IS IT TRUE OCTOBER 02, 2017
EDITOR’S FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column do not represent the views or opinions of the City County Observer or our
Youth Home Groundbreaking in Evansville
CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Youth Home Groundbreaking in Evansville
The new boys home will be larger than the current home and will allow United Methodist to house as many boys as they do girls, in their residential program. In 2016, the youth home served 52 children but had to turn away 59 kids because they were full.
United Methodist Group Home Director of Development, Travis Johnson says, “We want to be able to give the kids something that is safer and more inviting for the growth that they need to become mature adults.â€
So far a little more than $300,000 dollars was raised for the boys’ home but their goal is $400,000 dollars. For ways to donate visit
TRUMP’S ‘HIRE AMERICAN’ ORDER HAS STALLED
TRUMP’S ‘HIRE AMERICAN’ ORDER HAS STALLED
By Joe Guzzardi
While the headlines scream DACA, DACA, DACAdeferred action for childhood arrivals, as if all reading America doesn’t already knowanother work authorization program that stumping candidate Trump criticized rolls on.
The H-1B visa made national headlines last year when major corporations fired Americans workers, and forced them to train their foreign-born visa replacements or lose their severance packages. The corporations that fired Americans with families, mortgages and auto loans, sending them packing into a weak employment market, included household names like Disney, McDonald’s and Caterpillar. Displaced Americans call their firing, and then the hiring of overseas workers to take their jobs, treasonan understandable sentiment.
The “hire American†half of President Trump’s “Buy American, Hire American†executive order is tough to fulfill when the H-1B visa, advertised as temporary but valid for six years, gluts the labor pool with cheap overseas employees. Every year, 65,000 foreign workers come to the U.S. on H-1B visas. Another 20,000 already in the U.S. as students are issued H-1B visas.
In a relatively new wrinkle sanctioned under the radar, universities and nonprofits have been exempted from the congressionally approved 85,000 cap, so the total work authorization documents issued to foreign nationals may be hundreds of thousands each year.
President Trump’s executive order correctly identified the multiple flaws of the H-1B, and singled out the biggest abusers, Tata, Infosys and Cognizant. Trump: “So 80 percent [of H-1B visa workers] receive less than the median wage, and only 10 percent receive the median wage.†The order drew the obvious conclusion: Less skilled foreign workers are often brought in well below market rates to replace American workers.
The permanent cure to corporations’ excessive, unjust H-1B reliance is congressional action that would slow down H-1B issuance or put the visa in the deep freezer for a decade or so. Reams of nonpartisan research show that there’s no American tech worker shortage. To the contrary, tech companies are prolific job-cutters. Challenger Gray & Christmas, Inc., outplacement experts that compile data on workforce reductions, found that technology companies have cut more than 413,000 jobs since 2012, including more than 96,000 in 2016.
Even the adamantly pro-immigration, anti-Trump New York Times published a story that questioned the tech companies’ claim that its industry has 500,000 jobs it cannot fill. The Los Angeles Times has seen the light, too, and called shortage claims “phony.†Silicon Valley’s cry wolf allegations succeed with Congress, but have come under increasing scrutiny among impartial analysts.
So far, President Trump has done little to fulfill his campaign promise to rein in the H-1B. He may be hesitant to undertake what could be a losing showdown with an H-1B-loving Congress. Even if Congress cooperated with Trump, unraveling the H-1B regulatory maze would be an unholy mess.
The Departments of State, Justice, Homeland Security and Labor all have roles in overseeing the H-1B, and have written hundreds of pages of unfathomable regulations that govern the visa.
Sounds like it’s time for President Trump to get out his pen and phone, and put them to use the way his predecessor successfully did. For starters, a one-sentence executive order would be plenty: “Effective immediately, future H-1B visas expire one year from the issuance date.†The pen and phone technique would circumvent donor-dependent congressional Republicans that reply on tech titans’ money, and would help employers hire American.
Sheriff’s Office To Hold Recognition Ceremony
- Today, October 02, 2017 the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office will host a public ceremony to recognize the accomplishments of several sheriff’s deputies and confinement officers. Additionally, two new deputy sheriffs will be sworn in. The ceremony will be held in the courtroom of the Old Courthouse (201 NW 4th Street) at 9 a.m.
