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EVPL is kicking off our annual Summer Learning Program on Saturday, May 25 at all eight locations!
The Summer Learning Program is an opportunity for participants to earn incentives as they read throughout the summer months.
This year’s theme is Our Summer: Reading is for Everyone. EVPL encourages readers of all ages to be a part of reading this summer. No matter your interest or reading level, Our Summer is for you.
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Our Summer: Reading is for Everyone
Just In: Connie Robinson Resigns From Local Democratic Party
Connie Robinson Resigns From Local Democratic Party
May 22, 2019
9:30 AM
Dear Chairman Scott Danks,
I am writing to resign the affiliation that I have had for many years with the Democratic Party of Vanderburgh County
After allegations of racist activities in a Democratic primary campaign and malicious statements made against an African-American community activist during a recent Evansville City Council meeting, I came to the conclusion that the local Democratic Party has become a party of regression and racist sentiments that my conscience will no longer allow me to be a part of.
The Democratic Party’s leadership which fails to take a stand or make a statement condemning these actions is in effect condoning both.
I have watched in the last four years as the “Party of the People” has dissolved into a party of intolerance.
I will finish out my term as an Independent who is not identified by party affiliation, but instead by the principles that guide those of us who believe that this community is for all people and not just a few backward political operatives who sit on the City Council.
It seems that the Democratic Party is no longer a party that welcomes people who look like me. I can only hope that someday it will change and welcome substantive inclusion.
Respectfully
Connie Robinson
Xy’Len Zyaire Groves
Frances Marie Norman
Services are Saturday, May 25, 2019 at 1:00pm at Little Valley Missionary Baptist Church in Evansville, IN with visitation from 11:00am until service time. Burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Condolences may be left at www.masonbrothersfs.com
Vehicle collision
The Vanderburgh County Coroners Officer and The Evansville Police Department are investigating the collision of a semi truck and vehicle at US 41 and Covert Ave. Alyssa Keene, age 21, of Evansville died at the scene of the collision which was reported at 23:37 hrs. An autopsy is pending scheduling. The Evansville Police Department can provide details of their investigation.Â
“READERS FORUM” MAY 22, 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.
HERE’S WHAT’S ON OUR MIND TODAY
WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
Todays “Readers’ Poll†question is: Are you pleased with the overall progress of Evansville since Mayor Winnecke took office?
Planned Parenthood Hosts Statehouse Rally Against Abortion Bans
Planned Parenthood Hosts Statehouse Rally Against Abortion Bans
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS–Tiffany Brown hadn’t planned to speak at Tuesday’s Planned Parenthood abortion rally, but after listening to others she walked up to the Statehouse stairs and faced the large crowd to tell the story of her abortion.
Brown said she became pregnant after a man removed a condom during sex without her knowledge, leaving her feeling violated and lost. She decided to have an abortion.
“I felt like my body wasn’t my own. I felt like I couldn’t get him out,†Brown said to the crowd.
“No woman should feel like she cannot get a man out of her. No woman should feel like she does not have control of her own body.â€
Brown was one of many from the crowd who shared their stories and thoughts Tuesday afternoon. In the overcast weather, a couple of hundred people of different ages and genders filled the south steps of the Statehouse to protest recent abortion laws in several states in a #StoptheBans rally. They held colorful signs that read, “No uterus, no opinion,†and, “I say Roe way.†They chanted “Pro-choice united. We’ll never be defeated,†hoping those inside the Statehouse would hear them.
This event–and similar rallies Tuesday across the nation and in Washington–is a reaction to Indiana’s recent abortion law, which bans a form of second-trimester abortion, and recent enactments of laws in several states that ban abortion after six or eight weeks, make no exception for rape and incest victims and, in the case of Alabama and Missouri, make it a felony for a physician to perform an abortion except when medically necessary.
Indiana’s new abortion law will make second-trimester dilation and evacuation abortions illegal his law, like all other anti-abortion laws passed since 2013, is being challenged by the Indiana American Civil Liberties Union and two OB-GYNs, one of which was in attendance at the rally. Dr. Caitlin Bernard of Indianapolis told the crowd the government is trying to take away safe forms of abortion.
