http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/jail-recent-booking-records.aspx
Forum Cancellation Leads to Call For Resignation For Mayor Austin
Forum Cancellation Leads to Call For Resignation For Mayor Austin
“Disturbing but not surprising both of those people that are bringing up issues about it are running for public office in the next election so I’m sure they are trying to get a little traction with that,†says Austin.
Mayor Austin says the forum may be rescheduled once their nondisclosure agreements run out at the end of the month.
For now, officials are asking anyone with questions to email them at comments@methodisthospital.net.
ANOTHER EMPTY CHAIR By JIM REDWINE
GAVEL GAMUTÂ By Jim Redwine
ANOTHER EMPTY CHAIR
As President Trump and Secretary of State Pompeo negotiate with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his lead negotiator Kim Yong Chol over a possible summit, the 5.7 million Americans who served during the Korean War (1950-1953) continue to pass away. We have already lost about two thirds of them and on May 23, 2018 we lost another, Harold Lee Cox.
Harold and his brother-in-law Gene McCoy served in Korea at the same time. In September 2005 I wrote the following Gavel Gamut column about their service:
AN UNKNOWN VICTORY
You name the WAR:
Two countries are created from one by the greatest military power in
the world and are monitored by the United Nations;
One country led by a ruthless dictator invades the other in spite of
the United Nations warnings not to;
The Secretary General of the United Nations declares, “This is a war
against the United Nations.â€;
A United States President leads a coalition of world leaders to unite to
drive the invaders out and re-establish the status quo;
An American general was placed in charge of the United Nations
forces;
While many countries offered some help, the American military
provided more than half of a million personnel in the war;
The aggressors were driven out of and liberty was restored to the
invaded country; andÂ
The mission for which Americans fought and died was accomplished.
If you said The Gulf War of 1990-1991, that is understandable.  Almost all Americans supported that war and recognized that victory.  However, I am talking about the Korean War of 1950-1953.  It too was a great victory for American and United Nations interests and helped prevent World War III.  We owe a huge debt to our Korean War veterans.
Two of those heroes (they just hate to be called that but, hey, it’s my column and facts are facts) are Posey County natives and brothers-in-law Harold Cox and Gene McCoy.
Harold fought with the U.S. Army’s 25th Division which suffered many casualties and bore much of the fighting in Korea.  Harold was an infantry rifleman and was the jeep driver for his company commander.
Gene was a combat engineer with the Army’s 84th Engineers Battalion and, also, served as a courier/mail deliverer.
Harold was on the frontlines and Gene was building wooden bridges about 1000 yards behind those lines.  Gene says Harold had it a lot rougher than Gene.
Both suffered the 20 below zero cold, the stifling heat and humidity, the loneliness, home sickness and fear in what those not there called a “police action.â€
Harold said one of his worst memories, outside of dodging enemy mortar rounds for a solid year of combat, was the stench of the human waste the impoverished Koreans would save all winter and fertilize their rice paddies with in the spring.  Gene, also, mentioned that nauseating smell and the mud and flooding caused by the lack of vegetation due to constant shelling.
When Gene first arrived in Korea they put his outfit on a train which stopped frequently.  Each time it stopped the young soldiers were given a few rounds of ammunition and ordered out to guard the train from sabotage.  Gene said this initiation to Korea was more than a little unsettling.
Harold told me that the traffic signs in the war were a bit more to the point than those back home.  On one particularly dangerous stretch of road a sign advised:
“Get your ____ in gear and
drive like ____!  The NK
can see you.â€
Harold paid attention.
Harold and Gene came home and re-started their lives.  Harold served as Mt. Vernon’s Water Superintendent for several years in the 1980’s and 1990’s.  Gene served as a Mt. Vernon City Councilman and the Posey County Recorder.  Gene is currently Posey  County’s Veterans Affairs Officer.  They both raised families and went on publicly as if there had been no Korean War.  However, privately what General Douglas MacArthur called “the strange, mournful mutter of the battlefield†never left their consciousness.
Of course, there was a Korean War and it helped save you and me from another world war.  It was a largely unappreciated “mission accomplished.â€Â  Thank you Harold and Gene and all your fellow Korean War veterans.
It is only human to question the value of any military endeavor. But when one considers that our Korean War veterans of sixty-five years ago encouraged today’s world leaders to sit at a negotiating table rather than send more soldiers into new battles we owe our veterans the honor of saying thank you as we say goodbye.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
Or “Like†us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooksandKnitting
Commentary: Roseanne And The Perils Of Free Speech
TheStatehouseFile.com
Maybe Roseanne Barr should have run for president.
