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“READERS FORUM” MARCH 10, 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: Do you feel that the taxpayer should subsidize the Evansville Thunderbolts?

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.

Ohio Valley Conference Tournament Brings Thousands of Fans and Dollars to Evansville

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Thousands of people are spending time in Evansville this week for the Ohio Valley Conference.

This is the second time that dozens of basketball teams are competing at the ford center in the OVC.

Today that visiting had nothing but good things to say about how the River City is playing host.

Evansville is feeling a part of the march madness.

Basketball fans are filling up the Ford Center cheering on their favorite teams playing in the OVC tournament.

“I almost couldn’t stay in the arena last night. At the end it was so exciting I thought, “Oh no I am not going to make it to the championship game…” but we made it,” says Murray State fan and Alumni Yvette Payne.

Colored gear is separating fans, but folks from all over the region are coming together to support their teams in Evansville’s Ford Center.

“Well, it seems like all of the fans that are really impressed with the city, impressed with the building. So we’ve just heard numerous compliments from people that come from out of town that is really enjoying their time,” says the Ford Center’s Executive Director Scott Shoenike.

One fan who helped build the ford center in 2011 says the OVC returning to Evansville means a lot to the city.

“So for people to come in and look at our state of the art building and enjoy a game such as one that we saw last night… But tonight we are looking for another exciting game here at the ford center,” says Payne.

With the tournament’s excitement comes lots of money generated.

Bars, hotels, and restaurants see quite the increase of customers as fans from all over the country descend upon the River City cheering on their favorite players.

“It’s great that their family and friends and students come and support them and have an enjoyable time,” says Shoenike.

Payne says, “It’s a wonderful place. I am happy that everyone, especially from the Tri-State area from Tennessee, to Illinois, to Kentucky, gets to come to Evansville and experience the wonderful city that we live in.”

SENATOR BRAUN’S WEEK-IN-REVIEW

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 SENATOR BRAUN’S WEEK-IN-REVIEW

For the week beginning March 3

 This week, Senator Braun introduced three bills to tackle rising prescription drug costs through adding transparency to pricing negotiations, clearing the way for more prescription drug approvals by the FDA, and providing oversight and accountability for the pharmaceutical industry.

THE WASHINGTON TIMES:

Senator Mike Braun: Restoring sanity to our drug pricing

Senator Braun announced the drug price bills in an op-ed published by the Washington Times, detailing his solutions to lower prescription prices.

THE WASHINGTON POST:
Paulina Firozi: One GOP senator is urging the drug industry to make good on lowering prices

“Drug company executives indicated last week they would be willing to slash their prices if they no longer were forced to pay middlemen the kind of discounts that many blame for driving up the cost of prescription drugs for consumers.

Now, a first-term Republican senator is trying to turn that pledge into a reality with a new bill banning the practice of “rebates” in which drugmakers pay middlemen in the confusing drug-pricing chain to make sure their drugs are covered by insurers. Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) this week introduced a measure to end rebates negotiated between drugmakers and pharmacy benefit managers in transactions conducted in the private sector.”

Click here or below to read the full article:

INDIANA FRONT PAGES

Braun’s drug price proposals were featured in front-page stories for the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette and the Indianapolis Star, by Brian Francisco and Kaitlin Lange respectively:

Click here or below to read stories from the Journal Gazette and Indy Star:

FOX BUSINESS CHANNEL

Senator Braun took to Fox Business’s The Evening Edit to talk about the news of the day and his prescription drug price initiatives:

MSNBC LIVE WITH HALLIE JACKSON

Senator Braun appeared on MSNBC to offer his take on President Trump’s emergency declaration, trade talks with China, and the Michael Cohen hearings.

Click here to watch the full interview:

FOOTNOTES” For updates, follow Senator Mike Braun on Facebook and Twitter.

