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Agenda Of Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners 

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civic center

AGENDA Of Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners For April 30, 2019

at 3:00 pm, Room 301

  1. Call to Order
  2. Attendance
  3. Pledge of Allegiance
  4. Permission to Open Bids for VC 19-04-01: Melody Hills Subdivision Street Repairs
  5. Action Items 
    1. Second/ Final Reading of CO.05-19-005: Amending Title 17 Land Use and Zoning
    2. First Reading of CO.05-19-006 Amending 15.20.090: Fencing and retaining walls in drainage easements
    3. First Reading of CO. 05-19-007 Amending 16.04.010: Parcelization of Lots
    4. First Reading of CO. 05-19-008 Amending 16.04.040: Illegal Split
    5. First Reading of CO. 05-19-009 Amending 16.08.060: Hearing Before Commission- Primary Approval
    6. First Reading of CO. 05-19-010 Amending 16.12.020: Required Improvements- Sewers
    7. First Reading of CO. 05-19-011 Amending 17.12.150: Illegal Nonconforming Use of Land or Structure
    8. Resolution CO.R-04-19-006: Defining Use of Clinics for Vanderburgh County Employees
    9. County Employee Anthem Health Insurance Renewal 
    10. County Auditor: County Employee Direct Deposit Directive
    11. Superintendent of County Buildings: Old Courthouse Lease Agreement with Aaron Tanner and Jordan Barclay
    12. County Clerk: Collective Bargaining Agreement
    13. County Prosecutor: Collective Bargaining Agreement 
    14. Amendment to IT Support Contract with ANCS
  6. Department Head Reports
  7. New Business
  8. Old Business
  9. Consent Items
    1. Approval of April 16, 2019, Meeting Minutes
    2. Employment Changes 
    3. County Commissioners: Letter to Vanderburgh Redevelopment Commission Regarding TIF Funds
    4. Area Plan Commission: Travel Request
    5. County Highway: Annual Operations Report
    6. Superintendent of County Buildings: Old Courthouse Fire Alarm quote 
    7. Weights and Measures Monthly Report: March 16- April 15 2019
    8. County Clerk March 2019 Report
    9. County Treasurer March 2019 Report
    10. County Auditor: Claims Voucher Report for April 15-April 19 and April 22-26
    11. County Engineer: 
      1. 1.  University Parkway TIF Pay Request No. 46 for $653,183.16
      2. 2.  US 41 Expansion TIF Pay Request No. 58 for $10,726.00
      3. 3.  Department Head Report
  10. Public Comment
  11. Rezoning 
    1. First Reading of VC-3-2019
  12. Petitioner: Anlene, LLC
  13. 12715 Petersburg Rd
  14. Change from Ag to R-2 with UDC
  15. Adjournment

MEET ALEX SCHMITT THE REPUBLICAN PRIMARY CANDIDATE FOR CITY COUNCIL

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Alex Schmitt is running for the  Evansville City Council At-Large in the Republican primary. He’s a proud 4thgeneration Evansville native, West-sider, and F.J. Reitz graduate, who loves his hometown. He said, “that he was raised to give back to his community, serve his neighbors, uphold his Christian values, and preserve and respect the history of Evansville.”

He currently serves on the EVSC Foundation Board of Directors, Reitz Home Museum Board of Directors, Leadership Evansville Executive Board and Board of Directors, and is the Vice President of the Vanderburgh Humane Society.  Alex also volunteers for Youth Resources of Southwestern Indiana, SMILE on Down Syndrome and Habitat for Humanity, to name only a few.  In 2018, he was recognized by the Evansville Courier & Press–Tri-State Business Journal 20 Under 40 as one of the top 20 young professionals in the area, and received the Leadership Evansville Alumnus of the Year Award.

He’s a practicing attorney and owner of a small local law firm. In his campaign literature, he states “that he understands the “importance of local economic growth, and will strive to ensure a better quality of life for the citizens of Evansville by being an advocate for the needs of our community.”  He says “If elected one of his personal goals is to finally fix our traffic and road problem.”

Alex says “he wants to make it easier for small and local businesses to not only get off the ground but to succeed and flourish”. He also feels “that we have outdated municipal ordinances that act as a great hindrance on the success of local businesses.”

Finally, “he wants us to think of our community as an investment and that investment takes patience, sacrifice, and hard work, and the only way to get more out of your investment is to put something into it”.  “If you want your investment to prosper, you have to put something into it.”

FOOTNOTE: Any candidate running in the upcoming City Council primary can send their election profile to the CityCountyObserver@live.com to C/O Justin Phillips, Editor and we will publish it at no cost. 

CONGRESSIONAL ROLL CALL VOTES

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How Bucshon, Braun And Young Voted

Senate

Roll Call Braun, Mike Young, Todd C.

