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“READERS FORUM” JANUARY 13, 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? 

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Who was the most effective Mayor of the Evansville?

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Footnote: City-County Observer Comment Policy. Be kind to people. No personal attacks or harassment will not be tolerated and shall be removed from our site.
We understand that sometimes people don’t always agree and discussions may become a little heated.  The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site.
Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City-County Observer or our advertisers.

Evansville Water and Sewer Utilities Acquires Park At 4th And Main Street For $450,000

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City of Evansville Press Release

(In February 2018 The Prior Sale Purchase Price Was $104,000)

One of the key components of the Evansville Downtown Master Plan Update is moving forward with the installation of fencing around the park at 4th and Main streets. Fence Pros began enclosing the astro turf covered park today to ensure public safety and in preparation for site work this winter to stabilize the infrastructure and remediate possible issues underground.

The park property was acquired from a private owner this year by the Evansville Water & Sewer Utility as part of a land exchange with the Evansville Department of Parks and Recreation for Sunrise Park on Water Works Road. Sunrise Park, where Kids Kingdom playground is located, is adjacent to the East Side Waste Water Treatment facility on land that is needed to comply with federally mandated sewer infrastructure improvements.

The Master Plan Update envisions a “thriving Main Street” as the “core of downtown” that can become more active and vital with the addition of local and independent retail shops and restaurants. The park at 4th and Main streets will serve as an anchor and focal point for activities.

“The first step is to make sure the area is safe and then prepare the site,” said Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke. Next, the Parks Department will work with the downtown Economic Improvement District to develop more specific plans for the green space.

FOOTNOTE: Attached below are three links that gives you an idea on the entire transactions Of The 4th And Main Street Park. We wonder how the 4th and Main Park increased in value by $346,000 in just 7 Years.

https://wiky.com/news/articles/2017/mar/16/park-at-4th-and-main-listed-for-sale/

https://www.courierpress.com/story/news/2018/12/02/evansville-acquires-astroturf-covered-main-street-park/2182773002/

http://www.vanderburghassessor.org/Default.aspx?PID=82-06-30-020-027.002-029

 

 

 

ETFCU Returns Nearly $4 Million To Members Via Checking Account Programs

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Evansville Teachers Federal Credit Union paid out nearly $4 million to its members through consumer checking counts alone in 2018.

The $3,797,732 returned to members through ETFCU’s premier checking accounts represent a 61 percent increase over the 2017 total. That included a return of 3% APY on balances of up to $20,000 for members who use Vertical Checking (up from a maximum of $15,000 in 2017); reward points on debit card purchases plus bonus ScoreCard reward points each month to Platinum Rewards Checking members, who can redeem for brand-name merchandise, travel, gift cards and more; and ATM-fee reimbursement anywhere worldwide up to $15 on both accounts.

“Our mission is to provide the best value for our members,” ETFCU President and CEO Bill Schirmer wrote in a letter to members. “We do this through innovative products and services that provide real benefits on a monthly basis.”

Members received $2,299,956 in interest on Vertical Checking, $1,099,583 in redeemable points for Platinum Rewards Checking, and $393,193 in ATM-fee reimbursements.

ETFCU, which was recognized as Best in State for Banking and Credit Unions by Forbes in 2018, has grown to more than 205,000 members with assets of $1.8 billion. Schirmer was honored with the Indiana Credit Union League’s Professional Achievement Award in 2018, marking a first for an Evansville-based credit union leader.

The credit union operates six offices in Evansville, along with Indiana locations in Fort Branch, Mount Vernon, Newburgh, Princeton and Vincennes, and Kentucky locations in Henderson and Owensboro (2). An office will open in Washington, Indiana, in the spring. 

For more information about ETFCU and its programs, go to etfcu.org. 

