AGENDA Of Vanderburgh County
Board of Commissioners
January 23, 2018, at 3:00 pm, Room 301
Petitioner: Dianna Miller
Address: 10108 Schaeffer Road
Request: Change from Ag to C-4 with UDC
Petitioner: Benjamin Niemeier
Address: 8635 N St. Joe Road
Request: Change from Ag to C-4 with UDC
Petitioner: Charles & Michelle Wakefield
Address: 5510 Booker Road
Request: Change from C-2 to R-1
Yesteryear by Pat Sides
This view of downtown Evansville, looking towards the intersection of Vine and Third streets, is one of the earliest known images of the city. At the center left is Holy Trinity Church, which is located in the 200 block of NW Third Street.
It was founded in 1849 to serve the city’s German population, and a three-story schoolhouse was constructed next to the church.
The 208-foot bell tower stood until 1950, when it was struck by lightning on Palm Sunday, igniting a blaze that destroyed the church, which was replaced by the current one in 1957. The Old Courthouse now stands behind Holy Trinity; construction on the government building began in 1888, and its absence here dates the image earlier than then, but before the school was built in 1869.
I want your vote and will be honored to represent you and your Hoosier values.
God Bless,
Mark Hurt
FOOTNOTE: Â THE CITY COUNTY POSTED MR> HURT ARTICLE WITHOUT OPINON, BIAS OR EDITING.
by: Dan Barton, Publisher Of The New -Harmony Gazette
As one of our Nations founders and its second President, John Adams, once said, “Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.â€
What follows are the names of towns in Indiana and Illinois that have been put forward by supporters of the Chapter 17 Town Ordinance change in the past New Harmony Town Plan Commission meetings. These towns were meant as examples of “small towns†that have turned themselves around because of supposedly stronger ordinances prohibiting first-floor residential uses in their business districts.
But these examples have carefully ignored some very stubborn facts. Though some of the towns mentioned no doubt have zoning restrictions similar to what the New Harmony Town Plan Commission advocates, others do not. This is not a standard that attests to either the success or failure of any of the towns mentioned. In any case, neither of the speakers who brought these examples up in the Commission meetings ever presented any supportive evidence to back their claim.
However, what is interesting is how different the examples were to the specific situation we have in New Harmony. Of the six mentioned towns, four were County Seats, like our own County Seat, Mt. Vernon, just south of New Harmony. County Seats seem to always get the lion’s share of the State funds for rehabilitating their downtown shopping areas and river parks. They also employee scores of public workers who live and spend within their town’s. These towns, held up as examples, had populations that ran between a low of 2,893 to a high of 19,384. New Harmony has only 763 residents. What’s more all of these “little towns†have Wal-Marts, they have hospitals or medical centers, Schools in the town limits, doctors, and dentists. There is no fair comparison.
All of the towns mentioned by the supporters had bridges that were open: Not closed – like The Harmony Way Bridge in New Harmony. Many of the example towns were near large population centers. They had major highways or interstates running just by them or through them. New Harmony has been bypassed and now cut off from major traffic for years. All of the towns presented, as examples that New Harmony should emulate, have a median age population of between 27 to 44. New Harmony’s median age is 55.
The information put out by David Flanders and Jim Spann, supporters of the amendment is an unfair comparison of the situation being dealt with by New Harmony. The amendment to Chapter 17 of the Town Ordinance was passed by the Plan Commission in December but was
withdrawn from a Council vote by Flanders at his request. He is in the process of re-writing it and will submit it to the Plan Commission for another vote. The Town Council voted in January to reject the original amendment as a procedural motion.
The comparisons that follow testify to the faults in the data that was presented. Especially since our town’s only link to population centers in Illinois, The Harmony Way Bridge, was closed in 2011. If we’re going to do comparisons, then let’s do comparisons that make sense and follow some kind of logic.
