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IS IT TRUE APRIL 4, 2018

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” 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?

IS IT TRUE that Evansville’s Mayor Lloyd Winnecke got a bit more real in his State of the City address this year and publicly acknowledged some of the problems that the City County Observer has been pointing out since Weinzapfel was in charge?…the Mayor’s lackluster address was certainly a departure from the “everything is beautiful” and “#strongcity” propaganda that has dominated the public persona of his time in office?…one does need to acknowledge problems to have a prayer of solving them so on that basis the CCO says “congratulations Mayor Winnecke?

IS IT TRUE that Mayor Winnecke for the first time in what is usually an unconditional love fest State of the City speech that ignores problems pointed out that 8,670 potholes were filled, 160 water mains broke just in January of this year, the EFD responds to 20-30 drug overdoses per month (that is one every day)?

IS IT TRUE he also stated that 315 blighted houses were torn down?…we also remind the Mayor that while demolishing 315 houses is an expensive and time consuming task that there are still 10,000 to go?…at this rate of demolition the last of today’s dilapidated houses will be torn down in roughly the year 2050 by which time there will be more?

IS IT TRUE we need to point out because of the recent bad weather that there may be even more potholes than there were before the 8,670 were filled, the drug problem is seemly getting worse than last year, and the water main breaks are the tip of the iceberg since most of the water mains are over 75 years old?  …it looks like our Mayor has his work cut out for him?

IS IT TRUE that Mayor Winnecke even owned up to the homicide statistics so far this year? …on the very day that Mayor Winnecke was acknowledging this carnage, two shootings and a stabbing occurred in the 900 block of Independence Avenue just off of South Kentucky Avenue that was once a high society neighborhood?…the day before an adult was arrested for allegedly beating a 17-year-old to death with his bare hands? …it looks like the Mayor has a major challenge in making Evansville a safe, and tranquil city once again?

IS IT TRUE that the other topic of the day was Mayor Winnecke’s glee that perhaps the $729 million settlement made with the EPA to reduce the raw sewage overflows into the Ohio River may be appealed since he believes President Trump may be more accommodating of those who prefer to release raw sewage into the Ohio River than the previous administration?  …we hope the Mayor is wrong about the President being more accommodating about releasing more raw sewage into the Ohio River for us to consume?

IS IT TRUE yesterday the Evansville Redevelopment Commission awarded a contract to build the 72-space paved parking lot for Ragle, Inc located directly right behind  Dilegge’s restaurant, off North Main Street? …it was also stated that “City officials are hoping more public parking in the area will encourage people to utilize the bike path?”

IS IT TRUE we wonder who owned the vacant lot located directly behind Dilegge’s Restaurant?  …we wonder if this project was put out for public bid?  …we wonder what did the DMD pay for the property?  …we also wonder how much is it going to cost to have a 72 car parking lot paved?  …we wonder why City Councilman and Finance Chairman Jonathon Weaver isn’t calling for transparency concerning this deal?

IS IT TRUE according to Channel 44 News that the Evansville DMD Director explained the above parking lot transaction as follows; he stated: “that this comes after on-street parking was lost on the east side of North Main Street with the addition of the new bike path?”  …it was further stated; “that the lot will replace one of the parcels the city lost on North Main Street and Columbia Street?”  … “In that process, they leased the entire property which took the parking from the public domain to their private business so the lot we’re going to build on the east side of North Main then replaces that Davita Dialysis Center’s taking of that parking lot.” …all we can say about this statement is “what in the heck is this guy talking about”? …if you want to know more about the transaction please go to today’s City-County Observer and click on the TV interview article concerning parking behind Dilegge’s Restaurant?

IS IT TRUE that The Indiana Right to Life PAC just announced its endorsement of Mike Braun for U.S. Senate in the 2018 Primary Election? …a spokesman for the Indiana Right To Life said; “that Mike Braun has always fought to protect the lives of the unborn and will continue to do so in the U.S. Senate?”  …that Mr. Braun is a father of four children, he is proud to receive this endorsement in recognition of his staunch pro-life voting record?

