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READERS FORUM” JULY 29, 2019

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We hope that today’s “READERS FORUM” 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.

WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays “Readers Poll’ question is: Do you feel that President Donald Trump is a racist?

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Footnote: City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. Personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall be removed from our site.

We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language and insults against commenters shall not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.

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Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Meeting

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AGENDA Of The Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners

 July 30, 2019 At 3:00 pm, Room 301

  1. Call to Order
  2. Attendance
  3. Pledge of Allegiance
  4. Action Items 
    1. Resolution CO.R-07-19-011: Adopting the University Parkway Corridor Plan
    2. First reading of ordinance CO.07-19-015: Amending the Vanderburgh County Zoning Code: Model Overlay District
    3. Purchasing: Permission to Advertise RFP-01-036-19: Vehicles for Various Departments in Vanderburgh County
    4. Prosecutor: Professional Services Agreement with FSSA
    5. Health Department:  
      1. Immunization Grant Approval: Contract #35815
      2. PHEP Grant Approval: Contract #35453.
      3. Lab Director Contract with Chris Allen
  5. Department Head Reports
  6. New Business
  7. Old Business
  8. Consent Items
    1. Approval of July 23, 2019 Meeting Minutes
    2. Employment Changes 
    3. County Engineer:
      1. Department Report & Claims
      2. Pay Request No. 64: U.S. 41 Expansion TIF: $12,085
      3. Pay Request No. 53: University Parkway TIF: $16,398.02
      4. Pay Request No. 13: Phoenix Commerce Center TIF: $3,320.
    4. County Treasurer: June 2019 Monthly Report
    5. County Auditor: Claims Voucher Report: 7/22-7/26/2019
    6. Sheriff: Road Race/ Closure Request: River Run
    7. Superintendent of County Buildings:
      1. Boiler Condensate Pump quote
  9. Public Comment
  10. Adjournment

Commentary: The Hoosier Making Us Proud

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By Mary Beth Schneider

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—The Republican political consultant Rick Wilson wrote a book titled “Everything Trump Touches Dies.”

One only needs to look at the long list of those forced out of the Trump administration, many with their reputations in tatters, to get his point.

Mary Beth Schneider

Now, Washington is abuzz with talk that soon Dan Coats, the former Indiana senator who is the director of national intelligence, will join the list of ex-Trump appointees. He, though, is the exception to Wilson’s rule. Coats has only burnished his reputation by being that rare administration official who speaks truth to power, whether that truth is welcomed or believed. In fact, I can think of only one other Trump administration refugee — former UN Ambassador Niki Haley — who didn’t limp out of the executive branch.

I was surprised when President Donald Trump picked Coats — not because Coats wasn’t qualified but because he was, eminently so. In an administration where cabinet members either had no or little experience with the agency they led or had experience as an industry lobbyist attacking the agency they now ran, Coats was a choice even Democrats could applaud.

He’d been a member of the House of Representatives and then the Senate where he served on the intelligence committee. He was ambassador to Germany at a pivotal time in the days after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Little wonder he was confirmed by an 85-12 vote in March 2017.

It took only weeks before his first clashes with the president became public fodder when Coats reportedly told House investigators that the president wanted him to announce he’d been exonerated by the probe into Russian election interference. Coats instead issued a statement saying that it was “not appropriate for me to comment.”

In July 2018, Trump shocked many as he stood in Helsinki, Finland, next to Russian leader Vladimir Putin and chose to believe Putin’s denials that Russia had interfered in the 2016 election.

“My people came to me. Dan Coats came to me, and some others,” Trump said. “They said they think it’s Russia. I have President Putin. He just said it’s not Russia. I will say this: I don’t see any reason why it would be.”

The next day Coats released a statement saying the intelligence community’s job was to give the president “fact-based assessments.”

“We have been clear in our assessments of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and their ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy,” he said. “And we will continue to provide unvarnished and objective intelligence in support of our national security.”

Can I get an ‘Amen’?

Then came Trump’s romance with the North Korean dictator. While the president literally talked of love letters with the man who kills his own family to preserve power, Coats told the Senate Intelligence Committee that North Korea remains a threat, with little likelihood of giving up nuclear weapons.

