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Two Key Projects Of Vectren’s Smart Energy Future Strategy Now Live

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Customers Now Receiving Solar Energy Through Vectren’s First Universal Solar Projects

Vectren Chairman, President and CEO Carl Chapman joined the City of Evansville Tuesday afternoon to officially open two universal solar farms in Vanderburgh County. One of the 2-megawatt (MW) solar arrays is located near Oak Hill Cemetery on Morgan Ave. and is the result of a partnership with the City of Evansville through which the energy company will lease the City’s land. The other project, also 2 MWs, is located on Highway 41 near North High School. That facility will also include battery storage with the ability to discharge 1 MW per hour over a four-hour period.

“These are the very first solar projects in our electric generation portfolio, and it’s exciting to be able to officially say that the sun is now powering a piece of southwestern Indiana through Vectren’s generation fleet,” said Chapman. “We are grateful for the opportunity to join the City of Evansville in bringing universal solar energy to Vectren customers. These projects – combined with existing wind energy agreements and our plan to build a 50-MW universal solar farm in Spencer County – help demonstrate our desire to create a more balanced energy mix in how we generate electricity.”

Each solar farm consists of approximately 8,000 ground-mounted fixed-tilt solar panels on 15 acres. Combined, the 4 MWs of generation will supply enough renewable energy to power more than 800 homes each year.

“We are proud to be able to partner with Vectren in bringing clean energy sources to our City and the surrounding region,” said Winnecke. “This partnership allows both entities to respond positively to the public’s interest in local solar energy production, and we are thrilled to host one of the solar arrays within our city limits.”

The 4 MW’s of solar and the planned 50-MW facility, which should be fully operational in the fall of 2020, are expected to generate enough power to meet the needs of more than 12,000 households per year. When including Vectren’s 80 MW of wind power purchased through contracts with Benton County wind farms and its 3.2-MW landfill gas facility in Pike County, there will be enough renewable energy in Vectren’s portfolio to power more than 35,000 homes, or nearly 25 percent of Vectren’s residential customers.

The solar projects are part of Vectren’s Smart Energy Future strategy, which includes electric generation fleet diversification by adding natural gas and renewables, grid modernization projects, smart energy management tools for customers, and the utility’s ongoing gas system infrastructure modernization efforts. Customers can learn more atwww.vectren.com/SmartEnergyFuture.

Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – South delivers electricity to approximately 145,000 customers in all or portions of Gibson, Dubois, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick counties.

 

 

Old Properties in Evansville Receive New Owners

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Old Properties in Evansville Receive New Owners

The City of Evansville has plans to sell the former CVS property at 800 North Main Street and have approved the sale of the garage in the 400 Block of Locust Street.

The North Maine Street location is being leased to Davita Dialysis Center and the purchase of the property will need to honor the current lease. After the renovation on North Main Street this year, the city decided that the property should be put into private hands.

Five of six parties have expressed interest in the property.

The location on Locust Street was purchase by Evansville Health Reality, the organization that owns the properties of the downtown medical school. The garage will additional parking for the medical school and will be a public garage after 5:0PM on weekdays and weekends.

Plans include a pedestrian bridge connecting the garage to the soon-to-be-built Deaconess building.

 

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Indiana Forward Wants To Make 2019 The Year A Hate Crime Law Passes

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Indiana Forward Wants To Make 2019 The Year A Hate Crime Law Passes

By Erica Irish
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—There’s little doubt the hate crimes discussion in Indiana will dominate conversation through the next legislative session.

And a coalition of several hundred state business leaders and interest groups want to see to it that lawmakers do more than talk by upping the pressure on them to finalize a bill that better defines and punishes bias crimes.

Earlier in December, the United Way of Central Indiana announced the coalition as the Indiana Forward movement, a campaign designed to lobby for a bias crimes bill in 2019. The self-described “broad and bipartisan group” encompasses voices from the state’s faith communities, colleges and universities, nonprofits, employers and more.

 

Mike Leppert, who serves as Indiana Forward’s campaign manager, and Mindi Goodpaster, United Way of Central Indiana’s vice president of public policy, are championing the effort, which includes support from the likes of Indiana giants Eli Lilly and Company, Salesforce Inc. and Cummins Inc. Its executive committee is dotted with names from the Indiana Youth Group, the Muslim Alliance of Indiana and the state’s American Civil Liberties Union.

Leppert said Tuesday the coalition is pushing for specific language in the law that would protect people targeted on the basis of their race, ethnicity, religion, national origin, sex, disability, gender identity or sexual orientation and that would push courts to further consider sentence aggravators or enhancements in such crimes. The group views these elements as “non-negotiable,” he added.

A sentence aggravator would allow a judge to increase the severity of a sentence within a certain crime classification. This is determined if more than half of the evidence indicates an underlying motive, such as attacking a person because of their race.

Sentence enhancements are similar but allow the crime to be charged at a higher level, such as moving a charge from a Level 1 felony to a Level 2 felony. Such a decision must be determined beyond a reasonable doubt.

