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Sunday Alcohol Sales Gains Support Article Analysis By Gail Riecken

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Sunday Alcohol Sales Gains Support Article Analysis By CCO State House Editor Gail Riecken

The article on alcohol sales reminds me of one retiring colleague’s remark. He said something like I guess people will remember me as the the “sin” guy. Not far from wrong. He did lead the complicated issues of gaming/alcohol/and e-cigarettes during the last years of his membership in the legislature and he truly did a great job.

Now putting an end to the Sunday alcohol sales controversy is on the table and possibly near agreement. Let’s hope so. This issue can take the energy out of a session,  and there are so many other important issues that need discussing.

Just this summer there were 8 interim study committee meetings alone on the subject of alcohol, when only three were held each on the important issues of education and elections. Public health, behavioral health and human services interim study committee was scheduled for three meetings and the agenda and presentations from those meetings absolutely commanded more time. Think of just how critical the issues are on each of these topics.

It seems the alcohol parties with vested interests are coming to agreement. Let’s hope they work out their remaining  problems between now and the beginning of session. If not, this issue will drag on throughout session and the games will begin.

Gail Riecken

City County Observer State House Editor

Sunday Alcohol Sales Gains Support

By Adrianna Pitrelli for TheStatehouseFile.com

The Alcohol Code Revision Commission agreed Tuesday that Indiana lawmakers should allow alcohol sales on Sunday, but will wait until next month to work out the details in proposed legislation.

“Sixty-eight percent of people in Indiana want cold beer to be sold in convenient stores and grocery stores,” Sen. Phil Boots, R-Crawfordsville, said. “We should do what’s right for the state of Indiana.”

Sen. Phil Boots, R-Crawfordsville.  Photo by Dustin Beach, TheStatehouseFile.com

The commission’s agenda covered the selling of cold beer and Sunday alcohol sales, and agreed Sunday sales should be allowed. Members are still split on who should be able to sell cold six-packs of beer.

The commission has been meeting throughout the fall to prepare for the 2018 legislative session. Lawmakers earlier this year decided a review of the state’s alcohol laws was needed after a controversy arose over the sale of cold beer.

Convenience store owner Jay Ricker got around the cold beer ban by turning some of his locations into restaurants and then getting a liquor license. Lawmakers banned that tactic but agreed that the state’s alcohol control laws needed to be updated.

The commission reviewed bills proposing Sunday sales. One of them would allow liquor, grocery and convenience stores to sell alcohol from noon until 8 p.m.

Final versions of proposed legislation will be included in the commission’s report. The commission’s recommendations, to be voted on next month, will go to the General Assembly in January to be further discussed and possibly voted on. If any of the proposed legislation becomes law, none is expected to take effect until July 2019.

Indiana is the only state that regulates beer sales based on temperature and only one of nine restricting or prohibiting Sunday alcohol sales,  according to the National Association of Convenience Stores.

Boots doesn’t sit on the committee, but he’s been to nearly every meeting because he strongly supports Sunday alcohol sales and the purchase of cold beer in convenience and grocery stores.

“Sunday is the second busiest shopping day of the week,” Boots said. “Every other state around us sells alcohol on Sunday so we lose sales tax and revenue by not selling on Sundays.”

Boots proposed creating a supplemental license for stores that want to sell on Sundays. It would be a one-day addition to the current six-day license, which Boots said would amount to a $2.3 million increase in revenues.

Commission member Keith Byers agreed Sunday alcohol sales should be permitted.

“I’ve heard nothing that convinces me that Sunday sales is going to add any more alcohol abuse or underage drinking,” Byers said. “To me, it’s a free market issue.”

Sen. Lonnie Randolph, D-East Chicago, was the most outspoken against Sunday sales.

“If we allow cold beer sales on Sundays, I can see family-owned liquor stores going out of business,” he said. “I’m not particularly religious, but beer and religion don’t equate.”

The other issue raised, the sale of cold beer in venues other than package liquor stores, was the subject of more debate among the members of the commission.

