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Dear Editor,

As you can see below, I am still requesting I have an opportunity to address the complaint by Mr. Scales, even after he appears to want to withdraw.  Also, attached is an affidavit signed by John Gerard, of the Election Office disputing Mr. Scales, who is a member of the GOP Central Committee. The Election Board was ready to hear this complaint this Friday and I was ready to come and refute him. I will await the Election Boards decision on whether we can proceed, despite Mr. Scales now wanting to withdraw.  Mike Duckworth needs to disavow these types of election tactics or admit he was part of the plan to make false accusations.

Sincerely,

Jeff Hatfield,

Candidate for Vanderburgh County Commissioner, Dist. 2

Carla,

are you telling me this is canceled or are you asking me if I have an objection to Mr. Scales request to withdraw? I do object being denied my opportunity to defend against false accusations. I have no doubt that I have complied fully with Indiana law and am prepared to prove this on Friday. Further, I have obtained information that Mr. Scales may have intentionally misled the commission in his attempt to abuse this process. The withdrawal of his false complaint at this time is another attempt by Mr. Scales to abuse this process. Due process requires that I be afforded a fair and full opportunity to defend myself.

 

On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 12:44 PM, Hayden, Carla J. <chayden@vanderburghcounty.in.gov> wrote:  Please see the email below from Hobart Scales regarding his complaint.

From: Hobart Scales [mailto:hobartescales@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 12:35 PM
To: Hobart Scales <hobartescales@gmail.com>; Hayden, Carla J. <chayden@vanderburghcounty.in.gov>

REQUEST BY HOBART SCALES OF ELECTION COMPLAINT AGAINST JEFF HATFIELD TO BE WITHDRAWN

From: Hobart Scales [mailto:hobartescales@gmail.com]
Sent TO:
 Hayden, Carla J. <chayden@vanderburghcounty.in.gov> On Tuesday, May 15, 2018, 12:35 PM

Vanderburgh County Elections Board,

It has come to my attention that the President of the Vanderburgh County Election Board will not be present at the Election Board Hearing scheduled for this Friday.

Due to the serious nature and legal complexity of the complaint I filed last Friday (attached below) I feel that it is paramount for this complaint to be heard by the Board en banc.

Therefore, I hereby withdraw my complaint until which time it can receive a full review of the facts at hand.

Sincerely,

Hobart Scales

COPY OF THE FORMAL COMPLAINT FILE WITH THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY ELECTION BOARD BY HOBART SCALES AGAINST COUNTY COMMISSION CANDIDATE JEFF HATFIELD

On Fri, May 11, 2018, at 3:30 PM, Hobart Scales <hobartescales@gmail.com> wrote:

Vanderburgh County Elections Board,

As a registered voter in Vanderburgh County, I hereby am making an official complaint against Jeff Hatfield as a candidate for Vanderburgh County Commission District 2.

As of 3:18 pm, there has been no filing for a Committee, candidate or exploratory, for Hatfield for Commissioner.

Mr. Hatfield declared his candidacy earlier today, May 11th, 2018.  Around the same time, he releases to the public a website and video supporting his candidacy.  Indiana Law is very clear that if funds were raised or spent in the support of a candidate for office, a committee must first be formed, treasure named, and an account established for the maintaining of those funds.

Mr. Hatfield has had logos designed, videos produced, and website created, all without the proper declaration of exploratory or candidate committee.

As an owner of a campaign consulting firm that provides such services, it’s conceivable that Mr. Hatfield has already spent thousands of campaign dollars without properly disclosing his fundraising and expenditures.  Even if these materials were free, he would still need to disclose them as in-kind contributions and would need to have already filed his declarations.

In failing to do so, his first official act as a candidate for office has been to intentionally defraud the voters of Vanderburgh County.

Sincerely,

Hobart Scales

Evansville, IN

 

 

 

School Takeover And Safety Bills Easily Approved In One-Day Special Session

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By Abrahm Hurt and Adrianna Pitrelli

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Monday’s special session came with no surprises as the four bills that legislators failed to pass on the last night of the regular session were all easily approved and signed by the governor.

“Today, Indiana lawmakers aligned to state and federal tax law to streamline the process for Hoosier families and business, provided more funding to support schools in need and improved school safety statewide — all in one day as planned,” said Gov. Eric Holcomb.

Legislators met for a little more than six hours to discuss bills from school safety to updating the state’s tax code, but the most heated debate took place over House Bill 1315, the Gary-Muncie school takeover legislation.

HB 1315 establishes a process to single out struggling schools. It would allow the state to take over the Gary and Muncie community schools, and it authorizes a $12 million loan to the Muncie school system.

