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Former Eagle Raff selected to lead USI Volleyball

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Former University of Southern Indiana student athlete Randi Raff ’05 has been selected to lead the USI Volleyball program in an announcement by the USI Department of Athletics Monday afternoon. Raff becomes the 12th head coach in program history.

“I am beyond excited and deeply humbled at the opportunity to come home to USI.” Raff said. “I’d like to thank (USI Director of Athletics) Jon Mark Hall for placing his faith in me and believing in my vision for the future of USI Volleyball.

“After visiting campus, it’s clear the University and the Athletic Department are bound for even more great things.” Raff continued. “It is truly a special place. Everything from the committed and tight knit community of coaches, staff and players to the top notch facilities made saying ‘yes’ one of the easiest decisions of my life. It feels good to be a Screaming Eagle again!”

“We are thrilled to have Randi coming back to USI to be our head volleyball coach,” Hall said. “She has playing or coaching experience at the Division I, II and III levels and we feel like those vast experiences will help her become a very successful head coach. She is very driven to succeed and to make sure that the young women in our program have a great experience at USI.

“I would like to thank Assistant Director of Athletics, Mandi Fulton, and our entire search committee on their efforts to bring us such a strong candidate pool,” Hall continued.

Raff, who played volleyball at USI in 2001, 2003 and 2004, returns to the Screaming Eagles after spending the previous three seasons at Georgia Tech, where she was an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator.

At Georgia Tech, Raff assisted in putting together the Highest Honorable Mention recruiting classes in 2017 and 2018 per Prepvolleyball.com and helped the Yellow Jackets to their most victories in 12 years as they posted a 24-8 overall record and a 15-5 mark in ACC play in 2016.

Raff also coached two first-team All-ACC players as well as one honorable mention All-American and ACC Scholar Athlete of the Year. She coordinated and organized all recruiting activities, including identification of prospects as well as establishing and maintaining day-to-day communications.

Prior to Georgia Tech, Raff spent the 2015 season as the recruiting coordinator and assistant coach at Indiana after spending three seasons at Northern Kentucky University as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator.

During her time with Northern Kentucky, Raff helped the Norse to a 56-37 (.602) record in its first three years of NCAA Division I play, including the best start to any first-year Division I program (12-1 in 2012). She served as acting head coach for the program’s first-ever NCAA Division I post-season win, which came during the 2014 Atlantic Sun Conference Tournament—she filled in for Liz (Holmes) Hart, who was expecting the birth of her first child.

Prior to NKU, Raff spent two seasons at Division III Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Virginia, as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator. She helped lead the Captains to back-to-back 38-win seasons, including a national runner-up finish in 2011.

Raff was honored with the 2011 American Volleyball Coaches Association 30 under 30 award, which recognizes young up-and-coming coaches among all NCAA divisions in both men’s and women’s volleyball.

A native of Rensselaer, Indiana, Raff also served as an assistant coach for two seasons at Southeast Missouri State University in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, prior to her stint with Christopher Newport.

Raff broke into coaching as a graduate assistant strength and condition coach at Purdue University from 2005-07. She was the Head Junior Varsity Coach/Assistant Varsity Coach at Mt. Vernon High School in 2007 before brief volunteer stints with USI and former GLVC member Saint Joseph’s College in the spring of 2008. She was the Head Coach of the 16-2’s team for the Pursuit Volleyball Club in Jackson, Missouri, from 2008-09.

Raff was a team captain for the Eagles’ 2004 GLVC championship squad that posted a 15-1 record in league play en route to their second NCAA II Tournament appearance in three seasons. She earned her bachelor’s degree in exercise science from USI in May 2005 before earning a master’s degree in pedagogy and administration from Purdue in 2007.

