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“READERS FORUM” JULY 12, 2019
We hope that today’s “READERS FORUMâ€Â 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 when Scott Danks resigned from the Vanderburgh County Democratic party Chairmanship it will hurt current Democratic City Council candidates election chances?
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Dr. Woody Myers Becomes First Democrat to Enter Governor’s Race
Dr. Woody Myers Becomes First Democrat to Enter Governor’s Race
By LaMonte Richardson
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS– Dr. Woody Myers, a former state health commissioner, on Wednesday became the first Democrat to officially get in the race for governor.
“I’m running for governor because Indiana has too many pre-existing conditions that typical politicians just can’t treat,†Myers said.
Myers will seek the Democratic nomination to challenge Republican incumbent Gov. Eric Holcomb, who is expected to formally announce his re-election bid at a kickoff rally Saturday in Knightstown.
Standing outside what was once Wishard Memorial Hospital where he used to teach critical care and emergency medicine, Myers told a small group of supporters and a larger group of reporters that Indiana needs a shake-up. He cited medical issues, such as combatting opioid addiction and infant mortality, but also pocketbook issues and education
“All Hoosiers deserve the best schools, the best health care and a state that is creating jobs and opportunities for workers and their families faster than wages are rising,†Myers said.
“While today’s politicians are bickering, fighting and thinking small, Hoosiers in every corner of our state are having a harder time getting by, let alone getting ahead,†Myers said. “Teachers are leaving our state in record numbers, students are being forced to deal with overcrowded classrooms and less individual attention and it’s wrong that music classes and art classes are becoming optional.â€
Myers said education is one of the areas he will focus on the most, saying “we’ll stop cutting education and start paying our teachers what they deserve because our teachers are worth it, and the future of the state depends on it.â€
Noting his resume, Myers said: “I don’t know what else one could do to get better ready for this job than what I’ve done over the last couple of decades.â€
Myers first served as the state’s health commissioner – the youngest person and first black to hold the position — under a Republican, Gov. Robert D. Orr, and remained at the post under Democrat Gov. Evan Bayh.
Since leaving office, Myers has focused on various businesses. He is now owner of Myers Ventures LLC, a business consulting firm in Indianapolis, and consults for a variety of hospitals, health care companies and provider organizations.
His one previous foray into elected politics was a 2008 primary campaign for Congress in 2008. Myers lost to Andre Carson, spending $1.8 million of his own money on the campaign.
Among those cheering Myers on Wednesday was Cheryl Sullivan, a former head of Indiana’s Family and Social Services Administration who earlier led the maternal and child health division while Myers was health commissioner.
“He is focused, he is smart, he is compassionate,†Sullivan said. “He wants to ensure that this is a state that not only works, but cares about all Hoosiers.â€
She noted he was a key figure during the early fight against AIDS. At a time when the word “AIDS†sparked panic, Myers supported the right of Ryan White, a Kokomo teen suffering from the disease, to go to school. Myers physically stood by White, who later died from the disease, saying the child posed no threat to public health, and even tousling the boy’s hair to demonstrate his lack of fear.
Former Congressman Baron Hill, who has signed on as Myers’ campaign chairman, told supporters that Myers will give Indiana “an alternative way†and will deliver a different set of values to Hoosiers apart from the Republican message that has been heard for the past 16 years.
Republicans, though, argued that it’s Myers’ message that is off-key
Pete Seat, a spokesman for the Indiana Republican Party, said in a statement that “I know Woody has spent a limited amount of time in Indiana over most of the last two decades and it showed.â€
“Coming off of back-to-back years of record job commitments, $1 billion in new investment in K-12 education and the only fully-funded infrastructure program in the country, Indiana is on a roll,†Seat said. “On the ground, Hoosiers see that Gov. Holcomb is positively impacting lives every day. It may be hard to see from his $4.5 million penthouse in the Conrad (Indianapolis hotel), but it’s what Woody will find as he travels across Indiana.â€
At least two other Democrats also are eyeing a run to be the state’s chief executive: State Rep. Karlee Macer of Indianapolis and State Sen. Eddie Melton of Gary who is in Indianapolis Thursday as part of a statewide listening tour on education issues with Republican Superintendent of Public Instruction Jennifer McCormick.
FOOTNOTE: LaMonte Richardson is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College students.
State Wants $40 Million Back From Two Virtual Charter Schools
State Wants $40 Million Back From Two Virtual Charter Schools
By Abrahm Hurt
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS–Indiana wants $40 million slashed in future state funding to recoup dollars given to two virtual charter schools that allegedly inflated their enrollment numbers.
But getting the money, despite Wednesday’s recommendation by the State Board of Education recover it, won’t be easy. One, the Indiana Virtual School, closes in September and the other, Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy, is scheduled to close after the next school year.
On the table: legal action.
Asked by a board member if the apparently phony enrollment numbers got into the realm of potential criminal activity, State Examiner Paul Joyce answered: “I would say yes.â€
While he demurred on whether the FBI or state law enforcement had been contacted about this case, Joyce said: “In situations like this we do contact all our law enforcement partners to work with them.â€
Tim Schultz, general counsel for the board, said suspending future payments to the schools is the only way to begin recovering the funds, and recommended that a local prosecutor be appointed to pursue the overpayments.
