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UE Professor Lisa Nikolidakis Receives 2017 Exemplary Teacher Award

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University of Evansville assistant professor of creative writing Lisa Nikolidakis received the University’s 2017 Exemplary Teacher Award during UE’s winter commencement exercise today, Thursday, December 14. Sixty students received degrees during the ceremony.

The Exemplary Teacher Award is given by the University to an exceptional member of the faculty in acknowledgment of his or her teaching excellence.

Nikolidakis earned her PhD in English from Florida State University, and her MA and BA degrees in English from Rutgers.

Her work has been published in the Los Angeles Review, Brevity, Passages North, Nimrod, The Greensboro Review, The Rumpus, and elsewhere. Her essay “Family Traditions” was selected for inclusion in Best American Essays 2016. Her work has been runner-up or honorable mention for numerous prizes, including the Tobias Wolff Award for Fiction, the Gulf Coast Prize, the Lamar York Prize for Fiction, the Robert and Adele Schiff Award for Prose, the Calvino Prize, the Frank Mosher Short Fiction Prize. She has won the A Room Of Her Own’s Orlando Prize and The Briar Cliff Review’s Nonfiction Prize.

She has served as co-director of membership services for VISA: Women in Literary Arts and nonfiction editor for The Southeast Review. At UE, Nikolidakis organized and hosts the #readingseries and Collision: A Writer’s Series.

SNOW

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Judge Gives Fogle Another Avenue To Challenge Sentence

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Olivia Covington for www.theindianaiawyer.com

A federal judge is giving former Subway spokesman Jared Fogle another chance to seek relief from his 15-year prison sentence after striking down the most recent of his objections to his sentence on Wednesday.

After Southern District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt rejected Fogle’s challenge to his sentence on the grounds that he is a sovereign citizen not under the jurisdiction of the court, the disgraced spokesman –  who was convicted in 2015 on child pornography charges – filed a Rule 52(b) objection to Pratt’s November decision. In his objection, Fogle continued to deny the court’s jurisdiction over him and requested that a final judgment be entered on his motion to correct clear error so that he could appeal.

Pratt denied that request on Wednesday, holding that under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b), Fogle could file an appeal within 14 days of the entry of the order being appealed. However, the judge also gave Fogle until Jan. 12 to notify the court as to whether he would like his motion to be treated as one pursuant to 28 U.S.C. section 2255. Under that section, a court can grant relief from a federal conviction or sentence “upon the ground that the sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, or that the court was without jurisdiction to impose such sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the maximum by law, or is otherwise subject to collateral attack.”

If Fogle chooses to proceed under section 2255, Pratt required him to supplement his motion with a complete statement of the claims and grounds on which he challenges his conviction and/or sentence on. Or, he could notify the court that his original filing constitutes all of the claims he could or does assert in his challenge.

If Fogle fails to inform the court of his intent to proceed under section 2255 by Jan. 12, then his motion will be withdrawn as it relates to possible relief under that section.

The case is United States of America v. Jared S. Fogle, 1:15-cr-00159.

 

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Public Law Monitor

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Coal mining regulations spark disputePlans for a new coal mine to serve Alcoa near Boonville, Indiana, prompted that city to pass an ordinance that bans mining for coal, gas, oil, or other minerals within the city or areas within 3 miles of the city. The Evansville Courier & Pressoffers a story here. The Indiana Supreme Court decision in City of Carmel v. Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., as well as other case law, supports a municipality’s ability to ban mining within municipal limits, and Indiana’s zoning and planning laws also allow a city to regulate some contiguous unincorporated areas. However, the extent of those regulatory powers outside municipal limits remains uncertain and untested in some respects. Moreover, Indiana’s “home rule” approach generally forbids localities from regulations granted to another state entity, and numerous state agencies are already empowered regulate mining. Three shuttered smelter lines at Alcoa Warrick Operations planning to use the new coal are expected to return online in the second quarter of 2018.

How much autonomy does a clerk-treasurer have?

