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IS IT TRUE MARCH 21, 2018

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We hope that today’s “Readers Forum” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

IS IT TRUE just like the City-County Observer predicted in February, the building that the Courier Press has owned and occupied since 1990 has been sold to a New York-based real estate investor?…Twenty Lake Holdings purchased the newspaper building at 300 E. Walnut St. for $1.58 million on March 8, and The Courier Press will remain a tenant in the building they owned for nearly three decades?…Three Lake Holdings has been buying up properties owned by struggling newspapers for less than true value and the CP building is no exception? …to see an extremely nice office building that served as the center of operations for a major newspaper sell this cheap is shocking?…the CP building is a comp for downtown Evansville and the valuation of other properties based on this sale will be pathetic compared to what it costs to build?  …we encourage you to continue to support the Evansville Courier and Press printed publication?  …we also recommend that you read the Courier and Press online publication because it to is a good read?”

IS IT TRUE that yet another Evansville based non-profit is being faced with an alleged misappropriation of funds by its Executive Director?…this time it is ECHO Housing that has discovered that some personal expenses were paid with a non-profit check?…this is a tragic thing that has happened over and over for at least the last 15 years?…in this case the Executive Director enjoyed a stellar reputation and had been a finalists for the highly respected Athena Award?…we hope this all works out and that fiduciary responsibility prevails?…the often overlooked reality in cases where employee theft is alleged is that the boards of directors are responsible for oversight of non-profit spending?…it is that fiduciary responsibility that fails time and time again in River City at the board level that keeps these kinds of things happening?

IS IT TRUE we tried to find a list of the current ECHO Housing Board of Directors to no avail?  …does anyone know who is the current ECHO Housing Board Of Directors? …does anyone know who is the current Treasurer of the ECHO Housing agency?

IS IT TRUE it was recently reported by the Courier and Press that the former Executive Director of ECHO Housing Stephanie TenBarge used funds from the agency to pay her personal property taxes? ..ECHO Housing attorney Scott Wylie told the Courier and Press that the former Executive Director Stephanie TenBarge used ECHO funds to pay her personal property taxes?  …it was reported that TenBarge used ECHO money to pay the taxes for three (3) of her personal properties in November 2017, May 2017 and November 2016?

IS IT TRUE that ECHO attorney Scott Wylie told the Courier and Press that “all donor funds that have come to ECHO Housing have been accounted for”?  …we wonder if ECHO Housing attorney Wylie had an official Forensic Audit done by an independent CPA firm to back up his statement? …we wonder if attorney Scott Wylie alleged financial review statement included income and expenses of the 66 rental houses owned by ECHO Housing?  …we also wonder if his alleged financial review also included the Homeless Veterans housing unit and the Corporate office building repairs costs, insurance costs, property taxes, utility costs and bank payments? …we would hope that Mr. Wylie financial review also addressed business entertainment expenses, petty cash accounts, employees payroll and travel vouchers of the former Executive Director and ECHO Housing staff during the last several years?

IS IT TRUE that the Director of Evansville DMD, Kelly Courses told the Evansville Courier and Press that “ECHO Housing is an important partner for the Department of Metropolitan Development?” …Courses also stated that  “We’re going to continue without missing a beat. We’re going to support ECHO just the same as we always have?” …that Mr. Courses  also told the Courier and Press that “We combed through all of our grant programs and all the money that we run through ECHO, “We are 100 percent confident that ECHO used all our fund’s property?”

IS IT TRUE we find it interesting that Mr. Coures also told the Courier and Press “that he did not know what funding source TenBarge used to pay her personal property taxes?”  …we got the gut feeling that the Director of Evansville DMD, Kelly Courses knows more about this situation than he’s willing to talk about?

IS IT TRUE the City-County Observer respectfully request that either the ECHO Housing attorney or members of the ECHO Board of Directors immediately file a police report concerning the alleged misappropriation of agency funds? …when they do this it will allow the Indiana State Police to conduct a full investigation? …we feel if someone misappropriates money once they have the capacity to do again?…if the ECHO Housing authorities don’t, we respectfully suggest that members of the Evansville City Council do so?

IS IT TRUE we are told that many people want the Indiana State Police to conduct the investigation because they are independent of local control?  …if any alleged misappropriations of the ECHO agency funds for personal use turn out to be true the Indiana State Police should give this information to the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor and the US Attorney’s office so they can determine if criminal charges are warranted?

