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Commentary: The Old Lions’ Lesson For Today

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Commentary: The Old Lions’ Lesson For Today

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The surviving old lions paid tribute to the fallen one.

Just hours after former U.S. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Indiana, died, I chatted by phone with his onetime opponent and colleague, former U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Indiana.

Lugar talked about Bayh’s friendliness and approachability. He said Bayh had made a great contribution to the state and country as the author of two amendments to the U.S. Constitution – “that has never occurred for any (other) public servant in the history of our country,” Lugar said. He also said Bayh would be remembered as a champion of civil rights and the rights of humanity.

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

Bayh and Lugar ran against each other in 1974 for the Senate seat Bayh held. Bayh won.

Then, as now, it was a contentious time in America’s history. Political battles over Watergate, civil rights and the last days of the Vietnam War threatened to tear the country apart.

Lugar said he didn’t want to run against Bayh. But the Republican Party had been so wounded by Watergate and the eventual resignation of President Richard Nixon, Lugar found himself “almost drafted” by the GOP to run..

Lugar considered Bayh a formidable figure, one who would be tough to beat under any circumstances. Bayh was, Lugar said, “a great shoe-leather politician” – one who knew how to connect with people at a human level.

It was that quality of Bayh’s, former U.S. Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Indiana, told me over the air a little later that made the senator so effective.

Hamilton said he would bring people who were opposed to Bayh’s politics in to meet him. Inevitably, Hamilton said, they would leave the meeting saying they still didn’t agree with Bayh, but that they really liked him.

“He was the best retail politician in Indiana history,” Hamilton said.

Hamilton said Bayh revolutionized Indiana politics. Prior to Bayh’s emergence as a force, Hamilton explained, Hoosier political candidates tended to run “front-porch campaigns,” where they presented themselves for office and waited for the voters to come to them.

Bayh didn’t do that.

He went to the voters with an energy never seen before in Indiana.

Hamilton recalled times when Bayh would show up to campaign at a county fair or parade and find a line of cars two miles long. Bayh would work his way down the entire two-mile line, shaking hands and exchanging a few words with everyone in every car.

Hamilton and Vi Simpson – former Democratic state senator from Bloomington and her party’s 2012 lieutenant governor candidate – told me Bayh’s down-to-earth approach wasn’t feigned. He was a Hoosier through and through, one who couldn’t wait to get to Dairy Queen every time he returned to Indiana.

Lugar said Bayh’s sheer likability made him effective. Two years after they ran against each other and Bayh won, Lugar prevailed in a contest with Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Indiana, and joined Bayh in the U.S. Senate.

Birch Bayh, the senior senator from Indiana, greets Indiana’s junior senator, Richard Lugar, before a committee meeting at the United State Capitol in 1978. Bayh died last week at age 91. Photo provided by Susan Fleck.

The two men then did what good Americans and good Hoosiers are supposed to do. They put differences aside and worked for the good of the state and country they both had vowed to serve.

“I cannot recall an occasion when Birch and I had reason to be angry with one another,” Lugar said.

Amid the recollections, Vi Simpson urged everyone to think about the people Indiana had representing and leading it 40 years ago. She’s got a point. If Indiana had its own Mt. Rushmore, the visages of Birch Bayh, Richard Lugar, and Lee Hamilton would be carved into the mountain’s stone.

Different men with different beliefs, they all had at least one thing in common. They could battle their political opponents without hating them. Once in office, they focused on finding common ground and building upon it. They all believed that the politician’s calling was to achieve the greatest good possible, even if that meant compromising. And they all preferred a solution to a fight.

No wonder they don’t seem to have a place in the politics of today.

An old lion named Birch Bayh died a few days ago, and other old lions paid tribute to him.

In the process, they remind us that, somewhere along the way, we’ve lost much more than a solitary man.

Much, much more.

FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

African-Americans Missing Out on Southern Push for Legal Pot

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African-Americans Missing Out on Southern Push for Legal Pot

Natalie Jones Bonner, a 58-year-old entrepreneur in Biloxi, Mississippi, who has used cannabis to reduce inflammation in her knees and wrists, wanted her fellow Mississippians to experience the drug’s medical and economic benefits. So she volunteered to collect signatures for a ballot initiative to legalize its medical use.

