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St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements

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Marishka and Joel Bohannon, Evansville, son, Ethan Alexander Jeremiah, December 28

Tracey and Jeremy Neese, Evansville, son, Finn Patrick, December 28

Megan and Jared Mitchell, Evansville, daughter, Caroline Elizabeth, December 28

Nalen and Josh Lefler, Wadesville, IN, daughter, Rhenna Dawn, December 28

Jasmine Egan and Robert Duff, Evansville, daughter, Elizabeth Ray, December 28

Britney Dillon and Matt Taylor, Washington, IN, daughter, Olivia Grace, December 29

Susan and Justin Helfrich, Evansville, daughter, Abigail Ruth, December 30

Sherry Cress and Justin Miller, Vincennes, IN, daughter, Hazel Mary Jane, December 30

Holly Given and Marshall Winebarger, Grayville, IL, daughter, Macyn Taylor Michelle, December 31

Christina McFarland and Michael DeMoss, Evansville, son, Michael Jay Jr., December 31

Jesica and Quentin Emerson, Owensville, IN, son, Lincoln James Theodore, December 31

Clara Strong and Josh Lucca, Evansville, son, Asa David, January 1

Aydden Mitchell and Koa Hawkins, Evansville, daughter, Layla Noelle, January 1

Lindsey and Justin Bean, Evansville, daughter, Margaret Ann, January 2

Tiah Conklin and Jacob Baker, Evansville, son, Chevy Lenard Ray, January 2

Samantha Bader and Devin Clements, Evansville, daughter, Isla Nickole-Jencie, January 2

Stormie and Steven Vallette, Browns, IL, son, Easton Lee, January 4

Andrea Hempfling and Mikel Tosti, Evansville, son, Sterling Mykel, January 4

Angel Brooks and Frederick Cawthorne, Evansville, daughter, Aubree Nichol, January 5

Journey Russ and Thristen Walsh, Evansville, daughter, Annalyse Ruth, January 5

“IS IT TRUE” JANUARY 14, 2019

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” 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?

IS IT TRUE that Bill Schirmer, President and CEO of Evansville Teachers Federal Credit Union, was recently honored by the Indiana Credit Union League as its Professional Achievement Award winner?  …we congratulate Mr. Schirmer for his receiving this prestiges award?

IS IT TRUE we are told that a couple of local taxpayers are considering asking the city to start a $250 million dollars “GO FUND ME” account to help some struggling Eastside, Westside, Northside and Center City businesses to help them make needed improvements to their properties, sidewalks and streets in order for them to attract new customers? …they feel whats good for Downtown and North Main Street properties owners should be good enough for the business owners of other areas of the city?

IS IT TRUE that the Evansville Thunderbolts have gotten nearly halfway through the season and are sitting in last place in the league they play in?…after 28 games the Thunderbolts have won exactly 4 games for a record of 4-24?…the crowd at the Saturday night loss to Peoria by a score of 6-1 was estimated to be nearly 2,000 hockey fans but pictures taken in the Ford Center and posted on a recent Facebook page make it looK like it was way less than 1,000 fans and that is being generous? …we wonder why the main stream media aren’t challenging the Thunderbolts attendance figures put out by the officials at the Ford Center?

IS IT TRUE it’s a known fact that the taxpayers of Evansville tax dollars are being used to subsidized the Thunderbolts Hockey team?  …the taxpayers have a right to see the Evansville Thunderbolts financial performance numbers for the season so far?

