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Aces welcome Illinois State on Hall of Fame Weekend

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Game set for Saturday at 1 p.m.

The University of Evansville men’s basketball team returns for the Ford Center on Saturday to take on Illinois State at 1 p.m. The game will be carried live on ESPN+. It is Hall of Fame weekend with the 1959-60, 1963-64 and 1970-71 National Championship teams being inducted into the UE Athletics Hall of Fame.

 

Setting the Scene

– Evansville is riding some momentum heading into Saturday’s game after earning its first road win of the season at Missouri State on Wednesday

– UE looks to reverse a slide against the Redbirds, who have won the last seven games in the series over the Aces

– It is Hall of Fame weekend at UE as the 1959-60, 1963-64 and 1970-71 National Championship teams will be inducted into the UE Athletics Hall of Fame on Saturday

 

Last Time Out

– A late surge saw the Purple Aces earn a 70-64 win at Missouri State on Wednesday

– UE trailed by five points with 5:28 remaining (54-49), but outscored the Bears by a 21-10 margin over the final minutes of the game to take the win

– K.J. Riley led the team with 16 points and 8 rebounds in 35 minutes of work

– John Hall was 4-4 from the floor and 3-3 from outside on his way to 11 points while Shea Feehan finished with 10

 

Takeaways from Missouri State

– K.J. Riley has now finished in double figures in 10 of the last 12 games; he is 11th in the nation in free throw attempts and 17th in free throw makes

– John Hall matched his career high with three made triples; his tally of 7.11 defensive rebounds per game ranks 27th in the NCAA

– UE hauled in 28 defensive boards and now ranks 15th in the nation with 29.67 per game

– The Aces look to take better care of the ball moving forward; UE has finished with at least 16 turnovers in all five MVC games; the opposition has finished with fewer turnovers in four of those games

– Shea Feehan has reached double figures in three consecutive games, averaging 11.7 points over that span

 

Everyone is a Threat

– “Everyone is a Threat” is the quote used by Coach McCarty and is has shown in the efforts by UE’s walk-ons

– Devan Straub came off the bench to play 10 minutes at Missouri State and hit a huge three that helped the Aces pull off the win

– Straub has played in four games while Jared Chestnut has seen the court on ten occasions

 

Scouting the Opponent

– Illinois State topped Southern Illinois by a 59-58 final on Tuesday to improve to 10-8 overall and 3-2 in Valley play

– Milik Yarbrough paces the Redbirds with 16.5 points and 8.0 rebounds per game; he is a 49.6% shooter and is 39.0% from outside

– Phil Fayne, who led the Redbirds with 20 points in the first meeting against the Aces, checks in with 15.2 points per game

– Zach Copeland rounds out the double figure scorers with 10.7 points per contest

 

Plainfield Attorney Suspended With JLAP Probation

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A Plainfield attorney has been suspended for at least 180 days with two years of probation monitored by the Judges and Lawyers Assistance Program after he accepted retainers from several clients but failed to adequately communicate with or appropriately advance their cases.

Three separate disciplinary complaints were filed In the Matter of Jeffrey B. Cooper, according to an Indiana Supreme Court order.  According to the other’s stipulated facts, the suspension stems from Jeffrey Cooper being retained in six different client representations to handle various matters, including post-death estate administration, property title transfer, drafting of trust and power-of-attorney instruments and applications for benefits from the Veterans Administration.

In each case, Cooper accepted retainers but failed to communicate with his clients and move forward with their cases. In two of the cases, Cooper took actions constituting the practice of law while he was administratively suspended for dues nonpayment and noncompliance with continuing legal education requirements. And in another case, he failed to properly supervise a paralegal to whom he had delegated client work.

Cooper also failed to timely respond to demands for information from the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission regarding the clients’ grievances, leading to the initiation of multiple show cause proceedings against Cooper and a suspension for noncooperation.

In the Thursday order, the high court pointed to Cooper’s pattern of misconduct, his commission of multiple violations and his obstruction of the disciplinary process as aggravating circumstances. However, it also noted Cooper’s lack of prior discipline apart from the show cause proceedings, his early acceptance of responsibility for his noncooperation, his lack of dishonest or selfish motive, his voluntary involvement with JLAP to address factors contributing to his misconduct and his full restitution made to all aggrieved clients were mitigating circumstances.

Ultimately, the justices found Cooper violated eight Indiana Rules of Professional Conduct, including:

  • Rule 1.1
  • Rule 1.3
  • Rule 1.4(a)(2), (3) and (4)
  • Rule 5.3(b)
  • Rule 5.5(a)
  • Rule 8.1(b)

Thus, the justices imposed a 180-day suspension effective Feb. 22, with 60 days actively served and the remainder stayed subject to the completion of at least two years of JLAP-monitored probation.