We’ve already heard enough unsupportable data from those who want to put restrictions on Commercial Property owners in New Harmony’s Business Historic District. We need to focus on getting the bridge open to the 300,000 automobiles per year that is missing from the real equation. Our real and most visible problem. We need to stop drifting off into non-important diversions.
GALENA, ILLINOIS, POPULATION 3,429, COUNTY SEAT DAVIESS COUNTY, HAS COUNTY FAIR, BRIDGE OPEN OVER GALENA RIVER, MANY BUSINESSES HAVE CLOSED, MEDIAN AGE 44;
GENESEO, ILLINOIS, POPULATION 6,586, 20 MILES FROM THE 500,000 POPULATION QUAD CITY, LIES AT INTERSECTION OF INTERSTATES 80 AND ILL RT. 82, MEDIAN AGE 41;
DELPHI, INDIANA POPULATION 2,893, COUNTY SEAT CARROLL COUNTY, 6 BRIDGES ALL OPEN, LIES ON INDIANA 65 AND RT 421, MEDIAN AGE 35;
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, POPULATION 10,508 COUNTY SEAT PUTNAM CNTY, 50 MILES FROM INDIANAPOLIS, LIES NEAR IS 70 AND RT 40, HAS DEPAUW UNIVERSITY, WHICH EMPLOYEES 625, AND IVY TECH. WAL-MART EMPLOYEES 800, MEDIAN AGE 27;
SEYMOUR, INDIANA, POPULATION 19,384, LIES ON RTS 240 & 231 RUNNING THROUGH & NEAR INTERSTATE 70, ONE BRIDGE AND IT IS OPEN, MAJOR EMPLOYERS LIKE CUMMINS DIESEL, WAL-MART AND MANY MORE. MEDIAN AGE 35
WABASH, INDIANA, POPULATION 10,666 COUNTY SEAT, TWO OPEN BRIDGES OVER WABASH RIVER. LIES ON HWY 24 AND 15, MEDIAN AGE 37;
———————————————————————————————————————— NEW HARMONY, INDIANA POPULATION 763, NOT A COUNTY SEAT, ONE BRIDGE OVER WABASH CLOSED FOR ALMOST 7 YEARS. NO HOSPITALS, DOCTORS, DENTISTS, IN TOWN SCHOOL OR SUPERMARKET, MEDIAN AGE 55;
MT. VERNON, INDIANA POPULATION 6,687, COUNTY SEAT OF POSEY COUNTY – BIG INDUSTRY PORT OF INDIANA. SABIC, VECTREN ETC. MIDWEST FERTILIZER. G.A.F. COUNTRY MARK, SITUATED ON THE OHIO RIVER AND BRIDGE OVER WABASH OPEN TO ILLINOIS, MAJOR RTS 62 &69 RUN THROUGH. MEDIAN AGE 40;
Compare New Harmony with the towns named by supporters of Commissioner Flanders’ Chapter 17 change. Most are County Seats with populations far greater than New Harmony.
They also lie on major traffic routes. These important differences have been overlooked by those who presented these other towns as examples of towns that have turned themselves around. Also, their median ages are 15 to 20 years younger than New Harmony.
Council members should think about the accuracy and relevance of the facts they are being fed by the advocates of the Chapter 17 change. Pablum. Over and Over and Over. Let’s get the facts straight!
FOOTNOTE: Â The City-County Observer has posted this letter without opinion, bias or editing.
By Claire Castillo For TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Teenagers are two times more likely to access pills out of their parent’s medicine cabinets than they are to go to the streets to get illegal drugs.
“Pilfering is the number one way that teenagers initiate drug abuse in our country today,†Amy Levander, chair of Krieg Devault said.
She was testifying before the Senate Civil Law Committee Thursday about Senate Bill 339, which requires pharmacies and pharmacists to sell or dispense a schedule II-controlled substance such as OxyContin or Percocet, in a lockable container. She showed committee members a sample lockable vial.
