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Eleven complete 2018 Connect with Southern Indiana program

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Eleven local leaders successfully completed University of Southern Indiana’s 2018 Connect with Southern Indiana program on Thursday, May 4. An annual leadership program, Connect with Southern Indiana was established in 2006 and is managed by Community Engagement, a department within USI Outreach and Engagement.

The program is in its sixth year of using the Romain College of Business Entrepreneurship Initiative model as a guide. Participants attended 10 full-day sessions focusing on divergent and analytical thinking, idea generation, communication and strategic entrepreneurship from a community development perspective.

This year’s Connect with Southern Indiana class worked with the Vanderburgh County Health Department to create innovative solutions for three major health issues that plague southern Indiana: Opioid addiction, infant mortality and lead paint exposure. Teams presented their collaborative projects at the conclusion of the program.

Below is a list of the projects, the team members involved and a brief description of the project:

211: Laura Anderson and Jenelle Himsel
Indiana’s 211 is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing free and confidential information. The statewide resource directory includes a searchable database, hotline and email address. Through an improved branding strategy, awareness of 211 resources will increase, including lead poisoning resources that will help improve the health and lives of children in our region.

#Safebaby: Brushell Solorzano, Lori Barnett and Kristi Brown
The #Safebaby app is designed to educate new parents on safe practices. Widespread usage of the #Safebaby app will help save babies and lower infant mortality rates.

Get ’em Out of the Cabinet: Amber Wells, Kate Heilman and Laura O’Leary
This community-based opioid drop-off event will rid households of leftover or expired opioid prescriptions that could potentially be abused.

Reducing Fetal / Infant Mortality in Vanderburgh County: Ryan Bixler-Rigg, Jalessa Eskridge and Gena Garrett
This project proposes the establishment of a mobile health clinic to address risk factors that contribute to high fetal and infant mortality rates in Vanderburgh County.

Connect with Southern Indiana continues to promote active citizenship for individuals across a nine-county region in southwest Indiana. Connect with Southern Indiana is open to Indiana residents living in Dubois, Gibson, Knox, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh or Warrick counties who would like to improve the quality of life in their communities.

The 2018 class includes:

Dubois County:                                                   

Jenelle Himsel, Personal Lines Service Manager, German American Insurance

Gibson County:

Laura Anderson, Technical Training Supervisor, Vectren

Posey County:

Amber Wells, Program Management Senior Analyst, Vectren

Spencer County:

Kristi Brown, Administrative Officer, Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial

Vanderburgh County:

Jalessa Eskridge, Development Associate, Carver Community Organization

Gena Garrett, Curator of Educator, Wesselman Nature Society

Katie Heilman, Senior Chemist, AstraZeneca Pharmaceutical

Laura O’Leary, Administrative Coordinator, EVSC Foundation, Inc

Brushell Solorzano, Graduate Assistant, USI Undergraduate Admissions

Warrick County:

Lori Barnett, Executive Assistant, Optimal Rhythms Music Therapy

Ryan Bixler-Rigg, Community Development Manager, American Cancer Society

Tell City Career and Technology Center Open House/Building Tours And Dedication of new CNA Lab Space

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Friday, May 18

11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.  – Open House/Building Tours

12:15 p.m. – Ribbon-Cutting w/ Chancellor & Hospital Representatives

Ivy Tech Community College

Tell City Career & Technology Center

1034 31st St., Tell City

JUST IN: DUCKWORTH REQUEST HOBART SCALES TO DROP COMPLAINT WITH ELECTION COMMISSION

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page1image1817952FOOTNOTE;  THIS LETTER WAS POSTED BY THE CITY COUNTY OBSERVER WITHOUT BIAS, OPINION OR EDITING.

