Travel a natural oxbow lake under the full moon in the Hovey Lake Fish and Wildlife Area. The area is home to cormorants, ospreys, egrets, and bald eagles. Half-submerged bald cypress trees create an enchanting experience.
Advance Registration is required by Thursday! All equipment is provided. Participants must be ages 7 and up. $15 for WNS members, $20 for nonmembers.
FINAL DATE
Early Bird Member Morning Thursday June 28 Â 7:00 – 9:00 am
It’s our last Early Bird Member Mornings this season! Â Take a stroll or just sit in our wildlife viewing room and enjoy some early morning birding. This is offered exclusively to members only.
Not a member yet? Hit the button below to join now!
Turkey vultures are smart and inquisitive. They need opportunities to explore, manipulate, and problem solve especially in captivity. Pearl’s enrichment includes “puzzle†boxes with food inside, stuffed toys, dog toys, leafy greens (to shred!), a wide variety of food, and exploring the nature center and trails. She also enjoys playing with towels!
What’s In The Woods?
Many flowers are in bloom in the Nature Playscape! Unlike the Preserve where everything is protected, it is okay for kids to pick flowers in the Nature Playscape. On your next visit, we hope your kids will explore the difference colors, textures and shapes of our flowers.
The Evansville Police Department is again offering its free 10 week Citizen’s Academy for the Fall session.
The goal of the EPD Citizen’s Academy is to give members of the community an inside look at the various units of the police department and to create a better understanding and communication between citizens and police through education.
It will be held at the CK Newsome Center beginning September 4, through November 6, meeting on Tuesdays from 6 pm to 9 pm. Two new exciting presentations will be added this session on top of the already robust package that we already offer which include S.W.A.T., Narcotics, and EPD’s newest V.I.P.E.R. Unit.
Twenty-two members of the 2017-18 Indiana University men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams earned Scholar All-America honors from the College Swimming and Diving Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) on Wednesday.
Women: Mackenzie Atencio (HM), Taylor Carter (HM), Marie Chamberlain, Josie Grote (HM), Kendall Hermann (HM), Christine Jensen, Cassy Jernberg, Katie Keller (HM), Shelby Koontz, Bailey Kovac (HM), Sam Lisy (HM), Laura Morley (HM) and Ali Rockett
Men: Levi Brock, Andrew Capobianco, Cody Coldren (HM), James Connor, Gabriel Fantoni, Mory Gould (HM), Trey Hubbuch (HM), Matthew Jerden (HM) and Gary Kostbade (HM)
To receive CSCAA Scholar All-America recognition, student-athletes must have achieved a grade-point average of 3.50 or higher and participated in their respective NCAA Championships.
Those receiving CSCAA Scholar All-America Honorable Mention have also received a grade-point average of 3.50 or higher and achieved either an NCAA ‘B’ time standard or an NCAA Zone Diving qualifying score.
Founded in 1922, the College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) – the oldest organization of college coaches in America -is a professional organization of college swimming and diving coaches dedicated to serving and providing leadership for the advancement of the sport of swimming & diving at the collegiate level.
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New Harmony Theatre is seeking a part-time, seasonal (June 11, 2018 – August 10, 2018) Custodial Worker to provide a full range of custodial duties related to…
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It’s Time For City Council To Start Challenging The City Deficient Spending Practices
The City Council budget hearings for 2019 is ready to begin sometime in the near future?  Over the years we enjoy watching the former Finance Chairman of City Council, Dan McGinn and City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr do a “balancing act†with past due to bills, advancement on future revenue and proposed tax increases they insist were “negligibleâ€.
We expect that in the upcoming 2019 budget hearings, that the majority of members of City Council will start challenging the city deficient spending practices and do a better job in questioning the continued waste and overspending habits of the Winnecke Administration.  Over the last couple of years, we have become more concerned about the City’s financial status with each passing month.
During the last several years we suspected that the city finances were not in good shape. In fact, the former City Council Finance Chairman Dan McGinn acknowledged that the city finances were not in the best of shape.
