Home Blog Page 4518

This Week at USI

0

10:30 a.m. Monday, October 30

Indiana Supreme Court to hear oral arguments at USI

The Supreme Court will travel to Carter Hall at the University of Southern Indiana in Evansville, to hear oral arguments in the case of B.A v. State of Indiana at 10:30 a.m. Monday, October 30. The argument will be webcast live by the University of Southern Indiana and uploaded to the Court’s website in coming weeks.  Read More

9:30 a.m. Wednesday, November 1

Hamilton, Shepard to present 2017 Indiana Civic Health Index at USI

The Indiana Bar Foundation will present the results of the Indiana Civic Health Index (ICHI) at 9:30 a.m. Wednesday, November 1 in University Center Room 2217 and 2218 on the University of Southern Indiana campus. The event is open to the public as seating is available. Featured speakers at the presentation include former U.S. House of Representatives member Lee Hamilton and former Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Randall Shepard. Hamilton and Shepard will be available for media interviews at 10:30 a.m. following the presentation. Read More

Saturday, November 4

16th Annual Norwegian Foot March set to host over 500 on USI campus

On Saturday, November 4, just one week before Veteran’s Day, over 500 participants will take on a University of Southern Indiana Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) tradition. The Norwegian Foot March will host cadets, military personnel, veterans and civilians who hope to finish the 18.6-mile race in under 4.5 hours. At 7:30 a.m., the start of the race will be marked by the firing of a U.S. Army howitzer. Proceeds from the Norwegian Foot March will benefit the participating students and cadets of the USI ROTC program. Read More

2:30 p.m. Monday, November 6

Dr. Bill Thomas’ ChangingAging Tour to visit USI

The University of Southern Indiana will host Dr. Bill Thomas’ ChangingAging Tour on Monday, November 6 at the USI Performance Center. The event will include two performances: Disrupt Dementia from 2:30 to 4 p.m., and Life’s Most Dangerous Game from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The performances are made possible by AARP Indiana, USI and the USI Foundation. Tickets can be purchased at https://changingaging.org/event/evansville-in/. Read More

Appointments accepted now for Monday, November 6 – Wednesday, November 8

USI Dental Hygiene Clinic to repeat free dental cleanings for veterans

The University of Southern Indiana Dental Hygiene Clinic will provide free dental cleaning, fluoride and X-rays for military veterans on November 6 and 8, 2017. In an attempt to serve more veterans, the USI Dental Hygiene Program will schedule appointments during both day and evening hours again this year. Read More

Tickets go on sale Wednesday, November 1. Shows run Thursday, November 30 – Sunday, December 3

USI Madrigal Feaste

Tickets for the 48th annual Madrigal Feaste will go on sale on Wednesday, November 1. Shows will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, November 30 – Saturday, December 2 and at 1 p.m. on Sunday, December 3 in Carter Hall.

Saturday, December 9

Fall 2017 Commencement Exercises

The University of Southern Indiana will hold Fall 2017 Commencement Exercises on Saturday, December 9 in the Physical Activities Center. The ceremony for the College of Liberal Arts and Romain College of Business will be held at 10 a.m. and the ceremony for the Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education and the College of Nursing and Health Professions will be held at 1 p.m. Tickets will be required to attend both ceremonies. Eligible graduates may RSVP and reserve tickets until Wednesday, November 1.

 

Indiana State Police at Evansville Receives Four New Troopers

0

Evansville – Lieutenant Brian Bailey, Commander of the Evansville District, welcomes four new troopers to the Evansville District.

On October 19, 33 troopers graduated from the Indiana State Police Recruit School after completing 24 weeks of intense training that exceeded 1,000 hours. Some subject areas of training included criminal and traffic law, crash investigations, emergency vehicle operations, defensive tactics, firearms, and a host of other subjects related to modern policing.

Each graduating trooper was assigned to one of 14 State Police Posts across Indiana. The troopers will now spend the next three months working side by side with a series of experienced Field Training Officers. Upon successful completion of field training, the new troopers will be assigned a state police vehicle and will begin solo patrol in the Evansville District.

New Troopers at Evansville:

  • Kyle Otolski, 23, is a native of Evansville and a 2013 graduate of Harrison High School. He later attended Anderson University where he received a Bachelor’s Degree in Criminal Justice. Otolski currently resides in Evansville and will primarily patrol Warrick County.
  • Jonathan Lukeman, 24, is a native of Evansville and a 2011 graduate of Central High School. He attended Ivy Tech Community College and received an Associate’s Degree in Criminal Justice. He currently resides in Vanderburgh County and will primarily patrol Gibson County.
  • Daltyn Backes, 24, is a native of Evansville and a 2012 graduate of F.J. Reitz High School. He also attended University of Southern Indiana where he majored in Criminal Justice.  Backes currently resides in Evansville and will primarily patrol Posey County.
  • Chase Eaton, 21, is a native of Petersburg and a 2014 graduate of Pike Central High School. He later attended Vincennes University and received an Associate’s Degree in Law Enforcement. Eaton spent nearly three years as a correctional officer and dispatcher at the Pike County Sheriff’s Department before joining the Indiana State Police.  Eaton currently resides in Otwell and will primarily patrol Pike County.

(Pictured L-R) Trooper Kyle Otolski, Trooper Jonathan Lukeman, Trooper Daltyn Backes and Trooper Chase Eat

Adopt A Pet

0

Puddin is a 1-year-old female brown tabby. She’s the mom of the “Autumn food” kittens (who have all been adopted already.) Her adoption fee is only $15 thru October 31st!  Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details.

IS IT TRUE OCTOBER 30, 2017

19

We hope that todays “IS IT TRUE” 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 in a couple of days we shall be making an announcement that will take the City County Observer to the next level of newspaper publishing?  …it took about three (3) years to achieve this milestone?  …we want to thank our readers, advertisers, news contributors, family members in advance for helping us to achieve this important milestone?.

IS IT TRUE its been reported by members of the main stream media that the owners of the McCurdy owes the Evansville Water and Sewer department around $750,000?  …we wonder if this water and sewer bill for McCurdy has been paid?  …if we don’t pay our water and sewer bill the Water and Sewer department would turn off our water?

IS IT TRUE  why hasn’t members of the Evansville City Council confronted City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr. about how much  it costs the taxpayers to subsidize last years Thunderbolts Hockey team?

IS IT TRUE we wonder why members of the City Council hasn’t publicly ask City Controller Russ Lloyd Jr. how much cash advancement did he get from the Tropicana Riverboat fund for 2018?

IS IT TRUE supporters Of Mike Duckworth are telling people if he runs for County Commissioner he is a slam drunk winner? … we would like to  informed  his supporters that there are two other well qualified and savvy businessmen running for this position?

IS IT TRUE  four (4) individuals are seriously considering running against 2nd Ward City Council member Missy Mosby in the Democratic primary? …who ever-decides to run for her council seat better be willing to work day and night to unseat her because she one heck of a campaigner?

  IS IT TRUE we are hearing that at least seven (7) individuals are considering a run for the Evansville City Council at-large seats?  … the at-large City Council seats are always vulnerable because candidates run city wide? …don’t be surprised that all three (3) Council seats have new members?

IS IT TRUE that 6th Ward City Councilman Jim Brinkmeyer is finally doing things that his Westside constituencies even  agree with and it looks like his chances of re-election has improved?

IS IT TRUE we are told that the majority of local Republicans aren’t really upset with Councilman Dan McGinn for declaring that he’s now an Independent?  …we are told that the majority of Republicans are upset with him because of his tax and spend voting record during the last several years?  …according to GOP party chairman , Wayne Park that Mr. McGinn name shall not appear on the next City Council election ballot?

IS IT TRUE  that 4th Ward City Councilwoman Connie Robinson name won’t appear on the next City Council election ballot?  …Mrs. Robinson has served her constitutes well over the last 20 plus years?  …we hear that local banker and past At-Large City Council candidate Alex Burton is being groomed to replace Mrs. Robinson?

IS IT TRUE  the Democrats are going to spend a great deal of time and money to take back the 3rd Ward City Council seat that they held for many years?  …we predict that newly appointed 3rd Ward Council member John Hayden will have one heck of re-election battle to retain his seat on Council?

IS IT TRUE that 5th Ward City Councilman Justin Elpers re-elections chances look very good because of his responsible and conservative voting record?  …he’s also is an extremely friendly and likable person?

IS IT TRUE some of the movers and shakers in the Vanderburgh County Democratic party are saying that Vanderburgh County Commissioner Ben Shoulders is considered to be a raising political star?

Todays READERS POLL question is: Do you feel that Mike Duckworth is a slam dunk winner in the Republican primary for the District #2 Vanderburgh County Commission seat?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “LAW ENFORCEMENT, READERS POLL, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS” posted in our sections.  You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.

 If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.
EDITOR’S FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City County Observer or our advertisers

SANTA ARRIVES IN EVANSVILLE THE FIRST WEEKEND IN NOVEMBER

0

 The Vanderburgh Humane Society’s annual Pet Pictures with Santa are Friday through Sunday, November 3rd-5th.  This year marks the 32nd year for this holiday tradition sponsored by Pet Supplies Plus, Clippinger Financial Group, and Riney Hancock CPA’s. VHS is the ORIGINAL Pet Pictures with Santa in Evansville, and still the best!

Pet Pictures with Santa will take place at WASHINGTON SQUARE MALL. (2016 was the first year back at Washington Square Mall since the 1990’s.) Of course, all pets must be kept on a leash or in a carrier until the time of their photo. Pets should also be current on their rabies vaccination. Times are as follows:

  • Friday, November 3rd, 12 – 7 PM
  • Saturday, November 4th, 10 AM – 5 PM
  • Sunday, November 5th, 12 – 4 PM

For $25, participants receive two digital images for their own use. Photos may include more than one animal, and kids and adults are also welcome in photos! This is an excellent opportunity for a family Christmas card. Costumes are welcome, and rental holiday accessories for pets are available free of charge! Cash or check only please.
It is important to note that Sunday is the busiest day, and the public is encouraged to attend Friday or Saturday to avoid longer wait times.

Both the photographer and the venue space at Washington Square Mall are donated. Therefore, the entire $25 fee will come to the animals of the VHS.  Santa is also taking time out of his busy North Pole schedule and has volunteered to be at the mall on all three days! This is the same Santa who has done VHS photos for years!

The VHS was the first in the area to introduce Pet Pictures with Santa over 30 years ago.  This fundraiser averages $8,000 a year.  Typically, the three-day event has hundreds of pet owners bringing pets of all types. Santa has been known to visit with not only dogs but cats, pocket pets, rabbits, chickens, snakes, pigs, even goats & horses! Funds raised from this event will help the VHS care for the nearly 3,000 animals that are surrendered to the facility each year, provide low cost spay/neuter services, and educate the public on important animal issues.

For more information on this event and for photo/broadcast opportunities, please contact Amanda Coburn at the contact information above.

 

Rising Water Costs Tax Hoosiers

0

Rising Water Costs Tax Hoosiers

By Adrianna Pitrelli
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Water prices are steadily rising for Hoosiers because of over usage and old infrastructure, which causes leaks, water conservation advocates said Wednesday.

“The impact is so significant because water is a basic necessity of life,” said Kerwin Olsen, executive director of the Citizens Action Coalition. “We need to figure out ways to make sure that people can afford the water services and waste water services to make sure the most vulnerable people in our communities are healthy and safe.”

The discussion took place at the meeting of the Interim Study Committee on Environmental Affairs. The focus of the group was to take suggestions for a proposal about ways to fix the financial drain water services can have on Hoosiers.

A 2017 Michigan State University study shows water rates across the country have risen 41 percent since 2010. Today about 12 percent of Hoosier households cannot afford their water bills. Within the next five years, Olsen said he expects more than a third of households across the state to not be able to afford their water bill.

In some Indiana communities, the price a resident pays does not correlate to how much water they use. A neighbor who waters their grass every day would pay the same amount as someone who only waters once a week. Instead of this process, Olsen recommends people pay based on consumption.

“The more you use, the more you should pay,” he said. “If you’re going to make demands on the system, then you need to pay the price that comes with that.”

Currently, some rates are not based on how much water a household uses because the numbers from each water meter is combined to provide fixed rates. Some neighborhoods have argued the billing system is easier because it gives potential residents a rounded number of what their utility bill will be if they move in.

But Olsen said it isn’t a fair system and he wants to see it fixed. He and others who testified said it is also important for people to understand the significance of saving water.

Jeff Willman, vice president of Citizens Energy Group talks to the Interim Study Committee on Environmental Affairs Wednesday. He said conserving water is as easy as getting low flow toilets and turning off irrigation systems when they aren’t needed. Photo by Adrianna Pitrelli, TheStatehouseFile.com

“We want people to know the conservation is working and that if the average day consumption lowers, so will the price of their bill,” said Jeff Willman, vice president of Citizens Energy Group. “Low flow shower heads, low flow toilets, all those things add up and are working, so people need to do it more frequently.”

Willman said another way people can save water is by turning off the irrigation systems when it isn’t needed.

“There is no need to use an irrigation system if it has been raining a lot, for instance,” Willman said. “If we educate people and they start to irrigate 10 percent less, then we can save $50 million within 25 years.”

Educating Hoosiers on how much water they’re using is a plan that Sen. David Niezgodski, D-South Bend, would also like to see implemented.

“When customers are more cognitive of what they’re doing, they have a much better opportunity serving in the long run,” Niezgodski said. “If people have a meter for irrigation separated from their house, they would know the impact it’s making.”

While education was said to be important to making a change to the water payments, others said fixing infrastructure will help stop wasting water.

Jim McGoff, director of environmental programs at the Indiana Finance Authority, said 50 million gallons of water are lost each year because of leaks in the system. He said it is equivalent to a waste of nearly $4 million.

“Last year when we evaluated utilities across the state, we saw there is a lot of potential need for infrastructure facilities,” he said. “We will have to spend money up front but it’ll save a lot of money in the long run so it’s something to look into.”

Issues include leaking pipes and aging infrastructure that are not up to date with technology. The Michigan State study also said it will cost more than $1 trillion nationwide to fix the water systems over the next 25 years.

The Indiana Finance Authority will outline a comprehensive plan, which they hope lawmakers will take into consideration in the upcoming legislative session.

Adrianna Pitrelli is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

FACT-CHECKING THE NEW YORK TIMES

0

By Rick Jensen

The New York Times editorial board recently published, “5 Climate Truths Donald Trump Doesn’t Understand.”

While there are likely many climate truths the president doesn’t understand, the editors have now indelibly etched into the internet the fact that they, like Trump, do not understand “climate truths.”

Let’s begin by ransacking words from The Bard: “I come not to praise the president but to bury the notion that the Times’ editors have a clue.”

Times point #1:”Trump cannot save coal.He only says he can.”

James Bennet’s crew laments the EPA decision to revoke “Barack Obama’s commitment under the Paris climate agreement to cut United States greenhouse gas emissions by 26 percent to 28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.” They also grieve for allowing coal fired power plants to be at the ready in times of need.

Neither of these has anything to do with a “climate truth.”They are simply policies which would be more accurately described as “energy truths” or “policy change truths.”

A real “climate truth” in this vein would be to opine upon the genuine debate among scientists as to whether CO2 causes climate change or is a result of climate change most likely caused by the sun.

Reading the Times regularly, one may believe 97 percent of scientists claim man is causing global warming. That’s simply not true.

The short version is that if you believe 160 climate scientists in one study or 200 in another represents “97 percent,” then have at it.

If you believe 41 papers (0.3 percent of all 11,944 abstracts or 1.0 percent of the 4,014 expressing an opinion regarding anthropogenic climate change, in another study) represents 97 percent, then you will pass the Times editors’ climate change quiz.

An excellent overview of this resides in an October 8, 2015 National Review article by Ian Tuttle. You could also ask climatologist Dr. David Legates at the University of Delaware, a former state meteorologist.

As for myself, this belief in climate change seems absolutely religious on the political left and quite atheistic on the political right.

Why can’t we simply listen to the scientists while they work it out?

Ah! That brings us back to the Times dribble.

Times Point #2: “Coal use is declining.”

True, natural gas in surging. But this is not a “climate truth.”It is a “marketplace truth.”

Unfortunately, the clerics at the Times First Church of Anthropogenicy are blinded by their own scripture.

Times Point #3:”Renewable energy is coming on strong.”

True. While energy companies continue to experiment with alternative energies, coal use is declining.

Again, the Times’ climate clerics have articulated a “market truth,” not “climate truth.”

A “climate truth” would be: “only 36 percent of geoscientists and engineers believe that humans are creating a global warming crisis, according to a survey reported in the peer-reviewed “Organizational Studies.” By contrast, a strong majority of the 1,077 respondents believe that nature is the primary cause of recent global warming and/or that future global warming will not be a very serious problem.”

Only 17 percent are the Al Gore-Times styled “fatalists,” believing man is causing climate change and we’re doomed.

Times Point #4:”Wind and solar are becoming cheaper.”

That’s nice. Still not a “climate truth.”

Times Point #5: “Technology is helping renewables.”

While the Times’ Bishops of Bloviating Bullhockey genuflect at this alleged “climate truth,” anyone smart enough to clear one’s cache to evade news site paywalls recognizes this to be a disturbing waste of reading time unless it’s included in a well-researched piece that articulates the toxic sulphuric waste of supposedly “clean” Bloom Energy boxes and the latest developments in lithium-ion batteries.

Instead, the Times Council of Congregational Climate Clergy simply states batteries are getting cheaper.

Currently, the cost of batteries is less relevant than their holding capacity, discharge and recharging rate.

When wind turbines can power effective batteries with holding capacities of weeks not minutes, perhaps fewer of these government-subsidized corporations will go bankrupt.

When the Times replaces their editorial staff of politically liberal posers with independent thinkers, perhaps it will survive its current intellectual bankruptcy.