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Commentary: Sloppiness, Stumbles And Indiana Lawmakers

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – Somehow, it’s fitting that the 2018 session of the Indiana General Assembly ended in a tired, confused mess.

The curtain closed on this year’s adventure in lawmaking with legislative leaders sniping at legislators and each other, the governor complaining the legislature left work undone and the governor and GOP leaders trying to defy both time and state law.

Inspiring, it wasn’t.

By the time it was over, at least two of Gov. Eric Holcomb’s priorities – improvements in school security and inducements and regulations for driverless cars – were left in the unfinished pile.

Indiana House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, blamed the Indiana Senate for working too slowly. Retiring Indiana Senate President Pro Tempore David Long, R-Fort Wayne returned the fire and accused Rep. Ed Soliday, R-Valparaiso, of having a “meltdown” that prevented the legislature from doing its work.

Soliday wasn’t slow to lash back.

He said the Senate was rushing at the end because the senators spent five hours earlier in the day lauding Long as he prepares to retire. He more than suggested that Long could have waited to take his bow until after the work was done.

Keep in mind that all these guys are supposed to be on the same side.

They’re all Republicans.

Perhaps that is why Democrats reacted to the confusion with such undisguised glee.

House Democratic Leader Terry Goodin, D-Austin, chortled the late-hours debacle was a product of “complete and total mismanagement” by Republican leaders.

Then, to put the cherry on top, Goodin offered up this confectionary assessment of the entire legislative session.

“This session seems like Twinkie. It fills you up, but there’s just nothing of real substance or value to it,” he said.

Goodin is right about that.

Lawmakers this year ducked every tough challenge before them.

They punted again on passing a hate-crimes law, leaving Indiana one of only five states in the union not to say it’s wrong to target citizens for assault or injury because of the color of their skin, their gender, how they pray or whom they love.

They took a pass once more on adopting redistricting reform, which means our general legislative elections will continue to be as competitive as Harlem Globetrotters’ basketball games.

And they shoved any substantive investigation of the issues involving the Indiana Department of Child Services under the rug. That means, if former DCS Director Mary Beth Bonaventura, also a Republican, is to be believed, Indiana children will remain at risk of dying because dealing with this challenge was politically uncomfortable in an election year.

All in all, this was far from an uplifting performance by our leaders.

But it also wasn’t surprising.

Republicans have exercised largely unchecked power for much of this decade, ever since they secured supermajorities in both chambers of the General Assembly.

This hasn’t been good for either the state or the GOP.

When Republicans first gained overwhelming control of the legislature, they acted as if every day were Christmas. They pulled one item after another out of the conservative bag of wishes. They remodeled the state’s education system. They dug all the way back to the 1950s to adopt a divisive right-to-work law.

In the process, they turned Indiana into a kind of American laboratory for conservative governance.

But that kind of power leads to arrogance.

Because there’s no one to force Republicans to think beyond the moment, the party and the state have made some unforced errors. The embarrassing scramble to clean up a licensing mess for hardworking “dreamers” that was created by some self-indulgent immigrant-baiting by Indiana lawmakers a few years ago is but one example of Indiana leaders trying to clean up a mess they themselves made.

Republicans argue that competition is a force for good, that it refines and sharpens both ideas and performance.

They’re right about that.

The fact that they don’t have any real competition has made them sloppy and self-indulgent.

That is why this legislative session ended was a series of stumbles, not a sprint.

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.

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Another Session Behind Us: Business as Usual, I Hope Not

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By CCO StateHouse Editor-Gail Riecken

Another Session Behind Us: Business as Usual, I Hope Not

This might have been one of the most interesting but confusing and confounding ends of a session I can remember.

The Indy Star has Speaker of the House Brian Bosma and Senate President Pro Tem David Long publicly pointing fingers at each other’s caucus; Senator Long singling out Rep Ed Soliday as having “a meltdown” and causing much of the session’s self-destruction; and the Governor trying a last-minute effort to extend the session to save his bills and the legislature’s image.

House Minority Leader Terry Goodin couldn’t have said it better. “Instead of fixing DCS, we passed a bill that said you could buy alcohol at Walmart on Sunday”(the Statehouse File).

A better comment could not have been made. The sadness, though, is the issues that matter to many of us failed to get any traction and in some cases no discussion at all— issues like hate crimes legislation, raising the minimum wage, a redistricting compromise and a step forward addressing problems at the Department of Child Services (DCS).

Maybe this is the session legislators on both sides of the aisle will always regret. However, it is only one session, and those issues many of us think are important can and should be addressed at the next one.

Does the legislature lack leadership? Is the outcome solely the challenge of an inevitable arrogance that is guaranteed by supermajorities in both Houses?

Whatever the reason, the signature test will be the elections of 2018 and what a new State legislature will do for you and me in the future.

