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Lack Of Affordable Housing Is A Growing Problem In Indiana

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By Abrahm Hurt

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—Every day in Indiana 86 families or nearly 32,000 a year are evicted from their homes, an event that will end up making it more difficult for them to find a place they can afford.

That statistic was shared Wednesday by Prosperity Indiana, an economic development organization that works to provide resources and advocacy to strengthen local communities.

Nearly half of all Hoosiers who rent are burdened by the cost because they are paying more than 30% of their monthly income on housing, said Jessica Love, executive director of Prosperity Indiana.

Across the state there is a lack of affordable housing for low-income individuals, she added. In fact, Indianapolis has the 14th highest eviction rate among large cities in the United States, according to their data.

“While we’re sharing some dire statistics and trends today, we’re not doing so to indicate that the situation is hopeless,” Love said. “Rather, we want to encourage more voices to speak up now on what is happening to Hoosiers who are housing unstable and build support for the best solutions at the federal, state and local levels.”

Prosperity Indiana joined the Coalition for Homelessness Intervention and Prevention (CHIP), the IU Public Policy Institute and the National Low Income Housing Coalition at the Horizon House in Indianapolis to discuss the affordable housing issue. They stressed the need for advocacy to advance state and federal policy solutions.

Love said two bills filed in the 2019 legislative session would have helped prevent evictions and ensure renters live in safe housing, but they both failed to pass.

Senate Bill 524, authored by Sen. Eddie Melton, D-Gary, would have expanded legal aid to tenants in crisis, and it would have made it a criminal offense to rent a condemned property. It was assigned to the Commerce and Technology Committee and never got a hearing.

Senate Bill 422, which was authored by Sen. Mike Bohacek, R-Michiana Shores, would have allowed tenants to terminate a lease if basic habitability standards were not met within a reasonable time frame after moving in. The bill got out of the Judiciary Committee but never got a vote on the floor of the full Senate.

Kathleen Lara, policy director for Prosperity Indiana, said the biggest reason the legislation failed was because the issue had not been addressed in more than 10 years and a general lack of testimony in favor of the bills.

Michael Hurst, an attorney with Indiana legal services, has been part of a project to make the eviction process less transactional in Indiana and provide counsel. In six months, Hurst has handled 178 referrals.

“I kept the eviction of their record, but when push came to shove, they were not able to find alternative, affordable housing to go to,” he said, explaining that most of his clients are single mothers who cannot find housing they can afford.

Prosperity Indiana reports that an individual making minimum wage would have to work 86 hours a week to afford a two-bedroom apartment at a fair market rate in the state.

Love said a larger coalition of people and groups would bring more options and policy changes.

“We’ve said it’s not legal to put people in a home that’s not habitable,” she said. “But there’s also nothing happening really to enforce that.”

Abrahm Hurt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Senator Braun Talks Mexico Tariffs & USMCA on Varney & Co.

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ON PRESIDENT TRUMP’S PROPOSED TARIFFS ON MEXICO:

“Of course border security is more in peril that it’s ever been, so President Trump’s interest in using that as a negotiating tool made sense. Most of us were hoping that would be what it’s for and that it would be resolved before they went in place.”

“I’m concerned if tariffs get put in place because the USMCA – that masterful agreement that is ready to go through - might be put it in peril. President Trump has done a great job negotiating with the Chinese, Canadians, and Mexicans, and I think here he needed to make a statement that they’re not helping out on border security and I’m hoping the tariffs don’t need to be used.” 

ON TARIFFS:

“I’m a guy that believes in unfettered markets – keep government out of it – tariffs would be involvement but I come from Main Street America – I think it’s big business that is reflexively against tariffs.”

“I think the President was right to use it as a tool as long as we wean ourselves from it like he said we’d do after we accomplish some of these goals.”

ON COMING TO WASHINGTON FROM BUSINESS:

“I always said I wouldn’t do this if I couldn’t make it a joyful experience – I’m glad I’m part of a dynamic here with the President that’s going to shake the system.”

 

JOHN HAYDEN RESIGNATION STATEMENT FROM THE EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL

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JOHN HAYDEN RESIGNATION STATEMENT FROM THE EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL

I have loved serving the 3rd Ward, the city as a whole, working with fellow city-councilmen, and alongside Mayor Winnecke’s administration and will miss it.

I am excited for the future of Evansville and what is to come and will continue to be committed to seeing things move forward in any way I can.  My wife and I were approached by someone interested in buying our house, and although the timing didn’t exactly line up to allow me to finish my term, it was something we had to consider for the future of our family.

