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Deaconess Aquatic Center Coming To Garvin Park

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Deaconess Aquatic Center Coming To Garvin Park

Evansville’s new state of the art indoor pool now has an official name. It’s called the “Deaconess Aquatic Center.” The 28.4 million dollar project will replace the city’s aging Lloyd pool.

Earlier this week, plans for Evansville’s new pool were unveiled, and today it was named the Deaconess Aquatic Center. The indoor aquatic center will feature competitive swimming lanes, a diving area, and a place for people to learn how to swim. Officials at Deaconess say they hope their 2.5 million dollar investment will help battle obesity and improve their health.

“Part of our mission at Deaconess is to promote the health and well being of the community, and we think this project is on target for that,” says Deaconess CEO, Shawn McCoy.

There have been several big projects unveiled in the city recently, and the mayor says this is one more example of how Evansville is thriving and growing.

“It’s a quality of life statement. We know we need to replace Lloyd pool. It’s 43 years old. It’s beyond making major investments going forward, so we know we have to replace it. So the fact that we have a funding mechanism in an underserved area that will also compliment this multimillion streetscape project,” Mayor Lloyd Winnecke.

This project alone will cost 28.4 million dollars, and the city is making a 10.2 million dollar down payment.

“We’ll take about four million dollars from Jacobsville cash that’s accumulated, and that would be applied toward the down payment and then going forward on an annual basis to service the debt, we’ll use approximately 900 thousand dollars for debt services from Jacobsville tiff.”

ParksFest Music Festival Evansville 2018 is moving to Old National Events Plaza.

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After deliberate and in-depth discussions with staff, performers, stakeholders, and community leaders, we decided to move ParksFest Music Festival indoors to Old National Events Plaza, 715 Locust St. in Downtown Evansville. With the increased risk of rain and storms from the tropical storm hitting land now, we cannot endanger ParksFest attendees, performers, volunteers, vendors, and staff. Old National Events Plaza graciously stepped up to ensure this event is safe and remains FREE for the community. This was not possible without the help of Amy Word-Smith.
ParksFest is still FREE. The event is still 11 a.m. – 11 p.m. People are free to come and go as they please. The band schedules remain the same. We still have free kids activities, including face-painting, bounce houses and music workshops. We still have a great list of food trucks and market vendors. This decision was not easy, but we think it’s best to ensure our community gets a day of free music all day. We can’t wait to see everyone at Old National Events Plaza this Saturday.

USI rallies to tie NMU, 1-1, in 2OT

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The University of Southern Indiana women’s soccer team rallied to tie Northern Michigan University, 1-1, in double overtime this evening at Purdue University Northwest in Hammond, Indiana. USI goes to 0-2-1 overall, while Northern Michigan sees its record go to 1-1-1.

USI fell behind when Northern Michigan scored the match’s first goal 10 minutes into the first half. The Wildcats would hold onto the 1-0 lead through the half and until the final five minutes of regulation.

The Eagles knotted the match, 1-1, and sent the teams into overtime when junior midfielder Courtney Spicer (Loveland, Ohio) scored USI’s first goal of the year. Spicer was assisted on the goal by sophomore defender Madelyne Juenger (Columbia, Illinois).

In overtime, the Wildcats had four shots to USI’s two, but neither team could take advantage of the other before the final horn.

Between the posts, USI senior goalkeeper Emily Hopkins (Greenfield, Indiana) posted a tie after allowing one goal and making eight saves, two in the overtime periods.

The Eagles conclude their first road trip of the year Saturday when they play Purdue Northwest in a 12:30 p.m. contest. The Pride saw their record go to 2-1-0 after a 1-0 victory over the University of Illinois Springfield this afternoon.

Following Saturday’s game at Purdue Northwest, USI returns home September 14 when the Eagles open 2018 Great Lakes Valley Conference action by hosting Drury University at Strassweg Field. Due to the GLVC home-road weekend, the Eagles and the Panthers will have special Friday afternoon 3:30 p.m. kickoff.

IS IT TRUE SEPTEMBER 7, 2018

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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?

