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Children First

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Children First

by: Gail Riecken. CCO Statehouse Editor

As of today SB 1 has passed both Houses of the General Assembly. The bill addresses the critical challenge of meeting the needs of our Hoosier children who are Wards of the Court. Placement in foster homes is one of the main concerns of this bill and the bill categorically puts children first. (See Section 2 of the bill:   https://iga.in.gov/legislative/2019/bills/senate/1)

Whether it is the administration, the courts or criminal proceedings, “all decisions made by the department [DCS] or the court shall be made in consideration of the best interests of the child or children concerned.” (SB 1)

Speakers said over again that foster children are getting lost in the system. One legislator mentioned a young man who in his eighteen years in foster care was moved eighteen times.

Legislators heard the policy of moving around children has consequences. They heard factual information that confirms that information from Indiana public schools:

64% of Hoosier foster children graduate high school compared to 83 % of all children; and,
21% of Hoosier foster children are suspended in public schools vs. 8.9% of all children; and of the number of foster children suspended, 32% are Black.

The number of children in foster care has increased over recent years to the highest number in history, parental substance abuse – mostly opioids – the main factor in half of the families.

It will always be a moral struggle by well-meaning officials when they have to remove a child from his/her mother and father or change the placement of the child. But, given the new “child first” policy, there is hope the State will do a better job.

Appeals Court: Homeless Woman Must Comply With Panhandling Ordinance

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

A homeless woman challenging an Indianapolis ordinance restricting panhandling must comply with an injunction prohibiting her from violating the local code after the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed a grant of relief from judgment initially entered in her favor.

In May 2017, Ginger Tichy was permanently enjoined from violating Section 431-702 of the Indianapolis Municipal Code, which prohibits pedestrians from soliciting from or talking to a person in a vehicle that is on the road if the pedestrian is standing in a median or is within 50 feet of an intersection. The city subsequently moved to have Tichy found in contempt for allegedly violating the injunction.

Tichy responded by moving for relief from injunction under Indiana Trial Rule 60(B), arguing the injunction was overbroad and “impose(d) a serious burden on Ms. Tichy’s ability to engage in lawful, passive panhandling — an activity vital to her survival … .” Tichy also testified that on windy days she sometimes fell off of road medians but had never been hit by a car.

The Marion Superior Court granted relief to Tichy, finding the local ordinance was pre-empted by Indiana code. But the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed Tuesday, with Judge Edward Najam writing “(n)othing at all about Tichy’s testimony on her motion for relief from judgment under Trial Rule 60(B)(7) demonstrates exceptional circumstances that were not reasonably foreseeable at the time of the entry of the injunction.”

“Indeed, the circumstances to which she testified at the hearing on her Rule 60(B) motion were the exact same circumstances that were the factual predicate for the injunction in the first place,” Najam wrote. “In effect, then, her motion under Rule 60(B)(7) simply sought to relitigate the merits of the original judgment, which is not an appropriate basis for relief under Trial Rule 60(B).”

The appellate court also found Tichy was not eligible for relief under Rule 60(B)(8), rejecting her argument that her lack of counsel during the original injunction proceedings was a basis for relief. Not being represented by counsel is not an “extraordinary circumstance” considered under the rule, Najam said.

Thus, the court reversed the grant of relief to Tichy, declining to reach the merits of the case because of the error under Rule 60(B). The case is City of Indianapolis v. Ginger Tichy, 18A-OV-2202.

Tichy has also brought a federal suit against Indianapolis Police Chief Bryan Roach in his official capacity, arguing Section 431-702 is unconstitutional. However, Indiana Southern District Magistrate Judge Tim A. Baker granted the chief’s motion to dismiss last month.

Young/Braun: GOP Brings Boom Times

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Young/Braun: GOP Brings Boom Times

Fort Wayne Journal Gazette
Senator Todd Young & Senator Mike Braun
April 15, 2019
http://www.journalgazette.net/opinion/columns/20190415/gop-brings-boom-times

This Tax Day, we celebrate higher wages, record economic optimism, record low unemployment and Hoosier families taking more of their paychecks home as a result of Republicans’ pro-growth policies of tax reform and regulatory certainty.