IS IT TRUE in a stunningly mind-numbing move, the Evansville City Council has discussed passing a limit to the number of terms that one can serve on the City Council and VOTE IT DOWN?…term limits are extremely popular with the taxpayers but the majority members (5) of this group of self-serving elected officials have essentially attempted to vote themselves the possibility of being “Council Members for Life’?…given the contempt these five (5) City Council members have shown to the taxpayers they may feel that it  might be time to replace the Council members that voted against term limits at the next election in 2019?

Todays “Readers Poll” question is: Do you feel that a police report should have been filed concerning the misappropriation of ECHO Housing funds in order to allow the Indiana State Police to conduct a full investigation?

Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE Files, CHANNEL 44 NEWS, LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS”.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

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EWSU Takes First Steps For Potential Water Rate Increases

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EWSU Takes First Steps For Potential Water Rate Increases

The Evansville Water and Sewer Utility Board voted to approve a petition with the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission for proposed water rate increases over the next three years.

The petition is the first step for a water rate case with the IURC, which starts a potential 10-month process for the rate increases. The three-year rate increases, starting in 2019, could see water rates increased by around 13 dollars from the current water rates. The water rate increases, proposed by the EWSU, would see around a 5-dollar increase in 2019, another 5-dollar increase in 2020, and a 3-dollar increase in 2021.

EWSU attribute the water rate increases towards the funding needed for the Refresh Evansville project, which started in 2017. The project is set to replace older water mains and pipes throughout the city of Evansville that has aged over the years, with some up over 90 years old. The EWSU is looking to replace up to 1000 miles of waterworks throughout the city.

Once the petition is filed, the EWSU will be establishing public hearings within the next two months. The IURC could host their own public hearing in Evansville later in the year. EWSU anticipate that the IURC could decide the water rate increase by the fall of this year.

Blaine Fentress

Assistant News Director

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Governor Calls A Special Session To Focus On Taxes, School Safety

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Governor Calls A Special Session To Focus On Taxes, School Safety

By Abrahm Hurt
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Gov. Eric Holcomb announced Monday that he will call a special session of the Indiana General Assembly to address the school safety and tax issues left unfinished in the disorganized end of the 2018 session last week.

It would be the first special session in a non-budget year since 2002, Holcomb said, but necessary to complete the work.

“In essence, what we’ll be doing is putting some time back on the clock,” Holcomb said. “As you know, many of these items, obviously these items, were on their way to passage, and would have signed them all but we ran out of time.”

One of the more chaotic moves came when, as the clock clicked closer to midnight March 14, the official end of the session, Holcomb was asked by House and Senate leaders to extend it by one hour, to 1 a.m. Thursday.

After Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane, D-Anderson objected, President Pro Tem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, relented and at 12:10 a.m. the Senate adjourned. Bills that included additional money for school safety, autonomous vehicles and the state takeover of the Gary and Muncie school corporations died.

Holcomb said he was told by House and Senate leaders that he had the authority to take that action.

When asked why Republicans, who hold supermajorities in both the House and the Senate, could not complete their business before the deadline, Holcomb said, “Your guess is as good as mine.”

Holcomb said he wants the special session to be limited in scope, such as adding $5 million to the Indiana Secured School Fund, allowing school corporations to get extra money for school safety and providing the Muncie School Corporation a $12 million loan.

House Bill 1230 included $5 million for school safety Holcomb had requested from legislators. As the clock ticked down to midnight on the final day of the session, lawmakers rushed to finish committee reports in time for a vote on the floor but failed to do so.

“It is what it is. We ran out of time,” Holcomb said. “But the beauty of our system is we can fix this, and we can do it in short order.”

Holcomb also said he wants the General Assembly to update the state’s tax code to conform with changes in the federal tax law.

The Chamber of Commerce said if the legislature fails to address the changes, Hoosier companies would have to file their taxes twice—once for the state and once for the federal level.

“For smaller-sized businesses, that could mean another $1,000-$1,500 and for the larger ones, considerably more for internal staff time and/or outside accounting expertise,” the organization said in a news release. “In total, the compliance cost could easily be north of $100 million.”

When asked about the cost of bringing back legislators for the special session, Holcomb could not give an exact number but his office has estimated it could reach $30,000 a day.

“Whatever the cost is, is dwarfed by the cost of inaction,” he said.

Lanane released a statement saying the public should not have to spend $30,000 a day for a special session.

