Zach LaGrange has been named Vice President for Government Affairs and General Counsel, effective Monday, October 27. LaGrange will report to Steven J. Bridges, USI President, and will serve as a member of the USI President’s Cabinet.
In this role, LaGrange will serve as USI’s primary liaison to local, state and federal government, fostering strong, collaborative relationships with policymakers. This includes members and staff of the Indiana General Assembly, the Office of the Governor, the Indiana Commission for Higher Education, the Indiana Office of Management and Budget, and other key associations and organizations across Indiana and beyond. USI’s Institutional Equity Office will also report to LaGrange.
LaGrange will provide legal counsel and guidance to President Bridges, the USI Board of Trustees and other members of the University community on a broad range of legal matters relevant to the institution including compliance, contracts and grant management; employment; general business law policies and procedures; laws pertaining to students; real estate transactions; and other laws and regulations.
“Mr. LaGrange brings a wealth of legal and strategic experience that will be invaluable to the University of Southern Indiana as we continue to maintain compliance, mitigate risk and strengthen local and statewide partnerships,” Bridges says. “His proven leadership, deep ties to the Evansville community and commitment to collaboration make him an outstanding addition to our strong leadership team.”
With over 16 years of experience, LaGrange has extensive experience guiding organizations through complex legal, regulatory and governance matters. Most recently, he served as Senior Vice President and Senior Assistant General Counsel at Old National Bank in Evansville, where he led an experienced team of attorneys and a paralegal. In the role, he also partnered closely with business leaders on strategic issues ranging from real estate and labor and employment to executive compensation, benefits and vendor relationships.
Prior to Old National Bank, LaGrange served as General Counsel for Flanders Electric Motor Service, Inc., a multinational company with operations in five countries, where he oversaw contracts, compliance and risk management.
“USI represents the very best of public higher education—innovative, student-focused and community-driven,” said LaGrange. “I’m excited and honored to serve as Vice President for Government Affairs and General Counsel and look forward to helping advance USI’s mission with integrity and collaboration.”
Beyond his professional achievements, LaGrange is passionate about community leadership and service. He currently chairs the Board of Joshua Academy Charter School and serves on the Board of Forefront Community Therapy. He has also held leadership roles with the Evansville Bar Association, Legal Aid and the Evansville Trails Coalition.
He earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Evansville in 2002, a Juris Doctor from Valparaiso University School of Law in 2007 and a Master of Laws degree from the University of Florida Levin College of Law in 2008.
Indiana is asking the federal government for permission to overhaul how it spends and tracks billions in education aid — a request that Hoosier officials said would align the state’s accountability system with federal law and allow more freedom in how schools use their funds.
The request, submitted Friday to U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon, seeks a waiver from multiple provisions of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, or ESEA, the federal law governing K-12 education.
Indiana Secretary of Education Katie Jenner speaks before the state’s higher education commissioner on Friday, Aug. 22, 2025, in Indianapolis. (Photo by Casey Smith/Indiana Capital Chronicle)
If approved, the changes would take effect beginning in the 2026-27 school year.
State education leaders framed the proposal as an effort to “prioritize student learning over federal bureaucracy.” Indiana Secretary of Education Katie Jenner said the state’s message to federal officials was clear.
“With the opportunity to return education back to the states, we had a clear choice to make in Indiana: continue with the status quo or seize this moment to gain the flexibilities needed to remove federal barriers to more urgently move the needle for students,” Jenner said in a Monday statement. “As a state, we are leaning in to seize this moment, and today, our message to Washington is clear: Indiana is ready and eager, so give us the flexibility to keep driving forward for Indiana students.”
Gov. Mike Braun also praised the move, calling it proof that “Indiana continues to lead the nation in education and innovation.”
“We can best support Hoosier students when we return education to the states, empower parents with high-quality educational options, get red tape out of the way for educators, and focus on improvement for every student,” he said in a news release.
Streamlining federal programs into one ‘block grant’
The 19-page waiver application outlines a plan to simplify how federal dollars are administered and to align Indiana’s accountability system with federal requirements.
The state’s proposal centers on four main areas of flexibility: streamlining federal funding, easing local compliance, creating an innovation fund, and unifying accountability metrics.
In its filing, the Indiana Department of Education asked to combine funding from more than 15 federal education programs — including portions of Titles I, II, III and IV — into a single “strategic block grant.”
Those programs make up the bulk of federal K-12 aid: Title I supports schools serving higher percentages of low-income students; Title II funds teacher training and professional development; Title III provides extra assistance for English language learners; and Title IV helps schools expand “well-rounded” education programs, boost safety initiatives and increase access to technology.
Indiana officials argued that managing those programs separately consumes significant time and resources. The waiver emphasized that IDOE currently spends about $2.2 million annually in staff time to support the administrative infrastructure required to meet ESEA compliance demands, with roughly 75% of that amount — about $1.7 million — dedicated solely to compliance and reporting rather than to initiatives that directly advance student achievement.
By consolidating those programs, officials said the state agency can redirect resources toward its top priorities, like early literacy, STEM education and high school redesign.