Although we looked in the 3rd Ward for our next home, we ultimately landed with something outside of the 3rd Ward which forces me to resign.  I had every intention, and even investigated the rules with the State of Indiana, on finishing my term but the statutes indicate I must vacate my seat.  It is certainly a sad day for me, but I look forward to watching Mayor Winnecke and the new Council in 2020 continue to move Evansville forward!

John Hayden

3rd Ward Evansville, City Council

FOOTNOTE:  Steve Melcher’s is currently the official Republican candidate for the 3rd Ward seat in the upcoming November General election. Mr. Melcher was the 3rd Ward City Councilman for almost 18 years. The local GOP party Chairman Wayne Parke will be calling a party caucus in the very near future to select someone to serve out City Councilman John Hayden unexpired term.  Odds on favorite to replace Mr. Hayden is Steve Melcher.

Mr. Melcher Democrat opponent is Zac Heronemus.

 

Indiana Supreme Court Blocks Disputed Brownsburg Annexation

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Indiana Supreme Court Blocks Disputed Brownsburg Annexation

June 5, 2019

 Dave Stafford

Brownsburg has lost its final bid to annex nearly 4,500 acres of land after fighting residents who objected all the way to the Indiana Supreme Court. Justices ruled the town “did not satisfy its burden of proving it had met the statutory requirements for annexing the disputed territory.”

The state’s high court affirmed a Hendricks Superior Court ruling denying the town’s bid to annex property that met organized opposition in the form of a citizens group called Fight Against Brownsburg Annexation. The city continued to fight, losing at the Indiana Court of Appeals and in a unanimous Indiana Supreme Court ruling Wednesday.

The court also held that in annex cases, trial courts must consider the evidence presented by both the municipality seeking to annex land and demonstrators who oppose the consolidation.

Brownsburg failed to meet requirements of state law that any proposed annexations be at least 60 percent “subdivided,” which Justice Geoffrey Slaughter wrote was a term undefined in the legal sense. However, he noted that more than 70 percent of the land included in the proposed Brownsburg annexation area was agricultural land.

Justices also provided guidance for determining when proposed annexation areas meet statutory requirements for the percentage of subdivided land and other factors.

“…(T)he only permissible unit of measurement is acreage and not the number of parcels or tracts of land,” Slaughter wrote. “…(A)ll acreage within the proposed annexation territory must be included in the ratio’s denominator, and none should be exempted or excluded.

“Unlike the trial court, we are agnostic about whether the legislature should define ‘subdivided’ — a key statutory term, to be sure, in many annexation disputes. That is a matter for the legislature. But until or unless the legislature specifies the term’s meaning, courts and communities interested in local annexation issues should proceed with these guideposts in mind.”

Brownsburg had provided expert testimony from a city employee who had used various methods, including calculating the number of individual parcels of land or lots in platted subdivisions to represent a total exceeding the 60 percent threshold. Remonstrators prevailed on a survey from the Indiana Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations showing that nearly 77 percent of the land was agricultural.

Justices also found Brownsburg failed to meet another requirement of state law showing that the land is needed by the town for development “in the reasonably near future.” The town proposed a future extension of Ronald Reagan Parkway to relieve traffic on Raceway Road and State Road 267, a project first conceived in the 1980s.

“Even the Town agrees that the timeframe for extending the Parkway past its current terminus within the Town’s limits through the annexation area is ‘[o]ver the next five to fifteen years,’” the court noted. “And even then, the ‘timing of construction is not precisely known.’”

Other projects on the Brownsburg drawing board, such as a new bridge over Interstate 74, likewise were not imminent enough to meet the “in the reasonably near future test,” justices concluded. “As with the sixty-percent subdivided requirement, we hold that the court’s findings of fact here are not clearly erroneous, and that the record supports its conclusions of law,” Slaughter wrote.

Deciding the matter on these bases, the court did not address arguments that Brownsburg’s annexation plan was not legally contiguous to existing town limits or that the town’s fiscal plan for the annexation area was not sufficient.

The case — which also garnered friend-of-the-court briefs from Accelerate Indiana Municipalities and the Indiana Municipal Lawyers Association — is Town of Brownsburg, Indiana, et al. v. Fight Against Brownsburg Annexation, et al., 19S-PL-342.

IPAC Executive Director David Powell to Retire

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David Powell, the Executive Director of the Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys Council, will step down from his role this fall after leading the organization for more than 8 years.

Powell has announced he will step down as IPAC’s Executive Director on October 3, 2019 and will retire on November 1, 2019. Chris Naylor, IPAC’s current Assistant Executive Director, will succeed him. The IPAC Board of Directors officially named Naylor to the post during a board meeting earlier this year.