IS IT TRUE one of our posters overheard a City Council member say that Mesker Amphitheater is gonna be rebuilt, and MEXICO is going to pay for it?
IS IT TRUE that after all of these years that started with the admonition by Evansville City Councilman Dr. Dan Adams at the downtown Evansville Rotary Club, Evansville is still one of the only medium sized cities in the nation not to have imposed a smoking ban indoors?…that was cowardice of the highest order and showed a government addiction to tax money from places where smokers gather?…several City Council members over the years have called upon the State of Indiana to bail them out from the albatross of a smoking ban and it has never happened?…perhaps this $2 tax will help?…high taxes on cigarettes have helped reduce smoking everywhere with or without bans and it is about time that Indiana joined the modern world?…our elected officials have hid from this issue like a child hides from a ghost?…the option to save ourselves has been squandered time and time again in the name of keeping the tax dollars flowing and the graveyards growing?
IS IT TRUE that the “GoFundMe” campaign that was raising money to build a wall along the US-Mexico border did not meet its $1 billion goal, meaning the platform will begin refunding donors?
IS IT TRUE it has only been almost 8 years since former Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel proclaimed that a new downtown JW Marriot would be built with no public incentive? …that it never happened? …right after Weinzapfel left office Mayor Winnecke stepped up and made a new downtown Hotel a reality?
IS IT TRUE that were told that Mayor Winnecke gave a $29 million dollar taxpayer funded incentive to an out of town Developer/Builder to build the new downtown Doubletree Hotel? …we are told right after the Hotel was opened the Mayor Winnecke give the keys of the Hotel to the out of town-of-state Developer/Builder without charging him one dollar?
IS IT TRUE we wonder when Evansville Mayor Winnecke and Ivy Tech-Evansville Chancellor Jonathan Wienzapfel are going to publicly demand that newly built IU Medical School will include Ivy Tech 1,500 Medical Tech schools in their plans?  …that the taxpayers Evansville pledged $59 million dollars to insure that the new Downtown IU Medical School will house Ivy Tech Community College Medical Tech students? …could this be called a breach of contract and also a breach of the public trust?
IS IT TRUE that in 2017 DMD purchased two lots located behind Gelhausen Paint on West Iowa street for the grand total of $63,000.00 in exchange for letting the public park on it when this lot was paved? …that this lot is now a first class paved public parking lot that is currently being used to park a Church bus? … we been told that the cost to turned this vacant lot into first class paved public lot to park a church bus costs the taxpayers well over $100,000?
Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Who was the most effective Mayor of Evansville?
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City Council Meeting Agenda For This Evening

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City Council Meeting for January 14, 2019 at 5:30 at the Civic Center 

AGENDA

I. INTRODUCTION

 

Agenda Attachment:
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDUM

 

Memo Attachment:
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS

 

IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

A. NOMINATION & ELECTION OF OFFICERS
B. COMMITTEE CHAIR APPOINTMENTS
C. LIAISON APPOINTMENTS
V. CONSENT AGENDA:  FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

A. ORDINANCE R-2019-01 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 224 Mulberry Street Petitioner: Caron Leader & George Boren Owner: Caron Leader & George Boren Requested Change: R3 to CO1 Ward: 4 Robinson Representative: Julie Bellamy
R-2019-01 Attachment:
VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

VII. REGULAR AGENDA:  SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

A. ORDINANCE F-2018-24 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing  Repeals and Re-Appropriations Within the Department of Metropolitan Development Sponsor(s): Weaver Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 1/14/2019
F-2018-24 Attachment:
B. RESOLUTION C-2018-43 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Ratifying, Confirming, Authorizing and Approving an Agreement Between the City of Evansville and International Association of Firefighters Evansville Local No. 357 Inc. January 1, 2019 through December 31, 2021 Sponsor(s): Mercer Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Weaver 1/14/2019
C-2018-43 Attachment:
VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET

 

IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

 

A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, January, 28, 2019 at 5:30 p.m.
B. 2019 YOUTH GRANT APPLICATIONS are available online at www.evansville.in.gov/youthgrants or during regular office hours in the City Clerk’s Office in Room 314 of the Civic Center.  Application deadline is 5:00 p.m., Friday, February 15, 2019.
C. BOARD AND COMMISSION APPOINTMENTS
D. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
X. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

XI. ADJOURNMENT

Andrew Wilson Appointed to Ivy Tech State Board of Trustees

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Andrew Wilson Appointed to Ivy Tech State Board of Trustees

EVANSVILLE, IN – Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb has appointed Andrew W. Wilson,  president and principal auctioneer/real estate broker of William Wilson Auction & Realty, to the Ivy Tech Community College State Board of Trustees. He will serve a three-year term with the College.

