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DCS Evaluation, Redistricting Reform Dominate Legislature

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By City County Observer StateHouse Editor, Gail Riecken
The Statehouse File report of the first meeting of the 2018 legislative session acknowledges Speaker Bosma endorsing the upcoming evaluation of DCS. However, one must question why the Speaker stated at that meeting the problems are not monetary. “I think it’s best for these experts to dive in, give some recommendations and then we can act on them,” Bosma said. “We added $600 million—well over half a billion dollars—to the DCS budget just this biennium. So it’s not a money issue.”
That singular statement ties the hands of the evaluation council company proposed by the Governor and now endorsed by the Speaker and damages the credibility of any final report.
Certainly the problems have been other than money, but many have been tied to money-including underpaid staff, underpaid residential facilities, lack of effective recruitment training-including training, lack of adequate funding for foster care, ongoing training and supervision of foster families and the children living there, all costing money.
These issues were continuously addressed with improvements by the recent director, former judge Mary Beth Bonaventura, when I was watching the DCS as a state representative, but that doesn’t mean the problems were solved.
There was a committee that was supposed to act as an independent committee to oversee the operation, the DCS Oversight Committee, but under the Republican leadership became a useless “reporting out” waste of time. This committee could have done its job, if the government, including the legislative majority party leadership, would have stopped worrying about public embarrassment and started thinking about how transparency can produce progress toward real success in protecting the health and welfare of our children.
Government officials, including the legislature should not hamper the investigation. Government should not limit the evaluation process. And, you and I need to know more about this company that is heading up the evaluation.
A couple of weeks ago, I asked an IndyStar reporter to investigate the company being hired to evaluate. I did not get a response. But we, the public, need to know the company’s credentials. What are the 20 states that they have serviced? What has been their experience? Who are the principles of the company and what is their background? And, now, I add why does the Speaker deny the money issue knowing it has been front burner for years and the recent director, Director Bonaventura, claims it remains an issue?

Former IU McKinney Dean Dies At 70

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law alumna and former dean and professor Susanah M. Mead has died, the school announced Thursday.

Mead died Dec. 23 at the age of 70, the school said. She was a 1976 graduate of the Indianapolis law school, where she returned to begin a legal education career in 1978 after clerking for two years for former Indiana Court of Appeals Chief Judge Paul H. Buchanan.

Mead’s service to the law school included positions as a legal writing instructor, professor of torts and product liability and director of the legal writing program. She also created the Dean’s Tutorial Society, which was one of the first organized, volunteer law school peer-tutoring programs in the country.

After being named associated dean for academic affairs in 1997, Mead began to work on the capital campaign that led to the construction of Lawrence W. Inlow Hall. She was then named interim dean of the law school in 2005, a position she held until 2007 as the first woman and alumnus to serve as dean. Mead was also one of IU McKinney’s first tenured female law professors.

 “She became more than just a friend and colleague – but also a role model for how to handle even the most difficult issues with patience, thoughtfulness, and grace,” current Dean Andrew Klein, who served as associate dean for academic affairs under Mead, said in a statement. “Perhaps the core of what I learned from Susie is the importance for a leader to confront challenges head-on, and the value of doing so in an open and civil fashion.”

Aside from her work with the law school, Mead was active in Indiana’s legal community, serving as the co-chair of the Indiana State Bar Association’s Conclave on Legal Education in 2007, and on the bar’s Buchanan Award selection committee. She received multiple honors for her legal contributions, including being named as an Indianapolis Bar Foundation Distinguished Fellow in 2006, receiving the ISBA’s Presidential Citation in 2007 and being recognized as an Indiana Lawyer Leadership in Law Distinguished Barrister in 2009. IU McKinney also honored mead as it Law Alumna of the Year in 2007.

A memorial service for Mead will be held at 2 p.m. Jan. 8 at the Christ Church Cathedral on Monument Circle, with a reception to follow at the Woodstock Club, 1301 W. 38th St., Indianapolis. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Mead’s memory to the Indiana University Foundation, P.O. Box 6460, Indianapolis, IN 46206. Her daughters, Holly, Edie and Sybil, plan to use the funds to support a scholarship for women law students at IU McKinney.