The scandal was first reported by the education news site Chalkbeat Indiana and was pursued by state agencies, with an audit still going on.
A preliminary report from Joyce and the State Board of Accounts found that the two virtual schools, both authorized by the Daleville Community Schools, reported having a least two times as many students as they did have. For three years, the state examiner found, the schools padded their enrollments with inactive and out-of-state students. Five years after two students moved to Florida, they reappeared on enrollment records for Indiana Virtual School from 2015 through 2017 and then for Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy in 2018 and 2019.
And in one case, Indiana Virtual Schools reportedly kept a student who had died on its rolls.
In addition, the board was told, many of the students were simply not doing any classwork. From 2016 through 2018, 4,535 students from both charter schools were reported as not receiving any credit for courses.
Over 900 inactive students were kicked out of both schools in the 2017-18 school year but were re-enrolled the next school year. These students were included in their Average Daily Membership, the calculation used to determine a school’s share of state dollars.
The schools were budgeted 15.1 million in 2016-17, a number that doubled in the next school year. For the 2018-19 school year, they received $34.7 million in state funding and have received more than half of that as of June 27. According to Chalkbeat, it’s unclear how the schools spent some $80 million in public funding from 2016 to 2018 because they have failed to file annual audits.
The scope of the apparent deception led B.J. Watts, chairman of the state board of education, to ask a pointed question: “How did we miss this? How was this missed and by whom was this missed?â€
Percy Clark, the superintendent of the two virtual schools, attended the hearing but said nothing though he had warned in a July 5 email to the board that garnishing their future funding would lead to their immediate closure.
Daleville Superintendent Paul Garrison, who was grilled by board members because that district was paid about $2.4 million over three years to oversee the virtual schools, admitted: “This isn’t one of my proudest moments.â€
Garrison defended the district, saying it had raised red flags about the virtual schools but had been hampered by an inability until recently to obtain enrollment data. Board members shot back that Daleville had drafted a poor contract with the schools that didn’t ensure accountability.
State Rep. Ed DeLaney, an Indianapolis Democrat who attended Wednesday’s board meeting, said the state should look in the mirror as it seeks to determine whom to blame.
“The authorizer’s responsible. The state board’s responsible,†he said. “We set it up for failure, and somebody figured out how to make it fail to their benefit.â€
MaryAnn Schlegel Ruegger, an attorney in Broad Ripple, told the board that employees “have been trying and begging for someone to listen to them for years about Indiana Virtual School. They went to the appropriate places and those places didn’t have the authority to help them. And some of those employees were fired for doing that.â€
“So, we’ve had whistleblowers for years, and now it’s come to this,†she said. “And now we’re out all of this money.â€
As part of its recommendations, the board voted to encourage the state to enhance how it monitors charter schools.
Adam Baker, press secretary for the Department of Education, said that now that the board has made its recommendations to recoup funds and improve oversight, “now we will move into the phase of what does that look like.â€
The answer to that likely will be a hot issue in upcoming legislative sessions and elections.
State Sen. Eddie Melton, a Democrat from Gary who is exploring a run for governor in 2020, issued a statement saying virtual schools need to be held to the same standard as other public schools.
“Education in Indiana already has been underfunded for years, and budgets have been strapped,†he said. “The last thing we need is virtual schools taking money from the state that doesn’t even go towards educating children.â€
FOOTNOTE: Â Abrahm Hurt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalists.
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EPA’s Methane Challenge Partners Are Leading the Oil and Gas Industry in Efficiency and Emissions Reductions
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published new data showing that in 2017 oil and gas companies that participated in EPA’s Natural Gas STAR Methane Challenge Program reduced methane emissions equivalent to nearly 1 million metric tons of carbon dioxide – all through voluntary actions to reduce emissions from key sources across their operations.
“We greatly appreciate the actions these companies are taking to lead the way in improving efficiency, reducing methane emissions, and improving air quality,â€Â said Anne Idsal, EPA acting assistant administrator for Air and Radiation. “These companies are showing that pollution prevention and profitability can go hand-in-hand—because less methane in the air means more natural gas product in the pipeline to deliver to customers.â€
The Natural Gas STAR Methane Challenge Program is a voluntary program launched in 2016 by the EPA in collaboration with oil and natural gas companies. It builds on the successes of the Natural Gas STAR program, through which partner companies have achieved cost-effective methane reductions for more than 20 years. The Methane Challenge Program provides partner companies a platform to make a company-wide commitment to cut methane emissions, track and report their actions, and be recognized by EPA for their achievements. More than 60 companies from all segments of the industry—production, gathering and boosting, transmission and storage, and distribution—are now program partners.
The extensive data provided by companies on their voluntary efforts provides important information to the public and serves as a guide for other companies looking to improve efficiencies and reduce emissions. Highlights from the reported data include the following:
- Partners’ 2017 methane reductions kept nearly $6 million worth of natural gas in the pipeline.
