FOR MEMORIAL DAY – SERVING THOSE WHO SERVE US
by Tom Purcell
Every Memorial Day, we remember those who died during active military service. But the day gives us a special opportunity to serve those who serve us.
According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, nearly 42 million American men and women have served during wartime. Nearly 1.2 million died while serving. Nearly 1.5 million were wounded.
Since 9/11, nearly 7,000 U.S. service members have died in Iraq and Afghanistan. More than 50,000 have been wounded – many have debilitating injuries and mental challenges that have changed their lives forever.
We may debate the rightness or wrongness of various engagements, but we know that freedom comes at a steep price – and we honor those who have secured it for us.
But we can do more. We can serve them back.
“There are many small things people can do that can make a world of difference,†said Jerry Newberry, assistant adjutant general at the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW).
Such as assisting the family of a service member who has been deployed.
“Family members go through a long period of wondering, worrying and waiting,†said Newberry. “But they still need to deal with the car breaking down, a child getting sick, a death in the family. If you know of such families, reach out to them.â€
Or write an e-mail or letter. The troops – particularly those recuperating in military hospitals – love receiving e-mails, letters and care packages. You can do so at amillionthanks.org.
Donate time. Your local Veterans Affairs office, VFW and other legitimate organizations are in desperate need of volunteers.
Organize a toy drive for children of deployed soldiers. Support the Marine Corps Toys for Tots program. Provide gift cards to troops through aafes.com.
Donate money. You can give to a variety of needed services for military members – or support the Red Cross to provide basic necessities to service members in military hospitals. Go to vfw.org and click on “Donate†or “Troop Support.â€
Lori Felix at Military.com offers additional suggestions that are simple and inexpensive. One is to volunteer to place flags on the grave sites of fallen servicemen and women. Your local American Legion or VFW will have the details.
Felix writes that holiday weekends can be challenging times for those who are serving away from home. She suggests contacting the community relations office at your local military base to invite a service member or two to dinner.
Or do something kind for a wounded vet. The Walter Reed National Military Center has a Facebook page that provides inspiration and ideas for brightening a wounded vet’s day.
CNN offers some great suggestions.
Some disabled veterans are unable to drive. You can volunteer to give them a ride to their medical appointments at Disabled American Veterans (dav.org).
You can donate your frequent flyer miles so that family members can travel to the bedside of a hospitalized service member. That can be done through the Fisher House Foundation’s Hero Miles Program (fisherhouse.org).
CNN reports that more than a third of the men and women who served in Iraq and Afghanistan “have or will experience post-traumatic stress disorder.†The Puppies Behind Bars program trains companion dogs for veterans with PTSD. You can sponsor a dog at puppiesbehindbars.com.
Hey, Memorial Day is upon us. What better time to serve the men and women who have served, or are serving, us?
SPOTLIGHT: EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCILMEN JUSTIN ELPERS
MEET JUSTIN ELPERS 5TH WARD CITY COUNCIL MEMBER
Justin Elpers, a Republican, was elected to the City Council in 2015. Elpers has the reputation of being a social and fiscal conservative. In 2017 by a bipartisan vote, he served as Vice President of the City Council.
Elpers has been teaching social studies for thirteen years. Eleven of those years have been at Harrison High School. At Harrison High School, Elpers serves on the Scholarship Committee and is the Social Studies academic coach. One of his goals after getting elected was to get his students more active in their local government. His social media posts you will find his students picking up trash in the community, & giving informative presentations. Â
Justin is married to Alisann Elpers. They have been married for over 11 years and have 4 children. Their children are James 10, Patrick 7, Charlie 5 and Anni June 13 months. They are members of Good Shepherd Catholic Church. For fun, they like to play family soccer games in the backyard, swim and have a family movie night. Â
Justin is a strong proponent of small government and keeping taxes low. During the 2017 & 2018 Budget Hearings, Elpers proposed large cuts to the budget to solve the negative balances and voted no on both the property tax increase and the income tax increase.
Elpers believes in holding groups accountable. For example, ECHO housing is currently under investigation because their director improperly used taxpayer funds for personal use. As a result, Elpers drafted a finance ordinance to withhold taxpayer funds to ECHO housing until after the investigation has concluded. Â
Having a strong economy is also important to Elpers. He strongly supported relaxing the parking requirements in the new Overlay Zone for Franklin St. The new Overlay Zone for Franklin St. will attract new business growth and create more jobs. Tax-Abatement is another economic tool Elpers supports. Working with the Growth Alliance, Elpers has approved Tax Abatement status for TaylorMade Golf, Berry Global, & Imperial Fasteners. As a result, these companies will make over $75 million in investments and create over 200+ jobs. Â
Justin Elpers is principled, trustworthy, & hardworking. He has a strong faith in God and always puts his family first. Â
Commentary: Fake Respect For The Anthem Is Still Fake
By Michael Leppert
michaelleppert.com
As we head into one of our nation’s great national holiday weekends, the National Football League is at it again.