JUST IN: SCALES COMPLAINT AGAINST JEFF HATFIELD DROPPED

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This morning I sent the Vanderburgh County Election Board a complete withdrawal of the complaint I filed against the Hatfield for Commission campaign on Friday, May 11th.  It is attached below.  I filed this complaint as a voter of Vanderburgh County and not as agent for any organization or campaign.
Yesterday Jeff Hatfield and I met at his office to discuss the complaint along with the public coverage of it.  I wish to apologize to Mr. Hatfield for any harm that I caused him personally and publically.
The character attacks that were exchanged between us in the media represent the most base elements of politics.  I take full responsibility for the degradation of the dialogue as I was first to level an accusation.
We are so blessed here in Vanderburgh County with good and honorable public servants, inside and outside of politics.  Elected officials from both political parties work together, generally, to promote good public policy.  As a community, we should foster cooperation and goodwill.
I aspire to these beliefs in my public and personal life.  In this instance, I fell short.
Hobart Scales
Withdrawal Included Below
 
E-MAIL SENT TO ELECTION BY MR. SCALES TO THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY ELECTION BOARD

Vanderburgh County Election Board,

Last Friday I submitted a complaint against the Hatfield for Commissioner Committee (attached below).  The focus of the complaint was based on the timing on his filing and whether it violated portions of IC 3-8-2.
I met with Mr. Hatfield yesterday.  We spoke concerning the process and my complaint.  I am satisfied now that the filing meets all legal standards and was filed appropriately.
I am formally withdrawing my complaint.
Regards,
Hobart Scales

“READERS FORUM” FOR MAY 17, 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: DO YOU CARE IF PRESIDENT TRUMP HAD AN AFFAIR WITH A PORN STAR?

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.

Print Is Dying, Digital Is No Savior: The Long, Ugly Decline Of The Newspaper Business Continues Apace

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Print Is Dying, Digital Is No Savior: The Long, Ugly Decline Of The Newspaper Business Continues Apace

BY Dan Kennedy

Twenty years ago this month, The New York Times entered the Internet age with a sense of optimism so naive that looking back might break your heart. “With its entry on the Web,” wrote Times reporter Peter H. Lewis, “The Times is hoping to become a primary information provider in the computer age and to cut costs for newsprint, delivery and labor.”

The Times wasn’t the first major daily newspaper to launch a website. The Boston Globe, then owned by the New York Times Co., had unveiled its Boston.com service—featuring free content from the Globe and other local news organizations—just a few months earlier. But the debut of NYTimes.com sent a clear signal that newspapers were ready to enlist in the digital revolution.

Fast-forward to 2016, and the newspaper business is a shell of its former self. Far from cutting newsprint and delivery costs, newspapers remain utterly reliant on their shrunken print editions for most of their revenues—as we have all been reminded by the Globe’s home-delivery fiasco.

Not only do newspapers remain tethered to 20th-century industrial processes such as massive printing presses, tons of paper, and fleets of delivery trucks, but efforts to develop new sources of digital revenue have largely come to naught.

Craigslist came up with a new model for classified ads—free—with which newspapers could not compete. And there went 40 percent of the ad revenue.

Digital display advertising has become so ubiquitous that its value keeps dropping. Print advertising still pays the bills, but for how much longer? The Internet has shifted the balance of power from publishers to advertisers, who can reach their customers far more efficiently than they could by taking a shot in the dark on expensive print ads. The result, according to the Newspaper Association of America (as reported by the Pew Research Center), is that print ad revenues have fallen from $44.9 billion in 2003 to just $16.4 billion in 2014, while digital ad revenues—$3.5 billion in 2014—have barely budged since 2006.

And it’s getting worse. Last week Richard Tofel, president of the nonprofit news organization ProPublica and a former top executive with The Wall Street Journal, wrote an essay for Medium under the harrowing headline “The sky is falling on print newspapers faster than you think.” Tofel took a look at the 25 largest U.S. newspapers and found that their print circulation is continuing to drop at a rapid rate, contrary to predictions that the decline had begun to level off.

