Home Blog Page 3360

EPD REPORT

0

EPD REPORT

“IS IT TRUE” MAY 31 2019

4

We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” 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.

IS IT TRUE that the City-County Observer is now offering obituaries?  …we want to thank Ziemer, Koehler, Schneider and Mason Brothers Funeral Homes for providing us with their current obituaries at no costs?  …during the next several days we shall be announcing additional area Funeral Homes who shall provide our readers with obituaries? …we invite you to scroll down the lower half of the City-County Observer to view the current obituaries of area people who have passed?

IS IT TRUE  we been told by credible sources that the Republican party are planning an all-out assault on Democrats who are vying for a seat on the 2020 Evansville City Council?  …if members of the Vanderburgh Democratic party don’t watch their P’s and Q’s the Republicans could take control of the Evansville City Council for the first time in 50 years?

IS IT TRUE that the crime data for the City of Evansville as compiled by Neighborhood Scout inspired an article that was titled “The 10 Most Dangerous Neighborhoods in Evansville” to be published a few weeks ago?…it was no surprise to anyone who knows Evansville that the 10 most dangerous neighborhoods were dominated by the Southside, the Southeast, Center City, and Jimtown? …of particular note is that the two neighborhoods that make up the entire North Main corridor are on the list of 10 most dangerous proving that an overpriced bike path does not positively help with reducing criminal activity?…this comes on after spending of over $200 million on the downtown area while Center City neighborhoods have been suffering from excessive street crime?

IS IT TRUE that digging deeper into the crime data reveals that violent crime in Evansville is 6.9 per 1,000 members of the population and property crime has a rate of 50.4 per 1,000?…this means that each person in Evansville has a 1 in 20 probability of being a victim of a crime?…this is more than double the crime rate in the State of Indiana?…that there is only one city in Indiana that currently has worse crime statistics than Evansville and that is the City of South Bend?  …in spite of the City of South Bend having abysmal crime rates, there is a love affair with Mayor Pete going on that may end up with him being elected President of the United States? …going back several years will also reveal that the crime rates have not improved under Mayor Pete so his appeal to the nation is just confusing?…when the national cameras start concentrating on just how little impact Mayor Pete has had in his 7.5 years in charge of South Bend, it is likely that his star will begin to fall?
IS IT TRUE that it is a common practice for a County Assessor to quietly increase home values? …to protest these increases, the homeowner has to obtain a certified appraisal costing at least $300?  …that the cost of the protest will cost approximately the same amount of money as the increase in our property taxes?  …it is also a common practice by County Assessors that even if the homeowner pays the cost of the appraisal and wins, the very next year the County Assessor will increase the home values back to the original increase and then some?
IS IT TRUE that according to the most recent publication of our city’s fund balances, the City Controller has added an additional account fund to the books?.  …that the name of the new fund is the “Park Special District”?  …that the “Park Special District”  fund has a balance of over $24 million?   …that the City Controller has been keeping this fund on the down-low? …that the fund’s origin is an actual additional debt from Revenue Bonds used on the Jacobsville TIF?  …the funds earmarked for the new aquatic pool to be constructed in Garvin Park will be the second round of bonds issued from the Jacobsville TIF? …the first Revenue Bonds was for the magnificent bike lane on North Main costing $14 million dollars?

IS IT TRUE that we wonder why the “Park Special District” bond funds have been deposited in the same bank account used to operate our city on a daily basis?

IS IT TRUE  back in 2016  the newly elected City Council’s first order of business was to repeal the Separation of Funds” ordinance that required all city funds to be deposited in separate checking accounts in order to force financial accountability? …because City Council repealed the “Separation Of Funds” ordinance all of the City funds are now deposited into the city’s General Fund account?

