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House Supports Sullivan’s Bill To Boost State’s Workforce

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 House Supports Sullivan’s Bill To Boost State’s Workforce
On Wednesday, January 30, 2019, the Indiana House of Representatives voted in favor of State Rep. Holli Sullivan’s legislation to continue strengthening Indiana’s workforce pipeline. Sullivan said House Bill 1002 would reallocate existing state funds to proven workforce programs so Hoosiers can increase their certifications, earn stackable credentials and secure higher-paying jobs in high-demand fields to meet the changing needs of Indiana employers.
“By 2020, nearly two-thirds of in-demand jobs will require experience beyond a high school education,” Sullivan said. “Indiana’s private sector continues to grow and we need to attract and retain more skilled workers to fill the jobs becoming available. This legislation would build off our previous workforce efforts and continue strengthening our talent pipelines.” Learn more HERE
Sullivan: Supporting the Ohio River I-69 Crossing 

Indiana and Kentucky have been working for years to establish a river crossing on I-69 between Evansville and Henderson, Kentucky. After careful evaluation of the funding options, I am in support of Central Corridor Alternative 1B, which would apply tolls only to the new interstate bridge of I-69 and not on the U.S. 41 bridge. This route is the most effective at the lowest total cost and has the least intrusive construction and environmental impact.

The interstate bridge will provide a valuable north and south path of travel for our community, and positively affect all industries in our area and beyond. This development could open up numerous economic opportunities, and improve access to our region’s attractions and businesses. To learn more about the I-69 Ohio River Crossing, click here.

Public comments about the plan will be accepted through Feb. 8. Comments can be submitted in public hearings, through the project’s contact page, by email or in person at the project office.  Click here to read my recent letter submitted to the Ohio River Crossing Project Team

DNR to set up shop at Indy Boat, Sport and Travel Show, Feb. 15-24

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Visit us at the Indianapolis Boat, Sport and Travel Show, Feb. 15-24, at the Indiana State Fairgrounds. The show is presented by Renfro Productions and opens at 1 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 15.

The DNR’s main location is Tackle Town, in the Blue Ribbon Pavilion. The booth is a convenient one-stop shopping opportunity for licenses, state park passes, lake-use permits, Outdoor Indiana magazine, and a State Parks GO! (Get Outside) promotion. DNR staff will be on hand throughout the show to share program information and resources, as well as answer your fish and wildlife questions.

Divided COA Upholds Summary Judgment Denial In Contract Dispute Between Developer, Laborers

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The competing summary judgment motions were filed in the case of Bryan Alexander, Karl Cameron, William Love, Charlie Lovins, Kevin McMurray, and Matt Oelker, on behalf of themselves and all others similarly situated v. Linkmeyer Development II, LLC, et al., 18A-PL-311. The case began in November 2009, when Linkmeyer Development II, LLC, along with its representatives, Steve Linkmeyer and Brian Bischoff, entered into a development contract with the city of Lawrenceburg.

The agreement called for the city to provide Linkmeyer Development with a $3 million line of credit to be used to excavate and fill three local properties. The parties executed a promissory note, a mortgage and personal guarantees, but Linkmeyer Development defaulted on the loan soon after the project ended.

A class of Linkmeyer Development laborers responded by filing suit, arguing a city ordinance, Lawrenceburg Code Section 33.02, required payment of prevailing wages and was incorporated into the development contract. Thus, the laborers asserted claims for breach of contract, unjust enrichment and violations of Indiana wage laws and sought declaratory relief.

The class eventually moved for partial summary judgment in its favor on the breach claim, while the defendants – including Linkmeyer Development, Linkmeyer, and Bischoff – moved for summary judgment on all the claims against them. The Dearborn Circuit Court ultimately denied the class’ motion and partially granted summary judgment to the defendants on the unjust enrichment count.

The parties were certified to proceed on interlocutory appeal, with both sides challenging the denial of their summary judgment motions. The grant of summary judgment on the unjust enrichment claim, however, was not challenged on appeal.

The majority of the appellate court wholly affirmed on Friday, with Judge Margret Robb writing that although the language of the contract “unambiguously required that Linkmeyer Development ‘shall comply with all appropriate codes…including the payment of prevailing wages for labor…,’” the loan to Linkmeyer Development was not made “pursuant to an Investment Incentive Program,” as is required under the ordinance.