Drainage Board Agenda

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Vanderburgh County

Drainage Board Agenda

February 5, 2019

Call to Order

Pledge of Allegiance

Approval of Previous Minutes

Bid Specifications for 2019-Maintenance of Regulated Drains

Final Drainage Plan-13644 State Road 57 (JC Wildlife)

Vectren noncompliance with Sonntag Stevens Agreement-Follow up 

Ditch Maintenance Claims (none)

Other Business

Public Comment

Adjournment

ADOPT A PET

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Dax is a 5-year-old male. He was surrendered by a family that was moving. Interestingly enough, he is also front-declawed, which means he could live in pretty much any type of housing anywhere! He’s a sweet guy who gets along great with other cats. His adoption fee is $40 and includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

AG Curtis Hill asks U.S. Supreme Court to rule on Indiana law requiring fetal ultrasounds at least 18 hours before abortions

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Attorney General Curtis Hill this week asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a lower court’s ruling on the constitutionality of an Indiana law requiring fetal ultrasounds at least 18 hours prior to abortions.

In July of 2018, a panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit enjoined the law – accepting Planned Parenthood’s contention that it placed an undue burden on women seeking abortions. In this week’s filing, however, Attorney General Hill notes that the law essentially combines two Indiana statutes that have been on the books for years.

In 1995, the Indiana General Assembly passed the informed-consent statute, which specified that a woman must receive, in person, information relevant to abortion and childbirth at least 18 hours before an abortion. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a similar statute in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey.

Then, in 2011, the state legislature passed another law requiring an ultrasound be performed before an abortion. It required medical staff to show the ultrasounds to women seeking abortions unless they expressed in writing that they did not wish to see them. In 2016, lawmakers added the provision at issue in this week’s filing – which stipulates that the required ultrasound take place at the informed-consent appointment at least 18 hours before the abortion procedure.

“The state has a compelling interest to protect fetal life and dignity,” Attorney General Hill said. “It also has an obligation to ensure that women do not feel rushed or pressured into getting an abortion. I hope the Supreme Court will establish the clear constitutionality of this vitally important legislation.”

JOIN CARVER IN CELEBRATING THEIR DAY CARE & PRESCHOOL’S 50TH ANNIVERSARY

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carver

Carver Community Organization is eager announce the 50th anniversary of its Day Care & Preschool. Carver has offered its childcare services to the community with the intentions of always putting children first. Their dedicated team has worked every day for the past 50 years to stay aligned with the mission and vison of the organization, to provide unique programs in a safe environment which teaches respect for self, others, and the community. 

Two events, both open to the community, held on February 12th will encompass the hard work and evolution of the early childhood education program. To showcase Carver’s commitment to developing Carver kids into compassionate community members, an exhibit will take place February 12th from 3pm-5pm, in the Day Care Center and an Open House from 6pm-7:30pm in the Neighborhood Center showing how Carver has evolved over the decades. Carver Community Organization welcomes the community to come celebrate this wonderful achievement. To RSVP, contact Development Associate, JalessaEskridge, at jeskridge@carverorg.org or 812-423-2612.  

Since 1968, the Day Care Center has served the Evansville community with a focus on child care and educational activities.  Carver Day Care & Preschool is a state licensed early learning center as a Level 3 Childcare provider in the Indiana Paths to QUALITY, Indiana’s Quality Rating and Improvement Systems (QRIS) for childcare.  

Carver Community Organization is a nonprofit that has been enlightening generations within the community since 1944. At Carver, we are committed to developing a confident and compassionate community by engaging and inspiring all ages. Carver fulfills the needs of the community by offering the same respect, education, and opportunity to everyone. For more information about Carver Community Organization please visit www.carverorg.org or call (812) 423-2612. 

Ivy Tech Community College to Offer Welding Certification Program in Evenings at Castle High School

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Ivy Tech Community College Evansville Campus will offer a Welding Certification Preparation course beginning February 19 in Warrick county.

The 80-hour course will meet Mondays and Wednesdays, from 6-10 p.m., February 19 – May 1, at Castle High School in Newburgh.

This course focuses on safety, techniques, joint preparation, and proper machine setup to prepare students to earn the American Welding Society SMAW certification. Total tuition is $2,650 and all personal protective equipment, tools, and testing fees are included.

The course is open to the public and employer-sponsored students. Full funding is available through WorkOne and WorkINdiana, for qualifying students (INTraining #: 6025).

To register, call 812-429-9810 or email evv-reg@ivytech.edu.

In addition to SMAW (stick) welding, the College also provides hands-on instruction for the most common welding processes and cutting methods used in industry, including MIG, TIG, and oxyfuel welding, as well as oxyfuel cutting and plasma cutting.

