Video Highlights Ohio Community, Recipient of $38 Million Resilient Grant for Dam Rehabilitation
WASHINGTON — Local dam safety officials are addressing ways to prevent dam failure in communities across the nation. Dam upgrades help meet modern construction techniques and seismic activity considerations and help protect communities downstream. This past National Dam Safety Awareness Day, FEMA posted a video highlighting how one Ohio community was recently selected for a $38 million mitigation project to strengthen the Mineral Ridge Dam. The improvements and modifications to this dam will provide several benefits to more than 200,000 residents in local jurisdictions between Mineral Ridge and Weathersfield Township, Ohio. In addition, this upgrade ensures the dam can withstand the maximum flood levels from a 500-year storm. To learn more about this infrastructure upgrade project from state emergency management and local dam officials visit: FEMA’s YouTube channel. May 31 is a day of remembrance and in memoriam to the 2,220 people who lost their lives in the 1889 South Fork Dam failure near Johnstown, Pennsylvania. Every year, National Dam Safety Awareness Day seeks to encourage and promote individual community responsibility and best practices for dam safety. FEMA encourages government entities to continue to educate and take actions around the importance of dam safety. This year’s awareness day theme is Building Resilience: Safeguarding Our Nation’s Dams and Empowering Communities. This complements FEMA’s Year of Resilience to enhance response capabilities at all levels of government and build local capacity to withstand tomorrow’s hazards. These dam safety actions include investing in infrastructure, having routine inspections and proper maintenance, completing necessary upgrades and implement an Emergency Action Plan to protect the public health, safety and welfare of individuals and communities. Funding for this project comes from the fiscal year 2022 funding cycle for the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) grant program where a historic $2.3 billion was available. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law — which provides a total $1 billion to BRIC for grants in fiscal years 2022-2026, provides additional infrastructure funds to support efforts like the Mineral Ridge Dam. This type of resilience project reduces disaster impacts and minimizes future disaster costs. In support of National Dam Safety Awareness Day, you can make a difference in your community and join FEMA in support of these efforts throughout the year. |
FEMA Recognizes National Dam Safety Awareness Day
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.
BREAKING NEWS: Aces Outlast #1 Tennessee, 10-8, To Even Super Regional Series
Aces Outlast #1 Tennessee, 10-8, To Even Super Regional Series
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – The University of Evansville baseball team exploded for 10 runs in the middle three innings on Saturday, and then senior reliever Shane Harris worked out of a bases-loaded situation in the ninth inning, as the Purple Aces took down the #1 national seed Tennessee Volunteers, 10-8, at Lindsey Nelson Stadium in Knoxville, Tennessee. With the victory, Evansville evens the best-of-three Super Regional series with the Volunteers and forces the “if necessary” game on Sunday night in Knoxville.
“I am beyond proud of the fight and determination that our team showed today in the middle innings to help us get this win,” said UE head coach Wes Carroll. “We got down early, but we had multiple guys step up and make plays today, be it at the plate, on the mound, or in the field to help us get this win. I couldn’t be more proud of the team that I am right now.”
Tennessee jumped out early against UE, launching three solo home runs in the first inning and adding a fourth run in the second inning to grab an early 4-0 lead. Senior reliever Jakob Meyer (4-4), though, came on to get out of a bases-loaded situation in the second inning, and kept Tennessee scoreless in the third and fourth innings to keep the score at 4-0.
Evansville would get on the board with three runs in the fourth inning on an RBI ground out by graduate third baseman Brent Widder, and a two-run home run off the scoreboard in right-center field by junior second baseman Cal McGinnis.
After UT would answer back with a run of its own in the top of the fifth inning to extend the lead to 5-3, UE responded again to grab a lead it would never lose in the bottom half of the frame. Graduate catcher Brendan Hord started the rally with a lead-off single, and then after a pair of infield outs, senior outfielder Kip Fougerousse had an RBI single to score senior shortstop Simon Scherry to cut the UT lead to 5-4.
After a pitching change, graduate first baseman Chase Hug doubled to put two men in scoring position with two outs. Widder then delivered an RBI single on a 98 mile-per-hour pay-off pitch from Tennessee reliever Nate Snead to tie the game at 5-5. McGinnis then followed with an RBI single down the right field line to give UE a 6-5 advantage.
Sophomore reliever Max Hansmann then worked around a pair of walks to post a scoreless sixth inning, and UE exploded for four more runs in the sixth inning to extend its lead. Hord launched a towering two-run home run down the left field line that just snuck inside the foul pole to give UE an 8-5 lead. Fougerousse then belted a two-run home run to left-center field for his fifth home run of the NCAA Tournament and 22nd home run of the season to give UE a 10-5 advantage. With that home run, Fougerousse set a new single-season home run record at UE, while also grabbing the individual home run lead of the NCAA Tournament.
Senior reliever Nick Smith would work scoreless seventh and eighth innings, before the Volunteers would rally for three runs to trim UE’s lead to 10-8 in the ninth inning. Harris would get Tennessee slugger Christian Moore to fly out to right field with the bases loaded though to end the threat and notch his fifth save of the season.
Fougerousse led UE by going 3-for-5 with a home run and three RBI, as he not only set UE’s single-season home run record on Saturday but also broke UE’s single-season hits record, as he now has 94 hits on the season. McGinnis went 2-for-4 with his second home run of the Super Regional and three RBI, while Hord, Hug and junior designated hitter Evan Waggoner all had two hits as well.
With the victory, Evansville improved to 39-25 overall, while Tennessee fell to 54-12 with the loss. The three-game Super Regional series will conclude on Sunday night at 6 p.m. eastern/5 p.m. Central time with the “if necessary game.” Sunday’s game can be heard live in the Tri-State area on 107.1 FM-WJPS and seen live nationally on ESPNU. The winner of Sunday’s contest will advance on to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska beginning next weekend.
BASEBALL ACES DROP SUPER REGIONAL OPENER TO #1 TENNESSEE, 11-6
Albion – Emergency Shelter Fire
AVOID CONGRESS, DIOGENES
GAVEL GAMUT
By Jim Redwine
www.jamesmredwine.com
AVOID CONGRESS, DIOGENES
Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer have invited Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to speak to a Joint Session of Congress. However, one honest member of Congress, Senator Bernie Sanders Independent of Vermont, stated on MSNBC news on June 05, 2024:
“You do not honor a foreign leader by addressing a Joint Session of Congress who is currently engaged in creating the worst humanitarian disaster in the modern history of this country. Obviously as we all know, Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas terrorism and the terrible attack of October 7th. But what it is doing now is going to war against the entire Palestinian people and what we are seeing now is starvation and famine impacting thousands and thousands of children. The architect of that policy is not someone you honor by bringing to the United States Congress, in my view.”
Sanders was born into a working-class Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York in 1941. Sanders’ mother and father immigrated from Poland. His father’s family were killed in the Holocaust. Bernie attended Hebrew school in New York and had a bar mitzvah in 1954. The common trope of antisemitism for anyone who opposes Zionism lands lamely on Senator Sanders.
Sanders has run for president twice and has served in Congress since 2007. One might wonder how our two current presidential hopefuls with their blind eyes on Israel’s Zionist atrocities have the temerity to continue gainsaying their lack of humanity in the face of Sanders’ courage.
The western world just celebrated the 80th anniversary of D-Day. During the ceremony each speaker concentrated on the critical importance of honoring the WWII veterans by not forgetting that tyranny must be confronted, not appeased. The Zionists in Israel are the contemporaries of the Nazis of Germany. The victims have become the aggressors. As was said repeatedly on June 06, 2024, “Lest we forget” we may repeat history. Especially America must lead by example as Americans did 80 years ago.
When we invite someone to address a Joint Session of Congress, we tell the world such a person is representative of our values and ideals. If anyone should be addressing the world as a beacon of what we hold dear, I suggest Bernie Sanders.
For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com
CMS approves FSSA’s Indiana’s PathWays for Aging Program and Home and Community-Based Services Waivers
The Centers for Medicaid & Medicaid Services (CMS) has notified the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration that it has approved the agency’s proposed waivers and amendments for launching the Indiana PathWays for Aging program and continuing to provide home and community-based services to eligible Hoosiers across a number of programs, including PathWays, starting July 1, 2024.
The approved waivers include the following 1915(c) home and community-based services waivers: Community Integration and Habilitation Waiver, the Family Supports Waiver, the Health and Wellness Waiver, the Indiana PathWays for Aging Waiver and the Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver. Additionally, CMS has approved via a 1915(b) waiver the transition to managed care for Indiana’s long-term services and supports program under the Indiana PathWays for Aging program.
The approved waivers can be found HERE. The approval comes after two public comment periods in 2023 and early 2024.
The PathWays Waiver is a new waiver, replacing the Aged and Disabled Waiver for individuals aged 60 and over and will be administered by the Office of Medicaid Policy and Planning. The Health and Wellness Waiver is the former Aged and Disabled Waiver. It now serves individuals under age 60 and will be administered by the Division of Disability and Rehabilitative Services (DDRS). The Traumatic Brain Injury Waiver is also moving from FSSA’s Division of Aging to DDRS.
The new PathWays Waiver has been approved for five years. The other amended waivers remain on their current CMS-approved timelines.
Some noteworthy changes in the newly approved PathWays, H&W, and TBI home and community-based services waivers include:
- Adjustments to Structured Family Caregiving including clarifying when an eligible individual can receive skilled respite, permitting foster parents to provide Structured Family Caregiving services, and clarifying how individuals are assigned a tier.
- Settings in which individuals can receive home and community-based services was clarified.
- Alignment of expectations, requirements, and service limitations across all waivers.
2024 Parade of Homes Winners
2024 Parade Winning Homes Announced
JUNE 06, 2024
The Southwestern Indiana Builders Association announced its winners Tuesday evening for the annual Parade of Homes. This week, 26 newly built homes are on display for viewing by the public. Dates, hours and maps are available on the website,www.SIBAParadeofHomes.com.
