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“READERS FORUM” MARCH 12, 2019

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We hope that today’s “READERS FORUM” 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?

WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Who Is paying for the financial losses of the Evansville Thunderbolts hockey team?

Please go to our link of our media partner Channel 44 News located in the upper right-hand corner of the City-County Observer so you can get the up-to-date news, weather, and sports. We are pleased to provide obituaries from several area funeral homes at no costs.  Over the next several weeks we shall be adding additional obituaries from other local funeral homes.  Please scroll down the paper and you shall see a listing of them.

.If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

Todays Vanderburgh County Commissioners Meeting Agenda

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AGENDA 

Call to Order

  1. Attendance
  2. Pledge of Allegiance
  3. Action Items 
    1. Final Reading of Ordinances CO.03-19-004: An Ordinance Amending Vanderburgh County’s Ordinance Concerning Encroachments 
    2. Computer Services: Revised Amendment to Master Agreement for Information Technology Services with Advanced Network & Computer Services, Inc. 
    3. County Health:
      1. Ferdinand-Pike State Forest Professional Services Contract 
      2. Administrative Assistant Contract with Taylor Aguillon 
    4. County Treasurer: Tax Bill Printing Contract 
    5. County Auditor: Financial Advisory and Accounting Services: GAAP Financial Statements Agreement with Umbaugh 
  4. Department Head Reports
  5. New Business
  6. Old Business
  7. Consent Items
    1. Approval of February 26, 2019 Meeting Minutes
    2. Employment Changes 
    3. Economic Development Coalition of Southwest Indiana: February 2019 Monthly Report 
    4. County Clerk: January 2019 Monthly Report 
    5. County Treasurer: January 2019 Monthly Report 
    6. County Auditor: Claims Voucher Reports: 2/25/19-3/1/19 & 3/4/19-3/8/19
    7. County Commissioners: 
      1. Request to Waive Fees, not overtime, for ONEP Ballroom for Job Fair on August 22
      2. Letter of Support for Department of Corrections Grant
      3. Appropriation Request: Rent
      4. Transfer Request: Economic Development to Old Courthouse and Coliseum Maintenance
      5. Letter to the National Square Dance Convention 
    8. Road Closure Request: 
      1. St. Jude Give Hope Run on 4/27/19
      2. Bring Fitness 2 Life EVSC 5K on 5/4/19 
      3. St. Wendel Grillin’ & Chillin 5K Run/Walk on 6/01/19
    9. Area Plan Commission: Surplus Request a Fax Machine 
    10. County Engineering:
      1. Department Report
      2. Pay Request # 55 U.S. 41 Expansion T.I.F. for the sum of $53,415.78
      3. Pay Request #43 University Parkway T.I.F. for the sum of $370,801.74
      4. Claims 
    11. United Neighborhoods of Evansville: February 2019 Monthly Report 
  8. Public Comment
  9. Adjournment

Veterans, Minority Advocates Say Payday Loans Are Like An Addiction’

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By Erica Irish
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — When 38-year-old Steven Bramer Jr. returned home from a combat tour in the Iraq War in 2005, he carried the scars of an enemy attack and psychological trauma.

Since then, he’s struggled with addictions, first to narcotics and alcohol; then, more recently, to payday loans.

Bramer’s challenges began during his almost year-long service in Mosul, located on the north side of Iraq, when the Indiana National Guardsman came across an improvised explosive device (IED).

A metal wire that sprung out in the explosion slashed Bramer across the neck. Though he survived and made it home to receive a Purple Heart, the effects of the trauma launched him into a cycle of addiction.

After his homecoming, Bramer said he struggled with his reliance on alcohol and Vicodin, a pain-reliever prescribed to him by Veterans Affairs.

“In 2008, I quit my job. I had a house with a fiancée at the time…and I left and moved to East Chicago,” he said. “My parents didn’t know where I was for three months. I kind of just fell off the face of the earth.”

Bramer managed to regain his sobriety when he met his wife, 32-year-old Megan Bramer. He’s now been sober for eight years.

But it wasn’t until he and his wife encountered a years-long custody battle that he would realize the addictive power of a new substance: payday loans.