The filing compares Indiana’s management of the federal COVID-era ESSER relief funds, which the department described as a “more efficient” block grant model that allowed it to “move with urgency” and “align resources with its most pressing educational priorities.”
The waiver additionally seeks to extend similar flexibility to school districts by allowing them to merge multiple federal grants into a single plan.
Department officials argued that the change would simplify paperwork and monitoring, reducing what they describe as a “burdensome regulatory environment” that often discourages “innovation” at the local level.
Under the new system, districts would complete one consolidated application and monitoring process, rather than separate plans for each federal program. That streamlined process would “free up time and staff to focus on what matters most: effective implementation, real-time progress monitoring, and continuous improvement,” according to the waiver.
Rethinking how school improvement funds are used
A major component within the request is the creation of a new “Education Innovation Grant” to replace the current federal School Improvement Grant structure.
State officials said the change is needed to address long-term underperformance in some schools. The department cited national and state data showing that despite years of federal investment, many schools identified for improvement under ESEA remain among the lowest-performing.
“Students and families cannot wait — sometimes for years — for a chronically underperforming school to improve,” the application urged. “(Grant flexibility) allows the money to support the child, rather than continuing to be trapped in a system that year over year is yielding negative results for children.”
The proposed new approach would allow Indiana to direct about $25 million in annual federal school improvement funds to any district or program — such as charter schools, microschools, or partnerships with industry or higher education — that serves students zoned to attend persistently underperforming schools.
Hoosier officials argued that expanding eligibility would promote “student-centered solutions” and reduce the stigma associated with receiving federal school improvement dollars.
The state’s waiver also proposes aligning its new, forthcoming A–F accountability systemwith federal reporting requirements. Indiana officials say the move would end the confusion caused by schools currently receiving two different performance ratings—one for federal purposes and another under state law.
“This flexibility allows IDOE to tailor interventions to the state’s most urgent and localized needs,” the waiver notes, adding that a unified system would “provide families with clear, consistent school ratings to support informed decision-making” and “reduce complexity and increase clarity.”
The state would continue to publish annual report cards that break down outcomes by subgroup, but would shift how it packages and uses the funds behind those report cards.
Jenner described the request as part of a broader effort to “advance student outcomes through innovation, flexibility, and a relentless focus on academic excellence.”
The department emphasized that the waiver would not alter how federal funds are distributed to districts or change the “supplement, not supplant” requirement that ensures federal dollars enhance rather than replace state and local spending.
Teachers’ union urges caution
Federal education officials encouraged all states in July to consider ESEA waiver requests that would give them “more control” over how federal education dollars are used.
But the Indiana State Teachers Association previously urged caution, arguing that the waiver could weaken oversight and divert resources away from schools that need them most.
In an Aug. 18 statement, ISTA leadership said it supports efforts to reduce administrative burden “when it can be done without undermining educational equity or outcomes for students,” but warned that consolidating federal programs “risks weakening” the rights of educators and parents to participate in decisions about federal funding.
Ron Sandlin, Indiana Department of Education’s chief innovation officer (Photo courtesy IDOE)
The state’s largest teachers union also raised concerns that shifting school-improvement dollars “away from public schools identified for additional support … to other entities such as microschools, charter schools, or partnerships with industry or higher education institutions” could “redirect these funds to schools or programs that are not necessarily serving the students most in need.”
Still, at the July 16 State Board of Education meeting, IDOE senior official Ron Sandlin previewed the proposal and described it as a “continuation of Indiana’s commitment to innovation.”
Sandlin told board members the flexibility waiver “is not about reducing accountability or transparency,” but rather “about aligning systems so we can spend more time serving students and less time checking boxes.”
He said the plan is designed to “reduce bureaucratic compliance, empower local decision-making, and eliminate duplicative systems by adopting a single accountability framework for both state and federal requirements.”
Under federal law, the U.S. Department of Education has 120 days to review Indiana’s submission and provide a response. If approved, the changes would take effect beginning with the 2026–27 school year.
“The opportunity to return education to the states,” Jenner wrote in her letter, “allows us to further reduce burdensome federal compliance demands and empower our local leaders, in collaboration with parents and families, to make informed decisions about what Indiana students need most.”
Get ready for fall cleanup! Starting Monday, October 27, until Friday, December 12, Evansville Water and Sewer Utility (EWSU) will provide leaf collection for City residential customers. If you pay for trash and recycling through your water and sewer bill, simply place your properly bagged leaves at the curb on your usual trash pickup day—Republic Services will take care of the rest!
Help us keep our community clean and green!
Please put your leaves in biodegradable plastic or paper leaf bags, or in containers.
Once bagged, place them in neat, manageable piles by the curb near your trash cart.
Remember to set everything out before 6 a.m. on your regular collection day—no need to put them out early.
To ensure your leaves are picked up, please remember to use biodegradable bags, paper bags or containers, and follow the collection guidelines. If your leaves aren’t picked up and you believe you’ve followed all the steps, just give Republic Services a call at 812-424-3345 within two days of your usual trash day.
