JULY 7, 2017 “READERS FORUM”
Whats on your mind today?
Todays “READERS POLL†question is: Are you pleased with the way that the Evansville City Council are handling our hard earned tax dollars?
We urge you to take time and click the section we have reserved for the daily recaps of the activities of our local Law Enforcement professionals. This section is located on the upper right side of our publication.
If you would like to advertise or submit and article in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com
EDITORS FOOTNOTE:  Any comments posted in this column doesn’t represents the views or opinions of our advertisers.
CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Potentially Dangerous Chemical Showing Up In The Tri-State
Potentially Dangerous Chemical Showing Up in the Tri-State
A potentially dangerous chemical no longer used in manufacturing is still showing up in above-average amounts in Tri-state residents’ bodies, likely because of the water we drink. The University of Cincinnati did a study and found, residents…
EPD Will Host The FIRST STEP Advanced Student Threat Assessment and Intervention Response Program.
Evansville Police Department to host FIRST STEP Advanced Student Threat Assessment & Intervention Response Program
On July 27th and 28th, the Evansville Police Department will host the FIRST STEP Advanced Student Threat Assessment and Intervention Response Program. FIRST STEP gives you the skills, materials, and confidence to quickly and effectively assess, intervene, and manage a student who has made a threat of violence.
This training is for Police Officers, School Resource Officer, Teachers, School Administrators, Counselors, Residential Life Coordinators as well as anyone else involved in the education and safety of students.
Every student who is planning to attack a school has stepped onto The Path to Violence. When this occurs, the best way to ensure the immediate and long term safety of your school community is to guide that student off The Path to Violence and back to the person he used to be and can be again.
FIR ST STEP helps you to do just that–assess, intervene, and guide students back to a safe place–back to the FIRST STEP–the place they were before they began to travel down The Path to Violence.
This two-day advanced professional development course gives you 12 new skills to stop a school attack, change students’ lives, as well as to increase your personal growth and enhance your professional worth.
1. Implement effective and realistic techniques to save lives
2. Distinguish normal from threatening behaviors
3. Identify indicators of imminent or impending danger
4. Assess (read) student behaviors and determine their true risk level
5. Predict type & intensity of future student behaviors & calculate potential risk
6. Utilize proactive and effective (included) intervention plans to lower the risk level
7. Administer effective discipline after a student has made a threat of violence
8. Integrate suspended and expelled student s safely back into the school
9. Prevent stigmatizing students and alienating parents
10. Positively change the lives of students
11. Enhance your quality of life and raise your school’s total climate
12. Protect your school and yourself against civil liability
FIRST STEP can be used as a stand-alone program or to supplement your existing procedures!
Those who have these skills are invaluable members of their community and profession!
For more INFORMATION & to REGISTER online go to http://peoplearetheprize.com/_pages/classes/first-step-student-threat-assessment-program.html or visit People are the Prize at www.peoplearetheprize.com.
Indiana Joins Amicus Brief Defending Congressional Review Act
Indiana Joins Amicus Brief Defending Congressional Review Act
Olivia covington for www.theindianalawyer.com
Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill has added his name to a list of 14 state attorneys general voicing their support for the Congressional Review Act, saying the act protects the sovereignty of the states and provides them with a mechanism for relief from federal agency overreach.
Hill announced Thursday he has joined an amicus brief filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska, where the case of Center for Biological Diversity v. Ryan Zinke and Department of the Interior, 3:17-cv-00091, is pending. The brief urges the federal court to dismiss a complaint brought by the Center for Biological Diversity, which is challenging the act’s constitutionality, and instead find the act “is a tool that allows states to work with Congress to stop unlawful regulation.â€
In the amicus brief, the attorneys general argue the CRA – which allows both houses of Congress to pass joint resolutions overturning federal agency regulations, subject to the approval of the president – is a lawful execution of the legislative branch’s constitutional authority to set its own rules of procedure. Further, the attorneys general say the CRA helps protect the states against harmful federal overreach through implementation of agency rules.
“Many federal rules impose significant harms on the States, and often do so illegally,†the amicus brief says. “The CRA provides an efficient procedure that Congress can use to stop this federal overreach, quickly blocking regulations without requiring States to engage in costly and time-consuming litigation.â€
The amicus brief pointed to a list of six federal rules recently overturned through the CRA, including the Department of the Interior’s Stream Protection Rule, which “imposed onerous requirements on coal mines near streams,†and the Social Security Administration’s rule banning gun possession by citizens who need help managing their finances.
“In all, the CRA is a lawful procedural tool, which, as recent experience has demonstrated, allows Congress to expeditiously eliminate illegal and/or harmful rules, while working with the States,†they wrote.
In a recent interview with Indiana Lawyer, Hill said attorneys general have the “power and authority…to work on state sovereignty and to recognize the role of state government and the role of federal government and where the two intersect.†Similarly, before he left office last winter, former Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller told the Indiana Lawyer many of the federal lawsuits he either brought or joined that challenged federal regulation were not policy challenges, but rather were questions of the scope of the enumerated powers of the executive branch.
In addition to Hill, 14 other attorneys general joined the brief, those in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah and Wisconsin.
HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE
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Public Law Monitor By Joshua Claybourn
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Well-Traveled Susie Bee Tepid Favorite in Ellis Park TurfÂ
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