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ANOTHER CHANCE FOR ANIMALS, INC TO HOST A CRAFT AND VENDOR FAIR!

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Another Chance for Animals, Inc. will host a Craft and Vendor Fair on Saturday, August 4, 2018 from 9:00AM to 4:00PM to benefit the rescue.  Another Chance for Animals is dedicated to the rescue, care and placement of homeless animals in the area, working diligently to find forever homes and loving families for these animals.  The event will be held at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum, 300 Court Street, Evansville, IN.

The fair will feature a variety of vendors plus a bake sale.  Monetary donations or a donation of pet supplies is suggested for admission. Applications for crafters and vendors will be accepted until July 20, 2018.  Applications may be found here:  https://form.jotform.com/80937599484174

NOTICE OF JOINT VANDERBURGH COUNTY/WARRICK COUNTY DRAINAGE BOARD MEETING 

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Notice is hereby given that the Joint Vanderburgh County/Warrick County Drainage Board will hold a meeting on Wednesday, July 18, 2018 at 2:00 p.m. in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex located at 1 N.W. Martin Luther King Jr., Blvd., in Evansville, Indiana.  

IDEM issues Air Quality Action Day today for three Indiana regions

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The Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) has issued an Air Quality Action Day and is forecasting high ozone levels for Saturday, July 14, 2018 in the following areas: 

  • Central Indiana – Marion, Bartholomew, Boone, Brown, Delaware, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks, Johnson, Madison, Monroe, Morgan and Shelby 
  • Southeast Indiana – Clark, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson, Scott and Washington
  • Southwest Indiana – Daviess, Dubois, Gibson, Greene, Knox, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick 

IDEM encourages everyone to help reduce ozone by making simple changes to their daily habits. You can:

  • Walk, bike, carpool or use public transportation
  • Avoid using the drive-through and combine errands into one trip
  • Avoid refueling your vehicle or using gasoline-powered lawn equipment until after 7 p.m.
  • Turn off your engine when idling for more than 30 seconds
  • Conserve energy by turning off lights or setting the air conditioner to 75 degrees or above 

Anyone sensitive to changes in air quality may be affected when ozone levels are high. Children, the elderly and anyone with heart or lung conditions should reduce or avoid exertion and heavy work outdoors. 

A SUMMER PLACE (NOT THE MOVIE) By Jim Redwine

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GAVEL GAMUT

By Jim Redwine

Week of 16 July 2018

A SUMMER PLACE (NOT THE MOVIE)

I was married, had a son and was broke when I started Law School in Bloomington, Indiana in the summer of 1968. Although I was working full-time on a night stock crew at a Kroger’s grocery store and was receiving the G.I. bill for my Air Force service, our family just made it. My mission was to get out of school as quickly as possible. I.U. allowed 44 of us new law students to enroll on a new 27-month plan instead of the normal three years with three summers off. Only 6 of us completed the program where we actually started in June 1968 and took the Bar Exam in the summer of 1970 before we graduated in August.

What this did for my family and me was to allow me to become a lawyer when that would not have been possible had we had to remain in Law School another year. My G.I. Bill benefits were used up by the spring 1970 semester and we could not survive on my Kroger pay.

Now I will leave it up to my past clients and those who have appeared in front of me as judge to determine if I.U. made an error in judgment in allowing me to cram three years of education into two. But as for me it was a necessity. However, it also showed me how the summertime, when most Law Schools are not in session, could be put to use.

Another long-term association I have had as judge is with the National Judicial College in Reno, Nevada. While NJC does conduct summer continuing education sessions for judges from every state and many foreign countries, these courses, due to the demands of working judges’ schedules, usually are a maximum of two weeks. In two weeks judges can have existing skills more finely honed. However, the in-depth education and training one should experience before being charged with the thousands of critical judging decisions affecting our citizens requires a greatly expanded curriculum and much more time. Unfortunately, in America today all judges get their judicial education after they become judges. Such a system of on-the-job training might work well for workers on a night stock crew, but it is anathema to receiving equal justice from new judges.

In some countries, the pool of potential judges is formed in Law Schools where those who wish to someday be a judge must complete a rigorous and specially designed regimen. That is in contrast to America where if one wishes to be a judge all that is required is that he or she graduate from a law school. And in Law School not even the law professors are likely to have a clue about what a judge’s role really entails.

What I suggest is a system of developing a pool of attorneys who have a Law School specialty of Judging much as in medicine where one must be trained as a neurologist before they operate on someone’s brain. Naturally the students who want to later be considered for election or appointment as judges should have at least all the education and training of any attorney who will appear in front of the judge, so the judicial specialty must call for additional Law School time just as a medical student who wants to specialize needs extra education and time. I suggest the three summers of a Law School education are a natural fit for a Judicial Specialty. I will more fully address these issues in future columns. Try to curb your excitement.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

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Tanoos Town Hall

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William Tanoos Hosts Evansville Town Hall

William Tanoos, candidate for Congress in Indiana’s eighth congressional district, held a town hall at Evansville’s Central Library Wednesday night. Tanoos answered a wide swath of questions pertaining to federal issues. One issue of importance to the assembled crowd was healthcare and its raising costs. 