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Administrative Assistant
Mojo Sports, LLC – Henderson, KY
$10 – $14 an hour
This person is responsible for assisting the owner in day-to-day operations of the business, including contact with vendors and customers, creating email…
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Business Equipment Distributors – Henderson, KY
$35,000 – $60,000 a year
Our trained professionals work with you and your personnel to match your specific needs with the highest quality products and service — from general office…
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Sprint by Wireless Express 7,776 reviews – Henderson, KY
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Holy Name of Jesus Catholic School 5 reviews – Henderson, KY
If you’re interested, contact Director of Early Learning, Lois Utley at 270-827-3425. HNS is looking for an energetic, motivated person to work in the extended…
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Advent Veterinary Services – Evansville, IN
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Facilities Management Services, Inc 3 reviews – Evansville, IN
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Monitors activities in the front of the store and secures Michaels assets including cash, checks, media and merchandise….
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Michaels 4,232 reviews – Evansville, IN
On days the Support Specialist is scheduled, the Customer Experience Manager – Operations’ primary focus is on driving the overall operational excellence of the…
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Michaels 4,232 reviews – Evansville, IN
Merchandise Stocking associates (or Replenishment Associates) are responsible for executing tasks in the areas of Receiving, Stocking and Merchandise…
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Michaels 4,232 reviews – Evansville, IN
The Customer Experience Manager – Nights and Weekends is responsible for driving customer experience levels in the building by cultivating an atmosphere (…
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Store Associates run the cash register, keep the store stocked and clean, operate kitchen equipment in the production of prepared food items such as donuts,…
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Some of the responsibilities for this position include hands-on food preparation, ensuring satisfactory customer service in all prepared food areas and the…
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Merchandiser (PT/Rotating Shifts/$12.50/hr)
PepsiCo 7,729 reviews – Elberfeld, IN
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City and Country – Distribution Cordinator
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With an unmatched local-to-national reach, Gannett touches the lives of more than 110 million people monthly with our Pulitzer-Prize winning content, consumer…
City and Country – Assistant District Manager
Gannett 399 reviews – Evansville, IN
Valid driver’s license & reliable vehicle. This position will assist the District Managers with efficient management of the distribution areas and will also…
Maintenance Supervisor
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Technical school training/certification or Engineering Degree preferred. 5+ years relevant experience as a mechanic or automation technician in high volume…
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It is a 31-bed unit that includes three critical care rooms, two isolation rooms, one decontamination room, one OB/GYN exam room, two psychiatric rooms, four…

Messer Wins Grassroots Conservatives Straw Poll

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Luke Messer won a recent U.S. Senate straw poll conducted by the Grassroots Conservatives in Bloomington, Indiana.
Messer led all six primary candidates by an eight-point advantage in the Dec. 28th poll. Below are the results of the straw poll released by the Grassroots Conservatives this week:
  1. Luke Messer 18-1 = 17 pts
  2. Todd Rokita, 11-2 = 9 pts
  3. Andrew Horning, 2-2 = 0 pts
  4. Mark Hurt, 2-2 = 0 pts
  5. Andrew Takami, 0-2 = -2 pts
  6. Mike Braun, 1-7 = -6 pts
 “Grassroots Conservatives were impressed with Rep. Luke Messer’s answers to more than an hour of tough questions on national issues,” said Grassroots Conservatives leader Robert Hall.  “We liked that he sponsored a bill to get rid of a loophole that illegal immigrants use to receive tax credits. And he voted against the $1 trillion Omnibus spending bill in May 2017 that failed to cut domestic spending as proposed by the Trump administration. I feel he is a solid conservative and has the best chance to replace Joe Donnelly as U.S. Senator.”
The straw poll was conducted using a point system in which each YES vote was 1 point and each NO vote was -1 point.
Also in December, Messer led his primary opponents in an IndyPolitics poll on the Indiana U.S. Senate race.

Aces Host Bradley In Saturday’s Courier & Press Game

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The first home game of the calendar year is up next for the University of Evansville men’s basketball team as they welcome Bradley to the Ford Center on Saturday afternoon for a 3 p.m. game.

Fans can get tickets for just $5 for the 3 p.m. game by bringing in the ticket vouchers that will be printed inside the Courier & Press on January 1 and January 5.  You can also bring any issue of the Courier & Press from Dec. 31 through Jan. 6 that does not include a coupon to redeem the same deal.

Vouchers/newspapers can be redeemed at the Carson Center or Ford Center until game time on Saturday.  Redemptions can be done at the Ford Center on the day of the game.  One voucher/newspaper can be redeemed for multiple tickets. These vouchers are good for sections 103-108 and 114-119.  One of the top halftime performances of the season will be on hand Saturday as the ZOOperstars will entertain everyone at the half.

In a battle to the wire on Wednesday, UE fell by a final of 65-63 at Southern Illinois. Four players finished in double figures for the Aces, but SIU shot 65% from outside to hold on for the win.

