with its original Page Pipe Organ, is still a popular venue for movies, stage shows, and social events.  There were once over 100 Eberson movie palaces in America.  Only 12 remain.  Two have survived in Indiana:  The Paramount in Anderson and the Embassy in Fort Wayne.

50 years ago

1969     Governor Edgar D. Whitcomb was on hand for the opening of the 117th Indiana State Fair.  The star-studded entertainment program included Bob Hope, Glen Campbell, Anita Bryant, The King Family, and the hit recording group The Association.  General admission tickets for the shows ran from 50 cents to $1.50.


Loretta Rush2014     History was made as JudgeLoretta Rush was sworn in as Indiana’s first female Supreme Court Chief Justice.  Appointed to the Court by Governor Mitch Daniels, she succeeded Brent Dickson as Chief Justice.  She had earlier served 14 years as a judge in Tippecanoe County.

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Dome

Indiana Statehouse Tour Office

Indiana Department of Administration

Guided tours of the Indiana Statehouse are offered Monday through Saturday.  For more information, check our website listed at the bottom of this page.

(317) 233-5293
captours@idoa.in.gov


quiz

INDIANA QUICK QUIZ

1.  Indiana is one of four states which begins with the letter “I.”  What are the other three?

2.  The official state aircraft of Indiana is the World War II P-47 Thunderbolt.  In what Hoosier city was it built?

3.  What is manufactured at Fort Wayne’s Vera Bradley Company? a. cosmetics  b. purses  c. draperies  d.  floor coverings

Answers Below


HOOSIER QUOTE OF THE WEEK

Quote

“The trouble with the dictionary is that you have to know how a word is spelled before you can look it up to see how it is spelled.”

– – Will Cuppy


Monument

DID YOU KNOW?

     The Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument was under construction for nearly 13 years.  Dedication ceremonies were held in April of 1902.  General Lew Wallace presided over a large celebration which included poetry by James Whitcomb Riley and music by John Philip Sousa.


ANSWERS:  1. Idaho, Illinois, Iowa  2. Evansville 3.  b. purses

Otters’ Offense Backs Up Nicely

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The Evansville Otters scored in four consecutive innings to seize control and beat the Gateway Grizzlies 11-6 in Sunday’s series finale at Bosse Field.

Keith Grieshaber’s RBI single in the third inning gave Evansville a 1-0 advantage. Ryan Long followed with an RBI double and later in the frame, Taylor Lane’s sacrifice fly pushed the lead to 3-0.

In the fourth, David Cronin’s RBI single made it a 4-0. With the bases loaded, a pitch hit Grieshaber to score Hunter Cullen before Taylor Lane hit a bases-clearing double, giving the Otters an 8-0 lead.

Evansville scored two more runs in the fifth and added another in the sixth.

Gateway scored three runs back-to-back innings in the sixth and seventh to pull within five runs at 11-6.

Austin Nicely earned the win for Evansville, going six innings while allowing three runs–one earned–on six hits. He faced 26 batters, struck out seven and didn’t allow a walk.

Reign Letkeman took the loss, pitching three innings while surrendering six runs–three earned– on six hits.

Cam Opp earned the save, pitching 1 2/3 innings and striking out three.

Lane finished 1 for 4 with four RBIs for Evansville and Cronin went 2 for 4 with two runs and two RBIs.

Evansville improved to 49-35 with the win while Gateway fell to 33-51.

The Otters will make a midweek road trip to Marion, Ill. for a three-game series against the Southern Illinois Miners.

First pitch Tuesday is at 6:35 p.m. from Rent One Park.

Where Doctors Can Recommend Marijuana to Replace Opioids

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Where Doctors Can Recommend Marijuana to Replace Opioids

Over the past decade, however, Weber said she’s dramatically cut back on pills by instead using marijuana. “It took care of the pain,” said Weber, executive director of the Colorado chapter of NORML, a national group that backs marijuana legalization.

