FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
CenterPoint has awarded approximately $3.5 million to support more than 1,700 projects since launching the Community Safety Grants program
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – July 22, 2025 –This year, CenterPoint Energy’s Community Safety Grants Program awarded 99 grants totaling nearly $220,000 to communities in Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio and Texas. Grants are awarded to local government agencies located within CenterPoint’s service area for community safety equipment and projects.
Since launching the program in 2003, CenterPoint has awarded approximately $3.5 million in grants for more than 1,700 efforts.
“At CenterPoint, safety is our core value, and this drives every effort we undertake as a company for the customers and communities we are privileged to serve,” said June Deadrick, CenterPoint’s Vice President, Community Relations. “Through our Community Safety Grant Program, we appreciate the opportunity to fund vital safety equipment and projects helping emergency responders and public officials save lives and improve the health and safety of our customers.”
Grants have enabled communities to fund various projects, including public AEDs (automated external defibrillators), water rescue materials, personal protective equipment for first responders, traffic control signs, utility locate devices and extraction tools to rescue people after vehicle crashes.
CenterPoint awards program grants up to $2,500 to local government agencies working to fill funding gaps for safety materials and projects.
INDIANAPOLIS – The state’s first West Nile virus (WNV) disease case for the 2025 season has been reported in a Vanderburgh County resident. No additional information about the case will be released to protect patient privacy.
West Nile virus activity has also been detected in mosquitoes throughout the state (56 samples taken from 15 counties). Visit the Indiana Mosquito-Borne Activity Dashboard to learn more. Indiana reported 11 human WNV cases in 2024. The Indiana Department of Health expects to see additional West Nile virus cases as the mosquito season progresses. Taking precautions against mosquito bites can reduce the risk of disease caused by mosquito-borne viruses such as West Nile virus, Eastern equine encephalitis (triple-E) virus, and La Crosse virus. “We have already had mosquitoes test positive for WNV this season,” said State Health Commissioner Lindsay Weaver, M.D., FACEP. “With large amounts of recent rainfall and projected high temperatures continuing this week, Hoosiers in all parts of the state should take steps to remove breeding sites around their homes.”
Steps to prevent mosquito-borne diseases include:
Most people infected with West Nile virus have no symptoms or only mild flu-like symptoms which can include fever, headache, body aches, joint pains, vomiting, diarrhea, or a rash. A small number will develop a more severe form of the disease affecting the nervous system, including inflammation in the brain and spinal cord, muscle paralysis, or even death.
People older than 60 years and those with weakened immune systems are at higher risk of severe West Nile virus disease. People who think they may have West Nile virus disease should see their healthcare providers. |
Evansville Mayor Stephanie Terry announced today that her administration is now accepting applications for a new round of Forward Together grants.
Mayor Terry created the initiative in 2024 to strengthen local nonprofit efforts aligned with the City’s priorities of neighborhood revitalization, public safety, and poverty reduction. This year, eligible nonprofit organizations may apply for up to $35,000 in funding to support programs in one or more of the following categories:
The application deadline is Friday, September 19, at 5:00 p.m., and application materials are now available on the City’s website at www.evansvillegov.org/forwardtogether. Completed applications should be submitted via email to Ariah Leary, Director of Community Affairs and Special Projects, at aleary@evansville.in.gov.
“In communities across Evansville, nonprofit organizations are on the front lines, offering hope, opportunity, and critical services to those who need them most,” Mayor Terry said. “The Forward Together grant program is about amplifying that work. By investing in initiatives like literacy and food access, and by supporting organizations doing essential work around homelessness and home weatherization, we’re taking real, tangible steps toward building a more equitable and thriving city.”
The Forward Together program is funded by interest earned from American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds and reflects the City’s broader commitment to empowering grassroots solutions to systemic challenges.
All grant proposals will be reviewed by a volunteer committee before receiving final approval from the Mayor’s Office.
Evansville Mayor Stephanie Terry announced today that her administration is now accepting applications for a new round of Forward Together grants.
Mayor Terry created the initiative in 2024 to strengthen local nonprofit efforts aligned with the City’s priorities of neighborhood revitalization, public safety, and poverty reduction. This year, eligible nonprofit organizations may apply for up to $35,000 in funding to support programs in one or more of the following categories:
The application deadline is Friday, September 19, at 5:00 p.m., and application materials are now available on the City’s website at www.evansvillegov.org/forwardtogether. Completed applications should be submitted via email to Ariah Leary, Director of Community Affairs and Special Projects, at aleary@evansville.in.gov.