Porker of the Month: Rep. Mike Doyle

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Watch CAGW’s February Porker of the Month Video

Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) has named Rep. Mike Doyle (D-Pa.) Porker of the Month for spreading wild inaccuracies about the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) Restoring Internet Freedom Order (RIFO), which overturned Depression-era regulations intended for rotary-dial telephones that were imposed on the internet by the Obama Administration. Leading up to a February 7 hearing, Rep. Doyle, who is chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, quipped that “the FCC’s repeal of these essential protections – known as net neutrality – has been a disaster for consumers.” In fact, the Obama-era regulations significantly hampered broadband investment during the two years they were in effect. After RIFO was enacted in 2017, internet speeds increasedby nearly 40 percent, and the U.S. rose from 12th to sixth worldwide in broadband internet speed in just one year. For arguing to reinstate ineffective, unnecessary, and harmful “net neutrality” regulations, Rep. Doyle is the February Porker of the Month. Read more about the Porker of the Month.

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CAGW Releases Waste-Cutting Plan for the 116th Congress

In response to an annual deficit of $779 billion for fiscal year 2018 and a national debt of $22 trillion, CAGW released Critical Waste Issues for the 116th Congress on February 13. The report provides detailed proposals for creating a smaller and more efficient government. From civil service and regulatory reform to healthcare and defense spending, Critical Waste Issues details 18 policy areas that lawmakers should focus on to cut waste and improve management and transparency. In announcing the report’s release, CAGW President Tom Schatz commented, “[Critical Waste Issues] should be required reading for every member of Congress and serve as a blueprint for reining in out-of-control federal spending. The start of a new Congress is the perfect time to act on proposals that will begin to relieve America’s fiscal distress.” Read or download CAGW’s new report.

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CCAGW Launches Campaign to Save Earmark Moratorium

The Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) spearheaded a grassroots drive to stop the return of pork-barrel earmarks this month. The push came in response to many House Democrats and even some Republicans who are clamoring to lift the moratorium on wasteful, self-serving earmarks that has been in place since 2011. Lifting the moratorium would lead to an avalanche of earmarks that would waste taxpayer dollars on pet special interest projects and cause federal spending to explode. To date, the campaign has delivered more than 7,000 constituent e-mails to House members demanding that the earmark moratorium remain in place. Tell your U.S. Representative to vote against any effort to restore wasteful and corruptive earmarks.

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From “The WasteWatcher”

On February 7, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortes (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) released a 14-page resolution for their Green New Deal. “Saying that the plan is overly ambitious is an understatement,” opines CAGW Government Affairs Director Allen Johnson on CAGW’s blog, “The WasteWatcher.” The proposal calls for “a sustainable, pollution and greenhouse gas free food system,” as well as a “zero emissions” society in just 10 years. Under the plan, the federal government would pay to “build charging stations everywhere, build out highspeed rail at a scale where air travel stops becoming necessary, create affordable public transit available to all, with [a] goal to replace every combustion-engine vehicle.” Regarding payment for these endeavors, the authors of the Green New Deal write: “The Federal Reserve can extend credit to power these projects and investments and new public banks can be created to extend credit.” Ultimately, the Green New Deal is not a realistic proposal, but it shows how much control Democratic Socialists want over Americans and the economy, concludes Johnson. Read more on “The WasteWatcher,” CAGW’s staff blog.

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Advocates Push Lawmakers To Enact Redistricting Reforms

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By Bryan Wells
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS— Advocates for redistricting reform said time is running out for Indiana to enact changes that will put voters ahead of political advantage.

Bills that would enact their top priority – an independent nonpartisan commission to draw legislative and congressional boundaries – have already died this session, as they have in past sessions. Now, they are hoping to pass a measure, Senate Bill 105, which would set standards for drawing the maps that emphasize communities over politics.

Adding to the pressure: The next district maps will be drawn in 2021, after the 2020 census.

“The clock is certainly ticking,” Julia Vaughn, a leader of the Indiana Coalition for Independent Redistricting, said at a Statehouse news conference Thursday.

While it’s possible to enact reforms in the 2020 session, she and other advocates of redistricting reform want to see action this year.

Three legislators – Sen. John Ruckelshaus, R- Indianapolis; Sen. J.D. Ford, D-Indianapolis and Rep. Donna Schaibley, R-Carmel – each said this is an issue voter care about.

