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Indiana Supreme Court Hears INDOT Case During Rucker’s Final Oral Arguments

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Indiana Supreme Court Hears INDOT Case During Rucker’s Final Oral Arguments

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

In his last oral arguments on the bench of the Indiana Supreme Court, Justice Robert Rucker and three other justices considered the public standing doctrine and the concept of parens patriae as they weighed granting transfer to a case involving a dispute between a state agency and a local municipality.

The court, minus Justice Geoffrey Slaughter, heard arguments in the case of Board of Commissioners of Union County, Indiana v. Joe McGuinness, in his official capacity as Commissioner of the Indiana Department of Transportation, 81A01-1603-PL-00696, on Tuesday, the last day Rucker hear arguments. The milestone for the retiring justice was marked with little fanfare, with Chief Justice Loretta Rush telling audience members at the beginning of arguments they were part of history as they witnessed his final thoughts and questions as a justice. The court then got down to business, hearing the case and making no other public reference to the most senior justice’s retirement next week.

The case stems from roadwork the Indiana Department of Transportation completed on State Highway 27 in Union County in 2010 and 2011, when INDOT allegedly damaged septic systems on the properties of three private landowners, causing raw sewage to leak into a ditch. In its case before the Union Circuit Court, Union County claimed INDOT’s alleged negligence “may (have impacted) other properties and may (have implicated) a broader public health and safety concern… .” The trial court dismissed the case, finding the county lacked standing to sue the state.

However, the Indiana Court of Appeals reversed in December, with Judge Michael Barnes holding that the county could seek declaratory relief as to who bears responsibility for State Highway 27. Additionally, the appellate panel held the county could also seek injunctive relief under the public standing doctrine.

But Andrea Rahman, a deputy attorney general who argued before the court on behalf the state, warned the justices that letting the Court of Appeals’ ruling stand would allow Union County and other similar local governmental entities to usurp the state’s parens patriae authority to sue on behalf of its citizens. An affirmation of the decision would circumvent the Supreme Court’s holding in Board of Commissioners of Howard County v. Kokomo City Plan Commission, 263 Indiana. 282, 330 N.E.2d 92 (1975), which reserves parens patriae authority to the state.

But James Williams, counsel for Union County, pointed to the court’s opinion in State ex rel. Cittadine v. Indiana Department of Transportation, 790 N.E.2d 978, 979 (Ind. 2003), a case which links the public standing doctrine to the Declaratory Judgment Act. A municipal corporation such as Union County is defined as a “person” under the Declaratory Judgment Act, Williams said, giving the county public standing to bring its claims against INDOT. Cittadine does not reference “citizens,” Williams said, but rather only references “persons,” disputing Rahman’s arguments that only citizens can bring claims under the public standing doctrine.

Posed with a question from Rucker about why the county’s claim does not satisfy the standing requirements to bring a declaratory judgment claim, Rahman said the only issue the county cited to show its rights were affected was the possibility of a public health concern. If the Court of Appeals decision is affirmed, then the door would be open for counties to bring claims against their own residents based on “vague and speculative claims” of possible public health concerns, she said.

Rather than bringing a claim against INDOT, Rahman said the appropriate remedy for the county would have been to first seek a resolution with the private owners of the leaking septic tanks. If a resolution could not be reached, then the landowners could have joined the state as a party, she said.

Williams agreed that Rahman’s method was one way to approach the issue, but said the county chose to bring claims against INDOT instead because it would have been unfair to sue the citizens because it was unclear if a local ordinance violation had occurred. Instead, he said the county was seeking declaratory judgment as to who is responsible for the ditch where the raw sewage is leaking and, if the state bears that responsibility, an injunction ordering the state to comply with its duty.

Full oral arguments in the case can be viewed here.

