Home Blog Page 472

Governor Eric J. Holcomb and Attorney General Todd Rokita seek execution date for convicted murderer

0

Governor Eric J. Holcomb announced today that he and Attorney General Todd Rokita are seeking the resumption of executions in Indiana prisons — starting with a convicted murderer responsible for the deaths of four people.

  “After years of effort, the Indiana Department of Correction has acquired a drug — pentobarbital – which can be used to carry out executions. Accordingly, I am fulfilling my duties as governor to follow the law and move forward appropriately in this matter,” Gov. Holcomb said. 

  Joseph Corcoran was found guilty of the 1997 murders of four people. He exhausted his appeals in 2016 and has been awaiting execution. 

  “In Indiana, state law authorizes the death penalty as a means of providing justice for victims of society’s most heinous crimes and holding perpetrators accountable,” Attorney General Rokita said. “Further, it serves as an effective deterrent for certain potential offenders who might otherwise commit similar extreme crimes of violence. Now that the Indiana Department of Correction is prepared to carry out the lawfully imposed sentence, it’s incumbent on our justice system to immediately enable executions in our prisons to resume. Today, I am filing a motion asking the Indiana Supreme Court to set a date for the execution of Joseph Corcoran.” 

 

Indiana State Police Are Asking for The Public’s Assistance in a Cold Case Investigation 

0

Indiana State Police Are Asking for The Public’s Assistance in a Cold Case Investigation 

JUNE 26, 2024

January of 1998, a state highway employee found skeletal remains along Fruitridge Avenue near the I-70 overpass in Vigo County. Over the past 26 years several investigative techniques and many hours have been spent trying to identify the skeletal remains, without success. Details of the case were entered into the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs) and were sent to LSU (Louisiana State University) where they developed a forensic facial reconstruction and released it to the public in hopes the remains could be identified.

In 2023, the Vigo County Coroner’s Office in conjunction with Indiana State Police and the University of Indianapolis, submitted forensic evidence to Othram, a corporation specializing in forensic genetic genealogy, in hopes that advanced DNA would assist in identification of the unknown skeletal remains.  Othram was able to develop a DNA profile producing new investigative leads.

Detectives with the Indiana State Police Cold Case Team contacted potential family members of the unidentified human remains. Additional DNA testing and investigative efforts have now identified the skeletal remains as Mitchell Preston, of Anderson, Indiana. Preston was last seen in August of 1997 in Anderson, Indiana and was 47 years old at the time of his disappearance.  He was on foot and traveling to California.

Although Indiana State Police Detectives are pleased to bring some closure for the family of Mr. Preston, they are asking for the public’s assistance for anyone who may have seen Mr. Preston or have any knowledge of what might have happened to him.

Anyone with information please contact Indiana State Police Cold Case Team, Trooper Detective Brad Miller at 1-800-225-8576.  This is an active investigation, and all tips will be investigated and can remain anonymous.

EPA, DOE Announce $850 Million to Reduce Methane Pollution from the Oil and Gas Sector

0

Funding from President Biden’s Investing in America agenda builds on nearly 100 cross-government actions that are sharply reducing methane pollution in support of clean air, good jobs and climate action

WASHINGTON —  The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Energy announced that applications are open for $850 million in federal funding for projects that will help monitor, measure, quantify and reduce methane emissions from the oil and gas sectors as part of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda. Oil and natural gas facilities are the nation’s largest industrial source of methane, a climate “super pollutant” that is many times more potent than carbon dioxide and is responsible for approximately one third of the warming from greenhouse gases occurring today. Today’s announcement builds on unprecedented action across the Biden Administration to dramatically cut methane pollution, with agencies taking nearly 100 actions in 2023 alone, including the finalization of an EPA rule that will yield an 80% reduction in methane emissions from covered oil and gas facilities.

This funding from the Inflation Reduction Act—the largest climate investment in history—will help mitigate legacy air pollution, create good jobs in the energy sector and disadvantaged communities, reduce waste and inefficiencies in U.S. oil and gas operations, and realize near-term emissions reductions, helping the United States reach President Biden’s ambitious climate and clean air goals. The funding will specifically help small oil and natural gas operators reduce methane emissions and transition to available and innovative methane emissions reduction technologies, while also supporting partnerships that improve emissions measurement and provide accurate, transparent data to impacted communities. Today’s announcement constitutes a key part of broader technical and financial assistance to be provided by the Methane Emissions Reduction Program.

“Today, we’re building on strong standards and historic progress to cut methane pollution and protect communities across the country,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “These investments from President Biden’s Investing in America agenda will drive the deployment of available and advanced technologies to better understand where methane emissions are coming from. That will help us more effectively reduce harmful pollution, tackle the climate crisis and create good-paying jobs.”