On Tuesday, Roger Goodell, the NFL’s commissioner, announced that league owners had unanimously approved a new policy regarding players and the national anthem. The new policy will require all players on the field during the playing of the anthem to stand. Failure to do so will make any player subject to fines from the league. Individual teams may also discipline players further under the new policy. Players may stay off the field in the locker room as an alternative to not standing.
The NFL has every right to run its business the way the owners of the business want it run.
Except that there is an active collective bargaining agreement in place with the NFL Players Association, who is not a party to any addendum to this new personal rule. I’m not sure the NFLPA agrees with the new rule, which in this case, actually does matter.
Be that as it may, for the most part, this controversy really does feel like rich people arguing with each other.
Except that the respectful manner of protesting by kneeling during the anthem was an effort to bring light to real American problems. Those being police brutality against people of color and inequality in criminal justice. It may be the most respectful way I can recall any celebrity using a platform to raise awareness. Still, the NFL has decided it did not have the courage to tolerate it.
Vice President Mike Pence quickly announced approval of it all in a retweet of the CNN story on the matter with only this comment: “#winning.†I am not sure what Pence believes he is winning, or what is being won by anyone with this policy. I found the message to be in his office.
Except that the next day, while President Donald Trump was celebrating the apparent “win†in a contest that wasn’t even happening, he went one more step. He went on to say on Fox News that he doesn’t “think people should be staying in the locker rooms.†As petty as Pence was, Trump went lower.
Trump continued with “you have to stand proudly for the national anthem or you shouldn’t be playing. You shouldn’t be there. Maybe you shouldn’t be in the country.â€
And that is the best example of why the NFL made a mistake with their new policy. The fake “respect†won’t ever be enough for those who demanded it in the first place.
On Thursday, news started to come out that the owners didn’t actually take an official vote on the policy. At least two owners announced their intent to abstain from voting on it. So, the announcement of the “unanimous†vote is inaccurate. While that spin-gone-wrong is a little embarrassing for Goodell, it is still not as embarrassing as the policy itself.
On March 26, the NFL committed to implementing a local matching-funds component of the league’s social justice initiative. It committed $90 million to the cause. This effort was finalized this week as well but obviously was overshadowed by the politically charged anthem rule. The commitment and the money actually could make a difference.
Except that the other mistake has stolen the moment. The White House believes standing for the anthem is more important than actually doing something on the issue that started this debate. Sad.
Also this week, Milwaukee police released a body camera video of the arrest and tasing of NBA player Sterling Brown. The release brought with it an apology by the Milwaukee chief of police and disciplinary action for the officers involved. Finding a way to end these things in modern America is more important to me than any flag or any song.
I stand for the anthem and I love our flag. I will stand with authentic respect for it with 250,000 people on Sunday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. And all of us who do will have chosen to do so.
It will be the greatest spectacle in anthem standing anywhere this entire year.
Roger Goodell cannot make the employees of the NFL respect the anthem and the flag. Neither can Trump or Pence. Respect for things is a personal choice that each individual makes countless times a day. We can’t force people to feel one way or another.
The protest was respectful. Americans should appreciate its peacefulness and its mission. Instead, a leading national business has decided to fake it. And in the process pretend our flag and our song are more important than our people.
FOOTNOTE: Michael Leppert is a public and governmental affairs consultant in Indianapolis and writes his thoughts about politics, government and anything else that strikes him at MichaelLeppert.com.
KEEP THE GOVERNMENT OUT OF THE ENERGY MARKETPLACE
Over almost the entire course of the Obama presidency, congressional conservatives battled with the administration over the subsidies that were such an important part of renewable energy policy. Critics labeled them distortive of the marketplace, said they had an adverse effect on energy consumption and put the government in the position of picking winners and losers, something that most definitely was not its job.
Where these critics are now is a mystery, since hardly any are speaking out against an initiative proposed by Energy Secretary Rick Perry. The plan, which could come as soon as this week, would have the United States government step in and subsidize a group of coal and nuclear plants their operators claim may soon go bust.