Another great game saw Dru Smith record 10 points and 7 steals at Southern Illinois; his 7 steals was the most since Colt Ryan had that many against Drake in 2013 and is tied for the 3rd-highest tally in the nation this season.  His effort of seven swipes was the most for the Aces since Colt Ryan had seven against Drake in 2013.  Smith leads the MVC in steals, assists and field goal percentage; he is the only player in the nation to currently lead his conference in those statistics.

It was just another day at the office for Ryan Taylor, who scored 21 points at SIU.  In three games since missing seven with an injury, Taylor has notched 21 points per game.  He has taken at least 16 shots in each MVC game and is shooting 48.2% overall in those three league outings.  The SIU game marked his 7th 20-point game of the season; he had six such games last season.

A 13-point outing at Southern Illinois saw Blake Simmons make it 8 out of 9 games reaching double figures.  Since the beginning of December, Simmons is averaging 13.9 points per game while shooting 57% from the field; he shot just 39% in the first seven games of the season.  Simmons begins the week with 958 career points; he is just 42 shy of becoming the 49th player in program history to score 1,000 in his career.

Bradley is off to a great start this season, recording a 12-4 mark through their first 16 games while winning two out of three MVC contests.  The Braves fell at Drake in the league opener before they defeated UNI and Valparaiso at home.  Darrell Brown is the top offensive threat for Bradley, notching 14.1 points per game and a team-high 65 assists.  Donte Thomas was the leader against the Crusaders, posting 19 points in the 80-71 victory.

 

Citizen’s Academy Spring 2018 Signups Are Underway!

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Open registration for the Evansville Police Department’s spring 2018 Citizen’s Academy is taking place. This is a 10 week program that’s ABSOLUTELY FREE OF CHARGE and offered to participants to build citizen’s awareness of police policies and procedures. Presentations are given by officers in specialty units i.e. Swat, Narcotics, Hazardous Devices, Crime Scene, and many more!

The goal of the Citizen’s Academy is to give citizen’s an inside look of the Evansville Police Department to create a better understanding and communication between citizens and police through education. The program begins February 20, so hurry and join. For more information contact Debbie Hildebrant at 812-436-4948 or email her at dhildebrant@evansvillepolice.com.

CALLING OUT CONGRESS

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Making Sense by Michael Reagan

Didn’t we turn over a new leaf in 2018?

Didn’t everyone in Washington resolve to work together on America’s important problems and get things done?

Oh, sorry.

That must have been that pipe dream I had last weekend when I dozed off in my La-Z-Boy watching the Times Square ball fall on TV.

The New Year isn’t even a week old and already I can’t wait till the start of 2019.

We’re back to watching the same stupid political stuff going on in Washington and listening to the cries of the same Trump-deranged national media.

Today it’s Steve Bannon and his former boss Donald Trump calling each other names in public and everyone on TV talking about Michael Wolff’s new expose,”Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House.”

Wolff’s book details the internal feuds, power plays and administrative chaos of the president’s first year.

Nothing Wolff writes would surprise me, but these days who knows what’s true or fake?

What we know for sure so far in 2018 is what we learned from last year — there’s room for only one super ego in Washington, and Steve Bannon isn’t it.

Meanwhile, the forecast for The Swamp looks like a repeat of last year.

Our politicians will be playing the same selfish games in Congress and they’ll never accomplish anything worthwhile on big things like health care reform or immigration policy.

How about doing something simple and worthwhile for a change, Congress people?

How about doing your job and coming up with a dozen spending bills this year to pay for discretionary things like defense, agriculture and infrastructure — and then passing them on time?

According to the Constitution, Congress has the duty to pass discretionary spending bills each fiscal year to fund the annual budget the president has proposed.

You might not have noticed, because the mainstream media don’t pay much attention to this smelly aspect of federal sausage-making, but Republican and Democratic Congresses have shirked their spending duties almost religiously since 1974.

Since the current budget system was put into place the year Richard Nixon resigned, Congress has passed all of its annual spending bills on time only four times.

What Congress does more often is pass continuing resolutions that merely extend spending from previous years’ spending bills.

In early 2017, after the usual deal-making,Congress used a continuing resolution to pay for fiscal year 2017 – three months after it had officially started on Oct. 1, 2016.

All of this is confusing, frustrating and unnecessary.

It used to be that a president had the power to impound – or simply not spend — any money that Congress had allocated for something if he thought that it would raise the deficit.

But in 1974, after Nixon had lost his ability to veto any legislation Congress sent him because of Watergate, Congress passed a law stripping him of his power to impound Congress’ money.