FJ Reitz High School Boosters Plan Two 100th Anniversary Events

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FJ Reitz High School Big Blue Boosters continues its leadership of the school’s historic 100th anniversary commemoration.  This winter two events are planned.
On Tuesday, February 15, at Willard Library Conference Room, from 6 until 7:45 pm, Boosters are hosting a panel discussion on integration at FJ Reitz.  The period covered will be the 1950s through the mid 1980s with personal reflection.  Moderator will be retired educator Patricia Wisdom. Audience comment time is allowed.  The event is free, but hosts request registration through Facebook.Events. https://www.facebook.com/events
/2226701147594713/
On Saturday, March 16, in FJ Reitz Big Blue Boosters will host a 100th anniversary Re-dedication Brunch in the school cafeteria. Doors open at 10 am.  Brunch is served at 10:30, priced at $12.  History tours of the school will be offered and an exhibit of memorabilia.  Retired teachers are especially sought and encouraged to attend.  The event is ADA accessible. Tickets can be obtained by calling Ann Ennis at 812 483-5671.
Big Blue Boosters is a 35-year-old non-profit supporting extracurricular activities at FJ Reitz High School.  In the last 10 years alone the group has raised and donated more than a quarter million dollars for student programs and teams. Since 2015, Big Blue has assumed a mantle of leadership for the school’s 2018-2019 100th anniversary events and fund campaign. For information on the Century Campaign and Big Blue Boosters, see www.fjreitzbigblueboosters.org

Daily Scriptures for the Week of January 13, 2019

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MONDAY

For we know that when this earthly tent we live in is taken down (that is, when we die and leave this earthly body), we will have a house in heaven, an eternal body made for us by God himself and not by human hands.
‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:1‭‭NLT‭

TUESDAY
We grow weary in our present bodies, and we long to put on our heavenly bodies like new clothing.
‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:2‭‭NLT‭

WEDNESDAY
For we will put on heavenly bodies; we will not be spirits without bodies. While
we live in these earthly bodies, we groan‭and‭sigh,‭but‭it’s‭not‭that‭we‭want‭to‭die‭and get rid of these bodies that clothe us. Rather, we want to put on our new bodies so that these dying bodies will be swallowed up by life.‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:3-4‭‭NLT‭
‭
THURSDAY
God himself has prepared us for this, and as a guarantee he has given us his Holy Spirit.”
‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:5‭‭NLT‭

FRIDAY
So we are always confident, even though we know that as long as we live in these bodies we are not at home with the Lord. For we live by believing and not by seeing.
‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:6-7‭‭NLT‭

SATURDAY
Yes, we are fully confident, and we would rather be away from these earthly bodies, for then we will be at home with the Lord. So whether we are here in this body or away from this body, our goal is to please him.
‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:8-9‭‭NLT‭

SUNDAY
For we must all stand before Christ to be judged. We will each receive whatever we deserve for the good or evil we have done in this earthly body.‭2‭Corinthians‭‭5:10‭‭NLT‭

Submitted to the City-County Observer by Karen Seltzer

Bar groups oppose grandparent visitation bill

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Senate Judiciary Committee is pumping the brakes on a bill that would allow grandparents and great-grandparents to seek visitation with their grandchildren despite estrangements with the children’s parents, with two notable Indiana bar association groups speaking out against the proposed legislation.

Committee chairman Sen. Randy Head declined to call for a vote on Senate Bill 106 when committee members gathered for their first meeting of the 2019 Legislative Session on Wednesday. The issue, Head said, was that the Indiana State Bar Association had expressed “significant concerns” about the family law legislation. Additionally, the Indianapolis Bar Association sent a representative to Wednesday’s meeting to publicly testify against SB 106 on behalf of the Family Law Section.

Senate Bill 106, authored by Sen. Lonnie Randolph, D-East Chicago, would expand Indiana Code section 31-17-5-1 to allow grandparents to petition for visitation if meaningful contact between the children and grandparents has existed, “but, as a result of an estrangement between the parent of the child and the grandparent or great-grandparent, the parent of the child terminated the child’s visits with the grandparent or great-grandparent.” Existing law only allows grandparents to seek visitation if a parent is deceased, the parents are divorced or the child was born out of wedlock, with some exceptions.