“There is absolutely no reason the Republican supermajority couldn’t get all of these bills, some of which enjoyed bipartisan support, passed on time,” he said in a press release. “It was internal bickering within the Republican caucuses that held everything up until the last minute causing them to run out of time.”

Long said the Senate will support his decision.

“We will be efficient and focused, and are committed to collaborating with our colleagues in the House and with the governor to act in the best interest of Hoosiers,” he said in a statement.

House Minority leader Terry Goodin, D-Austin, said the only reason there should be a special session is to address the problems with the Department of Child Services.

“It should be everyone’s priority to protect the lives of at-risk children,” he said in a press release. “During the session, the Republicans chose to do nothing, hiding under the guise of waiting for a private consultant to tell us what we already know: there’s a lot that’s wrong with DCS.”

Holcomb called for a review of DCS in January after the agency’s former director, Mary Beth Bonaventura, resigned and said children are at risk because of a lack of funding. A review by the Child Welfare Policy and Practice Group will publish its full findings by June 21.

Holcomb said he thought that problems with DCS can wait until next year’s session.

Holcomb said he would meet with leaders from the House and the Senate later this week to talk about the agenda, which might include additional items lawmakers might add.

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

Vectren Launches Its Smart Cycle Program; Aims To Install 1,000 Wi-Fi Thermostats In 2018

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Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – South (Vectren) has launched a new energy management program known as Smart Cycle, a Wi-Fi- thermostat technology program designed to manage energy demand in times of critical need.  The new program was piloted in 2016 and will gradually replace the company’s Summer Cycler program, which has been in place since the 1990s.

The older Summer Cycler program gave participating customers bill credits for allowing Vectren to cycle off their A/C and/or electric water heater during peak periods in the summer. The cycling is enabled by a radio device installed on their A/C unit and/or electric water heater. Vectren will replace all of Summer Cycler devices with in-home Nest thermostats over the next decade.

“Nest thermostats provide customers energy savings throughout the year and will reduce energy demand during peak usage times,” said Brad Ellsworth, president of Vectren Indiana-South. “Our pilots demonstrated that the Nest performed twice as effective compared to the Summer Cycler device. When all existing Summer Cycler devices are replaced with the Nest, the Smart Cycle program will yield an additional 14 megawatts of peak demand savings when needed.”

To launch Smart Cycle, Vectren will begin contacting customers who currently participate in Summer Cycler to plan the switch to the Smart Cycle offering.

“We are excited to offer this new program to customers who are eager to utilize ‘smart’ technology to take an active role in using their energy wisely,” continued Ellsworth. “Nest thermostats offer a much more reliable and proven technology to help shed load when compared to the Summer Cycler devices that are nearly 30 years old. Customers continue to get bill credits for their participation, and they should also expect energy savings, as the Nest is a learning thermostat that helps customers save all year round on heating and cooling costs.”

Vectren will provide the customer a Nest thermostat and professional installation, and the customer will be automatically enrolled in Nest’s rewards program. Throughout the months of June through September, they will continue to receive a $5 per month bill credit for participating in cycling events. These energy cycling events are called “Energy Rush Hours” where the home is pre-cooled before the air conditioning unit is managed to lower energy levels on peak usage days. Periodically throughout the summer cooling season, customers will receive advanced notice of the “Energy Rush Hours” event via a display on their Nest thermostat and its smartphone app (if installed).

To qualify for the Smart Cycle program and receive a Nest thermostat, customers:

  • Must be a Vectren electric customer.
  • Must be a current Summer Cycler user.
  • Must have Wi-Fi in their home.
  • Must enroll in Nest’s Rush Hour Rewards.

Summer Cycler customers who already own a Nest thermostat can still participate in the Smart Cycle program through the Bring Your Own Thermostat option. They will receive a $75 incentive for enrolling in Nest’s rewards program and participating in Vectren’s cycling events. They will also continue to receive a $5 bill credit in June, July, August and September.

For questions about the Smart Cycle program, call Vectren at 1-800-240-8476. Smart Cycle is one of many services being offered as part of Vectren’s Smart Energy Future strategy. More information on Vectren’s Smart Energy Future can be found at www.vectren.com/SmartEnergyFuture.

 

 

Crime Control Not Gun Control Real Solutions To Make Our Schools And America Safer

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Crime Control Not Gun Control Real Solutions To Make Our Schools And America Safer

By Richard Moss, MD

Candidate for Congress, Republican Party, 8TH Congressional District

JASPER, IN: In the wake of February’s shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school, Congress is talking about creating a special committee to assess gun violence, expanding background checks before most gun sales and empowering federal researchers to evaluate gun violence as a public health issue.