Last month’s stellar jobs report, which includes 196,000 new jobs and a 3.8% unemployment rate, cemented the longest streak of consecutive American job growth. This is thanks to pro-growth tax cuts and a bold regulatory agenda championed by President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans.

Additionally, we have increased the child tax deduction, and families across the Hoosier State are taking home more of their hard-earned money.

Young: Since Republicans passed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, 3.2 million new jobs have been created. Our unemployment rate is near a 50-year low, and jobless claims have dropped to the lowest level since 1969,

Additionally, manufacturing job creation was the highest in 2018 it has been in more than 20 years. As the most manufacturing-intensive state in the nation, this is particularly good news for Indiana.

Since we passed tax reform at the end of 2017, stories have poured into my office from Hoosier families who are earning more, and businesses that are paying their workers more and expanding their operations.

My guest to last year’s State of the Union, Chelsea Hatfield, is a prime example. When tax reform was signed into law, Hatfield, a young mother of three, was working as a teller at First Farmers Bank and Trust in Tipton. She received a raise and a bonus. This helped her go back to school to earn her associate’s degree, and it enabled her to put money away for her children’s college education. This summer Hatfield graduated and has been promoted to a commercial loan administrative assistant.

I recently had the opportunity to visit a third-generation small business in Fort Wayne. Dan Parker, the owner of Parker Towing and Recovery, was able to purchase several new trucks, thanks in part to tax reform. This means more trucks will be available to assist Hoosiers who have been in an accident or have had their car break down. Parker was also able to expand the company’s office space, and he gave his staff raises.

“We have less turnover now,” Parker said of the raises.

Tax reform also included a bipartisan proposal I have long supported – the creation of opportunity zones. The new tax code incentivizes investment in distressed rural and urban communities to help the least among us through the creation of tax-advantaged opportunity zones around the state.

Bottom line: Hoosiers are benefiting from tax relief.

Braun: I have built my life as a Hoosier entrepreneur.

When President Trump’s tax cuts were signed into law, it felt like a weight had been lifted off my company, and we followed numerous Fortune 500 companies and small businesses in sharing the benefits with our employees. This meant lowering health care costs by $1,400 and providing additional employee bonuses.

Critics such as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi may think these are just “crumbs,” but in Indiana, a couple of thousand dollars goes a long way, and I’m thankful for Trump’s economic achievements that have helped families save and thrive.

In addition to tax reform, Trump has achieved regulatory reform by eliminating nearly 200 job-killing regulations, saving American families and businesses $23 billion. When government gets out of the private sector’s way, the rising tide of prosperity lifts all ships.

If our country wants to keep winning – creating more jobs, higher wages and lowering the unemployment rate – we need to enact more pro-growth policies, instead of the failed socialist ideas peddled by Sen. Bernie Sanders, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the Democratic Party.

Conservatives should be proud of the economic opportunities we’ve created for Hoosier families and small businesses, and we can’t afford to take our country back to the failed tax-and-spend policies of yesterday.

As your two senators in Washington, we’re proud to be fighting for pro-growth economic policies that will keep this red-hot economy firing on all cylinders for families across our country.

Todd Young and Mike Braun are Republicans representing Indiana in the U.S. Senate.

North High School Invites Delaware First Graders to Science Show

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North High School Invites Delaware First Graders to Science Show
Thursday, April 18, 9  11 a.m. at North High School, 15331 Highway 41 N.
Tomorrow, first-grade students from Delaware Elementary School will travel to North High School where they will participate in their very own Science Show thanks to students in Brian Dougan’s high school science classes. The Science Show not only teaches students about science but also gets both elementary and high school students excited and motivated to learn more about the subject.
The science show will include numerous experiments taking place in multiple rooms. The high school students will conduct the experiments, sometimes with the help of the younger students. Past experiments have included elephant toothpaste, methane bubbles, the ocean in a bottle, flaming ramp, grain explosion, liquid nitrogen ice cream and more.
Thanks to a 2019-2020 Rotary/PEF/Love Foundation grant, additional funding has been secured for this year’s show which will allow North to add different demonstration and experiments not possible in the past.
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ADOPT A PET

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Bruce is a male black Lab mix. He was found on the southeast side of Evansville as a stray, and never reclaimed. He’s estimated to be about 10 years old. His adoption fee is $110. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Vanderburgh County Drainage Board Agenda April 16, 2019