IS IT TRUE we urge you to attend the “Guns and Hoses XI” event this coming April 7, 2018, at the Ford Center because it’s for worthy causes?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Are you pleased with the overall progress of Evansville since Mr. Winnecke took office?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “Statehouse Files, Channel 44 News, Daily Devotions, Law enforcement, Readers Poll, Birthdays, Hot Jobs, and Local Sports.

You are 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

GOVERNOR SIGNS HARMONY WAY BRIDGE AUTHORITY LEGISLATION

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GOVERNOR SIGNS HARMONY WAY BRIDGE AUTHORITY LEGISLATION!

by Dan Barton, Publisher, The New Harmony Gazette 

As most of you know from last month’s Gazette, House Bill 1290 creating the Harmony Way Bridge Authority, passed 77 – 0 in the Indiana House. It has now been signed by Governor Holcomb making it a done deal and the law of the land. Thanks Governor Holcomb!

Lora Arneberg says to the Gazette, “We’re still working on doing a ceremonial signing for photo ops, but it has been signed. It’s a big step forward and now we’re starting to hear from the Illinois newspapers.” She thought that might be a good sign. I responded back to her, “Sounds like it could be. Everybody wants to go with a winner!”

It’s time the folks in Illinois got together and pushed Springfield to get route 14 open again between the Harmony Way Bridge and Crossville, Illinois. Let’s all get behind the Bridge Committee and Authority to bring back our community connections here in Indiana and Illinois.

I know it has been quite a few years ago that legislation was attempted to establish a Bridge Authority and it failed. Not this time. This is really a big deal! I admit it. I had my doubts that it would get this far. So I’m really impressed. It’s a time for dancing on the bridge, that’s for sure. Wish I could dance!

“The next step in this process,” as explained by Ms. Arneberg at the March New Harmony Town Council meeting, “is to have the ownership of the Harmony Way Bridge transferred from the White County Bridge Commission to the Harmony Way Bridge Authority.” She said, “ We now have a democratically elected, independent government entity, with Commissioners elected to four year terms. It will be tax exempt and eligible for federal grants for the first time ever. Senator Jim Tomes and State Representative Wendy McNamara helped get this done quickly. So if anybody gets a chance to send a thank-you note, they should do so. Please do that.”

Ms. Arneberg also stated, “The Committee and I will continue to work until all the appointments are made. Once the Bridge Authority is in place they will take over at that point.”

There was then a lengthy discussion about Section 4 (b) of House Bill 1290 as it applies to dismissal and reappointments on the Bridge Authority. Council President Alvin Blaylock, Councilman David Flanders and Town Attorney Erin Bauer, were concerned about whether appointments that the New Harmony Town Council makes to the Authority could be arbitrarily removed from the Harmony Way Bridge Authority without their involvement. The language in that section seemed ambiguous to them. (You can find this House Bill by simply inputting Indiana House Bill 1290 on the internet and it is easy to find. I found it. If I can find it anyone can. Then you can read the language for yourself.)

The end result of this long exchange was that Lora said she will look at the language again but that the same rule regarding removals and replacements applies to everyone, including the Governor’s appointees. The rule reads, members can be removed with or without cause, and that created some consternation with Town Council members.

Town Zoning Administer and Bridge Committee Member Rod Clark, who was in the audience, volunteered that, “Irrespective, the Bill has passed. Whatever the language is, is what the

language is. If the Governor signs it, it means the Bill has passed. The Legislature is adjourned, so you’re not going to get it amended now.”

Lora said that it could be amended at a later time. She added, “I was told that it would just be an amendment to this legislation. So the Governor will sign into law whatever is passed by the Legislature. That’ll happen very quickly. I will find out what final language was in there. Then if anyone wants to pursue an amendment, you can. “

Kudos to Lora Arneberg and the Bridge Committee for a job well done!

FOOTNOTE: The New Harmony Gazette is a media partner of the City County Observer.  We highly recommend that you go to their site to learn whats going on in Historical New Harmony. You also would benefit if you decided to put your business ad in this popular community newspaper.