“As we continue to accelerate the nation’s clean energy transition, we are taking steps now to drastically reduce harmful emissions from America’s largest source of industrial methane – the oil and gas sector,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “I am proud to partner with EPA to help revitalize energy communities and deliver long-lasting health and environmental benefits across the country.”

“President Biden’s historic investment agenda has enabled the U.S. to aggressively and ambitiously take the actions we need to decarbonize every sector of the economy. We are making significant progress in our efforts to cut pollution – including super-pollutants like methane – while creating thousands of quality jobs and lowering energy costs for Americans,” said Assistant to President Biden and National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi. “From implementing the U.S. Methane Emissions Reduction Action Plan that lays out a detailed roadmap for the federal government, to launching a Methane Task Force that brings all relevant agencies together around robust implementation, to hosting the first-ever White House methane summit that has catalyzed cross-sector partnerships, President Biden’s leadership on tackling methane is part of a comprehensive and historic climate effort that is spurring technological innovation, creating good-paying jobs and economic opportunity, cutting pollution in every sector, and holding polluters accountable. Today’s investments further those aims by providing the resources needed to monitor methane emissions and rapidly identify potential leaks to help protect our communities and planet.”

The primary objectives of this funding opportunity announcement are to:

  1. Help small operators significantly reduce methane emissions from oil and natural gas operations, using commercially available technology solutions for methane emissions monitoring, measurement, quantification and mitigation.
  1. Accelerate the repair of methane leaks from low-producing wells and the deployment of early-commercial technology solutions to reduce methane emissions from new and existing equipment such as natural gas compressors, gas-fueled engines, associated gas flares, liquids unloading operations, handling of produced water and other equipment leakage.
  1. Improve communities’ access to empirical data and participation in monitoring through multiple installations of monitoring and measurement technologies while establishing collaborative relationships between equipment providers and communities.
  1. Enhance the detection and measurement of methane emissions from oil and gas operations at regional scale, while ensuring nationwide data consistency through the creation of collaborative partnerships. These partnerships will span the country’s oil and gas-producing regions and draw in oil and natural gas owners and operators, universities, environmental justice organizations, community leaders, unions, technology developers, Tribes, state regulatory agencies, non-governmental research organizations, federally funded research and development centers and DOE’s National Laboratories.

A competitive solicitation for this funding will enable a broad range of eligible U.S. entities to apply, including industry, academia, non-governmental organizations, Tribes and state and local governments. This funding opportunity is expected to achieve measurable outcomes for skilled workforce training, community involvement and environmental justice. Funding applicants are required to submit Community Benefits Plans to demonstrate meaningful engagement with and tangible benefits to the communities in which the proposed projects will be located. These plans must provide details on the applicant’s commitments to community and labor engagement, quality job creation, diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility, and benefits to disadvantaged communities as part of the Justice40 Initiative. Established in Executive Order 14008, the President’s Justice40 Initiative set the goal that 40% of the overall benefits of certain federal climate, clean energy and other investments flow to disadvantaged communities that are marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution.

Read more details of this funding opportunity. For any questions on the application, applicants must submit written questions through the FedConnect portal at FedConnect.net. For assistance with any technical issues with grants.gov, please contact 1-800-518-4726 or support@grants.gov. More information, including applicant eligibility, can be found on the government grants page.

Retail Food Establishment Inspection Report

0
Healthy food. Healthy eating background. Fruit, vegetable, berry. Vegetarian eating. Superfood

media reports June 2-8, 2024

UE’S SHALLENBERGER EARNS SECOND-TEAM ALL-AMERICA HONORS FROM D1BASEBALL.COM

0
EVANSVILLE, Ind. –  University of Evansville graduate outfielder Mark Shallenberger (St. Louis, Mo./Priory) earned his second All-America honor of the 2024 season on Wednesday morning, as he was named Second-Team All-America by D1Baseball.com.  Shallenberger is the first Purple Ace to earn multiple All-America honors in the same season since Kevin Kaczmarski in 2015.
Shallenberger also captured American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA)/Rawlings Third-Team All-America honors in a vote of collegiate head coaches earlier in June.  D1Baseball.com is considered by many as the top on-line website focused on collegiate baseball.
Shallenberger earned All-America honors after a season in which he earned first-team all-Missouri Valley Conference honors and Greenville (N.C.) Regional All-Tournament team honors for the Purple Aces.  He finished the 2024 season ranked in the NCAA’s Top 100 in 11 different offensive categories, including ranking 13th nationally in on-base percentage, a category he has ranked among the nation’s top 25 in for much of the season.  Shallenberger set program records for both runs scored (72) and hit-by-pitches (28), while posting the second-highest single-season hit total in UE history with 91.
Overall, Shallenberger hit a team-best .374 with a team-high 21 doubles, two triples, 17 home runs and 64 RBI.  He hit arguably the biggest home run in UE baseball history with a game-winning three-run home run in UE’s 6-5 victory over East Carolina to win the Greenville (N.C.) Regional and advance Evansville to its first-ever NCAA Tournament Super Regional appearance.
Shallenberger now joins an elite fraternity of UE players to earn multiple All-America honors in the same season.  Shallenberger joins a list that includes only Andy Benes (1988), Cody Fick (2011), Kyle Freeland (2014), and Kevin Kaczmarski (2015) as the only UE players to earn All-America honors from multiple publications or groups in the same season.
Evansville went 39-26 this season, advancing on to the 2024 NCAA Tournament by winning the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament title.  The Purple Aces won the Greenville (N.C.) Regional Tournament and forced #1 national seed Tennessee to the “if necessary” game three of the Knoxville Super Regional in UE’s first-ever NCAA Super Regional Tournament appearance.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