“Payday loans are like an addiction,” Steven Bramer said. “At first, you get the money to pay off a bill that you had real quick, but then you have to keep taking out the loans to stay afloat.”

Steven Bramer voiced this reality at a press conference Monday at the Indiana Statehouse. A coalition of veterans’ organizations, faith leaders and minority advocates hosted the event in opposition to new legislation that would expand the types of loans offered by payday lenders.

The legislation in question is Senate Bill 613, authored by Sen. Andy Zay, R-Huntington. It narrowly passed out of the Senate in a 26-23 vote last month.

In its original form, the bill stood at 14 pages and would have introduced several new types of payday loans.

But the day before lawmakers reviewed the bill in the Senate Commerce and Technology Committee, Zay presented an amended version, totaling 69 pages.

With the amendment, SB 613 would allow payday loan lenders to offer two controversial new loan options to borrowers, each with long-term agreements and high annual percentage rates (APRs).

The first option — unsecured installment loans — would allow Hoosiers to borrow loans between $605 and $1,500 for a period between six to 12 months with a maximum APR of 192 percent. A second option includes small-dollar loans, which can provide up to $4,000 across four years with a maximum APR of 99 percent. With small-dollar loans, borrowers can submit their car title as security for the loan.

SB 613 also changes the definition of criminal loansharking. Currently, in Indiana, lenders offering loans that carry more than 72 percent interest can be charged with a felony.

There are some exceptions to this rule, however. Under current law, lenders can tack on an interest rate up to 391 percent in 14-day small loans.

In the commerce committee, Zay said his bill was designed to highlight the realities of Indiana’s payday loan enterprises.

“This is a billion-dollar industry in the state of Indiana,” he said. “It needs a voice, it needs solutions and it needs some regulation.”

For families like the Framers, who found themselves owing tens of thousands of dollars in lawyers’ fees after a three-year custody battle for Megan Bramer’s oldest daughter, payday loans offered short-term relief to complicated situations.

The companies realize this, too. Steven Bramer said he didn’t seriously consider payday loans as an option until lenders started calling and emailing him every day, just as the family fell behind on their utility bills and car payments.

That’s forced the Hammond family to sacrifice. Their four daughters, for example, now have to forego activities like cheerleading and competitive dance. Soon to follow were delays in credit card payments and car maintenance.

Gen. James Bauerle of the Indiana Military Veterans Coalition said these practices commonly target veterans, noting efforts by Congress to protect veterans from payday loans, including the Military Lending Act of 2006 and the newly introduced Honoring Veterans in Extreme Need (HAVEN) Act.

Bauerle denounced SB 613 and said it only serves to harm Hoosier veterans and other populations in need.

“Today we strongly oppose SB 613 and its new range of grotesque, usurious loans that trap borrowers in a debt crisis,” Bauerle said. “The bill this year is far worse and more far-reaching than any legislation in the past three years.”

Bramer, Bauerle, and others at the news conference said the bill was unprecedented, and the product of out-of-state lending companies lobbying in Indiana.

In 2017 and 2018, for example, two leading payday loan companies — Check Into Cash and Advance America — contributed more than $60,000 to lawmakers, according to campaign finance records.

No matter the price tag offered to lawmakers, Bramer and the coalition said it’s the responsibility of the Indiana House to strike down SB 613 before it expands payday loan options.

“I protected you at one point,” Steven Bramer said. “Now it’s time for you to protect me.”

FOOTNOTE: Erica Irish is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

 

 

 

RAISE THE ROOF FOR THE YWCA

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YWCA Evansville Announces $50,000 Matching Donation for Roof Replacement

YWCA Evansville is asking the community to help Raise the Roof! The YWCA roof is in desperate need of replacement. Water leaks are causing significant internal damage to the 94 year old building. Donations made to the YWCA Raise the Roof fund will now have double the impact thanks to a generous pledge of $50,000 in matching funds from an anonymous donor. Thanks to this pledge, YWCA Evansville will only be only $60,000 short of the funds needed to replace their leaking roof.