Taking Care of Business Tuesdays 2017

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TAKING CARE OF 
BUSINESS TUESDAYS:
a workshop & lecture series
for Arts Council members
1st Tuesday of the month, 6 – 7 PM
Don’t forget — tonight is May’s Taking Care of Business Tuesday lecture with registrar of the Evansville Museum of Art, History & Science, Liz Bragg. Liz will be discussing how artists should plan to present their work for submission into exhibits, display in public spaces, and for local consignment.
This event is FREE for Arts Council members!
Not a member but interested in a specific lecture? You can still attend for $10 per TCB Tuesday event.
TCB Tuesday events provide free lectures and networking opportunities for artists members. They will be held every first Tuesday of the month at the Arts Council’s Bower-Suhrheinrich Foundation Gallery, located at 318 Main Street in Downtown Evansville.
   2017 Taking care of Business Tuesdays line-up: 
  • May 2: Presentation of Work for Submission, Display, & Consignment
    Speaker: Liz Bragg, EVV Museum of Art, History & Science
  • June 6: Auditioning 101
    Speaker: TBA
  • August 1: Marketing Your Art with Traditional & Social Media
    Speaker: Andy Herbertz & Lisa Verkamp, Ad Club of Evansville
  • September 5: Artist Social Hour
  • October 3: Art as a Small Business Speaker: TBA
  • November 7: Indiana Arts Commission and Regional Resources
    Speaker: TBA
  • December 5: Artist Holiday Social Hour
For more information, please call (812) 422-2111 or email info@artswin.org.
Let’s take care of some business!

Eagles Finish Regular Season On The Road

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Eagles Finish Regular Season On The Road

The 20th-ranked University of Southern Indiana baseball team finishes the 2017 regular season on the road when it makes its final trip to Saint Joseph’s College for a four-game series May 5-7 in Rensselaer, Indiana. The first pitches for USI (29-16, 19-5 GLVC) and Saint Joseph’s (31-15, 13-11 GLVC) are 3 p.m. Friday and Saturday before the squads conclude the regular season Sunday with a noon doubleheader.

Game coverage for the final weekend of the 2017 regular season can be found on GoUSIEagles.com.

SCREAMING EAGLES BASEBALL NOTES:

USI climbs national poll. The Screaming Eagles climbed two spots in the latest National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Top 25, rising to 20th nationally. USI appeared in the national poll for the first time since February last week, entering the NCBWA poll at number 22.

USI on five-game winning streak. The Eagles have won their last five games, winning a road game at Kentucky Wesleyan College and sweeping a four-game series from the University of Indianapolis. Senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles led the USI hitters with a .500 batting average (14-28), while junior outfielder Drake McNamara hit a pair of home runs and junior shortstop Sam Griggs drove in 12 RBIs.

Eagles lead GLVC East. The four-game sweep of the University of Indianapolis put USI in sole possession of first place in the GLVC East Division with four games to play. USI has a one-game lead over Bellarmine University and a two-game lead over the University of Illinois Springfield.

USI perfect at home in the GLVC with third sweep. The Eagles were a perfect 12-0 at home this season in the GLVC and recorded its third conference sweep of the year after taking all four from UIndy Saturday and Monday.

Leading the way in the GLVC, NCAA II. USI ranks first in the GLVC and 10th in the NCAA Division II with a 3.17 ERA. The hurlers also lead the GLVC and are eighth nationally with a 3.08 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

The difference of a month. The Eagles went 18-4 in April with the team hitting .288 and posting a 2.10 ERA, compared to 9-12 in February and March with a team batting average of .259 and a nearly double 4.02 ERA. Senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles has seen the biggest turn arounds amongst the players, going from hitless (0-11) in seven games during February/March to .415 (22-53) in 18 of the 22 games during April. On the mound, junior right-hander Kyle Griffin went from 1-3 with a 5.90 ERA to start the year to 3-0 with a 2.08 ERA in April.

Season hitting leaders. Junior designated hitter/leftfielder Drake McNamara (.353), senior designated hitter Jaylen Quarles (.343), and sophomore infielder Jacob Fleming (.319) are the Eagles hitting over .300  this season. McNamara leads USI with a team-best eight home runs and 38 RBIs.

Season pitching leaders. Senior right-handers Lucas Barnett has the Eagles’ best ERA among the starting pitchers with a 2.42 in 11 games, 10 starts, and 63.1 innings of work. Senior right-hander Kyle Nowak leads the Eagles with six victories (6-3), while junior right-hander Kyle Griffin has recorded a team-high 74 strikeouts in 11 games.

GLVC Pitcher of the Week. Junior right-hander Kyle Griffin was named the GLVC Pitcher of the Week for the second time this season. Griffin threw a complete game shutout of UIndy, striking out nine, in his only outing of the week.

