Tumble is a rough & tumble little male black kitten! He is 7 months old. He’s currently adoptable at River Kitty Cat Café in downtown Evansville! His adoption fee is $40 and he’s neutered, up-to-date on shots, and ready to go home today. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or River Kitty at (812) 550-1553 for adoption details!
Reversal: Children placed in father’s care weren’t CHINS
Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com
Three Tippecanoe County minor children age 5 and younger who were cared for by their father after they were found home alone in their mother’s home should not have been adjudicated children in need of services, the Indiana Court of Appeals held Friday in reversing the juvenile court.
Mother A.K. was charged with neglect after their father, R.M., requested a well-being check on the children in December 2017. Police found the children unattended, the home in disarray and the door broken down. Father had previously found the children alone, and he told caseworkers he was not paying child support because he believed any money he gave to A.K. would be spent on drugs.
Months earlier, mother and her boyfriend had entered into an informal adjustment with the Department of Child Services due to concerns about substance abuse in the home. After the December 2017 well-being check, the minor children were placed with father, who was working and able to provide care for them, according to the record.
A DCS family case manager later testified that she had no issues with the children being in their father’s care as mother continued to struggle with court-ordered substance-abuse treatments, missing all but three or four of 20 scheduled visits.
Nevertheless, the court adjudicated the children as CHINS in February 2018, finding the only service that “might be appropriate†for father was parenting education. Father later was awarded custody of the children in a separate proceeding last August, after which DCS moved to dismiss the wardship.
In father’s appeal, he challenges whether DCS intervention was necessary, whether the record supports services he was required to complete, and whether a revised statute allows a CHINS court to modify custody. The COA ruled in father’s favor.
“We reverse the CHINS adjudication. We also determine that the CHINS court could have properly considered the custody matter pursuant to the revisions to Ind. Code section 31-30-1-13. We further conclude that Father’s challenge to the services ordered in the parental participation order is moot,†Judge Paul Mathias wrote for the panel in In re the Matter of M.M., A.M., and B.M. (Minor Children), R.M. (Father) v. Indiana Department of Child Services, 18A-JC-1234.
DCS argued that the children should be adjudicated as CHINS “to protect children ‘at imminent risk’ of being displaced or endangered.†But this alone was insufficient, the panel held. “In short, the agency’s concern that led it to continue to pursue a CHINS adjudication in spite of its belief Father was a ready, willing, and able parent, was that he did not have actual legal custody, which meant the children were at risk for going back to an unfit mother if the CHINS cases were to be closed. It is DCS’s position that the children were CHINS solely because of this legal risk, however remote in these circumstances, and that it is ‘compelled to pursue a CHINS adjudication unless and until the case can be resolved by other means, including legal custody to the non-offending parent,’†Mathias wrote.
“The court’s order adjudicating the children CHINS focuses on the facts and circumstances leading up to and surrounding the removal of the children from Mother’s care, and not the situation at the time the case was heard,†when they were in the care of their father. “While DCS was concerned about the legal custody arrangement at issue, the legal possibility of the children returning to Mother’s care does not alone mean that the children required services. The needs of the children were met, and there was no evidence showing that the coercive intervention of the court was needed to provide the children with services at the time of the fact-finding. Accordingly, we reverse the adjudication of the children as CHINS.â€
The panel also wrote that the CHINS court in this case could have modified custody itself.
“(P)rovided Mother had notice and the opportunity to be heard regarding Father’s request for change of custody, it was within the CHINS court’s authority in accordance with the newly amended Ind. Code section 31-30-1-13 to consider the request for change of custody and enter an order modifying custody pursuant to the analysis required by Ind. Code section 31-14-13-2, as well as corresponding statutes and existing precedent, that would survive the termination of the CHINS proceeding,†Mathias wrote.
