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HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Attendance Clerk
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation 41 reviews – Evansville, IN
$10.14 an hour
This position will automatically be enrolled in the Public Employees’ Retirement Fund (PERF) through the state of Indiana, which includes a defined benefit …
Receptionist/Office Assistant
KGA Architects, LLP – Evansville, IN
Answer, screen and forward incoming phone calls. Perform other clerical receptionist duties such as filing, photocopying, scanning and faxing….
Office Coordinator
Holiday Retirement Village of Holiday Health Care – Evansville, IN
$10.00 – $10.82 an hour
Holiday Retirement Village is an independent, assisted living facility located on the north side of Evansville….
Front Desk Receptionist
Talley Eye Institute – Evansville, IN
Growing ophthalmology practice seeking enthusiastic front desk receptionist to join our group. The Medical Receptionist manages efficient patient flow through…
Front Desk Receptionist
Beaux Cheveux International – Evansville, IN
$10 – $12 an hour
Opening of salon in the morning, greeting clients, scheduling appointments, receiving inventory, answering phone and delivering messages, keeping the salon tidy…
Tour Guide
USS LST Ship Memorial, Inc. – Evansville, IN
$9 an hour
Answer phones and direct calls when not engaged with visitors. Provide clerical and custodial assistance to Office staff when not engaged with visitors….
DSS Customer Service Spec I
Deaconess Health System 49 reviews – Evansville, IN
Receives payments and provides receipt to customer upon request according to Hospital Policy and Procedure. Sorts and distributes mail….
Ticketing
TJ Maxx Distribution Center 4,948 reviews – Evansville, IN
$12.00 – $13.50 an hour
Don’t mind keeping active and handling objects as low as the floor and as high as the thigh, waist and shoulder….
Receptionist (12666)
Alpha Rae Personnel, Inc. – Evansville, IN
$14.50 an hour
Answer phones as front desk in a professional manner. Greets guests and visitors, ask for proper ID, ensuring each visitor has badge and signs in at guest log…
Administrative Assistant
Global Employment Solutions 98 reviews – Evansville, IN
$11 – $14 an hour
No phone calls please. Must have data entry or administrative/clerical experience. Experience working in or around a manufacturing facility is also a plus….
$2 Pay Increase at TJ Maxx Distribution Center!
TJ Maxx Distribution Center 4,948 reviews – Evansville, IN
$12.00 – $13.50 an hour
Don’t mind keeping active and handling objects as low as the floor and as high as the thigh, waist and shoulder….
DSS HR Assistant
Deaconess Health System 49 reviews – Evansville, IN
Provides back-up coverage to the front reception desk. Provides support and assistance to the manager, the recruiters, and other department managers and…
Mulitple General Labor Openings
Road and Rail Services 98 reviews – Evansville, IN
$15 – $16 an hour
Must maintain a valid state driver’s license if required to operate company equipment; Valid Drivers License….
DVNA Hospice, Spiritual Bereavement Coordinator
Deaconess Health System 49 reviews – Evansville, IN
Valid Driver’s License. Appropriate certification in hospital or pastoral ministry. Graduate of an accredited seminary or school of theology….
Distribution Center Associate – Up to $15/hour!
TJ Maxx Distribution Center 4,948 reviews – Evansville, IN
$15 an hour
Don’t mind keeping active and handling objects as low as the floor and as high as the thigh, waist and shoulder….
Distribution Center Associate
TJ Maxx Distribution Center 4,948 reviews – Evansville, IN
$12.00 – $13.50 an hour
Don’t mind keeping active and handling objects as low as the floor and as high as the thigh, waist and shoulder….
Route Collector
CSC ServiceWorks 37 reviews – Evansville, IN
Maintain a valid driver’s license and clean driving record. A typical work day has you visiting various locations to collect money from our air and laundry…
Volleyball Coach – Grade 7
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation 41 reviews – Evansville, IN
$1,288 a month
It is the policy of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation not to discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, sexual orientation, veteran…
General Warehouse
TJ Maxx Distribution Center 4,948 reviews – Evansville, IN
$12.00 – $13.50 an hour
Don’t mind keeping active and handling objects as low as the floor and as high as the thigh, waist and shoulder….
Shipping and Receiving Clerk
TJ Maxx Distribution Center 4,948 reviews – Evansville, IN
$12.00 – $13.50 an hour
Don’t mind keeping active and handling objects as low as the floor and as high as the thigh, waist and shoulder….
Ministry Specialist
Dream Center Evansville – Evansville, IN
$12 an hour
Licenses & certifications required – Driver’s License. Driver’s License (Required). No calls please. 6 hours each week are spent teaching, with the remaining…
Experience Facilitator – EVPL Oaklyn
Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library – Evansville, IN
$12.98 an hour
I need a valid driver’s license. I need to have a Bachelor’s degree in a related or applicable field and minimal experience conducting programs for users of all…
Prevention Education Specialist
Albion Fellows Bacon Center – Evansville, IN
$21,000 – $24,000 a year
Valid Indiana driver’s license, proof of vehicle insurance & access to a car during work. Bachelor’s degree in Social Work, Education, Sociology, or similar…
Disaster Program Manager
American Red Cross 5,679 reviews – Evansville, IN
As a DPM, the work hours may vary and the selected candidate needs to be flexible to work on call 24/7 to cover disasters, attend weekend events and travel as…
Client Services Specialist
Reindeer Auto Relocation 4 reviews – Evansville, IN
$35,000 – $45,000 a year
Develop and maintain close relations with agents in order to serve their needs more effectively. Serve as liaison with Atlas agents for any order issues (late…
Director of First Impressions/Receptionist
Keller Williams Capital Realty 2,661 reviews – Evansville, IN
$10 an hour
Various clerical duties (creating documents with Microsoft Office, copies, filing, mail distribution, etc). Answering multi-line phone system….
Entry Level Lab Technician
Enviroplas, Inc. – Evansville, IN
Enviroplas, Inc., a leading engineering resin manufacturer, has the immediate need for a 2nd and 3rd shift entry level lab technician to create and test batches…