A former Greene County Prosecutor for 20 years, Powell took over as the Executive Director of IPAC in September of 2011. In addition to providing quality training and resources for Indiana’s 91 elected prosecutors and their offices, Powell also took an interest in passionately advocating for prosecutors in the Indiana General Assembly. Powell is a member of several policymaking boards, making sure the voice of prosecutors is heard when key decisions are made in regards to law enforcement, criminal justice matters and community safety.

“Working at IPAC and supporting Indiana’s prosecutors has been a wonderful and rewarding experience,” Powell said. “I will always be grateful for the opportunity to serve Indiana’s hard working prosecutors.”

Chris Naylor has served as the IPAC Assistant Executive Director since October of 2013. A former elected prosecutor and deputy prosecutor for Jefferson and Switzerland Counties from 2000 to 2006, Naylor will officially become IPAC’s fourth Executive Director on October 4, 2019. Naylor also served as the Indiana Securities Commissioner from 2006 to 2013. Naylor graduated from DePauw University, earned his law degree from the IU – Robert McKinney School of Law, and holds a Master of Business Administration degree from Butler University.  Naylor and his wife, Lydia, have two young sons.

“I’m excited to lead the IPAC team as we endeavor to support the efforts of prosecutors, deputy prosecutors and their staffs who are dedicated to upholding justice and contributing to safe, vibrant and healthy communities across Indiana,” Naylor said. “I look forward to collaborating with our partners in all branches of state and local government to take on the challenges that lie ahead.”

IPAC will start the selection process for a new Assistant Executive Director this month.

AG Curtis Hill Defending Indiana Law Prohibiting Abortion

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Attorney General Curtis Hill has written an op-ed defending an Indiana law prohibiting abortion based on an unborn child’s race, sex or disability.

“There is no escaping the hard truth that permitting abortion of the disabled not only denies equal human worth but also gradually eliminates the disabled from society,” he writes. “Iceland has reached a nearly 100 percent elimination rate for babies with Down syndrome, and the United States and other developed countries are not far behind.”

The op-ed appeared today at FoxNews.com. Any other outlets are welcome to publish the piece as well but are asked to please include the notation that the op-ed first appeared at FoxNews.com.

If you plan to publish the piece, as a courtesy please let us know by emailing Deputy Communications Director Bill McCleery at bill.mccleery@atg.in.gov.

USI’s Leonhardt earns Academic All-America honors

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University of Southern Indiana Softball junior pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) has been named first-team Google Cloud/CoSIDA Academic America in a vote by the College Sports Information Directors of America.

Leonhardt becomes the sixth Academic All-American in USI Softball history and the first since Haley Hodges ’17 collected second-team honors in 2016. Current USI Assistant Coach MacKenzi Dorsam ’15 M’18 was named first-team Academic All-America in 2015.

A second-team All-American on the field in 2019 by both the National Fastpitch Coaches’ Association and Division II Conference Commissioner’s Association, Leonhardt is coming off a 2019 campaign that saw her go 21-9 overall with four saves, a 1.29 ERA, 243 strikeouts and a .187 opponent batting average.

Leonhardt tossed two complete-game shutouts in the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament, bringing her single-season total to a school-record tying 13 as well as her career mark to a school-record tying 33. She also holds the school record for career strikeouts (705) and wins (76).

Earning her sixth-career All-America honor, Leonhardt finished the year ranked second in the nation in complete-game shutouts, seventh in strikeouts, ninth in ERA,  20th in hits allowed per seven innings (4.71) and 25th in wins.

At the plate, Leonhardt hit .351 with 11 doubles, a triple, one home run and 30 RBIs. She ranked 33rd, nationally, and fourth in the Great Lakes Valley Conference with four sacrifice flies, while her 13 sacrifice bunts tied for first in the conference and placed her 41st in the nation.

Leonhardt also was the GLVC Pitcher of the Year, unanimous first-team All-GLVC and first-team All-Midwest Region by both the NFCA and D2CCA.

In the classroom, Leonhardt has accumulated a 3.764 grade point average as a biology major at USI. She will be named Academic All-GLVC for the third consecutive year later this month and is a finalist for USI’s Female Student Athlete of the Year award.

USI, which was No. 25 in the final NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches’ Poll, finished the year with a 35-21 overall record and a 19-7 mark in GLVC play. The Screaming Eagles advanced to the NCAA II Midwest Region Tournament for the fifth straight year and the sixth time in seven seasons before falling to eventual Midwest Region champion Grand Valley State University in the championship round of the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament.

ADOPT A PET

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Bunny is a 3-year-old female mixed-breed! She does very well with the other dogs in play groups. She’s been with the VHS since March 21st when she was transferred in from Evansville Animal Care & Control. Her adoption fee is $110 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLLE

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Jun 5