Spurred partly by stories like Weber’s, policymakers in Colorado, Illinois and New York now allow health professionals to recommend marijuana instead of addictive, potentially deadly pain pills such as OxyContin, Percocet and Vicodin. Forty-six people in the United States die every day from overdoses involving prescription opioids, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

New Mexico, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania allow people with opioid addiction to qualify for a medical marijuana card.

But many physicians and medical experts strongly oppose such policies, pointing out that science hasn’t yet shown that dispensary-bought marijuana can deliver the same pain-killing punch as a prescription drug, nor that it can help people kick an opioid addiction.

“We have given marijuana the status of medicine with none of the standards,” said Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University. Other medicines, he pointed out, must undergo rigorous clinical trials and win federal approval before being sold to patients.

Health care professionals can’t prescribe pot because the federal government classifies it as an illegal drug. But under 33 state medical marijuana laws, providers can verify that patients suffer from certain conditions, which allows patients to grow pot or buy it from a medical marijuana dispensary.

In states that allow both medical and recreational marijuana, the products are typically regulated separately, sold separately and taxed separately. In Colorado, medical marijuana patients can legally possess more cannabis than other adults, and the pot they buy is cheaper.

Severe or chronic pain are qualifying conditions for a marijuana card in almost all states with a medical marijuana program, according to the Marijuana Policy Project, a Washington, D.C.-based organization that advocates for marijuana legalization. Colorado’s new laws allow doctors and other health professionals with prescribing power to recommend marijuana instead of opioids in all cases, including after minor surgery.

“We’re talking about an alternative to managing symptoms to a narcotic, or to pharmaceutical with severe side effects,” said Colorado Democratic state Rep. Edie Hooton. Her bipartisan bill allowing doctors to recommend pot instead of opioids easily passed the legislature and was signed by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis in May, despite some opposition from the medical establishment.

Dr. Ken Finn, a pain medicine specialist based in Colorado Springs, called the bill “the worst policy I’ve ever seen.” Finn said many of his patients have tried using marijuana to dull their pain, but find it doesn’t help or can’t replace opioids. Their willingness to try an unproven remedy, he said, “tells me what lengths people will go to, to try to get some relief.”

Marijuana as a Painkiller

Nearly 3.1 million medical marijuana patients are registered in the United States and its territories, according to the Marijuana Policy Project.

Many have turned to marijuana because they’re in pain. Over 93% of Colorado’s more than 87,000 medical marijuana patients suffer from severe pain, according to the state Department of Public Health and Environment.

Other people are seeking to ease their pain with recreational pot. Almost two-thirds of a thousand Colorado retail marijuana customers said they used marijuana to relieve pain, according to a survey published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Psychoactive Drugs this year.

Some studies have shown a link between marijuana and pain relief. Many of the about 40 randomized controlled trials that have tested whether cannabis and its chemical compounds, called cannabinoids, reduce chronic pain have found that they work as a pain reliever, said Ziva Cooper, research director of the UCLA Cannabis Research Initiative.

But many of those studies involve discrete or synthetic cannabinoids, rather than the flower, edibles and concentrates sold at dispensaries, she said. For the most part, the studies have been short, looking at cannabis used once or over a few weeks. And they involve patients also taking prescription pain medications.

“We don’t know yet how effective cannabis and cannabinoids are for pain when they’re administered by themselves,” Cooper said. “We also don’t know how cannabis and cannabinoids stack up next to opioids for pain relief.”

Many medical experts say more research is needed. “The science is thin,” said Robert Valuck, executive director of the Colorado Consortium for Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention. Marijuana also can be addictive, he said. “We’re seeing increases in what people call cannabis use disorder.”

As for state laws that allow people addicted to opioids to buy or grow medical marijuana, there’s not strong evidence to suggest that marijuana helps people kick an opioid addiction, Cooper said. “It’s more based on anecdotes — people reporting that they can wean themselves off opioids.”

