Otters to host Military Appreciation Night Saturday, August 25 at 6:35 p.m.
Serengeti Empress in Debutante, Tobacco Road in Juvenile
“IS IT TRUE” AUGUST 20 2018
IS IT TRUE that the 138th Annual Indiana Democratic Editorial Convention held last weekend at the French Lick Resort was a rousing success?  …a record number of Democrats around the State attended this event?  …former State Repersentsentive Gail Riecken and past Evansville Mayor Jonathon Wienzapfel were seen talking with many State officeholders and party leaders attending this event?  …political watchers are speculating that the former Democratic Mayor of Evansville could be posturing to run for a State or Federal office in the future?
IS IT TRUE that Courier and Press writer Jon Webb is channeling the City-County Observer these days and we applaud his efforts?…he aptly pointed out that the ribbon cutter team that showed up at the new downtown medical school must have been on a full dose of adrenaline induced delusion?… Mayor Winnecke even stated that Evansville has “PEAKED†and Webb took him to task for such hyperbole?… Webb went so far as to opine that he surely hoped that Evansville is not at its PEAK since poverty is getting worse, shootings are at their 2nd highest ever behind 2017, heroin has replaced meth as the drug of choice, and utility bills are off the charts?…the truth is that the population of Evansville “PEAKED†about 60 years ago along with national economic relevance?… Jon Webb is exactly right that shiny baubles do not replace crumbling infrastructure and cultural degradation?…we at the CCO do think the IU Medical School does have transformative capacity if the powers that be at IVY Tech can find a way to include their nursing students in the downtown campus too?
IS IT TRUE that it is sometimes instructive to do some comparisons and the time has come to compare Evansville to Fargo, North Dakota that has such bad weather that it is virtually frozen 3 months every year?…in 1960 when Evansville really was “PEAKING†the population was 141,543 and Fargo was a sleepy little town of 46,662 making Evansville 3 times the size of Fargo?
IS IT TRUE that time Evansville also had triple the economy of Fargo?…since that time Fargo has expanded the state university, established a research arm in that university, assured that the entire city has bandwidth that exceeds 1Gbps, and grown to a population of 122,359 that exceeds Evansville’s current population of 119,477?…in a short 60 years Fargo that had nothing but wheat and Bison has blown by Evansville by concentrating on substance instead of fun and games?… Fargo is not the first city to leave Evansville in the dust and it will not be the last as long as the movers and shakers of Evansville deeply believe that silliness is transformative?
IS IT TRUE the silliest false claim ever made by local leaders was that moving Roberts Stadium from Boeke Road to the new downtown Ford Center would immediately constitute the creation of many new jobs?….to think that moving a job from point A to point B created a new job takes a special kind of stupid?
IS IT TRUE that a compliance audit was recently conducted by the Housing and Urban Development Office of the Inspector General concerning the Evansville Housing Authority?  …that the Federal auditors stated that the EHA did not comply with federal guidelines during the renovations of hundreds of low-income housing units?  …we find that the comment made by the EHA CEO to the Evansville Courier and Press that the audit issues will be settled with little or no consequence to the agency to be insulting to the people conducting the audit  …that an official from the Office of the Inspector General told the Evansville Courier and Press that EHA “lacked a sufficient understanding of HUD’s requirements for housing quality standards and conflicts of interest. It also lacked an adequate quality control process?† …we are surprised that the EHA Executive Director Rick Moore had the gall to publically state he disagreed with the conclusions of the Housing and Urban Development Office of Inspector General? …several years ago Mayor Winnecke cut a quiet deal with an out-of-state for-profit entity to purchase the assets of the City of Evansville not-for-profit EHA with a promise that this transaction will allow EHA to make the major improvement to the housing units lived in by the economically disadvantaged citizens of Vanderburgh County?
IS IT TRUE that Evansville City Councilwoman Missy Mosby voluntarily locked herself in a big dog cage last Wednesday?  …that Missy Mosby is a long time volunteer at ‘It Takes a Village No Kill Animal Rescue,’ locked herself in a dog cage along with her own dog Lil’ Skipper to help raise money for “It Takes A Village” animal rescue shelter?  …Ms. Mosby set a goal of raising $3,000 in donations before she would be let free?  …we are happy to report that Missy was let out of the cage when she raised an astonishing $5,000 to help raise enough money will help the shelter improve the dog playground at “It Takes A Village” animal rescue shelter? …we give five (5) cheers to Missy Mosby for raising money for ‘It Takes a Village No Kill Animal Rescue”?