But the Navy veteran, who is black, was disheartened to discover that the campaign included few African-Americans. Mississippi is 38 percent black — the highest percentage in the nation — but four white people were leading the campaign. And people of color made up less than a third of the 70 people on the steering committee.

Minorities have been largely absent from the push for medical cannabis across the South. Following the lead of Arkansas and Florida, white male conservative lawmakers are spearheading legalization drives in Georgia, Kentucky, South Carolina and Tennessee.

Black legalization advocates such as Jones Bonner fear the lack of minority involvement could have far-reaching consequences.

“We have to work together,” Jones Bonner said. “I would love to see a browning of the [ballot] initiative.”

Medical cannabis laws typically lay out the conditions for which the drug may be prescribed. But the laws in Arkansas and Florida — the only Southern states that have legalized medical cannabis — don’t cover sickle cell disease, which causes acute pain and disproportionately affects African-Americans. The bills advancing in Tennessee and Kentucky also exclude that condition.

Three states that have legalized medical but not recreational cannabis — Connecticut, Ohio and Pennsylvania — allow sickle cell disease patients to use it.

In other regions of the United States, state lawmakers and advocates pushing to legalize cannabis are starting to focus on racial equity and discrimination in the criminal justice system.

In blue states such as California and Massachusetts, lawmakers view legalization as an opportunity to reinvest in minority communities disproportionately harmed by decades of the set of policies known as the war on drugs.

Not so in the South, where efforts to lessen punishments for cannabis possession — current or past — haven’t gained much traction in Republican-dominated statehouses.

Black legalization advocates also fear that even if medical cannabis becomes legal, white politicians won’t regulate licensing and permitting in a way that ensures equitable opportunities for people of color.

“Without that, it’ll be more of the same,” said Dr. Felecia Dawson, a board-certified physician who closed her Georgia-based OB-GYN practice to focus on advocating for medical cannabis. “Legislators will keep people of color … from the benefits of cannabis.”

Nationally, research suggests that medical marijuana use is more common among whites with high incomes, perhaps in part because of the long history of racial disparity in drug enforcement.

That discrimination persists: In New York City, for example, a recent New York Timesinvestigation found that black people were arrested on low-level marijuana charges at eight times the rate of non-Hispanic whites.

Despite their role in popularizing cannabis use, minorities are the founders or leaders of only a fraction of businesses in the legal cannabis industry.

“Cannabis is medicine — it should be available to all,” Jones Bonner said. “Because there’s going to be economic benefit to states, that benefit should be spread to all constituents of a state regardless of color. There will be bars and boundaries to exclude people of color.”

Qualifying Conditions

Marijuana possession for any reason was illegal in the South — often with stiff consequences — until the early 2010s. Then came the 2013 Cole Memorandum, a U.S. Department of Justice document that advised prosecutors to back off enforcing federal anti-marijuana laws in states that had legalized the drug.

Recognizing the drug’s potential to help patients with conditions that are difficult to treat, Southern advocates started lobbying their elected officials for products such as cannabidiol oil that are low in tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and don’t make users high.

The drug offered hope for parents whose children had severe seizures, and for soldiers seeking a reprieve from the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Conservative lawmakers once opposed to cannabis consumption on moral grounds began to reconsider their beliefs.

“Everyone’s got a grandmother or cousin or friend who’s benefited from medical [marijuana],” said former Georgia state Rep. Allen Peake, the Macon Republican who led the fight to legalize possession of CBD oil, a cannabis extract that doesn’t make users high. “People now see it’s not the huge earthquake they anticipated. The sky didn’t fall.”

Every Southern state by 2016 had legalized the treatment of a limited number of conditions using CBD oil. As public support increased, so did lawmakers’ willingness to expand the list of eligible conditions.

But some conditions that affect minority populations at higher rates than white ones — such as sickle cell disease, which affects 73 in 1,000 African-Americans at birth compared with 3 whites, according to federal estimates — are not included in proposals currently making their way through several Southern statehouses.

In a 2017 hearing co-hosted by the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission, following a ballot initiative that had legalized medical cannabis, advocates wore “Diversity for All” T-shirts to emphasize the drug’s importance to minority residents.

“We know that such diseases as hypertension, sickle cell, neuropathy and so on are more predominant in blacks,” Casey Caldwell, a black cannabis advocate, said at the hearing.