Indiana currently provides a definition for bias crimes in general terms, noting any crime in which a person, group of people or property was harmed or damaged due to its association with a “color, creed, disability, national origin, race, religion, or sexual orientation,” granting those involved in the judicial system a basis to determine aggravating factors.

The Indiana Supreme Court also determined in a 2003 case, Witmer v. State, that judges can consider a victim’s characteristics to justify an enhanced sentence. In this case, the court determined a murder victim, 17-year-old Sasezly Richardson, was targeted because she was black and used this conclusion to justify a longer sentence for the perpetrator, Alex Witmer.

Sen. Mike Young, R-Indianapolis, and former Senate President Pro Tem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, used this ruling and Indiana courts’ virtually limitless power in considering case evidence as justification for blocking last session’s hate crimes bill, which never received a vote.

While Leppert agreed these powers exist, he said case decisions show they are rarely used.

“What’s lacking is the state’s response to things that are illegal and intolerable,” Leppert said.

Goodpaster and Leppert added the state has little to lose by enforcing Indiana Forward’s legislation, which can only be enacted when a crime occurs.

“The biggest misconception is that we’re trying to control thoughts or beliefs. Someone has to commit a crime to be punished,” Goodpaster said. “It is not a crime to think or believe, but as soon as you commit a crime against a person, a group of people or their property, this law will affect you.”

“If I were them, I would pass this as soon as possible,” Lepper added, noting that extended support from Gov. Eric Holcomb is placing considerable weight on Republican leaders in both chambers.

Holcomb first called for legislation in a tweet this summer after a Jewish temple in Carmel, Congregation Shaarey Tefilla, was vandalized with anti-Semitic symbols. He further outlined the necessity of the law in his legislative agenda presented earlier this month, where he modeled his recommendation on the state’s existing workplace harassment prevention policy.

“I fully appreciate the ‘where does the list stop’ discussion,” Holcomb said Tuesday, referring to prior hate crimes law debates. “However, we’ve had an employment policy in place in this office since 2005 that’s worked just fine, and so I didn’t want to take a step back from that.”

The harassment policy includes protections for all of the characteristics Indiana Forward wants included in a bias crimes law, as well as guidance for those harassed for their national origin, ancestry and veteran status.

“It’s not just the right thing to do, it’s long overdue. I’ll take some responsibility for it not being checked off the list already,” Holcomb said.

The Indiana Forward website provides additional information about the group’s 2019 policy goals. Lawmakers will reconvene for the legislative session on Jan. 3.

Erica Irish is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

FOOTNOTE: Editor’s note: Mike Leppert writes a column for TheStatehouseFile.com.

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Lt. Governor Crouch: Public schedule Dec. 19

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Below is Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch’s public schedule for Dec. 19, 2018.

Wednesday, Dec. 19
What: Crouch speaks at H38 East Apartments
Host: Area IV
When: Wednesday, Dec. 19, 8:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m., ET, with Crouch remarks at 8:15 a.m., ET
Where: 3791 Winston Dr., Lafayette, IN 47905
*Media are welcome

Wednesday, Dec. 19
What: Crouch joins Stellar designation celebration
Host: NewAllen Alliance
When: Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2018, 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m., ET, with Crouch remarks at Noon, ET
Where: New Haven Community Center, 7500 SR 930 E., Fort Wayne, IN 46803
*Media are welcome

Wednesday, Dec. 19
What: Crouch visits Rachel’s Taste of Indiana
When:
Wednesday, Dec. 19, 2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m., ET
Where:
102 S. Jefferson St., Converse, IN 46919
*Media are welcome

ADOPT A PET

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Bruno is a male American Staffordshire Terrier or “pit bull” mix. He’s 7 years old, which makes him technically a “senior” but you’d never know it! He’s a super sweet boy. He would love to be the only canine in his home. His $110 adoption fee includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Lawyer facing jail time for forgery, counterfeiting

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Dave Sttafford for www.theindianalawyer.com

A northern Indiana lawyer could be sentenced to nearly two years in jail after she pleaded guilty Tuesday to forging a judge’s name on a phony divorce decree and sending a bogus email bearing a deputy prosecutor’s name.

Jill N. Holtzclaw of Decatur pleaded guilty to Level 6 felony counts of forgery and counterfeiting Tuesday in Adams Superior Court. Holtzclaw entered her change of plea before Adams Superior Judge Patrick Miller, who set sentencing for Jan. 11.

According to Adams County officials, Holtzclaw’s plea agreement calls for her to be sentenced to a maximum one year in jail on the forgery conviction and up to 270 days on the counterfeiting charge. The charges were uncovered in separate police investigations.

The agreement gives the judge discretion to impose a lesser sentence, but the terms will be served consecutively, and followed by a year’s probation. As a result of the plea, a second felony counterfeiting charge against Holtzclaw will be dropped. The court also ordered a presentencing report to be completed five days before sentencing.

Fort Wayne attorney Chad Thurston represented Holtzclaw in her criminal case and said in an email he had no comment.