Judges visited the homes and scored them in categories based on selling price. The following are the winners, as provided by Audra Kain, Association Services Director at the Builders Association. For each award below, see Map #, Building Company, and Subdivision.
2024 Parade of Homes Winners
Category ONE: UP to | $375,000 | |
BEST EXTERIOR: | #22 Carl Elpers Contracting | Briar Pointe |
BEST INTERIOR: | #22 Carl Elpers Contracting | Briar Pointe |
BEST KITCHEN: | #22 Carl Elpers Contracting | Briar Pointe |
BEST BATH: | #22 Carl Elpers Contracting | Briar Pointe |
HOME OF THE YEAR: | #01 John Elpers Homes/Gen3 Contracting | Briar Pointe |
Category TWO: $376,000-$450,000 | ||
BEST EXTERIOR: | #17 Chapman Homes | Creekside Meadow |
BEST INTERIOR: | #17 Chapman Homes | Creekside Meadow |
BEST KITCHEN: | #17 Chapman Homes | Creekside Meadow |
BEST BATH: | #17 Chapman Homes | Creekside Meadow |
HOME OF THE YEAR: | #26-Chris Brown Homes | Cambridge |
Category THREE: $451,000-$520,000
BEST EXTERIOR: #14 Jagoe Homes McCutchan Trace
BEST INTERIOR: #14 Jagoe Homes McCutchan Trace
BEST KITCHEN: #13 Jagoe Homes Westridge Commons
BEST BATH: #13 Jagoe Homes Westridge Commons
HOME OF THE YEAR: #07 CAC Custom Homes Quail Crossing
Category FOUR: $521,000-$725,000
BEST EXTERIOR: #16 The Oakridge Group Magnolia Ridge
BEST INTERIOR: #15 David Finnerty Interiors Waters Edge
BEST KITCHEN: #16 The Oakridge Group Magnolia Ridge
BEST BATH: #16 The Oakridge Group Magnolia Ridge
HOME OF THE YEAR: #03-Barrington Custom Homes Coppers Edge
Category FIVE: $726,000-$960,000 | ||
BEST EXTERIOR: | #09 Hirsch Custom Homes | Victoria Woods |
BEST INTERIOR: | #09 Hirsch Custom Homes | Victoria Woods |
BEST KITCHEN: | #09 Hirsch Custom Homes | Victoria Woods |
BEST BATH: | #09 Hirsch Custom Homes | Victoria Woods |
#06 CAC Custom Homes | Bellevue Estates |
HOME OF THE YEAR: #10 Jagoe Homes Waterside at Berkshire
Category SIX: $961,000-$2,000,000 | ||
BEST EXTERIOR: | #18 Mattingly Homes and Development | Victoria Woods |
BEST INTERIOR: | #18 Mattingly Homes and Development | Victoria Woods |
BEST KITCHEN: | #18 Mattingly Homes and Development | Victoria Woods |
BEST BATH | #18 Mattingly Homes and Development | Victoria Woods |
HOME OF THE YEAR: #04 CAC Custom Homes Castle Ridge
Category SEVEN: $3,000,000 AND UP
HOME OF THE YEAR: #08 Hirsch Custom Homes Happe Parcelizaiton
Evansville Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Red Shoe Luncheon Held Today
(Evansville, IN) – The Evansville Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., celebrates 46 years of service in the Evansville community and will hold a luncheon on Saturday, June 8, 2024, at 11:30 am at the Venue 812, 1401 N. Boeke Road, Evansville, IN 47715. The Red Shoe Luncheon will honor women in the Evansville community who are leading in areas that support Delta Sigma Theta Sorority’s mission and the Five-Point Programmatic Thrust – Economic Development; Educational Development; International Awareness and Involvement; Physical and Mental Health; and Political Awareness and Involvement. In addition to recognizing outstanding women in the community, the event includes a delicious meal and entertainment. The following women will be recognized at the luncheon:
- Economic Development
Geronica Hazelwood, Founder/Executive Director, Missing Pieces Community Development Corporation
- Educational Development
Debbie Calhoun, #Tech Me Program
- International Awareness and Involvement
Rev. Lynn Renne, Amani Partners Kenya
- Physical and Mental Health
April Goebel, RN, and Community Mentor
- Political Awareness and Involvement
Amy DeVries, Community Organizer
- Community Outreach
Dr. Trinisia Brooks, Culturally Responsive-Trauma Informed Practitioner, Your Advocate Consulting
- Youth Award
Sophie Golday
- Youth Award
Jahzara McAlister
Founded in 1913, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., is a non-profit organization that aims to provide services and programs to promote human welfare. The Evansville Alumnae Chapter was chartered April 22, 1978. Programs throughout the years include building homes for families under the Habitat for Humanity program, voter registration drives, hosting seminars on women’s health issues, mentoring programs for young girls, and a scholarship fund to assist students with expenses upon entering college.
Tickets and sponsorships may be purchased by visiting www.evansvilledeltas.com. If you would like more information, please email the Chapter at DSTEvansvilleAlum@gmail.com or contact Diane Clements-Boyd at (812) 457-1148.