Eagles Drop Series Finale To Hawks, 6-2

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Southern Indiana baseball team committed two errors in a four-run seventh inning and lost to the 23rd-ranked Quincy University, 6-2, Sunday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. USI watches its record go to 7-9 overall, while Quincy goes to 11-6 in 2018.

For the third-straight game, the Screaming Eagles took the lead in the first inning. Senior designated hitter Drake McNamara (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) continued to have the hot bat, hitting his second home run in as many day, a two-run blast to give the Eagles a 2-0 lead.

USI maintained the 2-0 advantage until the fourth when Quincy cut the lead in half with a single run. The Hawks would overtake the Eagles in the seventh when they scored four times with the aid of two USI errors with two outs and flew into the lead, 5-2.

Quincy would add another tally in the ninth to seal the 6-2 win.

On the mound, junior right-hander Austin Krizan (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) started and took the loss for the Eagles. Krizan (1-2) allowed five runs, two earned, on nine hits, while striking out three in seven tough innings.

The next action for the Eagles is on the road when they travel to St. Louis, Missouri, to visit the University of Missouri-St. Louis Wednesday for a 3 p.m. match-up. USI leads the all-time series with UMSL, 52-42, after taking both games last season (win at home 6-5; win on the road 5-3).

Following the road trip to UMSL, the Eagles return to the USI Baseball Field for a 13-game homestand between Mach 24 and April 11. The start of the homestand also is the beginning of the 2018 GLVC slate when the University of Illinois Springfield comes to Evansville for a four-game slate on March 24-25.

COA Upholds Denial Of Race-Based Batson Challenge

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

A Madison County man who alleged the state challenged a potential juror for race-based reasons has lost his appeal, with the Indiana Court of Appeals finding the record of the robbery trial does not support the argument that the juror was released because he was black.

In Steven Wade Childress v. the State of Indiana, 48A02-1707-CR-1658, Steven Childress, and two companions tricked Darren Sloss into coming to visit them, then attacked him at gunpoint when he arrived. Sloss was beaten and pistol-whipped, saw Childress rummaging through his car, and was eventually robbed of $200 that was in his wallet.

Sloss reported the robbery, and Childress was charged with Level 3 felony armed robbery. After voir dire, the state made a peremptory challenge to Potential Juror 8, which Childress challenged with a Batson claim on the basis that Potential Juror 8 was the only remaining black juror.

The prosecutor, however, noted that when Potential Juror 8 was asked what reasonable doubt meant, the juror responded with “no doubt.” Though Potential Juror 2 gave a similar answer and was not dismissed, that juror eventually changed her response, while Potential Juror 8 did not, the prosecutor said. The Madison Circuit Court agreed and denied the Batson challenge, and Childress was found guilty as charged.

The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld the denial of Childress’ Batson challenge in a Friday opinion, with Judge Terry Crone initially noting the trial transcript was incomplete. Many portions of the transcript were labeled “indiscernible,” Crone said, while each juror was identified as “prospective juror,” making it impossible to determine which potential juror made which statements.

Though it was incomplete, Crone went on to write that the transcript did show that neither defense counsel nor the trial court disputed the prosecutor’s claim that Potential Juror 8 thought “reasonable doubt” meant “no doubt.” Thus, the appellate court determined Childress failed to prove the prosecutor’s alleged misrepresentation of the potential juror’s answer undermined his race-neutral reasoning for the peremptory challenge.

The court then found the prosecutor was not required to re-examine Potential Juror 8 after he gave his questionable answer. Finally, the panel determined that because Potential Juror 2 eventually changed her answer to the proper meaning of “reasonable doubt” – which Potential Juror 8 did not do – it could not be said that the challenge to Potential Juror 8 was racially motivated.

Adopt A Pet

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Chico is a male Boxer. He’s about 5 years old. Like most boxers, he is very silly & sweet! His $110 adoption fee includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

STEPHEN HAWKING

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Eagles Snap Seven Game Losing Streak

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The University of Southern Indiana women’s tennis team broke a seven-game losing streak over the weekend with a 7-2 route of Purdue University Northwest on Sunday after a 7-0 loss to Butler University on Saturday.

USI vs. Butler

The Eagles’ (6-8, 0-0 GLVC) first stop was in Indianapolis where it took on Division I opponent Butler to start the weekend, falling 0-7.

USI vs. Purdue Northwest

Fast-forwarding to Sunday, USI went further north to Griffith, Indiana to face Purdue Northwest. The Eagles swept the Pride in all three doubles matches first starting with senior Jennifer Mizikar (Batavia, Illinois) and freshman Lauryn Thompson (Evansville, Indiana) winning 8-1 at the number three slot.

The duo of freshman Anna McDonald (Tallahassee, Florida) and sophomore Alex Jamison (Floyd Knobs, Indiana) came next with an 8-3 win of their own. The final doubles point came at the number one position with sophomore Lauren Hambrock (Terre Haute, Indiana) and senior Kelsey Shipman (Olney, Illinois) in a 8-5 final tally.