YWCA Evansville has served the Tri-State community since 1911, operating from the same building for the past 94 years. The YWCA is a home to hundreds of homeless women and children each year. As a safe place for healing and recovery, the YWCA building has witnessed the transformation of countless women. Although the roof has experienced several emergency repairs over the years, it is currently decades old and in need of replacement in order to prevent further damage to client bedrooms and common areas.

“The safety and wellbeing of clients is our top priority so we work diligently to maintain and repair our historic building,” said Erika Taylor, chief executive officer of the YWCA. “The current state of our leaking roof has caused major interior damage to the ceilings, walls and floors of client bedrooms and common areas. It is imperative that we have our roof replaced as soon as possible. We are calling upon the Tri-State community to open their hearts and their wallets to help fund this urgent need.”

Replacing the roof now will prevent further damage and allow the YWCA to continue impacting lives in a safe environment. A significant portion of the funds needed to fully replace the roof have already been raised, but there is still work to be done. With the matching gift in place and the generous support from the community, the YWCA is poised to overcome this barrier.

YWCA Evansville is asking for community support to ensure that women and children have safe and clean housing with a new roof over their heads. The sky truly is the limit for YWCA clients and matched donations will go twice as far in helping to Raise the Roof.

For more information about the Raise the Roof campaign, contact Erika Taylor at (812) 422- 1191. View current funds raised on our website at www.ywcaevansville.org.

The YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. The YWCA has been serving the Evansville area since 1911 and, from its inception, has provided housing and services for women and girls. Currentprograms include the YES! recovery residence, Live Y’ers after-school and mentoring program for girls, a domestic violence shelter, and emergency housing for homeless women and children.

The Evansville YWCA is part of an international movement serving over 2 million in the United States and 25 million worldwide.

For comprehensive information about this important work, go to www.ywcaevansville.org orwww.ywca.org.

 EPA FY 2020 Budget Proposal Released

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The proposed Fiscal Year 2020 budget for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), announced today, provides $6.1 billion to support the agency’s mission of protecting human health and the environment. The budget proposal maintains EPA’s focus on its core mission – providing Americans with clean air, land and water, and ensuring chemical safety. In addition, this budget provides critical water infrastructure investments for communities across America.

“This commonsense budget proposal would support the agency as it continues to work with states, tribes and local governments to protect human health and the environment,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “I am proud of the tremendous progress that EPA and its partners have made in cleaning our nation’s air, water and land, and I am looking forward to continuing this progress through FY 2020.”

Highlights of the fiscal year 2020 budget proposal include:

Investments in Water Infrastructure: The budget funds water infrastructure through the State Revolving Funds, the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) credit program, and the recently authorized America’s Water Infrastructure Act (AWIA). The FY 2020 capitalization of the State Revolving Funds would supplement approximately $80 billion currently revolving at the state level. Credit subsidy funding for WIFIA will continue the program’s momentum by potentially supporting more than $2 billion in direct loans, which when combined with other funding sources, could spur more than $4 billion in total water infrastructure investment. Additionally, the budget proposes funds for AWIA grant programs that will assist in lead testing and drinking water fountain replacement in schools, sewer overflow control, and water infrastructure workforce investment. These resources would complement state and local drinking water and wastewater infrastructure investments as well as funding provided through other federal sources.

Support for Healthier Schools: Approximately 50 million American children spend their time in K-12 school facilities every day. Many of these buildings are old and contain environmental hazards that could pose a risk to children’s health. To address this issue, the budget proposes establishing a $50 million grant program to assist communities in identifying and resolving these hazards. Activities supported by this grant program will result in safer and healthier school environments for American children.

Regulatory and Permitting Reforms: The budget provides resources to ensure EPA can advance priority areas, including reviewing and revising regulations, improving the permitting process, and enhancing collaboration with state, tribal and federal partners. For example, several significant rulemakings are expected to be completed before 2020, including replacement rules for Waters of the United States and the 2015 Clean Power Plan. In FY 2020, EPA is committed to implementing these rulemakings by providing technical assistance and guidance to states, tribes and regulated entities as they adapt to these changes.