Holding auctioneer and real estate licenses in Indiana and Illinois, Wilson specializes in estate management, assisting with complete solutions during the estate settlement process.  Wilson has earned the prestigious designation of Certified Auctioneers Institute and also holds the Certified Estate Specialist (CES) designation from the National Auctioneers Association. Clients include families, professionals, and major institutions.

He is active in the community, having served on various boards on the local and state level. Currently, Wilson is president of the Board of Directors of the Posey County Economic Development Partnership; a member of the Board of Trustees of the Evansville Museum; Posey County Leader for the Riley Children’s Foundation; a member of the National Auctioneers Association Advocacy Committee; a member of the Board of Directors of the Indiana Auctioneers Association Foundation; and a member of the Board of Directors of Junior Achievement of Southwestern Indiana.

Wilson has been recognized for his business and civic leadership, including a 2007 Governor’s Award for Tomorrow’s Leaders, one of the Evansville Business Journal’s “20 Under 40” in 2011, and Southwest Indiana Chamber’s first “Young Professional of the Year” in 2017. He led the statewide Indiana Auctioneers Association as President in 2012.

“Andrew knows the value of Ivy Tech and its variety of pathways for students. He also understands the workforce development needs in this area and how Ivy Tech is the solution to addressing those needs,” said Jonathan Weinzapfel, chancellor of Ivy Tech Evansville. “We are pleased to have him represent our campus on the State Board of Trustees.”

MEET KAITLIN MOORE MORLEY AT LARGE EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATE

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MEET KAITLIN MOORE MORLEY AT LARGE EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATE

It was a cold, rainy, windy day in Manchester, England and I was homesick for my midwestern American.  I had spent the last three years living abroad and I yearned for a group of people who spoke my language and understood me intrinsically.  I had grown up evangelical and in a fiscally conservative family which lead the Republican party to make sense to me in many ways.  In a moment of supreme homesickness I googled Republicans Abroad and was about to sign up when I noticed the $50 fee.  

Yikes.

As a poor college student that seemed like a lot. I noticed the Democrats Abroad charged zero dollars to join, and as a fiscally responsible woman this began my love affair with a new party.  As I attended events and listened, I began to shift my thinking and grew into a new ideology. I had found my political home.

I was born in Evansville Indiana, the daughter of a banker and a nurse, as American as pumpkin pie.  I was joined a few years later by two brothers whom I would remain close to throughout my adolescence and adulthood.  My dad was adamant in teaching us a good work ethic, kindness, and to take responsibility for our actions.  My mom added a touch of spice, humor, support to everyday life.

I attended FJ Reitz High School as a somewhat studious band member. As I looked toward graduation I felt a strong pull to serve as a missionary, something that had been my dream since I was a young child.  In 2003, at the age of 18, I moved to the Czech Republic and taught English as a Second Language to adult students. I developed an interest in learning other people’s languages, not simply the words, but the cultural and social meanings behind the words.  At the end of the year I was not ready to go home and began to apply to universities throughout Europe.

I moved from the Czech Republic to Spain where I studied Spanish and Sociology and lived in a house with a dozen women from half a dozen different countries.  Yelling in Spanish, English, German, French and a variety of other languages was a part of daily life, and I learned to live and thrive with people of different cultures and religions.

My final European stop was Manchester, England where I completed my undergraduate degree in Anthropology from the University of Manchester.  This was post 9/11 when fear of Islam was high, I had roommates who were Muslim and women of true character, grace and faith.  It was through these women my mind grew.  I began to understand how much I can learn from people who have a different narrative and experience than me. 

The Czech Republic taught me to listen, Spain taught me to embrace, and England taught me to let people different from me to grow me.  