Ivy Tech also offers courses in pipe welding and welding fabrication. Ivy Tech Community College is an American Welding Society Accredited Test Facility. Ivy Tech provides on-site certification testing services for employers throughout the region. Three fully-equipped welding technology labs are available for workforce training at campus locations in Evansville (16 booths), Princeton (12 booths), and Tell City (16 booths).

Ivy Tech Workforce Alignment offers one-on-one support to employers who are ready to design customized training solutions for their team in 2019. Learn more at ivytech.edu/TrainedAndReady.

Calling all Young Artists: K-8!

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Exhibit dates:
March 11 – 26
Opening Reception:
Saturday, March 9
12 – 2 p.m.
Open to all students in grades:
Kindergarten – 8th
Drop artwork off at:
212 Main
Evansville, IN
Feb. 25 – March 1
10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Pick artwork up on:
March 27, 28, & 29
10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
One 2D piece or one 3D piece per young artist.
Teachers:
Submit up to ten 2D pieces and/or ten 3D pieces per school

Gilda’s Club Evansville celebrates 5 years!

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Open house set for Wednesday, February 6, 2019 between 4-6pm

Gilda’s Club 5 year birthday party will be Wednesday, February 6, 2019 from 4:00-6:00 p.m. at Gilda’s Club Evansville, 5740 Vogel Road, Evansville, IN 47715.   The celebration is open to the public.  There will be a timeline of pictures and inspiration highlighting the impact Gilda’s Club has brought to our community over the last 5 years. 

Gilda’s Club Evansville’s mission is to serve as a community of caring individuals that provide social, emotional and educational support to anyone impacted by cancer.   100% locally funded, together we share a vision that no one should face cancer alone. 

Gilda’s Club Evansville is an affiliate of the Cancer Support Community (CSC), a global organization providing psychosocial cancer support to tens of thousands of people through a network of nearly 50 local affiliates, more than 100 satellite locations and online.  

IPAC Applauds Passage of Victims Protection Legislation Senate Bill 551 clears Senate committee unanimously

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Senate Bill 551, authored by Sen. Mark Messmer, R-Jasper, passed unanimously out of committee today by a vote of 7-0. The bill greatly expands the rights of crime victims in Indiana, especially domestic violence and child victims. The bill adds protections for the community against sex offenders who improperly register or fail to register on the sex offender or violent offender registry, allows for child victims to bring a comfort item or specially trained comfort animal with them to court during testimony and includes an enhancement for domestic battery if the convicted person has a prior conviction of strangulation, among many other needed fixes to Indiana code to support the plight of crime victims in the Hoosier state.

The bill supports criminal investigations and prosecutions of child abuse cases by restricting disclosure of sensitive information about the child victim and defendant during the criminal investigation or prosecution of the case. It allows parents to seek a protective order against persons who are making inappropriate contact or contacts with their child. SB 551 also plugs a loophole in current law that potentially allows adults to engage in inappropriate sexual relations with a person 13 or 14 years of age. Finally, the bill addresses a gap in the current kidnapping and criminal confinement laws by creating an offense when the kidnapping or criminal confinement results in moderate bodily injuring to the victim. Current law only provides for offenses that include “bodily injury” or “serious bodily injury.”  The legislation also eliminates the current practice where an offender who is convicted of felony domestic battery has the ability to reduce the penalty to a misdemeanor.

“We’re pleased with the passage of Senate Bill 551 and we thank Sen. Messmer for his work on this important piece of legislation, as well as the work of Chairman Mike Young and members of the Senate Corrections and Criminal Law Committee,” Dave Powell, executive director of IPAC, said. “The bill involved a lot of hard work but this is something that is needed in Indiana.”

Also testifying in support of the bill last week was Clark County Prosecutor Jeremy Mull. Prosecutors all across Indiana work with victims of life-altering crimes and their families on a daily basis. Prosecutor Mull and prosecutors throughout the state are eager to stand with legislators this session to support measures that help victims and their families.

The bill would also task an interim study committee with looking at the issue of discovery depositions.

After unanimous passage out of committee, SB 551 will now to go the full Senate for further consideration.