Reluctant Doctors, Eager Patients

Even in Colorado — where residents voted to legalize medical marijuana in 2000 and recreational pot in 2012 — many physicians remain reluctant to recommend marijuana. In July, just under 2% of licensed doctors in the state had recommended cannabis to registered medical marijuana patients, according to a Stateline analysis of state data.

It’s not clear whether the new law will convince them to embrace marijuana and move away from prescribing opioids — especially for young people.

“There’s no condition right now where I feel there’s enough information for me to recommend marijuana to a family for a child or an adolescent,” said Dr. Jennifer Hagman, medical director of the eating disorder program at Children’s Hospital Colorado.

Hagman testified against the Colorado bill on behalf of the Colorado Psychiatric Society, the Colorado Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Society, the Colorado Medical Society and the Colorado Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

She told Stateline she occasionally treats young people experiencing psychosis and depression related to marijuana use. “I know that the vast majority of physicians would very much like to know what specific parts of the marijuana plant, and which kinds, are useful for different conditions — or not,” Hagman said.

Doctors who embrace alternative treatments, such as herbal supplements and acupuncture, tend to be more open to marijuana. Dr. Melissa Milan runs a holistic medicine practice in Colorado and said she’s comfortable recommending marijuana because the overdose risk is negligible. “As a physician, I really want to help people,” she said. “And I want to do no harm.”

People seeking a medical marijuana card also can turn to clinics that specifically employ doctors to issue them.

Many patients are convinced of marijuana’s healing powers. Mindy Mysinger, a 40-year-old former nurse who testified in favor of the Colorado bill, told Stateline that marijuana helped her kick an opioid dependency she developed after multiple back surgeries. At one point, she said, she was taking up to 30 pills a day — a mix of painkillers, pills to address their side effects and over-the-counter drugs.

Mysinger said she decided to reduce her opioid intake after surviving a post-surgery infection. “I realized I had done everything those specialists had said, I took all the pills they told me to take, and I almost died,” she said. Over the past four years, she said, she has adopted a healthier lifestyle and switched from opioids to marijuana. She feels great.

But for many medical professionals, inspirational stories aren’t sufficient proof. “As it relates to pain, the jury is still out,” said Finn, the Colorado Springs doctor. He noted that the placebo effect, or patients’ belief that a certain treatment will make them well, plays a big role in how people experience pain.

Long’s four-RBI night propels Otters over Grizzlies

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The Evansville Otters saw their offense find their spark on Saturday as Ryan Long’s four-hit; four RBI night led the Otters to a 9-6 victory against the Gateway Grizzlies.

The day started with Matt Quintana making his first start as an Otter, as he was acquired in a trade with the Joliet Slammers.

 

Quintana had a scoreless first inning, recording two strikeouts, and Rob Calabrese caught Brent Sakurai stealing second for the third out of the inning.

 

The Otters started their scoring early, tallying two in the bottom of the first inning.

 

Long recorded his first RBI with a single to score David Cronin, and an RBI triple by Taylor Lane brought home Long to put the Otters ahead 2-0 after one.

 

The Grizzlies responded and tied the game at two in the top of the second inning.

 

Shawon Dunston Jr. hit a one-out double and would later score on a balk by Quintana.

 

Greg White singled to score Andrew Daniel to tie the game at two.

 

Gateway would take their first lead of the game in the top of the third on an RBI double from Luke Lowery, giving the Grizzlies a 3-2 lead.

 

The Otters answered in the bottom of the third with three runs.

 

After back-to-back walks to Cronin and Keith Grieshaber, Long ripped a two-RBI triple, as the Otters would retake the lead 4-3. Long would score on an Elijah MacNamee RBI single, giving the Otters a 5-3 edge.

 

The Grizzlies went to the bullpen after the third as starter Ian Kahaloa went three innings, allowing five runs on five hits. He earned the loss, dropping his record to 2-6.

