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USI to host Flowers on the Lake for Domestic Violence Awareness Month

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The University of Southern Indiana’s Sexual Assault and Gender Violence Prevention Group will host the annual Flowers on the Lake ceremony from 4:30-5 p.m. Tuesday, October 15 in front of the Liberal Arts Center followed by a ceremony at Reflection Lake. The ceremony, held in honor of Domestic Violence Awareness Month, is open to the public at no charge.

Flowers on the Lake is an annual ceremony to honor those who have lost their lives to domestic violence and raise awareness about the warning signs of relationship abuse. Students will speak during a brief presentation about lives that have been lost as a result of domestic violence, which will be followed by a moment of silence. Guests will then proceed to Reflection Lake to scatter flower petals on top of the water in honor of survivors and in memory of victims of domestic violence.

New this year, participants will also be invited to cover a USI Public Safety vehicle with messages of support and/or action on sticky notes as a part of the “Cover a Cruiser” initiative. This will take place before and after the ceremony in Lot N, adjacent to the Liberal Arts Center.

“Our goal is to highlight the warning signs of abusive relationships and stress the importance of accessing the many support resources offered by the University and our community,” says Catherine Champagne, Assistant Program Director for Student Wellness.

This event is sponsored by the USI Sexual Assault and Gender Violence Prevention Group and Albion Fellows Bacon Center.

In the event of rain, the event will be held at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, October 17 at the same location. For more information, contact Catherine Champagne at cchampagne@usi.edu or 812-461-5483.

Report Reveals New Findings on Health Care Costs, Outcomes in Indiana

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Oct. 8, 2024 (INDIANAPOLIS) A new report from the IU Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health outlines the most recent publicly available data on a wide range of factors impacting health care costs and outcomes in Indiana, including spending by industry, market characteristics, and Hoosiers’ health conditions.

The report was commissioned by the Indiana Business Health Collaborative (IBHC), a statewide coalition of employers, economic development organizations, health care industry stakeholders, and more working to develop comprehensive solutions to address cost, access, and quality of care in Indiana. The report compares approximately 80 health measures for Indiana, the U.S., and four of Indiana’s neighboring states, assessing trends over time in each metric since the school’s initial report in 2020.

IBHC Chief Executive Luke Messer says the Collaborative pursued the report to shed light on the state’s current landscape and provide an actionable framework for IBHC members to consider as they work together to improve health care in Indiana.

“While Indiana benefits from a strong economy, improving the health status of Hoosiers and lowering overall health care costs is essential for further economic prosperity,” said Messer. “This report is an important step in identifying our state-specific challenges and how we can address them.”

According to the report, Indiana’s total per-capita health care spending, including spending for hospital care, physician services, and pharmaceuticals, is nearly identical to the national average and in-line with neighboring states. On average, Hoosiers spend 10.7% of their median income on health care, which ranks below the national average and decreased 7% since 2020. Competition among insurance companies in the state is consistent with U.S. norms while the Indianapolis hospital market is slightly more competitive than the national average.

Indiana differs from other states in its high prevalence of self-insured health plans, the report found. Sixty-six percent of Indiana’s private sector employees are enrolled in self-insured plans, which ranks 20% higher than the national average.

“Over the past few years, self-insurance has grown in Indiana, even while it has declined in the U.S. and each of our neighboring states,” said Dr. Nir Menachemi, dean of the Fairbanks School of Public Health and co-author of the report. “Self-insured employers lack the market power to effectively negotiate prices, and studies show that self-insured plans pay higher prices for the same services. Addressing this market dynamic may result in lower prices.”

High-deductible health plans (HDHPs) are also dominant in Indiana. According to the report, nearly 64% of Hoosier employees are enrolled in HDHPs, which increased 23% since 2020 and ranks higher than the national average.

“The prevalence of high-deductible health plans may partially explain patients’ higher out-of-pocket costs in Indiana, despite our overall average ranking in health care spending,” said Menachemi.

Fairbanks researchers also note that Indiana has a greater shortage of physicians, both in general practice and specialty care, than the rest of the nation, in addition to lower utilization of value-based care payment models.

“Moving toward greater use of value-based payment models, including bundled payments and accountable care in settings where the evidence supports them, may contribute to more cost-effective, patient-centered health care,” said Menachemi.

Meanwhile, Indiana continues to perform worse than the national average in most health outcomes, which have declined over time. Indiana’s mortality rate is nearly 16% higher than the national average, led by an 81% increase in drug deaths since 2020. In addition, the state has higher rates of nearly all chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and obesity. Since 2020, cardiovascular disease prevalence increased 30% in Indiana, while the prevalence of diabetes and childhood obesity rose 27% and 24% respectively.

