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Supreme Court Backs New Jersey’s Bid To Legalize Sports Betting

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New Jersey’s current governor, Phil Murphy, said he was “thrilled” by the ruling and would work with state lawmakers to enact a law authorizing sports betting “in the very near future.”

“Today’s ruling will finally allow for authorized facilities in New Jersey to take the same bets that are legal in other states in our country,” Murphy said.

 Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito said the problem with the federal law is that “state legislatures are put under the direct control of Congress.”

“A more direct affront to state sovereignty is not easy to imagine,” he wrote.

New Jersey wants to allow limited forms of sports gambling and to collect the taxes from it. While supporters of the federal law said it discouraged betting and the resulting corrupting influence of organized crime on athletics, Christie said Americans already spend nearly $150 billion a year on illegal sports wagering.

“I know that we don’t know much about organized crime coming from New Jersey. But we know a little bit. And the fact is that organized crime is involved in profiting from this every day,” he said.

The American Gaming Association estimated that Americans would wager $10 billion on this year’s NCAA men’s basketball tournament alone, with just three percent of the bets placed legally through Nevada.

“Today’s decision is a victory for the millions of Americans who seek to bet on sports in a safe and regulated manner,” the association said in a statement Monday. “Today’s ruling makes it possible for states and sovereign tribal nations to give Americans what they want: An open, transparent and responsible market for sports betting.”

The NCAA and the major professional sports leagues contended that the law was not unconstitutional, because it didn’t compel states to do anything, it simply prevented them from making sports betting legal by either operating sports-gambling schemes themselves or authorizing casinos to do so.

New Jersey officials said they would allow only certain types of sports betting, at casinos and racetracks, with a minimum age of 21 to participate. When the case was argued in January, Christie said the state was prepared to act within two weeks of a Supreme Court ruling in its favor.

USI Softball Advances to Super Regionals

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USI Softball Advances to Super Regionals

Southern Indiana softball did it again. The Screaming Eagles (34-23) will head back to the Sweet 16 after defeating Midwest Region Tournament No. 1 host Grand Valley State 2-1 Sunday.

USI entered the day in the winner’s bracket and the Lakers (44-9) needed to beat the Screaming Eagles twice to dethrone the reigning champs.

No. 9 GVSU won the first game 5-3, but the Screagles rebounded in the second game for a 2-1 win.

Caitlyn Bradley’s RBI double in the third inning made it 2-0 and senior Haylee Smith held things down in the circle, allowing only one run.

However, the Screaming Eagles defense played a big role as well with nine hits, three walks, and two errors only resulting in one run coming across to score.

Next up for USI is the Midwest Super Regional against No. 19 the University of Illinois at Springfield.

The Screaming Eagles three-game series against conference foe UIS starts Thursday.

First pitch from Springfield, Ill. is at 1:30 p.m.

Last year, the Screaming Eagles hosted the Midwest Super Regional and defeated Wayne State 2-0 in a three-game series to advance to the Division II championships in Salem, Va.

Special Session Includes Tax And School Bills

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By Abrahm Hurt
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana Democrats are worried that the May 14 special legislative session is undemocratic by not involving Hoosier voices.

“My fundamental problem is this is being handled in an amazingly undemocratic fashion,” said state Rep. Ed Delaney, D-Indianapolis. “How can we consider legislation without testimony, without committee hearings and without the possibility of an amendment?”

Lawmakers will meet at the Statehouse on May 14 for a special one-day session to act on bills that legislators failed to pass before the end of the regular session. Republican leaders in the House and Senate, who hold supermajorities, have said they want to limit the work to a single day where they will tackle tax and education bills.

While the Democrats have expressed their concern, Indiana Republicans have said the bills already had a public testimony, gone through committees and been amended. They have said the bills will be exactly the way they looked the night of March 14 when the regular session ended.

“With the exception of a technical corrections bill recommended for adoption by the Legislative Services Agency, the four other bills will be eligible for a final vote in the same form they were in on the last night,” House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, said. “This process will complete our work just as it should have been with the limited expense to the taxpayer.”

The estimated cost for the special session is $30,000 per day with legislators receiving a daily expense stipend of $173 as determined by the federal government.

The proposed legislation, motions and fiscal notes for the bills being considered were released to the public April 30.