IS IT TRUE we predict that the Mayor will stack the City Council Chambers this coming Monday evening with supporters of the proposed $28 million dollars Aquatic Center at Garvin Park?  …when the Mayor makes his public pitch to City Council to build the Aqua Center we hope they will ask him to give them a detailed breakdown on how much of our tax dollars has he spent on projects since he been in office?  …we hear that total the projects costs he presents to City Council will be mind-boggling?

IS IT TRUE on Monday we predicted that Garvin Park across from the entrance of Bosse Field will be the proposed site for the new $28 million dollars Aquatic Center? …its now being reported by other media outlets that the new Garvin Park Aquatic Center will accommodate the needs of competitive swimmers of as well as recreational swimmer?. …the proposed Garvin Park Aquatic Center will also have designated areas for diving, competitive swimming, as well as swimming lessons if the Evansville City Council approves this $28 million dollars project?

IS IT TRUE we still stand by our prediction that once the $28 million Aquatic Center is finished that the Mayor will sign a contract with the local YMCA to manage the new Aquatic Center?  …that the local downtown YMCA is currently building a new state-of-the facility next to their current location?  …since the city is going to sign a long-term contract with YMCA to manage the new Aquatic Center we wonder why the Mayor didn’t suggest to the YMCA Board of Directors that they make the new Aquatic Center part of the new downtown YMCA facility? … it’s obvious that the blending of the new YMCA facility and the proposed Garvin Park Aquatic Center into an adjoining facility would not only save a bunch of money but also would be the crowning jewel for development of downtown?

IS IT TRUE  Mayor Winnecke told the Courier and Press that “he’s really disappointed by the decision to reduce the security force at the Evansville Regional Airport?” …Winnecke also told the Courier and Press that “I’ve expressed that opinion to Mr. Joest multiple times over the last 12 months?”  …the Mayor makes 3 out of 5 appointments to the Evansville Regional Airport Authority?  …it’s common knowledge that the Mayor has a major influence on the decisions on board that he makes the majority appointments to?  …many of our readers feel that its time that the Mayor puts political pressure on the current Airport board members by asking them to enhance public safety at the Evansville Regional Airport Authority Board?

IS IT TRUE  several years ago we remember when the “Jacobsville Join In” office was officially opened on North Main Street?  …that a large group of people observed the Mayor, officials from Echo Housing and the Evansville DMD officially cutting the ribbon to opening the office?  …at the official opening, the dignitaries in attendance told us how “Jacobsville Join In” is going to make major positive changes in the North Main Street corridor? …recently without fanfare “Jacobsville Join In” group abruptly vacated their office located on North Main Street?  …that “Jacobsville Join In” was sponsored by ECHO Housing and allegedly received their operating funds from the Evansville DMD?  …we hope the reason for the abrupt closing of “Jacobsville Join In” office on North Main Street didn’t have anything to do with the current “Forensic Audit” being conducted at ECHO Housing Corporation?

IS IT TRUE that after all said and done last week Evansville showed that it could put on a controversial event without looking like fools?… Ford Center set a record for attendance at any event ever held or ever will be held with approximately 11,500 people jammed inside to show support for President Donald Trump?…the Evansville Police Department estimated that an additional 2,000 were outside wanting to get in but were denied entry due to the limited capacity of the venue to safely hold more than 11,500 people?…the recording capacity at Roberts Stadium was just over 14,000 that drove from miles around for a KISS concert in the mid 1970s when the Gotham rockers were the rage of the teenage nation and the kings of the nighttime world?…we do wonder if President Trump could have broken the record that KISS set if the capacity to hold more people was in place?

IS IT TRUE there were resistance members who held a rally far over by The Centre whose numbers have been estimated around a 1,000 people? …except for three solitary incidents both crowds were well behaved toward one another and that is a reason for all of the Tri-State to be proud?…one of those three instances was a disturbed person who shook a knife and a middle finger at a helicopter that was circling the Ford Center for some undisclosed official purpose?… Evansville showed better behavior that big American cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York when President Trump showed up?…in these other cities violence and destruction of property are commonplace when President Trump comes to town and that says very bad things about the people and cities where such things occur unopposed?