Chair of Krieg DeVault, Amy Levander, testified in favor of Senate Bill 339. Photo by Claire Castillo, TheStatehouseFile.com
Author of the bill, Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, said he believes that the idea is for a person to keep track of his or her own vial to make sure opiates are safe and kept away from teenagers.
“Many times, homes are broken into specifically for somebody to get into the medicine cabinet, and this is another fundamental of keeping our opioids safe,†Merritt said.
Four out of five heroin users today started with a prescription opioid, said Milton Cohen, CEO of SafeRx and one maker of the locking prescription vials.
“Ninety percent of abusers start in their teens, and the number one source for teen abuse, by a very substantial mark, is pilfering,†Cohen said.
One advocate for the bill, paramedic Kristy Nelson testified about losing her son, Bryan Fentz, to an overdose in 2009. He had injured his arm and was prescribed Vicodin.
“Although I approved of the prescription, I was a little hesitant that he had 30 pills with one refill,†Nelson said.
Her son’s pill-taking escalated after his grandfather died. He found Xanax in his grandfather’s closet and took the remaining bottles to begin self-medicating so he could get through his grandfather’s funeral, Nelson said.
Kristy Nelson, a paramedic, testified in favor of the bill by explaining the death of her son from an opioid overdose. Photo by Claire Castillo, TheStatehouseFile.com
She said that her son would take the pills he stole from his grandparents and put them in a Skittles bag. She never thought to check the bag because he was using opioids.
Nelson said that 91 people in the United States die every day because of opioid abuse, which is why she believes that locks on narcotic prescription bottles will prevent teens from accessing them.
Frank Gordon, a site manager at Genoa, a healthcare company in Fort Wayne, testified against the bill. Many of the patients in this facility have a mental illness.
Gordon said many mental health patients will not take their medication if they have to call the pharmacy, obtain a password and then use the password to open the vial.
“Study after studies shows that even a one day gap in therapy can so much as double the risk of hospitalization,†Gordon said. “Well we understand the intent of the bill, and absolutely agree that the opioid crisis is terrible, we do not believe that this is the way to approach the crisis especially within the mental health population.â€
The bill was held until Sen. Randall Head, R-Logansport, and chair of the committee decides how to proceed.
FOOTNOTE: Claire Castillo is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
1 p.m. Tuesday, January 22
Media Alert: Dr. Bill Thomas and Dr. Ann White
Dr. Bill Thomas, nationally-renowned expert on aging, and Dr. Ann White, dean of USI’s College of Nursing and Health Professions, will be available to speak with media about the MAGIC Project at 1 p.m. Tuesday, January 23 in the 3rd Floor of the Health Professions Center on the USI campus. Please contact Ben Luttrull, media relations specialist, at 812-461-5259 or bluttrull@usi.edu if you plan to attend. Read More
7 p.m. Friday, January 26
The University of Southern Indiana’s College of Liberal Arts, World Languages and Cultures Department, and USI Society for Arts and Humanities will host the Tournées Film Festival, a French film festival continuing on Fridays through February 23. This week’s film, Beauty and the Beast, will be screened at 7 p.m. in Forum One. The film festival is free and open to the public. A discussion will follow each screening. More Information
Tuesday, January 30 – Thursday, February 1
Early in each spring semester, University Division hosts Student Success Week, an entire week dedicated to students’ academic success and retention. This event offers students the opportunity to connect with University services, Colleges, and support offices under one roof in the University Center. A full lineup of activities can be found on the USI website.
