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JUDY VALADA MUNYON

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Boonville, IN. – Judy Valada Munyon, 71, of Boonville, Indiana went home to be with the Lord on Tuesday, July 2, 2019.
Judy was born in Evansville, Indiana on January 20, 1948 to the late Vaughn and Florence DeWeese.
Judy was a retired Middle School Teacher for 40 years with the Anderson Community School System. She loved to travel with her late husband Mark, read her Bible, play the organ, and most of all she loved her animals. Judy was a member of the Blue Grass Methodist Church.
She is survived by her sister-in-law, Teresa DeWeese of Boonville, IN; niece, Christie Still and her husband, Mike of Tennyson, IN; nephew, Jason DeWeese and his wife, Tasha of Nebraska; five great nieces, Makenze, Kyndel DeWeese of Knightstown, IN; Gracelyn, Macie Still of Tennyson, IN; Ivy DeWeese of Nebraska; several cousins from Evansville, IN;
Services will be 12 P.M. on Friday, July 5, 2019 at Koehler Funeral Home in Boonville, Indiana with Rev. Ben Lovell officiating. Burial will be at Blue Grass Cemetery in McCutchanville, Indiana.
Visitation will be 10 A.M. until 12 P.M. on Friday, July 5, 2019 at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions can be made in her name to any animal rescue center or to the National Stroke Association, 9707 East Easter Lane, Suite B, Centennial, CO. 80112.

To send flowers to the family of Judy Valada Munyon, please visit Tribute Store.

Late home run by Grizzlies hurts Otters

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The Evansville Otters suffered a 5-3 loss to the Gateway Grizzlies Tuesday as a three-run home run by Gateway’s Dustin Woodcock produced a comeback win for the Grizzlies.

The Grizzlies opened the scoring in the bottom of the first inning with runners on first and second. Luis Roman smacked a two-run double for Gateway to give the Grizzlies a 2-0 lead.

The Otters responded in the top of the second to tie the game.

All-Star catcher Rob Calabrese led off the inning with a single.

Two batters later, Hunter Cullen ripped a double to the outfield, moving Calabrese to third, putting runners on first and second with one out.

With two outs, David Cronin smacked an RBI single to right field, scoring Calabrese, cutting the Grizzlies lead in half.

Keith Grieshaber, the next batter, rocketed a single to left field, scoring Cullen to tie the game at two.

Both teams would remain scoreless in the third, fourth, and fifth innings, but the Otters would break the 2-2 tie in the top of the sixth.

Jack Meggs led off with a single and was followed by Hunter Cullen who was hit by the pitch.

J.J. Gould laid a successful sac bunt to move Meggs and Cullen to second and third with one out, setting up another big spot for Cronin.

Cronin then walked to force the bases loaded with one out in the top of the sixth.

That would force Gateway to pull starter Dominic Topoozian, who earned a no-decision, throwing 5.1 innings, allowing three runs on seven hits with two strikeouts.

The third earned run came from the bat of Greishaber, hitting a sac fly to left field that scored Meggs, giving the Otters a 3-2 lead.

In the bottom of the sixth with two outs and two men on, Tyler Beardsley threw his last of eight strikeouts to get out of a jam. The reigning Frontier League Pitcher of the Week tossed six strong innings, allowing two runs on three hits, and unfortunately earning a no-decision.

Otters reliever Drew Beyer threw a scoreless seventh inning but could not shut down the Grizzlies in the eighth.

Connor Owings led off the bottom of the eighth with a single.

Two batters later, Roman singled, putting runners on first and second with one out.

After Andrew Daniel struck out looking, Dustin Woodcock crushed his three-run home run over the porch in right-centerfield, his first hit of the game, pushing the Grizzlies in front 5-3.

Grizzlies reliever Grant Black came on in the ninth and retired the Otters in order, earning the save.

 

