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Summer Study Committees Lead To Mixed Results

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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.”

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.”

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.”

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.

Former State Sen. Beverly Gard, R-Greenfield

“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.”

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.”

“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.”

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

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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.”

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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Join Us At Ellis Park For The Belmont Stakes!

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Come to Ellis Park on Saturday, June 9th and see if Justify can earn a place in history by winning the 150th running of the Belmont Stakes and becoming horse racing’s 13th Triple Crown winner.
Also, a special Belmont Buffet will be available while you enjoy the races for only $12.95!

Honoring Women Veterans Conference at UE Planned for June 16

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The ninth annual Honoring Women Veterans Conference at the University of Evansville is Saturday, June 16, 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m., in Ridgway University Center. This day of education, fun, and camaraderie is free and open for women who have served and currently serve in the United States military. The deadline for women veterans and current service members to register for the event is June 1. 

Attendees will have the opportunity to get current information on military benefits and interact with fellow women veterans. Activities include a complimentary lunch and facials, manicures, massages, prizes, and more.

The speaker for the event will be Stacy Pearsall is a US Air Force Veteran and founder of Veterans Portrait Project (VPP). The VPP began while Pearsall rehabilitated from combat injuries sustained in Iraq. As one of the most decorated combat photographers of our time, Pearsall overcame more than the average soldier. She had to prove her mettle every day to demonstrate she deserved a position amongst the men. Pearsall will discuss overcoming sexual harassment, marginalization, and gender bias to become the first female to twice win the National Press Photographers Association Military Photographer of the Year. Though combat disabled and retired from military service, Pearsall continues to work worldwide as an independent photographer, and is an author, educator, military consultant, and public speaker. She recently adopted a service dog, Charlie. In November 2017, The Today Show presented Pearsall with Charlie, the “puppy with a purpose.” Charlie travels with her and is an integral part of her support system. 

UE is proud to host this event and to celebrate the dedicated women who have served our country. The University is consistently ranked as a top college for veterans by U.S. News & World Report, Military Friendly Schools, Military Times Magazine, U.S. Veterans Magazine, and Military Advanced Education.

Saves leader Massingham to be inducted into Frontier League Hall of Fame

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Former Evansville reliever Eric Massingham is one of seven 2018 inductees going into the Frontier League Hall of Fame, the league announced Friday.

Massingham, the league’s all-time saves leader with 70, spent four seasons with the Otters from 2011-14. Over that span, he appeared in 116 games, pitched 128 1/3 innings and finished with a 1.68 ERA. He also stuck out 137 batters.

“Eric not only was one of the best relievers in the league, he is among the highest character individuals I’ve come across in all my years of baseball,” Otters manager Andy McCauley said. “I congratulate him on his well deserved induction.”

Signed by former player procurement director Kevin Cope, Massingham arrived in Evansville after spending time in the Philadelphia Phillies organization.

Splitting time between Williamsport and Lakewood from 2009-10, Massingham went 7-3 with a 2.70 ERA in 47 games. In 86 2/3 innings of affiliated baseball, he struck out 82 batters.

“He took over the closing job here from day one and I had confidence in him in  the seasons that followed,” McCauley said. “It was an absolute advantage knowing we needed a lead after eight innings.

“It shortened the opposing team out of an inning every time out.”

In addition to the Otters, Massingham spent time with the Somerset Patriots of the Atlantic League in 2011 and Fargo-Moorhead Redhawks of the American Association in 2012.

He also competed overseas in the off-season, playing for the Canberra Calvary of the Australian Baseball League in 2012 and 2013.

A Benicia, Calif. native, Massingham was drafted in the 25th round of the 2009 MLB Amateur Draft by the Phillies from California Polytechnic State University.

The 2018 Frontier League Hall of Fame luncheon and induction ceremony will be held at the Trigg Banquet Center in O’Fallon, Mo. on Wednesday, July 11, at 11:30 a.m.