There have been rumors ever since that Vice President Mike Pence, a fellow Hoosier, stopped him from resigning and that Trump was interviewing people for Coats’ job. No matter why Coats is still there, I’m glad he is.

Look at this week’s news. On July 19 — almost exactly a year after Coats contradicted Trump on Russian election interference — Coats created a new position to oversee election security efforts.

“Election security is an enduring challenge and a top priority” for the intelligence community, Coats said.

Too bad it’s not a priority for the president and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Wednesday, reiterating his report at a Congressional hearing, former Special Counsel Robert Mueller repeatedly stressed the danger of foreign tampering in our elections. Asked by one Republican if he thought the Russian interference in 2016 was a one-off, Mueller was clear.

“Oh, this wasn’t a single attempt. They’re doing it as we sit here,” Mueller responded. “And they expect to do it in the next campaign.”

Yet on that same day, McConnell blocked a bill that would require campaigns to alert law enforcement if they learn of foreign attempts to interfere in elections. And McConnell has rejected calls for the Senate to vote on legislation already passed by the House to improve election security measures.

While Trump and his minions — including Rep. Devin Nunes, the California Republican who has been mentioned as a possible successor to Coats — continue to call Russian interference a hoax and witch hunt, Coats is listening to fact-based assessments and doing what he can to address them.

Trump may not appreciate that.

The nation should.

FOOTNOTE: Mary Beth Schneider is an editor with TheStatehouseFile.com, a news site powered by Franklin College journalists.

BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS SPECIAL MEETING

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BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS

SPECIAL MEETING

KEVIN WINTERNHEIMER CHAMBERS

ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX

WEDNESDAY, July 31, 2019

12:00 NOON

 AGENDA

1. CALL TO ORDER

2. MEETING MEMORANDUM  

             N/A 

3. CONSENT AGENDA

             N/A

                                                                 

4.         OLD BUSINESS  

N/A

5.          NEW BUSINESS    

                                                

             a.  Request Re: Permission to open bids for Deaconess Aquatic Center.- Holtz

6.         REPORTS

            N/A

7.        ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMS

            N/A

 

8.        ADJOURN

House And Senate Hire Lawyer To Intervene In Curtis Hill Lawsuit

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By Brandon Barger
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—Leaders of the Indiana House and Senate have asked a federal court to allow them to intervene in a lawsuit filed by four women who say that Attorney General Curtis Hill groped them at a party at the end of the 2018 legislative session.

House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, and Senate President Pro Tempore Rodric Bray, R-Martinsville, said late Monday that they had hired Susan M. Zoeller of Jackson Lewis P.C. to represent them in the case. Zoeller, who previously helped lawmakers craft new sexual harassment policies, has been paid $54,474 for her services so far, according to the Legislative Services Agency.

Four women—Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon, D-Munster; Niki DaSilva, a legislative assistant for Indiana Senate Republicans; Samantha Lozano, a legislative assistant for Indiana House Democrats; and Gabrielle McLemore, communications director for Indiana Senate Democrats— sued Hill and the state of Indiana in U.S District Court for sexual harassment, gender discrimination, retaliation, battery, invasion of privacy and defamation related to the March 2018 incident.

Hill is being sued both personally and in his role as attorney general. Indiana is being sued because, the women say, lawmakers and policy-making officials failed to act when concerns about workplace discrimination and retaliation were reported.

But neither the House nor the Senate was sued separately, which is why the lawmakers are asking the court to allow them to intervene in the case.

Attorneys for the women at Katz, Korin, and Cunningham declined to comment on why the General Assembly wasn’t included in the lawsuit.

In motions to intervene on behalf of each legislative chamber, Zoeller wrote that by not naming the House or the Senate, the four women are requiring them to change policies without giving either of them an opportunity to defend current policies.

In addition to the allegations against Hill, the lawsuit says that the state’s policies to protect employees against sexual harassment have been weak or non-existent. In January, the General Assembly passed its first sexual harassment policy, but the lawsuit claims the policy does not go far enough to protect employees.

Zoeller wrote that the House and Senate have a long-term interest in defending its policies and investigative actions from attack.