“There is no difference between buying a cold beer in a package store and buying a cold beer in a convenient store,” Boots said. “If you are able to sell it responsibility, you should be able to sell it rather if it is warm or cold.”

Byers disagreed, saying the only people who should be able to sell it cold are those who already have a permit to do so.

“There is only one reason to have cold beer in a gas station,” Byers said. “You’re going to go in and buy is then go to your car and open it up.”

The meeting followed an announcement late last week from the Indiana Association of Beverage Retailers and the Indiana Retail Council that they agreed to put aside past differences and support Sunday alcohol sales. They also agreed to unite in opposition to cold beer sales outside of a package liquor store.

Previously, liquor stores said they would support Sunday sales if there were restrictions, like building walled-off areas to put the alcohol for sale. But under the agreement announced Friday, they would no longer advocate for those restrictions. Rather, liquor stores will have support from big-box stores to block the expansion of cold beer sales in places like gas stations.

The commission has two more scheduled meetings prior to the start of the 2018 legislative session and 20 alcohol-related draft legislation under consideration. They include requiring everyone to be carded when purchasing alcohol and allowing minors in a liquor store with a parent or guardian. The next meeting is Dec. 1.

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

EDUCATION FOR EVERYONE

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EDUCATION FOR EVERYONE

BY MARK HURT CANDIDATE FOR THE UNITED STATES SENATE 

At a Lincoln Day event in Jasper County earlier this year, one of my advisers had an interesting experience. One, I am sure, well-intentioned young attendee asked him why Republicans were not more in favor of higher education. Whey he pressed him for what he meant, he cited that New York had just passed a bill authorizing free college education for any New York resident making an annual income of $ 100,000.00 or less. The young attendee thought that might be a good platform plank to attract young people to the Republican side.

They had a good conversation. My friend reminded him that the socialist Bernie Sanders had the same idea in the last Presidential race and that Hillary Clinton was close that same view – both embracing more and more the socialist approach to problem solving – spend other people’s money. He recalled for him that the country Sanders cited as a prime example of what New York was trying to do now was Norway. A paradise, if you believe United Nations’ reports on the best countries in which to live. Yes, in Norway there is universal free education through the university and universal free medical care. Sounds great, even assuming incorrectly that the care they receive is on par with hospitals in the USA.

Any downsides he asked him? None the college junior could think of.
Here are a couple downsides. The lowest federal income rate in Norway is 40% and no deductions are allowed. If you make more than $ 78,000 per year, the income tax rate jumps to 68%. Also, there is a 25% national sales tax (what Europeans refer to as a VAT – a Value Added Tax) and a 100% tax on new vehicles, yes 100%! A Honda, for example costing $20,000 in the USA would then be just under $40,000 in Norway. Furthermore, gas is perpetually at least $ 10.00 per gallon. That is why most Norwegians do not own cars and fewer still own homes, and Norwegians have the highest personal debt in the world.
A socialist paradise? Not quite, just in theory. My colleague asked the young Lincoln Day attendee how those numbers fitted into his expected $23,000 per year salary upon graduation from IUPUI. He was floored. As the student put it, “I never thought about that and our professors do not mention it.” As the famous business guru, Dr. W. Edward Deming used to say, “In God we trust, all others bring data.”

ROY MOORE

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Cops Connecting With Kids Pick Cedar Hall School Students Part of “Reveal Week” 2018 Disney Trip

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Evansville Police Officers and Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Deputies joined the staff of Cedar Hall School yesterday for their 2018 Walt Disney World trip reveal.

At the school wide assembly our law enforcement professionals  announced that 16 students will travel to Walt Disney World as part of the “Cops Connecting With Kids” program in January, 2018.

The group will take 48 kids in total from McGary Middle School, Glenwood Leadership Academy, and Cedar Hall. The McGary kids found out they earned their trip on Monday. The Glenwood kids will find out on Friday morning during their 9:00am assembly.

The “Cops Connecting With Kids Disney” trip is completely funded through a sponsorship program and fundraisers. The goal of the “Cops Connecting With Kids” program is to build relationships with kids through positive interactions with law enforcement.