Proponents of HB 1315 said the school takeover would allow for a unified approach to solving the two districts’ financial problems. But opponents countered that the voices of the community could be silenced because the elected school boards would be overridden.

Rep. Sue Errington, D-Muncie, said she wanted to be a part of the process of writing the bill, but she was ignored by the author, Rep. Tim Brown, R-Crawfordsville.

“I am just concerned about the democratic processes with this body,” she said. “It’s Muncie and Gary right now, but who’s going to be next?”

Many legislators were concerned that citizens would no longer have the right to elect a school board.

“Their right to select local representatives is being taken away from them,” Vernon Smith, D-Gary, said. “If there has been some mismanagement, the people of both cities have committed no wrong so, why are we punishing the average citizen?”

Ball State will appoint a newly created seven-member school board to replace the current elected five-member school board, and Gary’s school board will be changed into an advisory board.

Senate Democrats also voiced strong opposition to the bill.

“The bill says that it allows the district to fire up to five percent of their teachers and staff,” said Sen. Lonnie Randolph, D-East Chicago. “The bill takes down the elected school board to make an advisory board — so does your vote really count?”

Sen. Tim  Lanane, D-Anderson, said while he is happy for Ball State because this is something they have advocated for, he does not support the bill.

“There will be less than 90 days before the fall school year once this passes because of the special session so the community must quickly unite over this decision,” he said. “While I disagree with this, I am here to assist Ball State University in any way we can get this job done for the students and families.”

The bill passed the House 63-30 and in the Senate 34-14.

Ball State President Geoffrey Mearns said the university’s board of trustees will meet Wednesday to discuss the whether or not they accept the responsibilities, and if they do, Ball State will assume responsibility starting July 1.

Lawmakers also approved House Bill 1230 which provides $5 million for school safety that the governor requested during the regular session. The bill also allows school corporations and charter schools to obtain funding advances of up to $500,000 for school security equipment and capital purchases, but total advances are not allowed to exceed $35 million. The bill passed the House 96-1 and the Senate 47-1.

House Minority Leader Rep. Terry Goodin, D-Austin, voted for the bill but said it still does not go far enough.

“Five million dollars divided by all the schools that will be eligible for the benefit, $7,352.94, is what that $5 million is boiling down to,” he said. “We’re getting ready to work on bills that are going to give multi-million dollars in tax cuts to billion-dollar corporations, and we think that securing our schools is worth $7,352.94.”

In other action:

  • House Bill 1242 is a tax bill which exempts trucks, pavers, vehicle parts and fuel purchased by a hot mix asphalt company from Indiana’s 7 percent sales tax, which will cost the state around $5 million per year. It also includes a provision requiring that employees of the Department of Revenue and subcontractors be fingerprinted to comply with federal requirements. The bill passed the House 74-20 and 41-7 in the Senate.
  • House Bill 1316 will update the state’s tax code to comply with recent federal changes. The bill changes to state policy to the current federal policy that allows one to use money in a 529 college savings plan on K-12 education. The bill passed the House 75-22 and the Senate 40-8.

FOOTNOTE: Abrahm Hurt and Adrianna Pitrelli are reporters for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Jeff Hatfield Requesting The Opportunity To Address The Election Complaint Filed Against Him

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EXHIBIT A

Jeff Hatfield Requesting The Election Commission To Give Him The Opportunity To Address The Election Complaint Filed Against Him 

From: Hatfield4Commissioner [mailto:Hatfield4Commissioner@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018, 6:45 PM
To: City-County Observer

Dear Editor,

As you can see below, I am still requesting I have an opportunity to address the complaint by Mr. Scales, even after he appears to want to withdraw.  Also, attached is an affidavit signed by John Gerard, of the Election Office disputing Mr. Scales, who is a member of the GOP Central Committee. The Election Board was ready to hear this complaint this Friday and I was ready to come and refute him. I will await the Election Boards decision on whether we can proceed, despite Mr. Scales now wanting to withdraw.  Mike Duckworth needs to disavow these types of election tactics or admit he was part of the plan to make false accusations.

Sincerely,

Jeff Hatfield

Candidate for Vanderburgh County Commissioner, Dist. 2

FOOTNOTE: LINK OF AFFIDAVIT

                                                               Affidavit

EXHIBIT B

Jeff Hatfield Objects To Hobart Scales Request To Withdraw Complaint Against Him 

From: Jeff Hatfield <hatfield4commissioner@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, May 15, 2018, at 2:41 PM
Subject: Re: FW: Elections Complaint Against Jeff Hatfield
To: “Hayden, Carla J.” <chayden@vanderburghcounty.in.gov>

Carla,

Are you telling me this is canceled or are you asking me if I have an objection to Mr. Scales request to withdraw?