Optimizing Clean-Up Efforts at the Nation’s Most Complex Hazardous Waste Sites: The budget provides $1 billion for the Hazardous Substance Superfund Account. EPA has made significant progress identifying impediments to clean-up at sites with significant exposure risks and developing action plans to overcome those impediments. EPA is also working with prospective purchasers, developers and responsible parties to bring more private funding for redevelopment, saving taxpayer dollars for the sites that truly need federal funding. Reducing exposure to hazardous substances and revitalizing contaminated land for use by the community is a priority and a fundamental part of EPA’s core mission.

Strengthening Protections from Toxic Chemicals: The Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), as amended, requires EPA to evaluate whether existing chemicals may pose unreasonable risks and, if so, take immediate steps to protect human health and the environment. EPA must also affirm that new chemicals entering the market are safe and that appropriate measures are taken to address risks. In FY 2020, this work will accelerate as the agency reaches statutory deadlines to complete the first set of risk evaluations for existing chemicals and begins the next phase of work. The budget provides $66.4 million for the Chemical Risk Review and Reduction program to support these efforts, which will supplement fees paid by chemical manufacturers and processors.

Clean Energy Resolution Passes Evansville City Council

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Tonight a clean energy resolution passed through the Evansville City Council seven to two. The resolution aims to gradually reduce the cities carbon footprint by 2050. Council members say clean energy can benefit energy bills, and create jobs.

“It’s only when you run out of the air when you run out of water that you realize how important it is. We are lucky to take it for granted,” says Gina Robinson Ungar.

Solar energy is on the rise in Evansville, and City Council members Dan McGinn and Dr. H Dan Adams want to make sure to keep the green trend moving.

A clean energy resolution proposal passed through the City Council, and some River City residents support the measure.

After a devastating drought affected many farmers in 2012…

“I felt abandoned by the sky. I mean that is how it felt. You are looking up and you need the rain for things to grow and for some relief and it did not rain for months and months,” says Robinson Ungar.

Going green could mean keeping more green in the bank.

How the plan will affect the taxpayer…

“It depends. I think that there will be entrepreneurs who will figure out a way to make money by producing electricity with solar power, or with wind power, or why not hydroelectric power. You know we have the Ohio River,” says Councilmember McGinn.

Buildings in Evansville have already gone green with their light bulbs, but now Council members want to push to continue reducing the cities carbon footprint.

“Save some money on electric bills. I mean our bills are extremely high. The cost of oil gets high,” says McGinn.

“If we get rid of the carbon and all of the other nasty chemicals that are produced by fossil fuels it has to be somewhat better.”

The clean energy resolution is non-binding so that means the city council cannot progress the plan into a law.

Comments

Justices: Admission Of Warrantless Cell Location Data Was Harmless

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

Even though law enforcement conducted a warrantless Fourth Amendment search when they accessed of a man’s cellphone location data, the admission of the data does not warrant a new trial because any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled Friday, upholding a man’s four convictions in a case heard on remand from the U.S. Supreme Court.

In a unanimous opinion authored by Chief Justice Loretta Rush, the state’s high court upheld Marcus Zanders’ convictions of two counts of robbery with a deadly weapon and two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm by a serious violent felon in Marcus Zanders v. State of Indiana, 15S01-1611-CR-571.

The justices had previously upheld Zanders’ liquor-store-robbery-related convictions in May 2017, when they ruled police could obtain cellphone location data without a warrant. But after the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Carpenter v. United States, 585 U.S. —-, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018), the case was remanded to the Indiana high court for reconsideration. Carpenter held that the third-party doctrine did not apply to seven days or more of historical cell-site location information, or CSLI, so law enforcement must get a search warrant to obtain those records.

The Indiana Court of Appeals reached a similar holding in overturning Zanders’ convictions in May 2016. Zanders’ CSLI had been admitted over his objection at his trial, but a divided COA determined law enforcement should have obtained a warrant before obtaining the location data.

When the state justices initially considered the issue in December 2016, they ultimately determined the third-party doctrine applied to CSLI. But the U.S. Supreme Court granted Zanders’ cert petition, vacated the Indiana Supreme Court’s holding and remanded for reconsideration in light of Carpenter.

After reconsideration, the state justices determined the state’s access of the CSLI data was a Fourth Amendment search under Carpenter because law enforcement accessed 30 days of Zanders’ location data. But the court declined to address the state’s argument that exigent circumstances justified the warrantless search, finding instead that the admission of the location data was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.