After graduation I returned to the United States and was accepted at Asbury Theological Seminary for a Masters of Divinity degree.  This would fulfill another childhood dream of becoming a minister.  During my time at Asbury I was hired as a youth pastor at Newburgh United Methodist and began my career in ministry.  Since then I have served at Howell United Methodist, Hillside United Methodist and Trinity United Methodist where I am currently an associate pastor of community development.  I had the opportunity to take part in Deaconess’ Chaplain Residency Program where I learned how to minister to all people regardless of background and religious belief.  I spent several years as a chaplain at St Mary’s Medical Center.  

At my core I am a chaplain, I love challenge of listening deeply to people and being present in times of crisis. Being a chaplain has taught me how to be quiet, present, self-assessing, and proactive. 

It was a week before graduating from seminary that I met my husband, Darren.  His work with his family company, Morley Corp (formerly Morley and Associates) moved us to Philadelphia where I met a group of Mennonites that would eventually become my church family.   In the Mennonites my theology and political beliefs met.  Our church was not so interested in what you believed but how you expressed it.  Do you care for the homeless, the immigrant, the downtrodden? Do your words and actions reflect a quiet inward faith? I found myself personally and theological challenged daily I was baptized Mennonite in the spring of 2017.  I continue to be active in the Mennonite church while serving at Trinity.

The Mennonites have taught me how to be humble and develop community. 

These are all factors that have led me to a decision to run for office.  I joked in my twenties that I would leave the politics to people smarter than me.  As I have matured I have learned the truly great leaders are the listeners, the philosophers, the curious, the humble.  I have become determined to be the civic leader I want other people to be.  

People ask me why I am running for office.  I am running because I am passionate about listening to people.  I have spent years listening to people, embracing them, learning from them and problem solving with them.  I am now ready to take these skills to a civic level and be a servant leader in this vibrant and growing city. 

Also, I really like budgets.

Sincerely,

Kaitlin Moore Morley

Candidate For At -Large Seat On The Evansville City Council

FOOTNOTE: We ask Kaitlin to write this article in the first person and we would post it without editing.  We must admit that her article is very  informative. In the published photo are Kaitlin and her husband Darren.

Supreme Court Issues ‘Crushing Blow’ To Exxon In Major Climate Case

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Supreme Court Issues ‘Crushing Blow’ To Exxon In Major Climate Case

The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal from ExxonMobil regarding Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey’s climate change investigation Monday, a decision legal experts called a “crushing blow” to the oil giant. The Court’s decision could have implications beyond the state of Massachusetts as Exxon is forced to hand over documents detailing what it knew about climate change and when.

After the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled last April that the company must turn over documents requested by Healey, Exxon asked the Supreme Court to intervene, arguing Healey lacked jurisdiction to even bring the investigation.

“Today’s decision means Exxon is out of options and out of time in its fight to keep these documents from public light,” Carroll Muffett, president and chief executive of the Center for International Environmental Law, told ThinkProgress.

The company is facing multiple climate lawsuits around the country. In the case of Massachusetts, like New York, the attorney general is investigating what Exxon knew about climate change and the effects of burning fossil fuels — and whether it lied to the public and its investors about the risks.

Reports published in 2015 by InsideClimate News and the Los Angeles Times revealed that the company was aware of the risks of burning fossil fuels as early as the 1970s, and yet continued to mislead investors.

“Courts have repeatedly rejected Exxon’s attempts to stop the state attorneys general in New York and Massachusetts from investigating the company’s historic knowledge about climate change and what it did with that information,” Michael Burger, director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University, told ThinkProgress.

“These internal documents—describing what the company knew and when it knew it—are critical to any fraud case that may result,” Sharon Eubanks, a former U.S. Department of Justice attorney who prosecuted and won the massive racketeering case against Big Tobacco, said. “Without a doubt, ExxonMobil will bring further objections, but the [Court’s] denial… is a crushing blow.”

