Evansville Museum History Extravaganza
UE Men’s Soccer falls to Grand Canyon
Aces suffer first loss of the season
 PHOENIX, Ariz – On a night that saw the 22nd ranked University of Evansville men’s soccer team dominate the action for much of the game, a late goal sent the Aces to their first loss of the season, as they fell to Grand Canyon University 1-0, in front of a crowd of more than 3,500 in Phoenix, Arizona Thursday night.
“That was a good college soccer match tonight”, said UE Men’s soccer coach Marshall Ray. “It’s an environment that any kid playing in Division One soccer would want to play in. I felt like we took it to them here tonight. It was two good teams going after it.
After 74 minutes of scoreless soccer, redshirt sophomore Hunter DeWeese (Haubstadt, Ind.) was given a yellow card just outside the Evansville box. Grand Canyon’s Alex Ramirez sent the ensuing free kick in front of the net, setting up Niki Jackson for a header, which beat replacement goalie Frederik Reimer the lone goal of the game. The Antelopes move to 1-and-3 on the season with the win.
The lone tally of the night came after the Aces (4-1) had several scoring opportunities thwarted by either GCU goalkeeper Jeremy Pollard or the crossbar. Still. Ray was pleased with his squad’s effort.
“I think we were unlucky”, said Ray. “The cross bar was not our friend this evening, that’s for sure. I think in the second half we continued to battle and push to get the winner. And when we gave up the goal, the guys responded well and created some more chances. It’s just unfortunate that we couldn’t get one to tie it and get it to overtime.”
As for Reimer, the sophomore from Vester Hassing, Denmark replaced senior Matthew Keller (Carmel, Ind.), who went down with a leg injury in the 35th minute of play. Reimer faced six shots on goal, making 5 saves in his first action of the season. An elbow injury had sidelined him for the Aces’ first four games.
“Keller, I think he pulled something on one of those things”, said Ray. “He said he felt it spas up pretty quick, and that’s the reason he came out. I think Frederik responded well. It would have been nice to get him a few more minutes in training and in other spots, but he came in and made some saves and was commanding in the back, and was able to organize things.”
Despite suffering the first loss of the 2017 campaign, Ray feels positive about the team’s performance and believes it’s a game to grow on.
“We’ll watch some video, get ourselves back to Evansville, and get ready for Butler”, said Ray. “But I think we can walk out of here with our head held high, that we battled and competed with a good college team in front of a great crowd this evening, and look forward to get back on the field and playing in front of our fans, when we come home for Eastern Illinois.”
The Aces are back in action Tuesday, September 12, when they make the trip to Indianapolis to take on Butler.
CCO EXCLUSIVE: SCOTT DANKS WILL REMAIN AS DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHAIRMAN
SCOTT DANKS WILL REMAIN AS DEMOCRATIC PARTY CHAIRMAN
In an exclusive interview with the CCO, Vanderburgh County Democratic Chairman Scott Danks announced that he has no immediate plans to step down as a party chairman.
Danks had previously announced his desire to resign as party chairman due to the required time commitment to affectively re-structure, re-organize and energize the party.
Following Danks’s announcement, he was inundated with request from party members, officeholders and candidates to stay on. Moreover, many of these individuals offered to assume various task to relieve Danks and other members of the Central Committee of some of the workload.
Danks said the next 30 days will be very time-consuming with the Democratic party’s golf scramble on September 18th and the party’s annual dinner on October 6th. Thereafter, Danks, his Central Committee and other highly active Democrats Will be able to focus on rebuilding the party.
Danks said he is “very passionate towards the Democratic Party and getting Democrats elected to office” and that “I will stay on until our goals are accomplished”.
However, Danks further indicated that if a highly qualified person who can demonstrate a willingness and ability to make the necessary time commitment to the chairmanship position and who has the support of the current Democratic office holders comes forward that he would certainly consider “passing the torch”.