“It is safe to say that African-American communities would benefit the most,” she added. “In the past, pharmaceutical drugs have been priced so high that [we] have to make a decision whether or not they should eat or whether they should purchase medication.”

Those concerns echoed what Dee Dawkins-Haigler, a former Democratic Georgia representative who headed the state’s Black Caucus, said in 2015 about the initial absence of black people among the state’s 17 appointees to the Commission on Medical Cannabis. The Black Caucus eventually fought to get sickle cell disease added to the list of conditions eligible for CBD oil.

“Had the caucus not fought for sickle cell,” Dawkins-Haigler told reporters, “it would not have been included.”

Peake, who is white, dismisses the idea that race was an issue in determining the covered conditions. “Cancer doesn’t discriminate if you’re black [or] white,” he said. “I don’t have a concern about that at all.”

A ‘Racial Lens’?

From Georgia to Tennessee, Southerners of all backgrounds have faced criminal charges after possessing pot used to treat pain. Jaime Montalvo, a Louisville, Kentucky, resident with multiple sclerosis, said cannabis worked so well for his pain that he could ride bikes with his son without taking opioids. He started growing it for his personal use.

Then one day in 2011, a bank robbery occurred in his community, leading authorities past his house. A drug-sniffing dog caught the scent of his cannabis. After getting arrested and temporarily losing custody of his son, Montalvo went on to found Kentuckians for Medicinal Marijuana, and has since lobbied for legislative changes.

“The racial [equity] aspect of it — talking about getting people [convicted for drug-related crimes] out of jail — has not come up at this time,” said Montalvo, who identifies as Hispanic. “To tell you the truth, it might hurt the medical legislation.”

Kentucky is one of at least six Southern states where lawmakers are pushing measures to decriminalize small amounts of cannabis. But Montalvo doesn’t believe that Republican lawmakers are interested in advancing a Kentucky bill that would make possession of up to an ounce a fineable offense instead of a misdemeanor.

Similar measures in Georgia, South Carolina and Tennessee have yet to receive a hearing.

“There’s a reticence to move on this issue in a lot of Southern states,” said Georgia state Sen. Harold Jones, an Augusta Democrat and a member of the Black Caucus. “Can it be from a racial lens? It’s a possibility.

“The demonization of drug use — and the response through criminal punishment — that’s harder to back off of,” he adds. “That hasn’t just been a Republican issue — that goes back to Democrats and a drug war going on for 40 years.”

A Diverse Industry

As Southern states inch toward legalization, minority cannabis advocates hope that states will also adopt licensing and permitting programs that promote equity within their state’s emerging industries.

In 2017, a Marijuana Business Daily poll of nearly 600 cannabis industry professionals found that 81 percent were white. To diversify the growing industry, California cities such as Oakland have created what are known as cannabis equity programs to provide business development, loan assistance and mentorships for minority and low-income entrepreneurs. Some of those cities, including Oakland, have a set number of permits for people of color.

Those kinds of policies have yet to arrive in the South.

In Arkansas, minority license applicant Mildred Barnes Griggs filed a complaint over the lack of racial diversity among the state’s permitted medical cannabis growers.

In Florida, black farmers initially cried foul at being shut out of the state’s multibillion-dollar cannabis trade over policies that required license holders to have operated for 30 straight years.

According to Roz McCarthy, founder of the Florida-based advocacy group Minorities for Medical Marijuana, the state’s law lacked the teeth needed to ensure that medical cannabis license holders adhered to requirements to ensure diversity in hiring.

A spokesperson for the Florida Department of Health said that state law “does not require medical marijuana treatment centers to report the race or ethnicity of its owners.”

McCarthy said, “We’re trying to push lawmakers to understand that they have the ability and the power to ensure exclusionary practices don’t happen. Barriers are there. But the opportunity to reduce barriers is also there.”

Evansville Veteran Celebrates 101st Birthday

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Evansville Veteran Celebrates His101st Birthday

Yesterday an Evansville native is celebrating a major milestone.

Surrounded by friends and family singing happy birthday, Thomas Boyd turns 101 years-old this St. Patrick’s day. On top of being a World War Two veteran, Boyd also has a storied career with the United States Postal Service.