VCSO and USI Partnership announcement

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WHO: USI President Ronald Rochon, USI Vice President for Finance and Administration Steve Bridges, USI Public Safety Director Steve Bequette, Vanderburgh County Sheriff Dave Wedding, and other members of USI Public Safety and the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office.

WHAT: Public announcement of agreement and start of work of full-time Vanderburgh County sheriff’s deputies on the University of Southern Indiana campus.

WHEN: 10 a.m. Tuesday, August 21, 2018. Anticipated time 30 minutes or less.

WHERE: The University of Southern Indiana Rice Library Book Drop and Loading Dock area located on the south side of the library. A map of campus that includes the Rice Library can be found at USI.edu/map. Parking for media will be available in this same area, adjacent to the library off University Boulevard

UE men’s basketball adds two transfers

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Aces add Sam Cunliffe and Artur Labinowicz

University of Evansville head men’s basketball coach Walter McCarty continues to build for the future and took a big step in that direction with the addition of transfers Sam Cunliffe and Artur Labinowicz.

Cunliffe comes to Evansville from the University of Kansas while Labinowicz spent his first two collegiate seasons at Coastal Carolina.

“It is very exciting to add two guys that bring a variety of skills such as shooting and athleticism to our program,” McCarty said.  “They each will have a year to learn our system, which will pay dividends when they are eligible in 2019.”

“We are happy that Sam and Artur chose the University of Evansville to further their careers,” McCarty continued.

Sam Cunliffe was a top 50 player in the nation coming out of Rainier Beach High School in Seattle, Washington.  He was the Seattle Times Player of the Year as a senior while leading his high school squad to its fourth state championship in five seasons.  He began his career at Arizona State where he played in 10 games as a freshman while recording 9.5 points and 4.5 rebounds per game.  His top effort at ASU was a 23-point, 10-rebound game against The Citadel.

The 6-6 guard transferred to Kansas, where he was eligible to play in the second semester of the 2017-18 campaign.  Cunliffe saw time in 15 games for the Jayhawks as they made a run to the 2018 Final Four.  He played just under five minutes per game while appearing in two NCAA tournament contests.  Cunliffe will have two years of eligibility at UE.

Labinowicz joins the Purple Aces following two seasons at Coastal Carolina.  Following a solid freshman season that saw him post 6.5 points and 3.9 rebounds, he enjoyed great improvement as a sophomore, upping his productivity to 10.8 points and 4.4 caroms.