As a condition of his probation, Cooper must provide the commission with an unlimited and irrevocable authorization and release form, to remain effective for the entirety of his probationary period, allowing JLAP to provide the commission with information regarding his treatment and progress. If Cooper violates the terms of his probation, the stay of his suspension will be vacated and his suspension will be actively served without automatic reinstatement.

Cooper is also barred from undertaking any new legal matters until after the suspension is complete. The costs of the proceedings are assessed against him.

AG Curtis Hill joins event marking one year of TenPoint chapter on Indy’s Far Eastside

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Attorney General Curtis Hill joined community leaders at a press conference marking the first year of operation for a Far Eastside Indianapolis chapter of the TenPoint Coalition, a grass-roots organization committed to reducing urban youth gun violence.

“When we look at the TenPoint Coalition, we see the power of good ideas put into practice,” Attorney General Hill said. “Many people come up with good ideas, but fewer people transform those ideas into action. . . . The men and women of TenPoint are making a true and lasting difference in the lives of people, in the lives of neighborhoods and in the dialogue that’s happening across our state and even across the nation.”

The TenPoint Coalition last year also expanded into the cities of Fort Wayne and Gary.

Rev. Charles Harrison, president of the TenPoint Coalition, expressed gratitude for the many success stories he has witnessed.

“We feel blessed to be able to spread a proven model that saves lives and builds communities,” he said.

Both Attorney General Hill and Rev. Harrison praised local police for developing a productive partnership with the TenPoint Coalition. On hand at today’s event were Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Deputy Chief Josh Barker, Lawrence Police Chief David Hofmann and Lawrence Mayor Steve Collier.

“The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department is committed to partnering with grass-roots groups to address violence and those factors that lead to violence,” Barker said. “We are encouraged by the tremendous effort occurring on the east side of our city to address violence. Groups like TenPoint and many others are an important part of that collaborative citizen/police effort for change.”

Connie Miles was among several Eastside residents attending today’s press conference. In 2014, her 25-year-old son, Derrick, died after being shot. After his death, Miles got involved with TenPoint.

“In TenPoint, I found a new family,” she said. “We listen to what people have to say. We listen to people’s problems and we try to help whoever we can help. In the process, we’re working to stop the violence and stop the crime.”

In addition to today’s press conference, the TenPoint Coalition also plans a training event at 6 p.m. this evening at Barnes United Methodist Church, 900 W. 30th St., Indianapolis. It will include representatives from Gary, Fort Wayne and Indianapolis.

ADOPT A PET

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Willow is a 2-year-old female Bullmastiff mix. She was transferred to VHS from Evansville Animal Care & Control when they were out of space. She weighs 60 lbs. Her adoption fee is $110 and includes her spay, microchip, and vaccines. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!

 

USI Cheer Team To Compete At Nationals This Weekend

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The University of Southern Indiana Cheer Team is set to compete at the 2019 UCA & UDA College Cheerleading and Dance Team National Championships Saturday at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida.

Under the direction of sixth-year Head Coach Shane Wycoff, the Screaming Eagles will be sending 16 student-athletes to compete in the prelims of the All-Girl Division I semifinals, which will take place around Noon (CST).

The Eagles must finish in the top 50 percent of the prelims to advance to the finals, which will be held Saturday evening. Live coverage will be available on Varsity TV.

USI, which finished second at the event in 2014, posted a seventh-place finish in All-Girl Division I competition a year ago.

“READERS FORUM” JANUARY 19, 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: Do you think that the Republicans will take control of the Evansville City Council in 2019?

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

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.

Black Southerners Are Bearing the Brunt of America’s Eviction Epidemic

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ATLANTA — On a brisk morning in mid-December, Valencia Hicks was running late to the Fulton County courthouse in hopes of avoiding eviction.

The 43-year-old mother had been forced out of her home the year before, a process that had uprooted her family from their apartment in East Point, Georgia. At her new brick split-level, Hicks decided not to pay her $995 monthly rent because her landlord hadn’t adequately fixed broken appliances, preventing the family from enjoying affordable home-cooked meals. The landlord, in turn, filed for eviction.

Like most tenants facing eviction in Fulton County, Hicks is African-American and lacked a lawyer. She planned to tell the judge about her family’s hardships. Not only did she have a disability, reliant on government checks for rent, but she also was raising two boys who each had autism.