More Paved Parking Coming To Jacobsville Area Just Behind Dilegge’s Restaurant

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 More parking is coming to the Jacobsville area in Evansville. The Iowa Street parking lot will be built behind Dilegge’s restaurant, off North Main Street.
This morning, the Evansville Redevelopment Commission awarded a contract to build the 72-space lot to Ragle, Inc.
This comes after on-street parking was lost on the east side of North Main Street with the addition of the new bike path.
Officials say the lot will replace one of the parcels the city lost on North Main Street and Columbia Street.  “In that process, they leased the entire property which took the parking from the public domain to their private business.
So the lot we’re going to build on the east side of North Main then replaces that Davita Dialysis Center’s taking of that parking lot.”  City officials are hoping more public parking in the area will encourage people to utilize the bike path.


Britney Taylor
Web Producer 44 News

Hate Crimes Passed As A Summer Study Committee

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Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS—A resolution that would allow Indiana to join 45 other states with hate crimes legislation was approved unanimously in the Senate Rules and Legislative Procedures Committee Monday.

Senate Resolution 60, authored by Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, asks for a summer committee to study current state and federal statutes that address hate crimes, current and future law enforcement training and education for recognizing and responding to such crimes.

SR 60 is a result of the fall of Senate Bill 418 earlier this session which would have allowed judges to impose tougher sentences for crimes motivated by factors such as race, religion, sex, gender identity, and sexual orientation. SB 418 never made it out of committee.

“I wanted to give the Indiana legislature one last opportunity to do the right thing this year,” Taylor said in a written statement. “This is not an issue we can just brush past and leave on the table for yet another year, too much is at stake as bias-related crimes continue to increase.”

The bill would also review appropriate sentencing options for addressing bias-motivated crimes and how Indiana courts currently address them.

“The common response when this legislation is proposed is that the courts already have the ability to add aggravators for crimes committed with a bias,” Taylor said. “I think that this study committee would determine the level of inadequacy of our current laws.”

Taylor said he hopes that the study committee will help better protect minority communities from crimes committed against them because of race, gender or skin color.

FOOTNOTE: TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.  TheStatehouseFile is a media partner of the City-County Observer.

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Anti-Bullying Law Compels Schools To Report Incidents

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By Quinn Fitzgerald
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS ­– After finding more than half of schools in Indiana are not reporting bullying incidents, lawmakers have passed legislation that aims to resolve the issue.

The latest data report in Indiana provided online by the Indiana Department of Education, shows that 55 percent of schools throughout Indiana reported zero incidents for the 2016-17 school year. One potential cause is not having a clear definition of bullying, which legislature and IDOE are working to get a handle on.

House Enrolled Act 1356, which was signed by Gov. Eric Holcomb March 14, contains a number of elements to address the issue.

The bill, which was authored by Rep. Greg Porter, D-Indianapolis, would ensure that the reports do not affect a school corporation’s overall performance grade given by the state.

Rep. Greg Porter, D-Indianapolis, authored the anti-bullying bill.Photo by Lesley Weidenbener, TheStatehouseFile.com

“What we thought was that school corporations were not reporting bullying because they were afraid of their performance report in schools,” Porter said. “We don’t think they’re doing it because it’s punitive toward their outcomes.”

To make sure the intimidation is reported, even with the assurance that it will not affect school grades, the bill also requires IDOE to send a letter to schools, electronically or physically, reminding schools of the reporting policy.

“Sometimes those procedures or the movement does not happen at the Indiana Department of Education and it’s not casting disparaging comments on them, but we are here to help,” Porter said during the Senate Education and Career Development Committee in February.

Under the law, IDOE would be able to periodically conduct an audit or a review of school corporations to ensure incidents are being accurately reported and report discrepancies on the IDOE website.

David Woodward, director of school building physical security and safety for IDOE, disagrees with this aspect of the bill because it undermines local authority.

He added that because weeks can pass between the incident occurring and it being reported to administration, having IDOE to intervene and re-investigate after seeing a dispute months after the fact would only muddy the water.