“One such investment incentive program in place at the time of the Development Agreement can be found in Indiana Code section 5-28-24-2,” Robb wrote. “…At this juncture, the Class has yet to designate evidence that the Development Agreement was approved or financed pursuant to Indiana Code section 5-28-24-2.”

Further, in an affidavit, Lawrenceburg Mayor William Cunningham, a signatory to the agreement, stated he was “unaware of any project approved or financed…pursuant to an ‘Investment Incentive Program’ while I served as Mayor or as Council Member.”

“Although Mayor Cunningham’s affidavit did not ‘affirmatively negate’ the Class’s claim and thus it did not satisfy the Defendants’ burden on their own motion for summary judgment,…it was sufficient to demonstrate the existence of a genuine issue of material fact,” Robb wrote. “Accordingly, we conclude the trial court correctly denied both parties motions’ for summary judgment regarding breach of contract.”

The court likewise upheld the denial of the defendants’ summary judgment motion on the claims brought under the Wage Payment and Wage Claims statutes. In order to proceed under the Wage Claims Statute, the laborers would have to have been involuntarily terminated from their employment, Robb said, and they would have been required to exhaust their administrative remedies before filing a complaint with a trial court.

“On appeal, the Defendants argue that because the Class failed to exhaust their administrative remedies before filing their complaint, the Defendants are therefore entitled to summary judgment,” the judge wrote. “However, the Defendants fail to argue – and the record is entirely absent of evidence – that the employees composing the Class were involuntarily separated from their employment.

“Therefore,” Robb continued, “we conclude the Defendants failed to establish they were entitled to summary judgment on this issue and the trial court did not err in denying such motion accordingly.”

But in a partial dissent, Judge John Baker disagreed with the majority – joined by Judge Melissa May – that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the class of laborers is entitled to payment of prevailing wages.

“Neither party offered evidence of a formal ‘Investment Incentive Program’ in the City of Lawrenceburg,” Baker wrote. “Thus, I can only conclude that Section 33.02 refers generally to investment incentive programs that benefit the area, not to anyone specific of the official program.

“And, simply put, the Development Agreement acted as an investment incentive program for the City of Lawrenceburg,” Baker continued. “Specifically, the City of Lawrenceburg incentivized this development – the investment – by agreeing to finance it. The Defendants then performed work that benefitted the City of Lawrenceburg. If that does not constitution an investment incentive, I do not know what does.”

Thus, Baker said he would find that the only issue of material facts is whether the class did the work to qualify for the prevailing wage – to which he believes the laborers are entitled as a matter of law – and what the prevailing wage would be.

ADOPT A PET

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Aces Battle To The Finish Against Salukis

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UE drops 78-73 game at SIU

Marty Hill scored a game-high 20 points and Dainius Chatkevicius added a career-high of 13 points, but five Southern Illinois players reached double digits with the Salukis hanging on for a 78-73 win over the University of Evansville men’s basketball team on Saturday evening inside SIU Arena.

“I loved our fight tonight, we were ready to go.  We never gave in and fought to the end.  That is what I wanted to see,” UE head coach Walter McCarty said.  “We were against a really good basketball team tonight and we were able to run our actions; we are growing as a basketball team. We are playing a lot of freshmen and sophomore and I am happy with the way they never gave up.”

Hill had an efficient night for the Purple Aces (10-15, 4-8 MVC), posting his 20 points on 5-for-8 shooting and a 6-of-7 effort from the line.  Chatkevicius led everyone with his 10 rebounds along with 13 points on the way to his second career double-double and his first of the season. K.J. Riley scored 11 points.

Leading SIU (13-12, 6-6 MVC) was Kavion Pippen, who scored 18 points.  Aaron Cook was next with 15.

Evansville utilized the long ball to score its first six points of the game.  Shamar Givance knocked down the first before John Hall connected to give UE a 6-5 lead at the 15:39 mark.  The teams continued to swap the lead over the opening as four more lead changes led to a 16-15 lead for the Salukis at the midway point of the half.