The Sellersburg clerk-treasurer who sought to make the town board give her funds for a second deputy clerk lost her appeal after the Indiana Court of Appeals determined state statute gives the legislative body oversight over the number of deputy clerks. The court found state law clearly provides that the clerk-treasurer’s appointment of deputies and employees requires approval of the town legislative body. Click here for the court’s decision in Michelle Miller, Town of Sellersburg Clerk-Treasurer v. Town Board of Sellersburg, Indiana.


Gov. Holcomb files appeal in Bloomington annexation dispute

Gov. Eric Holcomb appealed to the Indiana Court of Appeals after the Monroe Circuit Court denied the governor’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the city of Bloomington over an annexation dispute. Bloomington filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief against Holcomb in May, claiming a provision inserted into the state budget specifically targeting the city’s attempts to annex nearly 10,000 acres (including portions of the Cook Medical campus) is unconstitutional. The city pointed out Section 161, which was introduced less than 24 hours before the Legislature approved it, terminates the planned expansion of the municipality’s boundaries and prohibits any future annexation of that area until July 1, 2022. In October, the governor’s motion to dismiss was denied.


Can the Indiana legislature bind future legislatures?

In 1938 the United States Supreme Court ruled in Indiana ex rel. Anderson v. Brand that a state can enter into contracts that must be honored under the U.S. constitution, even if that means restricting future legislative options of the state. The issue arose again this month in Elliott v. Board of School Trustees, wherein the 7th Circuit concluded that Indiana could not amend its law that affected tenured teachers because the new law violates the Contract Clause rights of a teacher who had tenure before the law took effect. The holding remains a controversial one because of its practical effect that a legislative body can bind future legislative bodies for close to 100 years and legislation creates a contract that cannot be impaired under the Constitution.


Joshua Claybourn

Joshua is Counsel in Jackson Kelly’s Evansville office. He advises clients in matters of business and corporate law, governmental services, and public finance. Learn more here.

State Revenue Collections Come In Below Forecast

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Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com

Indiana’s year-to-date revenue collections of nearly $5.8 billion have come in nearly $150 million below what was forecast by the State Budget Agency last spring.

The agency on Monday issued its revenue report for November, which found that although actual collections for the current fiscal year are below forecast, they are above the collections for the same time period a year ago.

In November, general fund revenues totaled a little more than $1 billion, lower than the forecast by 1.3 percent but above November 2016 collections by 1.7 percent.

Other November numbers:

  • Sales tax collections were $617.5 million, more than1 percent higher than forecast and 3 percent above a year ago;
  • Individual income tax collections totaled $363.9 million, above the estimate and 3.2 percent above the amount collected a year ago;
  • Corporate tax collections were $33.8 million, well below the forecast and the amount collected in November 2016.

The budget agency reported that corporate tax collections are down because refunds, which total $76.6 million fiscal year-to-date, are up 100 percent.

FOOTNOTE: TheStatehouseFile.com is a website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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$40,000 in Grants Handed Out to Community Organizations

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$40,000 in Grants Handed Out to Community Organizations

Five organizations in Evansville are in line for part of $40,000 in grants thanks to the Vanderburgh Community Foundation’s Community Good Grants program.

Dream Center Evansville, EFD, Carver Community Organization, Parenting Time Center, and The Arc of Evansville will each receive part of that grant money.

The Community Good Grants program supports arts and culture, community development, education, health, human services, and other civic endeavors, like the environment, recreation, and youth development.

This is the first of quarterly grants to be awarded from the program throughout this year.

Recipients of those awards include:
Dream Center Evansville – $7,500 – to expand the half-day summer camp program (Summer Zoom) to a full-day program starting in 2018
Evansville Fire Department – $10,000 – to purchase of a new rescue watercraft and equipment
Carver Community Organization – $7,500 – for the Pathfinders Project that teaches children the importance of STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, and math) in a hands-on environment taught by instructors from UE, USI, and Ivy Tech
Parenting Time Center – $7,500 – for the “Helping Moms to Involve Dad” program that utilizes evidence-based curriculum designed to impact moms’ understanding of the positive impact of fathers’ involvement with their children
The Arc of Evansville – $7,500 – to support the “My Amazing Body” initiative to create a holistic wellness program to improve the physical, social-emotional, and overall health and wellness of the children served by the Child Life Center

To learn more go to Vanderburgh Community Foundation.

Britney Taylor

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