IS IT TRUE that the Evansville City Council is more in need of a financial analyst than of a legal counsel?

iS IT TRUE a new magistrate has been selected for Vanderburgh Superior Court? …the Court has selected Molly Briles as the new Magistrate?  …she will assume her new role on July 1st, 2019?  …we expect her to do an outstanding in her newly appointed position?  …we are pleased to hear that the Court has also selected Leslie Jackson to serve as the Chief Probation Officer of the Vanderburgh Superior Court Misdemeanor Probation Office?

IS IT TRUE that newly hired University of Evansville Swim coach Stu Wilson begins his tenure as the new swim coach with the Aces today?  …that Mr. Wilson has coached Eight (8) conference champions in a power five conference before?  …that six (6) of his former athletes went to the Olympics and World Championships? …it is abundantly clear that Coach Stu Wilson was the right hire to coach the extremely talented student-athletes at the University Of Evansville?

Todays “Readers’ Poll” question is: DO You feel that Evansville is in financial trouble?

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us City-CountyObserver@live.com

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.

Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

D-Day 75th Anniversary Celebration

0

D-Day 75th Anniversary Celebration

June 6, 2019, marks the 75th anniversary of D-Day, and the LST 325, Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science, and Evansville Wartime Museum have come together to celebrate the anniversary.

The LST 325 will temporarily move down to the central Evansville Riverfront and will be offering free tours June 6-9.

The 4-day celebration begins with a private ceremony on the morning of June 6th on the LST 325. The Evansville Museum will host a special screening of “Casablanca” and also a program focusing on Evansville-made war material used during the invasion. The Evansville Wartime Museum will have a special exhibit, “75 on the 75th”, showcasing 75 D-Day artifacts including a B-17 Flying Fortress that will be available for tours.

Continue the celebration at the Big Band 40’s Gala that will take place at Tropicana Riverfront Events Center Saturday evening at 6 pm!

Casino Workers Demand Change As Indiana Gaming Commission Welcomes Industry Updates

0

Casino Workers Demand Change As Indiana Gaming Commission Welcomes Industry Updates

By Erica Irish
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Gaming Commission met Thursday for its first hearing since Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb signed a controversial bill that expands gambling and legalizes sports wagering in casinos and on mobile devices.

At the commission meeting, leaders provided updates in response to House Enrolled Act 1015, the law that will open the door to new licensing opportunities for casino operators in Gary and Terre Haute, Indiana, among other provisions.

Amid these changes, including a possible Sept. 1 start date for sports wagering, some remain concerned that other critical aspects of the gambling industry — as well as its real-time effects on local communities and economies — remain overshadowed.

 

Unite Here Local 23, for example, a subsidiary of the national Unite Here service workers union that advocates for employees working at the service level in Indiana casinos, submitted a letter to the IGC arguing the industry is changing without consistent and fair input from all employees.

In the letter, the organization pinpoints top-down leadership adjustments made in Caesar’s Entertainment, Indiana’s primary casino operator. It goes on to allege how a single stakeholder in the company — Carl Icahn, a nationally recognized corporate investor who secured three seats on the operator’s board — managed to singlehandedly gain control of the selection process for the next CEO with less than a 10 percent stake in the company.

By consolidating power in the hands of a few, the organization argues, companies like Caesar’s Entertainment are able to engage in severe mismanagement with few consequences for those in charge. 

“Our members report that some regional properties still need significant repair and improvements and that staffing levels remain at bare-bones levels,” Marlene Patrick-Cooper, president of Unite Here Local 23, wrote in the letter to the commission. “More of the same will not sustain our industry.”

Kate O’Neil, research director for Unite Here, presented the concern to the commission alongside Shelby Wood, a food service employee at Indiana Grand Racing & Casino in Shelbyville, Indiana.

Wood has worked for Caesar’s Entertainment-owned casino for just under a year as part of its 24-hour food service team. She said employees like her face exhausting and unjust work conditions that could jeopardize positive changes to Indiana’s gambling industry.