Finally, the panel found father’s challenge to orders concerning parental participation moot, because the CHINS petition has been dismissed, and the orders are no longer effective.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
|
No. 3/11 Hoosiers Sweep No. 24/– Purdue in West Lafayette
The No. 3/11-ranked Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams swept the No. 24/– Purdue Boilermakers on Saturday afternoon at the Burke Aquatic Center in West Lafayette, Ind.
The No. 3 Indiana men’s team (7-0) defeated No. 24 Purdue, 188-106, while the No. 11 IU women’s squad took down the Boilermakers, 187.5-111.5. The win for the Hoosier men marked the team’s 29th-straight dual-meet victory.
HOOSIER WINNERS
MEN
Zach Apple – 200 freestyle (1:38.77), 50 freestyle (20.09), 100 freestyle (44.27), 400 freestyle relay (2:57.23)
Bruno Blaskovic – 400 freestyle relay (2:57.23)
Michael Brinegar – 1,000 freestyle (9:07.43), 500 freestyle (4:26.25)
Mikey Calvillo – 400 IM (3:54.41)
Andrew Capobianco – 1-meter dive (424.95)
Gabriel Fantoni – 200 medley relay (1:27.46), 100 backstroke (46.64), 100 butterfly (47.67)
Ian Finnerty – 200 medley relay (1:27.46), 100 breaststroke (54.38)
Jack Franzman – 400 freestyle relay (2:57.23)
Corey Gambardella – 200 butterfly (1:47.62)
Brandon Hamblin – 200 medley relay (1:27.46)
Vini Lanza – 200 medley relay (1:27.46), 200 breaststroke (2:01.20)
Mohamed Samy – 200 backstroke (1:45.85), 400 freestyle relay (2:57.23)
WOMEN
Bailey Andison – 400 IM (4:18.22)
Laurel Eiber – 200 medley relay (1:38.96), 50 freestyle (23.34)
Christine Jensen – 200 medley relay (1:38.96), 100 butterfly (54.16), 400 freestyle relay (3:23.92)
Cassy Jernberg – 1,000 freestyle (10:00.55)
Maria Paula Heitmann – 500 freestyle (4:53.42)
Lilly King – 200 medley relay (1:38.96), 100 breaststroke (1:01.12), 200 breaststroke (2:14.03)
Shelby Koontz – 100 freestyle (50.59), 400 freestyle relay (3:23.92)
Bailey Kovac – 200 backstroke (1:59.82)
Jessica Parratto – Platform dive (316.65), 1-meter dive (311.70)
Noelle Peplowski – 400 freestyle relay (3:23.92)
Morgan Scott – 200 medley relay (1:38.96), 400 freestyle relay (3:23.92)
NOTABLES
- The Hoosier men’s team extended its dual-meet winning streak to 29 meets. IU’s last loss in a dual meet came on Jan. 16, 2016 against Michigan.
• The victory for IU men is the team’s sixth over a top-25 opponent this season.
 NCAA CUTS
A: None.
B: Gabriel Fantoni (100 back), Lilly King (100 breast), Noelle Peplowski (100 breast, 1:01.81)
NCAA ZONES QUALIFYING SCORES
Men’s 1-Meter: Andrew Capobianco, James Connor (388.35), Mory Gould (382.65), Seamus Scotty (305.55).
Women’s 1-Meter: Jessica Parratto.
Men’s Platform: Andrew Capobianco (366.98).
Women’s Platform: Jessica Parratto, Taylor Carter (240.98).
 UP NEXT
The No. 3/11 Hoosiers will be back in action on Friday, Feb. 1 when the team hosts No. 8/16 Louisville on Senior Day at the Counsilman Billingsley Aquatic Center in Bloomington, Ind. The meet is scheduled to start at 2:00 p.m. ET and will be streamed live on BTN Plus.
Steve Martin & Martin Short
STILLÂ AVAILABLE
ACT NOW!
Here’s the show you’ve been waiting for – Steve Martin and Martin Short “Now You See Them, Soon You Won’t†is coming to Evansville’s Aiken Theatre on March 8th at 8:00pm.