Open through Monday, February 19
The McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries will present two exhibits, IF/THEN: Sarah Martin and The Chair, writ small, through Monday, February 19. Sarah Martin, University of Southern Indiana Art and Design Department visiting studio artist for spring 2018, will give a lecture on her work at 6:30 pm Monday, February 19 in Kleymeyer Hall in the Liberal Arts Center on the USI campus. There will be a closing reception for both exhibitions and their artists immediately following the lecture in the McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries. Read More
The ninth annual Hearts on Fire 5K, part of the Romain Screaming Eagles Running Series, will be held on Saturday, February 10 on the USI campus. This event a features an athlete division Run/Walk starting at 9 a.m. followed by a Cupid Fun Run (kids run) at 10:15 a.m. A portion of the proceeds from the Hearts on Fire 5K will be used to offer programming and provide professional development opportunities for student clubs within USI’s Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education. More Information
10:30 a.m. Friday, February 16
The University of Southern Indiana Center for International Programs will host its annual International Food Expo at 10:30 a.m. Friday, February 16 in Carter Hall. Tickets can be purchased in advance for $10 from the Center for International Programs Office in the University Center East, Room 1235, or at the door on the day of the Expo for $15. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to a local charity. For additional information, contact Nicole Vernon at nmvernon@usi.edu or 812-228-5092. More Information
Youth-serving professionals will benefit from a series of trauma-informed training led by Dr. Kenneth Ginsburg, a pediatrician specializing in adolescent medicine at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
Dr. Ginsburg comes to Evansville January 23 and 24 at the invitation of Youth First, Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated to strengthening youth and families.
“When children struggle to manage their emotions and behaviors, the root cause is often high levels of stress or trauma, what experts call Adverse Childhood Experiences or ACEs,†said Davi Stein-Kiley, Youth First’s Vice President of Social Work and Programs. “Dr. Ginsburg’s work focuses on fostering resilience and other strengths to help children overcome their problems.â€
Dr. Ginsburg will lead multiple sessions over a two-day period for medical and mental health professionals, educators, and youth workers. He will cover ACEs, strategies to engage hard-to-reach youth and resiliency, among other topics.
The training was made possible through a community partnership between Youth First, the Evansville-Vanderburgh School Corporation, St. Vincent, Southwestern Behavioral Healthcare, Inc., and Deaconess Cross Point.
The media is invited to attend a session for educators and school administrators Tuesday, Jan. 23, 8:00 – 10:00 am, at the Academy for Innovative Studies auditorium on Diamond Avenue. Dr. Ginsburg will address questions after the session.
Become a part of the winning 2018 Democratic Team effort. Learn how you can participate in the exciting 2018 Vanderburgh County Democratic Party (VCDP) Get Out the Vote (GOTV) campaign. Join us on Saturday January 27, at 10:00 AM in the Browning Room at Evansville Central Library (200 SE Martin Luther King Jr Blvd). Be there ready join the WINNING effort.
 Evansville, IN – Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Diorion Dontez McRath: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony), Possession of marijuana (Class A misdemeanor)
Junior Bilimon:Â Conspiracy Armed robbery (Level 3 Felony), Armed robbery (Level 3 Felony), Armed robbery (Level 3 Felony)
Ivanjhay Tarson Bilimon: Conspiracy Armed robbery (Level 3 Felony), Armed robbery (Level 3 Felony), Armed robbery (Level 3 Felony)
Stephanie Harris Teague: Robbery resulting in bodily injury (Level 3 Felony), Conspiracy Robbery (Level 5 Felony), Robbery (Level 5 Felony), Fraud on a financial (Level 5 Felony), Fraud on a financial (Level 5 Felony), Fraud on a financial (Level 5 Felony)
Blake Allan Whitson: Robbery resulting in bodily injury (Level 3 Felony), Conspiracy Robbery (Level 5 Felony), Robbery (Level 5 Felony), Fraud on a financial (Level 5 Felony), Fraud on a financial (Level 5 Felony), Fraud on a financial (Level 5 Felony)
Steven Randal Young: Domestic battery (Level 5 Felony)
Theresa Elaine Alexander: Battery resulting in serious bodily injury (Level 5 Felony), Strangulation (Level 6 Felony)
Toni Renee Ashby: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)
Huber Morales: Child molesting (Level 1 Felony), Child molesting (Level 1 Felony), Child molesting (Level 4 Felony), Child molesting (Level 4 Felony), Child molesting (Level 4 Felony)