“I can’t drive without seeing one of the (“Redistricting Reform Now”) yard signs in my district,” Ford said.

And Schaibley said that as she went door-to-door in her Hamilton and Boone County district talking to voters, “this was a major issue.”

“It’s the fair thing to do. It’s the right thing to do,” she said.

Ruckelshaus, R- Indianapolis, recalled that when he was in the House in the early 1990s, Democrats who then held the majority “literally drew me out of my district.”

 

That could still happen under SB 105, but not on purpose. Lawmakers could no longer take into account where incumbents live as they draw the districts. But they would have to consider minority populations, city and county boundaries, trying to keep from splitting them when possible while keeping districts compact and contiguous.

The Senate defeated a proposed amendment by Ford that would have specified that no district could be created that unduly favored a person or political party. But the bill setting the standards narrowly passed, 26-23, and advocates are now hoping it will get a hearing in the House Election Committee. Vaughn and the lawmakers urged people to write to their legislator and to Rep. Tim Wesco, the Osceola Republican who is chairman of that committee, asking for that hearing.

Mike Bowling, a Senior Pastor at Englewood Christian Church, said at the Statehouse news conference that this is about giving people a voice in the political process.

“If you love your neighbor, you want to hear their voice, and you want to hear their voice on the issues that matter to them,” he said.

He cited one Senate district that is mostly in rural Hancock and Shelby counties but juts into central Indianapolis.

“That’s the kind of things that this bill will address, to not split up neighborhoods. We watch the destruction and the discouragement that comes every time neighborhoods are split up,” Bowling said. “All of these things matter.”

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

 

 

Lavender Ball Celebrates All Cancer Patients

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Today Evansville took a moment to stop and celebrate the accomplishments of the past year while giving cancer patients a night out on the town.

The chemo buddies organization is holding the lavender ball tonight until 10 at Tropicana casino.

Patients are dancing the night away, and enjoying music, food and more compliments of local businesses.

The lavender ball high lights all different types of fights since lavender is the color of the ribbon that represents all types of cancer.

“And there isn’t anyone you can walk up to on the street or anywhere that doesn’t know at least someone in their life that’s been impacted by cancer. So it’s a wonderful opportunity to be apart of a cause that really gives back. That is on the front lines. We really focus on care. There are other organizations that are focusing on the cure. For us we are focused on the care that people receive during the time that can be the scariest times of their lives,” says Andrea Phillips.

50th Annual Bowl for Kids Sake Raises Money for Children in the Tri-State

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A bowling fundraiser in Evansville is raising money to help mentor children in the Tri-State.

Dozens of folks bowled to help the Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Southwestern Indiana organization strike their fundraising goal.

The 50th-anniversary fundraiser was held at the Franklin Lanes.

“Bowl for kid’s sake” teams hoped to raise 300 dollars each to contribute to the organization’s goal of supporting children facing adversity with strong, professionally reported relationships.
SOT

“You know there are so many good organizations in Evansville and this is certainly one of those, probably one of the top organizations and it’s just gonna mean a lot to them. I think this is maybe one of their biggest fundraisers of the year. So if we can spend an hour helping an organization like this that means a lot to the community to raise this money then I will be here every year,” says Ron Romain.

Big Brothers, Big Sisters of Southwestern Indiana serves children in Vanderburgh, Warrick, Posey, Perry, Spencer, and Gibson counties in southwest Indiana, and Henderson County in Kentucky.

Beginning Genealogy

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ADOPT A PET

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This gorgeous girl is a female brown tabby named Lauren. She was brought in as a stray (by a volunteer named, you guessed it, Lauren) and no one ever stepped forward to claim her as their lost pet. So now she’s ready for a new home! She is living in a cageless room with multiple other cats and doing just fine. Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Meeting

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, March 11, 2019, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A); initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9), and training of Board members with
an outside consultant about the performance of the role of the members as public officials, (11).

The regular meeting of the School Board will follow at 5:30 p.m. in the EVSC Board Room, same address.