While still higher than the national average, maternal mortality declined 38% and infant mortality declined 2% in Indiana since 2020. Authors attribute the improvement to the state’s concerted efforts to expand funding for maternal health coverage and programming. Further, authors note that the state’s recent $225 million public health investment, a 1,500% increase in statewide funding, is projected to significantly improve overall health outcomes.

Since 2020, state policymakers have passed several laws to reduce health care costs in Indiana, including enacting hospital price transparency requirements, encouraging competition in the health care industry, implementing the state’s All Payer Claims Database for consumers to compare health care prices, and installing guardrails around previously unregulated market participants such as pharmacy benefit managers.

“We commend our state policymakers for their efforts to curb health care spending in Indiana,” said Messer. “The IBHC is dedicated to building on those efforts, and the findings of this report will help guide our work to further improve health care affordability, access, and outcomes across the state.”

 

Home improvements: Dishonest concrete company deconstructed by Attorney General Todd Rokita for ripping off Hoosier consumers

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Owner ordered to pay nearly $350K in restitution, banned from industry 

Attorney General Todd Rokita has taken down another group of businesses engaged is shady practices that violate the standards that Hoosier consumers have a right to expect. 

This time, it’s a home-improvement contractor who allegedly tried running off with hundreds of thousands of dollars collected from hard-working homeowners without providing the anticipated services. 

“Here in Indiana, we won’t tolerate businesses that collect payment and then fail to do the work they promised,” Attorney General Rokita said. “We will always work to hold accountable businesses that violate the trust placed in them by hard-working Hoosiers.” 

Attorney General Rokita and his Consumer Protection team won a combination judgment of both civil penalties and restitution totaling $341,006.81 on behalf of numerous Hoosiers duped by Quest Concrete LLC and Cobraro & Company LLC — doing business as Quest Exteriors. These are an intertwining network of “home improvement” contractors that allegedly improved nothing but the businesses’ own financial situations.  

Attorney General Rokita also secured a permanent injunction that bans from the construction industry Michael Gossett, the head of both LLCs, and all primary affiliates — including agents, representatives, employees and successors involved with ripping off Hoosier consumers. 

Rokita commends Deputy Attorney General Tamara Weaver for her hard work in removing Quest Concrete and their affiliates from the Indiana marketplace and for helping to win the nearly $350,000 restitution order from the court.

Bannister and Vertanen shine at the Grier Jones Invitational

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NEWTON, Kan.– University of Southern Indiana Men’s Golf finished 12th place at the Grier Jones Shocker Invitational hosted by Wichita State University at Sand Creek Station Golf Course.
 
Senior Jason Bannister placed third overall in the tournament, shooting a 212 (68-71-73). Despite the impressive performance, Bannister missed the invite to next year’s Korn Ferry Tour by four strokes.
 
Senior Sam Vertanen recorded a top-20 finish by posting a 217 (76-69-72), finishing five strokes back of Bannister and tying for 16th.
 
Round 1
USI finished the first day of competition in 12th place, shooting 305 (+17) as a team. Bannister led the Eagles shooting 68 for the round, a tournament-best 18 holes for the team.
 
Round 2
Senior Sam Vertanen had his best tournament round on day two, shooting a 69 (-3). Freshman Tye Boone improved massively in the second 18, cutting ten strokes off his first-round score, posting a 72.
 
Round two saw USI shoot 287 (+5), their best round of the invitational. This performance moved them up to 11th place after two rounds.
 
Round 3
Vertanen once again led the Eagles in round three, shooting 72, one stroke better than Bannister (73) for the final 18. USI closed out the tournament by shooting 299 and cemented their 12th-place finish.
 
What’s next for the Eagles:
USI will be back in action on October 17 in a dual match against the University of Evansville at Cambridge Golf Course. The two teams met last spring with USI taking the victory 6.5-4.5.

 

Men’s golf completes Cullan Brown Collegiate

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Romashkin and Rodriguez tie for 37th

 LEXINGTON, Ky. – Tuesday’s final round of the Cullan Brown Collegiate saw the University of Evansville men’s golf team take 15th place at Lexington Country Club.

Pacing the team in the final standings was the duo of Andres Rodriguez and Daniil Romashkin.  Both completed the three rounds of play with a 229, tying for 37th.  Rodriguez carded a 78 in the final 18 holes while Romashkin finished with an 81.