While there is nothing wrong with “studying” gun violence, my suspicion is that such a committee will reflect the biases of the gun-control crowd.  The Republicans will buckle and the Democrats and media will have their way. This means there will be no meaningful solutions.

The answer is not gun control but crime control. Below follows my plan for making American safe again, with emphasis on our schools, although not limited to that, without compromising the rights of law-abiding citizens to arm and defend themselves.

In the Parkland tragedy, we witnessed the massive failure of government at the federal level (the FBI) and local law enforcement in Broward County, Florida that received repeated warnings about the eventual killer but did nothing to prevent the tragedy.  We also learned about the four officers who remained outside the school while the killing occurred, a disgrace.

From this and other examples, it is apparent that government cannot be relied on and that local schools must undertake measures to protect themselves.

I would borrow from Israel, a nation that has been very successful at protecting their schools from violent Muslim terrorists.  Such measures include lockdowns, intercoms, video cameras with a comprehensive access control of all entry and exit points.  There should be unapologetic profiling of potential terrorist or violent criminal suspects.  Designated, trained, and armed individuals that carry concealed should play a role.  These could be teachers, coaches or others that volunteer and have a suitable background in the military or law enforcement with additional comprehensive training.  Metal detectors are a consideration.  Active shooter drills, like fire drills, should be practiced.

The goal is to reduce response time. Waiting for police to arrive even under the best of conditions involves a minimum of 6-8 minutes or more.  With an armed good guy in the school, the response time can drop down to 30 seconds, potentially saving many lives.

It is time to eliminate “gun free zones” by abolishing the “Gun Free Schools Act of 1994.” This is where so many of the mass shootings occur, as they are an attractive target for killers.  Implement “red alert laws” for threatening or unstable individuals and gun violence restraining orders (GVROs).  Detention and notification by local authorities and/or FBI of area gun stores and schools of problem individuals.  Mandate that all states share significant crime incidents and convictions (including all violent felonies) with the NCIC (National Crime Information Center) (currently 38 states give less than 80% of such information). In this way, potential threats can be recognized at the point of sale in gun stores during background checks.

Re-open mental institutions. Implement mandatory court-ordered detention and treatment for individuals professionally determined to be a threat to themselves or others (with proper attention to individual rights and liberties).

We should not ignore the filth and violence emanating from Hollywood and other venues and the impact on young people.  Even more important, is the breakdown of the culture and the two-parent intact married family. Most if not all of the perpetrators of such mass shootings were without fathers and therefore lacked strong paternal discipline in their upbringing. Also, we must acknowledge the role of the media that for political reasons and ratings glorifies these killers thus potentially creating copycat mass shooters.

Historically, including right up to the sixties and beyond, schools had rifle and gun clubs with training in the shooting sports.  Children brought their own weapons to school without incident (our culture and family structure were much stronger then). Even today 4H clubs teach the shooting sports using guns and live ammunition with children as young as eight years old.

We must also acknowledge that the overwhelming majority of gun violence occurs in our inner cities that have strict gun control yet have the equivalent of Parklands occurring on a weekly basis. That is where the attention needs to be. School shootings like the tragedy in Parkland are a very small percentage of gun-related deaths in the country as emotional and traumatic as it was.

It is also ironic that as we speak Congress is debating criminal justice reform, which will release violent criminals into our streets, even as they demagogue more gun control measures.  Such “reforms” may have played a role in Parkland as existing grants and mandates de-incentivize local schools and law enforcement from apprehending and detaining potential juvenile threats like Nikolas Cruz.  Sanctuary cities and states protect illegal alien criminals including violent MS13 gang members. Thanks to DACA, illegal immigration, and sanctuary cities, many of our cities and towns are overrun with violent drug dealers from Mexico and Central America.  Our federal courts have unlawfully stopped Trump’s efforts to prevent immigration from terrorist nations even as many of our mass shooters in recent years have been Muslim terrorists. These measures together hardly make sense in terms of reducing gun violence and threats and show the hypocrisy of the gun-control crowd who have supported them all.

  Do not rely on another law or the government to protect you. They will not. Local institutions are far better equipped than Washington DC to take effective measures if they choose to do so. The focus should be on measures that local schools can undertake to protect themselves and paying attention to our inner cities where most gun violence occurs.