Some Evansville residents are already struggling to hold on to their homes, buy medications, pay ever-increasing utility bills, and put food on the table. Â Young families are scraping to save money for a down payment on a home to put down roots in a city that presently doesn’t have an overabundance of good-paying jobs.
We have been saying for several years that the  City of Evansville Employee Healthcare funding is in trouble and a day of reconcillation is near. We expect that the Mayor and his Controller, Russ Lloyd, Jr. will again tell members of City Council that Evansville is expected to have more revenue than in previous years so they shouldn’t worry about increasing City spending for 2019.
This year you may even hear the majority of council members saying they must cut extraneous funding to offset a sharp increase in Employee Health insurance costs of city employees.  Like it or not the City’s Employee Healthcare costs will experience a sharp increase during the 2019 budget year. The City Council may be forced to increase the employees’ deductibles and out-of-pocket expense. We expect City Council members, Justin Elpers and G. John Hayden, CPA to lead the charge.
It’s time that Council makes some tough choices in order to balance the budget, like laying some employees off, discontinue the city from subsidizing the ThunderBolts Hockey team, no pay increases for City Council members, and city employees together with department heads and the Mayor’s staff for 2019.  Council may even decide to delays the future expansion of new exhibits for the Zoo, eliminating the funding of “political pork barrel” projects, make major reduction to city grants given to area not-for-profits, make cuts to sports grants awards, the suspension of capital projects requested by department heads, put a freeze on hiring new employees for 2019, cut the proposed 2019 city budget by 2%. across the board and once for all address the Employee Healthcare funding problems head-on.
The most important ingredient that we believe has been missing from past budget discussions is how to stretch the budget.  It’s time for the city administration and the City Council to adhere to the principle that requires transparency and a willingness to be innovative in order to promote local government efficiencies.
We predict that all eyes will be on At-Large City Council member and Finance Chairmen  Jonathon Weaver to see if he is up to the task of convincing his fellow Council members its time to make hard and painful budgetary decisions concerning the 2019 City budget.  Somehow we believe that Mr. Weaver has the capacity to do just that.
They are a torment for motorists and a costly headache for transportation departments. Every winter and spring, potholes plague city streets and rural roads, causing drivers to curse and public works officials to shudder.
That’s why some local governments are turning to data and technology to find and fix potholes. Some are even trying to predict where they’ll open up.
In a growing number of cities, including Omaha, Nebraska; Hartford, Connecticut; and San Diego, residents can download an app for reporting potholes. In Houston, residents can check out the Pothole Tracker app or log on to a website and see graphics and charts showing the city’s progress in fixing them.
And emerging technologies and data analytics are taking the fight against potholes to a new level. In Syracuse, New York, officials are using data that will track and visualize trends around potholes. And a Kansas City, Missouri, a pilot project is using algorithms to try to predict where potholes will show up.
Even companies such as Google and Microsoft have created apps that people can use in their cars that try to detect potholes and alert drivers about damaged roads.
“Potholes are a huge problem. The federal government may screw around and not pass a budget and guys will bitch about it on CNN,†said Bob Bennett, Kansas City’s chief innovation officer. “But if we fail to fill the potholes or pick up the trash, we’re going to hear about it. Potholes are one of those things people kvetch about.â€
No one knows how many potholes are out there, but everyone agrees there are lots of them, especially in areas that have repeated temperature swings below and above the freezing point.
American drivers pay an estimated $3 billion a year to repair damage caused by potholes, according to AAA. Over a five-year period, 16 million drivers reported their vehicles were damaged by potholes, from tire punctures and bent wheels to suspension damage.
Repair bills for motorists can range from under $250 to more than $1,000, said Michael Calkins, AAA’s manager of technical services.
And vehicle damage isn’t the only threat motorists face.