“I don’t think that’s going to clarify anything at all,” Woodward said. “Nothing ever is helped by adding a level of bureaucracy to something that is already hard to measure.”

The state defines bullying as any overt, unwanted, repeated act or gestures committed by a student or group of students against another student with intention of harassing, ridiculing, intimidating or harming the student.

In other words, to be reported by the school, bullying has to be more than a one-time incident.

“That doesn’t mean that what someone does wouldn’t be wrong or an act that could be cause for discipline,” Woodward said.

When she was a freshman, 17-year old Madi Brown from Floyd Central High School in Floyds Knobs, became a football manager with three other girls. She was subjected to repeated intimidation, especially by one particular girl.

Madi Brown is a senior at Floyd Central High School in Floyds Knobs, Indiana. Photo by Quinn Fitzgerald, TheStatehouseFile.com

“Little by little, they would make me do all the work, and then they would exclude me from what they were doing,” Brown said. “They would talk about me behind my back.”

Brown didn’t want to quit, so she instead went to one of the coaches–who is also a teacher at the school–but he dismissed the situation. Her dad eventually found out Brown was being bullied and confronted the coaches on the field to address the issue. The girl who was targeting Brown quit afterward.

“It was a public affair. It was a nightmare,” Brown said.

There are four types of incidents that IDOE requires schools to report— verbal, physical, social or relational, and electronic or written communication. Brown’s experience fell under social or relational bullying.

Dr. Joe Voelker, assistant principal for student development at FCHS, said he is hearing more instances of students posting on social media when they feel intentionally left out of the group, similar to how Brown was treated her freshman year.

“It causes a lot of anxiety for kids,” Voelker said. “Ten years ago, people didn’t know about that. And maybe just it was a coincidence that they met up there. It’s not that they’re intentionally trying to leave somebody out.”

In 2013, then-Gov. Mike Pence signed the Indiana Anti-Bullying Law that requires schools to report bullying under guidelines by IDOE. Voelker said since the implementation of the law, the number of incidents documented in Floyd Central has risen.

For the 2014-15 school year, Voelker said FCHS documented 10 instances of bullying, which was eight more than the previous two years. For the 2016-17 school year, he said he documented eight incidents and seven the year before.

Voelker said the increase of reports during the 2014-15 school year has more to do with how the 2013 law defines bullying. Since then, he said the law has helped the school in how they handle the procedure for reporting instances.

Lawrenceburg High School was one of the 1,852 schools reporting zero incidents of bullying. Assistant Principal Steve Johnson said this is partly due to how bullying has to be a “repeated act” in order to be reported.

“Whatever behavior is going on when we start that process tends to stop immediately,” Johnson said.

Woodward said in the first few years after implementing the law, there was difficulty in spreading the word about the requirement and how the data was collected. He said there isn’t enough yet to determine a trend.

Because the data could mean schools are not reporting as they should, Woodward said there will be work done on IDOE’s end to fix it.

“I think it’s going to require more education for us with regards to the reporting mechanism and what’s reported and what isn’t, and then going from there,” he said.

The last portion of HEA 1356 requires IDOE to conduct a statewide survey to see if school corporations improve in reporting. The survey must then be submitted to the General Assembly no later than Nov. 1, 2018.

While HEA 1356 takes care of the regulation of reports, House Bill 1230–authored by Rep. Wendy McNamara, R-Evansville–includes language that would have specifically dealt with incidents outside of school hours. The bill, however, died on the last day of the legislative session after lawmakers ran out of time to hear the bill.

Pushing for legislation like HEA 1356 and HB 1230 is one way to help schools take control of bullying so that students don’t have to go through experiences like Brown did, as well as addressing issues including student retention.

“If we want to really address the drop-out rate and suspension and expulsion and things like that, if we want to raise the graduation rate, we have to take care of our children,” Porter said during the Senate Education and Career Development Committee during the session. “We have to address it right now. This is the way to do it, through anti-bullying legislation.”

FOOTNOTE: Quinn Fitzgerald is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The City-CountyObserver is a media partner of THE STATEhouseFiles.com.