Evansville’s low score on Tuesday came from Omar Khalid.  Posting a 76, the freshman wrapped up the tournament with a 239 on his way to a tie for 71st.  He was followed by Luke Price.  His low round of the weekend came on Tuesday as he registered an 82.  He completed the event with a 253.

The Purple Aces finished in 15th place with a score of 950.  Kennesaw State took the team championship, besting North Alabama by 14 strokes.  Claes Borregaard of KSU and Andrew Ferworn from UNA tied for the individual victory.  Both came in with scores of 218.

In its final fall event, the Aces travel to The Buddy on Monday and Tuesday of next week.  Murray State is the host for the tournament.

OLD NATIONAL EVENTS PLAZA PRESENTS THE GAZILLION BUBBLES SHOW

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TICKETS GO ON SALE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, AT 10AM

Evansville, IN – Transport to an enchanting realm of magical fun during a spectacular celebration of bubbles at The Gazillion Bubble Show, on January 3, 2024, at Old National Events Plaza! This unbubblievable performance combines the joy of bubbles, the wonders of science, and family entertainment for kids young and young at heart.

Over 50 million guests worldwide have rediscovered the sheer wonder and delight of bubbles through this one-of-a-kind interactive journey. The unforgettable production features awe-inspiring bubble artistry, high-energy music, and captivating lights and lasers.

The New York Times hails the show as “enchanting,” while The New Yorker praises it for its “ingenious bubble wizardry.” Celebrities like David Letterman have called it “the world’s greatest bubble show,” and Queen Latifah enthused, “the kid inside of me loves this!”

The phenomenal bubble artists behind this l show are siblings Deni and Melody Yang. Captivating audiences since their early years, Deni and Melody come from a family of performers who have tirelessly infused their passion for performance with a blend of art, science, and entertainment that makes this show truly special.

Today, Deni and Melody travel the globe, sharing their bubble science expertise with audiences, transforming the art of bubble-making into a display of pure joy and entertainment. As one of the longest-running Off-Broadway shows in NYC for nearly two decades, their performance is a testament to its enduring charm and appeal.

To see more about The Gazillion Bubbles Show visit Gazillion Bubble Show.

Ticket Information:

 

What:                  The Gazillion Bubble Show

When:                 Friday, January 3, 2025, at 1PM and 4PM

Where:                Old National Events Plaza I 715 Locust Street, Evansville, IN 47708

Tickets:                Tickets start at $21.00 plus applicable tax and fees.

Tickets are available at Ticketmaster.com or the Old National Events Plaza Box Office.

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

 

USI to host MidWest Society for Photographic Education Conference

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The University of Southern Indiana, in collaboration with New Harmony, Indiana, will host the MidWest Society for Photographic Education Conference Thursday through Saturday, October 17-19. Brooke Shaden, conference keynote speaker, will be on campus to give a lecture at 4 p.m. Friday, October 18 in WA1 (Forum 1), followed by a gallery reception at 7 p.m. in the McCutchan Art Center (MAC)/PACE Galleries.

“Bringing the Midwest Society for Photographic Education Conference to USI and New Harmony is a wonderful opportunity to share the great things that our University and New Harmony have to offer,” says Rob Dickes, Associate Professor of Photography and Digital Imaging. “One of my priorities during the conference is to get community college and high school faculty to see the Art Center and the remarkable work our students are creating.”

Dickes organized the conference, titled Visions of Utopia. Currently, the MAC/Pace Galleries 1 showcases work by Shaden, a contemporary photographer who lives in Flagstaff, Arizona. Her series, Samsara, “creates a rich, uncomfortable, and open space to dissect how we internalize grief and how other cultures practice rituals surrounding death.

On view in MAC/Pace Galleries 2 and 3 is Classic & Contemporary: Selections from the Paul Paletti Collection, generously on loan to the University by Paul Paletti, an attorney and art collector, who will also attend the conference.

A TROUBLED PLACE

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Charleroi, Pennsylvania, is a deeply troubled place. The former steel town, built along a stretch of the Monongahela River, south of Pittsburgh, has experienced the typical Rust Belt rise and fall. The industrial economy, which had turned it into something resembling a company town, hollowed out after the Second World War. Some residents fled; others succumbed to vices. The steel mills disappeared. Two drug-abuse treatment centers have since opened their doors.

The town’s population had steadily declined since the middle of the twentieth century, with the most recent Census reporting slightly more than 4,000 residents. Then, suddenly, things changed. Local officials estimate that approximately 2,000 predominantly Haitian migrants have moved in. The town’s Belgium Club and Slovak Club are mostly quiet nowadays, while the Haitians and other recent immigrants have quickly established their presence, even dominance, in a dilapidated corridor downtown.