Over the next five minutes, Southern Illinois used an 11-2 run to take a 27-17 advantage with under five minutes left in the period.  They hit five out of eight shots in the run.  Evansville made sure the edge for SIU did not get any higher as they scored the next eight points.  Started off by a pair of K.J. Riley free throws, the Aces connected on their next three tries and got within a pair at 27-25.  The Salukis connected on a triple at the buzzer to take a 35-30 halftime advantage.

Southern Illinois recorded the first six points of the second half, extending their lead to a game-high 41-30.  Just as they did in the first half, the Aces came right back.  Marty Hill scored five in a row to cut the gap to six before a dunk by Dainius Chatkevicius got UE back within four at 43-39 four minutes in.

Shea Feehan got the Aces even closer.  Two minutes later, his triple made it a one-point game – 45-44.  Evansville was never able to get the basket to give them the lead during that stretch.  Southern Illinois increased its lead to 12 points (66-54) with three minutes on the clock.  The Aces did not make things easy for SIU.  Hill struck again with his third triple of the night before a Jawaun Newton layup one minute later cut the deficit to 66-60.

Evansville got even closer.  In the final 20 seconds, Riley and Hill connected on 3-pointers that made it just a 3-point game, but two late free throws finished off the SIU win, making it a 78-73 final.

Both teams finished the game shooting 47.3%.  UE took the rebounding edge by a 35-31 final.

Two home games are upcoming for the Aces when they welcome Missouri State to the Ford Center on Wednesday at 6 p.m. before UNI comes to town on Sunday, Feb. 17 for a 3 p.m. game.

USI Softball splits Day 2 at Chillout

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No. 1 University of Southern Indiana Softball settled on a split to the second day of the UAH Charger Chillout Saturday. The Screaming Eagles began the day with a 5-1 win over host and No. 11 University of Alabama-Huntsville before seeing a 2-0 lead slip away in a 9-4 loss to Mississippi College.

Freshman Kat Mueller (Evansville, Indiana) went 4-for-6 with a pair of runs scored to lead the Eagles at the plate.

#1 USI 5, #11 Alabama-Huntsville (6-4) 1
USI (1-3) scored in the bottom of the first inning on an RBI fielder’s choice by junior outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky), then scored three times in the second frame to take a 4-0 lead over the Chargers.

Senior second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) had a sacrifice fly to put the Eagles up 2-0, while an error and another RBI by Schubert staked USI to the four-run lead.

USI went up 5-0 on an RBI-single by junior pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) in the fourth inning, while the Chargers’ lone tally came on an RBI-triple in the fifth.

Leonhardt (1-1) earned the win after giving up just one run off four hits and three walks. She had five strikeouts in the complete-game victory.

Eagles grounded by Flyers, 79-69

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 University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball failed to complete its road trip sweep by falling to Lewis University, 79-69, Saturday afternoon in Romeoville, Illinois. The Screaming Eagles fall to 16-6 overall and 8-4 in the GLVC, while the Flyers go to 17-4, 9-3 GLVC.

The Eagles started slow, hitting only two of their first seven shots, and found themselves down by five points twice to the Flyers, 15-10 and 17-12. USI rallied with a 14-3 run to take control in the opening half, hitting six-of-seven shots during the run that started on a three-point bomb by senior guard/forward Nate Hansen (Evansville, Indiana) and concluded with a boom when sophomore forward Emmanuel Little (Indianapolis, Indiana) threw down a dunk to lead 26-20 with 5:39 to halftime.

The USI first half lead would increase to as many as 10 points, 35-25, before the Eagles went into the intermission ahead, 39-32.

Overall in the first half, USI shot 54.2 percent for the half (13-24) and held Lewis to 39.3 percent (11-28). Little led the Eagles during the first 20 minutes with 13 points on six field goals and a free throw, while senior guard Alex Stein (Evansville, Indiana) wasted little time getting his 100th career double-figure game with 11 first half points.

The second half started with a bang when USI junior guard/forward Kobe Caldwell (Bowling Green, Kentucky) sank a three-point bomb to push the Eagles’ lead back to 10 points, 42-32. Lewis, however, caught fire with an 11-0 run to surpass USI, 43-42, with 15:08 to play.