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Ivy Tech Community College Hosts Annual Wellness Fair

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Ivy Tech Community College Southwest will conduct its Wellness Fair on Wednesday, April 4, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Ivy Tech’s main campus located at 3501 N. First Avenue. The event is free and open to the public.

The Wellness Fair will showcase booths from more than 40 area vendors including Anthem, Gilda’s Club, Evansville Tri-State Affiliate of Susan G. Komen, Deaconess Hospital, St. Vincent, Active Chiropractic, YWCA, and many more. There will also be free blood pressure screenings, chair massages, and cholesterol screenings provided by our students as they showcase what they are learning in their programs. The Ivy Tech nursing students will also be on hand giving out health-related information as part of their community project.

”Our goal is to offer a large variety of health information while also educating our students. We are excited to have more student participation in our Wellness Fair this year,” said Ivy Tech’s Wellness and Fitness Coordinator Amy Lutzel.  “This is a convenient opportunity for the community to not only learn about some of the programs we offer at Ivy Tech, but also to ask questions about their health.”

Ronald McDonald House Receives Donation From D-Patrick Honda

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Ronald McDonald House Receives Donation From D-Patrick Honda

 The Ronald McDonald House Charities of the Ohio Valley is getting some extra help from D-Patrick Honda. Charity representatives accepted a check for $2,500 from D-Patrick this morning.

The donation is part of the dealership’s Honda Helping Kids campaign. Every month D-Patrick awards a check to a different non-profit as a way to support people who help others in the Tri-State.

“Ronald McDonald House is one of our favorite go-to charities because it’s such a good one. It takes care of children who are sick and allows their families to be near them. We have a lot of children who have difficulties here in the Tri-State that come into both St. Vincent and Deaconess, and their families have nowhere to stay necessarily. So the Ronald McDonald House provides them with shelter and food and what they need.”

Ronald McDonald House offers parents and family members a reprieve from hospital waiting rooms 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. It offers beds, hot showers, home-cooked meals, kitchen and laundry facilities, and more.

Britney Taylor

Web Producer

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Alleged DOJ misconduct spreads to Indiana death penalty case

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

Accusations of sexual harassment and prosecutorial misconduct at the U.S. Department of Justice’s Capital Case Section have ensnared a death penalty case in the Southern District of Indiana against a federal inmate charged with killing his cellmate.

The allegations of unwanted sexual advances and discrimination against women were revealed in a civil lawsuit filed against the Justice Department. Attached to the complaint was a declaration by a longtime attorney at the Department, Amanda Haines, which also detailed a hostile work environment and specifically pointed to violations in handling the Indiana death penalty case.

Chief federal defender Monica Foster of the Indiana Federal Community Defenders is representing the inmate, Andrew Rogers. While working on the case, Foster was tipped off to take a look at the civil lawsuit, Rodriguez-Coss v. Sessions, 3:16-cv-00633, where she found the declaration.

Foster and her team had been surprised when the Department of Justice decided to push for the death penalty for Rogers. She said she is not surprised by the claims of prosecutorial misconduct, but she is angered by the revelations of how the female attorneys were treated.

“I think it is appalling behavior that should not be going on anywhere in any office, least of all the office deciding life and death,” Foster said. “… I have some empathy for the women who had to work in that office under those conditions. I can’t imagine going to work in that environment every day.”

The civil lawsuit and accusations of discrimination and sexual misbehavior were spotlighted in a New York Times article published Sunday.

Documents filed as a part of Jacabed Rodriguez-Coss’ complaint highlight discrimination and retaliation against women attorneys in the section as well as the former Capital Case Section chief Kevin Carwile and his deputy Gwynn Kinsey, accused of “turning a blind eye” toward rampant sexual harassment. Male attorneys were alleged to have made unwanted sexual advances to female interns and administrative staff, bragged about sexual conquests and showed naked pictures of women to each other during office hours.

Haines’ declaration also accuses Justice Department attorney James Peterson of mishandling the death penalty case against Rogers. In particular, he was said to have committed the violation of interviewing more than 12 witnesses without a law enforcement officer or another official being present. He then “compounded this error” by destroying his interview notes, particularly from witnesses who were suspected of having information that could have been detrimental to the death penalty case.