Those individuals being recognized are:
New Deputy Sheriffs:
Chelsea Trail
Jordan KuesterAwards:
Logan Osborne – Lifesaver AwardCompletion of ILEA:
Logan Osborne
Matt GardnerPromotions:
Sgt. Matt Hill – Lieutenant
Deputy Luke Freiberger – Sergeant
Deputy Stetsun Sunderman – Sergeant
C.O. Brennen Schenk – Confinement SergeantRetirements:
Lt. Ken Tenbarge
Sgt. Jim Boyd
Deputy Brian Spradlin
Jean Elsfelder – Confinement Officer
UE Recognized for Affordability Find Student Benefits On Several Top College Lists
The University of Evansville has been named to several top college lists, including rankings by Princeton Review, Forbes and Money. These commendations are in addition to those from U.S. News & World Report and Washington Monthly earlier this month.
Forbes magazine named UE to its Top College list again this year and named the University to its Grateful Grads list. The Forbes Top Colleges ranking focuses on direct benefits a college provides students. Student experience is an important criteria and is based on freshman-to-sophomore retention rate and data from Niche, a comprehensive ranking site.
Niche uses survey information from approximately 93,000 current students and recent alumni reviewing over 1,300 colleges to rate schools and give them a letter grade. Overall, Niche named UE a Top Private University, a Best College in America, and a Best College in Indiana. UE was also rated by Niche as a College with Best Academics, Best Professors, and Best Value in America, and as a Most Diverse College and a College with the Best Student Life in America.
This year the Princeton Review listed UE as a Best Midwestern school in its Best Colleges: Region by Region category. Only 158 colleges were on this list of premier colleges. Schools chosen are considered “academically outstanding and well worth consideration.†Rankings are based on what students attending the reviewed colleges say about their experiences at their institutions.
UE has been named a 2017/18-Best Colleges by Money. Money used research and advice from the nation’s top experts on education quality, financing, and value to create a new and practical analysis of the nation’s best-performing colleges. Schools were ranked in quality of education, affordability, and outcomes – including graduate earnings.
College Factual recently listed UE in eight awards categories, including: Best Nationwide Colleges, Best Indiana Colleges, and Best Nationwide Colleges for Your Money, ranking in the top ten percent of more than 1300 colleges and universities. College Factual compares the quality of education at a given college, compared to all others on the list. Factors include student body caliber, educational resources, degree completion, and post-graduation earnings.
Earlier this month, U.S. News and World Report named UE a Best Midwest Value in its annual Best Colleges rankings and as one of the Best Regional Universities: Midwest. Washington Monthly also ranked UE number 7 in the nation among Baccalaureate Colleges and a “Best Bang for the Buck†school.
UE President Thomas A. Kazee said the University was extremely pleased with the accolades from these ranking organization.
“At UE we are committed to providing students with a high quality education that is affordable. These rankings make one thing crystal clear: UE is a terrific value.â€
EPD release on National Coffee With A Cop Day. October 4, 2017 at the University of Evansville.
The Evansville Police Department will hold National Coffee With A Cop Day at the University of Evansville on Wednesday October 4, 2017 from 7 am to 9 am. The University of Evansville has opened the Rigway Center to students, faculty, staff, citizens, and officers alike for the celebration. Rademacher’s Lounge, located on the first floor of the Rigway Center (Walnut St. entrance), is where Officers will be to meet and greet you as you enter. Parking for the event will be in parking lot H at Walnut St and Frederick Ave. We hope to see you there.
Rickey gives USI a 2-1 OT win
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. – University of Southern Indiana sophomore midfielder Sean Rickey (Columbia, Illinois) scored with 17 seconds left in overtime to lift the Screaming Eagles to a 2-1 victory over the University of Illinois Springfield Sunday afternoon in Springfield, Illinois. The Eagles rise to 4-5-0 overall and 2-5-0 in the GLVC, while Illinois Springfield sees its record go to 5-4-1 overall and 5-2-1 in the league.
Rickey deposited the game-winning goal at 99:40 from five yards out as the Prairie Stars tried to clear the ball. The goal was Rickey’s team-high fifth of the season.
USI jumped out in front early, 1-0, when sophomore forward Eric Ramirez (Vincennes, Indiana) put the Eagles on top at 2:22. Ramirez, who posted his second goal of the year, scored on a breakaway up the middle on a through-ball by senior midfielder Cesar Alba(Hanover Park, Illinois).
In the second half, the Prairie Stars waited until 88:47 to get the equalizer and knot the match at 1-1. That would set the stage for Rickey and the Eagles in overtime.
Between the posts, senior goalkeeper Adam Zehme (Orland Park, Illinois) marked his fourth win over the year. Zehme allowed one goal, while facing 15 shots and making eight saves.
The Eagles return to the friendly surroundings of Strassweg Field Friday evening when they host Quincy University for a 7:30 p.m. kickoff and start a two-match homestand. USI concludes the upcoming homestand next Sunday (October 8) against Truman State University.