Last season, the 6-4 guard from Charlotte, N.C. set his career mark with 32 points against Georgia State while draining six 3-pointers.  He averaged 27.3 minutes per game as a sophomore.  Labinowicz began his high school career at David W. Butler High School and led his team to a 23-4 record.  He went on to play at Combine Academy averaging 24 points per game with his top outing being a 37-point game while also posting a triple-double.

 

 

Adopt A Pet

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Cloudy is a 6-year-old female dilute tortoiseshell cat. She’s friendly with other cats and should do fine in just about any home! Her adoption fee is $40 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

Unions Brought Black Americans Into The Middle Class.

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Unions Brought Black Americans Into The Middle Class. They’re Now Being Decimated

posted in the  Guardian

Ozell Ueal and the Rev Cleophus Smith in Boston, Massachusetts on 17 July. Photograph: Scott Eisen for the Guardian

Cleophus Smith started working at the Memphis, Tennessee, sanitation department in 1967. He had no union, six children, and made the equivalent of about $8.50 per hour. Ozell Ueal started working at the same sanitation department seven years prior for roughly the same pay.

On 1 February 1968, during a violent rainstorm, two fellow sanitation workers, Echol Cole and Robert Walker, were killed when heavy rain caused barrels of heavy garbage to crush them. Their deaths catalyzed what would become one of the most important civil rights and labor rights campaigns in US history, ending 12 days after Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated.

The deaths of Cole and Walker, coupled with generally poor working conditions and inadequate pay, compelled Smith, Ueal and a host of others to join a protest led by TO Jones, a sanitation worker-turned-organizer. They armed themselves with signs bearing the familiar phrase of the civil rights struggle: “I am a man.”

Only a strike, they believed, would be economically powerful enough to force the city government to negotiate. But striking would be a risky and at times dangerous show of courage. It meant sacrificing already anemic pay for the duration of the strike; facing the wrath of the mayor, Henry Loeb, who had declared the strike illegal; and enduring violent suppression by a racist and unflinching police force.

National Guard troops stand with bayonets fixed as African American sanitation workers march wearing placards reading ‘I am a man’. Photograph:

The sanitation workers went on strike anyway. With that decision, two key African American movements that had been moving in parallel for decades became fatefully intertwined: the fight for labor rights and the fight for civil rights.

Fifty years later, Cleophus “Cleo” Smith, 76, and Ozell Ueal, 79, still remember the strike as if it were yesterday. For 65 days, they and hundreds of other black sanitation workers marched – “every day, for hours”, often while being maced, clubbed or teargassed by police – to demand safer working conditions and fairer pay. Local churches helped feed the workers and their families during the strike.

One particularly bloody day, 28 March 1968, ended with 276 arrests, 60 injuries and the death of a 16-year-old boy, Larry Payne, who came to support the strikers. King was visiting Memphis to support the strike when he was murdered on a motel balcony.

Yet they prevailed. Against all odds, the strike succeeded.

” src=”blob:https://city-countyobserver.com/3f076acf-9ab6-4de5-ad50-029af86c6c91″ alt=”image002.png” border=”0″ class=”Apple-web-attachment Singleton” style=”width: 3.9583in; height: 5.9375in;”> The Rev Cleophus Smith. Photograph: Scott Eisen for The Guardian

“I got promoted to become a truck driver,” said Ueal, then “a crew chief”.

Smith has a winsome squint and a smile that belies his sharp wit, perhaps from the 51 years of working with the sanitation workers that he still counts as co-workers half a century later. His blue pinstripe suit is pressed perfectly, with creases marking each pant pleat. Ueal, who started the same job a few years earlier and has been Smith’s buddy since the 1960s, proudly wore his “I am a man” hat.

“He wouldn’t have gotten that promotion without the strike,” Smith pointed out.

The sanitation workers also achieved unionization through AFSCME Local 1733 and, perhaps most saliently, they get time off for the same type of rainy weather that led to the deaths of Cole and Walker.

Thanks in part to the work of groups like AFSCME Local 1733 – still going strong today – many black workers are now organized in labor unions. They have better pay and fairer treatment, and, as Smith said: “We don’t have to work in the rain anymore.”

But the hard-fought gains of the black labor movement may be once again under threat.

On the last Friday of May, Donald Trump signed a series of executive orders that dealt a blow to the ability of federal employees to organize.