H.J. Res. 46

QUESTION: On the Joint Resolution H.J.Res. 46

Joint Resolution Passed (59-41) on March 14, 2019


Nay

Nay

S.J.Res. 7 As Amended

QUESTION: On the Joint Resolution S.J.Res. 7

Joint Resolution Passed (54-46) on March 13, 2019


Nay

Aye

Motion to Table Inhofe Amdt. No. 194

QUESTION: On the Motion to Table S.Amdt. 194 to S.J.Res. 7 (No short title on file)

Motion to Table Agreed to (52-48) on March 13, 2019


Nay

Aye

Ivy Tech Nursing Program Ranked 2nd in the State

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Ivy Tech Community College’s Evansville campus was recently notified that its Licensed Practical Nurse Program in the Barbara J. Hilton R.N. School of Nursing, was ranked 2nd in Indiana as the best nursing program by practicalnursing.org. 100% of the LPN graduates from the Evansville campus passed the NCLEX-PN test for the years 2014-2018. This exam is used by state boards of nursing around the country for testing proficiency and granting licensure, according to practicalnursing.org.

“We are so proud of the success of our students,” said Ivy Tech Evansville Chancellor Jonathan Weinzapfel. “The 100% pass rates here in Evansville of the LPN program indicate the high quality of our programs, faculty, and graduates, and the high demand for these graduates in area hospitals and other health-related facilities proves the success of the preparation our students receive.”

The 2nd place ranking is made by examining the NCLEX-PN licensing pass rates. According to practicalnursing.org’s website, NCLEX-PN exam pass rates for all PN programs were collected for five years, if available. If schools had the same pass rates after being ranked, additional program characteristics were then analyzed, including the 1) Looking at the number of students taking the exam — the higher the number, greater the ranking position and 2) the number of years of test data available – those with more years of data, the greater the ranking position

At Ivy Tech, the Practical Nurse (LPN) Technical Certificate can be earned on the way to acquiring the Associate of Science in Nursing degree and can be earned in about one year, after completing general education requirements. The program provides education in conceptual and technical skills for specific occupations. The Associate of Science in Nursing (ASN) degree can be completed in two years once a student is admitted into the program.

Dean of Ivy Tech Evansville School of Nursing Gail Lindsay said the faculty at Ivy Tech Evansville is unmatched in their dedication to the students. “Every day I see students and faculty who are working together to help the student be successful. Many of our students come to us with life challenges they are overcoming and still, they bring everything they have to the table and obviously, as the pass rates show, work to reach their end goal.”

In Indiana, 20 schools were analyzed for five years, with 5 being ranked.

THE NEW HARMONY GAZETTE NEWSPAPER LINK

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THE NEW HARMONY GAZETTE NEWSPAPER LINK

New Harmony Gazette May-2019-1

Justices Consider Whether Skype Appearance Violated Juveniles’ Rights

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Katie Stancombe for www.theindianalawyer.com

Indiana Supreme Court justices heard arguments in two consolidated and procedurally identical cases Thursday, questioning whether two juveniles who appeared at disposition modification hearings via Skype were denied their rights to be present.

The cases are C.S., Jr. v. State of Indiana, 19S-JV-00136 and Z.T. v. State of Indiana, 19S-JV-00137, in which the Elkhart Circuit Court separately adjudicated both C.S. Jr. and Z.T. as delinquents. A disposition modification hearing was later held for each, but both boys Skyped into the courtroom instead of appearing in person.

The Indiana Court of Appeals held, in part, that the juveniles’ appearances via video conferencing complied with Indiana Code section 31-37-18-1.3 (2007), noting that no requirements existed for a minor to be physically present at a hearing.

But both juveniles appealed, bringing before the high court the question of whether the boys were denied due process because, pursuant to Indiana Administrative Rule 14, they did not waive their right to be physically present by consenting to have the proceeding conducted via Skype.

Nancy McCaslin, representing both juveniles, argued the minors’ due process rights were violated by not allowing them to be physically present in the courtroom. McCaslin began by noting that several issues can arise if video conferencing transmissions occur in court, referencing statements made by the court reporter in both cases that noted much of what was communicated by the juveniles through the computer was indiscernible.

“These are some of the problems with Skype transmissions, because they don’t provide the privacy between attorney-client during the hearing,” McCaslin said. “They don’t provide for the court to see the demeanor of the young person. It is an impersonal way for a court to conduct a hearing for a juvenile.”

Justice Geoffrey Slaughter interjected, opining that the attorney and client’s inability to privately converse might still be a problem even if the parties had consented and complied with Rule 14(B). Justice Mark Massa agreed, arguing that Rule 14(A) explicitly allows courts to have detention hearings via Skype.

But McCaslin maintained that detention and disposition hearings are different, with the child’s future depending on the outcome of the latter. The problem is not whether the child is placed in the Department of Correction, she said, but the problem is with future harm. If juveniles feel they are being cast aside or uncared for by not being allowed to appear in court face-to-face with a judge, then they could rebel further.

“Navigating these turbulent waters of adolescence is not easy, and juveniles can become impersonal,” McCaslin explained. “The idea is to try and keep them from becoming criminals.”

Speaking as amicus curiae, Joel Craig Wieneke of the Indiana Public Defender Council, Juvenile Defense Project argued the right for an adult in criminal proceedings to be present at a hearing should also be extended to juveniles in non-criminal proceedings.