The Eagles responded with a 10-0 run of their own on four-straight buckets and got the lead back, 52-43. The nine-point advantage would be the Eagles’ last lead of the game as the Flyers exploded on a 20-4 surge that put Lewis up by seven twice, including a 63-56 margin with 5:56 left on the clock.

USI chipped away at the deficit, pulling to within three points, 63-60, with 3:59 on the clock when Hansen drained a three-point field goal. The three-point deficit would be as close as the Eagles would come the rest of the way as the Flyers sealed USI’s fate with a 13-4 run before the 79-69 final.

The Eagles’ shooters cooled in the second half, hitting only 34.4 percent (11-32) in the final stanza from the field, 25 percent from beyond the arc (4-16). USI also was outrebounded in the contest, 36-26.

Individually in the final box score, Stein led four USI double-figure scorers with 20 points and comes home to the Physical Activities Center needing 69 points to reach 2,000 career points. Little followed Stein in the scoring column with his 13 first half points, while Hansen and Caldwell finished with 12 points and 10 points respectively.
USI returns to the friendly surroundings of the PAC next week to start a four-game homestand and Homecoming. The Eagles starts the homestand Thursday when they host McKendree University for a 7:30 p.m. before finishing the first half of the four-game home set with Homecoming versus the University of Illinois Springfield Saturday at 3:15 p.m.

McKendree is 9-13 overall and 5-8 in the GLVC after splitting on the road this week, while Illinois Springfield was 0-2 on the road and watched its record go to 13-10, 6-7 GLVC.

USI leads the all-time series with McKendree, 10-7 overall and 8-1 in GLVC, since the start of the series in 1970-71 and the Bearcats entrance into the GLVC in 2012-13. The Eagles, who lead the series at the PAC, 4-0, took last year’s match-up, 86-56, at McKendree and was led by the 22-point performance by forward DayJar Dickson.

USI has the series advantage versus Illinois Springfield, 10-4 overall and 7-3 in the GLVC, since the beginning of the match-ups in 2002-03 and the Prairie Stars entrance into the GLVC in 2009-10. The Eagles, who hold a 7-1 advantage in the series at the PAC, lost to the Stars last year in Springfield, Illinois, 79-70, despite the double-double, 23 points and 10 rebounds, by Little.

USI Women’s Basketball falls to Lewis

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball suffered a 97-54 Great Lakes Valley Conference setback to host Lewis University Saturday afternoon.

The Screaming Eagles (15-7, 8-4 GLVC) simply ran into a buzz saw as the Flyers shot 54.7 percent (35-64) from the field while sinking 15-of-28 (.536) shots from behind the arc.

USI, meanwhile, could not get much done offensively in the second and fourth quarters as the Eagles were a combined 8-of-29 (.276) from the floor during those periods and 21-of-57 (.368) for the game.

How it happened
After rallying from a five-point deficit to tie the game at 13-13 midway through the opening quarter, the Eagles were outscored 10-4 throughout the final four minutes of the first period.

Lewis (20-2, 11-1 GLVC) outscored the Eagles 19-6 in the second quarter as it held USI to just 3-of-17 (.176) shooting in the period to take a 42-23 halftime advantage. The Eagles came up on the short end of a high-scoring third quarter that saw the Flyers extend their lead to 75-43 heading into the fourth quarter.

97 points
Lewis’s 97 points marked the most points given up by a USI Women’s Basketball team since giving up 101 in a triple-overtime loss to the University of Indianapolis January 22, 2011. It was the most points the Eagles have given up in a regulation game since surrendering 100 points to Lake Superior State University in the opening round of the NCAA II Great Lakes Region Tournament March 12, 2004. The 43-point loss was USI’s worst setback since falling to Northern Kentucky, 89-38, late in the 1990-91 season.

Leaders
Sophomore forward Imani Guy (Columbus, Indiana) had 13 points and 11 rebounds to lead USI, while senior guard Alex Davidson (Salem, Indiana) and sophomore guard Emma Dehart (Indianapolis, Indiana) each finished with 10 points.

Senior forward Jessica Kelliher had 23 points and nine rebounds to lead the Flyers. Kelliher became the GLVC’s all-time leading scorer with 2,511 career points in the win.