Five Takeaways From John Henry’s Apology And The Likely End Of The Globe’s Crisis
First came the news that The Boston Globe’s previous distributor has re-entered the picture. Next came an apology by Globe publisher John Henry. And with those two steps, the Globe seems to have essentially brought its week-and-a-half-old home-delivery crisis to an end, even though problems will likely linger into next week. Here are five takeaways.
  • OPINION

There’s a bit of apples-and-oranges confusion in Tofel’s numbers. For instance, he suggests that the 140,000 paid weekday print circulation that the Globe claimed in September 2015 was somehow analogous to the 115,000 it reported during the recent home-delivery crisis. In fact, according to the Alliance for Audited Media, the Globe had 119,000 home-delivery and mail customers in September 2015. (Another 30,000 or so print newspapers were sold via single-copy sales.)

But there’s no disputing Tofel’s bottom line, which is that print circulation plunged between 2013 and 2015 at a far faster rate than had been expected. The Journal is down by 400,000; the Times by 200,000; The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times by 100,000.

“Nearly everyone in publishing with whom I shared the 2015 paid figures found them surprisingly low,” Tofel wrote, adding that “if print circulation is much lower than generally believed, what basis is there for the confidence the declines are ending and a plateau lies ahead?”

If advertising is falling off the cliff and print circulation is plummeting, then surely the solution must be to charge readers for digital subscriptions, right? Well, that may be part of the solution. But it’s probably not realistic to think that such a revenue stream will ever amount to much more than a small part of what’s needed to run a major metropolitan newspaper.

Not everyone agrees, of course. The journalist and entrepreneur Steven Brill, in a recent interview with Poynter.org, said newspaper executives find themselves in their current straits because they were not nearly as aggressive as they should have been about building paywalls around their content.

“I always had a basic view … that if you weren’t getting revenue from readers, you ultimately weren’t going to put a premium on your journalism,” said Brill, a founder of the paywall company Press Plus, which he later sold. “You couldn’t just rely on advertisers because they would then be your only real customers.”

Brill’s views are not extreme. For instance, he thinks it’s reasonable to give away five to 10 articles a month, as newspapers with metered paywalls such as the Globe and the Times do. But Brill does not mention what I think are by far the two biggest hurdles newspapers face in charging for digital content.

First, customers are already paying hundreds of dollars a month for broadband, cell service, and their various digital devices. It’s not crazy for them to think that the content should come included with that, as it does (for the most part) with their monthly cable bill. Those who wag their fingers that newspapers should never have given away their content overlook the reality that customers had none of those extra expenses back when their only option was to pay for the print edition.

Second, paywalls interfere with the way we now consume news—skipping around the Internet, checking in with multiple sources. To wall off content runs contrary not just to what news consumers want but to the sharing culture of the Internet. The Globe has had quite a bit of success is selling digital subscriptions—about 90,000, according to the September 2015 audit report. But what will happen when the paper ratchets the price up to $1 a day, as the newspaper analyst Ken Doctor recently reported for the website Newsonomics?

As I write this, I am on my way to Philadelphia, where I’ll be learning more about the transfer of that city’s newspapers—The Philadelphia Inquirer and the tabloid Daily News—to a nonprofit foundation. Ken Doctor, writing for the Nieman Journalism Lab, isn’t optimistic: “Sprinkling some nonprofit pixie dust won’t save the newspaper industry. Only new ideas can do that.”

For the beleaguered newspaper business, the walls are closing in and the oxygen is being pumped out of the room. Clay Shirky, who writes about digital culture, once said, “Society doesn’t need newspapers. What we need is journalism.”

Trouble is, 20 years after NYTimes.com staked out its home on the web, newspapers are still the source of most of the public interest journalism we need to govern ourselves in a democracy.