Citing Bible v. State, 254 NE 2d 319 (Ind. 1970), Wieneke reiterated the importance of in-court interaction between the judge and the juvenile and suggested an add-on to Rule 14(B) in regard to the best interest of the child.

“That is such a core and valuable process to get the child to buy into the system, to understand what’s happening to him, to accept the rehabilitation that we’ve used that to deny children the right to a jury trial,” he said.

When asked how a judge could build a meaningful relationship with a child through a 10-by-12-inch screen, state counsel Andrew Kobe argued that both C.S. Jr. and Z.T. had already appeared face-to-face before the judge during previous hearings.

Kobe faltered, however, when asked whether an oral argument would be as effective if he Skyped in from the attorney general’s office rather than being there in person.

“But I think that creates a question that shows what this case isn’t about,” Kobe said. “This case isn’t about when we should have Skype or video conferencing, and when we shouldn’t. That should be left to cases in which it’s preserved.”

Kobe further argued no fundamental error was committed in either case, noting that because no objections were raised, no one knows that nature of such an error would be.

“The state agrees that it would problematic to have complete proceedings through the juvenile system through Skype,” Kobe said. “But that’s not we’re talking about here at all, not even close.”

Kobe added that because there is no right to be physically present to begin with, it would be difficult for the state to find a reason how that would be fundamental error.

Helping Hoosiers Fight Addiction By Wendy McNamara

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Helping Hoosiers Fight Addiction By Wendy McNamara
Over the past several years, the number of opioid-related deaths in Indiana has substantially increased.
I supported legislation that would implement a set of guidelines to be followed by all doctors and office-based opioid treatment centers that prescribe Suboxone, a synthetic drug that helps people get off heroin. Similar to Methadone clinics, Suboxone clinics would be required to follow up on their patients to ensure proper recovery.
Patients with more frequent doctor interactions could have a higher chance of beating addiction. Physicians would be able to administer a more comprehensive treatment plan and better track their progress.
This bill would also require doctors prescribing Suboxone at these treatment centers to check Indiana’s Prescription Drug Monitoring Program database. This could help prevent “doctor shopping” patients from traveling to several different offices or clinics trying to obtain Suboxone.
As legislators, we have a responsibility to the people of Indiana to make sure these clinics are correctly caring for their patients when they are treated with Suboxone. By enacting these commonsense reforms, we can continue to curb opioid addiction in Indiana.

It’s A Wrap On The 2019 Legislative Session

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The 2019 legislative session recently came to an end, and lawmakers passed bills creating new policies for Indiana. This session, I authored legislation to address various aspects of health care and strengthen our state’s public health sector.

House Enrolled Act 1342, which I proposed to the General Assembly, was signed into law requiring 911 operators to be trained to coach callers through performing hands-only CPR on cardiac arrest victims. By completing this training, dispatchers could better instruct bystanders on how to help a victim survive until an ambulance arrives. Every second counts in these scenarios, and knowing how to coach someone through a medical emergency can be the difference between life and death.

To combat Indiana’s high infant mortality rate, legislation I co-authored would support healthier mothers and babies. If signed into law, the bill would require medical providers to check for signs of substance abuse in pregnant women through a consultation and refer at-risk women to treatment programs as early as possible. This will connect pregnant women with more obtainable resources and health care providers, improving patient care for those at risk of substance use disorder.

I also sponsored a new law ensuring those with disabilities are not discriminated against when needing organ transplants. This law will prohibit health plans from denying individual insurance coverage for the transplant based on disability. While it does not happen often, there are cases where eligible patients have been denied an organ transplant or placed lower on the recipient list solely due to their disability or concerns that they are unable to comply with post-operative treatment regimens.

This session, I had the opportunity to begin serving as chair of the Interstate and International Cooperation Committee, which focuses on passing legislation to benefit Indiana and our partnerships with surrounding states. In this role, I will continue working to help Hoosier businesses connect with other states, and stay competitive on the national and international level.

Let’s continue working together to take the state to the next level. Although session is over, I will soon begin attending summer committee hearings and focusing on legislation that may need to be enacted in the future. Please continue reaching out to me with input or questions at h75@iga.in.gov or 317-232-964

Counterfeit Bills Investigation

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Evansville Police continue to investigate a series of cases where two people passed counterfeit bills at several locations.

The two suspects have been passing fake counterfeit $100 bills at various businesses over the last week. Anyone who recognizes these two suspects is asked to contact EPD or 

Amber Gowen to Speak at UE on the Work of Evansville Nurses During WWI

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On Tuesday, April 30, University of Evansville alumna Amber D. Gowen, archivist for Vanderburgh County, will present her research on the service of Evansville nurses during World War I, on the home front and on the frontlines in France. The presentation begins at 6:00 p.m. in Room 100 in the Koch Center for Engineering and Science on UE’s campus. This is free and open to the public.

This presentation is sponsored by Gender and Women’s Studies at UE.

For more information, please email ap3@evansville.edu or call 812-488-2963.