I will also emphasize that our 2nd amendment, perhaps our most important civil right, is not up for grabs.  I will defend the rights of law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms and to defend themselves – while fighting for measures that will truly make our schools and America safer.

FOOTNOTES: Dr. Richard Moss is a board certified head and neck cancer surgeon and was a candidate for Congress in 2016. He graduated from the Indiana University School of Medicine and has been in practice in Jasper and Washington, IN for over 20 years. He is married with four children.  For more information visit RMoss4Congress.com. Contact us at hq@rmoss4congress.com. Find Moss For Congress on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

The City-County Observer posted this article without editing, bias or opinion.

Hoosier Law Schools Fall In U S News Rankings

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

All three of Indiana’s ranked law schools slipped in the U.S. News & World Report 2019 Best Law Schools tabulations just released Tuesday morning.

Indiana University Robert H. McKinney took the biggest tumble, falling 10 slots to the 98th position among the nation’s 194 accredited law schools. It was tied with Stetson University and Wayne State University. The Indianapolis school’s part-time program was ranked 33rd, tying with Suffolk University and Cleveland State University.

Notre Dame Law School slumped four steps to 24th place, tied with George Washington University. Also, Indiana University Maurer School of Law dropped two spots to the 32nd, where it was tied with Big Ten sports rival The Ohio State University along with the University of Georgia, University of Washington and Wake Forest University.

Valparaiso Law School remained in the “Rank Not Published” category.

No Indiana law schools placed among the top 10 in specialized programs for clinical training, environmental law, health care law, intellectual property law, international law, or legal writing.

 U.S. News annually calculates the rankings based on assessments by academics, lawyers and judges, median LSAT scores and undergraduate grade point averages, as well as employment and bar passage rates.

The U.S. News’ top five law schools for 2019 are unchanged from the 2018 list. U.S. News ranked Yale University No. 1, followed by Stanford University, Harvard University, University of Chicago and Columbia University.

Messer Issues Statement on President Trump’s Opioid Plan

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U.S. Rep. Luke Messer (IN-06) issued the following statement today after President Trump unveiled his administration’s plan to combat the opioid epidemic.

“Hoosier families in every corner of our state have been affected by the opioid crisis,” Messer said. “I applaud President Trump for bringing real solutions to the table to combat this growing epidemic. By getting tough on drug dealers, strengthening enforcement and ensuring Hoosiers have access to treatment, President Trump’s plan will help bring much-needed relief to Indiana.”

President Trump’s plan focuses on reducing over-prescription, cutting off the supply of illegal drugs, expanding evidence-based treatment options, increasing efforts to educate the public about the dangers of drug abuse, and implementing harsher penalties on drug traffickers.

Messer previously spoke at an Education and the Workforce Committee hearing entitled, “Close to Home: How Opioids are Impacting Communities” that focused on the impact of the growing opioid crisis on communities across Indiana.

 

Free Mining Training at Ivy Tech Community College

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Ivy Tech Community College will offer free mining training at the Princeton Career and Technology Center beginning in April.

The training, MSHA Part 48, is being offered April 9-12 from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Participants must register in person at Ivy Tech’s Princeton Career & Technology Center, 2431 South Crabtree Drive, Princeton.

Proceeds from Indiana Coal Mining Institute license plate sales are making this opportunity available at no cost to participants who meet the general hiring requirements. Participants will be trained and ready for hire on the last day of class.

More than 125 immediate job openings in Gibson County require MSHA Part 48 training. MSHA training is required for all employees, maintenance, and vendors on any mine site. Training is valid for 36 months, so participants can train now and work later.  Ivy Tech hopes to continue to offer this training this summer, for Class of 2018 high school graduates that have an interest in a career in coal mining or mining support industries, such as diesel maintenance, engineering, industrial technology, logistics, management, and welding.

John Snowden, workforce development consultant, will coordinate the free mining training classes at Ivy Tech. Snowden boasts nearly 30 years of mining experience and workforce training instruction throughout Southern Indiana.

For more information about free mining training classes, call the Princeton Career and Technology Center at 812-385-8565. Learn more about Ivy Tech Workforce Alignment at ivytech/edu/TrainedAndReady.

 

 

Adopt A Pet

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Tucker is a 1-year-old male Border Collie mix. He’s such a beautiful boy who would make a great addition to just about any home! His $110 adoption fee includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!