This change—the replacement of the old ethnics with the new ethnics—is an archetypal American story. And, as in the past, it has caused anxieties and, at times, conflict.

The municipal government has felt the strain. The town, already struggling with high rates of poverty and unemployment, has been forced to assimilate thousands of new arrivals. The schools now crowd with new Haitian pupils, and have had to hire translators and English teachers. Some of the old pipes downtown have started releasing the smell of sewage. And, according to a town councilman, there is a growing sense of trepidation about the alarming number of car crashes, with some vehicles reportedly slamming into buildings.

Among the city’s old guard, frustrations are starting to boil over. Instead of being used to revitalize these communities, these residents argue, resources get redirected to the new arrivals, who undercut wages, drive rents up, and, so far, have failed to assimilate. Worst of all, these residents say, they had no choice—there was never a vote on the question of migration; it simply materialized.

Former president Donald Trump, echoing the sentiments of some of Charleroi’s native citizens, has cast the change in a sinister light. As he told the crowd at a recent rally in Indiana, Pennsylvania, “it takes centuries to build the unique character of each state. . . . But reckless migration policy can change it quickly and permanently.” Progressives, as expected, countered with the usual arguments, claiming that Trump was stoking fear, inciting nativist resentment, and even putting the Haitian migrants in danger.

Neither side, however, seems to have grappled with the mechanics of Charleroi’s abrupt transformation. How did thousands of Haitians end up in a tiny borough in Western Pennsylvania? What are they doing there? And cui bono—who benefits?

The answers to these questions have ramifications not only for Charleroi, but for the general trajectory of mass migration under the Biden administration, which has allowed more than 7 million migrants to enter the United States, either illegally, or, as with some 309,000 Haitians, under ad hoc asylum rules.

The basic pattern in Charleroi has been replicated in thousands of cities and towns across America: the federal government has opened the borders to all comers; a web of publicly funded NGOs has facilitated the flow of migrants within the country; local industries have welcomed the arrival of cheap, pliant labor. And, under these enormous pressures, places like Charleroi often revert to an older form: that of the company town, in which an open conspiracy of government, charity, and industry reshapes the society to its advantage—whether the citizens want it or not.

The best way to understand the migrant crisis is to follow the flow of people, money, and power—in other words, to trace the supply chain of human migration. In Charleroi, we have mapped the web of institutions that have facilitated the flow of migrants from Port-au-Prince. Some of these institutions are public and, as such, must make their records available; others, to avoid scrutiny, keep a low profile.

The initial, and most powerful, institution is the federal government. Over the past four years, Customs and Border Patrol has reported hundreds of thousands of encounters with Haitian nationals. In addition, the White House has admitted more than 210,000 Haitians through its controversial Humanitarian Parole Program for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans (CHNV), which it paused in early August and has since relaunched. The program is presented as a “lawful pathway,” but critics, such as vice presidential candidate J. D. Vance, have called it an “abuse of asylum laws” and warned of its destabilizing effects on communities across the country.

The next link in the web is the network of publicly funded NGOs that provide migrants with resources to assist in travel, housing, income, and work. These groups are called “national resettlement agencies,” and serve as the key middleman in the flow of migration. The scale of this effort is astounding. These agencies are affiliated with more than 340 local offices nationwide and have received some $5.5 billion in new awards since 2021. And, because they are technically non-governmental institutions, they are not required to disclose detailed information about their operations.

In Charleroi, one of the most active resettlement agencies is Jewish Family and Community Services Pittsburgh. According to a September Pittsburgh Post-Gazettereport, JFCS staff have been traveling to Charleroi weekly for the past year and a half to resettle many of the migrants. The organization has offered to help migrants sign up for welfare programs, including SNAP, Medicaid, and direct financial assistance. While JFCS Pittsburgh offers “employment services” to migrants, it denies any involvement with the employer and staffing agencies that were the focus of our investigation.

And yet, business is brisk. In 2023, JFCS Pittsburgh reported $12.5 million in revenue, of which $6.15 million came directly from government grants. Much of the remaining funding came from other nonprofits that also get federal funds, such as a $2.8 million grant from its parent organization, HIAS. And JFCS’s executives enjoy generous salaries: the CEO earned $215,590, the CFO $148,601, and the COO $125,218—all subsidized by the taxpayer.

What is next in the chain? Business. In Charleroi, the Haitians are, above all, a new supply of inexpensive labor. A network of staffing agencies and private companies has recruited the migrants to the city’s factories and assembly lines. While some recruitment happens through word-of-mouth, many staffing agencies partner with local nonprofits that specialize in refugee resettlement to find immigrants who need work.