Shift teams are often short-staffed and forced to work long hours with no guarantee for pay raises, Wood said. That’s why she started researching opportunities to translate worker frustration into an active union, a possibility she is already exploring with Unite Here Local 23.

“We know that these jobs can be better,” Wood concluded. “I know Caesar’s can make these jobs better because they are doing it at other properties.”

On a personal level, the 23-year-old said she fears sustained poor working conditions will prevent her from getting married and purchasing a home. Wood said she is already riddled with student loan payments to debt accrued from her time as a public relations and women’s studies major at Purdue University.

O’Neil determined it is the responsibility of the gaming commission to better determine whether Indiana’s current and future casino operators have the state’s best interests at heart.

“We want to see investment in Indiana casinos, but fear that investment could be jeopardized by Wall Street investors trying to make a quick buck,” O’Neil said.

While commission members did not offer much of a response to the testimony, commission chairman Mike McMains assured the pair the commission will take their concerns into consideration moving forward.

In the meantime, however, the gaming commission is also under sizeable pressure to implement the updates introduced by HEA 1015.

Sara Tait, the commission’s executive director, said the commission is doing its best to finalize the structure to guide sports wagering, for example. At the meeting, Tait announced the creation of a new sports wagering division within the commission to be led by Dennis Mullen, formerly deputy general counsel for the agency.

Under HEA 1015, the commission is expected to open applications to sports wagering vendors on July 1. Then, if all goes according to plan, the vendors may begin conducting business on Sept. 1, allowing patrons to bet on games involving human competitors but not on e-sporting events, high school athletics or youth teams.

However, Tait said the commission is “making no promises for a Sept. 1 launch,” noting transparency and efficiency are priorities for the commission. She also didn’t rule out a launch in two tiers, which could provide the commission with more time to review vendor applications.

“There are many factors outside of our control,” Tait said.

Tait said the organization hopes to provide a draft of the sports wagering vendor application for public comment.

FOOTNOTES: Erica Irish is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Cannabis Banking Bill May Falter (Again) Despite State Support

0

Cannabis Banking Bill May Falter Again Despite State Support

Many state leaders are hoping the fourth time’s the charm for a federal bill that would protect banks from being penalized for serving licensed cannabis businesses. Many banks are reluctant to work with marijuana businesses or people in the industry because federal law says the plant is a dangerous drug.

Seventeen state treasurers and attorneys general from 34 states and four U.S. territories back the Secure and Fair Enforcement Banking Act, authored by U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter, Democrat of Colorado. They argue that under current law, licensed marijuana businesses are pushed out of the banking system, leaving them dependent on cash, a target for crime and harder to tax and regulate.

The National Association of State Treasurers also has called for law changes, and the Michigan House last week adopted a resolution asking Congress to pass Perlmutter’s banking bill.

But despite mounting pressure from the states, congressional support is far from a sure thing.

“The biggest issue is building a political campaign around the issue,” said Michael Correia, director of government relations for the National Cannabis Industry Association, a nonprofit trade group. He said that while most members of the U.S. House support a banking fix — over a third of members have co-sponsored the House bill — support is weaker in the Senate.

The chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, Idaho Republican Mike Crapo, hasn’t committed to holding a hearing yet, according to Amanda Critchfield, communications director for the committee.

While the House Financial Services Committee approved the banking bill on March, 15 of 26 Republicans voted against it, including U.S. Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, the committee’s ranking member.

“We need to ensure we’re doing our due diligence before proceeding,” McHenry said in a statement. “One committee hearing is not enough to fully understand the consequences of this bill.”

In a March letter to the committee’s Democratic leaders, McHenry and Republican U.S. Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer of Missouri listed 15 questions the legislation raises, such as how it would affect the enforcement of anti-money laundering regulations.

As marijuana legalization spreads, more businesses and states are running into the banking problem. Today 10 states allow adults to possess small amounts of marijuana, and more than 30 states allow adults to use marijuana if they have a prescription.