Since then presidents have essentially been forced to spend every dime Congress allocates, whether it’s for “A Bridge to Nowhere” in Alaska or free cell phones to the poor.

Depriving the president of his impoundment powers, which Thomas Jefferson first used in 1801 to stop the building of unneeded Mississippi River gunboats for the Navy, is one reason our annual deficits are averaging half a trillion dollars and the national debt has zoomed past $20 trillion.

A bigger reason is that members of Congress from both parties can spend what they want with little political pain or media scrutiny and then pass continuing resolutions that are loaded with pork, perks and new laws no one reads until it’s too late.

It’s still a new year. It’s not too late to make presidential resolutions.

If Donald Trump really wants to clean up The Swamp, he should pledge that this year he’ll try to force Congress to write a budget, vote on it and pass it by October 1.

It’s not a goal he can explain to the public in a tweet, but it’s one of the best things any president could to do in 2018 to make America great

Griffin Named Player To Watch By Collegiate Baseball Newspaper

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University of Southern Indiana Baseball senior right-handed pitcher Kyle Griffin(Morganfield, Kentucky) was named a Player to Watch for the 2018 season in the Collegiate Baseball Newspaper.

Griffin was first-team All-GLVC East Division and a two-time GLVC Pitcher of the Week during his first season with the Screaming Eagles in 2017. He tied for the team-lead in wins with a 6-3 record and had a 3.45 ERA in 13 starts and 73.0 innings pitched. The senior right-hander set a USI single-season record with a team-best 86 strikeouts, including a season-best 12 strikeouts in the win over Saint Joseph’s College

USI throws out the first pitch in six weeks when it travels to preseason top-ranked Delta State University for a double-header with the Statesmen February 16 before playing a single neutral-site game against Quincy University. The Eagles open the 2018 home schedule with the Dunn Hospitality Classic February 23-25, featuring match-ups with Missouri University of Science & Technology, Hillsdale College, Grand Valley State University, and Rockhurst University.

 

FIRE AND FURY

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OH TO BE AN EGYPTIAN JUDGE By Jim Redwine

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GAVEL GAMUT

By Jim Redwine

Week of 08 January 2018

OH TO BE AN EGYPTIAN JUDGE

Some of you may have noticed I have been a judge for awhile. And, although I know it may surprise you, not everyone of my thousands of decisions has been met with universal acclaim. Occasionally someone may actually disagree with my fair and objective legal analysis and have the bad form to say so. Well, my friends, not if we were in Egypt.

According to a report in the Palm Beach, Florida Sun Sentinel of Sunday, December 31, 2017 a court in Cairo convicted 19 people of making public statements, “[t]he court found to be inciting and expressing contempt toward the court and the judiciary”. If you are wondering why I was reading the Palm Beach paper in sweltering 80 degree weather while some of you may have been enjoying a cool and exhilarating Indiana Christmas season there is no truth to the rumor it was because Peg and I felt compelled to be near President Trump’s Mar-A-Lago winter White House. We did not even receive an invitation to his $750 per person New Year’s Eve party. It may have been lost due to the holiday rush at the post office. Anyway, back to Egypt and the injured dignity of the judiciary.

The newspaper reported that the heinous criminals insulted the judges by making statements that were aired on TV, radio, social media or in other disfavored publications. Now the court did not deign to ignore these demeaning comments or to call for the miscreants to tug vigorously on their forelocks. Oh no. The defendants received 3 years in prison and were fined up to one million Egyptian pounds ($56,270 US).

Each defendant was also ordered to pay one million Egyptian pounds to each of the judges of the powerful union known as The Judges Club. Now I would never advocate for such a response against anyone who had the temerity to publicly disagree with my rulings. However, a few hours in the stocks on the courthouse campus might be considered or parading around the courthouse wearing sackcloth and ashes or maybe a few public recitations of “Judge Redwine is Solomon” or, well, you get the idea.

Actually, it is events such as those in Egypt that truly show what a blessing it is to be in a country where CNN, MSNBC, The NY Times, The Washington Post, FOX News, Breitbart and  many other publications can spew their invective against anyone from the Supreme Court to even  a court in Posey County, Indiana without fear of being jailed.

Instead of just worrying about the current protestors in our enemy Iran perhaps we should address the draconian pronouncements of offended judges in countries such as our friends in Egypt and elsewhere. The injured sensibilities of some pompous plutocrat may lead to far greater harm to the public than their unfair judgments that get publicly condemned.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to

www.jamesmredwine.com