“In communities across Evansville, nonprofit organizations are on the front lines, offering hope, opportunity, and critical services to those who need them most,” Mayor Terry said. “The Forward Together grant program is about amplifying that work. By investing in initiatives like literacy and food access, and by supporting organizations doing essential work around homelessness and home weatherization, we’re taking real, tangible steps toward building a more equitable and thriving city.”
The Forward Together program is funded by interest earned from American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds and reflects the City’s broader commitment to empowering grassroots solutions to systemic challenges.
All grant proposals will be reviewed by a volunteer committee before receiving final approval from the Mayor’s Office.
A new hotline aims to help Hoosiers with public meeting and records questions — and buy recently installed Public Access Counselor Jennifer Ruby time to catch up.
The pilot project is operated by the Indiana Coalition for Open Government. The volunteer-staffed hotline will formally launch Aug. 1 but is already open for calls, President Zachary Baiel said Monday.
The coalition decided to take action as complaints of non-responsiveness and long wait times pile up among its own members and in the news.
“We convened a quick working group with ICOG and just said, ‘Hey, … it’s not hard to set up a phone number and do that sort of thing. Why don’t we try this?’” Baiel recounted.
“This gives us another way to connect with Hoosiers, which is already what we enjoy doing,” he added. “This might also alleviate the pressure on the PAC office.”
The coalition was founded in 1995, with an informal luncheon organized by the Society of Professional Journalists’ Indiana chapter, according to the website.
It offers informational talks, webinars and other online resources, but focuses on aiding Hoosiers — answering questions, finding the right agency to contact, wording requests better, and so on. There’s no legal advice involved.
Baiel called the coalition “another voice, another perspective” to the governor-appointed PAC. It still directs people to the office for informal and formal advisory opinions, however.
Former PAC Luke Britt, who ran the office for about 12 years under previous Govs. Mike Pence and Eric Holcomb, announced plans to resign mid-February, WFYI reported. In late March, new Gov. Mike Braun named Indianapolis attorney Jennifer Ruby as the successor.
Ruby faces a daunting workload — and disgruntled Hoosiers.
Others are stepping in.
“We gave her a heads up, like, ‘Hey, don’t take offense to this or anything,’” Baiel said. “But, you know, she’s not blind, and I’ve seen plenty of the press around her … People aren’t getting responses. So we’re going to fill in the void.”
There’s an accountability angle, too.
“If there’s anything we can do to help catch some of those people — that way, that doesn’t then become an excuse in terms of responding back to the public. Like, ‘Oh, we did so many of these really low-level calls a day, and that just eats up four hours, and we have no personnel, and we can’t do those,’” Baiel said. “You know, I like removing excuses, so this is another excuse that then can’t be used.”
He and two other members of the coalition’s board have committed to the hotline, with the goal of answering calls live or responding to voicemails day-of.
They’re using OpenPhone, a Voice over Internet Protocol provider, so that incoming calls will ring on their desktops or smartphone apps.
The project is billed as a 90-day pilot, but Baiel said he intends to keep it going. It will depend on costs, interest from board members and uptake from the public.
Freedom, Indiana – On Saturday, July 26th at noon, we will assemble at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in downtown Indianapolis, to demand that our government stop lying, and stop keeping secrets about its corruption, blackmail, and a widespread ruling class culture of theft, human trafficking, sexual exploitation, and rape.
It’s easy to see that promises to audit the Federal Reserve and Ft. Knox, major news stories like the Las Vegas mass shooting, catastrophes like 9/11 and the assassination of JFK and Martin Luther King Jr. appear, disappear, and feed conspiracy theories. It’s also easy to see that our government, while building a digital panopticon to monitor and control us, has itself become opaque and out of control.
From past revelations, we’ve already learned that our government has performed radiation and medical experiments on soldiers and citizens, has even started wars on lies, leading to uncountable needless deaths. We’ve been warned from our nation’s founders through Eisenhower and JFK about nefarious actors building a shadow government in violation of constitutional and basic moral laws. We did not heed their warnings.
While the proof is withheld from us, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that our today government is not merely corrupt, but also under the control of international actors with sick and murderous proclivities.
We’ve never had so much evidence of deceit from the self-contradictory mouths of our politicians. We’ve never been closer to socioeconomic collapse, or WWIII. We’ve never had a better reason to protest, and demand answers.
We need revelations much more extensive and complete than the too-limited and quickly aborted Church Committee findings of 1975. We demand our politicians open up and finally tell us the truth about who and what our government is, how it actually operates. We need to fix this mess before it collapses around us in the greatest tragedy of all – the end of the USA’s experiment with free people and a government on a leash of written law.
Liberty or Bust!
Andy Horning
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FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.