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

IS IT TRUE JULY 3, 2019

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” will encourage  honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way.
IS IT TRUE the Publisher of the City-County Observer will turned 76 years old at the end of this month? …he tells us that the only thing left on his “bucket list” is to finish his book called “IT IS TRUE”?  …over 15 plus years our publisher with the help of his 139 ‘Moles”, CCO staff have created many insightful, accurate and dynamic “IS IT TRUE” comments designed to encourage our elected and appointed officials to make “Good Public Policy” decisions?
IS IT TRUE starting next month our publisher will start in earnest writing his long awaited book called “IT IS TRUE”?  …he wants us to stress that none of the names of the 139 “CCO MOLES” that provided him with “IS IT TRUE” material over the years will not be reference or exposed in his book? …in fact, he’s the only person who knows who the “CCO MOLES” are? …he will not get personal with appointed or elected offices holders that appeared in past “IS IT TRUE” columns over the last 15 plus years?  …he will only reference good and bad public policy decisions they made? …in fact, he’s telling us so far the ‘”IS IT TRUE” comments posted over the years are trending to be around 90% accurate? …our publisher predicts that his book (“IT IS TRUE”) will be an informative, enlightening, funny and enjoyable to read?
IS IT TRUE we just received the following e-mail from our former editor and friend Joe Wallace?  …he said; “I will help with the IS IT TRUE book if you like. I just did all of this and know exactly how to set it up.”  …we have accepted his offer?
IS IT TRUE that the biggest accomplishment of the City-County Observer is that we have never been considered to be a “Minister Of Propaganda” for any appointed or elected officials?
IS IT TRUE if a person has charisma, has the capacity of giving long and boring speeches about nothing and would love having his picture taken 24-7 he should run for Mayor of Evansville?
IS IT TRUE politics in Evansville have done a complete about face in the short space of 12 years?…in the campaign for Mayor in 2007, incumbent Jonathan Weinzapfel faced a Republican candidate named David Nixon and reveled over a 70 point margin of victory?…four years later the Vanderburgh County Democrat Party imploded under the weight of ego and hubris after shoving the $127 million Ford Center down the taxpayers throats without an opportunity to hold a vote?
IS IT TRUE it’s guesstimated that the Ford Center has proceeded to consume nearly $9 million taxpayer dollars per year? …it has totally underperformed relative to the study by the handpicked consulting group that claimed it would be break even from day one?…it has now been 8 years and the people of Evansville have seen over $70 million dollars go up in smoke?
IS IT TRUE that Palm Springs, CA is about to get a new hockey rink and not one dime of taxpayer money will be spent on the construction?…the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians have announced a partnership with Live Nation to bring a 10,000 seat arena with an adjacent practice rink and entertainment area similar to Louisville’s 4th Street Live to downtown Palm Springs?…the arena is slated to open in the Fall of 2021 which will be a record time to compete a $250 million project?…the arena will be on the Agua Caliente reservation so there will be no State of California regulations, litanies of lawsuits, or insane local rules to hamper the construction?…as the reservation is a sovereign nation it is also not subject to the deal killing Davis Bacon laws that were passed in 1931?…if the arena is a big financial winner the Agua Caliente will reap the profits and if it is not they will absorb the losses?…this is how arena’s should be financed?  …the Agua Caliente partnership with Live Nation will essentially guarantee that the large drawing acts that can fill such a facility will be there?
IS IT TRUE that U.S. Senator Mike Braun created mobile offices to better assist Hoosiers? …we commend Senator Braun for working outside the box?
IS IT TRUE according to WRDB TV, Louisville, the Kentucky Supreme Court will weigh in for the second time in a long-running case challenging the legality of the nearly 3,000 slot-like “Historical Horse Racing” machines that have been installed at racetrack-owned venues around the state since 2011.
IS IT TRUE that WRDB TV, Louisville also reported that Casino gambling is illegal in Kentucky, but the current gaming machines are designed to mimic slots while basing the results of each spin on an old horse race, selected at random, which players are not able to identify in advance?
IS IT TRUE we hope that the owners of Casinos located in Kentucky will show their patrons how to use the additional option of betting on past horse races from tracks all over America? …we are told that this feature is available on every instant “Historical Horse Racing” gaming machine in the State Of Kentucky but is rarely used?
Todays “Readers Poll” question is:Do you feel because the Democratic party doesn’t have a Mayoral candidate it’s going to hurt City Council canidates?
We are pleased to provide obituaries from eight (8) area funeral homes at no costs.  Please scroll down our paper and you shall see a listing of them.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com
FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.”READERS FORUM” 

 

 

Is Kentucky Being ‘Shortchanged’ On Its ‘Slots?

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IS KENTUCKY BEING ‘SHORT CHANGED’ ON IT’S SLOTS? 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) – Sitting at one of the hundreds of betting machines at Derby City Gaming in Louisville – with names like Electric Nights and Vegas Fortune — it’s hard to tell that you’re betting on an old horse race instead of playing a slot machine.

But whatever physical resemblance the machines bear to casino gambling, there is one respect in which they’re more like horse racing: taxes. Kentucky now has nearly 3,000 slot-like “historical horse racing” machines at racetracks and track-owned facilities like Derby City Gaming, with more on the way. Spin by spin, the amount of money players put into them is on pace to reach $2 billion a year.

The slot-like machines have provided a financial shot in the arm for the state’s ailing horse industry — but only a negligible amount of old-fashioned tax revenue that the state can use on pensions, Medicaid or other budgetary needs.

The casino-style gambling is flourishing at a time when government coffers in Louisville and across Kentucky face steep financial challenges. In fact, Louisville and other local governments receive no share of the money bettors are spending in the machines, at a time when Metro government is closing public pools and libraries to make ends meet.