In the first three years of the program, 118 kids earned an all expenses paid trip to the Disney theme parks. The 2018 trip will bring the total to 166 kids.

Commentary: Still a fight for love and glory

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com 

INDIANAPOLIS – The actress Lauren Bacall once affectionately called her husband Humphrey Bogart “the ugliest handsome man you’ve ever seen.”

As I sit in a movie theater watching a special 75th anniversary screening of the Bogart classic “Casablanca,” I realize how apt Bacall’s description was.

 

In many ways, Bogart was the most unlikely of screen idols.

A slight man with an oversized head who spoke with a slight lisp and had a face almost skeletal in structure, by all common reckoning he shouldn’t have been able to radiate the force he did.

But he did.

In this, the most star-making of his many complex and powerful performances, he did more than own the screen. He created a character that set a code for masculine conduct that lasted for at least two generations.

The movie’s plot is familiar, a tale of two pining lovers – Bogart’s Rick and Ingrid Bergman’s Ilsa – separated by fate and circumstance in a world “gone crazy,” one plunged into the maelstrom of a global war. The tension in their story is as old as life itself, the conflict between desire and duty.

Bogart’s Rick is a reluctant hero. At the beginning of the film, he is a wounded man. To the outward world, he is cool and confident, a graceful, self-assured figure in an immaculate white dinner jacket. In private, he nurses his wounds, bathing them in bourbon to the tune of a tinkling piano.

Rick’s narrative arc is the movie’s point. As the plot propels itself forward, Rick rediscovers his best self, remembering his responsibilities to others and to the world around him as he sacrifices the thing he wants most – a life with Ilsa – so he and she can serve the greater good.

There are, to be sure, moments that now seem absurd.

As I watch the scene in which the lovers have reconciled, temporarily, and Bergman’s Ilsa says to Bogart’s Rick that she feels so overwhelmed that he will have “think for both of us,” I try to imagine a circumstance in which my wife, my daughter or any other woman I respect would say such a thing to a man.

I cannot conjure up a single plane of reality in which that might occur.

Nor would I want it to.

Other parts of the Bogart/Rick code, though, still resonate.

Part of that code is the implied assertion that a man’s character should be defined and revealed through his conduct. That what he feels should be made clear by what he does, how he cares for those around him, what he defends, what he resists and where he stands when things that matter are at stake.

And some of that code also can be found in what a man holds back, the taciturn refusal to display one’s wounds, which is an act of faith that there can be and is dignity in owning one’s vulnerabilities and disappointments without reveling in them.

We all hurt at times, but we all have to find ways to keep going.

We owe that much not just to those around us, but to our best selves.

The film’s final scene is justly famous. In it, Bogart’s Rick and the superb Claude Rains’ Capt. Renault, having resolved to return to the world of conflict, stride into the fog, two small figures who seem to grow in stature even as they disappear into the mists, two men ennobled by their determination to try to make moral sense of a world enshrouded by chaos and malice.

The movie’s message – that we should focus not just on what we are owed but also on what we owe others and the world around us – is as pertinent today as it was in 1942.

As the song “Casablanca” made famous makes clear, it’s still “a fight for love and glory, a case of do or die.”

Because we still live in a world where “the fundamental things apply, as time goes by.”

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

NCAA II XC Championship Start Times Moved Up

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Due to the threat of inclement weather in the Evansville Tri-State area late Saturday morning, the start times for the NCAA Division II Cross Country Championships at Angel Mounds have been moved up.

The women’s six-kilometer race is now scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. (CST), while the men’s 10k race has been changed to a 9:30 a.m. start time.

Otters Sign Rookie Outfielder

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The Evansville Otters have signed outfielder John Kukura of Pace University to a 2018 contract.
A 2017 graduate, Kukura collected 205 hits in 166 games with Pace to finish fifth on the school’s all-time hits list.  The New York City native holds Pace’s career record with 11 triples, including a single-season mark of eight as a junior in 2016.  Kukura hit .341 with 33 RBIs and a .536 slugging percentage in 2016 to be named Pace’s Co-Male Athlete of the Year.

Kukura earned first-team all-Northeast Ten Conference accolades in 2016 and 2017 as well as back-to-back American Baseball Coaches Association All-Region honors.  He was also named to both the CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team and NE10 Academic All-Conference Team in 2016 and 2017.

The Otters will face the Washington Wild Things at Bosse Field on May 11 to open the 2018 Frontier League regular season.

Volleyball To Wrap up 2017 Season On The Road

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Purple Aces Play Bradley And Illinois State

 In the last weekend of the regular season, the University of Evansville volleyball team heads north for matches at Bradley and Loyola.

Last weekend, the Purple Aces completed the home schedule against Valparaiso and Loyola.  UE dropped those contests by finals of 3-1 and 3-0, respectively.  Mildrelis Rodriguez had a match-high 17 kills against the Crusaders while Rachel Tam posted 13 to lead the team on Saturday versus the Ramblers.

The Purple Aces honored their four seniors as the team completed its home schedule.  Prior to Saturday’s contest against Loyola, Cathy Schreiber, Erlicia Griffith, Montana Schafer and Jelena Merseli were recognized.

Mildrelis Rodriguez has always done well for the Aces on both sides of the net and that showed on Friday against Valparaiso.  The junior finished the contest with 20 digs and 17 kills.  In a 5-set win over Bradley earlier this season, Rodriguez had a great 20-20 performance, notching 21 kills and 22 digs while adding three block assists.  It was the first such performance for a UE player since Brooke Maher in 2010.  Maher had 20 kills and 31 digs versus Drake on Nov. 20, 2010.  Rodriguez is second on the team with 2.44 kills per set and is also second with 3.46 digs per game.

Rachel Tam had a strong effort in the final weekend of home action as she finished with 23 kills in the contests against Valpo and Loyola.  That translated into an average of 3.29 per set.  In her previous 30 sets of work, Tam averaged just 2.0 kills per set.  In the first meeting of the season at SIU, she set career marks in kills (27) and attempts (79).  Her kill total was the most for a UE player since Oct. 24, 2015.  Tam continues to lead the way for the Aces with 2.86 kills per set.

Sitting at .267 for the season, Cathy Schreiber has been UE’s most accurate hitter.  In the weekend of October 27-28, Schreiber had 24 kills in 44 attempts with just six errors while notching 4.00 kills per set.  Schreiber’s season hitting mark of .267 ranks near the top ten in the MVC.  She has had double figure kills in five of the last 10 matches while hitting .300 or higher on ten occasions.

Entering the final weekend of play, Bradley sits at 9-21 overall and 2-14 in conference play.  They have dropped their last five league outings.  Erica Haslag is ranked second in the Valley with 4.28 blocks per set while Kathryn Graf is third in blocks with an average of 0.98 per game.

Illinois State enters the homestretch with a mark of 18-11 and are solidly in the conference tournament with an 11-5 record.  The Redbirds have won three in a row, taking down Valparaiso, Loyola and Bradley.  Jaelyn Keene sits third in the MVC with 3.99 kills per set while Courtney Pence leads the Valley in digs (6.62/set).

AXIOM Designs Vinyl Wraps for Evansville Police Department Mounted Patrol Horse Trailers

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ESpeck and Blondie, popular members of the Evansville Police Department’s mounted patrol unit, are no longer transported via unmarked vehicles. Their two horse trailers, now bearing newly designed vinyl wraps were unveiled November 8, 2017 at a news conference held on the grounds of the Boys & Girls Club of Evansville. Design services were provided by Evansville marketing company, AXIOM.

The concepts, created by AXIOM Art Director, Jason Snader, incorporate the colors of blue traditionally associated with law enforcement, as well as images of galloping horses, and Evansville landmarks. Alvey’s Sign Company, Inc., also of Evansville, printed and installed the vinyl wraps.

EDITORS FOOTNOTE: AXIOM is a full-service Marketing, Media, and Digital agency headquartered in Evansville.

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