Legal weed has become a multibillion-dollar industry, generating hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue for states such as Colorado and Washington.

Why Marijuana Businesses Still Can’t Get Bank Accounts

Marijuana businesses currently can access limited banking services, thanks to guidance issued by the Justice and Treasury departments during the Obama administration. In 2014, the agencies said financial institutions could serve marijuana businesses if they carefully monitored the accounts for nefarious activities, such as selling marijuana to minors and regularly reported to the Treasury.

These days, a growing number of financial institutions are willing to offer a basic business checking account, said Andrew Freedman, co-founder, and partner at Freedman & Koski, a cannabis policy consulting firm. “They’re pricey, but they’re available in most states.”

But cannabis companies can’t qualify for traditional bank loans or process credit card transactions. For dispensaries, handling cash transactions is the norm.

Nearly 500 banks and credit unions nationwide serve the marijuana industry, according to the latest report from the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. Marijuana money is typically handled by local, state-chartered banks and credit unions.

Banks’ ability to handle marijuana money was thrown into doubt last year when then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions rescinded the Justice Department guidance. But the Treasury’s guidance hasn’t changed, and banks and credit unions have continued to serve cannabis clients under the Obama-era rules.

However, the marijuana industry and many state officials argue that the services available are insufficient.

Safe Harbor Services, a wholly owned subsidiary of Partner Colorado Credit Union, has been helping credit unions and banks in about 10 states create systems and procedures for managing cannabis accounts.

Safe Harbor itself currently manages 137 marijuana-related accounts for financial institutions nationwide, in addition to 325 marijuana-related accounts managed by Partner Colorado Credit Union.

“At any given time, we typically have a waiting list and a queue of accounts that we are trying to open up and process that’s over 100 deep,” said Katrina Skinner, president of Safe Harbor Services. “I would say there’s still a huge demand, especially in newer states where legalization has just happened.”

“We do hear from licensees that the majority of businesses have access to banking services,” said Shannon Gray, marijuana communications specialist at the Colorado Department of Revenue. “That is not federal banking, that’s credit unions and that’s cash transfers.”

In some cases, she said, businesses must pay very high fees for banking services.

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, a Democrat who rallied his fellow attorneys general to support Perlmutter’s legislation, said that the lack of banking services creates a public safety risk.

“For too long, the status quo has pushed legitimate businesses outside the banking system and into cash-dependent models, creating a lucrative target for violent and white-collar crime,” he said in a public statement announcing the letter earlier this month.

Marijuana businesses comprise about 1% of Denver businesses but report about 10% of business burglaries, according to the city’s latest report on the marijuana industry.

Trump Administration’s Shift on Marijuana Could Imperil Banking Arrangements

The cannabis banking bill introduced in the U.S. House and Senate each session since 2013 wouldn’t entirely fix the problem, but it would give banks and credit unions more assurance that they won’t face blowback from regulators for taking marijuana money from businesses obeying state law.

The legislation could encourage more bank and credit union leaders to work with marijuana businesses, Skinner said.

The bill’s opponents, however, argue that banks will continue to risk prosecution so long as marijuana remains illegal at the federal level.

“The people and businesses who deposit the proceeds from the sales of high potency marijuana, concentrates, and gummies will still be violating the Controlled Substances Act,” Jonathan Talcott, chairman of the board of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, a nonprofit that opposes legalizing marijuana sales, told the House Financial Services Committee in February in prepared remarks.

Perlmutter’s bill has failed to gain traction in years past. Still, the bill’s supporters remain hopeful. Younger congressmen and women from states that have legalized marijuana tend to be more supportive of a banking fix, Correia said.

“Every year, the support in Congress is going to grow,” he said. “You can’t put the genie back in the bottle. We’re not going to go backward.”