And compared with neighboring states that have actual casinos, Kentucky is getting a paltry share of the revenue generated by historical racing, according to a WDRB News analysis. It’s a result of a tax rate that aligns more with traditional horse racing than casino gambling.

As Churchill Downs and Keeneland plan to open the fifth historical racing parlor in southern Kentucky next year, some question why the broader state shouldn’t get a bigger share of the gaming boom.

“As (historical horse racing) grows and proliferates, there isn’t any reason why it shouldn’t benefit the commonwealth with that growth,” said Pam Thomas, a senior fellow at the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy, a progressive group that argues for higher taxes on the slot-like machines.

The state horse racing commission, a group appointed by Kentucky’s governor, paved the way for historical horse racing in 2010 under former Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear and has overseen a significant expansion of it in recent years under Republican Gov. Matt Bevin.

Beshear couldn’t get  Kentucky’s legislature to legalize casinos or put the question to voters, and Bevin doesn’t favor an expansion of gambling.

But since historical racing started at Kentucky Downs in 2011, customers at the four racetrack-owned gaming venues around the state have bet $5.3 billion in the slot-like machines though April, according to the latest figures from the racing commission.

It’s a fast-growing market, with the tracks taking in $1.6 billion in wagers in first ten months of the state’s fiscal year, up 77 percent from the same period a year earlier.

While they look and feel like slot machines, the math that determines winners is based on the results of old horse races. The tracks and the racing commission have so far prevailed in a legal battle over whether historical horse racing is a form of pari-mutuel wagering, or the type of betting used in horse racing.

There are a few reasons why historical horse racing, also called instant racing, hasn’t made a bigger dent in the state coffers. The main one is that most of the taxes generated by the slot-like machines go to horse industry funds and programs, such as supplementing purses at Kentucky tracks.

The $5.3 billion in wagers has produced about $80 million in taxes, of which about $51 million has gone to horse industry-related funds and programs, leaving only $29 million in general tax revenue for the state.

Horse industry officials say the money generated by the slot-like machines has helped revive the sport and even the playing field with states that use actual casinos to prop up their racing circuits.

“We have literally faced the situation where people that train their horses and stable them in Kentucky will drive right past some Kentucky tracks to go tracks in other states where the purses are higher,” said Lexington attorney Bill Lear, a trustee of Keeneland Association. “If one of the goals of the current racing commission, with which we whole-heartedly agree, is to really have a bona fide, year-round racing circuit in Kentucky, then historical horse racing is a big key to that.”

Another reason is that, in terms of dollars, casino gambling in neighboring states still dwarfs historical horse racing in Kentucky. In Indiana, which has a mature gambling industry, the state’s 13 casinos took in $22 billion in bets in the last fiscal year, more than 20 times the amount attracted by Kentucky’s slot-like machines.

But Kentucky also taxes historical horse racing at a lower effective rate than bordering states tax casino proceeds, according to a WDRB News analysis of publicly reported data.

Kentucky’s Growing Historical Horse Racing Industry Is Taxed At A Lower Effective Rate Than Casino Gambling In Border States.
EFFECTIVE TAX RATE -KENTUCKY is 18%
EFFECTIVE RATE IN MISSOURI IS 26%
EFFECTIVE TAX RATE IN INDIANA IS 27%
EFFECTIVE TAX RATE IN OHIO IS 33%
EFFECTIVE TAX RATE IN ILLINOIS 34%
EFFECTIVE TAX RATE IN WEST VIRGINIA IS 47%

Like most live horse racing, Kentucky levies a tax of 1.5 percent on the “handle,” or total amount bet, in the slot-like machines. After most of the handle is paid back to winning customers, the taxes represent about 18 percent of what’s left over.

By comparison, Indiana and Ohio tax 27 percent and 34 percent of their casinos’ gross revenues, according to WDRB’s analysis of figures compiled by the American Gaming Association.

“Kentucky is allowing these historical racing parlors to be taxed at a 1.5 percent rate, and it ought to be much higher than that,” said state Rep. Jason Nemes, a Republican from eastern Jefferson County.

Nemes said he plans to propose a hike on historical racing taxes as part of a broader tax reform bill.

In an opinion affirming the legality of the slot-like machines in October, Franklin Circuit Judge Thomas Wingate questioned whether the state is being “shortchanged” on taxes, although tax policy was irrelevant to the legal issue he had to decide;.

Wingate’s decision is on appeal, part of a nine-year legal battle waged by the conservative Family Foundation of Kentucky, which contends the machines are not pari-mutuel wagering.

But others say it’s unsurprising that casinos generate higher taxes and unfair to hold historical horse racing to the same standard.

“It does bring in less revenue than casino gambling — because it’s not casino gambling,” said state Sen. Damon Thayer of Georgetown, the floor leader for the Senate’s Republican majority. “It’s pari-mutuel wagering on horse racing, and it’s taxed at the same rate as live racing and as simulcasting.”