 

The Otters matched their third inning run total with three more in the fourth.

 

Hunter Cullen scored on a wild pitch by Nick Stroud, and Grieshaber followed two batters later with a monstrous two-run home run to increase the Otters’ advantage to 8-3.

 

The Grizzlies did not go away as Shawon Dunston Jr. hit a two-run homer off Quintana to make it an 8-5 game.

 

Quintana finished the sixth inning, allowing five runs on eight hits with six strikeouts in his Otters debut. He earned the victory tonight, improving his record to 7-3 overall, and his first as an Otter.

 

Long recorded his fourth RBI in the bottom of the sixth on a single to score Calabrese. He would finish 4-5 with three singles, a triple and a pair of runs.

 

Cam Opp threw 1.2 innings, surrendering an RBI groundout to Dunston Jr. to score Lowery, making the score 9-6 Otters.

 

Taylor Wright pitched a scoreless ninth as the game ended on a 4-6-3 double play, earning his 13th save of the season for the Otters.

 

The Otters scored nine runs on 11 hits after being held scoreless on Friday.

 

The Otters will go after a series win in the rubber game Sunday at 12:35 p.m. from Bosse Field.

 

Judgment For Sign Company In Digital Billboard Fight Reversed

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A judgment in favor a sign company that converted a large billboard in Lawrence to a digital display was reversed on appeal Friday. The Indiana Court of Appeals remanded a lawsuit brought by the city of Indianapolis, setting the stage for a possible trial over whether the digital billboard may remain.

At issue in Metropolitan Development Commission v. Worth Outdoor LLC, 19A-OV-212, is a two-sided billboard towering over the Oaklandon Commons shopping center at 11915 Pendleton Pike, just northeast of Oaklandon Road. In 2015, sign owner Worth Outdoor converted the northeast-facing half of the sign to a digital display. Since then, Indianapolis ordinances governing digital billboards in the Revised City-County Code were amended, largely banning them. Separately, the city reached a federal court settlement with another billboard company, GEFT, allowing two digital displays to remain in GEFT Outdoor LLC v. Consol. City of Indianapolis & Cty. of Marion, Indiana, 187 F. Supp. 3d 1002 (S.D. Ind. 2016)

But in the case of Worth’s sign on Pendleton Pike, the city persuaded the appellate court to overturn summary judgment for Worth granted by Marion Superior Judge Cynthia Ayers.

“…Worth argues that its sign should be grandfathered in as a legally established nonconforming use,” Judge John Baker wrote for the appeals panel. “…Finding that the billboard is not a legally established nonconforming use because it did not comply with all ordinances in effect at the time of construction, we reverse and remand for trial.”

Baker wrote that the static billboard was originally built in 2009, and while Worth received permission for the digital conversion from the Indiana Department of Transportation and permits from the city of Lawrence, “Worth’s designated evidence does not show that it sought an Improvement Location Permit (ILP) from the (Metropolitan Development Commission) to alter the billboard.”

Because of this, the court held that neither the city’s amended ordinances nor the federal court settlement in GEFT provide cover for Worth. The panel found dispositive that the relevant ordinances at the time of the billboard’s conversion required a permit from the MDC for construction or alteration of a billboard.

“There is no evidence in the record that Worth ever applied for an ILP at the time it sought permission for, and completed, installation of the new billboard. As such, this process did not comply with the ordinances in place at the time and cannot be a legally established nonconforming use,” Baker wrote. “Similarly, because the digital billboard never lawfully existed and its permit application process was incomplete, Worth cannot make a successful claim that it has vested rights in that billboard.”

Likewise, the panel observed in a footnote, “Nor can Worth argue that it acted in good faith by relying on GEFT. GEFT was decided six months after Worth completed construction and installation of the digital billboard.”