In separate responses on behalf of the House and Senate, Zoeller responded line by line to every point made in the women’s lawsuit, including whether the sine die party held at the end of the session was an officially sanctioned event.

“Answering further, the Indiana House denies there is an official, sanctioned sine die Celebration,” she wrote. Zoeller had a similar statement in the Senate response.

In addition to seeking damages against Hill and the state, the women in their lawsuit are asking the court to order the state to improve policies and procedures to for preventing and reporting sexual harassment and retaliation.

Hill has filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, saying that the charges against him do not rise to the level of a civil rights violation.

Hill faces a hearing in October before retired Supreme Court Justice Myra Selby on charges filed against him by the Indiana Supreme Court disciplinary commission. The 10-page complaint accuses him of committing both felony-level and misdemeanor battery while acting “with the selfish motive to arouse his sexual desires.”

Hill could face the loss of his law license, which in turn could cost him his elective office because Indiana law requires the attorney general to be licensed to practice law.

Brandon Barger is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, anews website powered by Franklin College journalists.

Warn Children About The Dangers Of Social Media By Wendy McNamara

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As a school principal, I am increasingly concerned about the dangers of social media and online games present to our children.

Here in Evansville, a young man named Mason died several days after being found unresponsive at his home. According to his parents, he played the “choking game” where kids are challenged to experience the feeling of suffocation.

I have spoken with Mason’s parents about their son, and I want to help them share his story so we can prevent this from happening to other kids.

Kids often don’t realize just how dangerous these “games” are until it’s too late.

Parents need to be aware of the irreversible consequences of some social media challenges in order to help stop preventable tragedies like this from occurring.

Some videos and posts across social media outlets like YouTube and Facebook glorify reckless behavior as entertainment. That’s why parents and mentors need to educate vulnerable young Hoosiers about the dangers.
I am committed to sharing #Mason’sMessage, and I ask you to click here to like his Facebook page and join in keeping our children safe from the negative aspects of social media.

Citizen And Trooper Helps Render Aid To Unknown Female In Distress

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On July 27 at approximately 5:15 p.m., Trooper Nick Hatfield was patrolling on 6thStreet near Executive Boulevard in Vincennes when a driver from a nearby vehicle began to flash their headlights toward Trooper Hatfield.

The vehicle quickly pulled over and Trooper Hatfield pulled in behind the vehicle. A male driver jumped out of his vehicle with a cellphone in his hand and started to explain to Trooper Hatfield that someone that he didn’t know just called his cellphone and that the female sounded like she was in distress and needed help. Trooper Hatfield took the cellphone and attempted to communicate with the female caller, but she was panicking and difficult to understand.

Trooper Hatfield stayed on the phone with the female and was able to calm her down. Trooper Hatfield was able to determine the female had taken multiple pills and had attempted suicide. Hatfield was eventually able to obtain her address in Charleston, IL. Local police was contacted and an ambulance and fire department was immediately sent to the caller’s residence. Emergency crews arrived at 5:29 p.m. and transported her to a nearby hospital.

LEAD AND ARSENIC CONTAMINATED SOIL REPORT

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. — A new health report on lead and arsenic contaminated soil in Evansville says Vanderburgh County children have higher blood lead levels compared to statewide numbers.

A public health assessment by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), a federal public health agency, said Vanderburgh’s high blood lead levels in children indicate there is a higher exposure to lead and that it is a health hazard.

It casts the high blood lead levels as an environmental justice issue, linking risk of exposure in some of the city’s most affected areas to aging housing, poverty and race.

The report warns lead and arsenic contaminated soil in the city’s Jacobsville Neighborhood Soil Contamination Site pose a health risk but it also delves into other contributing factors.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has been working to remove contaminated soil in the area since 2007.

According to the report:

  • More than 64 percent of residents in the Jacobsville contamination site live in older housing where there can be lead in paint and plumbing.
  • Nearly 21 percent of the population there lives in poverty.
  • About 27 percent of people there are black, compared with 11 percent black in all of Evansville.

Nearly 7 percent of children in all of Vanderburgh County were found to have high blood lead levels compared to 4 percent statewide in 2014-2015, according to the report.