“We are delivering on our pledge of full transparency and openness with regard to the special session,” Senate President Pro Tem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, said in a statement.  “I’m hopeful that this will help facilitate an efficient process when we gather on May 14 to complete our work on these important issues.”

 

The four pieces of legislation are:

  1. House Bill 1230 would provide $5 million for school safety that Holcomb had requested during the session. The bill would allow school corporations 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.
  2. Senate Bill 242––now House Bill 1242 because it will start in the House––is a tax bill which would have exempted trucks, pavers, vehicle parts and fuel purchased by a hot mix asphalt company from Indiana’s 7 percent sales tax.
  3. House Bill 1315 would establish 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 corporations.
  4. House Bill 1316 will update the state’s tax code to comply with recent federal changes.

House Bill 1457 will make technical corrections to legislation passed this year.

Delaney said the legislation regarding the Gary and Muncie schools is punitive, not legislative.

“Every school district in the state ought to be concerned that if they somehow offend the supermajority either because of real economic problems or because of mismanagement that their school district will be brought before the General Assembly and subjected to punishment,” he said.

Rep. Melanie Wright, D-Yorktown, said until it’s understood why these school corporations are struggling, the problem will continue. She said the legislature needs to look at how property tax caps, changes to the complexity index and school choice have affected school corporations.

“We’ve never really looked at the impact of those three things separately, let alone how they interact,” Wright said. “I think part of that is playing out in some of our school systems, and I think until we look at the larger vision of why is this problem happening, I think we’re bound to see it repeating.”

Lawmakers will meet on Monday to review the agenda for the special session.

FOOTNOTE: Abrahm Hurt is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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Nature News

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Nature Playscape
Grand Opening
Saturday, May 26
10 am – 3 pm

Join us to celebrate the Grand Opening of the Welborn Baptist Foundation Nature Playscape at Wesselman Woods!

After 4 years of planning, fundraising, and building, we are so excited to welcome you to the largest Nature PlayScape in the country.

What is a Nature Playscape? A Playscape is a play environment intentionally designed to engage in and with nature. Its purpose is to develop children’s love of nature through unstructured play in the outdoors.

Join us for a full day of play. (And dress to get dirty!) In addition to being one of the first to play in our Nature Playscape, we have a full schedule of fun activities all day long.

Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana Union Employees Ratify New Labor Agreement

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Teamsters Local 135 voted late Thursday to ratify a new three-year contract for its Vectren Energy Delivery (Vectren) employee-members. Local 135 represents Vectren’s natural gas employees in the Vincennes, Washington and Princeton areas in southwestern Indiana.

The early settlement comes months prior to the expiration of the existing contract in late September. Management and union representatives began discussions on the new contract in late April.

“A successful negotiation process and early mutual agreement are good news for our employees and their families,” said Vectren’s Senior Vice President of Utility Operations and President of VUHI, Jon Luttrell. “This contract ensures our skilled, dedicated workforce will continue providing safe, reliable natural gas to our customers in southwestern Indiana.”

 

Commentary: Passing Time With The Pastime

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – The bat feels like a toothpick in my hands.

The baseball floats in the air and a small boy chases after it.

I’m tapping fly balls with a child’s bat in my front yard on a lazy Saturday afternoon to a neighbor’s 6-year-old son. My own son – now a strapping 6-feet-2-inch teenager – coaches the little boy.

“When you’re judging a fly ball,” my son says, “your first step is always back.”

He also shows the younger boy how to control his throws better by making the motion overhand, rather than sidearm. The little boy listens attentively, desperate to learn the game.

The moment takes me back.

I’ve lost track of how many hours I spent hitting fly balls or throwing batting practice to my son. He fell in love with baseball when he was not much older than our young neighbor. My son spent hours out here, tossing baseballs up in the air and whacking them when I couldn’t toss or hit to him. There still are spots worn bare in our front lawn that mark where he stood when he hit and where I stood when I pitched to him – an unofficial batter’s box and pitcher’s mound.

We stopped doing that a few years ago when I tossed him a pitch that he hit with a crack. The ball flew over the street and landed atop a neighbor’s roof. A slightly lower trajectory would have put it through a large and lovely picture window.

It’s a cliché to wax rhapsodic about baseball, to lapse into lyricism about lessons passed from fathers to sons on fields of green.

The temptation is understandable.

I never played much baseball when I was young – a regret now – because summer swim practices conflicted with most Little League schedules. But I treasure the times I spent working with my son as he developed his skills.

