IS IT TRUE NOVEMBER 8, 2018
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?â€
IS IT TRUE  we have been informed that the Governor recently appointed another Vectren Executive to serve on the USI Board of Trustees?  …that there are now two (2) Vectren employees currently serving on this prestigious board? … it’s obvious that the Governor feels that Vectren Executives have a “patent on brains”?
EPD Released Body Cam Footage of Fairlawn Elementary Arrest
EPD Released Body Cam Footage of Fairlawn Elementary Arrest
The incident happened last Wednesday at Fairlawn Elementary School. According to police, an officer was called to the school to investigate a complaint about a suspicious person.
Around 7 a.m., Logan Stidham showed up to the front door and told school employees he had a child in daycare. However, employees say that was untrue and called the police.
According to the officer, he tried talking to Stidham but he was uncooperative. He attempted to handcuff Stidham but he resisted arrest prompting the officer to tase him.
A scuffle ensued between Stidham and the officer. Stidham allegedly grabbed the taser and fired it at the officer’s face.
Stidham was eventually taken into custody and is being held in the Vanderburgh County Jail. He is facing charges of battery with serious injury, resisting law enforcement, trespassing, and theft.
The officer has since been treated at a hospital and released.
MEMO TO TRUMP: PRICE CONTROLS ARE NOT THE WAY TO GO
MEMO TO TRUMP: PRICE CONTROLS ARE NOT THE WAY TO
by Peter Roff. by Cagle newspaper syndicate
President Donald Trump, Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar, and the rest of the administration deserve considerable thanks for the creativity they’ve employed in developing workarounds for some of the worst parts of Obamacare. Up to a point.
Regrettably, the recently announced plan for bringing down the cost of prescription drugs down is so heavily dependent on government-imposed price controls as to render it anathema to anyone serious about using market-based reforms to bend the cost of health care downward.
Azar’s department is already taking comments on a potential rule tying the price for what Medicare Part –pays for certain drugs to what they cost in other countries. To the people who think drugs are cheaper in Canada because the government charges less for them, that might sound like a good idea. It is in fact hogwash, and the only comment people should be sending into HHS is to drop the initiative in its entirety before someone gets hurt.
The key reason the price consumers pay for drugs in other countries are cheaper than they are in the United States is because the bureaucrats in a country like Canada that runs a single-payer healthcare systems dictate to manufacturers the price they’re willing to pay. Companies that refuse to play along run the risk of being shut out of the market altogether – which isn’t great for patients – or of having carbon copies of supposedly patent-protected drugs suddenly appear on the market at a much lower cost as if by magic.
Neither of these outcomes are good for patients or consumers. They’re also bad for U.S. manufacturers and investors – which means a chilling effect on innovation can’t be far behind. How does a CEO justify an investment of millions or more into research and development of new drugs when government dictates on price virtually guarantees the money won’t be recouped to any kind of reasonable degree before a patent expires and generics flood the market? People sometimes forget the first pill is the most expensive one to manufacture: After that it’s all downhill, production and distribution costs generally being negligible by comparison.
The Wall Street Journal put it well earlier this week when it editorialized on the subject by explaining how cheaper European drugs weren’t necessarily better. “Of 74 cancer drugs launched between 2011 and 2018, 70 (95 percent) are available in the United States. Compare that with 74 percent in the U.K., 49 percent in Japan, and 8 percent in Greece. This should cure anyone of the delusion that these countries will simply start to pay more for drugs. They’re willing to deny treatments if it saves money.â€
A chief complaint about Obamacare in its nascent stage, before Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid rammed it through Congress without knowing what was in it (because few if any members of Congress would admit to having read it), was that rationing of care would be an almost certain result. Well, the same is true of price controls. They also lead to rationing – remember the 1970s anyone – and leave too much power in the hands of the bureaucrats who set them while disempowering consumers. Markets should set prices by sending signals about what they should be. It’s not a job for an SES level federal bureaucrat working just off Capitol Hill looking at a spreadsheet showing what they cost in Europe.
The president and Secretary Azar would be well advised to drop the whole idea, quietly and let it just fade from memory. Price controls never work. The desire to use them is not helpfully as a matter of policy or politically: they play to the liberal/left narrative that Trump is an autocrat intent on doing everything his way or not at all.
–Copyright 2018 Peter Roff. Distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.
Court Upholds Death Sentence For Jeffrey Weisheit
Weisheit believes his attorneys didn’t show school records or have expert witnesses which may have helped his case.
During Wednesday’s Supreme Court decision four out of the five justices agreed that his convictions should stand.
Lowe’s to Close 51 Stores Nationwide
Lowe’s to Close 51 Stores Nationwide
Retail stores are struggling to adjust to the rapid rise of online shopping, particularly from Amazon.
Many successful retailers with big stores have adjusted their business strategies to make better use of their physical spaces.
Stores such as Sears, Kmart and Toys “R†Us have closed.