Commentary: College Is worth It If Done Right

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Commentary: College Is Worth It If Done Right

By Abdul Hakim-Shabazz
IndyPoltics.Org 

I was at my favorite downtown Indianapolis watering hole Saturday night having a scotch and cigar when I struck a conversation with one of the servers who told me she had met a former student of mine. As some of you might be aware I teach, part-time, at Ivy Tech Community College and the University of Indianapolis. The server told me that she mentioned she worked at Nicky Blaine’s and the student asked her if she knew me. She said yes. He then proceeded to tell her that when he first took my class (speech) he couldn’t stand me. Big shocker. He thought I was arrogant and worse, hard. However, as the class went on through the semester he realized what he was learning was about more than giving speeches. It was being a more effective communicator. And the skill sets he picked up from that class (organization, research, self-confidence, knowing your audience, persuasion) made it a lot easier for him to go into his current field. The student sent his best.

I bring up this story because as many students, young and old, walk across the stage this month, they should keep in mind that what you learn in college goes far beyond what’s taught in a classroom. There is a big debate in the country about the value of college and whether it is worth the debt that some students incur when juxtaposed to the positions waiting for them when they graduate.

I think that is a fair discussion. I think we have put the misleading narrative into too many people’s heads that everyone needs a four-year degree. I have three degrees and have taught college for nearly 15 years, and I will be the first one to tell you not everyone needs a four-year degree. However, I will argue that in the 21st century, everyone needs some type of post-secondary education beyond high school. Whether it is a four-year degree, associates, certification, to make it in the 21st century, knowledge and critical thinking are currency.

And when college is done right, students walk away with the critical thinking and reasoning skills that will do them well in their personal and professional lives. And here’s another reason why a post-secondary education is so important.

A recent report concerning jobs and the economy showed that for every person in this country who is out of work, there is a job available. That’s right there are now as many jobs open as there are unemployed. MarketWatch reported that according to the latest data from the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, there were 6.55 million job openings in March. In March, there were 6.59 million unemployed, meaning there are 1.01 unemployed workers for every job.

To put this in perspective, during the 2008 recession, there were 6.67 unemployed people for every one job. Of course, the big challenge is filling those spots.

Marketwatch also reported that a separate survey from the National Federation of Independent Business found that 88% of companies hiring or trying to hire reported few or no qualified applicants for the positions they were trying to fill. I am willing to bet my box of cigars and comic books that most of those people out of work don’t have much education past a high school diploma if that much. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate for those with less than a high school diploma is near twice the national average. I’m just saying.

So, is college worth it? I think, like anything else, if it’s done right it is. However, I don’t think we should confuse college with a post-secondary education. We should encourage all students, and adults for that matter, to continue learning because in the 21st-century knowledge is not only power but currency.

FOOTNOTE: Abdul is an attorney and the editor and publisher of IndyPoltics.Org. He is also a frequent contributor to numerous Indiana media outlets. He can be reached at abdul@indypolitics.org.

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Indiana Is Cracking Down On Drug Interdiction Across The State

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Indiana Is Cracking Down On Drug Interdiction Across The State

Attorney General Curtis Hill is determined to strengthen drug interdiction efforts across Indiana.

A collaboration with the Indiana Drug Enforcement Association (IDEA) will provide the funding needed for regional interdiction teams.

IDEA and highway interdiction teams (HITs) are comprised of officers and drug-sniffing dogs that are cracking down on criminals in Indiana who use the states thoroughfares to do their business.

Attorney General Hill said; “We need to fight the drug crisis on many fronts, including prevention and treatment.  “By increasing interdiction, we are both reducing the number of illicit drugs flowing into our communities and simultaneously sending a strong message to those who choose the Crossroads of America to carry out criminal activity: You will pay a heavy price for trafficking drugs in Indiana. Officers and deputies are out in force looking for you every day.”

West Lafayette Police Chief Jason Dombkowski agrees with Hill, saying that he knows the efforts made by these teams are making a difference.

All in the month of April, HITs conducted 273 drug-related investigations. These investigations led to 16 arrests, 12 pounds of marijuana seized, and a pound of methamphetamine seized. Pills and cocaine with a street value of more than $65,000 as well as a handgun and $16,000 cash were among other items that were confiscated.

So far, eight police cars and five police K-9s have been purchased for agencies to use. Also purchased were tracking software, two-way radios and emergency police equipment such as lights and sirens.

 

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