Grandma’s Visitation Order Vacated After Parents’ Marriage

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A grandmother fighting to keep a visitation order for her out-of-wedlock grandchildren failed to persuade an Indiana Court of Appeals panel to rule in her favor. Instead, the panel concluded grandparent visitation orders do not survive the subsequent marriage of the natural parents of a child born out of wedlock.

A few years after her two grandchildren were born, Tara Eary petitioned for an order of grandparent visitation pursuant to Indiana’s Grandparent Visitation Act. She specifically requested the visitation under Indiana Code Section 31-17-5-1(a)(3) on the ground that the children were born out of wedlock, and the trial court granted her request.

Two years later, the children’s biological parents married and subsequently moved to dismiss Eary’s visitation order on the ground that their marriage had “legitimized” the children and that, as a matter of law, the visitation order did not survive the marriage. The St. Joseph Circuit Court disagreed and denied the motion, prompting the couple to pursue an interlocutory appeal.

Appealing the motion to dismiss, Allison and Kyle Lanthier alleged the Indiana Grandparent Visitation Act does not provide for the survival of the visitation order after the parents have legitimized the children by their marriage.

“Here, the Act does not include the subsequent marriage of a child’s natural parents as a circumstance in which an existing grandparent visitation order survives,” Judge Edward Najam wrote for the appellate court. “Thus, we conclude that a grandparent visitation order does not survive the subsequent marriage of the natural parents of a child born out of wedlock.”

Additionally, the appellate court found that a grandparent visitation order entered over a child born out of wedlock survives the “establishment of paternity of a child by a court proceeding,” but that marriage is not a court proceeding. It also found the survival of a grandparent visitation order following a subsequent adoption was not an equivalent circumstance to the legitimation of a child by the subsequent marriage of the child’s natural parents.

“In sum, the Act is in derogation of the common law and must be strictly construed,” Najam wrote. “Instead, Grandmother’s argument on appeal asks this Court to read words into the Act that are not there. We will not read the Act to say something it plainly does not say, and we will not disregard the words actually chosen by our General Assembly to strike the balance between allowing for grandparent visitation while also protecting a fit biological parent’s rights over his or her children.”

The appellate court thus reversed and remanded Allison Campbell, et al. v. Tara Eary, 19A-MI-00006 with instructions to vacate Eary’s visitation order.

July Indiana Employment Report

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INDIANAPOLIS (August 16, 2019) – Indiana’s unemployment rate drops to 3.4 percent for July and remains lower than the national rate of 3.7 percent. The last time Indiana’s unemployment rate was at 3.4 percent was April 2018. The monthly unemployment rate is a U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) indicator that reflects the number of unemployed people seeking employment within the prior four weeks as a percentage of the labor force.

Indiana’s labor force had a net decrease of 6,608 over the previous month. This was a result of a decrease of 1,274 unemployed residents and a decrease of 5,334 employed residents. Indiana’s total labor force, which includes both Hoosiers employed and those seeking employment, stands at 3.38 million, and the state’s 64.6 percent labor force participation rate remains above the national rate of 63.0 percent.

Learn more about how unemployment rates are calculated here: http://www.hoosierdata.in.gov/infographics/employment-status.asp.

July 2019 Employment Charts

Employment by Sector

Private sector employment has grown by 27,300 over the year and has decreased by 1,300 over the previous month. The monthly decrease is primarily due to losses in the Leisure and Hospitality (-1,500) and the Trade, Transportation and Utilities (-700) sectors. Losses were partially offset by gains in the Private Educational and Health Services (1,500) and the Financial Activities (300) sectors.

Midwest Unemployment Rates

July 2019 Midwest Unemployment Rates

  

EDITOR’S NOTES:

Data are sourced from July Current Employment Statistics, Local Area Unemployment Statistics – U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

July employment data for Indiana Counties, Cities and MSAs will be available Monday, August 19, 2019, at noon (Eastern) pending U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics validation.