“I worked inside down at the old post office and after a while, they built a new post office and then I moved down there and worked down there and I’m retired from the new post office and it was an experience but I’m very fortunate I got where I did,” says Boyd.

Boyd was the last person on the original dig of Angel Mounds State Historic Site. He says that one of the most important commodities in his over a century of life was serving his county.

“The regular Army, after all that’s 2 years and 8 months in the infantry and from here to there and everywhere, you never knew what you were going to do or how to do it, or if you were going to get well or get out of it or what but 2 years and 8 months was quite an experience,” says Boyd.

Boyd, and his best friend and neighbor Lawrence Miller flew to France together with the second World War. He says that it’s all about making friends and sharing stories along the way.

Without a doubt, Boyd remains steadfast and sharp as can be, proving that age is really just a number.

“It was a good life. I can kick it, but it wouldn’t do any good.”

Boyd still lives in Evansville and says he is looking forward to many birthdays to come.

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Yesteryear: F. W. Cook Brewing Company

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F. W. Cook Brewing Company

By PAT SIDES

When Frederick Washington Cook built his brewery in the 1850s, he needed space. Bounded by Seventh, Sycamore, Vine, and Eighth streets, the mammoth operation occupied a block that stood in the middle of nowhere then but soon became the heart of Evansville’s business district. 

The company survived Cook’s death in 1913, as well as Prohibition, and although it competed with numerous local breweries, it was immensely successful. Age eventually began to take its toll on the company, and labor problems in the 1950s interrupted production and soon led to its closure.

The buildings were razed in 1965 to make way for the new Civic Center.

 

 

BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS MEETING SCHEDULE

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BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS

REGULAR MEETING

IN THE KEVIN WINTERNHEIMER CHAMBERS IN ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 2019 At 12:00 NOON

 AGENDA

1.      CALL TO ORDER

2.      MEETING MEMORANDUM   

3.      CONSENT AGENDA                                                

              

  1. Request Re:  Permission for wildlife removal on Parks Department property with Wathen  

Environmental Service. – Holtz

  1. Request Re: Approve and Execute Land Use Permit with EYFL for Kleymeyer Football and 

 Softball Field. -Wube     

          c.    Request Re: Approve and Execute change order for 20 tree mitigation units $54,000.00

                 for Slide Remediation Project.- Holtz

4.      OLD BUSINESS  

           

  1. N/A

 

5.       NEW BUSINESS  

          

  1. Request Re: Yearly update by the CVB for Goebel Soccer Complex- Fulton

          b.    Request Re: Any Other Business the Board Wishes to Consider and Public Comments

                        

6.        REPORTS

          

           a.   Brian Holtz- Executive Director

          

            

7.        ACCEPTANCE OF PAYROLL AND VENDOR CLAIMS

 

8.        ADJOURN

EPA Extends Application Period For Environmental Educator Awards

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The application period has been extended for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Presidential Innovation Award for Environmental Educators (PIAEE).

Applications are now due April 5, 2019.

EPA is seeking PIAEE awards applications that highlight environmental stewardship in one or more of the following areas:

  • environmental sustainability;
  • healthy school environments, including projects that reduce food waste in cafeterias;
  • environmentally-friendly agriculture practices;
  • reducing human contributions to ocean litter;
  • school gardens;
  • recycling; or
  • using STEM to teach environmental education.

EPA will select up to two winners in each of EPA’s 10 Regions, one for Grades K-5 and one for Grades 6-12. Winners will be invited to a ceremony in Washington, D.C. in mid-2019 and have their project mentioned on EPA’s website.

PIAEE awardees will receive up to $2,500 to be used to further the recipient’s professional development in environmental education, and the teacher’s local education agency will also receive an award of up to $2,500 to fund environmental educational activities and programs.

The PIAEE is an annual award program administered by EPA’s Office of Environmental Education. Since 1971, the EPA has recognized exceptional K-12 teachers employing innovative, interactive approaches to environmental education. It is one of the most important ways EPA and the administration demonstrate commitment to environmental stewardship efforts created and conducted by our nation’s teachers.