Thayer, a longtime proponent of historical racing, supported an unsuccessful effort in 2012 to allow Kentuckians to vote on whether to legalize casino gaming at up to five racetracks.

But historical racing is a “totally different business model” from casino gambling – one that is more profitable and thus able to be taxed at a higher rate, Thayer said.

Any effort to hike taxes on historical racing would be “dead on arrival” in the legislature, he said.

“Why would you take something that is a huge success story and try to diminish its economic returns and benefits to the people of Kentucky by taxing it more?” Thayer said. “The horse industry in Kentucky is doing better than ever, and it’s because of the purses derived from historical horse racing.”

Thayer noted that the tracks set aside a good chunk of the after-tax proceeds of historical racing to supplement racing purses. He also said it’s “short sighted” to look only at the direct taxes generated by the slot-like machines while ignoring the indirect revenues flowing from a revived racing industry.

Even operating within the constraints of horse racing, Churchill Downs’ Derby City Gaming has had “very encouraging” results since opening last September at an off-track facility on Poplar Level Road, Churchill Downs CEO Bill Carstanjen said in April.

Disclosing results to investors, the company touted Derby City Gaming’s “strong” 41% margin for adjusted earnings – a measure of profitability – in the first three months of the year). Derby City Gaming contributed $7.6 million in adjusted earnings on $18.7 million in net revenue during the three-month period, the company said.

“I think the Derby City return (on investment) is sort of best-in-class and we’re very pleased with what we’ve seen there,” Carstanjen said on the company’s earnings call.

The success of Derby City Gaming has Churchill Downs contemplating further expansion, including bringing the slot-like machines to the iconic Louisville racetrack on Central Avenue. The company is licensed for 2,000 machines in Louisville, but has deployed only 1,000 so far.

And, Churchill Downs is teaming with Keeneland to build a racetrack, historical racing parlor and hotel in Oak Grove, Ky., with a plan to capture customers from the Nashville market. The racetrack is set to open in the fall, with the gaming machines coming in 2020.

Customers at Derby City Gaming have placed nearly $490 million in bets since the facility opened last fall, generating about $3.6 million in general taxes to state government, according to horse racing commission reports.

When Mayor Greg Fischer unsuccessfully tried to sell the Metro Council on an insurance tax increase earlier this year, he and his aides said that residents often asked why the city wasn’t getting a big windfall from the new gaming operation in town. In fact, none of the tax revenue from historical racing flows directly to local governments like Louisville.

By contrast, in the 20 years that Horseshoe Southern Indiana has operated across from Louisville in Elizabeth, Ind., Harrison County has built sewer and water lines and paved gravel roads with local casino tax revenues that amounted to $26 million in the most recent year.

Lear, the Keeneland trustee, said it would be wrong to expect a similar impact from historical horse racing.

“It was never envisioned as a significant revenue generator. The primary driver of it was to bolster, protect and hopefully improve the thoroughbred racing industry in the state,” he said.

State Rep. Adam Koenig, the Republican chairman of the House committee that oversees horse racing, said he doesn’t think Kentucky is being “shortchanged” by instant racing. If anyone thinks otherwise, he said, there is an obvious solution.

“If people want to generate revenue as slot machines would generate revenue, then we need to legalize casino gaming,” said Koenig, a supporter of expanded gambling.

But Koenig said the racetracks seem content with the status quo: “Right now everything is going swimmingly well. They are not paying taxes like slot machines are, and the restrictions on them are quite minimal. What industry doesn’t want that?”

FOOTNOTE: This article was posted by the City County Observer with permission by WDRB on line digital reporter Chis Otto. This article was posted by the City-County Observer without opinion, bias or editing.

 

You can reach reporter Chris Otts at 502-585-0822, cotts@wdrb.com, on Twitter or onFacebook.   Chris Otts reports for WDRB.com about business and economic topics, higher education and local/state government. 

Copyright 2019 WDRB News. All rights reserved.

 

 

Big Business To Supreme Court: Defend LGBTQ People From Bias

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Big Business To Supreme Court: Defend LGBTQ People From Bias

July 2, 2019

More than 200 corporations, including many of America’s best-known companies, are urging the U.S. Supreme Court to rule that federal civil rights law bans job discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.

The corporations outlined their stance in a legal brief released Tuesday by a coalition of five LGBTQ rights groups. The brief is being submitted to the Supreme Court this week ahead of oral arguments before the justices on Oct. 8 on three cases that may determine whether gays, lesbians and transgender people are protected from discrimination by existing federal civil rights laws.