At the center of this system in Charleroi is Fourth Street Foods, a frozen-food supplier with approximately 1,000 employees, most of whom work on the assembly line. In an exclusive interview, Chris Scott, the CEO and COO of Fourth Street Barbeque (the legal name of the firm that does business as Fourth Street Foods) explained that his company, like many factory businesses, has long relied on immigrant labor, which, he estimates, makes up about 70 percent of its workforce. The firm employs many temporary workers, and, with the arrival of the Haitians, has found a new group of laborers willing to work long days in an industrial freezer, starting at about $12 an hour.

Many of these workers are not directly employed by Fourth Street Foods. Instead, according to Scott, they are hired through staffing agencies, which pay workers about $12 an hour for entry-level food-processing roles and bill Fourth Street Foods over $16 per hour to cover their costs, including transportation and overhead. (The average wage for an entry-level food processor in Washington County was $16.42 per hour in 2023.)

According to a Haitian migrant who worked at Fourth Street and a review of video footage, three staffing agencies—Wellington Staffing AgencyCelebes Staffing Services, and Advantage Staffing Agency—are key conduits for labor in the city. None have websites, advertise their services, or appear in job listings. According to Scott, Fourth Street Foods relies on agencies to staff its contract workforce, but he declined to specify which agencies, citing nondisclosure agreements.

The final link is housing. And here, too, Fourth Street Foods has an organized interest. During the Covid-19 pandemic, Scott said, Fourth Street Foods was “scrambling” to find additional workers. The owner of the company, David Barbe, stepped in, acquiring and renovating a “significant number of homes” to provide housing for his workforce. A property search for David Barbe and his other business, DB Rentals LLC, shows records of more than 50 properties, many of which are concentrated on the same streets.

After the initial purchases, Barbe required some of the existing residents to vacate to make room for newcomers. A single father, who spoke on condition of anonymity, was forced to leave his home after it was sold to DB Rentals LLC in 2021. “[W]e had to move out [on] very short notice after five years of living there and being great tenants,” he explained. Afterward, a neighbor informed him that a dozen people of Asian descent had been crammed into the two-bedroom home. They were “getting picked up and dropped off in vans.”

“My kids were super upset because that was the house they grew up in since they were little,” the man said. “It was just all a huge nightmare.”

In recent years, a debate has raged about “replacement migration,” which some left-wing critics have dubbed a racist conspiracy theory. But in Charleroi, “replacement” is a plain reality. While the demographic statistics have shifted dramatically in recent years, replacement happens in more prosaic ways, too: a resident moves away. Another arrives. The keys to a rental apartment change hands.

In one sense, this is unremarkable. Since the beginning, America has been the land of migration, replacement, and change. The original Belgian settlers of Charleroi were replaced by the later-arriving Slavic populations, who are now, in turn, being replaced by men and women from Port-au-Prince. The economy changed along the same lines. The steel plants shut down years ago. The glass factory, the last remaining symbol of the Belgian glass-makers, might suspend operations soon. The largest employer now produces frozen meals. 

In another sense, however, legitimate criticisms can be made of what is happening in Charleroi. First, the benefits of mass migration seem to accrue to the organized interests, while citizens and taxpayers absorb the costs. No doubt, the situation is advantageous to David Barbe of Fourth Street Foods, who can pay $16 an hour to the agencies that employ his contract labor force, then recapture some of those wages in rent—just like the company towns from a century ago. 

But for the old residents of Charleroi, who cherish their distinct heritage and fear that their quality of life is being compromised, it’s mostly downside. The evictions, the undercut wages, the car crashes, the cramped quarters, the unfamiliar culture: these are not trivialities, nor are they racist conspiracy theories. They are the signs of a disconcerting reality: Charleroi is a dying town that could not revitalize itself on its own, which made it the perfect target for “revitalization” by elite powers—the federal government, the NGOs, and their local satraps.

The key question in Charleroi is the fundamental question of politics: Who decides? The citizens of the United States, and of Charleroi, have been assured since birth that they are the ultimate sovereign. The government, they were told, must earn the consent of the governed. But the people of Charleroi were never asked if they wanted to submit their borough to an experiment in mass migration. Others chose for them—and slandered them when they objected.

The decisive factor, which many on the institutional Left would rather conceal, is one of power. Martha’s Vineyard, when faced with a single planeload of migrants, can evict them in a flash. But Charleroi—the broken man of the Rust Belt—cannot. This is the reality of replacement: the strong do what they can, and the weak do what they must.