Early registration deadline nears for Mid-America Institute on Aging and Wellness

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The University of Southern Indiana and SWIRCA and More, the local agency on aging, will present the 11th annual Mid-America Institute on Aging and Wellness (MAIA) on the USI campus on August 9 and 10, with a pre-conference workshop on Alzheimer’s disease and dementia care scheduled for August 8.

MAIA is a two-day gerontology conference for lay persons, nurses, social workers, older adults and professionals working in the field of gerontology. Each year, national and local speakers provide practical tools and ground-breaking information related to successful aging and gerontology.

The conference this year will feature four keynote speakers: Teepa Snow, MS, OTR/L, FAOTA; Ashton Applewhite; Jeff Speck, AICP, CNU-A, LEED-AP; and Bill Thomas, MD.

Teepa Snow returns as a MAIA speaker this year, and is leading a special pre-conference workshop on dementia for direct care providers on Wednesday, August 8 at USI. As one of America’s leading educators on dementia, Snow’s philosophy is reflective of her education, work experience, available medical research and first-hand caregiving interactions. Working as a registered occupational therapist for over 35 years, her wealth of experience has led her to develop Positive Approach® to Care techniques and training models that now are used by families and professionals working or living with dementia or other brain changes throughout the world.

Ashton Applewhite, a leading voice in an emerging movement dedicated to dismantling ageism and making age a criterion for diversity, will present a keynote on Thursday, April 9. The author of This Chair Rocks and a TED2017 mainstage speaker, she reveals the untapped possibilities of late life and debunks our culture’s most pervasive myths about getting older. With her funny, straight-talking approach, audiences realize the often overlooked benefits of advanced age, championing the need for greater age-based diversity in the workplace and our institutions.

Jeff Speck, Principal at Speck & Associates LLC, in Brookline, Massachusetts, is a city planner and urban designer who advocates internationally for more walkable cities. As Director of Design at the National Endowment for the Arts from 2003 through 2007, he presided over the Mayors’ Institute on City Design and created the Governors’ Institute on Community Design.

Dr. Bill Thomas, is an author, entrepreneur, musician, teacher, farmer and physician whose wide-ranging work explores the terrain of human aging. Best known for his health care system innovations, he is the founder of a global non-profit The Eden Alternative®, which works to improve the care provided to older people. He is the creator of The Green House® which Provider Magazine has called the “pinnacle of culture change.” Dr. Thomas has recently developed a new form of housing called the Minka, and he is currently partnering with USI for the MAGIC (Multi-Ability, multi-Generational, Inclusive Community) project.

Keynote presentations from Applewhite, Speck and Dr. Thomas will be free and open to the public; however, due to seating limitations, advanced registration is required. Visit USI.edu/maia for information on reserving your spot in the free keynote presentations.

Break-out session topics for conference attendees over the two-day event include exercise, healthy eating, money safety, laughter yoga, prescription drug plans, palliative care and mental health. This conference appeals to health care and social service professionals, health care administrators, clinicians, older adults or retirees, family members providing care for a loved one, students and anyone who wants to learn tips for leading a healthier life.

The deadline for a reduced registration fee is July 27, 2018. After that date, the rate increases for the pre-conference workshop and one- and two-day registrations. There is a discounted rate for students and retirees. More information about registering is online at USI.edu/maia or by calling 812-464-1989.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Angela Marie Hallam: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony), Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony), Possession of paraphernalia (Class C misdemeanor)

Matias Hernandez-Aburto: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

Isaiah M. Edwards: Criminal recklessness (Level 6 Felony)

Daniel Wayne Hajek Jr.: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony)

David Abraham Browning: Battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony)

Derek Nathan Kurtz: Domestic battery (Level 6 Felony), Strangulation (Level 6 Felony)

State officials remind Hoosiers to be vigilant against fraud during flood recovery

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With 35 counties having declared local emergencies following severe flooding earlier this year, the Office of Attorney General Curtis Hill and the Indiana Department of Homeland Security are warning residents to beware of “storm chasers” and other scammers.