There don’t seem to be many consequences these days for saying racist, mean or flat untruthful things from the Oval Office.
Saying such things, though, from a perch on network television can lead to a long, hard fall.
That’s what happened to Barr Tuesday.
Just hours after she tweeted, among other things, that Valerie Jarrett, an aide to former President Barack Obama, was like the love child of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Planet of the Apes.
That’s right.
She suggested that Jarrett, an African-American woman, was both a terrorist and an ape.
Lovely.
The reaction was swift.
Wanda Sykes, an African-American executive producer of the “Roseanne†revival, immediately said she was quitting the show. Other cast members started calling in their resignations when they learned that ABC had cancelled the program.
The network did this even though “Roseanne†was a ratings giant, the top-rated show on television.
Incurable optimists saw this as evidence that ABC and its parent company, Disney, have souls and that the corporate chieftains value decency more than they do money.
Maybe.
Maybe not.
President Donald Trump could carve a path to the White House by speaking almost exclusively to the animosities of select demographic groups because our political wars have become so tribal.
But mass-media entertainment and communications companies such as ABC and Disney cannot afford to do that. They do not want to reach the segment of the population “Roseanne†spoke to – however significant a minority share it may be – at the exclusion of all others.
Those companies want to sell to everyone.
They need to sell to everyone.
Anyone who makes that difficult – as Roseanne Barr had done – goes from being an asset to a liability faster than Donald Trump can say, “You’re fired.â€
Barr’s response to her firing has been almost schizophrenic.
She’s veered from offering abject apologies to complaining that she’s the real victim in this situation to vowing to leave Twitter to returning to Twitter with still more inconsistent and often incoherent utterances.
This is not surprising.
Barr always has been about as stable as the volcanoes in Hawaii now are.
Also not surprising is the defense some of her fans and fellow Trump supporters have mounted that she’s just another victim of “political correctness.†She’s just an entertainer, they say, and she has a right to speak her mind.
Please.
These, by and large, are the same folks who have mounted a long campaign to have former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick denied a spot on any NFL roster because he knelt during the national anthem to protest police shootings of unarmed black men.
They are also the same people who cheered, lustily, when the president said that NFL players who knelt during the anthem should be run not just out of the league, but out of America.
What’s good for the goose….
This is a free speech issue, but not in the way Barr’s and Trump’s advocates think.
No one is stopping Roseanne Barr or Colin Kaepernick from speaking. But ABC, Disney and the NFL have chosen not to associate themselves with what Barr and Kaepernick are saying, primarily for business reasons.
ABC and Disney seek a worldwide, inclusive audience. The NFL, for good or ill, draws a heavy share of its fan base from Trump supporters.
Advocates and partisans on either side of America’s great political divide may decry the network’s or the league’s decision not to support certain kinds of speech, but ABC, Disney and the NFL are within their rights to make decisions not to say certain things.
And, as for the nonsense about “political correctness†– well, that’s exactly what it is.
Nonsense.
What Barr, Trump and their followers want is the privilege – not the right – to say offensive and antagonistic things without ever offending or angering anyone. They want this even though they cry like branded calves whenever someone looks crosswise at them.
That’s not the way it works.
We have a right in this country to say what we think, but that carries with it the responsibility to be held accountable for what we say.
In the NFL.
On network TV.
And maybe, someday, once again, even in the White House.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits†WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
THE CITY-COUNTY OBSERVER POST THIS ARTICLE WITHOUT BAIS, OPINON, OR EDITING.
EVANSVILLE CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU ANNOUNCES JOE TAYLOR AS INCOMING EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
The Evansville Convention & Visitors Bureau is excited to announce the hiring of Joe Taylor as incoming Executive Director upon current Executive Director, Bob Warren’sretirement. An extensive nationwide search guided by an executive search firm and local committee was conducted.
“We are delighted that through the national search process we were able to find someone with JoeTaylor’s experience and tenure in the industry. The Evansville Convention & Visitors Bureau has successfully accomplished a significant number of new programs that have sparked vibrant industry growth and development. We are confident that Joe will bring the energy, skills and knowledge necessary to keep our positive momentum moving forward for years to come. We look forward to Joe leading our Team, with an anticipated start date of June 4, 2018â€, said John Chaszar, President of the Board of Commissioners and Selection Committee Chairman.