The why of that can be found in the game’s nature. Because so much of it is about listening, observing and learning, baseball lends itself to close conversation – to teaching.

I tap a pop fly into the air. The neighbor boy runs under it, glove outstretched. The ball lands in the web, a clean catch.

He holds the ball in the air.

A huge grin splits his face.

He and my son slap gloves together in celebration.

Then my son walks the younger boy through what he did to make the catch, how he tracked the ball, how he squeezed it when it landed and secured the grab with both hands. It’s a lesson my son learned that he now shares.

I watch my son coach, and the other boy listens, with wonder in my heart. I marvel at the way some things endure even as everything around them changes.

A few years ago, I took my son and my father on a trip to see baseball in Cleveland, Ohio, where I was born. Before the Saturday game, we drove over to a working-class neighborhood where we’d lived when I was little more than a toddler.

The three of us played pitch and catch in the tiny little playground behind the small duplex where we lived long ago. As we tossed the ball back and forth, my dad, who was in his 80s, told his grandson about how, decades earlier, he used to throw in this same spot with me.

Dad said it made him feel good to see his grandson take such an interest in baseball.

The ball’s flight tracked the march of generations.

Grandfather to father to son/grandson – and then back again.

Now, my wife sits at a window chair in our kitchen and watches the three of us play. My son notices me smiling at her.

“You can go in and sit with Mom, Dad,” he says. “I can take over for you.”

Someday, he will.

Because that is the nature of things.

On this day, though, I watch while my son teaches a little boy some things he’s learned from and about a game he loves.

The grass grows. Clouds push across the sky. Time passes.

And that’s okay because I can’t think of any place I’d rather be.

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.

Eagles are headed back to Super Regionals!

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University of Southern Indiana Softball is heading back to the NCAA Division II Midwest Super Regional for the second straight year thanks to a 2-1 win over No. 9 Grand Valley State University in the “if necessary” game of the NCAA II Midwest Region #1 Tournament Sunday afternoon.

The Screaming Eagles (34-23), who needed just one win on the day, fell to the Lakers, 5-3, in the first game.

USI will open up Super Regionals Thursday at 1:30 p.m. when it visits the University of Illinois Springfield at the Land of Lincoln Junior Olympic Softball Complex in Springfield, Illinois. The best-of-three series continues with game two Friday at noon, while the “if necessary” game is Friday at 2:30 p.m.

Game 1: #9 GVSU 5, USI 3 (Box Score)
A combined eight runs were scored in the second inning as GVSU scored five times in the top half of the inning to build a 5-0 lead before the Eagles answered with a three spot in the bottom half of the inning to cut into the early deficit.

GVSU (44-9) had five hits, including a solo home run and back-to-back run-scoring doubles to produce its offense in the second.

The Eagles took advantage of an infield single and two walks to set up junior second baseman Claire Johnson (Pittsboro, Indiana) for a two-out, three-run double that nearly went over the fence for a grand slam.

Despite the offensive outburst, both teams settled down on the defensive end to hold the opposing offenses in check throughout the final five frames. Junior pitcher Haylee Smith (Florence, Kentucky) came on in relief in the second frame and scattered three hits throughout 5 1/3 innings of work to keep the Lakers off the scoreboard.

Meanwhile, the Eagles got back-to-back hits to leadoff of the fifth inning, but GVSU junior pitcher Allison Lipovsky got back-to-back fly balls followed by a strikeout to retire the threat.

Sophomore pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky) was charged with the loss after giving up five runs off four hits in 1 2/3 innings of work. Leonhardt (19-12) had a pair of strikeouts and walked one batter in the loss.

Game 2: USI 2, #9 GVSU 1 (Box Score)
Junior outfielder Caitlyn Bradley (Forest, Indiana) hit a two-out double off the top of the fence in the top half of the fourth inning to give USI a 2-0 lead and Smith navigated her way to a complete-game victory in the circle as USI was triumphant in the “if necessary” game.

Bradley’s double looked like a three-run home run, but it somehow bounced back into the outfield as USI had to settle for two runs.

Smith (6-5) remained in the circle to pitch the beginning of the game and was so affective in keeping the Lakers’ hitters off balance, USI Head Coach Sue Kunkle opted to leave her in for the duration.