Voters Oust Trial Court Judge; Carmichael Beats Party-Switching Ex-Jurist
Dave Stafford for www.theinf=diinalawyer.com
Southern Indiana voters rejected one trial court judge and narrowly re-elected another who was challenged by a former colleague who changed parties to run against her.
Jefferson Circuit Court Judge Darrell Maurice Auxier, a Democrat, was the lone sitting Indiana trial court judge to lose his bid for re-election Tuesday, according to a review of results posted on the Indiana Secretary of State’s website.
Voters in the southeastern Indiana county defeated Auxier and elected his Republican rival, Jefferson County chief deputy prosecutor D.J. Mote, to the bench in the courthouse in Madison. Mote won by a margin of 60 percent to 40 percent.
Next door in another Ohio River county, Clark Circuit Judge Vicki Carmichael retained her bench seat in one of Indiana’s closest countywide trial court races Tuesday. Carmichael, a Democrat, withstood a challenge from Republican Daniel Moore, who had been elected a Clark Circuit judge in 2008 when he also ran as a Democrat. Moore was defeated in the Democratic primary in 2014.
On Tuesday, voters returned Carmichael to the Jeffersonville courthouse by a margin of 53 percent to 47 percent against Moore, who this time was on the ballot as a Republican. The race was among the closest contests for circuit, superior and probate judges around the state.
Here are the results of the contested trial court election results around Indiana:
Boone Circuit Court: Republican Lori Schein defeated Libertarian challenger Pam Buchanan by a margin of 67 percent to 33 percent. Schein will succeed retiring Boone Circuit Judge J. Jeffrey Edens.
Brown Circuit Court: Rebublican Mary Wertz will succeed retiring Brown Circuit Judge Judith A. Stewart after defeating Democratic challenger Kristopher Kritzer by a margin of 61.5 percent to 38.5 percent.
Johnson Circuit Court: Republican Andrew S. Roesener won nearly 71 percent of the vote against Democrat Steven L. Kennedy. Roesener will succeed longtime jurist Mark Loyd, who did not seek re-election.
Madison Circuit Court: Republican Andrew Hopper defeated Democrat Rosemary Khoury by a margin of 60 percent to 40 percent. Hopper succeeds one of Indiana’s longest-serving judges, Thomas Newman, Jr., who is retiring. Hopper is the son of another former Madison Circuit Judge, David Hopper, who died in office in 2009.
Monroe Circuit Court: Democrat Darcie L. Fawcett won 60 percent of the vote against Republican Kevin Weldon to win a race for a seat in the Bloomington courthouse. Two other Democrats ran unopposed and were elected as Monroe Circuit judges. Three judges opted not to seek re-election: Teresa Harper, Frances HIll and Marc Kellams.
Posey Circuit Court: Republican Craig Goedde prevailed with 58 percent of the vote against Democrat W. Trent Van Haaften, a former Indiana State Representative. Goedde will replace long-serving Judge James Redwine, who is retiring from the courthouse in Mount Vernon.
St. Joseph Probate Court: Incumbent Republican Judge James N. (Jim) Fox squeaked out a win against Democratic challenger Jason Cichowicz. Fox defeated his challenger by a margin of 53 percent to 47 percent.
White Circuit Court: Republican Jason A. Thompson defeated Democratic challenger Stacey L. Diener by a margin of 54.5 percent to 45.5 percent. Thompson will succeed Judge Robert W. Thacker, who is retiring.
St. Vincent Evansville Birth Announcements For The Week of November 8, 2018
Christie and Keith Dewig, Haubstadt, IN, son, Kayson Daniel, October 26
Shayla and Eric Hendricks, Oakland City, IN, daughter, Alexandria Dawn, October 26
Rachel and Elliott Thole, Evansville, son, Hayden Joseph, October 27
Amanda and Spencer Redding, Evansville, son, Luke Bennett, October 28
Megan and Robert Abel, Petersburg, IN, daughter, Violet Danielle, October 29
Makayla and William Jump, Evansville, daughter, Annavelle Cadence, October 29
Amanda and Trevor Koontz, Evansville, son, Kylar Wayne, October 29
Ashley James and Michael Wright, Evansville, daughter, Harper Jade, October 30
Hailey and Tyler Weaver, Evansville, son, Peyton Everette, October 30
Kayla and Nickolas Halbig, Evansville, daughter, Willow Ann, October 30
Korinne and Matthew Ellis, Evansville, daughter, Norah June, October 30
Fallon Salder and Dustin Hancock, Rockport, IN, son, Layton Wayne, October 31
Melissa and Kent Walden, Princeton, IN, son, Kole Eric, October 31
Sara and Devan Overley, Evansville, son, Charles Neal, November 2
Rachel Mart, Evansville, son, Eden Blaze, November 2
Mariana Maza and Andres Barreto, Evansville, son, Daniel Andres, November 2
Haily and Alex Towery, Evansville, daughter, Josie Nicole, November 3
Ashlie Sharp, Mount Carmel, IL, son, Adler Gregory Lee, November 3