Without a favorable ruling, a landlord could move forward with padlocking the door and placing their items on the curb. If she was lucky, she might get her wish of celebrating Christmas there.

A long understudied facet of the American housing market, evictions have hit no area of the country harder than the South, a region home to most of the top-evicting large and mid-sized U.S. cities, according to a list released by Princeton’s Eviction Lab.

Last year Eviction Lab debuted what’s thought to be the nation’s largest eviction database, revealing that U.S. property owners had submitted at least 2.3 million eviction filings in 2016. For housing experts from Louisiana to Virginia, it provided the evidence to confirm what they long suspected: Black renters disproportionately bore the brunt of the eviction crisis.

Eviction Lab found that nine of the 10 highest-evicting large U.S. cities were not only located in the South but also had populations that were at least 30 percent black.

Moreover, the top 25 entries in its ranking of mid-sized cities — including East Point, pop. 35,000 — experienced an eviction rate at least four times higher than the national average of 2.3 percent.

“If you’ve read about the housing crisis, it seems located in New York and San Francisco, but the eviction crisis is happening in cities with a fairly low cost of living like North Charleston, South Carolina, and Tulsa, Oklahoma,” said Matthew Desmond, a professor of sociology at Princeton and the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book Evicted.

“There’s a lot of questions left unanswered, but the data allows us to see the problem in a way we’d never seen it before,” Desmond said. “That’s allowed the narrative to change in some communities.”

As some southern legislatures kick off their 2019 sessions this month, many state lawmakers are considering a new slate of bills to curb the larger affordable housing crisis. Following the launch of Eviction Lab’s database, local advocates intend to further raise awareness of the consequences of eviction, a process that can start with a single missed rent payment.

Not only do evicted people face barriers to new housing, studies suggest evictions also are linked to worse health and educational outcomes, according to research respectively from Desmond and the Urban Institute. With evictions often clustered in lower-income black neighborhoods, entire communities can face the fallout of a churn of new neighbors that severs close-knit social networks.

This status quo is often protected and nurtured by politicians and property owners. Landlords in Mississippi routinely file for eviction as a legal way to collect rent, according to an investigation last year by Mississippi Today.

Meanwhile, some lawmakers in the Republican-controlled Georgia statehouse have stymied proposals to strengthen tenant rights.

From 2012 to 2016, Republican state Rep. Wendell Willard, then the chairman of the influential House Judiciary Committee, received at least $30,000 from various companies with ties to the housing industry, based on a Stateline review of campaign contributions. No bill to bolster tenant rights advanced out of his committee.

The former chairman of the Georgia Senate Judiciary Committee, Republican Josh McKoon, didn’t grant a hearing to a bill that would have forced landlords to fix “unsafe or unhealthy conditions” in rental units such as mold growth, pest infestation and tainted water.

McKoon says the committee under his leadership granted hearings to any lawmaker who requested one, but that lawmakers sometimes file legislation “to have a broader conversation” about an issue.

“We try to give judges a fair amount of discretion,” said Willard, who said campaign contributions had no influence on his decision-making on the issue. “I think we have a pretty good body of law in Georgia that’s been developed over many decades on dispossessory. But if something needs to be changed, we try to change it.”

Armed with data and heightened public awareness, in part thanks to Desmond’s book Evictedreleased two years ago, some housing advocates are pursuing changes in law with a renewed energy to decrease evictions, increase affordable housing and reduce disparities that exist for black renters in the South.

While eviction rates have spiked in states like South Carolina, according to Eviction Lab data, Georgia and Virginia have seen their rates trend downward since the Great Recession.

But if the federal government shutdown lasts much longer, housing experts fear evictions could spike nationwide because landlords who rent to low-income tenants might not be able to get rental assistance from the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

“Evictions are both a consequence of cumulative forces of poverty — and black poverty — and a cause of it,” said Dan Immergluck, an urban studies professor at Georgia State University. “Evictions hurt folks in all kinds of ways. Because evictions are concentrated in black neighborhoods, it impacts whole communities.”

Higher Rents, More Evictions

Evictions are the latest in a long line of housing policies that have disproportionately harmed black Americans. Over the past century, well-documented discriminatory practices like redlining, restrictive covenants and predatory lending have denied black people the opportunity to buy homes.

Discouraged from homeownership — and the accompanying wealth-building benefits — many black people rented instead. In 2015, the African-American homeownership rate was about 42 percent, more than 20 points lower than the rate for all groups, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. But a 2018 study found that black people are more likely to pay higher rents than white people in the same areas.