“Storm Chasers” are companies that target communities after severe weather events and sell their services to repair damaged homes and other property. These individuals typically will conduct door-to-door sales in storm-ravaged communities, urging consumers to immediately sign contracts with their companies. They often promise to assist consumers in negotiations with insurance companies at little to no out-of-pocket cost to customers.

Some companies may seek immediate down payments for future work. Hoosiers should be wary of such operations as these crews may perform sub-quality work or even fail to perform the work at all after receiving payment.

In April of 2017, Attorney General Hill launched the “Double Check Before You Write a Check” campaign to remind Hoosiers to take steps to protect themselves from becoming victims of storm chasers.

“When severe weather rips through Indiana, the damage can be significant,” Attorney General Hill said. “In the worst cases, the devastation can be heartbreaking. Many Hoosiers face the stress of out-of-pocket costs to make repairs to personal property. No Hoosier should face the additional nightmare of becoming a victim of fraud. I strongly urge all Hoosiers to double check a company’s name, reputation, history and authenticity before writing a check to a person claiming to represent such a business.”

IDHS Executive Director Bryan J. Langley also cautioned residents to exercise sound judgment.

“As state and federal resources continue to help restore flood-damaged areas across Indiana, citizens must remain vigilant to those who would take advantage of this opportunity for their own gain,” Langley said. “Impacted residents should safeguard their personal information and inspect any person or business hired to perform repairs. IDHS and FEMA representatives always will have proper identification when working with residents.”

A Major Disaster Declaration was issued on May 5 for Indiana for flooding that occurred Feb. 14 to March 4. This included nine counties that qualified for individual assistance and 27 counties that qualified for public assistance. Since then, more than $2.2 million has been authorized to help citizens and local governments restore and rebuild.

Helpful tips for flooding recovery:

  • Avoid agreeing to any repair or restoration work on the spot during initial contact with someone offering services.
  • Avoid signing any contracts or other legally binding agreements without first gathering information and researching a business being represented.
  • Obtain information about the individual offering his or her services.
  • Research any company an individual claims to represent.
  • Use licensed local contractors who are backed by reliable references
  • Get written estimates from at least three contractors that include the cost of labor and materials.
  • Insist that contractors carry general liability insurance and workers’ compensation.

Don’t be fooled by false agency representatives:

Fraudulent phone calls or home visits — Individuals falsely claim to be from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) or another government agency. These individuals lack proper photo identification.

  • Survivors will be asked to provide their Social Security number and banking information only when registering for FEMA assistance. They should never give this information to contractors.
  • Residents should ask to see the inspector’s identification badge. A FEMA or U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) shirt or jacket is not proof of someone’s affiliation with the government. Federal employees and contractors carry official photo identification.
  • FEMA inspectors already will have applicants’ nine-digit registration numbers, and inspectors will never require banking or other personal information. If in doubt, survivors should not give out any information.

Fake offers of federal aid — A phone or in-person solicitor promises to speed up the insurance, disaster assistance or building-permit process for a fee. Other scam artists promise a disaster grant and ask for large cash deposits or advance payments in full.

  • Federal workers do not solicit or accept money. FEMA and SBA staffers will never charge applicants for disaster assistance, inspections or for assisting individuals filling out applications.

Dishonest pleas for post-disaster donations — Solicitors may play on the emotions of disaster survivors. These solicitations may come by phone, email, letter or face-to-face. Residents should verify legitimate solicitations by asking for the charity’s exact name, street address, phone number and website address, then phone the charity directly and confirm that the person asking for funds is an employee or volunteer.

If you believe you have been scammed — or suspect someone may be trying to scam you — contact the Office of the Indiana Attorney General. You can file a complaint by visiting indianaconsumer.com or calling 1-800-382-5516 or the FEMA Disaster Fraud Hotline at 1-866-720-5721.