“We need to focus on the cost of healthcare,” said Tanoos. “The over corporatization of our hospitals and healthcare providers are gouging middle class people and hard working men and women. 

Tanoos also put an emphasis on doctor run medicine, price transparency, reducing the age of Medicare to 55, and adding a public option all as ways to lower costs.  

Tanoos also said one of the questions he hears most is, “What change will you make in Washington?”

“The idea is not always to be against something. We have to be for something, and I don’t care what party you are. If we work together and you’re for something, if you’re for the majority of the people, you work for working men and women, middle class, small business, agriculture, things that are major parts of this community, I think people will respond to that message.”

Tanoos also spoke about the importance of having the town hall.

“I think one of the most important responsibilities of a congressperson is constituency services, and primary among that is being accessible and open with those you serve. A town hall is a great forum to accomplish this necessary obligation to your district.”

Tanoos will be hosting another town hall on Monday, July 16th in Terre Haute at the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 841 from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. EST.

William Tanoos is a disability attorney born and raised in Terre Haute.

Driver Fleeing Police Crashes Into Another Vehicle On SR 257

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This morning at approximately 11:42, Trooper John Davis attempted to stop the male driver of a black 1996 Ford Mustang on SR 57 in Petersburg for not wearing his seat belt. The driver failed to stop and continued south on SR 61 and then east on SR 56 at a high rate of speed.  The vehicle then turned south onto SR 257 toward Velpen and continued to drive at a high rate of speed. The driver of the Ford Mustang attempted to pass a silver 2014 Chevrolet pickup truck that was also traveling southbound approximately 300 feet south of CR 200 South. As the Mustang was in the process of passing, the driver of the pickup truck attempted to turn left into a private drive.

The Ford Mustang collided into the side of the Chevrolet pickup truck causing it to flip onto its top. The driver of the Chevrolet pickup truck, Frank Rode, 68, of Velpen, was transported to Jasper Memorial where he is currently being treated for non-life threatening injuries. Both vehicles were totaled.  SR 257 was closed for approximately two-hours.

The driver of the Mustang was identified as Aaron Sanders, 25, of Petersburg. Further investigation revealed he had an active felony warrant out of Daviess County for failing to register as a sex offender. Sanders was transported to Deaconess Mid-Town Hospital in Evansville where he is currently being treated for a facial injury.

The investigation is continuing and additional charges are expected.

“READERS FORUM” JULY 13, 2018

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We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays“Readers Poll” question is: If the election was held today for the Indiana United State Senate who would you vote for?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us CityCountyObserver@live.com.

 

USI Receives $2 Million Grant To Expand Nursing In Rural Primary Care

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The College of Nursing and Health Professions at the University of Southern Indiana has received a four-year grant of more than $2 million to increase the number of registered nurses trained in primary care to positively impact health in rural communities.

Funding is from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) division of Nurse Education, Practice, Quality and Retention (NEPQR) – Registered Nurses in Primary Care Training Program. HRSA is an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The USI College of Nursing and Health Professions will create four academic practice partnerships with two rural hospitals serving surrounding counties with limited access to health care and two county health departments. In addition to enhancing primary care in rural areas, the grant will allow ample clinical opportunities for USI undergraduate students. “In our nursing curriculum, we plan to focus on population health, primary care in medically underserved communities and interprofessional education and practice to prepare our students for these clinical experiences,” said Dr. Ann White, dean of the USI College of Nursing and Health Professions.

Partnering with USI for all four years of the grant project will be Memorial Hospital and Health Care Center based in Jasper, Indiana. Memorial Hospital serves Dubois County and seven surrounding counties with 31 health care clinics. In July 2019, Memorial Hospital will open a new facility that will include a family medicine residency program in affiliation with IU School of Medicine.

“The opportunity to educate registered nurses in an outpatient primary care setting integrates well with our initiative to train the next generation of Family Physicians at our family medicine residency program,” said Dr. Stan Tretter, vice president of Medical Affairs and chief medical officer at Memorial Hospital and Health Care Center. “Working side by side, this interprofessional collaboration of nurses and physicians is the future of high-quality health care for the patients of our community.”

Tonya Heim, vice president of Patient Services and chief nursing officer at Memorial, agreed that the goal is to develop a “change process” for utilizing registered nurses to improve efficiency and outcomes.

“As a healthcare organization, we have certainly witnessed the shift of patient care from the acute to the ambulatory setting,” said Heim. “This partnership with USI will help define and implement a new model of care for RNs in primary care practice.”

Beginning in year two of the grant, additional rural sites will be integrated in partnership with Gibson General Hospital, a critical access hospital in Princeton, Indiana, with four primary care clinics.

USI is also collaborating with the Dubois County Health Department, Gibson County Health Department and the Southwest Indiana Area Health Education Center (AHEC), which will work closely with USI across all four years to engage rural communities in expanding and strengthening the primary care nursing workforce.

“The HRSA grant will allow USI undergraduate nursing students to help create a model of providing care within primary care settings, which is very exciting,” said Dr. Tracy Kinner, clinical assistant professor of nursing at USI. “Plus, current registered nurses already working in this area will receive advanced training to increase skills in providing community-based primary care, which will improve outcomes for their patients.”