And a Cleveland State University researcher surveying rental agreement laws found that no southern state had a suite of laws protecting tenants over landlords.

This City Wants to Reverse Segregation by Reviving Neighborhoods

Every week, attorney Jesse McCoy sees this play out inside eviction court in Durham, North Carolina. The tenants, he said, are mostly black. Many make honest pleas to a judge about their life’s circumstances — which almost always lack legal standing.

McCoy thinks many of those same tenants would have legitimate grievances, from roach infestations to black mold, that might yield a favorable outcome. But without consulting counsel, he said, they rarely raise legal arguments.

“If you don’t understand rights, you can’t advocate for yourself,” said Sue Berkowitz, director of the SC Appleseed Legal Justice Center, an organization that helps clients in South Carolina, a state with an eviction rate of 8.9 percent, nearly four times the national average.

Housing attorneys throughout the South think that tenants facing an eviction case could have better outcomes in court if they were guaranteed the right to counsel — a right now ensured in select cities such as New York.

“An eviction — even a filing — follows you around,” said Elora Raymond, an assistant professor of city planning and real estate development at Clemson University. “If you get evictions filed against you in Georgia, and move to California, you still have that history.

“If that’s happening more in South Carolina or Georgia,” she said, referring to two states with high percentages of black residents, “and less in Montana or Colorado — there’s a racial implication.”

Virginia Poverty Law Center attorney Christine Marra said tenants who have had rental applications denied are less likely to find safe or affordable housing.

In some cases, those renters often can find housing only farther from where they lived before, potentially impacting other family issues, such as a child’s academic performance. And health care researchers have found that evictions are linked to higher rates of depression, stress and suicide.

Garland Nellom, a 51-year-old mother of three who faced eviction in New Jersey, said she moved to Georgia four years ago after her youngest son, who had asthma and an allergy to the mold she later discovered in their apartment, died. He was 11 years old. Nellom found an apartment in College Park, Georgia, for $745 a month.

Soon, she noticed problems including rodents and mold. She withheld her rent in protest — a practice that in some northeastern and western states can be done legally to force serious repairs from a neglectful landlord, but in Georgia can be grounds for eviction. Her landlord took legal action.

They ultimately settled the dispute, thanks to a lawyer Nellom had secured through the Atlanta Volunteer Lawyers Foundation, and she stayed. This past summer she left for good upon finding exposed wire in her laundry room, which had flooded once again. Given her spotty housing record, landlords wanted her to pay a higher security deposit, which she was unable to do living on disability.

“I was fearful I was going to die,” she said. “I had nowhere to go — nowhere. I put my name on homeless shelter lists. They were full. I had neighbors gracious enough to let me stay.”

Faced with the scope of the eviction crisis, advocates are lobbying for changes to address housing disparities throughout the South.

In North Carolina, McCoy has helped oversee Durham’s eviction diversion program, which pairs Duke law students with unrepresented tenants facing eviction.

South Carolina state Rep. Marvin Pendarvis, a Democrat from North Charleston, is pushing a bill to approve “repair and deduct,” a practice allowed in many states, in which tenants front the costs of repairs if a landlord doesn’t fix the issue, and deduct that amount from a future rent payment.

And in Virginia, which is home to some of the nation’s highest eviction rates, a coalition of lawyers, researchers and activists last year launched the Campaign to Reduce Evictions.

The group has drafted more than 30 proposed changes that would make it easier for tenants to understand the court process for evictions, increase tenant legal rights trainings, pump $20 million into the state’s housing trust fund and expand the state’s low-income housing tax credit.

In response to news reports about Virginia’s high evictions rate, National Apartment Association President Robert Pinnegar recently claimed that “misunderstandings” about evictions have unfairly cast landlords in a negative light.

“Apartment owners do not target evictions for any group or reason,” he wrote in a letter to the Washington Post. “Evictions are a last resort in the rental housing business.”

Housing advocates further recognize that changes can only be effective if they also address the shortage of affordable housing affecting many southern cities.

Some officials have recognized the need: Atlanta Democratic Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms has vowed to put $1 billion toward more affordable housing. But low-income housing developers say additional funds or tax credits are needed to build new units.

Policies like inclusionary zoning — requiring developers to make a fixed percentage of rental units affordable in new developments — have received a mixed reception across the South.

“Don’t just build new affordable housing,” Immergluck said. “States and localities need to think about creating their own voucher program that might focus on particular populations like families with kids. I don’t see southern states funding a permanent voucher program. Maybe it’s short term.”