TROPICANA EVANSVILLE TO OPEN NEW LAND-BASED CASINO ON OCTOBER 20, 2017
After nearly 22 years, operating as Indiana’s first riverboat casino, Tropicana Evansville is scheduled to cut the ribbon on their new land-based casino and entertainment facility on Friday, October 20, 2017, at 10AM CST.
The new 75,000 square-foot entertainment complex, located between the Tropicana Evansville and Le Merigot Hotels, contains a sweeping single-level casino floor, two restaurants and an entertainment lounge.
The 24-hour casino features 45,000 square feet of gaming space featuring 1,175 slot machines, over 30 table games, Poker Room and a High Limit Room.
The TAP HOUSE Restaurant & Bar features an impressive 36 tap handles pouring a rotating selection of seasonal beers, half dedicated to Indiana and Tri-State regional favorites.
The 24-hour Deli serves New York-style fare around the clock featuring Boar’s Head® meats and cheeses, Nathan’s® all beef hot dogs, Maxwell Street polish sausage and more.
421 is Tropicana Evansville’s new sleek and contemporary entertainment lounge showcasing music videos, nightly live entertainment and the best DJs in the business.
For event and entertainment information, visit www.TropEvansville.com
Mandatory Evacuations Forces Florida Residents to Abandon Homes
Mandatory Evacuations Forces Florida Residents to Abandon Homes
Gary Wagner’s condo is located in Key West, and he also owns property in Fort Myers. Wagner says he’s keeping in mind that material things can be replaced. “It’s a matter of the house or the condo. It ain’t–we don’t have anyone living there, that it’s a matter of life and death. It is a concern to us in dollars, but we do have flood insurance.â€
Wagner says he’s never risked staying through a hurricane.
Irma has already proven deadly in the eastern Caribbean. It’s expected to impact Florida this weekend.
Florida Governor Rick Scott is urging people to take this storm seriously and prepare now.
Will Read and Sing for Food:
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Criminal code reform review: Low-level felonies soar, jails feel brunt
Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com
The number of people serving time in local jails instead of the Department of Correction on low-level felony convictions rose 177 percent in the two years since Indiana’s criminal code reform took effect, and 28 percent more were people convicted of the new Level 6 felony compared to the prior Class D felony.
Those were among the findings presented Wednesday to the General Assembly’s interim Committee on Corrections and Criminal Code by Dave Williams, project manager for court technology for the Indiana Supreme Court.
The code reform in House Enrolled Act 1006 that took effect in July 2015 converted Class D felonies and some Class C felony drug and property crimes into a new Level 6 felony category. Williams said the result has been more people convicted of Level 6 felonies, but fewer serving significant sentences. The average sentence for low-level felonies declined 31 percent in July 2017 compared with June 2014.
“In March 2014, the most common D felony sentence was straight to DOC,†Williams told the committee. “In December 2016 (for convictions of a Level 6 felony), that sentence had fallen to the fifth most common.†Judges instead most commonly sentenced Level 6 felony offenders to community corrections, probation, or to time executed in the county jail.
The committee in its statutory review of the implementation of criminal code reform heard varying views about whether the reforms have been positive, but most agreed that local jails are feeling the brunt of housing offenders who previously would have been sentenced to DOC.
Williams told the committee that jails are reimbursed $35 a day per inmate by the DOC. The DOC receives $55 a day per inmate it houses. But that’s not the only way jails are shorted under the current system. Jails aren’t reimbursed for people held pretrial — an amount Williams said worked out to $43 million last year at the $35 daily rate.
Vanderburgh County Prosecutor Nicholas Hermann said many local jails are bursting at the seams, and more than 30 counties in Indiana are studying or have plans to enlarge their jails. He also noted that as with pretrial detainees, counties receive no funding from the state for offenders who are placed on probation or in community corrections. Nevertheless, these programs still bear costs paid by local taxpayers.
Hermann also linked criminal code reform with a rise in felony charges, noting that after they declined statewide in 2014, they are on pace in 2017 to be the highest this decade. Meanwhile, he said law enforcement in many cases is reluctant to charge misdemeanors, and probation departments are reluctant in some cases to report violations because jails lack space to house them.