In reaching that decision, Rush noted that if the CSLI was illegally obtained, only records and testimony related to the location data would have been excluded. She rejected Zanders’ argument that evidence obtained via subsequent search warrants — which Zander said relied on the CSLI — should be considered fruit of the poisonous tree.

“Here, the good-faith exception applied: the officers had reasonable grounds for believing that the warrants were properly issued,” Rush wrote. “When the officers applied for and obtained the warrants to search the residence, they did not have the benefit of Carpenter or other precedent establishing that the Fourth Amendment generally requires a warrant before police may access CSLI.”

“… This is true even if the warrants — without the CSLI information in the affidavits — were unsupported by probable cause,” the chief justice continued. “In that case, each warrant was still not so facially deficient that executing officers could not reasonably presume it to be valid.”

The court then recounted other “weightier” evidence that pointed toward Zanders’ guilt, including the fact that the robberies occurred near Zanders’ home; that a gun found at Zanders’ home was “indistinguishable” from the gun seen on surveillance footage during the robberies, and; that photos and video of the stolen goods were posted to Zanders’ Facebook page the day after each robbery. That evidence, among other evidence and corroborating eye-witness testimony, showed that the CSLI evidence was only cumulative, the court held.

“Again, the most the CSLI evidence could do was place Zanders near the liquor stores around the times they were robbed,” Rush wrote. “…To be sure, the sea of strong non-CSLI evidence that Zanders went inside and robbed Whitey’s and J&J necessarily submerged the significantly weaker CSLI evidence that Zanders was near the crimes.”

The court also concluded “the importance of the CSLI evidence was diminished by the non-CSLI evidence’s strength.” The justices further noted the location data underwent cross-examination, yet Zanders was still convicted.

“In sum, this cross-examination called attention to the CSLI evidence’s weaknesses — which, even at its strongest, was swamped by other, stronger evidence that Zanders was the man behind the mask in each robbery,” Rush concluded. “For this reason and others elaborated above, the admission of CSLI evidence, if it was error, was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”

In a footnote, Rush said the justices declined to revisit its original holding under Article 1, Section 11 of the Indiana Constitution.

Evansville’s Hyrdofest Free in 2019; More Events Added

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Evansville’s Hyrdofest Free in 2019; More Events Added

Not only will new events be added this year to Evansville’s Hyrdofest in its third year, but the fest will also be free!

Hydrofest will be two weeks earlier this year and will be more like a real festival.

Hydro-plane racing will take place on Saturday and Sunday, but the entire family will have several options when it comes to activities.

The festival will have a live concert this year also food trucks, an international barbecue competition, and a vintage motorcycle and car show.

“We want to make this available for everyone and we want to remove any hindrance because of admission so it’ll be a free event except for your concert, and except for the barbecue competition on Saturday,” says Hydrofest director Randy Lientz.

Hyrdrofest will kick off on the Ohio River the weekend of August 16th. Officials with Hyrdofest are always looking for sponsors to keep the event affordable for the community.

‘YACHT ROCK’ COMING TO 421 LOUNGE!

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‘Yacht Rock’ is set to cruise into Tropicana Evansville’s 421 Lounge this weekend!  The six-piece band from Nashville, Monsters of Yacht, delivers a smooth set of ‘70s soft rock favorites!

Associated with the leisure activity of sailing, the ‘Yacht Rock’ genre of music focuses on clean vocals with catchy melodies and high-quality production.  Monsters of Yacht performs songs like Seals & Crofts’ ‘Summer Breeze,’ America’s “Sister Golden Hair,” Steely Dan’s “Reelin’ In The Years,” Jackson Browne’s “Somebody’s Baby” and Climax Blues Band’s “Couldn’t Get It Right.”

Enjoy ‘70s light rock with Monsters of Yacht at 421 Casino Lounge on Friday and Saturday, March 15 & 16 from 8PM – 1AM!  Must be 21 years of age or older.  No admission fee, just a two-drink minimum for a night of fun!

For more information, contact Bobbi Warren, Bobbi Warren Productions, at 812-401-0094 or bobbi.warren@att.net.