“The laws here in Indiana are already harming Hoosiers. You do not need to look at Georgia and Alabama as if that is the future. It is already here,†Bernard said. “It is only a matter of time before it is right here on our doorsteps.â€
Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill responded to the lawsuit filed by Bernard and the ACLU by saying in a press release that, “Indiana has a compelling interest in protecting the value and dignity of fetal life by banning a brutal and inhumane procedure.â€
Joni Chenoweth, a former physician assistant and director of the Protect Your Sister Project, had an abortion when she was 18. She said she can’t believe that people want to go back to the days before the Supreme Court in 1973 legalized abortion in the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.
“Roe v. Wade has been the law of the land for nearly 50 years,†Chenoweth said. “This is decided the law.â€
RaeVen Ridgell of Planned Parenthood, who helped organize the protest, told the crowds to let their state legislators know how they feel about abortion laws. She yelled out the phone numbers of anti-abortion Republican Sen. Liz Brown of Fort Wayne, House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis and Gov. Eric Holcomb.
“You call him (Holcomb) and you call him and you call him until he gets it,†Ridgell said. “Because it seems like he doesn’t.â€
FOOTNOTE: Emily Ketterer is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Pre-Hearing Conference In AG Hill’s Discipline Case To Be Public
Pre-Hearing Conference In AG Hill’s Discipline Case To Be Public
A pre-hearing conference in the attorney discipline case against Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill will be open to the public, despite Hill’s specific request that the hearing Wednesday be closed to the public and press.
Former Indiana Supreme Court Justice Myra Selby, now an Ice Miller partner who is serving as the hearing officer in Hill’s disciplinary case, issued an order Tuesday making the pre-hearing conference open to the public. Documents filed in the case, In the Matter of: Curtis T. Hill, Jr., 19S-DI-156, show that Hill’s counsel sent an email to Selby on Friday requesting that the conference be closed.
Hill is facing disciplinary charges stemming from his alleged groping of four women at a party in March 2018. The Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission filed the complaint in March 2019, and Selby was appointed hearing officer last month.
In response to the Friday email, Selby asked the parties to provide a briefing on whether the conference should be open to the public. According to Hill’s brief — filed on his behalf by former commission director Donald Lundberg and Indianapolis criminal defense attorneys Jim Voyles and Jennifer Lukemeyer — “(t)he purposes of a pre-hearing conference are ‘obtaining admissions, narrowing the issues presented by the pleadings, requiring an exchange of the names and addresses of prospective witnesses and the general nature of their expected testimony, considering the necessity or desirability of amendments to the Disciplinary Complaint and answer, and any other matters as may aid in the disposition of the action.’â€
Those actions, as prescribed in Admission and Discipline Rule 23(14)(e), are subject to public view under Rule 23(22)(a)(2), the commission argued in its brief. That rule requires that “all proceedings shall be open to the public,†with a few exceptions allowed pursuant to Section 22(b).
“None of those extraordinary reasons exist in this case,†the commission wrote. “… No witnesses will be called, no disruption is expected, no known security issues have been raised, no confidential information will be revealed, no known medical information will be discussed, and the Commission knows of no other ‘good cause’ that exists that would require a closed hearing.â€
But Hill’s defense team said a pre-hearing conference is neither a “hearing†nor a “proceeding†subject to public access. The defense lawyers expressed particular concern about the effect press coverage would have on the conference.
“The presence of the public at the pre-hearing conference would detract from its goal: a candid discussion of the case to facilitate its resolution,†Hill’s brief says. “… With counsels’ and the Hearing Officer’s comments subject to publicity in the press, the participants in the conference will need to focus, in part, on how statements might play in the press versus how the case can be efficiently managed to conclusion.â€
Hill argued that other portions of his disciplinary case would be open to the public, and that “the public and the press have never been invited to attend pre-hearing conferences.†But according to the commission, the public is generally uninterested in what occurs during a pre-hearing conference.
“In this case, however, there is great public interest and rightfully so,†the commission wrote.
The public conference will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Indiana Supreme Court Conference Room at the Indiana Statehouse.