The first order now reduces the time to fire “poor performers and employees under suspicion of misconduct”. The second order restricts union officials to using only 25% of their work hours on official time for the union, meaning it can’t be used for lobbying Congress or representing employees who file grievances. The last order empowers all agencies to renegotiate all collective bargaining agreements, under the watchful eye of a new “Labor Relations Working Group”.

Then, on 27 June, the US supreme court ruled that public sector unions can no longer compel employees to pay union dues.

On the surface, these recent developments may seem unremarkable – and outcries from labor may just sound like public sector workers unwilling to let go of a comfortable status quo. But between them, they could represent one of the most precise injuries to the progress of people of color in history.

Working, unionized black women, according to the Economic Policy Institute, “are paid 94.9% of what their black male counterparts make”, while non-union black women make “just 91% of their counterparts”.

Another study by the Economic Policy Institute shows that “unions help raise the wages of women and black and Hispanic workers – whose wages have historically lagged behind those of white men … Black and Hispanic workers get a larger boost from unionization than their white counterparts”.

The Center for Economic and Policy Research showed that black union workers are “13.1 percentage points more likely to have employer-provided health insurance, and 15.4 percentage points more likely to have employer-sponsored retirement plans”.

And the results are more staggering for black union workers who haven’t completed high school: black union workers in this category benefit from a “wage advantage of 19.6% over their non-union peers, and are 23.4 percentage points and 25.2 percentage points more likely to have health insurance and a retirement plan, respectively”.

For many black Americans, unions have been life-changing ladders to the middle class.

The anti-union “right-to-work” doctrine has been a rallying cry of the American right wing for nearly a century. In fact, long before Trump’s executive orders (or Wisconsin governor Scott Walker’s ongoing assault on unions, which he has called an “expensive entitlement”), there was Vance Muse.

Muse is often credited with popularizing the term “right-to-work”. He epitomized big business interests in maintaining segregation during the early 20th century. Both an anti-labor hardliner and a fierce segregationist, Muse proudly told a Senate committee hearing in 1936: “I am a southerner and I am for white supremacy.”

Muse’s affinity for white supremacy influenced his ideas on organized labor. His 1944 Right-to-Work campaign in Arkansas distributed literature warning white Arkansans that “white women and white men will be forced into organizations [labor unions] with black African apes whom they will have to call ‘brother’ or lose their jobs”.

It was a simple tactic – divide and rule – that served the needs of both white supremacy and big business. By preventing unionization, Muse simultaneously enforced black subjugation and kept both black and white wages down. By the time of his death in 1950, 12 southern states had passed right-to-work laws.

Wisconsin state troopers remove a protestor from the state capitol on 10 March 2011. The state’s Republican governor, Scott Walker, is a committed foe of unions. Photograph: Darren Hauck/Reuters

In the mid-1950s, Reed Larson, leader of both the National Right to Work Committee and National Right to Work Legal Foundation, picked up where Muse left off – making anti-labor and racist ideas comfortable bedfellows. Larson was an early member of the John Birch Society, which opposed the civil rights movement and often claimed that desegregation was a communist plot.

John-Paul Ferguson, the expert in labor relations and McGill University assistant professor, says: “We’ve gotten used to thinking that there’s a meaningful difference between disparate racial impact and intent.” He argues that impact and intent are often closely linked.

“We know that attacking unions has a disparate impact on people of color in the United States,” Ferguson said flatly; right-to-work and Trump’s effort to “reform the civil service” will set back workers of color worst of all.

Brittany Adams, a black female caseworker for the state of Illinois and a member of AFSCME Local 2858, credits her family’s long history in public union jobs with propelling her into the middle class. “If there wasn’t a union, I wouldn’t be middle class. My wages would be lower and my insurance co-pays would be higher.”

In fact, the path to the middle class for many African Americans has come by way of public sector unions. Lee Saunders, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), recalled in his upbringing: “You had three ways for the majority of African American folks” in Cleveland, where Saunders grew up, “to move into the middle class”. Many blacks in the middle class were employed “at the post office, or drove the city bus, which my dad did, or worked in the steel or rubber mills”.

Those three jobs, Saunders noted, were all “organized by unions that provided African American families the ability to move up based upon having a seat at the table and being able to negotiate wages and working conditions.” The same goes for Adams; her grandfather held his position at the Chicago Public Transit Authority for 30 years, and her uncles were unionized coalminers or postal workers.