Holtzclaw was suspended from the practice of law in June for noncooperation with the Indiana Supreme Court Disciplinary Commission’s investigation of a grievance against her. She had been criminally charged in February, after investigators alleged that Holtzclaw:

• Forged Adams Circuit Judge Chad Kukelhan’s signature on a divorce decree that bore no cause number and was found to be fraudulent, and;

• Counterfeited an email to the widow of one of Holtzclaw’s clients who sought to expunge his criminal record. The email purported to be sent from Huntington County deputy prosecutor Jennifer Pyclik.

The Indiana Supreme Court has hit Holtzclaw with five orders of suspension this year in five separate disciplinary cases, most recently last week. Four of those suspensions remain active. The disciplinary commission has not made public the nature of the complaints against Holtzclaw in the other cases in which she has been suspended.

VANDERBURGH HUMANE SOCIETY TO OFFER CHRISTMAS DELIVERY OF ADOPTED PETS

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The Vanderburgh Humane Society is offering the purr-fect add-on Christmas gift this holiday season. For $50 (in addition to the pet’s adoption fee) a VHS volunteer “elf” will deliver adopted pets to their new homes on either Christmas Eve or Christmas morning. The public has requested this option for years and it is now available!

This promotion only applies to dogs, cats, and rabbits adopted December 18th-22nd. Adoption hours are Tuesday-Saturday 12-6 pm (with the exception of Thursday, December 20th when the shelter will be closed to the public.) The last chance to adopt any pet before Christmas will be Saturday, December 22nd. Only animals who have been spayed or neutered already may leave the building.

Payment can be made using cash, Visa, Mastercard, or Discover. Time blocks for delivery are 5-7 pm Christmas Eve, 8-10 am Christmas Day, or 10 am – 12 pm Christmas Day. Only an approximate delivery time within those 2-hour ranges will be given.

Valid for Vanderburgh County and Newburgh deliveries only.

The public can see all animals available for adoption at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt. This promotion does include cats adoptable at River Kitty Cat Café.

Those interested in Christmas delivery should inquire at events@vhslifesaver.org, (812) 426-2563 extension 218, or ask an Adoption Counselor in person at the shelter during business hours. Deliveries will be filled on a first-come first-served basis, based on the number of volunteers available.

For those who would like to give the gift of adoption this holiday season, but would rather the recipient pick out their own pet, gift cards are also available in any denomination. They can be purchased anytime during VHS business hours and are also valid for merchandise, Spay/Neuter Clinic services, and in the Happy Tails Resale Shop.

To arrange a photo opportunity or interview, contact Amanda at the above information.

 

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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MAIL HANDLER ASSISTANT
United States Postal Service 3.6/5 rating   18,490 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$16 an hour
Please ensure you can receive email messages from our test vendor and follow instructions carefully so you can be. Weigh incoming sacks;…
Dec 13
Ramp Agent
Delta Air Lines Global Services 4.2/5 rating   3,218 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$8.75 an hour
Must possess a valid Driver’s License for operating ground support equipment. Performs wing walker duties to protect the aircraft wing from equipment in the…
Dec 13
WAREHOUSE/MATERIAL HANDLER
Frito Lay 3.5/5 rating   3,971 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Safely operate a forklift after we provide you training and you obtain certification. Whether you are experienced or not, please be sure that you meet the…
Dec 14
3 new jobs found

Holly’s House to Receive Handmade Blankets from Christ the King Students

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Holly’s House, a non-profit child and adult advocacy center, will attend a brief donation presentation on Wednesday, December 19, 2018 at 1:15 pm CST at Christ the King School, 3101 Bayard Park Drive, Evansville, Indiana, 47714, to accept handmade blankets made by 7th and 8th Grade Students in support of Holly’s House and the “Think First & Stay Safe” child abuse prevention program.  Holly’s House offers the “Think First & Stay Safe” personal safety and child abuse prevention program at no charge to elementary schools in five counties in Southwest Indiana.

This program utilizes the curriculum developed by Child Lures Prevention and focuses on helping children understand the lures or tricks that are used by people who might want to hurt them.  The program also focuses on bullying, internet and general safety lessons including emphasizing the importance of telling a trusted adult if they feel scared or unsafe.  Since first offering the program in the spring of 2010, over 40,000 elementary school students have been taught how to “Think First & Stay Safe.” As the demand for the program has increased, the “Think First & Stay Safe” staff has grown to include one full-time and three part-time prevention educators.

Holly Edmond, Holly’s House Executive Director, said, “This heartfelt gift shows that students want to support Holly’s House and those we serve. The “Think First & Stay Safe” program utilizes age-appropriate lesson plans to teach safety tools children may use for the rest of their lives. To receive this gift at Christ the King makes it even more meaningful.  It is wonderful to know that students who have been taught the “Think First & Stay Safe” program join Holly’s House in our commitment to preventing child abuse.”

Christ the King School Blanket Donation on Wednesday, December 19, 2018, at 1:15 pm at 3101 Bayard Park Drive, Evansville, IN 47714

 

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