Mizikar then went on to start off the singles competition right for USI in the number five position, defeating her opponent 6-1, 6-2. Jamison followed up at the number four spot winning 6-2, 6-1.  Hambrock then secured the number one singles win with a 6-3, 6-3 performance. The seventh, and final, USI point was capped by Shipman who won 6-3, 6-4 at the number two spot.

The Eagles will be on the road yet again for its next match on Wednesday, March 21 at 1:30 p.m. where the University of Missouri-St Louis awaits.

 

Governor Eric Holcomb to sign computer science bill on USI campus

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Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb, USI President Dr. Linda L. M. Bennett, Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Dr. Jennifer McCormick, members of the Indiana General Assembly

Bill signing for SEA 172

2 p.m. Tuesday, March 20

 University of Southern Indiana Decision Support and Negotiations Lab, located in room 1004 of the Business and Engineering Center on the USI campus. A map of campus highlighting the Business and Engineering Center can be found at USI.edu/map.

SEA 172: Establishes the Next Level Computer Science Grant Program and the Next Level Computer Science Fund to award grants, after June 30, 2019, to eligible entities to implement teacher professional development programs for training in teaching computer science, and requires, beginning July 1, 2021, each public school to include computer science courses as electives and as part of the science curriculum from kindergarten through grade 12.

 

Lunch With The Aces Returns In April

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Popular Event Has Been A Huge Success

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – One of the most popular yearly events for the University of Evansville athletics department returns in 2018 as Lunch with the Aces will be held on Friday, April 13 at Meeks Family Fieldhouse on the UE campus.

Highlighting the day is keynote speaker Scott Shreffler.  The 1993 graduate of UE was inducted into the Purple Aces Athletics Hall of Fame in 2004 and had jersey retired in January 2018.

The event goes from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. on the 13th.  Early registration is $30 while seats will be $35 after April 9 and at the door.  Corporate tables cost $350 and include eight seats plus two student-athletes seated at your table.  There is also the option to provide lunch for a student-athlete for just $10.

Marx BBQ will once again cater the event with food being available for the duration.  The program, which includes a video presentation and the keynote speaker, begins at 12:30 p.m.  A student-athlete will be seated at each table.

A half post and silent auction will provide additional opportunities for the lunch.

 

Spring season hits midway point for Evansville golf in Tennessee

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The University of Evansville men’s and women’s golf teams hit the midway point of their spring seasons at the Bobby Nichols Intercollegiate at Sevierville Golf Club in Sevierville, Tenn. on Sunday through Tuesday.

The Aces’ men earned a top 10 finish last time out two weeks ago at the Lonnie Barton Invitational. After carding a team-score of 306 in the first round, the Purple Aces recorded a 334 on the second day for a team total of 640. All 14 teams in the invitational field struggled in the second round as none of the competing teams improved their opening round score in their second round. Leading the way for the Aces were Tyler Gray and Noah Reese who each finished the two-day tournament with totals of 158. Gray opened the invitational with a 74 before recording an 84 on the second day, while Reese tallied a 77 on Monday, following up with an 81 in the final round.

For Evansville’s women, the Aces utilized an improvement on the second day of the tournament to grab a fifth-place team finish. The Purple Aces opened the tournament with a 330 in the first round, but bounced back with a 317 on the second day to push Evansville into the top five with a team-total of 647. Pacing the Aces was Madison Chaney who moved up three spots on the final day with a second-round 78 for an invitational total of 157 (79-78). For her efforts, Chaney was named Missouri Valley Conference Women’s Golfer of the Week. Following Chaney was Sophia Rohleder who finished in a tie for 12th as Rohleder carded a 79 and an 80 for a total of 159. Just a stroke behind Rohleder, Minka Gill carded a two-day total of 160 (84-76) with an eight-stroke improvement in the final round to move Gill into a tie for 17th. Following Gill were Lexie Sollman and Giulia Mallman who finished within a pair of strokes of one another. Sollman carded a 10-stroke improvement on the final day as Sollman finished in a tie for 49th with a two-round total of 176 while Mallman finished in a tie for 54th with a total of 178 (88-90).

The Bobby Nichols Intercollegiate features a strong field on both the men’s and women’s side. Joining the Aces men in the field are Austin Peay, Belmont, Carson-Newman, Detroit Mercy, Eastern Kentucky,  Lincoln Memorial, Marshall, Maryville College, Montreat College, Tennessee State, Tennessee Tech, UT Martin, and Wright State. On the women’s side, Evansville will compete against Belmont, Carson Newman, Dalton State, Jacksonville State, Marshall, Radford, Tennessee, Tennessee State, and Tennessee Tech. The intercollegiate features three 18 hole rounds spread out across Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday.