State Representative Ron Bacon (R-Chandler) is filing for re-election for House District 75. Bacon has represented parts of Spencer, Pike, and Warrick Counties since 2010.
He is the Vice Chair of the House Committee on Public Health and serves on the House Committee on Commerce, Small Business and Economic Development, the House Statutory Committee on Interstate and International Cooperation and the Medicaid Advisory Committee.
While in office, Bacon has made multiple tax-cut reforms helping make Indiana fifth in the nation and number one in the Midwest for the best place to do business.
Bacon says he will use his experience in southwest Indiana and help vet legislation that impacts all Hoosiers in a positive way.
Bacon has served as the Warrick County Coroner, and was heavily involved with local organizations, including the St. Mary’s Warrick Hospital Foundation, Warrick County Chamber of Commerce, and Boonville Kiwanis.
by PETE WILLIAMS For NBC NEWS On JANUARY 10, 2018
WASHINGTON — When Larry Harmon of Akron, a Navy veteran and software engineer, went to his local polling place to vote in 2015, he discovered he was no longer on the list of registered voters.
On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court is taking up his challenge to the system Ohio used to remove him and others from the database. Civil rights groups say it discourages minority turnout, but the state says it’s an important tool in the task of keeping voter registration lists accurate and up to date.
“If the court sides with Ohio,” said Professor Rick Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California at Irvine, “you’ll see more red states making it easier to drop people from the voter registration rolls, and it’s going to continue what I call the voting wars between the parties.
Supreme Court Hearing Case On Ohio Voters Purged From Rolls
For the Supreme Court, the issue is what a state can assume from a resident’s failure to cast a vote in more than one election. Harmon’s decision to sit out two successive elections started the state’s effort to cancel his registration.
As many states do, Ohio compares change-of-address data from the U.S. Postal Service with its state registration list to identify voters who have moved without updating their addresses. A local election boards mails notices to those who appear to be ineligible to vote. If they do not respond or vote during the following four years, their registration is canceled.
At issue in the Supreme Court is an alternative method Ohio uses to identify people who have moved. The state sends notices to those who fail to cast a ballot during a two-year period. Those who do not respond and don’t vote over the next four years (including in two more federal elections) are dropped from the list of registered voters.
It was that supplemental system that dropped Harmon from the rolls. The state says he was sent a notice. He says he doesn’t remember getting it.
 Larry Harmon stands outside of his home in Kent, Ohio, on Aug. 4, 2017. Harmon was removed from the voting rolls after not voting in the last election.Maddie McGarvey / for NBC News
A federal appeals court ruled that Ohio’s supplemental system violated a federal law, the National Voter Registration Act, which says voters can be purged from the rolls only if they ask, move, are convicted of a felony, become mentally incapacitated or die. A failure to vote, the court said, should not trigger the beginning of the purging process.
The A. Philip Randolph Institute, a civil rights group, led the effort to challenge Ohio’s system, arguing that poor and minority residents are the hardest hit.
But Ohio says the failure to respond to a notice, not a failure to vote, leads the state to remove a voter from the roles. Trump’s Justice Department, reversing the position taken under the Obama administration, is defending Ohio’s method.
“Registrants removed using that procedure are not removed by reason of their initial failure to vote. They are sent a notice because of that failure, but they are not removed unless they fail to respond and fail to vote for the additional period prescribed,” the Justice Department said in a court filing.
The outcome will directly affect Ohio and six other states that have similar laws — Georgia, Montana, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. More than a dozen other states have indicated they would like to adopt the same system.
INDIANAPOLIS — Lawmakers took a step Tuesday to extend health benefits to the families of law enforcement officers and other public safety officials who lost their lives in the line of duty.
Sen. Michael Crider, R-Greenfield, authored Senate Bill 152 because he said was concerned about how surviving families are affected by the loss.
Michael Whited, a firefighter from Muncie, testified in favor of the bill because he saw first-hand how a death in the line of duty can affect a family. He cited an incident where a Muncie fighter died, leaving the widow and children struggling to find access to health care.
Michael Whited, firefighter. Photo by Eddie Drews, TheStatehouseFile.com
“Police officers and firefighters put themselves on the line and their families deal with a lot,†Whited said. “Especially with firefighters working 24-hour shifts so the surviving spouse, their whole world stops.â€
The bill provides that if a person is employed by the public safety department and dies in the line of duty after June 30 the remaining spouse and family will have health insurance. The surviving children will also have health coverage until age 18 or longer under some circumstances.
Sen. Blake Doriot, R-Syracuse, said he appreciates the sacrifices of public safety officials.
“These people are so vulnerable and we need to protect them and their families,†Doriot said.
The bill now will goes to the Senate Appropriations Committee for review.
FOOTNOTE: Claire Castillo is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
INDIANAPOLIS – Veterans and citizens across Indiana traveled to the Statehouse Tuesday morning to have their voices heard by legislators on issues important to both veterans and their loved ones.
It was the fourth annual Indiana Military Veterans Legislative Day hosted by Reps. Jim Baird, R-Greencastle, and John Bartlett, D-Indianapolis.
Jim Bewley stands in front of the congregation of veterans and elected officials early Tuesday morning, performing a rendition of “God Bless America.â€
Currently there are 16 bills that have been filed during the 2018 legislative session addressing issues like tax deductions, hunting opportunities, and the legalization and use of medical marijuana for veterans.
Veterans began the celebration with a march in unison to the Statehouse where they were greeted by legislators and citizens alike and to listen to guest speakers and organizers including keynote speaker Gov. Eric Holcomb, a Navy veteran.
Holcomb talked about the benefits that the military has brought to people across the world, and the sacrifices that soldiers and their families make to defend the nation.
The event was created so that veterans from all branches of the military could able to meet face to face with their legislators and discuss issues on a more personal level.
Various organizations and veterans took advantage of the event to promote their own individual causes and issues. Organizations such as Bosma Enterprises, a non-profit organization to help Hoosiers who are visually impaired, and NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws), had booths at the event.
With House Bill 1106 concerning the legalization of marijuana, groups such as
Hoosier Veterans for Medical Cannabis, Inc. used this opportunity to meet with legislatures and make the case to pass House Bill 1106, which would legalize medical marijuana
Many veterans have been showing support for HB 1106 and are optimistic about its growing support and outcome.
“It’s been snowballing,†said Army veteran Jimmy Giordano, a member of Hoosier Veterans for Medical Cannabis. “We’re hoping this year’s the year.â€
FOOTNOTE: Andrew Longstreth is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
A lack of sufficient evidence doomed a businessman’s appeal of the Indiana Department of State Revenue’s proposed assessments against two of his businesses, as the Indiana Tax Court ruled Thursday it could not substantiate the businesses’ various expense deductions based on the evidence presented.
Beginning in 2003, Paul Elmer established two pharmaceutical companies, Pharmakon Long Term Care Pharmacy, Inc. and Hamilton Consulting Group. Pharmakon was the primary pharmacy for 41 long-term care facilities, while Hamilton coordinated the provision of respiratory care services to Pharmakon’s customers.
Some of the facilities Pharmakon served were operated by affiliates of Magnolia Health Systems, Inc., which was owned by Stuart Reed. Elmer and Reed also worked together through Hamilton, with Reed’s business, Augusta Corporation, providing licensed respiratory therapists and necessary medical supplies, while Hamilton coordinated the provision of the respiratory care services on behalf of Pharmakon. During the 2005 through 2007 tax years, Pharmakon was Hamilton’s only customer, with Hamilton, in turn, paying Augusta for its “consulting†services.
Elmer and Reed never formalized their business relationship with a written contract except when mandated by the law. Thus, when many of the Magnolia affiliates failed to pay their invoices in 2007, the companies ended their relationship.
After an audit of Pharmakon and Hamilton for the 2005 through 2008 tax years, the Indiana Department of State Revenue disallowed some of Elmer’s expense deductions and instead issued proposed assessments totaling more than $400,000 in additional adjusted gross income tax, interest and penalties. After their departmental appeal was denied, Elmer and his wife appealed to the Indiana Tax Court, which upheld the proposed assessments on Thursday.
In the Thursday opinion, Senior Judge Thomas G. Fisher first wrote the Elmers failed to establish Pharmakon’s eligibility for contract labor deductions by failing to provide sufficient detail about Hamilton’s coordination efforts for Pharmakon. Similarly, Hamilton’s entitlement to expense deductions for consulting services could not be established because the testimony Elmer and Reed offered about those services were “nothing more than unsubstantiated conclusions,†Fisher said.
“Additionally, when Mr. Reed was asked about the specifics of the agreements, particularly those regarding respiratory therapy services, he could not recall the details and deferred to his previously-completed affidavits,†the judge wrote. “The affidavits, however, do not provide any further details about the terms of any of the agreements.â€
Hamilton also sought miscellaneous expense deductions based on evidence from “general ledgers,†but those ledgers were never admitted into evidence, Fisher said. The evidence was similarly insufficient to prove Pharmakon was entitled to uncollectible debt deductions based on billing mistakes, he said, because the company did not indicate what collections measures it used to collect from private pay patients.
Finally, the court ruled that the Elmers failed to substantiate their uncollectible debt deductions as they related to the Magnolia affiliates by failing to “offer documentary evidence or some other evidence that detailed the summarized amounts of the purportedly uncollectible debt.â€
University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball is looking to rebound from its first Great Lakes Valley Conference loss when it hosts the University of Indianapolis Thursday at 5:30 p.m. at the Physical Activities Center.
The Screaming Eagles (11-2, 3-1 GLVC) also visit Bellarmine University next Monday at 4:45 p.m. (CST) in Louisville, Kentucky.
USI is looking for the season-sweep of the Greyhounds (5-10, 2-3 GLVC) after defeating UIndy, 73-66, in December, while its bout with Bellarmine (7-6, 2-2 GLVC) is the first of two meetings between the two rivals.
Both contests will be aired on WSWI 95.7 FM and online at www.957thespin.com, while live stats and GLVC Sports Network coverage can be accessed at GoUSIEagles.com.
USI WBB Notes (1/9/18) • Eagles top UMSL, fall to Drury. USI Women’s Basketball went 1-1 in GLVC play last week, earning a 70-65 home win over Missouri-St. Louis Thursday before suffering a 71-55 road setback to No. 8 Drury.
• Last week’s leaders. Senior guard/forward Kaydie Grooms averaged 21.0 points and 6.5 rebounds per game to lead the Eagles against Missouri-St. Louis and Drury, while senior forward Morgan Dahlstrom contributed 15.5 points to go along with a team-high 7.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game.
• Season Leaders. Grooms and Dahlstrom continue to lead the Eagles in scoring with 17.9 and 16.1 points per game, respectively. Dahlstrom leads USI with 9.2 rebounds per contest, while senior forward Randa Harshbarger is averaging a team-high 3.2 assists per appearance.
• Grooms, Dahlstrom lifted Eagles early against Drury. Grooms and Dahlstrom combined for USI’s first 21 points against Drury Saturday. The duo finished the contest with 37 points as Grooms led all scorers with 20.
• Saturday win streak ends. USI’s loss to Drury ended the Eagles’ 16-game Saturday win streak, a run that began at the end of the 2015-16 campaign. USI was 4-0 on Saturday this year after going a perfect 11-0 on Saturday a year ago. The setback also was the Eagles’ first in a day game since falling to Michigan Tech November 27, 2017.
• USI in the Top 25. USI slipped nine spots to No. 18 in the latest Division II Media Poll and two spots to No. 22 in the latest USA Today Sports/NCAA Division II Coaches’ Poll. USI also slipped to No. 9 in the latest Herosports.com Division II rankings and No. 14 in the Massey Ratings.
• Where do they stand? USI is currently ranked No. 3 in the latest GLVC Tournament rankings. The top eight teams will qualify for the GLVC Tournament based on a point rating system, which is detailed on page 10 of this week’s notes packet.
• What’s next? The Eagles host Indianapolis Thursday before paying a visit to Bellarmine Monday evening.
• A look at Indianapolis. Led by senior guard Martha Burse, the Greyhounds have won two straight games as they prepare to avenge a 73-66 loss they suffered at the hands of USI last month. Burse is second in the GLVC with 22.7 points per contest and leads the league with 4.2 steals per game.
• A look at Bellarmine. Senior guard Raven Merriweather is third in the GLVC with 18.0 points per game to lead the Knights, who have lost three of the last four games.
• What’s ahead? Following its game at Bellarmine, the Eagles host three straight at the PAC, starting January 18 against Missouri S&T.
Jackson Kelly PLLC is pleased to announce that the firm has elected three new members to its Executive Committee and two new office managing members, all effective January 1.
Firm Members Michael Leahey, Kristin White and Robert Tweel were elected to three-year terms on the Executive Committee. They fill the expired Executive Committee three-year terms of firm Members Al Sebok, Marcia Broughton, and Karen Johnston
Eric Whytsell was appointed to replace White as the Managing Member of the Denver, Colorado office. Seth Hayes was appointed Managing Member of the Morgantown, Bridgeport, Martinsburg and Wheeling, West Virginia offices.
“We are thrilled to welcome Mike, Kristin, and Bob as the newest members of our Executive Committee and we are grateful for Al, Marcia and Karen’s service and leadership over the past three years,†said firm Managing Member Ellen S. Cappellanti. “We also congratulate Eric and Seth on their new appointments and look forward to their ongoing contributions to the successes of our firm and our clients.â€
Leahey is a Member in the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, office. His practice focuses on the defense of the Firm’s energy sector clients in general civil litigation in connection with wrongful death and personal injury claims. Leahey obtained his Bachelor of Science degree from Allegheny College and he received his law degree from Duquesne University School of Law.
White is a Member based in the firm’s Denver, Colorado office, where she practices in the areas of workplace safety and employment law. She counsels and defends clients in all types of workplace matters and regularly acts as crisis management counsel for employers in all industry sectors. White holds a law degree from the University of Tulsa College of Law and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Kansas.
Tweel is a Member in the Charleston, West Virginia office and is Chair of the Tax Practice Group. His practice focuses on federal tax issues. He represents and works with accountants and attorneys in analyzing federal tax issues, including compliance with the standards of tax practice. Tweel graduated from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, where he received his Bachelor of Arts degree. He received his Juris Doctor from West Virginia University College of Law, and his LL.M. in taxation from New York University School of Law.
Whytsell represents a wide variety of clients, from small businesses to major multinational corporations, helping his clients identify opportunities and resolve problems that arise in connection with doing business with the government. He earned his law degree from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He also has a Bachelor of Arts degree, cum laude, from Davidson College.
Hayes works from the Morgantown, West Virginia office and focuses on litigating commercial cases and handling matters relating to electronic discovery and data privacy and security. Hayes received his Juris Doctor from the West Virginia University College of Law. He received a Bachelor of Science and a Bachelor of Arts degree from West Virginia University.
FOOTNOTE: Client Focus, Industry Insight, National Reputation. Jackson Kelly PLLC is a national law firm with more than 160 attorneys located in twelve offices throughout Colorado, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Washington, DC. Focusing on clients’ industry-specific needs, the Firm serves a wide variety of corporate and public clients and enjoys a national reputation in business, labor and employment, litigation, government contracts, tax, safety and health, permitting, natural resource and environmental law.
Paige is a female American Staffordshire Terrier mix (or “pit bull.â€) She is an absolutely wonderful sweet, loving girl. She loves to receive affection from anyone who will give it. VHS recently pulled her from Evansville Animal Care & Control when they were out of room. Paige is around 2 years old. Her $110 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!
The Southwest Indiana Chamber of Indiana will host the Legislative Kick Off: Pancakes & Policy, Friday, January 12, 2018 at the Southern Indiana Career & Technical Center from 7:30 am – 9:30 am.
The 2018 Indiana General Assembly kicks off in January. It’s a short session. What are the issues facing the legislature as we begin the legislative session. Join us on Friday, January 12 for our annual legislative kickoff, Pancakes & Policy. Members of the Southwest Indiana Delegation will be on hand to discuss their priorities for session.
Sponsors for this event are Beam, Longest & Neff, AARP Indiana and Tropicana.
For more information about the Legislative Kick Off: Pancakes & Policy, to purchase seats, or to inquire about
sponsorship opportunities, email Ashley Murray, director of events, or call 812-425-8147.