Who is not eligible
Apartment complexes, mobile home communities, business and commercial customers, and Utility customers who live outside of the Evansville city limits are not eligible.
Heavy Trash Temporarily Suspended
We’re pausing heavy trash pickups for the Fall Leaf Collection Program and will resume full service on Monday, December 15, 2025. Thank you for your continued support and understanding!
Evansville, IN – Ivy Tech Community College Evansville is planning a series of discussions with EVSC families about career options and the 42 different programs of study offered in-person at Ivy Tech.
The first of the Unlock Your Future series will be on Thursday, Nov. 6, at 5:30 p.m. at the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library – Central Library Location, 200 SE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Not only is this a good opportunity for juniors and seniors in high school, but also for middle school students as they consider their high school pathway. It is free and open to all and will be held in the large meeting room, upstairs at Central Library.
It will be offered through Ivy Tech’s IvyGo initiative, which travels to locations in the community to meet with interested individuals. This event will discuss the programs and careers in Advanced Automation and Robotics, and Engineering.
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana swimming and diving returns to action with a dual meet at Kentucky Wednesday (Oct. 22) inside the Lancaster Aquatic Center.
The meet is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. ET, and fans can stream the action via the SEC Network+ digital platform.
Indiana swimming and diving won all five duals meets during the two-day USC Invitational October 10-11.
The Hoosiers swept the four relays and won 18 individual events. Three IU swimmers – freshman Liberty Clark, junior Miranda Grana and senior Zalán Sárkány – won all three of their individual events. Twelve Hoosiers captured NCAA qualifying times and seven IU divers picked up NCAA zone qualifying scores on the springboards. The Indiana men won 15 of 17 swimming events while holding No. 14 Texas A&M and No. 17 USC to double-digit team scores.
IU captured four of the six available conference weekly awards, sweeping the Big Ten Swimmer of the Week and Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors for the cycle.
HOOSIERS FILL U.S. NATIONAL TEAMS
A total of 21 Americans with ties to the Indiana swimming and diving program have qualified for their respective national teams.
Twelve Hoosiers feature in USA Swimming’s 2025-26 national team, including Alexei Avakov, Brian Benzing, Mariah Denigan, Travis Gulledge, Lilly King, Matt King, Josh Matheny, Van Mathias, Owen McDonald, Anna Peplowski, Aaron Shackell and Jassen Yep. Avakov, Gulledge, McDonald and Shackell will compete for Indiana during the 2025-26 NCAA season.
Nine more Hoosiers earned selections to USA Diving’s High Performance Squads in May: Andrew Capobianco, Josh Hedberg, Quinn Henninger, Carson Tyler (Tier 1), Lily Witte (Tier 2) as well as Dash Glasberg, Ella Roselli, Joshua Sollenberger and Maxwell Weinrich (Tier 3). Hedberg, Witte, Glasberg, Roselli, Sollenberger and Witte are all members of the NCAA roster.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Ivy Tech Community College Evansville is planning its annual Halloween Hoopla, on Oct. 30 from 3-5 p.m., on the main campus located at 3501 N. First Avenue in Evansville. The event is free and open to the public. Guests are asked to enter through Door C on the Colonial Avenue side of the campus.
Families are invited to dress up in costume and participate in “Board Games Come to Life” which will include Halloween-themed giveaways, fun activities featuring different departments and student organizations, as well as indoor Trick or Treating, throughout the building.
This outreach activity is sponsored by the Office of Student Life and Staff Council.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Kate Petrova and Elizabeth Mercer recorded top ten finishes to complete the Braun Intercollegiate on Tuesday at Oak Meadow Country Club.
Petrova led the Purple Aces as she finished in a tie for fifth place with a 153. She finished Tuesday’s final round with an 80. Mercer wrapped up the final 18 holes with a 79. Combined with Monday’s score of 76, Mercer tied for the seventh position with a 154.
Jane Grankina was third on the team coming home in a tie for 24th place. Following an 80 on Monday, Grankina posted a 79 in the last round. She finished the weekend with a 15-over 159. Trinity Dubbs and Haley Hughes rounded out Evansville’s team efforts. Dubbs lowered her score by five strokes in the second round shooting an 80. She tied for 42nd with a 165. Hughes also had a lower score on Tuesday. After recording an 86 to open the event, Hughes carded an 83 on Tuesday to tie for 52nd with a 169.
Adeline Wittmer and Mia Cruz competed as individuals. Wittmer completed both days with scores of 87 while Cruz registered a 90 in the final 18 holes for her low score of the tournament.
Belmont took the team championship along with having the top two individuals. The Bruins finished at 23-over for the tournament to defeat UIC and Indian Hills CC by 27 strokes. Evansville came in sixth place at 55-over. Chloe Tarkany of BU was the medalist. Following a 73 on Monday, she finished with an even 72 on Tuesday to wrap up the tournament at 1-over. She bested teammate Sloan Biddle by two strokes.
UE completes the fall slate at Lipscomb in two weeks.
FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.