After telling Carwile and Kinsey about the problems with the Rogers case and noting the defense needed to be alerted, Haines said to her knowledge, no action was taken. The office did not investigate or impose any kind of discipline.

“To the contrary,” Haines stated in her declaration, “the Rogers case was simply reassigned from me to other attorneys in the Section (it has been reassigned three times since then).”

The office of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Indiana declined to comment. Instead it pointed to the statement Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior made to the New York Times.

“The Department of Justice takes these allegations extremely seriously but cannot discuss specific employee disciplinary actions, or comment on internally handled personnel actions or matters that may impact personal privacy,” Prior said.

Based on the allegations, Foster is asking the court to bar the government from seeking the death penalty against Rogers. The case is United States of America v. Andrew Rogers, 2:16-cr-00018.

Rogers, who was serving a 27-year sentence for robbing a Subway sandwich shop in Illinois, was housed at the high-security U.S. penitentiary in Terre Haute at the time his cellmate was found dead in the cell in a pool of blood. According to court documents, Rogers confessed to the stabbing, saying he did not want to live in a bathroom with another man for 27 years.

Foster said Rogers had “begged” prison officials for mental health treatment prior to the incident with his cellmate. However, she said, he was given puzzles rather than medication or therapy. That is suspected to be what the witnesses told Peterson, which did not help the case for capital punishment.

“The government’s conduct here is an affront to the judicial system itself and has, in a way, sought to make the Court complicit in its misconduct,” Foster wrote in the motion to strike the notice of intent to seek the death penalty. “The government has brought a capital proceeding before the Court, and the Court has understandably assumed that the government conducted the death-penalty authorization process in good faith. The recently discovered information demonstrates, however, that the government has enlisted the Court in a sham proceeding where the death penalty was authorized by the use of unconstitutional tactics.”

In her motion, Foster also asserts that the high tolerance for sexual misconduct and sexual discrimination undermines the integrity of the capital review process. She questioned whether she was given the proper respect when she argued against the death penalty before the Capital Review Committee. Carwile was a member of that committee and he, according to Haines, holds the view that “women only go to law school to find rich husbands.”

The government counters that Peterson contacted the prison employees in 2015 who were listed as providing for Rogers’ care and custody. No one offered any facts that would exculpate the defendant or impeach the government’s witnesses.

Peterson subsequently turned their comments over to the Attorney General and, in 2017, summarized his contact with prison’s medical personnel in a memo for the defendant’s counsel.

The government argues that the statements made to Peterson just illuminated the information contained in the prison records and those records were already in the possession of the defendant.

“The (Bureau of Prisons) personnel uniformly agreed with their earlier assessments that the defendant did not manifest symptoms of any mental health malady that required intervention beyond that which was requested and provided,” the government said in its response motion. “That information is not exculpatory. That information is not impeaching. That information was not, therefore,” subject to disclosure under (Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963)).”

The Rogers case is continuing. Judge William Lawrence of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana has ordered each party to file a proposal as to the scope of the discovery by Friday.

 

The Evansville Otters signed first baseman Caleb Eldridge and right-handed pitcher Patrick McGuff.

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Eldridge, an Edmond, Okla. native, arrives in Evansville after playing affiliated baseball the last two seasons, seeing time in the organizations of both the Philadelphia Phillies and Seattle Mariners.

He played for Oklahoma State University and Cowley County Community College before being drafted in the 20th round of the MLB Amateur Draft by the Phillies in 2016.

With the GCL Phillies in 2016, Eldridge batted .159 in 12 games. He split time between the AZL Mariners and GCL Phillies last season, appearing in 42 total games while batting .293 with 19 runs and 21 RBIs.

“Caleb comes highly recommended by a hitting coach I’ve known a long time,” Otters manager Andy McCauley said. “He should figure into the lineup everyday at first base and as a designated hitter.

“He is a power bat that should get a chance at another opportunity in affiliated baseball.”