Among the 206 corporations endorsing the brief were Amazon, American Airlines, Bank of America, Ben & Jerry’s, Coca-Cola, Domino’s Pizza, Goldman Sachs, IBM, Microsoft, Morgan Stanley, Nike, Starbucks, Viacom, the Walt Disney Co. and Xerox. Two major league baseball teams, the San Francisco Giants and the Tampa Bay Rays, were among the group.

In their brief, the companies argued that a uniform federal rule is needed to protect LGBTQ employees equally in all 50 states.

“Even where companies voluntarily implement policies to prohibit sexual orientation or gender identity discrimination, such policies are not a substitute for the force of law,” the brief argued. “Nor is the patchwork of incomplete state or local laws sufficient protection — for example, they cannot account for the cross-state mobility requirements of the modern workforce.”

Such friend-of-the-court briefs are routinely submitted by interested parties ahead of major Supreme Court hearings. The extent to which they might sway justices is difficult to assess, but in this case it’s an effective way for the corporations to affirm support for LGBTQ employees.

Federal appeals courts, including the 7th Circuit in Chicago and in the 2nd Circuit in New York have ruled recently that gay and lesbian employees are entitled to protection from discrimination; the federal appeals court in Cincinnati has extended similar protections for transgender people.

The question now is whether the Supreme Court will follow suit, given its conservative majority strengthened by President Donald Trump’s appointments of Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. The three cases are the court’s first on LGBTQ rights since the retirement last year of Justice Anthony Kennedy, who authored landmark gay-rights opinions.

The Obama administration had supported treating LGBTQ discrimination claims as sex discrimination, but the Trump administration has changed course. The Trump Justice Department has argued that the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 was not intended to provide protections to gay or transgender workers.

The companies signing the brief represent more than 7 million employees and $5 trillion in annual revenue, according to the Human Rights Campaign, the largest of the LGBTQ rights groups organizing the initiative. Other organizers included Lambda Legal, Out Leadership, Out and Equal, and Freedom for All Americans.

“At this critical moment in the fight for LGBTQ equality, these leading businesses are sending a clear message to the Supreme Court that LGBTQ people should, like their fellow Americans, continue to be protected from discrimination,” said Jay Brown, a Human Rights Campaign vice president. “These employers know firsthand that protecting the LGBTQ community is both good for business and the right thing to do.”

In one of the cases heading to the Supreme Court, the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of a gay skydiving instructor who claimed he was fired because of his sexual orientation. The appeals court ruled that “sexual orientation discrimination is motivated, at least in part, by sex and is thus a subset of sex discrimination.”

The ruling was a victory for the relatives of Donald Zarda, now deceased, who was fired in 2010 from a skydiving job that required him to strap himself tightly to clients so they could jump in tandem from an airplane. He tried to put a woman with whom he was jumping at ease by explaining that he was gay. The school fired Zarda after the woman’s boyfriend called to complain.

A second case comes from Michigan, where a funeral home fired a transgender woman. The appeals court in Cincinnati ruled that the firing constituted sex discrimination under federal law.

The funeral home argues that Congress was not considering transgender people when it included sex discrimination in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The law prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of “race, color, religion, sex or national origin.”

The third case is from Georgia, where the federal appeals court ruled against a gay employee of Clayton County, in the Atlanta suburbs. Gerald Bostock claimed he was fired in 2013 because he is gay. The county argues that Bostock was let go because of the results of a financial audit.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed Bostock’s claim in an opinion noting the court was bound by a 1979 decision that held “discharge for homosexuality is not prohibited by Title VII.”

An Indiana case filed by fired Ivy Tech Community College professor Kimberly Hively was settled on remand after the 7thCircuit held in her case that Title VII prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Gov. Holcomb Makes Appointments To Various Boards And Commissions

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Governor Eric J. Holcomb today announced several new appointments and reappointments to various state boards, commissions, and task forces.

Board of Registration for Soil Scientists

The Governor made four new appointments to the board, who will serve until June 30, 2023:

  • Robert Jones (Carlisle), project manager with the Indiana Department of Natural Resources
  • Jessique Haeft (Huntington), assistant professor of natural resources at Ball State University
  • Rebecca Langford-Willis (Evansville), owner of Rebecca Langford LLC
  • Linda Mauller (South Bend), former environmental director with the St. Joseph County Health Department

The Governor also made one reappointment to the board, who will serve until June 30, 2023:

  • Thomas Eickholtz (Kendallville), soil consultant with Eickholtz, Inc.

Environmental Rules Board

The Governor made one new appointment to the board, who will serve until June 30, 2023:

  • Michael Schuler (Sellersburg), president of Schuler Homes, Inc.

Indiana Election Commission

The Governor made one new appointment to the commission, who will serve until July 1, 2021 and will also serve as chair of the commission:

  • Paul Okeson, executive vice president of Garmong Construction Services.