Taylor comes to Evansville from the Quad Cities Convention & Visitors Bureau where he has served as President/CEO from May 1998 to present. The Quad Cities CVB consists of Davenport/Bettendorf, Iowa and Rock Island/Moline, Illinois. During his tenure at the Quad Cities CVB, he was responsible for growing the two-state, multi-jurisdictional CVB with annual budget of $1.3 million and multiple offices serving metropolitan and rural areas with a regional population of 350,000. He is also noted for leading the accreditation of the Quad Cities CVB by Destination Marketing Association International (DMAI), and was among the first 40 CVB’s in the world to achieve accreditation in 2008. The accreditation continues to date.
In addition to the Quad Cities CVB accreditation, Taylor is recognized for having a history of hosting large scale events. As President/CEO of the Quad Cities CVB, he successfully secured the Women’sInternational Bowling Congress in 1998; the National Trails Symposium in 2006; and the Missouri ValleyConference women’s basketball tournament in 2016, 2017 and 2018, with 2019 added to the original
three-year contract. His success continues with obtaining the ending points of the Des Moines Register’sAnnual Great Bicycle Ride Across Iowa (RAGBRAI) in 2008, 2011, 2015 and 2018. The RAGBRAI is the oldest, largest and longest multi-day recreational bicycle touring event in the world, drawing riders from across the United States and many foreign countries.
Taylor’s knowledge of sporting events extends past hosting large scale events, as he has also overseen the operations of the Quad Cities Sports Commission for many years.
His extensive background in sporting events is complimented with an incredible knowledge of hosting meetings and conventions, the river boat cruise industry and partnering in riverfront development and gaming.
“I want to thank the commission and the many community leaders whom I met during the selection process for putting the destination marketing of Evansville in my handsâ€, said Taylor. “I am thrilled to be named Executive Director of the Evansville CVB as Evansville is a dynamic community that I am excited to use my skills and abilities to continue to grow the region on the strong foundation that is in place. Iwas particularly impressed with the community’s hospitality and leadership that demonstratedEvansville is a welcoming, thriving destination that wants to grow even more. Evansville is similar to the Quad Cities in many ways so my immediate plan is to listen and learn so I can hit the ground running in selling and marketing this fantastic destination.â€
BREAKING NEWS: FORMER DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHAIRMAN MARK OWEN PASSES
FORMER DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHAIRMAN MARK OWEN PASSES
We were inform today that well respected former Vanderburgh County Democratic party Chairmen Mark Owen died today in I U Medical Hospital in Indy.
Mark Owen served two terms on the Vanderburgh County Council, one unexpired term as a Vanderburgh County Commissioner and twelve years as Democratic Party Chairman. Owen chaired successful campaign committees for former Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel and U S Congressman  Ellsworth.
MR. Owen previously served as Executive Director of the Board of Public Works, Chairmen of the Board of Directors for Southwestern Healthcare, Inc. and is currently a Commissioner on the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Department Commission.
Mark Owen served two terms on the Vanderburgh County Council, one unexpired term as a Vanderburgh County Commissioner and twelve years as Democratic Party Chairman.
Owen chaired successful campaign committees for former Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel and U S Congressman  Ellsworth. Owen previously served as Executive Director of the Board of Public Works, Chairmen of the Board of Directors for Southwestern Healthcare, Inc. and is currently a Commissioner on the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Department Commission.
THIS IS A DEVELOPING STORY
Summer Study Committees Lead To Mixed Results
By Abrahm Hurt
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS— A summer study committee spent hours last year examining Indiana’s alcohol laws and one of its recommendations, sell booze on Sundays, became law.
But the committee’s recommendations alone didn’t deliver the votes in the General Assembly needed for the Sunday sales bill. An agreement between two powerful lobbying groups,the Indiana Association of Beverage Retailers and the Indiana Retail Council, provided the push to change the law.
“I think certainly, thanks to our efforts, we were certainly able to raise its visibility,†Grant Monahan, president of the Indiana Retail Council, said. “I think that combined with the endorsement by the code revision committee and the agreement between us and the liquor stores all played a part.â€
Summer study committees tackle a range of complex and controversial issues, but often the recommendations lead nowhere. While some see the value of taking time to study difficult issues outside of a legislative session, to others it becomes a way for lawmakers to put off making hard decisions.
Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis, said these committees are beneficial for long-term studies on topics like criminal justice reform but that does not always happen.