IS IT TRUE that the real head-scratcher of the day was the fact that Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke seemly invented a reason to be out of town for a presidential visit that makes most Mayors gleeful with civic pride? …what really puzzled us is why didn’t the Mayor allow Deputy Mayor Steve Schaefer to publicly welcomed the President to Evansville? …we hear that President Trump was cordial about the fact that no one from the Winnecke Administration was available to welcome him to Evansville since he held off on making up names for the cast of characters who normally would have been at the front of the receiving line?

IS IT TRUE we were told that Steve Hammer give some of his 70 VIP tickets to the “Trump and Braun” political rally at the Ford Center to the some of the following well known local Republicans? …they were; Steve Schaefer, Richard Martin, Hobart Scales, Nicholas Hermann, Michael Duckworth, Christine Keck, Gary Schutte, Jr., Alfonso Vidal, David Clark, Marsha Abell Barnhart, Aulden Nance, Brenda Goff, Jeff Knight,  Michelle and Frank Peterlin, Chad Howard,  Dottie Thomas, Aaron Wilson, and Danny Koester to name a few?  …we were told that they really enjoyed themselves?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that the new owners of Ellis Park are going to invest the money to make the track and casino more upscale and customer friendly?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, Channel 44 News, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, Hot Jobs” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us City-CountyObserver@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.

 

Economic Development Is About our Youth

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Economic Development Is About our Youth
This past weekend we honored our workers, men, and women who spend the majority of their time working to earn a better living for their families. Labor Day, the first Monday in September, became a Federal Holiday in 1894. Thanks to the Labor Day Association for another weekend of celebration.
Workplaces have changed over the years and the skills to earn a living wage have also changed. I don’t deny education has always been important, but years ago there wasn’t a great incentive to finish high school to get a good job, that is until WWII.
High school graduation rates climbed over 50% after WWII. And last year, our young people proved they have the “can do ” spirit, and the national high school graduation rate increased to over 80%.
Our country seems to be going in the right direction. Yet….
Education and workforce “talent” development experts are saying a high school diploma alone is just not good enough, that a student in high school should have concentrated studies in a career path.
Lumina Foundation, the recognized education readiness think tank in Indiana, has offered this clarification. By 2025, employers in Indiana will need to fill one million high-demand, high-wage jobs and about 60% of those will require some post-secondary degree, certificate or certification.
Lumina Foundation has set a goal- 60% of high school graduates with a degree or certificate by 2025.
Governor Holcomb, educators around the State and industry leaders are joining in. They aren’t just being attentive, they are enthusiastic about their involvement.
As one educator with whom I spoke corrected me, “60% should be the low standard”, he said.  ”We aren’t doing enough. Our students must be on a sure pathway either for employment after high school, having graduated with a recognized certification, or on to college with an earned Associate Degree – that is, every graduating youth, not just a percentage.”
Evansville Campus Ivy Tech Chancellor Jonathan Weinzapfel announced in a recent speech that our local Ivy Tech is ahead,  that their goal for Associate Degrees and certifications has exceeded expectations- their goal for 2017-2018, 1,009; the actual number at 1,726.
And, the legislature has taken action. This past legislative session, HEA 1398 helped further the concept of “talent” development by allowing more flexibility. The new law allows schools to substitute courses in a graduation pathway if that course is of equivalent or higher rigor. It allows schools to replace the ISTEP with the certification test of the career the student will be entering.
One of the HEA 1398 presenters talked of the Lumina goal benefits to the students. “Having an Associate Degree in high school saves the family money- two years of college expenses.”
This educator had 32 students receive Associate Degrees this past year. Considering the lower end cost of a year in college at least $20,000, this is savings to those 32 families of $1.2 million.
The presenter/educator went on. “That is money spent in our community and not the college town. And, the student who graduated with an Associate Degree is further rewarded. He is guaranteed entrance into a state college as he is considered a transfer student.” (He explained colleges because they get higher fees from students outside Indiana, might prefer that student over a student from Indiana.)
This educator later commented to me, “If a student wants to go the vocational route, there are rewards there, too. Consider the story of a recent high school grad.  He was welding at his workplace when his employer noticed the internationally recognized welding certification he earned in our high school. His employer added an annual $30,000 to his paycheck.”
The Lumina Foundation considers this focused direction a “new learning system”, one that is targeted, that stresses results-oriented education.
This “new learning system” will, as Lumina promotes on it’s website, “encourage colleges, universities, and other education providers to affordably meet the needs of today’s students by counting more leaning toward a wider array of post-high school credentials, including degrees, certificates, and certifications”.
It is a learning system that is comprehensive, like in one school corporation where soft skills are taught early in the 8th grade and those students tour job sites;  or an Ivy Tech that teaches women in prison toward certifications; or our own Ivy Tech partnering with EVSC to prepare young people for highly desired careers in manufacturing, a program called Skill Up.
There should be roles for partnerships with every post-graduate educational institution locally, including the new IU Medical Center.
Our leaders are focused. But, I am reminded this new direction must be everyone’s challenge. It will be up to the educators on every level to increase their work in partnerships; Industry will have to continue to train its workers now on the job and  provide paid internships to prospective new workers; and, everyone in the new learning system will need to think of innovative ways to help pay the cost of Associate Degrees and certifications in high school.
There is definitely a race on among the states and within our State to get our youth prepared. Make no mistake. Whoever meets the demands of a workforce ready to go to work with certifications or  Associate Degree will be a winner.
If we stay focused on the “new learning system”, not only will we be helping our children and their future opportunities in life but our community, our region, and our State?