GVSU threatened throughout the contest, including the second inning when senior outfielder Olivia Clark-Kittleson (Carbondale, Illinois) threw out a runner at home plate. The Lakers, who had runners on base in each of the first six innings, loaded the bases in the fourth inning but could not break through.

After the Lakers put a run across in the fifth frame to cut USI’s advantage in half, GVSU had the leadoff runner on board in the sixth inning only to hit into a double play. Two batters later, with a runner at first base, USI junior outfielder Allison Schubert (Nicholasville, Kentucky) made an over the shoulder grab at the warning track in right field to keep the Lakers off the scoreboard.

Smith, who allowed just one run off nine hits and three walks, retired the Lakers in order in the seventh to complete the victory and bring the Eagles to within two wins of their second consecutive trip to the NCAA II Softball Championship.

Aces drop slugfest, series to Indiana State

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The University of Evansville got out to a fast start, however Indiana State’s bats proved to be faster in a marathon game, as the Sycamores downed the Purple Aces 14-9 Sunday afternoon at Bob Warn Field, taking the series’ rubber match.

“Our offense gave us a chance today on Sunday Funday in the Valley with the series on the line”, said Aces Head Coach Wes Carroll. “But from a pitching standpoint, we couldn’t get a guy to get hot and get us outs. So we had to keep going to the pen.”

The Aces came out swinging, putting up four runs in the opening frame, highlighted by junior second baseman Sam Troyer’s three run home run, his second round tripper of the season. Evansville would tack on another tally in the top of the second inning on sophomore left fielder Troy Beilsmith’s RBI single left, driving in senior shortstop Stewart Nelson, putting UE out in front 5-0.

After tossing a perfect first inning, sophomore hurler David Ellis ran into trouble in the second, as Indiana State tallied three runs, spearheaded by an RBI single by Roberto Enriquez. Ellis would stay into finish the frame, however his day was over two innings. From there, the Aces went through their entire bullpen, sending 8 relievers to the hill. The Sycamores would put up eleven more tallies on the board.

“We had a tough time with command all day”, said Carroll. “And that’s unfortunate.”

Evansville’s bats would battle back, with the second of two RBI singles from freshman third baseman Tanner Craig, a solo home run off the bat of senior first baseman Dalton Horstmeier, then a two-run single from Horstmeier. However, it wasn’t enough, as the Aces dropped the five-run decision.

“Our guys were still fighting and competing, and I’m proud of their overall effort”, said Carroll. “We just didn’t do enough to get a series win on the road in the Valley.”

The loss drops the Aces to 10-35 on the season and 2-16 in the Missouri Valley Conference, while Indiana State improves to 26-21 and 8-10 in the MVC.

Evansville is back on the road Tuesday night as they play the back end of their home-and-home series with Belmont.

Lions Club International Presents 3rd Highest Award to Sgt. Eric Dunn

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The Indiana State Police is humbled to share the press release, as provided by the Indiana Chapter of the Lions Club International, to announce recognition of Indiana State Police Sergeant Eric Dunn

As released by the Lions:

Multiple District 25, Indiana, Honors Indiana State Police Sergeant Eric Dunn

Muncie, IND – At the recent 101st Indiana Lions Clubs state convention, the President of Lions Clubs International, Dr. Naresh Aggarwal presented Indiana State Police Sergeant “Lion” Eric Dunn with a Leadership Medal, the 3rd highest award from Lions Clubs International.

Lions Clubs International is the world’s largest service organization representing 1.4 million members in over 200 countries. There are over 9,000 Lions in clubs throughout Indiana.

The Leadership medal exemplifies dedicated service to the citizens of Indiana, but especially to the youth of Indiana.  As the director of the Vincennes Indiana State Police-Lions Law Camp, “Lion” Sgt. Dunn embraces the Lions Clubs International’s motto of “WE SERVE” through the ”Power of Action,” the “Power of Service” and the “Power of We”, while never forgetting the Indiana State Police Motto “to Serve and Protect.”  Quality leadership is essential to providing quality service to Indiana communities.

Dunn, a 14-year member of Indiana Lions, is a member of the Bloomington Lions Club.  He graduated from the 50th recruit school academy of the Indiana State Police Department and was assigned to the Toll Road in 1993 and later transferred to the Bloomington State Police Post.  He resides with his family in Bloomington, Indiana and is assigned to Indiana State Police Headquarters Operations Center, Indianapolis.