“You can recommend a summer study committee in part maybe because it’s a tough issue and you don’t want to take a position, at least not now,†he said. “You can recommend it and if it actually gets to a summer committee you may have only postponed the discussion. Often times, however, as a sop, somebody will put something into a summer study committee, and it never gets granted.â€
This year, summer study committees will be examining issues that include sports wagering, the Department of Child Services and sexual harassment policies for legislators.
The committees are often viewed as a tool for creating new legislation, but Dr. Laura Merrifield Wilson, professor of political science at the University of Indianapolis, said that has not been a recent trend.
She said in the case of gerrymandering, they talked about the issue and discussed potential policy, but ultimately it did not really have an impact.
“It gives legislators kind of this neat little way out where they can say, ‘Oh, but we talked about that issue,’ and they can tell constituents they’re discussing it,†she said. “Even though policy change has not actually occurred and discourse is not the same as legislation.â€
The head of last summer’s alcohol commission, former State Sen. Beverly Gard, R-Greenfield, said she thinks there is a real need for summer study committees to create recommendations.
“During the session, things move so very quickly and you really don’t have time to get as much in depth and information that you need on a lot of issues,†she said. “If summer study committees are handled right and the chairman really digs deep, they can provide committee members with a lot of valuable information.â€
Gard was preparing for a second year of examining Indiana’s alcohol laws when she was replaced Wednesday with former state Rep. Bill Davis, R-Portland. House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, made the announcement Wednesday, giving no reason for the decision, except to say that Davis would prove to be a strong leader.
The recommendations from study committees sometimes lead nowhere.
Julia Vaughn of Common Cause Indiana was hopeful that the commission addressing the issue of gerrymandered legislative districts would lead to redistricting reform. The panel, led by a retired state Supreme Court justice, developed recommendations that were quickly shot down in the General Assembly.
In February, for the second year in a row, Rep. Milo Smith, R-Columbus, killed a redistricting reform bill that would have established redistricting standards for congressional and state legislative districts.
Smith said the topic needed more time and study, while fellow Republicans cited the pending lawsuits at the Supreme Court as reasons not to act on the legislation.
A year earlier, Smith refused to hold a vote on a bill that would have created a nonpartisan redistricting commission to redraw state and congressional districts. Then, too, he said the issue needed more study.
“I think the subject has been vetted as deeply as it can be, but Rep. Smith is opposed to considering any redistricting reform, and he offered that as an excuse,†said Ted Boehm, the former Supreme Court justice who chaired the Special Interim Study Committee on Redistricting in 2016.
Smith’s communications staff did not respond to a request for an interview.
Boehm said he is generally skeptical of summer studies, but he said the redistricting commission was an unusual case.
“It was essentially really composed of people who might actually come up with a reasonable report from a balanced point of view,†he said. “But in this General Assembly, those things aren’t going to get anywhere because the General Assembly is pretty skewed heavily in favor of essentially non-centrist positions.â€
“I’ve been around the Statehouse working as a lobbyist since the mid-1980s and I do think that in earlier years these recommendations carried more weight,†Vaughn said.
Boehm said summer study committees can have real value such as research on health needs in various types of urban and rural environments.
“I think they work if there really is an issue that requires extensive canvassing from experience in other states or some otherwise real research values to it,†Boehm said. “But sometimes they really want to study something that is essentially a policy question where most of the members of the General Assembly already know what they think about it.â€
Abrahm Hurt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Vectren To Provide Energy-Efficient Lighting To Area Food Pantries For Distribution
Evansville, Ind. – Sixteen food pantries throughout Evansville, Chandler, Princeton, Petersburg, Mt. Vernon and New Harmony are receiving 4-packs of LED bulbs from Vectren’s energy efficiency program to distribute to patrons throughout the summer. Vectren is providing more than 50,000 bulbs to be given to those in the community who frequent the area’s various food pantries.
“Vectren is committed to assisting customers to conserve energy and save money,†said Brad Ellsworth, president of Vectren Energy Delivery-South. “By providing LED bulbs to the food pantries, we are helping low-income families take simple, effective steps to lowering their energy costs.â€
If all bulbs are installed replacing traditional 60 watt light bulbs assuming three hrs/day of use, nearly 232,000 kWhs of energy consumption will be saved annually – enough to power 2,780 homes for a month or 230 homes annually.
Vectren offers instant discounts on LED bulbs at area retailers such as Menards and Lowe’s. Visitwww.vectren.com/lighting for a list of all stores. Learn more about Vectren’s energy efficiency programs at www.vectren.com/saveenergy or call 1-866-240-8476.
Evansville Wartime Museum Celebrates Its First Birthday
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