The Governor also made one reappointment to the commission, who will serve until July 1, 2021 and will also serve as vice-chair of the commission:

  • S. Anthony Long (Boonville), founding attorney of Long & Mathies Law Firm

Indiana Housing & Community Development Authority Board of Directors

The Governor made one new appointment to the board, who will serve until June 30, 2022:

  • G. Michael Schopmeyer (Evansville), partner with Kahn, Dees, Donovan & Kahn, LLP

Indiana Public Retirement System Board of Trustees

The governor made two reappointments to the board, who will serve until June 30, 2023:

  • The Honorable Tera Klutz, Auditor of the State of Indiana
  • The Honorable Kelly Mitchell, Treasurer of the State of Indiana

Indiana State Board of Education

The governor made three new appointments to the board:

  • William Durham (Indianapolis), director of The Excel Center-Meadows, will join the board and will serve until June 30, 2021.
  • Pete Miller (Avon), director of business intelligence for IU Health Revenue Cycle Services, will join the board and will serve until June 30, 2023.
  • Kristin Rentschler (Columbia City), teacher at Columbia City High School, will join the board and will serve until June 30, 2023

 Land Resources Council

The Governor made one new appointment to the council, who will serve until June 30, 2023:

  • The Honorable Tom DeBaun, Mayor of Shelbyville

Nonemergency Medical Transportation Commission

The Governor made twelve appointments to the new commission, who will serve terms staggered as follows:

  • Serving until June 30, 2021:
    • Lorraine Bigsbee (Indianapolis), representing fee-for-service recipients
    • Sarah Chestnut (Indianapolis), director of public policy and technical assistance with the Indiana Association of Rehabilitation Facilities (INARF)
    • Dr. Michael Kaufmann (Brownsburg), EMS Medical Director for the State of Indiana
    • Gary Miller (Highland), former owner of PROMPT Medical Transportation
    • Andrew VanZee (Indianapolis), vice president of operational improvement and technology at the Indiana Hospital Association
    • Rob Zachrich (Atlanta, GA), COO of Southeastrans
  • Serving until June 30, 2022:

o   Kim Dodson (Westfield), executive director of The Arc of Indiana

    • James Fry (Clay City), CEO of Steadfast Transportation, LLC
    • Sherri Hampton (Morgantown), vice president of field accounting with American Senior Communities
    • Kristen LaEace (Indianapolis), CEO of the Indiana Association of Area Agencies on Aging
    • Amanda McClure (Carmel), Indiana regional lead social worker with Fresenius Kidney Care
  • Serving until June 30, 2023:
    • Dr. Jennifer Walthall, director of the Indiana Family & Social Services Administration.  The Governor has also designated Dr. Walthall as chair of the commission.
    • Probate Code Study Commission

The Governor made nine appointments to the new commission, who will serve until June 30, 2021:

  • James Carlberg (Carmel), partner with Bose McKinney & Evans LLP
  • The Honorable J. Terrence Cody (New Albany), judge of the Floyd Circuit Court
  • Barry Cushman (Notre Dame), John P. Murphy Foundation Professor of Law, University of Notre Dame Law School
  • Donald Hopper (Indianapolis), partner with Harrison & Moberly, LLP
  • Jeffrey Kolb (Vincennes), senior partner with Kolb Roellgen & Kirchoff LLP
  • James Martin (Merrillville), attorney with Martin & Martin
  • Sara Shade (Muncie), attorney with Beasley & Gilkison, LLP
  • Kip White (Covington), attorney with Fountain Trust Company
  • Cindy Wolfer (Fort Wayne), associate with Rothberg Logan & Warsco

School Accountability Panel

The Governor made two appointments to the new panel, who will serve until Dec. 31, 2021:

  • Jody French (Leopold), principal of Perry Central Jr./Sr. High School
  • B.J. Watts (Evansville), teacher and coach with the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation

Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission

The Governor made seven appointments to the new commission, who will serve until June 30, 2021:

  • Keira Amstutz (Indianapolis), president & CEO of Indiana Humanities
  • Elaine Bedel (Indianapolis), president of the Indiana Economic Development Corporation
  • Kathy Cabello (Indianapolis), owner of Cabello Associates
  • Joyce Rogers (Indianapolis), vice president for development and external relations for the Office of the Vice President for Diversity, Equity, and Multicultural Affairs at Indiana University
  • Danielle Shockey (Carmel), CEO of Girl Scouts of Central Indiana
  • Judy Singleton (Indianapolis), co-founder of Singleton Associates, LLC
  • Rose Wernicke (Indianapolis), president of the Indianapolis Propylaeum

FOOTNOTE: The Governor also designated Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch to serve as chair of the commission.

 

Lt. Governor To Grow Agriculture,Tourism Partnerships In Mexico

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 Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch, in collaboration with the Indiana State Department of Agriculture, Indiana Office of Tourism Development and Indiana Economic Development Corporation, will lead a delegation of Indiana agriculture and tourism leaders to Mexico to develop economic partnerships, strengthen agricultural ties and showcase Indiana as a tourism destination.