0
EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

UE’S CARROLL NAMED ABCA/ATEC MIDWEST REGIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR

0
UE’S CARROLL NAMED ABCA/ATEC MIDWEST REGIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR
JUNE 26 2024
EVANSVILLE, Ind. –  University of Evansville head baseball coach Wes Carroll was named on Tuesday as the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA)/ATEC Midwest Regional Coach of the Year in a vote of the ABCA’s All-America and Coach of the Year Committee.  Carroll is one of eight baseball coaches nationwide to earn Regional Coach of the Year honors at the Division I level, and it marks the first time in which an UE head coach has earned the honor.
“It’s an honor to be recognized by the ABCA and earn this award,” said Carroll.  “I would like to thank our coaching staff, athletic training staff, and our strength coach.  They were so instrumental in our success this season.
“But, most importantly, I want to thank the players!  They bought into something bigger than themselves, and represented our University well this season.”
Carroll was named the ABCA/ATEC Midwest Regional Coach of the Year after helping Evansville advance to its first-ever NCAA Tournament Super Regional, where the Purple Aces fell, 2-1, to eventual national champion and #1 overall seed, Tennessee, in the best-of-three game Super Regional series.  Evansville was one of just two teams in the NCAA Tournament to knock off the Volunteers, as UE posted a 10-8 victory in game two of the series to force the deciding game three.
Evansville advanced to the Knoxville Super Regional by winning the Greenville (N.C.) Regional Tournament as the regional’s No. 4 seed, after UE advanced to the NCAA Tournament by sweeping through the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament to earn the league’s automatic bid.
Evansville finished the regular season 39-26 overall.  The Purple Aces finished the season nationally ranked in various collegiate baseball polls, including ranking 15th in the NCBWA Top 25 and 23rd in both the Baseball America Top 25 and the USA Today Top 25 Coaches’ Poll.
Here is the list of the 2024 ABCA/ATEC NCAA Division I Regional Coaches Of The Year:
Midwest:             Wes Carroll (Evansville)
Northeast:          Mike Glavine (Northeastern)
   East:                   Randy Mazey (West Virginia)
    Atlantic:               Scott Forbes (North Carolina)
 Southeast:             Tony Vitello (Tennessee)
            South:                  Lane Burroughs (Louisiana Tech)
               Central::              Skip Johnson (Oklahom
             West            Andrew Checketts (UC Santa Barbara)

Gov. Holcomb hosts Hoosier Huddle, a resource program to promote the Hoosier Playbook

0

State and local officials joined governor to discuss how communities can benefit from state resources

INDIANAPOLIS – On Friday, Governor Eric J. Holcomb hosted the Hoosier Huddle, a collaborative panel discussion focused on the Hoosier Playbook. Gov. Holcomb was joined by state and local officials throughout the state to discuss local community benefits.

chat 2

The Hoosier Playbook includes a diverse range of resources aimed at enhancing education, improving health, boosting workforce development, strengthening infrastructure, fostering community development and ensuring public safety. Hoosiers from across Indiana gathered at Hinkle Fieldhouse for a fireside chat with Gov. Holcomb and Vanessa Green Sinders, President and CEO of the Indiana Chamber. They were also joined by partners from across the state for breakout sessions.

weaver

Dr. Lindsay Weaver, the Indiana Department of Health Commissioner, led a discussion with community health leaders to demonstrate how the Health First Indiana initiative is reshaping public health in its inaugural year. Through local partnerships and data-driven solutions, the panel spoke on how counties can utilize the full benefits as the program to improve the overall health of Hoosiers.

student

A key item of the Governor’s Next Level Agenda since day one has been to ensure Hoosier students are prepared for the careers of tomorrow and to build a robust talent pipeline. Members of the Governor’s cabinet engaged in discussion on statewide efforts to prepare Hoosier students for postsecondary success and workforce readiness.

gug

Indiana’s innovative READI program fosters community vibrancy, enhances economic development and supports successful public-private partnerships. Panelists provided insights into READI’s achievements, future directions and its role in initiatives like blight reduction and arts enhancement with the generous support of the Lilly Endowment.