FirstEnergy Solutions, which operates the plants located in the Ohio and Pennsylvania region of the PJM Interconnection (a regional transmission organization coordinating the movement of wholesale electricity in all or parts of 13 states and the District of Columbia) has asked the department to use emergency powers accorded it in the Federal Power Act to provide them with what is effectually an unending subside by awarding so-called “preferential contracts†to keep them in business.
The company may say it’s a matter of “grid reliability†and “national security†(as a backup it’s also citing emergency authority available under the Defense Production Act) but what it comes down to is having the government force customers to buy electricity from a set of supplies at a higher price before allowing other companies to compete by selling power at a lower price.
Perry knows better. As governor of Texas, he did everything he could to facilitate extraordinary growth in the energy production. The fact the United States exports as much surplus energy as it does and is projected to be the world export leader in just a few years is due in no small part to the wisdom he showed in getting the government out of the way and letting the private sector do what it does best: innovate, develop new technologies to meet expanding needs, and keep prices and production stable. What FirstEnergy wants, and what he seems inclined to soon approve goes against all that.
It’s true the Obama Administration beat the heck out of coal and nuclear for eight years. It wasn’t right, it was expensive for the taxpayers and for energy consumers, and it put lots of people out of work. Providing subsidies now won’t fix any of that. Unfortunately, the genie is out of the bottle and there’s no way to get her back in. What was true under Obama is true now even though the energy production the government is attempting to subsidize (or is being asked to subsidize) is different. The effort to promote wind and solar through subsidies and stimulus didn’t work and taxpayers were left holding the bag. Fool me once, as the saying goes.
At the behest of FirstEnergy Perry is being asked to fool us twice. Writing on the subject for The Heritage Foundation, a leading pro-free market organization based in Washington, policy analyst Katie Tubb described the situation thusly: “Adding more distortions to electricity markets for the sake of a short-term band-aid for coal and nuclear power plants will have long-term negative consequences for customers, technology innovation, and the future of the electricity grid.â€
“Instead of micromanaging the grid,†she continued, “politicians and regulators should be reducing the barriers and distortions that undermine its efficacy.†The subsidies FirstEnergy is seeking is one of those distortions which, in his saner moments, Perry would have once rejected out of hand as being anathema to what he believes.
There are ways forward, for FirstEnergy and the entire U.S. energy community that will work for us all. That means giving free reign to competition so that price signals rather than government largess will let the rest of us know what’s happening in the market. That’s the way to get to grid reliability is not through a scheme based on a phony claim national security is somehow at stake. This waiver is so broad and the logic behind it so tortured it would, if the request is approved, give the U.S. Department of Energy unlimited power to act without restraint in the future. For the good of the country, Secretary Perry needs to say “No†to this blatant act of crony capitalism and once again be the hero he was back in Texas.
FOO9TNOTE: Â PETER Roff is a former senior political writer for United Press International and former contributing editor for opinion at U.S. News and World Report. During the administration of George W. Bush, he worked at the U.S. Department of Energy as a political appointee and speechwriter.
Honoring The Fallen And Their Families by Wendy McNamara
Honoring The Fallen And Their Families
by Wendy McNamara
Memorial Day is a solemn day of remembrance to honor those who gave their lives serving our nation in uniform. While we can never fully repay the debt owed to those who died protecting our freedom, as a public servant, I will continue supporting our veterans and their families.
To learn more about the brave Hoosiers who have defended our country, visit the Indiana War Memorial Plaza Historic District in the heart of the state’s capital. With a large museum and 24 acres of parks, monuments, sculptures, statues and fountains, only Washington, D.C., has more veterans’ monuments.
The Indiana Military Veterans Hall of Fame honors the tremendous sacrifices of Indiana military veterans and their families. Click here to learn more about those who have been inducted, and if you would like to nominate a veteran to the Hall of Fame, click here.
The Honor Flight Network is a non-profit organization that transports America’s veterans to Washington, D.C., to visit memorials honoring their sacrifices. Various trips are scheduled for this year. To be included or volunteer with an Honor Flight, click here.
This weekend, please join me in reflecting upon the sacrifices of those who laid down their lives in service to this nation, and take a moment to acknowledge others who lost a loved one in the line of duty.
MEMORIAL DAY IS TIME TO TAKE A PUBLIC STAND IN SUPPORT OF OUR VETERANS AND LAW ENFORCEMENT PROFESSIONALS
Seemingly every time we turn around we read or hear someone trashing members of our military and local law enforcement by accusing them of being inept and abusing their powers.  We are getting sick and tired of this type of treatment towards the very people who protect us and our family on a daily bases.