Additionally, the bill would extend existing grandparent visitation rights to great-grandparents.

“The key thing in the bill dealt with ‘meaningful contact,’” Randolph told Indiana Lawyer.  “… The courts have discretion, and it was hard and difficult to get people to see that when you have an issue like that and the courts take over, judges in their good judgment will utilize their discretion to see what’s in the best interests of the child.”

Former Senate Judiciary Committee chair Brent Steele filed similar legislation in 2010, but the bill did not become law.

Similar concerns have been revived nine years later with Randolph’s bill. In an email to Indiana Lawyer, Katharine Vanost Jones, chair of the ISBA’s Family Law Council, said the council unanimously voted to oppose the legislation for three reasons:

  • The bill conflicts with the decision in Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 120 S. Ct. 254 (2000);
  • The bill “appears to allow grandparents and great grandparents to intervene in intact families,” and;
  • The bill “expands the number of people who have standing to request visitation, diluting the amount of time a non-custodial parent has with the child.”

Likewise, Thomas Green, immediate past president of IndyBar’s Family Law Section, said the legislation would give grandparents standing to potentially disrupt the lives of children who are already appropriately cared for. He further noted that custody disputes could expand from two parents to as many as eight people if every great-grandparent is alive and petitions for visitation.

The net effect of SB 106, Green said, would be to choke the court system and divest parents of their ability to control their children’s influences and raising.

But in his presentation of the bill to the committee, Randolph painted a very different picture – one of a family in which the children are being used as pawns to force grandparents to comply with parents’ demands.

Those situations were the inspiration of Steele’s 2010 bill, Randolph said, recounting the story of one of Steele’s clients being denied visitation with their grandchildren because the grandparents would not give the parents money. Randolph said he, too, has had clients encounter similar situations.

Through SB 106, those grandparents would have standing to petition for visitation despite their poor relationship with the children’s parents. That would be especially important for grandparents who raise their grandchildren for a time before the parents decide to cut off contact.

In response to Green’s testimony, Randolph said he took issue with the fact that the bar associations weren’t viewing his legislation as he did, through the lens of children being used as bargaining chips. Committee chair Head responded by saying he understood the issue engendered passion from both sides, which is why he wanted to hold the bill before calling for a vote.

Tempers flared at one point during the hearing after the testimony of Ron Mitchell, a veterinarian who spoke on the bill. While Mitchell had some concerns about the legislation, he said personal experience led to his support of the estrangement provision.

But at one point during his testimony, Mitchell announced that he had learned that some lawmakers have daughters named Michelle. He asked those lawmakers to consider a situation in which Michelle died, her children were adopted and the adoptive parents would not allow grandparent visitation.

Mitchell continued with that example for several minutes, referencing specific lawmakers and their daughters named Michelle on multiple occasions. At the conclusion of Mitchell’s testimony, Sen. Jim Buck angrily said he had never heard of a witness being permitted to use lawmakers’ family members as examples during testimony.

“They don’t know our family dynamics,” Buck said.

Head responded by apologizing to Buck and all committee members, saying he should have put a stop to that portion of Mitchell’s testimony. Mitchell attempted to respond to Buck’s comments, but Head would not allow him to speak again, as his testimony had already concluded.

SB 106 was originally scheduled to come back before the committee at its next meeting on Jan. 16. However, as of Friday, the bill had been removed from next week’s Judiciary Committee agenda.

State court suit aims to ban Indiana death penalty

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A lawsuit naming Gov. Eric Holcomb filed on behalf of a prisoner on Indiana’s death row urges a state court to issue an injunction halting capital punishment and rule that the state’s ultimate criminal penalty violates the Indiana Constitution.