Todays“Readers Poll†question is: Are you concerned that the EHA did not comply with federal guidelines during the renovations of hundreds of low-income housing units?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS†and “LOCAL SPORTSâ€.  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. Â 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. Â The use of offensive language, insults against commenters will not be tolerated and will be removed from our site
Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners Meeting
AGENDA
Vanderburgh County Board of Commissioners
August 21, 2018, at 3:00 pm, Room 301
- Call to Order
- Attendance
- Pledge of Allegiance
- Permission to Open Bids for VC18-08-02: Street Resurfacing in Kingsmont Subdivision & Arrowood SubdivisionÂ
- Action ItemsÂ
- Resolution CO.R-08-18-011: Amending the Burkhardt Road TIF Economic Development Area Plan
- Memorandum of Understanding between The City of Evansville and Vanderburgh County for the 2018 Byrne Justice Assistance Grant FundsÂ
- Purchasing Department: Approval to Award Batteries for Various Departments (RFP-01-003-18) to Distributors Warehouse Inc.Â
- Public Hearing RQAW Jail Study
- Department Head Reports
- New Business
- 2019 Calendar
- Joint Vanderburgh and Warrick County Commission Meeting to Discuss INDOT Lloyd Expressway Plans
- Jail Blue Ribbon Committee will meet on Thursday, August 23, 2018 at 1:30 p.m. in Room 318
- Old Business
- Consent Items
- Contracts, Agreements and Leases
- Community Corrections: Professional Services Agreement with Southwestern Behavioral Healthcare, Inc.Â
- Burdette Park: Contract with American Locker for New Lockers for the Aquatic Center
- Approval of August 7, 2018 Meeting Minutes
- Employment ChangesÂ
- County Auditor:Â
- 8/6/18-8/10/18 & 8/13/18-8/17/18 Claims Voucher ReportÂ
- Request to Surplus a ComputerÂ
- County Clerk: July 2018 Monthly ReportÂ
- County Treasurer: July 2018 Monthly ReportÂ
- County Engineer:Â
- Financial Commitment Letter for the Reconstruction of Oak Hill Road between Heckel Road and Millersburg Road
- Financial Commitment Letter for the Rehabilitation of the Franklin Street Bridge over Pigeon Creek
- Financial Commitment Letter to Request INDOT “Local Trax†Funds for the Construction of a Railroad Bridge on Mill Road over the CSX Railroad Tracks
- Department Report
- Claims
- Pay Request #8 Phoenix Commerce T.I.F. for the sum of $2,250.00
- Pay Request #43 U.S. 41 Expansion T.I.F. for the sum of $655,092.78
- Weights and Measures: July 16-August 15, 2018 Monthly ReportÂ
- Contracts, Agreements and Leases
- Public Comment
- Rezoning
- First Reading of Rezoning Ordinance VC-7-2018
Petitioner: Jack Strassweg, Member of SS&K, LLC
Address: 728 E. Baseline Road
Request: Change from AG to C-4 with UDC
-
- Final Reading of Rezoning Ordinance VC-6-2018
Petitioner: Robert & Kimau Faulkner
Address: 1809 Allen Lane
Request: Change from AG to C-2
- Adjournment
There Has to be More From the IU Med Center
Commentary: A Farewell To The Queen
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.comÂ
INDIANAPOLIS – Somehow, it’s fitting that the Queen of Soul and the King of Rock ’n’ Roll died on the same date.
Thanks to Aretha Franklin and Elvis Presley, Aug. 16 forever will be known, to quote a song from my youth, as the day the music died.
We don’t agree about much as a country and a people now. We find some of the silliest reasons imaginable to turn disagreements into arguments, arguments into fights into brawls and brawls into wars.
But most of us did agree about Elvis.
And Aretha.
More important, we agreed that we wanted to live in a country where stories like theirs were possible.
We wanted an America in which the son of an ex-convict Southern sharecropper and day laborer could vault from working as a truck driver to becoming a king.
And we wanted a land in which a black, teenage, unwed mother could leap from being in the choir in her father’s church to becoming a queen.
Elvis and Aretha became royalty the same way – through hard work, by breaking down barriers and by being talented.
So talented.
Many tributes have been written to the natural force of Aretha’s voice. It was a marvel, an instrument of incredible range and flexibility, so supple and so powerful at the same time.
But many people are born with great voices.
That doesn’t make them great singers.
That doesn’t make them Aretha.
What defines the great, great singers – and Aretha Franklin was one of the greatest – is a fierce intelligence. In addition to superb musicianship, they must have such a deep understanding of life that they literally can live a lyric – and make the audience live it, too.
That can come from nowhere but a profound sense of our shared humanity, of the pieces of life that link everyone.
Aretha Franklin may have climbed heights that allowed her to pal around with presidents and other potentates, but it was clear she never forgot what it was like to be a black, unwed, teenage mother in a segregated America. She never forgot what it was like to be disregarded and disparaged.
That was why she could sing about respect – R-E-S-P-E-C-T – with the urgency she did. She knew what it felt like to have other people look past her.
She had lived the lyric.
And she made us – black and white, male and female – live it, too.
The late Otis Redding of “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay†fame, himself no slouch as an interpretative singer, wrote “Respect†and recorded it first.
When he heard Aretha’s version, Redding shook his head in dismay and admiration.
“The little girl cut me,†he said and laughed.
Redding knew genius when he heard it.
He knew Aretha had taken the song – and, with it, the audience – places he hadn’t and maybe couldn’t.