“There’s a potential to lose control of the car,†Calkins said. “If it’s a big enough pothole and you’re going fast enough, you could have the steering wheel jerked out of your hands and end up hitting another car.â€
Potholes Grow
Potholes form when moisture collects in small holes and cracks in an asphalt road surface and seeps into its lower layers.
As temperatures fluctuate, the moisture freezes and thaws, expanding and contracting, which weakens the roadway and cracks the pavement. With the weight of cars and trucks, the road surface becomes increasingly damaged and eventually breaks apart, resulting in a pothole.
“The bigger potholes get, the faster they grow,†Calkins said. “If you can catch it while it’s small the repair is easier and the potential for it to grow and the risk of damage to vehicles is reduced.â€
Although potholes sometimes form on major highways, most appear on city streets and rural roads, which are built to less stringent standards with thinner surfaces.
“Potholes are definitely a local government problem,†said Omar Smadi, director of the Center for Transportation Research and Education at Iowa State University. “They will impact the quality of driving. Your tire is going to drop in it; water is going to collect in it. If the local government doesn’t take care of it, the problem is just going to get worse.â€
Pothole Solutions
Some cities are tackling the craters by using technology to find, track and fix them or figure out where they’re going to appear.
In Syracuse, city trucks that fill potholes carry GPS units that pull data every time they spray asphalt into one. Instead of workers filling out forms, the data is automatically logged, showing the date, time and location every pothole is filled, said Sam Edelstein, the city’s chief data officer.
“We are trying to limit the number of times we’re revisiting a street,†Edelstein said. “If they’ve been on a block three times in the last two months, why is that? Is there some underlying condition? Is there something wrong with the fill not lasting?â€
The data also may show that a quick fix isn’t the answer; that the road needs to be repaved.
“The idea is to have a more holistic view of our infrastructure and say this street is the most at a need for a longer-term repair,†Edelstein said.
Other local governments also are trying to think ahead. More than 40 of them, from San Joaquin County, California, to Quincy, Massachusetts, contract with a Pittsburgh software company that uses smartphone cameras and algorithms to create color-coded maps of road networks that show not only potholes but the cracks and fissures where they might develop.
The company, RoadBotics, sends out drivers with the phones placed on windshields. Drivers turn on an app that collects video from every street and sends the data to the cloud. The company, which charges $75 a mile, then uses artificial intelligence to analyze the road surface the same way a trained pavement engineer would CEO Mark DeSantis said.
“This saves time and effort of having to send people out and inspect the roadways,†DeSantis said. “Staring at mile after mile of pavement is difficult, it’s tedious, and in some cases, it’s dangerous.â€
Kansas City has gone even further. Its project combines details from weather data, traffic volume and pavement conditions to predict where potholes are most likely to appear.
The city would rather save money in the long run by making long-term repairs to likely pothole hotspots than wait to patch them after they’ve become a problem, said Bennett, the chief innovation officer.
“We can go in where we know a road has got extra stress and put in sealant that keeps it from potholing,†Bennett said, adding that it also will reduce the amount of overtime needed to pay workers after hours in a pothole emergency.
So far, the program appears to be a success, Bennett said. Despite the bad winter, the public has reported fewer potholes this spring than last year. But officials won’t know for sure until later in the year, he said.
Transportation experts say regardless of how sophisticated the technology is or how many potholes the workers fix, the bottom line is that many U.S. streets are old and in poor condition and need to be rehabbed and rebuilt.
“It’s an issue of dollars available,†AAA’s Calkins said. “A good proportion of America’s roads need resurfacing, but transportation departments simply don’t have the funding to do that.â€
Evansville Power Yoga has scheduled a benefit for the Tri-State Alliance this Thursday and Friday at 6 pm at their studio located at 4814 Tippecanoe Drive in Evansville.
80s blacklight Yoga is the theme, with instructors dressed in their favorite 80s outfits and many customers will be dressed as well. The event is family friendly and there is no cost to attend, and donations will be collected to benefit the Tri-State Alliance.
For more information call Mark at 812-449-2239 or visit Evansville Power Yoga on Facebook.