However, Eubanks, who now works for the firm Bordas & Bordas, added that the Supreme Court’s denial of Exxon’s request does not set a precedent; it doesn’t give an indication as to where different justices sit on the issue, it simply allows the investigation to proceed.

The mere fact that the investigation can move forward “is a tremendous success,” Alyssa Johl, legal counsel for the Center for Climate Integrity, said. “Where it goes from here is to be determined — it depends on what they [Exxon] disclose.”

Legal experts told ThinkProgress that the Supreme Court’s decision has wider implications beyond this particular case.

In its efforts to fight the Massachusetts investigation, Exxon argued to the Supreme Court that it’s an issue of jurisdiction. The company, which is headquartered in Texas, said that because it does not directly sell gasoline in Massachusetts, the attorney general does not have jurisdiction to investigate.

In essence, Exxon tried to argue that its service stations across the state are franchises, and not part of the company itself. And it was this argument that the Massachusetts court rejected earlier in 2018, “on the simple grounds that Exxon’s standard franchise agreement gives the company significant control over how its products were marketed in the state,” said Muffett.

Therefore, Supreme Court’s decision is “basically affirming, for now, the decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court that the AG has jurisdiction over ExxonMobil,” explained Eubanks.

Upholding this decision not only means the case can proceed but hints that other states might be able to look to Massachusetts for inspiration down the road.

“The Massachusetts investigation poses an even bigger risk for the company because the pool of Exxon’s potential victims includes not only the seven million citizens and consumers in Massachusetts but untold tens of millions more living in states with nearly identical consumer protection laws,” Muffett said.

States with similar consumer protection laws to Massachusetts — ones that are based on the Federal Trade Commission Act — include California, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Maine, Ohio, Vermont, and Washington. There are additional states with laws modeled on the Unfair and Deceptive Trade Acts legislation but whose provisions share similar strengths to Massachusetts’ law, Muffett explained, such as Illinois and New Jersey, as well as Washington, D.C.

And as the Massachusetts attorney general’s office lays out online, the impact of Exxon’s action on consumers is at the heart of its investigation: “Specifically, the investigation seeks information regarding whether Exxon may have misled consumers and/or investors with respect to the impact of fossil fuels on climate change, and climate change-driven risks to Exxon’s business.”

While each state is unique, many states do often draw on Massachusetts’ extensive body of jurisprudence interpreting its consumer protection laws. This makes for “another aspect of the Massachusetts case that should be of serious concern for Exxon and its investors,” Muffett said. “Since the court was interpreting Exxon’s standard franchise agreement, it’s very likely that its reasoning would be persuasive if Exxon tries the same defense in any other state where that same standard agreement is in use.”

Indiana Awarded Nearly $7 Million To Support Early Childhood Education

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The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration today announced its Office of Early Childhood and Out-of-School Learning received nearly $7 million in federal grant funding to strengthen the state’s early childhood education system. The grant supports strategic planning and a formal evaluation of Indiana’s birth-through-age-5 early childhood education programs.

The preschool development grant awarded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will help ensure early education is streamlined to best serve Hoosier families and meet Indiana’s workforce needs. Grant outcomes will help further inform and develop Gov. Holcomb’s Next Level agenda goal to expand On My Way Pre-K in 2021.

“This is a wonderful opportunity for Indiana to focus holistically on how to best develop our youngest Hoosiers in a way that propels them toward a successful future,” said Jennifer Walthall, M.D., M.P.H., secretary of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration. “We don’t often get the chance to unify our planning, and this funding allows us to do that.”

When funding is received, FSSA will lead a collaborative needs assessment, strategic planning process and evaluation of existing programs. Goals included in the grant application include improving the overall quality of early childhood education using best practices, assessing gaps in services for low-income Hoosiers and citizens in rural counties, and incentivizing communities to support high-quality programs including strengthening the available workforce of pre-K educators.

The award is a one-year grant with opportunities to apply for additional funding in subsequent years.

JEFF BEZOS DIVORCE

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ADOPT A PET

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