 

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Evansville City Council to Discuss City Officials Salaries

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Evansville City Council to Discuss City Officials Salaries

Evansville City Council will be meeting next Monday to consider the First Reading of an ordinance to fix salaries for city heads.

The salaries for every appointed officer, employee, deputy, assistant, departmental and institutional head of the city of Evansville and Evansville-Vanderburgh County Levee Authority for 2019 will be discussed.

The ordinance states that the Evansville Mayor salary will remain the same from 2018.

Along with the Mayor’s salary, the board members of the Police Merit and Fire Merit will be paid the same amount as last year. Every other city office employee will see a 2% increase from 2018.

Other city office officials salaries over 100K for 2019 include Chief Information Officer (CIO) for Computer Services Local Income Tax, Director of Utility for Water Administration, Deputy Director Engineering Services for Water Planning, Police Chief.

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Historic Neighborhood May Gain National Attention

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Historic Neighborhood May Gain National Attention

A neighborhood in Evansville may be getting some national attention. A grant proposal is being prepared in hopes of getting the Hebron Meadows development nominated to the Nation Register of Historic Places.

Hebron Meadows is a historic neighborhood, built in 1948 through the 1950s. The Director of Metropolitan Development, Kelley Coures says this neighborhood is an example of midcentury modern architecture and the majority of the homes were built by someone who was ahead of their time. “One of the architects in this neighborhood was a woman. She designed about, maybe 250 of them, maybe, 380 homes that were built in Hebron Meadows,” says Coures.

This neighborhood also gave those with limited rights in the 1950s options.

“This was one of the areas where upper-middle-class Jewish families lived, and in cities like Evansville, many times in other neighborhoods built earlier, there were deed restrictions actually about race and about religion. African Americans and Jews were prevented from building or buying homes in some more exclusive neighborhoods, but there were no such restrictions in Hebron Meadows,” says Coures.

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IDEM Seeks Input On How To Reduce Diesel Emissions

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Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—The Indiana Department of Environmental Management is seeking public comments on its report of how to use nearly $41 million in the state’s share of the Volkswagen Environmental Mitigation Trust Fund.

The public has until Sept. 28 to comment on the plan, which is aimed at projects that will reduce the amount of nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions from diesel-powered vehicles.

The trust fund was set up after Volkswagen was found to have installed equipment in its Diesel-powered vehicles that overrode the emissions control equipment. A $2.7 billion trust fund is to be used to remove the same amount of NOx that the Volkswagen vehicles put into the air in the United States over an eight-year period.

IDEM has developed a plan to use the money to outfit on-road vehicles like trucks and buses and offroad devices such as forklifts and airport ground transportation equipment to reduce pollution.

Gov. Eric Holcomb formed Indiana’s mitigation trust committee last fall to develop a plan for how to use the money. State officials are still seeking innovative projects that will have a lasting impact on Indiana’s air quality, infrastructure, and economy.

Send comments to VWTrust@idem.IN.gov. For more information about the Indiana Volkswagen Mitigation Trust Program, please visit www.idem.IN.gov/vwtrust.

Footnote: TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.