Steve Martin is one of the most acclaimed and beloved talents in entertainment. His work has earned numerous honors including an Academy Award, five Grammy Awards, an Emmy Award, the Mark Twain Award, and the Kennedy Center Honors.
Martin Short is a beloved comedian and actor, whose career spans television, film and theater. Since his breakout performances on NBC’s Saturday Night Live, Short has become a household name with roles in several feature films.
Senator Braun Votes to Secure Border & Reopen Government
U.S. Senator Mike Braun released the following statement after voting in support of a comprehensive legislative package that reopens the government, funds President Trump’s border security priorities, a disaster supplemental, and bipartisan immigration reforms:
“Today, I voted in support of President Trump’s solution to address border security, immigration reform, and fully reopen our government, yet Democrats are blocking the legislation out of blind opposition to President Trump’s attempt to secure our southern border,â€Â said U.S. Senator Mike Braun. “In business, deals are achieved through compromise, and unfortunately Hoosiers will have to wait for Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, and Democrats to put partisan politics aside and come to the table.â€
“READERS FORUM” JANUARY 26, 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?Â
WHAT’S ON YOUR MIND TODAY?
Todays“Readers Poll†question is: If the election was held today for the Evansville City Council 1st Ward seat who you vote for?
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.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com
Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.
Meet “Living Outside The Box” Underwriter-D-Patrick Auto Group Of Evansville
Meet “Living Outside The Box” Underwriter-D-Patrick Auto Group Of Evansville
AssuredPartners Evansville has deep roots to the Evansville business community. The office DNA goes back to Citizens Insurance, The Jesse Stock Agency, and Douglas Bays & Associates.Â
AssuredPartners has a unique philosophy when it comes to growth thru an acquisition. Partner with the best of the best, provide them with the tools and resources to help their community businesses, then let them do what they have always done, make independent decisions at the local level as to what is best for Evansville.
It is this very philosophy that has catapulted AssuredPartners inside the top 10 insurance brokers in the United States. “It is truly a unique (outside the box) approach to growth that has been extremely successfulâ€, said Doug Bays, Agency President for AssuredPartners Evansville.
When Doug heard about the CCO “Living Outside the Box†speaker series, he was thrilled. He has deep roots of his own with the founder, Ron Cosby, and former editor, Joe Wallace, who inspired the speaker series with his book, “Living Outside the Boxâ€. “When Ron first thought about starting the paper, he used me as a sounding board for his ideas. When the paper had it first printing, which was done in Princeton, In, I had a pickup truck, so I was called to help him go pick them up and distribute them. I’ll never forget trying to beat the rain with all those papers in the back of the truck for his first edition. There are many funny stories to share about those early days of the paper. The CCO itself is a tremendous example of one man, who had a call to action, was joined by others who also felt compelled to get involved for the purpose of promoting good public policy for our community. When you see now where it has come, it is quite impressive but not surprising. People are interested in accountability. Accountability provides transparency. Transparency provides confidence and a path forward toward goodâ€.
When Mr. Cosby recently shared with Doug that he had interest from local elected political officials in helping to underwrite the “Living Outside The Box”: speaker series, he voiced concern. “Not because of the people involved, many of them are my friends, the principle was the issue. I felt that this speaker series should be void of political influence as much as possible. Politics has it place, but often-times, it inhibits real growth and opportunity because certain inefficiencies override what is best for everyone and only benefit a few. It’s an unintended consequence. I felt this speaker series was an opportunity for our local business leaders to share with others and that it should not be influenced by any political tiesâ€. I suppose that in some way is itself, an example of “Living Outside the Boxâ€.
For additional information concerning the November 2019Â Â ‘Living Outside The Box” speaker event please contract Steve Hammer by calling him at 812-589-3802.
FOOTNOTE: Get your own copy of “Living Outside the Box” by Joe Jack Wallace please click the link below.