St. Vincent StatFlight Expands Coverage to Evansville
Will Become Largest Air Medical Provider in Indiana
 This week, St. Vincent officials announced that effective November 1, 2017, St. Vincent StatFlight, operated by PHI Air Medical, will become the largest air medical provider in Indiana with the addition of the program’s sixth base in Evansville. The new St. Vincent StatFlight base will replace the existing St. Vincent LifeFlight program that has been in service for more than 35 years. St. Vincent is part of Ascension, the nation’s largest Catholic and nonprofit health system.
“We are proud of our continued partnership with St. Vincent to help provide the citizens of Indiana with this critical, life-saving air medical service,†explained Sean O’Neal, Regional Director for PHI Air Medical. “With this expansion in services, we look forward to serving the communities in central Indiana and now the Tri-State area in southern Indiana.â€
St. Vincent partnered with PHI Air Medical in 2010 to form the St. Vincent StatFlight program, which is accredited by the Commission on the Accreditation of Medical Transport Services (CAMTS). Other locations for StatFlight include Anderson, Greencastle, West Lafayette, Rushville and Seymour, Indiana.
Due to the outstanding clinical quality from the Evansville LifeFlight team, many of these employees will transition to become St. Vincent StatFlight staff. It is expected that approximately 90 people, comprised of pilots, mechanics, nurses, paramedics and communication specialists across state will now be a part of St. Vincent StatFlight.
“We are grateful for the outstanding work that the LifeFlight program has provided to this community for the last 35 years,†said Dan Parod, President, St. Vincent, Southwest Region. “As we begin to take the next step in enhancing our air medical service we want the communities we serve to be assured that they will continue to have access to this vital service.â€
About St. Vincent
In Indiana, Ascension’s St. Vincent operates 20 hospitals in addition to a comprehensive network of affiliated joint ventures, medical practices and clinics that cover a 57-county area and employ more than 15,000 associates. Across the state, St. Vincent provided more than $266 million in community benefit and care of persons living in poverty in fiscal year 2016. Serving Indiana for 136 years, Ascension is a faith-based healthcare organization committed to delivering compassionate, personalized care to all, with special attention to persons living in poverty and those most vulnerable. Ascension is the largest non-profit health system in the U.S. and the world’s largest Catholic health system, operating 2,500 sites of care – including 141 hospitals and more than 30 senior living facilities – in 24 states and the District of Columbia. Visit www.stvincent.org and www.stvincent.org/evansville.
About PHI
PHI Air Medical is a leader in air medical transport, providing critical care and support for many of the nation’s leading health care organizations and in communities across the US. PHI Air Medical pilots have recorded over eleven million flight hours, in virtually every type of helicopter and terrain known. The Air Medical fleet consists of proven aircraft outfitted with medical interiors conducive to providing sustained emergent care for air medical transports and most PHI Air Medical programs operate at or above Commission on Accreditation of Medical Transport Systems (CAMTS) standards. PHI Air Medical headquarters are located in Phoenix, Arizona.Â
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.
Christopher Shawn Golike: Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Level 6 Felony)
Joshua Edward Draper: Theft (Level 6 Felony)
Jason Richard Novotny: Possession of a narcotic drug (Level 6 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession or use of a legend drug (Level 6 Felony), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor)
EVSC Schedules W.H.Y. Parent Camp
Giving parents and community members an opportunity to learn together and share information about the community’s children is the focus of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation’s W.H.Y. (Working to Help Our Youth) Parent Camp. The Camp is scheduled for Saturday, August 26, from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Bosse High School. The event is free and open to the public.
“The W.H.Y Parent Camp is designed to take the veil off what we do as a district, and create an intentional opportunity to listen and learn from parents and caregivers†said Cathy Gray, associate superintendent of Family, School, and Community Partnerships. “It’s a chance for caregivers to offer up their expertise as parents and help us problem solve and move the work of the district.â€
The Camp will include numerous sessions where participants will be asked to share their thoughts, and ideas. Discussion topics include:
-  GAIN: EVSC’s Whole Child Approach to Learning
- Â Homework Help
- Â Social Media: What Your Kids Know that You May Not
- Â The Health and Nutrition Connection to Learning
- Â This is Not the Classroom You May Remember
- Â Cultural Responsiveness and the School to Prison Pipeline
- Â College, Career and Beyond
- Â Special Education and Individual Student Supports
- Â Attendance Matters
-  I Wonder…
- Â What are Educational Tests for, Anyway?