Vanderburgh County has the eighth largest population in Indiana. In the 10 most populated counties in the state, only St. Joseph County had a higher rate of blood lead levels, the report notes.

The area has been slowly undergoing cleanup through the EPA’s Superfund program as funding becomes available. Twelve years and $60 million dollars after the cleanup began, the project is still several years away from completion.

Named for the Jacobsville neighborhood between the Lloyd Expressway, First Avenue, Diamond Avenue and Garvin Street where contamination was first found, the site has grown to include a 4.5-square-mile area surrounding Downtown.

Jena Sleboda Braun, the EPA’s remedial project manager for the cleanup, said the worst properties in the heart of the Jacobsville neighborhood have already been addressed.

“We have been working outward from there. We are finding the contamination is less intensive the further out we go,” she said.

EPA testing found residential soils in the area are contaminated with lead and arsenic partly due to air pollution from former foundries and factories operating in the area from the late 1800s up to 1990.

More than 5,000 properties have been tested so far and about 2,450 have been cleaned up, the EPA said. This includes homes, parks and daycare facilities. An estimated 300 will be tested and 400 cleaned up in 2019. Workers remove and replace the first two feet of soil where properties have tested unsafe.

Sleboda Braun said cleanup work is expected to take another five years.

It is unknown how many people may have been affected specifically by the contaminated soil, but the ATDSR considers the exposure risk high. Lead poisoning affects the brain, nervous system and kidneys.

The ATSDR says children in Jacobsville area yards who swallow soil and dust containing lead could experience slower growth and development, hearing damage and attention and learning problems. The problem extends to pregnant women who may ingest lead-contaminated soil, creating similar effects in unborn children.

There is no known safe level of lead in children’s blood, the ATSDR report said.

People exposed to arsenic in soil over long periods of time might be at a slightly increased risk of skin, liver, bladder and lung cancer, according to the report.

Vanderburgh County’s participation rate in childhood blood screenings for lead has decreased, similar to Indiana as a whole, according to the report.

However, the federal health agency noted the Vanderburgh County Health Department offers lead screening for free, along with public education programming.

The health department also received a $675,000 grant to remediate homes with lead-based paint in 2018.

In 2017, Evansville passed an ordinance bringing its powers and procedures for reporting, monitoring and preventing lead poisoning in line with the state’s, including authority to issue citations with fines.

Health Department Administrator Joe Gries did not return Courier & Press phone calls to discuss the report.

Justices Amend Rules Of Judicial Conduct, Bar Admission

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IL Staff for www.theindianalawyer.com

The high court first announced amendments to the Indiana Rules for Admission to the Bar and the Discipline of Attorneys, Rules 2(j) and 4.

Rule 2(j) dealing with annual continuing education fees for non-attorney judges now includes the option to electronically mail notices to non-attorney judges that a $45 education fee must be paid on or before October 1. Additionally, the amendments remove language stating that a failure to pay the $45 fee would result in an automatic suspension from judicial office.

Non-attorney judges who fail to pay the fee will now be subject to suspension from judicial office and “may resume office upon payment of the unpaid education fees and payment of the delinquency fee set out in subsection (1).”

In the same order, Rule 4 regarding the Roll of Attorneys has been updated to reflect current updates in technology. An amendment to the rule replaces the clerk of court’s responsibility to keep, and from time to time revise, a permanent “alphabetical index roll” with “electronic database.”

A second order issued by the justices Thursday includes an addition to Rule 2.12 of the Indiana Code of Judicial Conduct. The rule, dealing with supervisory duties, now states that:

“A judge is responsible for ensuring competency, efficiency, and productivity of court staff. To better provide accurate performance of court staff duties and to best serve the public and the judge, a judge is encouraged to make certain that court staff receive training on a regular and continuing basis.”

All justices concurred with both orders, and the amendments will go into effect on January 1, 2020.

Candidates Bash Trump, Propose Programs To Create More Equality

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By Janet Williams and Haley Carney
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—The Democratic presidential candidates who appeared before the National Urban League’s convention Friday morning all addressed, in one way or another, the issue of inequality and the impact on people of color.

But the proposals that got the loudest response and applause came when Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Sen. Kamala Harris of California said they want to legalize marijuana and make sure African-Americans can participate in pot businesses as they take off.