St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements for March 18, 2019

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Megan and Jeremy Brown, Sebree, KY, son, Jack Michael, March 7

Taylor Dixon and Darius Fingers, Henderson, KY, daughter, Avianna Grace, March 7

Stefanie and Brian Aker, Lynnville, IN, daughter, Sawyer Faith, March 8

Nicole and Dustin Paul, Evansville, daughter, Olivia Rose, March 9

Erin and Alexander Dayvolt, Newburgh, daughter, Hazel Grace, March 9

Lexi Martin, Henderson, KY, daughter, Abelene Kay, March 11

Courtney and Cory Halbig, Evansville, son, Samuel Noble, March 11

Hillary Arnett and Johnathon Gomos, Evansville, son, Enzo James, March 11

Lindsay and Kyle Beckwith, Evansville, son, Leif James Jerome, March 13

Delaney and Kyle Welch, Princeton, IN, son, Sylas Reid, March 13

Jessica and Samuel Patton, Evansville, daughter, Ayda Rae, March 13

Shannon Crow and Marco Kleeman, Boonville, IN, daughter, Zoey Rayne, March 13

Newburgh Wine Fest Early Bird Tickets on Sale Now

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Newburgh Wine Fest Early Bird Tickets on Sale Now

The 14th annual Newburgh Wine Fest is kicking off on Saturday, May 18th and tickets for this event are now available. Early Bird ticketing is $20 each. Ticket prices go to $25 on April 1st and $30 at the door.

A $10 discount will be given to any festival-goers that purchase tickets before April 1st.

Festival-goers must be 21 to attend the event.

Click here to purchase tickets.

For more information call 812-853-2815 or visit here.

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Mary Stewart Adams to Speak at UE’s R. Wayne Perkins Lecture

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The University of Evansville’s fourth annual R. Wayne Perkins Lecture Series is planned for Friday, March 29 through Monday, April 1. This year’s speaker is Mary Stewart Adams, star lore historian, storyteller, author, and global advocate for starry skies.

Adams lectures using a humanities-based approach to understanding the celestial world and the cultural inuence of astronomy. She speaks about our relationship to the night sky and why it matters that we are losing direct access to the natural dark. Adams led the team that established the 9th international dark sky park in the world in 2011. She has received numerous honors including Dark Sky Advocate of the Year, Environmentalist of the Year, and Dark Sky Defender.

All of the events listed below are free and open to the public.

Friday, March 29
Room 73, Schroeder School of Business Building, University of Evansville
3:00 p.m.
History 290 class

Saturday, March 30
Koch Planetarium, Evansville Museum of Art, History, and Science
2:00 p.m.
Mary Stewart Adams to speak

Sunday, March 31
Trinity United Methodist Church, 213 SE 3rd Street, Evansville, Indiana
9:30 a.m., Sunday Service and 10:45 a.m., Wesley Advocates Class Session

Monday, April 1
2:00 p.m.
Room 100, Koch Center for Engineering and Science, University of Evansville
Astronomy 101 class

The annual R. Wayne Perkins Lectures, sponsored by UE’s Ofce of Religious Life, bring together religion scholars, theologians, and church leaders to explore biblical and theological questions relevant to our common life together. The lectures are intended to be public in nature, engage a broad gathering of world views, and help inform the complexities of theological understanding within contemporary life. The Perkins Lectures are made possible by the generosity of private donors and the Lilly Endowment Inc., and are designed to generate and foster sustained theological reection among UE students and alumni, clergy, and the larger community.

McNew earns GLVC honor as Eagles move up DH

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University of Southern Indiana Baseball’s freshman catcher Lucas McNew (Floyds Knobs, Indiana) was recognized as the Great Lakes Valley Conference position player of the week for his efforts in the three-game sweep of Lewis University last weekend.

McNew smacked two home runs and a triple from the Flyers at the plate in his six-for-11 weekend effort to collect six RBI and cross the plate four times. The catcher posted a .545 batting average, .571 on-base percentage, while hitting in the third slot of the lineup for the Screaming Eagles.

The freshman business administration major also threw out two-of-three baserunners and played 27 innings of error-free baseball from behind the dish.

McNew leads USI in batting average (.426), slugging (.936), doubles (7) and home runs (5). He sits second among the Eagles in RBI (15), on-base percentage (.540), walks (14), and fourth in stolen bases (3).

USI Baseball has a quick turnaround this week as its Wednesday GLVC double-up with Bellarmine University has been moved up to Tuesday at 3 p.m.

Then, the Eagles hit the road for their three-game series with William Jewell College this weekend.