Walmart Is Quietly Closing Stores

0

Walmart Is Quietly Closing Stores — Here’s The Full List

Business Insider

Walmart Neighborhood Market
  • Walmart is closing or has already closed at least 15 stores in the US and Canada.
  • The US stores include Walmart Supercenters in Dallas and Lafayette, Louisiana, as well as Walmart Neighborhood Market stores in Arizona, California, Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington.
Walmart is closing or has already closed at least 15 stores across 10 US states and Canada.

The stores include Walmart Supercenters in Dallas and Lafayette, Louisiana, as well as Walmart Neighborhood Market stores in Arizona, California, Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and Washington.

The closing date for most of the affected stores was April 19, according to employees of those stores, who confirmed the closings to Business Insider. A store in Bedford, New Hampshire, is expected to close in June.

Walmart representatives previously confirmed the closings to various local media outlets but did not immediately return Business Insider’s request for comment.

Walmart Neighborhood Markets are about one-fifth the size of a Walmart Supercenter, and they are typically found in areas that are more urban than locations for Supercenters. These stores focus primarily on selling groceries.

Read more: Walmart US CEO says half his store visits make him ‘grumpy’ — and he’s turning up the heat on managers

Walmart said last month that it planned to open fewer than 10 new stores over the next year. The company did not provide guidance on closings at the time.

Walmart has more than 4,700 stores in the US, with 3,570 Supercenters and nearly 700 Neighborhood Markets.

“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB” May 31, 2019

30

“LEFT JAB AND RIGHT JAB”

“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 JAB” 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

St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements for May 28, 2019

0

Demitria and Eric Westlund, Princeton, IN, daughter, Corah Jane, May 17

Chelsie and Kevin Ziegler, Henderson, KY, daughter, Ava May, May 18

Heather and Tanner Wedding, Evansville, son, Hampton Eugene, May 19

Misty Reese and Jason Dickens, Evansville, son, Alexander Christian, May 20

Jada Cox and Andre Campbell, Evansville, daughter, Ayvah Bre’ayle, May 20

Leticia Hernandez and Billy Gonterman, Evansville, son, Rowen Alexander, May 20

Toni and Zachary Mason, Evansville, son, Declan Gene, May 20

Jessica and Kurtis Goebel, Evansville, son, Bennett Edward, May 20

Patricia and Spencer Goodyear, Mount Vernon, IN, son, Finley James, May 20

Alicia and Matthew Nichols, Evansville, son, John Paul Andrew, May 20

Misty Reese and Jason Dickens, Evansville, son, Alexander Christian, May 20

Stephanie Keneipp and Ramiro Xoca Xolo, Mount Carmel, IL, daughter, Sara Leticia, May 21

Kayla Engel and Steven Hyatt, Mount Carmel, IL, son, Gunner Matthew, May 21

Samantha and Cody Hanley, Henderson, KY, son, Rhett Theroux, May 21

Kendra Brown and Adam Capehart, Evansville, daughter, Vada Rose, May 22

Shelby and Nathan Preston, Evansville, son, Timothy Owen, May 22

Katelyn and Joshua Brown, Mount Carmel, IL, daughter, Layla Renee, May 24

Kyra and Kevin Goines Jr., Evansville, son, Kevin Lamont III, May 24

Natalie Eubanks and Jarvis Ward, Evansville, daughter, Arielle Lucille, May 25

Kelsey Moore and Michael Allen, Evansville, daughter, Ariana Grace, May 25

 

Vanderburgh County Felony Charges

0

 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Mark Anthony Border: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)

Ronald Maurice Lemon: Theft (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a controlled substance (Class A misdemeanor)

Bryant Mykal Mathis: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)

Uber Perez-Labano: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

William Joseph Pittman: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony)

James L. Robinson: Attempt Domestic battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony), Domestic battery (Class A misdemeanor)

Michael Dean Weddle: Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony), Attempt Domestic battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony)

Matthew Robert Bailey: Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug lookalike substance (Level 6 Felony)