The delegation will depart Indiana on Sunday, July 7, and return on Thursday, July 11.

“After our successful trip to Canada, I am excited to bring agriculture and tourism partners to Mexico, to further our economic partnerships between the two countries,” Crouch said. “Indiana has a lot to offer and learn from our associates in the south, and I look forward to the positive conversations that will occur over this trip.”

While the delegates will participate in certain events together, such as a Friends of Indiana Reception and Business Networking Breakfast, the group will conduct most of their business as two separate contingents: one focused on agricultural economic development and the other on building tourism partnerships.

The agricultural delegation will spend most of its time in Mexico City, with a one day trip to the state of Hildago, working to strengthen ties and develop new markets for Indiana’s agricultural products. They will participate in business to business discussions, government meetings, site visits and company tours.

“Mexico is a large purchaser of Indiana’s agricultural products, in sectors such as corn, hardwoods, duck and pork,” said Bruce Kettler, Indiana State Department of Agriculture Director. “Our focus there will be to expand opportunities for Hoosier farmers by building stronger ties and facilitating cooperation with one of the state’s largest export markets.”

In Mexico City, the tourism delegation will be working to develop relationships with key travel and tourism stakeholders, while showcasing the state’s tourism assets and promoting travel to Indiana.

They will be meeting with Mexican travel writers, tour organizers, travel agents, and potential businesses, who are interested in expanding their tourism footprint in the U.S. They will also be visiting some of Mexico’s premier agritourism destinations, in an effort to bolster the state’s culinary and agritourism profile.

“Our statewide tourism efforts are helping the economy grow and we want to take that internationally,” said Misty Weisensteiner, Indiana Office of Tourism Development Executive Director. “While in Mexico, we want to develop relationships with successful travel writers and agents, and encourage them to write about Indiana and include us in their itineraries.”

Indiana is home to 15 Mexico-based business establishments, including Azteca Milling, Allura USA, Bimbo Bakeries USA, Cemex Materials, Glasteel , Republic Steel, Transpoint Intermodal and Waelz Sustainable Products, that support more than 1,000 jobs across the state. Additionally, many Indiana companies, such as Allison Transmission, Berry Global Group, Cummins, Eli Lilly, Franklin Electric & Company, Kimball Electronics, Maple Leaf and Steel Dynamics, have operations and facilities in Mexico.

Along with the Lt. Governor, members of both delegations are listed below.

Agriculture Delegation

  • Indiana Economic Development Corporation:
    • Jim Schellinger, Indiana Secretary of Commerce
    • Andrea Richter, Vice President of International Engagement
  • Indiana State Department of Agriculture:
    • Bruce Kettler, Director
    • Connie Neininger, Business Development Director
    • Ben Gavelek, Communications Director
  • Tracy Barnes, Office of the Lieutenant Governor Chief of Staff
  • Michael Beard, Indiana Corn Marketing Council, Board President
  • Paul Brennan, Indiana State Poultry Association, Inc., Executive Vice President
  • Susan Brocksmith, Vincennes University, Professor
  • Natasha Cox, Farm Credit Mid-America, Regional Vice President of Ag Lending
  • Amanda Dickson, Purdue University, International Extension Specialist
  • Jeffrey Gormong, Indiana Farm Bureau, District 7 Director
  • Harold Gutzwiller, Hoosier Energy, Economic Development/Key Accounts Manager
  • Douglas Leman, Indiana Dairy Producers, Executive Director
  • Nicholas Maple, Indiana Pork Producers Association, Board President
  • Thomas Oilar, Cole Hardwood, Inc., President
  • Chris Olsen, Tate & Lyle,Vice President of Community & Government Affairs
  • Doris Anne Sadler, World Trade Center Indianapolis, President & CEO
  • Andy Tauer, Indiana Soybean Alliance, Director of Livestock & Aquaculture
  • Trenton Torrance, United Animal Health, Chief Operating Officer
  • Joseph Tuholski, Indiana Soybean Alliance, Board Chairman

Tourism Delegation

  • Indiana Office of Tourism Development:
    • Misty Weisensteiner, Executive Director
    • Amy Howell, Director of Communications & Media Relations
  • Arann Banks, Jackson County Visitor Center, Executive Director
  • Christian Butzke, Purdue University, Professor of Food Science and Enology
  • Liping Cai, Purdue University Tourism & Hospitality Research Center, Professor and Director
  • Kristal Painter, Visit French Lick/West Baden, Executive Director

For the state delegation, the costs of the trip are being paid through private donations made to the Indiana Economic Development Foundation specifically for the Mexico trade mission.