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Vanderburgh County

Drainage Board

Agenda April 16, 2019

Call to Order
Pledge of Allegiance
Approval of Previous Minutes Construction in Floodway (2-ADM) Rexing Creek Sewer Crossing Hunters Chase-update
Ditch Maintenance Claims
Other Business
Public Comment
Adjournment

 

TCB Social Kickoff moved to next week

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UPDATE: Tonight’s TCB social gathering at the Arts Council gallery is postponed to next week due to some light renovation work in the gallery today. We hope to see everyone next Tuesday for drinks, snacks and socializing!
PREVIOUSLY: Artist members and those interested in learning more about the Arts Council are invited to our first Taking Care of Business event of the year on Tuesday, April 16 from 6-7 p.m.
Join us for a discussion of membership benefits and ARTSWIN events in 2019, and learn how the Arts Council is working in our community and with our members. Enjoy snacks, drinks and mingling!
TCB Tuesday events provide free lectures and networking opportunities for artists members. They are held every first Tuesday of the month at the Arts Council’s Bower-Suhrheinrich Foundation Gallery, located at 212 Main St. in Downtown Evansville.
TCB Calendar
April 23 – Social hang and TCB kickoff
May 7 – How to book a gig
June 4 – Auditioning 101
July 2 – Indiana Arts Commission information
Aug. 6 – Social hang
Sept. 3 – All about galleries
Oct. 1 – How to market you and your art
Nov. 19 – Social hang
For more information, contact the Arts Council at 812-303-3178.

UE Plans Earth Day Birthday Celebration on April 22

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The University of Evansville’s Environmental Concerns Organization (ECO) will host Earth Day Birthday, a celebration of the earth’s 4.6 billionth year of existence, on April 22. The public is invited and encouraged to attend the event, which is scheduled from 5:00-7:00 p.m. on the East Terrace Lawn on UE’s campus.

The celebration features Earth Day themed food, merchandise, and activities, including:

  • Build-a-Bin – decorating free recycling bins
  • Up-cycling T-shirts into reusable shopping bags
  • Decorating and planting flower pots
  • Contest for the best chalk drawing of the Earth
  • Blankets provided to lie on the grass and watch the clouds
  • Birthday Cake (dirt-cake, cookies, and brownies), Snow cones, and popcorn
  • Relay game of sorting recycling materials, recycling-themed corn hole game, and water consumption guessing game.
  • Bi-Sci Club’s plant sale
  • Sale of Earth Day themed T-shirts, water bottles and other items.

Community organizations at the event will include: Wesselman Woods Nature Center, Urban Seeds, Audubon Nature Society, Project Acorn, Norwex, and the Southwestern Indiana Citizens for Quality of Life.

AG Curtis Hill to host the Youth Prevention Summit at the Indiana Statehouse

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Attorney General Curtis Hill will host the inaugural Youth Prevention Summit at the Indiana Statehouse. Dozens of Indiana high school students are expected to be in attendance.

WHO: Attorney General Curtis Hill; State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jennifer McCormick; Walmart Regional Director of Health and Wellness Gordi Lee; Addiction Specialist Brandon George.

WHAT: Youth Prevention Summit

WHEN: 9 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Wednesday, April 17, 2019

WHERE: North Atrium of the Indiana Statehouse

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

Kwauntai Jermain Flax: Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Possession of marijuana (Class B misdemeanor), Reckless driving (Class C misdemeanor), Reckless driving (Class C misdemeanor), Driving the wrong way on posted one-way roadway (C infraction)

Montarious Deanton Cheatem: Operating a vehicle as an habitual traffic violator (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class A misdemeanor)

Andrea F. Blanford: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Jason R. Stubblefield: Auto theft (Level 6 Felony)

Chelsea Lynn Whitaker: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony)

Louis Dudley Guyot: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

Tesa Yavone Walker: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

Mark Edward Long: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 5 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

Mary Elizabeth Martin: Attempt Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony), Intimidation (Level 6 Felony)

Jillian Denise Rietl: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

James Michael Davis: Battery against a public safety official (Level 6 Felony), Battery against a public safety official (Level 6 Felony)