The stress level that members of our military and first responders experience on a daily basis is unreal. We are aware every time an officer makes a routine traffic stop it could turn deadly in a  blink of an eye.  We believe members of our local law enforcement and military are grossly underpaid and un-appreciated considering their job responsibilities.
Over the years we observed some of our elected officials giving long and flowery speeches at a rally in support of our military and local law enforcement professionals.  Today the only thing we hear from them is the sound of silence.  Maybe its time to call the masses to assemble with members of our military and first responders to give a “we love and support our military and law enforcement professionals” speeches.
Many of the members of our military and law enforcement professionals feel unappreciated.  They have an extremely dangerous and stressful job.
It’s time we give them a public display of support showing them how much they are really appreciated!
Finally, we also appreciate the outstanding work of the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s office, Evansville Police Department, Vanderburgh County Sheriffs Office, local EMT, local Dispatchers and the Evansville Fire Department do on our behalf!
This Memorial Day please stand with Stand with us and join hands with our law enforcement professionals so we can take this community to a level of peace, love, and understanding.
It’s time to take a public stand in support of our law enforcement professionals!
ADOPT A PET
Callie is a 1-year-old female Beagle! She was surrendered in April for her owner’s failing health. She is a sweet, happy girl like a typical Beagle! Her adoption fee is $130. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!
Johnson sends Eagles into national championship series
Celebrating her 21st birthday in style, junior second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) hit a solo home run in the bottom of the seventh inning to tie the game and drove in the winning run in the eighth as University of Southern Indiana Softball rallied from a 4-2 deficit to defeat No. 25 Saint Leo University, 5-4, in the semifinals of the NCAA Division II Softball Championship Sunday morning.
The Screaming Eagles (39-23) advance to play in the best-of-three national championship series for the first time in program history and are now just two wins away from claiming the first team national championship in the history of women’s athletics at USI.
In a comeback that began Saturday morning, the Eagles roared back from a 4-0 deficit. After spotting the Lions (39-18) four runs in the top of the first frame, USI scored in the bottom of the first inning on an RBI-double by junior outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky).
After back-to-back hits by Schubert and senior third baseman Mena Fulton (Bloomington, Indiana) put runners on base with no outs in the fourth, sophomore shortstop Taylor Ricketts (Georgetown, Kentucky) pushed across the second tally on an RBI-groundout.
Neither team scored a run in the fifth as rain took hold of the Roanoke Valley, forcing the contest to be halted and resumed Sunday.
After sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) mowed down the Lions’ lineup in the sixth inning Sunday morning, Fulton led off the last half of the sixth frame by being hit by a pitch.
A passed ball allowed Fulton to move to second base before USI Head Coach Sue Kunkle inserted freshman Alicia Webb(Elberfeld, Indiana) to run for Fulton. The move payed dividends as senior first baseman Marleah Fossett (Brownsburg, Indiana) hit a ball up the middle that scored Webb and got the Eagles to within a single tally.
Leonhardt, who retired 16 consecutive batters at one point between Saturday and Sunday, set the Lions down in order again in the seventh, setting the stage for Johnson’s heroics in the bottom of the inning.
Johnson, who was down in the count, 1-2, drilled the fourth pitch of the at-bat over the leftfield fence to tie the score. The home run was the first long ball hit by USI during the 2018 NCAA II Tournament and was the first in program history at the NCAA II Softball Championship.
After a one-out single broke up Leonhardt’s streak of batters retired in the top of the eighth inning, Johnson began a 4-6-3 double play to get the Eagles out of the frame unscathed.
In the bottom of the eighth, Ricketts drew a one-out walk to get the Eagles going. A base-hit by junior catcher Lindsey Barr(Whitesville, Kentucky) put runners on first and second, while a walk to senior outfielder Olivia Clark-Kittleson (Carbondale, Illinois) loaded the bases for Johnson, who sharply hit a ground ball to the shortstop that was mishandled, allowing Ricketts to score the winning run from third base.
Leonhardt (23-12) earned the win after giving up four runs off four hits in eight innings of work. She struck out eight batters and allowed just one hit in the final seven innings of the game.
USI will play Saint Anselm College (44-11-1) in game one of the national championship series Sunday at 6 p.m. (CDT). The Hawks defeated No. 8 Southern Arkansas University, 3-0, in the “if necessary” game Sunday afternoon to advance.