For updates on the agricultural delegation, follow ISDA at @ISDAgov, or for updates on the tourism delegation, follow IOTD at @INTourismPR.

IBM Awarded Post-Judgment Interest To 2017 in Long-Running Dispute

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IBM Awarded Post-Judgment Interest To 2017 in Long-Running Dispute

July 1, 2019
Indiana Lawyer

In its second opinion issued in the years-long dispute between Indiana and IBM Corp. over the failed contract to create a new Hoosier welfare system, the Indiana Supreme Court has allowed IBM to collect post-judgment interest on its $49.5 million damages award. However, that interest will date back only to a 2017 judgment on remand, not the original judgment entered in the company’s favor in 2012, and only serves as an offset to the greater sum IBM owes the state.

Justice Steven David wrote for the court in the Wednesday opinion in International Business Machines Corporation v. State of Indiana, acting on behalf of the Indiana Family & Social Services Administration, 19S-PL-19. The justices, excluding Justice Mark Massa, heard their second round of arguments in the case in February.

At issue in the litigation is a contract between IBM and the state requiring IBM to develop a new welfare system that utilized a centralized call center to handle customer requests. The new system, colloquially known as “modernization,” was meant to be a shift away from the prior welfare system that emphasized face-to-face contact with customers.

But the state terminated the IBM contract in 2009 after modernization began experiencing problems. Instead, the state created its own welfare system, known as “hybrid,” that combined the call center with the former face-to-face model.

Both parties filed breach complaints, and the Marion Superior Court initially determined modernization’s failure was not a breach of IBM’s contract. Instead, the state was ordered in 2012 to pay IBM $49.5 million for the costs of equipment and assignment fees.

But the appellate courts, including the Indiana Supreme Court, determined IBM had breached the contract and, in 2016, remanded the case for a damages assessment.

Judge Heather Welch determined in 2017 that IBM owed the state $128 million, offset by the $49.5 million previously awarded to the company, for a net damages award of $78 million for the state. Welch also declined to award post-judgment interest on IBM’s $49.5 million in damages, but the COA reversed that decision after hearing oral arguments last August.

The parties raised multiple issues on appeal when they returned to the Supreme Court in February, but the justices chose to address only the question of post-judgment interest. In determining the interest should date back only to 2017, David rejected the Court of Appeals’ reliance on Beam v. Wausau Ins. Co., 765 N.E.2d 524 (Ind. 2002), to award post-judgment interest because the $49.5 million damages award had been the “one constant” of the case lasting roughly a decade.

Beam relied on Indiana Code section 24-2.6-1-101, but David said the controlling statute here is I.C. 34-13-1-6 “because we are dealing with a sum of money due from the State.” The inquiry under the latter statute, he said, is “whether there was a final decree or judgment.”

“Case law is clear that a final judgment disposes of ‘all issues as to all parties,’” David wrote. “… Not all the issues as to all parties were resolved at the time of remand and further, what was due and owed to IBM was necessarily contingent upon what damages were due the State for the breach.”

“… Here, there is no money that rightfully belonged to IBM as the amount awarded to it may have been and ultimately was, only an offset to what IBM owes the State,” he continued. “Accordingly, looking at the statute, our case law and the facts of this case, post-judgment interest going back to the original judgment is inappropriate.”

The court summarily affirmed the COA in all other respects and affirmed the trial court in all respects, which would include the $78 million damages award to the state.

Barnes & Thornburg attorneys John Maley and Peter Rusthoven, counsel for the state in the IBM litigation, released a statement Wednesday afternoon saying they are pleased with the court’s ruling.

“Hoosiers will finally benefit from IBM’s multi-million-dollar payment of this judgment,” the statement said, referring to the $78 million owed to the state.

But Justice Geoffrey Slaughter dissented from the summary affirmance of the Court of Appeals, because one of the COA’s central premises in its ruling was that the modernization system was “essentially the same” as the hybrid system.

“It is telling that the State initially asked IBM to implement Hybrid via change order,” Slaughter wrote in his partial dissent. “By entering into the change-order process, the State all but admits that Hybrid is outside the scope of contracted services. Parties do not negotiate proposed changes to an agreement that already requires those things.”

Thus, Slaughter said the COA wrongly determined the costs the state incurred through hybrid were “procurement costs.” He would classify those costs as consequential damages subject to a $3 million cap.

“It will come as little surprise if prospective vendors respond to today’s ruling in one of two ways,” Slaughter continued. “Either they will not do business with the State at all, thus reducing the supply of those willing to contract with the State. Or they will include a risk premium in their contracts to cover the unknown costs of fulfilling obligations beyond what they agreed to.”

Slaughter concurred with the court’s ruling on post-judgment interest.

Massa did not participate in the case because he previously worked for former Gov. Mitch Daniels, who led the state to contract with IBM for the new welfare system.