Short of a universal housing voucher program, something that Desmond has called for, the Princeton professor thinks states could reduce evictions by making smaller policy changes, such as providing additional legal support, wraparound services, short-term financial assistance or better record keeping.

“We might have a referendum on housing in 2020 — and we haven’t had that in a long time,” Desmond said. “I do think we’re in a moment where we could ask for something ambitious.”

Until tenant rights and affordable housing supplies improve, many experts say black southerners like Hicks will remain vulnerable to eviction. Hicks showed up over 30 minutes late to her Dec. 18 court date. Weary and worried, she said she experienced more traffic than usual.

In a letter to the judge, Hicks explained that she hadn’t slept well because one of her autistic sons had tried to open the upstairs windows of their house late that night. But the judge, offering no explanation, denied Hicks’ request to stay longer in her brick split-level.

According to court records, Hicks’ landlord could have filed for a writ of possession immediately to regain possession of the house. So Hicks called apartment complexes and family members hours away in case she needed to relocate fast.

She desperately wanted a place nearby to keep her boys in the same special-needs program at Banneker High School. But no one she called had immediate availability. She felt disheartened.

“Evictions shouldn’t hurt you after the eviction,” she said. “The laws are more for the landlords and rental companies than the tenants. It’s hurting people. It’s hurting us.”

The day after New Year’s, Hicks was finishing up packing her house, thankful the county marshals hadn’t yet been called to place her possessions on the curb. Her landlord had let her stay through the holidays, but wanted her out in just a few days’ time. She didn’t know where her family would go next. But one thing was certain: She couldn’t stay there.

Senate Committee Wants More Recent Child Fatality Data

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Senate Committee Wants More Recent Child Fatality Data

By Emily Ketterer
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Lawmakers want the Department of Child Services to provide them with more recent data and in greater detail about the deaths of children statewide.

Members of the Senate Family and Children Services committee said Monday they are concerned with outdated fatality data reported by DCS used to support Senate Bill 170. The bill, authored by Sen. Jean Leising, R-Oldenburg, would require DCS to report whether a child death occurred within a foster home or after the child was returned to their biological parents.

The state releases data on child fatalities every year, but Leising said it does not clearly specify whether a child  was in the care of DCS with foster parents or under the supervision of their biological was in the care of DCS with foster parents or under the supervision of their biological was in the care of DCS with foster parents or under the supervision of their biological was in the care of DCS with foster parents or under the supervision of their biological parents.was in the care of DCS with foster parents or under the supervision of their biological parents.

She cited data from the state’s most recent annual child fatality report, filed in September 2018, which reported 59 total deaths due to abuse or neglect in 2016 — a decrease from 77 deaths in 2015.

Sen. Erin Houchin, R-Salem, supported the bill, but said she is concerned with the gap of time between when DCS reports child fatalities and when they actually occurred. The data is released two years after the death. For example, 2015 data was released in July 2017.

Houchin said she isn’t sure how the legislature can react as policymakers while looking at data from two to three years ago.

“I don’t think it’s acceptable at all that our data is from 2016, and that’s the most current information we have,” Houchin said.

The concern comes from not knowing within a reasonable time if deaths are increasing or decreasing, Houchin said. She proposed adding a reporting deadline for DCS to file the number of fatalities. Leising said she was also surprised by the two-to three-year gap in the data.

DCS did not appear to testify at the committee meeting Monday. Kristi Cundiff, CEO of the Indiana Foster and Adoptive Parents advocacy group, testified in support of the bill, calling on lawmakers to hold DCS accountable.

“We can’t wait and get results down the road,” Cundiff said.“We have way too many children that are dying because of lack of accountability and lack of follow-up.”

SB 170 passed the Senate Family and Children Services committee unanimously Monday. Leising said she plans to talk to DCS about adding an amendment to the bill that would create a reporting deadline.

“I don’t want to see any child die in Indiana,” Leising said. “I just want to make sure we’re doing everything we can to protect kids that live in vulnerable situations.”

The committee also heard Senate Bill 258 Monday. The bill, authored by Sen. Frank Mrvan, D-Hammond, would ban registered sex offenders from providing individual childcare services.

Mrvan said he realized this was not covered in existing Indiana law when a registered sex offender in his district publicized his own babysitting service.

Current law prevents sexually violent predators from working for a childcare company, but not from running an individual business. The bill would add language to prohibit registered sex offenders from providing their own childcare services.

“When I heard of [the advertisement], I thought it was the most horrible thing in the world,” Mrvan said.

SB 258 also passed unanimously. Both bills will go the Senate for action.

FOOTNOTE: Emily Ketterer is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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