I do object being denied my opportunity to defend against false accusations. I have no doubt that I have complied fully with Indiana law and am prepared to prove this on Friday. Further, I have obtained information that Mr. Scales may have intentionally misled the commission in his attempt to abuse this process. The withdrawal of his false complaint at this time is another attempt by Mr. Scales to abuse this process.

Due process requires that I be afforded a fair and full opportunity to defend myself.

Sincerely,

Jeff Hatfield

Candidate for Vanderburgh County Commissioner, Dist. 2

EXHIBIT C

LETTER FROM HOBART SCALES TO CARLA HAYDEN CONCERNING HIS WITHDRAWING FROM THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY ELECTION BOARD HEARING

From: Hobart Scales [mailto:hobartescales@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018, 12:35 PM
To: Hobart Scales <hobartescales@gmail.com>; Hayden, Carla J. <chayden@vanderburghcounty.in.gov>

Subject: Re: Elections Complaint Against Jeff Hatfield

Vanderburgh County Elections Board,

It has come to my attention that the President of the Vanderburgh County Election Board will not be present at the Election Board Hearing scheduled for this Friday.

Due to the serious nature and legal complexity of the complaint I filed last Friday (attached below) I feel that it is paramount for this complaint to be heard by the Board en banc.  Therefore, I hereby withdraw my complaint until which time it can receive a full review of the facts at hand.

Sincerely,

Hobart Scales

EXHIBIT D 

FORMAL COMPLAINT AGAINST AGAINST COUNTY COMMISSION CANDIDATE JEFF HATFIELD FILED BY HOBART SCALES WITH THE VANDERBURGH COUNTY ELECTION COMMISSION

On Fri, May 11, 2018, at 3:30 PM, Hobart Scales <hobartescales@gmail.com> wrote:

Vanderburgh County Elections Board,

As a registered voter in Vanderburgh County, I hereby am making an official complaint against Jeff Hatfield as a candidate for Vanderburgh County Commission District 2.

As of 3:18 pm, there has been no filing for a Committee, candidate or exploratory, for Hatfield for Commissioner.

Mr. Hatfield declared his candidacy earlier today, May 11th, 2018.  Around the same time, he releases to the public a website and video supporting his candidacy.  Indiana Law is very clear that if funds were raised or spent in the support of a candidate for office, a committee must first be formed, treasure named, and an account established for the maintaining of those funds.

Mr. Hatfield has had logos designed, videos produced, and website created, all without the proper declaration of exploratory or candidate committee.

As an owner of a campaign consulting firm that provides such services, it’s conceivable that Mr. Hatfield has already spent thousands of campaign dollars without properly disclosing his fundraising and expenditures.  Even if these materials were free, he would still need to disclose them as in-kind contributions and would need to have already filed his declarations.

In failing to do so, his first official act as a candidate for office has been to intentionally defraud the voters of Vanderburgh County.

Sincerely,

Hobart Scales

Evansville, IN

FOOTNOTE: The City-County Observer posted the attached e-mails without opinion, bias or editing.

Two Controversial Proposals Over Wildlife Shot Down In Indiana

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 Two proposals by the Indiana DNR that stirred up some controversy will not be going into effect.

A rule to open a bobcat hunting and trapping season has been removed by The Indiana Natural Resources Commission. It was a rule initially proposed by the DNR without having an accurate population count in the state, according to the commission.

In Indiana, bobcats were placed under state protection in 1969, where the remained on the list until 2005. They have been protected from hunting ever since.

The second proposal that was removed would have required nuisance wildlife control officers to kill all opossums, coyotes, and raccoons they catch.

More than 1,300 concerned citizens, along with biologists, veterinarians and experts in the field of wildlife care and rescue disagreed with the proposals and made their voices heard during the public comment period.

ADOPT A PET

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Cherry – Cherry is a 4-month-old female Lionhead/New Zealand mix rabbit. She was part of an accidental litter from 2 pet store bunnies, so their owner surrendered them. THEN – her sister turned out to be pregnant, too – the family just kept multiplying! Well now Cherry is spayed, so definitely no babies for her. She would love to be someone’s indoor bunny for the next 8-10+ years. Her adoption fee is $40 and also includes her registered microchip. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

Change the Play Camp returns to UE in June

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Event set for June 26 on UE campus

 With the help of Indianapolis Colts Quarterback Andrew Luck, Riley Children’s Health is hosting several camps throughout Indiana this summer…including one at the University of Evansville on June 26!