Indiana appeals 18-hour ultrasound injunction to U.S. Supreme Court

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Indiana is again appealing to the Supreme Court of the United States to overturn a preliminary injunction blocking a state abortion law, this one requiring women to get an ultrasound at least 18 hours before the procedure.

The provision was included in House Enrolled Act 1337, which was signed into law by then-Gov. Mike Pence in 2016. A preliminary injunction on other provisions in the bill – including the requirement that fetal remains be either buried or cremated and the prohibition on abortions because of sex, race or genetic anomaly of the fetus – has already been appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Indiana’s writ of certiorari for those other provisions has been relisted for conference several times and is on the agenda for the justices’ Feb. 15 conference.

Monday, Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill’s office filed a writ of certiorari for the ultrasound dispute with the high court.

“The state has a compelling interest to protect fetal life and dignity,” Hill said in a press release. “It also has an obligation to ensure that women do not feel rushed or pressured into getting an abortion. I hope the Supreme Court will establish the clear constitutionality of this vitally important legislation.”

However, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana called the move an attempt to make reproductive services less available.

“There is no reason for the Court to take this case because the Seventh Circuit got it right,” Ken Falk, legal director of the ACLU of Indiana, said in a statement. “This requirement is unconstitutional as it creates a substantial obstacle to a woman seeking to obtain an abortion. There is no medical justification for the requirement that an ultrasound be obtained at least 18 hours before the abortion.”

The writ of certiorari for the ultrasound case was filed in Kristina Box, et al. v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc.

Hill defended the 2016 ultrasound law as combining two existing state statutes. Since 1995, Indiana’s informed-consent statute mandates that women seeking an abortion must receive, in person, information about the abortion and child birth at least 18 hours prior to the termination of the pregnancy. Then in 2011, the state required an ultrasound to be performed before an abortion.

Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky and the ACLU of Indiana countered the provision adversely impacts low-income women. Previously, women could have the ultrasound on the same day they had the abortion. But under the 18-hour provision, some patients seeking an abortion could have to take an extra day off work, find child care for their children and make a potentially lengthy trip to one of the six Planned Parenthood centers in the state that have ultrasound equipment, they argue.

The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana and the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals agreed. In issuing the preliminary injunction March 31, 2017, Judge Tanya Walton Pratt found PPINK was likely to succeed on the merits of its complaint because the law was placing an undue burden on women.

“PPINK presents compelling evidence that women, particularly low-income women, face significant financial and other burdens due to the new ultrasound law,” Walton Pratt wrote in Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc. v. Commissioner, Indiana State Department of Health, 1:16-cv-01807. “The State’s primary justification for the law is to promote fetal life – that is, to convince women to choose not to have an abortion by having them view their ultrasound at least a day before rather than the day of the abortion. But it presents little evidence, and certainly no compelling evidence, that the new ultrasound law actually furthers that interest.”

The 7th Circuit affirmed in a July 25, 2018 opinion, calling the district court’s ruling “well-reasoned.” In October 2018, the appellate court denied the state’s petitions for a rehearing and a rehearing en banc.

In its brief to the Supreme Court, the state challenges the 7th Circuit’s determination that the 18-hour ultrasound law would place an undue burden on women, the standard established in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992). Specifically, Indiana argues the appellate court defined the group of impacted women too narrowly.

“…(T)he Seventh Circuit should have ruled that the relevant denominator consisted of those women who would not otherwise choose to have an ultrasound eighteen hours before their abortion as required by the statute,” Indiana stated in its brief. “Instead it defined it to include ‘low-income women who live a significant distance from one of six PPINK health centers offering informed-consent appointments.’”

Also, the state countered the court’s finding that the law’s burdens on women outweigh the “very small” impact of the law persuading women to forego the abortion.

“What dollar amount in burdens is her unborn child’s life worth?” the state asks. “Surely the Constitution does not require this type of utilitarian calculus.”

PPINK and the ACLU maintain the law violates a woman’s constitutional rights.

“This law only stands to harm Hoosiers,” Christine Charbonneau, CEO of PPINK, said in a statement. “Politicians weaponized basic health care with one motive in mind – to end abortion access. If the state of Indiana wants to address health care disparities like infant mortality rates, it should get to work finding solutions that improve access to health care. This law does the opposite – it chips away at a patient’s ability to access critical health care when they need it.”