“Our hope is to create an ongoing dialogue between schools and parents/families to develop more unique, meaningful relationships that ultimately benefit the students of the EVSC,†said Amanda Hooper, a member of the EVSC Parent Advisory Team that worked with EVSC staff to plan the camp. “We are also excited to engage community partners in this conversation to foster ideas, understanding, and solutions to better serve our students and their families.â€
The Parent Camp is free and open to anyone in the community. In addition, free childcare will be provided for students in kindergarten through fifth grade.
To register, visit www.evscschools.com and click on W.H.Y Parent Camp at the top of the page, or look for W.H.Y. Parent Camp on the EVSC app.
New York Priest Recall 9/11 And ‘Greatest Rescue Ever’
A Manhattan Priest And NYPD Officer Share Memories, Lessons From 9-11
by Gretchen R. Crowe OSV Newsweekly
9/9/2016
Father Kevin Madigan is the quintessential New Yorker: pragmatic, a realist. And so, when the Manhattan pastor reflects on the 15 years since Sept. 11, 2001, it’s not surprising that his responses reflect his character.
“Just put one foot in front of the other every day and keep on going with God’s help,†he told Our Sunday Visitor.
When Father Madigan, just after celebrating Mass and hearing confessions at his parish of St. Peter Church in Manhattan, heard a plane had struck one of the towers of the World Trade Center, he ran outside — St. Peter’s is located about a block and a half away. He had a vague notion of going to help, but on the street, all he saw were upturned faces looking at the fire and smoke billowing out of the north tower.
“Standing where I was, some distance from the tower, I thought I was relatively safe,†he recalled. “When all of a sudden, a burst of flame emerged from the other tower, and debris was flying in all directions. I remember the wheel of an airplane flying over my head, and a bottle of water bursting against the wall by which I was standing. Of course, at that moment, everyone fled in the opposite direction.â€
Vocation Of Service
Terri Tobin, now a deputy inspector with the New York Police Department, had just arrived at the World Trade Center when the second plane hit. She helped evacuate the site until she was knocked out of her shoes and blown across the road by the force of the south tower collapsing.
“It only reaffirmed for me that I was doing exactly what I was meant to be doing on 9/11. I think that police work in the NYPD is a vocation,†she said. Tobin, a member of St. Francis de Sales Parish in Belle Harbor, Queens, is in her 34th year with the NYPD.
Light From Darkness
In the weeks, months and years following the tragic event, hope and renewal — moments of light emerging from darkness — were found in simple things, Father Madigan recalled. Like in the inscription on a new baptismal font: “Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains just a grain of wheat; but if it dies, it produces much fruit†(Jn 12:24).
Then there was the Bible found amid the debris, fused with steel and opened to the Sermon on the Mount — in particular, the passage on forgiveness.
“That’s certainly a testimony and something to remember,†Father Madigan said of the artifact, now on display in the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. “I remember, too, in the days after all the readings at that time of the year were about forgiveness.â€
Then there were the people. Father Madigan spent the years after 9/11 rebuilding his parish — physically, spiritually and emotionally. He regularly talked with those who would be “coming in, still traumatized†and looking for assistance, whether survivors or family members who had lost loved ones.
“The faith they showed, and also the lack of anger and hostility and a desire for revenge, was certainly something that inspired me,†Father Madigan said, contrasting this response to the wars that followed.
“How true it is that violence just brings on even more violence, so that the response to 9/11 was more violent than even the attack was,†he said. With the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, “we had to show that we’re going to get even with — show our power. (But) Jesus says, you cast out one devil and seven worse come back. That was a witness to it.â€
Perspective And Memory
Perspective, too, comes with time — as does healing. Father Madigan is now pastor of a parish on the Upper East Side, where he is not constantly reminded of that fateful day.