According to Saunders, efforts to curb labor have put a “bullseye on our back”. But these efforts also threaten settled law on matters of race and equality. For example, the Bradley Foundation, which has distributed $30m to 24 conservative organizations to launch legal challenges to public sector unions, also spent large sums to challenge the legality of the affirmative action and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

During the 1990s, investigative reports by the Independent found that the Center for Individual Rights, another “non-profit public interest law organization” and challenger to public unions, enjoyed the support of the Pioneer Fund, an organization that supports “research asserting the genetic superiority of whites”.

These organizations know that enough hits to public unions can cripple the labor movement as a whole. “We [public sector unions] represent about 34.4% of the workforce,” Saunders noted. “The representation of private sector (unions) is about 6.2%. So if they take us out they have mortally wounded the labor movement, not just the public sector.”

But Cleophus Smith is spoiling for a fight regardless of the setbacks. “We are having some of the same issues that we were having in 1968 but the difference is we have the tools to fight with.” He tells people not to call him and Ozell “heroes, but workers”.

It was lobbying Congress that brought Americans an eight-hour day and the guarantee of overtime pay. Or as Adams reminds her anti-union friends: “You can thank unions for your weekend.”

It was the small contributions of middle-income workers across this country that have fueled the fight for more adequate health care, fairer pay and more. It was the tireless organizing and striking of people like Cleophus Smith and Ozell Ueal that ensured that my Jamaican grandmothers, young nurse assistants in the 1970s, could walk into SEIU 1199 in New York and get fair redress of workplace grievances. Unionized labor guaranteed their foothold in the middle class, as it did for Smith and Ueal.

Or, as Smith told me: “The reason we are taking the struggle further is that had we not taken the struggle in the first place, you wouldn’t be sitting here.”

FOOTNOTE: This article was sent to us by a loyal CCO reader.  We posted this article without bias or editing.

 

 

Otters come through in the clutch to earn doubleheader split with Normal

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The Evansville Otters managed a split of their doubleheader with the Normal CornBelters, losing the first game 7-4, but rebounding to win the second game 3-2, on Thursday night at Bosse Field in front of 1,263 fans.

Chris Iriart opened the scoring in the first game with a solo homer in the second to put Normal up 1-0.

The CornBelters tacked on another run in the third on a Santiago Chirino RBI single.

Evansville got on the board in the bottom of the third when Travis Harrison doubled home Ryan Long.

Cody Erickson got that run back and one more with a two-run double in the top of the fourth. Michael Baca then brought Erickson home with a double of his own to make the score 5-1 in favor of Normal.

The Otters stormed back with three runs to make it a one-run game in the bottom of the fourth. David Cronin brought home a run with a single and Long followed him with an RBI groundout. Harrison capped off the frame with an RBI single.

Normal pulled away with two runs in the sixth, taking a 7-4 lead. A Long throwing error brought home a run and then James Davison Jr. drove home a man with a sacrifice fly.

Jonathan De Marte came on in the seventh and induced a double play to end the game as Normal won the first game of the doubleheader 7-4.

Jack Landwehr gets the victory for the CornBelters. Landwehr went five innings allowing nine hits, four runs, two walks, while punching out two batters.

Spencer Medick is dealt the loss for the Otters, his second of the year. Medick worked five innings, giving up seven hits, six runs, while walking three and striking out three.

The Otters would battle back to win the second game of the doubleheader and force a split of the twin bill.

Normal again scored first, as in the second game Cameron Adams plated two runs with a single to get the CornBelters out in front.

Evansville tied the game with back-to-back two out RBI hits in the third. Harrison singled home a run and Jeff Gardner tripled home Harrison to tie the score at 2-2.

In his first game as an Otter, Taylor Lane singled home the go-ahead run in the sixth to push Evansville on top 3-2.

Alex Phillips came on and struck out Davison Jr. with the tying run at second to end the game and net Phillips his fourth save on the year and give Evansville the 3-2 win.

Randy Wynne earns his eighth victory of the season after throwing six innings, giving up two runs on five hits and striking out nine.

Nick Bozman is handed the loss for Normal. Bozman went 5.1 innings allowing three runs on three hits while walking eight batters.

The Otters will now hit the road to take on the Florence Freedom in a weekend series at UC Health Stadium starting tomorrow at 7:05 p.m.

Ladies Day at the Park

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Ladies, it’s your day at the park. Join us from 12pm-4pm in the Gardenia Room for a fun filled day with signature drinks, live music and more.