The suit was filed Tuesday in LaPorte Superior Court, which has jurisdiction over the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City. The prison houses Indiana death row and the state’s lethal injection chamber.

Fort Wayne attorney David Frank filed the suit on behalf of inmate Roy Lee Ward, who is on death row at Michigan City after he was convicted in 2001 of the rape and mutilation killing of 15-year-old Stacy Payne in Spencer County.

Spokespeople for Holcomb and Attorney General Curtis Hill, whose office would represent the Department of Correction and presumably the governor’s office in this litigation, did not immediately respond Friday to email messages seeking comment.

The Indiana Supreme Court in June 2012 affirmed Ward’s sentence, but his execution was stayed by a federal judge later that same year. While Ward faces no execution date after almost two decades on death row, the complaint filed Tuesday contends that no other death row inmates do, either, and that the death penalty is arbitrary and capricious. The suit argues Indiana should follow the lead of other states including Illinois, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin that have outlawed the death penalty.

“In 2018, the Supreme Court of the State of Washington unanimously declared the use of capital punishment to be unconstitutional under its state constitution,” the complaint says. Washington, where eight people are on death row, had not carried out an execution since 2010.

Similarly, Indiana has not carried out an execution since 2009, the complaint says, and the state has nine death row inmates — seven of whom, including Ward, are under an active sentence of death.

Ward’s suit attacks the death penalty on four Indiana Constitution grounds, contending it violates:

• The equal protection clause of Article 1, Section 1;

• Article 1, Section 15, which holds that no one “confined in jail, shall be treated with unnecessary rigor”;

• Article 1, Section 16, barring cruel and unusual punishment, and;

• Article 1, Section 18, declaring the state’s penal code “shall be founded on the principles or reformation, and not of vindictive justice.”

Frank contends the state’s only rationale for the death penalty is “vindictiveness and vengeance,” in violation of Section 18.

“Hopefully the state will take notice that the use and implementation of capital punishment in Indiana has become arbitrary and capricious,” he said Friday in a telephone interview. “There has been no execution in 10 years, and the number of men on death row is now in single digits.”

Frank said the suit is not about relitigating the guilt of the inmates. If the death sentence were ruled unconstitutional, death sentences would be commuted to life in prison without parole. Senate Bill 301, introduced in the Indiana General Assembly by Sen. Lonnie Randolph, D-East Chicago, would do just that, along with abolishing the death penalty.

“Certainly, we acknowledge all of them were convicted of very serious offenses, but I think the average and reasonable person could ask the state, ‘Why them?’” Frank said of the inmates on death row. “… We don’t know what the state will use to execute people, and we don’t know who they will execute. … When the state offers no legitimate explanation for its use, it’s time to get rid of it.”

The suit also comes as the Department of Correction is on the defensive in court cases seeking information about drugs it could use to carry out a lethal injection.

DOC has not publicly identified a lethal injection protocol it would use in the event an execution were ordered. The Indiana General Assembly in 2017 slipped last-minute language into the budget bill known as “the secrecy statute.” Among other things, that language forbid anyone in the supply chain of lethal injection drugs from disclosing what those drugs are.

That language undermined a judge’s order requiring DOC to make public certain information about drugs and substances it had on-hand that could be used in a lethal injection. Marion Circuit Judge Sheryl Lynch in November struck down the secrecy statute on First Amendment and multiple other constitutional grounds.

Separately, the Indiana Supreme Court in February 2018 ruled DOC did not need to go through public rulemaking in developing a lethal injection protocol in another case Frank brought on Ward’s behalf. The Indiana Court of Appeals had previously ruled DOC was not exempt from public rulemaking processes under the Administrative Rules and Procedure Act.

The case challenging the constitutionality of the Indiana death penalty before LaPorte Superior Court 2 Judge Richard Stalbrink is Roy Ward v. Gov. Eric Holcomb, et al., 46D02-1901-PL-69.