That’s the thing about genuine artists such as Aretha.
They show us things about our own lives and souls – and about the lives and souls of others. They remind us that we all breathe and bleed, live and love, rejoice and cry.
They give us lessons in empathy, often to a great beat that we can dance to.
I’m a democrat with a small “d.†I believe that, regardless of how we pray, the color of our skin or who we love, we’re all born into and swim in the same broad river of humanity. For that reason, I’ve never had much use for royalty or for the trappings associated with it.
But I am and always have been a fan of the King of Rock ’n’ Roll.
And I’m more than happy to bow down before the Queen of Soul.
Perhaps it was a coincidence that Elvis and Aretha both died on Aug. 16. Maybe it was a quirk of fate. Possibly a message from the universe.
All I know is that, for a lot of us, that date will be the day the music died, the anniversary of when the King and the Queen left us.
Long may they reign.
FOOTNOTE:  John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits†WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
The City-County Observer posted this article without opinion, bias or editing.
Lawmaker wants to block public dollars from schools with discriminatory policies
By Shelby Mullis
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS — An Indiana lawmaker is attempting to block state dollars from going toward any Indiana school with discriminatory policies after an Indianapolis Catholic high school suspended an employee for her same-sex marriage.
Rep. Dan Forestal, D-Indianapolis, submitted language to the Indiana legislature’s drafting officials Wednesday in response to the recent suspension of Shelly Fitzgerald, a counselor at Roncalli High School.
“Roncalli should not be rewarded with state dollars if they choose to discriminate against employees simply based on who they love,†Forestal said in a statement. Forestal is a Roncalli alumnus.
Fitzgerald, who has worked at Roncalli for 15 years, was placed on paid administrative leave Sunday after news surfaced of her 2014 marriage to her partner of more than 20 years. The school defended its decision in a Facebook post Sunday, which has since been removed, saying it requires teachers to uphold the beliefs of the Catholic church, including a marriage “between a man and a woman.â€
But Forestal said Roncalli’s actions against the counselor are contrary to the ideals he learned as a student.
“We were taught to love and accept everyone regardless of our differences,†Forestal said the statement. “Roncalli should practice what they preach and reinstate Shelly Fitzgerald immediately and without any further consequences. And in the meantime, I will work to ensure that Hoosier tax dollars no longer fund these discriminatory actions.â€
Under current law, school vouchers can be used at private and religious schools for students to offset the cost of tuition. These vouchers are funded by the state’s school funding formula.
The school has received more than $6.5 million in public money over the last five years through the state’s school voucher program.
Forestal wants to prohibit those vouchers from getting into the hands of institutions that engage in discriminatory practices and punish employees based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
He plans to officially file a bill when the legislative session resumes in January.
Footnote: Shelby Mullis is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Indiana Secretary of State Connie Lawson To Tour State Educating Citizens On Investment Fraud Through BINGO
The game is designed to educate Hoosiers on how to avoid falling prey to fraudsters. All events are free and will include prizes and refreshments.
“Research shows that Americans lose $40 billion a year to investment fraud,” said Secretary Lawson. “Our goal is to give Hoosiers the tools they need to avoid falling prey to scammers and fraudsters. Bringing our MoneyWise BINGO tour to communities around the state helps us spread the word in a fun way to citizens of all ages.”
Secretary Lawson will visit the following locations for a BINGO event throughout the summer to educate citizens on investment fraud. All events are free to the public and open to the media. The event will last for an hour. All times are local.
July 19th – Fishers, Christ the Savior Lutheran Church at 10:30 am
July 19th – Anderson, Anderson Public Library at 1:30 pm
July 23rd – Martinsville, American Legion Post 230 at 2:30 pm
July 24th – Brownsburg, American Legion Post 331 at 6:00 pm
July 25th – Franklin, Johnson County Public Library (Franklin Branch) at 3:00 pm
July 30th – Greenfield, Hancock Public Library (Greenfield Branch) at 12:00 pm
July 30th – Zionsville, American Legion Post 79 at 3:30 pm
July 31st – Elkhart, Elkhart Public Library at 9:15 am
August 23rd – Indianapolis, Indianapolis Public Library (East 38th Street Branch) at 2:30 pm
August 28th – Evansville, Evansville-Vanderburgh Public Library (Central Branch) at 1:00 pm
September 4th – Lafayette, Tippecanoe County Public Library (Downtown Branch) at 1:00 pm
September 6th – Fort Wayne, Allen County Public Library (Main Branch) at 1:00 pm
September 11th – South Bend, St. Joseph County Public Library (Main Library) at 1:00 pm
September 11th – Portage, Portage Public Library, 5:00 pm
Attendees should RSVP to Mikaela Malott at mmalott@hirons.com or 317-977-2206, extension 120.
Citizens can report suspected securities or investment fraud to the Secretary of State’s office at 317-232-6682. For more information on the MoneyWise BINGO tour or on investor protection, visit www.indianamoneywise.com.