Not only will kids be active, but they’ll also have fun and learn to make good choices when it comes to food, exercise, and their wellbeing.

THE RUNDOWN

â–  One hour of high-energy fitness and nutrition stations alongside Andrew Luck

■ Riley Children’s Health team member and local athlete volunteers

â–  Designed for children ages 5 to 13

All camps are free of charge but are limited to 250 children per session.

Register at rileychildrens.org/evansvillecamp.  Camp times are 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.

 

Spots still available for Purple Aces Club Golf Classic

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Openings are still available for the Purple Aces Club Golf Classic, which will be held on Monday, May 21 at Oak Meadow Country Club in Evansville.

Foursomes are available for $600 while individuals can register for $150.  Your entry fee includes a boxed lunch, drinks, a polo shirt and post-golf hors d’oeuvres.  Several sponsorship options are also available and include hole sponsor, longest drive sponsor, closes to the pin sponsor, cart sponsor, reception sponsor and event title sponsor.

Registration begins on Monday at 11 a.m. with lunch being served in your cart at that time.  A shotgun start commences the golf tournament, which will go until approximately 5 p.m.  The post-golf reception goes from 5-6 p.m. with the awards ceremony taking place at 5:30 p.m

USI Wins GLVC Commissioner’s Cup

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For the second time in school history, University of Southern Indiana Athletics has captured the Great Lakes Valley Conference Commissioner’s Cup, it was announced by the league office on Tuesday.  The Screaming Eagles’, who first won the Commissioner’s Cup following the 2003-04 season, earned the award for the 2017-18 campaign by posting the strongest finish in the league’s seven core sports.

Points are allocated for the Commissioner’s Cup based on the athletic department’s finish in the GLVC’s postseason tournaments in men’s soccer, women’s soccer, volleyball, men’s basketball, women’s basketball, softball and baseball. Each of the league’s members sponsors these sports at the intercollegiate level.

Under the guidance of Director of Athletics Jon Mark Hall, USI earned 72 points over the course of the academic year, besting runner-up University of Indianapolis (67) by five points. Bellarmine University (66), Drury University (59) and University of Illinois Springfield (58) rounded out the top five.

Just four points separated places sixth through 11th.  Lewis University (53) was sixth overall, while University of Missouri-St. Louis (52) and Truman State University (52) tied for seventh. Rockhurst University (51), Maryville University (50) and McKendree University (49) finished ninth through 11th. Rounding out the conference contingent was Quincy University (41), William Jewell College (37) and Missouri S&T (28). The University of Wisconsin-Parkside was ineligible to earn points this season due to GLVC sanctions.

Although this season marks USI’s first Commissioner’s Cup victory in nearly 15 years, the Eagles netted 79 points and fell just three markers shy of taking the crown from Rockhurst University last year. USI was eighth in 2015-16 and seventh in 2014-15.

In conference play this year, USI made the GLVC Championship Tournament in six of the seven core sports, highlighted by a league title in softball and runner-up finishes in men’s soccer and women’s basketball.  USI competed in the opening round of both the women’s soccer and men’s basketball tournaments, and fell just one win shy of the GLVC title game in baseball.

The Commissioner’s Cup, instituted prior to the 2002-03 season, has had five different institutions stake claim to the award. Prior to Rockhurst earning its first honor last year, UIndy picked up its second Cup in 2015-16 after the first came in 2013-14, which was bookended by other first-time winners Drury (2014-15) and Lewis (2012-13).  Following the 2011-12 season, former GLVC member Northern Kentucky University took home its fifth-straight and eighth overall Cup over a 10-year span, while SIU Edwardsville, another former member, earned the Commissioner’s Cup in 2007.

The standings for the 2017-18 GLVC Commissioner’s Cup are as follows:

This Week at USI

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Open through Friday, May 25

New Harmony Gallery opens new exhibition, Middle Ground

The New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art is hosting a new exhibition, Middle Ground, April 14 through May 25. The exhibition features the work of Kate Burnet, Amelia Volwiler-Stanley and Dan Woerner from Bloomington, Indiana. Dan Woerner and Kate Burnet construct narratives through their animated videos, drawings and installations by weaving together memories of the past with our prospects for the future from fragments of pop culture and other detritus. The exhibition is free and open to the public. Read More

 

Summer 2018

Summer camps and activities to be offered at USI

Registration is now open for a variety of camps offered this summer through the University of Southern Indiana. The camps each have a different focus, and range from engineering and other STEM-related themes to sports and general enrichment. Visit USI.edu/summer for the full listing of camps and registration information.