“For the first five years, six years, not a day went by when I didn’t think about 9/11,†he said. “There would always be some kind of reminder of that day, just walking down the street something would flash in my memory about what it was like before or during or the days after. That’s what being out of the situation does. It sort of puts it behind me.â€
Tobin marks the anniversary by visiting the firehouse of a cousin who was killed that day at the age of 33. “Even 15 years later, he wouldn’t be 50 years old,†she noted.
One thing stands out for her most about that day. “When people were evacuating those buildings, no one knew, no one cared and no one looked at anyone’s gender or race, ethnicity or religion,†she said. “It was just people in a common experience helping one another. And that will always stay with me.â€
Gretchen R. Crowe is editor-in-chief of OSV. Follow her on Twitter @GretchenOSV.
With a broken ankle, a chunk of concrete lodged in her skull through the back of her Kevlar helmet and covered in dust, Tobin continued her work of bringing people off the street to safety, even evacuating an apartment building of about a hundred people.
“I try to remember, although it was the worst terrorist attack ever to occur on American soil … we were able to get out 10 people for every one that perished,†she told OSV.“So we also have to look at it as the greatest rescue ever,†Tobin said.
Tobin cited the training and professionalism of her colleagues for being able to keep people calm and move them out and away from the towers.
Editor’s Footnote:  The plans for the Vanderburgh County Public Safety Foundation event will be held on August 23, 2017 at the steps of the Veterans Memorial Coliseum is really coming together? …the event keynote speaking will be Dr. Terri Tobin, now a deputy inspector with the New York Police Department.  ..during the next several weeks you will be receiving more detailed information about this most worthily public event?
Air Quality Forecast
Air quality forecasts for Evansville and Vanderburgh County are provided as a public service. They are best estimates of predicted pollution levels that can be used as a guide so people can modify their activities and reduce their exposure to air quality conditions that may affect their health. The forecasts are routinely made available at least a day in advance, and are posted by 10:30 AM Evansville time on Monday (for Tuesday through Thursday) and Thursday (for Friday through Monday). When atmospheric conditions are uncertain or favor pollution levels above the National Ambient Air Quality Standards, forecasts are made on a daily basis.
Ozone forecasts are available from mid-April through September 30th. Fine particulate (PM2.5) forecasts are available year round.
Monday August 7 |
Tuesday August 8 |
Wednesday August 9 |
Thursday August 10 |
Friday August 11 |
|
Fine Particulate (0-23Â CST avg) Air Quality Index |
moderate | good | NA* | NA* | NA* |
Ozone Air Quality Index |
good | moderate | NA* | NA* | NA* |
Ozone (peak 8-hr avg) (expected) |
NA* | NA* | NA* | NA* | NA* |
* Not Available and/or Conditions Uncertain.
Air Quality Action Days
Ozone Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when maximum ozone readings averaged over a period of eight hours are forecasted to reach 71 parts per billion (ppb), or unhealthy for sensitive groups on the USEPA Air Quality Index scale.
Particulate Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when PM2.5 readings averaged over the period of midnight to midnight are forecasted to reach 35 micrograms per meter cubed (µg/m3).
Current conditions of OZONE and FINE PARTICULATE MATTER are available in near real-time on the Indiana Department of Environment Management’s website.
National and regional maps of current conditions ar
School Zone Safety A Top Priority As New School Year Begins
This week marks the new school year for thousands of Evansville students. As always, school zone safety is a priority for the Evansville Police Department and our education partners.
We will have increased patrols in school zones to ensure drivers are following the posted 20mph school zone speed limit. Several methods are used to notify drivers that school zones are in effect. They include yellow flashing lights, school zone times posted on the speed limit signs, and crossing guards working at their assigned spots. Officers will also be monitoring the areas around the schools where student pedestrian traffic increases.
Parents and students are reminded to use sidewalks, cross in designated crosswalks, and to follow the instructions of the crossing guards at the intersections where they are present.
Parochial schools will resume on Tuesday and the EVSC schools will resume on Wednesday.
Adopt A Pet
Sebastian is a male black cat. He’s about 2 years old. He does okay with other cats, but not too many… he was in the Cageless Cat Lounge but wasn’t particularly happy in there. Now he has his very own condo while he waits for his new family to find him! Sebastian can go home today neutered, microchipped, and vaccinated for $30. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!