As a result, he said consequences for failing drug screens or not following through with treatment are reduced. “In my community, people are not likely to get rearrested for violating until their fifth or sixth violation,†Hermann said. “Our ability to provide that negative incentive has gone away.â€
He said lower penalties for lower-level offenses may have encouraged offenders to “level up†from theft to burglary to robbery, for example. “Crime rates are up, CHINS cases are up, overdose rates are going up,†Hermann said. “We’re not winning,†he said. “And I don’t mean prosecutors, I mean the people of Indiana.â€
But Indiana Public Defender Council Executive Director Larry Landis said it’s too early to draw conclusions about code reform. Having been enacted in July 2015, impact on sentencing and crime would not have been known for many months, or perhaps as long as a year later. He said there was no evidence linking code reform to a rise in crime, calling such assertions “misleading at best.â€
“One thing we know for sure is we have an opioid crisis, we have a heroin crisis. Neither of them were caused by (criminal code reform),†he said. Landis also noted prosecutors in most cases have more say than judges over sentences in plea agreements, which is the way most low-level felony cases are resolved.
Landis said jail crowding was in many cases due to too many people being held pending trial, largely because they can’t afford bail. He encouraged lawmakers to back evidence-based bail reform, and bemoaned that just 11 counties are participating in a pilot project.“Every county should be doing bail reform,†he said, noting similar efforts are gaining steam nationally. “We’re not going to be immune to the bail-reform movement that’s going on.â€
Landis and several lawmakers agreed with the need to better treat offenders with substance abuse and mental health issues. “The issue is, we don’t have an appropriate place for them, so we put them in jail.â€
The committee will meet again on Sept. 19.
Invitation to the University Parkway Corridor Plan Public Workshop
The Vanderburgh County Commissioners, Evansville-Vanderburgh County Area Plan Commission (APC), and Evansville Metropolitan Planning Organization (EMPO) have partnered to create the University Parkway Corridor Management and Land Use Plan. They will host the first in a series of public meetings to engage our community in the creation of the University Parkway Corridor Plan. The meeting will be held on Monday, September 18th, 2017 from 6:00 pm until 7:30 pm at the Griffin Center Great Hall, 8600 University Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana 47712.
There will be an informative presentation at the beginning of the meeting that explains the purpose of this plan and the planning process. Â Participants will then be broken down into small work groups to brainstorm ideas and discuss a vision for the future of the corridor. The project team will facilitate this discussion.
Due to growth anticipated from the planned extension of sanitary sewers and the many tracts of undeveloped land in the area, the goal of the corridor plan is to prepare for the future by coordinating appropriate, planned development with transportation and other infrastructure investments over time. The project area includes over 9 square miles and is bounded by State Road 66 to the north; State Road 62 to the south; Schutte Road, Peerless Road, and Church Road to the east; and the Vanderburgh/Posey County line to the west.
The corridor plan will offer specific land use recommendations on future development, preserving the corridor’s resources, and amending the Zoning Ordinance to ensure that future development meets the vision and intent of the Plan. Since the Parkway serves as a critical thoroughfare in western Vanderburgh County providing access to the University of Southern Indiana, the transportation component of the Plan will focus on protecting the Parkway for the efficient and safe movement of traffic, and identifying any future road improvements needed.
County Commission President Bruce Ungethiem encourages the public to participate in this planning process for the future of the University Parkway corridor. He stated, “We want this plan to reflect our community and for there to be buy-in from all interested parties. The only way for that to happen is if we can get lots of ideas from the public and we all work toward consensus on a vision for the corridor. New development should be properly planned, fit in its surroundings and enhance the area. We have a nice parkway out there, and the County should protect its investment.â€Â He also offered a reminder that “New developments will be around for generations, so we want to do this right.â€
For those who wish to provide input on the plan remotely, the project team encourages community members to comment through the project’s website at www.universityparkwayplan.com.
If you would like more information about this topic, please contact Blaine Oliver, Assistant Director at 812-435-5226 or email atUniversityparkwayplan@gmail.com.