With Cowley in 2016, Eldridge started 53 games and finished with 66 RBIs and 18 doubles.

McGuff, a Cincinnati, Ohio native, was drafted in the 36th round of the 2016 MLB Draft by the Minnesota Twins from Morehead State University.

From 2016-17, McGuff split time between the GCL Twins, Elizabethton and Cedar Rapids. In 49 appearances in affiliated baseball, he went 5-2 with a 2.40 ERA and 12 saves. He pitched 82 1/3 innings and struck out 95 batters.

“Patrick was highly sought after in independent baseball,” McCauley said. “He was a surprise release to us and Patrick pitched for Bobby Segal in a collegiate summer league.

“Bobby was instrumental in signing Patrick and he should be a top of the rotation starter for us.”

As a senior with the Eagles in 2016, McGuff posted a 5-3 record in 18 appearances and finished with 63 strikeouts. Opponents only hit .260 against him that season in his 59 innings on the mound.

He began his collegiate career at Sinclair Community College, playing there from 2013-14.

Evansville will celebrate Bosse Field’s Opening Night May 11 against the Washington Wild Things at 6:35 p.m.

The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions. Group packages, season tickets and single game tickets are now on sale. Fan Fest will be held at Bosse Field on April 28, beginning at 9 a.m. and lasting until noon.

 

VANDERBURGH HUMANE SOCIETY TRANSITIONS FROM PETPOINT SOFTWARE TO SHELTERLUV SOFTWARE, POSITIVELY IMPACTING ADOPTERS & VISITORS

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Since 2009, the Vanderburgh Humane Society has used shelter management software known as PetPoint to keep track of its animal population, record important medical information like vaccinations, process adoptions, and more.

Effective January 22, 2018 the VHS has made the transition to software called Shelterluv. Shelterluv is a 5-year-old nonprofit company based in California’s Silicon Valley. They are a forward-thinking company that has done a great job of pairing modern technology with the specific needs and issues that animal welfare agencies face. For more information on their history visit www.shelterluv.com.

There is a multitude of ways that this software will help the VHS improve internal operations. But there Shelterluv will also positively impact VHS visitors, foster parents, adopters, and supporters! For example:

· The kennel cards on animals’ cages are now much cleaner-looking, easier to read, and free of less-relevant imformation
· Shelterluv has the capacity to go entirely paperless. Adoptions can now be processed right on an adopter’s smartphone. Those who don’t have smartphones can still e-sign documents, which are stored electronically, saving a lot of money a year in paper & printing costs
· Shelterluv accepts an unlimited number of photos and videos for animal listings, instead of just 3 photos and 1 video with PetPoint
· Shelterluv is capable of tracking where adopters & visitors heard about the VHS, which will be invaluable in determining how & where to most effectively spend marketing resources
· Potential adopters can now apply online to adopt an animal which was not possible with PetPoint
· It will be much easier for potential adopters to see individual attributes about an animal in our online listings, such as heartworm-positive dogs, FIV+ cats, animals who are housetrained, bonded pairs, etc.
· Shelterluv automatically uploads to Adopt-A-Pet.com and Petfinder.com, which will not only save staff & volunteer time but will ensure that those listings are as up-to-date as possible
· Medical histories sent home with adopters are also much cleaner-looking and easier to read
· New foster care opportunities will be easier than ever to implement (stay tuned!)

To see a listing of the VHS’ adoptable animals in the new format, visit www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt!

Additional changes to VHS operations include new microchips. Adopted animals formerly went home with 24PetWatch chips, and will now go home with Michelson Found Animals chips. Registration is still automatically included with the adoption fee.

The VHS will no longer be recording lost & found animal reports. For missing or found animals, the VHS recommends utilizing a website called Pawboost.com where people can list photos & information about the animal. The listings are organized by location so people can easily see any lost or found animals in the Evansville area. Pawboost also allows people to easily share listings to Facebook and print flyers. Both Pawboost’s website and mobile app are free to use.

The Evansville Lost Pets Facebook page is also a great resources for lost & found animals.