- Distribution segment companies reported replacement of more than 1,400 miles of cast iron pipelines and more than 2,000 miles of unprotected steel pipelines. These actions reduced methane emissions from old, leaky pipes by over 230,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.
- Transmission segment companies reduced methane emissions from pipeline “blowdowns†during planned pipe replacement/maintenance activities by nearly 650,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.
To learn more about our Methane Challenge Partners, their commitments and their achievements to date, see:Â https://www.epa.gov/natural-gas-star-program/methane-challenge-partners
More information the Natural Gas STAR and Methane Challenge Program and how to join can be found at: https://www.epa.gov/natural-gas-star-program.
Lilly General Counsel Among 2 Departing Senior Executives
Additionally, Christi Shaw, senior vice president and president of Lilly Bio-Medicines, said she was will be leaving the company at the end of August.
Lilly shares dropped 4.6 percent in early trading, to $109.30 each.
The company said Patrik Jonsson, president and general manager of Lilly Japan, will succeed Shaw. It also said a search is underway for Harrington’s successor.
Harrington joined Lilly in 1991 after working as a litigator at Baker & Daniels in Indianapolis, the predecessor firm to Faegre Baker Daniels. He was promoted to his current position in 2012.
Harrington has been a leader at Lilly on diversity initiatives and is a champion for ensuring the legal field is a welcoming place for people of all backgrounds, having served in leadership roles with the Civil Justice Reform Group and as a board member for the National Center for State Courts and the Leadership Council for Legal Diversity.
Indiana Lawyer honored Harrington as a Distinguished Barrister in 2017.
She returned to Lilly in April 2017 to lead the Bio-Medicines division.
“During Christi’s tenure, our Bio-Medicines division launched multiple new medicines globally, such as Olumiant and Emgality, and added key development projects to our early and late-phase portfolio,†Lilly CEO David Ricks said in written remarks. “I value the external perspective and passion for patients that Christi brought to the company.â€
Jonsson joined Lilly in 1990 as a sales representative in Sweden and has held marketing leadership positions for the company throughout Europe. He has been in his current position since 2014.
“Patrik is a patient-focused, inclusive leader who has a long track record of delivering results in numerous markets around the world,†Ricks said. “With a portfolio of newly launched medicines and a robust pipeline in both immunology and pain, he is the right person to lead our Bio-Medicines business.â€
Gov. Holcomb Proposes Nearly $300 Million To Pay Down Debt
Governor Eric J. Holcomb offered the following statement regarding the 2019 fiscal year close out report outlined today by Indiana Auditor Tera Klutz, CPA:
“Indiana’s economy is on a roll, and our reserves are healthy because of robust revenue growth. It is of paramount importance that Indiana continue sound fiscal management to further fortify our strong fiscal position.
Therefore, I am recommending we use nearly $300 million of reserves to pay for several one-time capital projects and to finish the free-flow of U.S. Hwy. 31. We have an opportunity to reduce our ongoing costs by paying cash rather than borrowing for several projects approved by the Indiana General Assembly in this year’s legislative session. Paying for capital projects now maintains Indiana’s low debt burden, avoids lease obligations over the next 25 years and leads to taxpayer savings of more than $100 million.
Earlier this week, I discussed these recommendations with House Speaker Bosma and Senate President Pro Tem Bray, including my desire that the state maintain fiscally responsible reserves of nearly $2 billion or 12.2 percent of expenditures after putting aside money for the following capital projects:
- $50 million for the swine barn at the Indiana State Fairgrounds
- $73 million for the Purdue College of Veterinary Medicine teaching hospital
- $60 million for the Ball State University STEM and Health Professions facilities
- $30 million for the Ivy Tech Columbus main building replacement
In 2018, I made the commitment to improve access and safety on U.S. Hwy. 31 from Indianapolis to South Bend by eliminating all traffic signals and rail crossings. Our fiscal position allows us to provide approximately $78 million so the Indiana Department of Transportation can complete this transformational project.
I asked the legislative leaders to strongly consider my proposal when the Indiana General Assembly returns in January 2020. We will work over the next six months to demonstrate how the ongoing savings can be best used for tackling our priorities in the next budget, such as providing meaningful increases in teacher compensation so Indiana is competitive with neighboring Midwestern states.
I am grateful to state agency leaders and employees, legislative leadership and Auditor Klutz who all help maintain our position as the fiscal envy of the nation.â€
“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB†JULY 12, 2019
“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JABâ€
“Right Jab And Left Jab†was created because we have two commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE†or “Readers Forum†columns concerning National or International issues.
Joe Biden and Ronald Reagan’s comments are mostly about issues of national interest.  The majority of our “IS IT TRUE†columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give Mr. Biden and Mr. Reagan exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and RIGHT JAB† column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB†AND “RIGHT JABâ€Â several times a week.  Oh, “Left Jab†is a liberal view and the “Right Jab is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments of the two gentlemen is free to do so.
FOOTNOTE: Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.