Her plan is to give them “a place where they can be first in line to get those jobs.”

The National Urban League, meeting in Indianapolis for the first time in 25 years, invited every candidate for president to speak and nine accepted. Besides Gillibrand and Harris, South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg and conservative filmmaker and writer Ami Horowitz spoke Friday morning at the Indiana Convention Center.

On Thursday, former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Amy Klobachur of Minnesota, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, former Rep. John Delaney of Maryland and Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio made their pitches about why they should be the candidate to challenge President Donald Trump next year.

Buttigieg, who got a smattering of applause during his 20 minutes, sounded many of the same themes he addressed a week ago when he appeared before the Young Democrats of America at its Indianapolis convention.

He spoke of systemic racial inequality that has stifled opportunities for African Americans for generations and what the next president must do to deal with them, including his Douglass Plan, named for Frederick Douglass. It addresses everything from education funding to mass incarcerations, which Buttigieg said he would end by getting rid of mandatory minimum sentences.

“You are four times as like to be arrested for the same offense as a white person,” Buttigieg said. “You are living in a different America and I think for too long we have believed we were on a path where systemic racism was going to take care of itself.”

In a swipe at Trump, he said, “I believe a president like the one we’ve got now does not come near the Oval Office unless the ground is shifting beneath our feet. My generation saw this country elect its first black president and then turn around and elect a racist to the White House.”

In a question-and-answer session with National Urban League President Marc Morial, Buttigieg acknowledged the lack of diversity and other problems in the South Bend police department where a white police officer shot and killed a black man.

He said he is addressing the issue, in part, by building trust between the African-American community and police. In South Bend, he said they are starting by inviting the community to weigh in on use of force policies and police training.

Gillibrand, who has struggled with low poll ratings, positioned herself as the fighter in the race before the Urban League audience as she unveiled her build local, hire local infrastructure plan. She got applause when she pledged to spend $100 million on infrastructure projects with a provision that half of the money be spent on communities left behind, with 30% of the money going to minority-owned businesses.

In response to a question from Morial, Gillibrand said to loud applause and laughter, “On the first day I become president, after I Clorox the oval office, the second thing I would do is restore our moral leadership on the world stage.”

She criticized Trump for being unwilling to stand up to world leaders like Vladimir Putin and for continuing to create divisions in the nation.

Like Buttigieg, she said she would support policies to end the mass incarceration of African-Americans.

“We don’t enforce our criminal justice laws the same,” she said. “We know there are black and brown and white young men who smoke pot at the same rate, but who gets arrested?”

Harris, the final candidate to speak, took on Trump more directly than any of the others as she called the election a fight for equality. She said he stands in the way of progress.

“He wants to take us back. Donald Trump says he wants to make America great again. Well, what does again mean? Back before the civil rights act? Back before the voting rights act? Back before Roe v Wade?”

“Well, we’re not going back,” Harris said to applause.

The California senator announced her plan to provide historically black colleges with $60 billion in STEM—science, technology, engineering and math—funding and another $2.5 billion to the teacher programs in the same colleges.

Morial asked Harris to address one of the issues she has been most criticized for throughout the campaign—her role in California as a prosecutor.

After noting that she had to explain her decision to become a prosecutor to her family members who were deeply involved in the civil rights movement, she said, “Why do we always have to be on the outside? Shouldn’t we have a role on the other side?”

Harris said that as prosecutor she had the power to create a re-entry program for ex-felons so they could re-establish their lives in the community and avoid committing another crime.“And I didn’t have to ask anybody’s permission to do it because I was running the office,” she said.

The most awkward moments came as Horowitz lectured the largely African-American audience about victimhood and saying that Democrats have failed them.

“They take you for granted,” he said. He received little applause and at one point a few people left the conference room where the session was held.

Horowitz said he, too, is focused on equality—equality of opportunity. He said Democrats focus on equality of outcome, which leads to socialism.

The four-day conference of the National Urban League, a nonpartisan organization to focuses on issues urban area, ends Saturday.

Janet Williams is executive editor of TheStatehouseFile.com and Haley Carney is a reporter. TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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