Archuleta at USI. USI Head Coach Tracy Archuleta is USI’s all-time winningest coach with a record of 407-208 (.662) in nine-plus seasons and is 555-332 (.626) in 14-plus seasons all-time as a head coach. He has been named the ABCA Division II Coach of the Year twice (2010 and 2014) after leading the Screaming Eagles to a pair of national championships and the ABCA Division II Midwest Region Coach of the Year after leading USI to the regional crown in 2016. Archuleta also has earned a pair of GLVC Coach of the Year awards (2011 and 2014) at USI.

USI vs. Saint Joseph’s. USI enters this week’s action with a 42-41 all-time series lead over Saint Joseph’s College and is looking to end the series in with a winning record versus the Pumas. The Eagles swept last year’s four-game series at the USI Baseball Field and are 17-13 since 2007. USI also will be looking to get back on track at Rensselaer, going 3-7 in its last 10 road games versus Saint Joseph’s.

NCBWA Top 25 Poll
1. Mercyhurst (Pa.) -13-
2. Chico State (Calif.) -1-
3. North Georgia -2-
4. Southern New Hampshire
5. Tampa (Fla.) -1-
Emporia State (Kan.)
7. Mount Olive (N.C.)
8. Colorado Mesa
9. Azusa Pacific (Calif.)
10. Delta State (Miss.)
11. Minnesota State
12. Northwood (Mich.)
13. West Chester (Pa.)
14. Angelo State (Texas)
15. USC Aiken
16. Felician (N.J.)
17. Dixie State (Utah)
18. Southern Arkansas
19. Lubbock Christian (Texas)
20. Southern Indiana
21. Nova Southeastern (Fla.)
22. Millersville (Pa.)
23. Catawba College (N.C.)
24. California Baptist
25. St. Cloud State (Minn.)

Also receiving votes: Texas A&M-Kingsville; St. Thomas Aquinas, N.Y.; West Alabama (32-17); Walsh,; UNC Pembroke; Valdosta State, Ga.; Cal. Poly-Pomona; West Texas A&M.

 

 

Women’s Golf selected for NCAA Super Regional REGIONAL RANKINGS

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Golf has been selected for the NCAA II East Super Regional, which will take place May 8-10 at Glenmoor Country Club in Canton, Ohio. USI is ranked 10th of the 12 teams selected.

Junior Taylor Howerton (Evansville, Indiana) has paced the Screaming Eagles for much of the season, leading the team with an average of 77 strokes per round. She has finished in the top ten in each of the last five events and has five top-five finishes on the year.

Freshman Grace Davis (Valparaiso, Indiana) is second on the team with an average of 81.39 strokes per round. She won the Screaming Eagles Classic in September at Cambridge Golf Course.

As a team, the Eagles have one win at the Maryville Fall Invitational and nine top-five finishes, most recently a fifth-place finish in the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championship.

There are four other GLVC teams in the regional. They are GLVC champion University of Indianapolis, the University of Missouri-St. Louis, the University of Illinois Springfield, and Lewis University. The five teams from the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference are the University of Findlay, Grand Valley State University, Northern Michigan University, Ashland University, and Northwood University. Rounding out the field are two members from the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference, Gannon University and California University of Pennsylvania.

The Super Regional is a 54-hole event, with the top three teams and top three individuals not on a qualifying team advancing to the NCAA II Women’s Golf Championships at Findlay Country Club May 17-20 in Findlay, Ohio.

Ivy Tech Southwest Summer Semester Beginning Soon

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Ivy Tech Southwest will begin its summer semester on Monday, June 5. The site offers courses in a wide variety of areas of study including English, Psychology, Communications, Public Speaking, Reading Strategies for College, Intro to College Writing, Art Appreciation, Anatomy and Physiology, Microbiology, Certified Nurse Assistant and Qualified Medical Assistant prep, Business Law, Medical Law and Ethics, Human Resource Management, and a variety of courses in the Technology Division including Welding, HVAC, Basic Electricity, and Program Controllers.

 

Ivy Tech offers a college education at an affordable cost close to home. Students can pursue an Ivy Tech degree to prepare for an in-demand, high-paying job in two years or less, or as a smart start to a bachelor’s degree. Ivy Tech offers certificates, technical certificates, associate of applied science and associate degrees.

 

For a course schedule list of summer offerings at any of the Southwest campuses (Evansville, Princeton, Tell City), visithttps://www.ivytech.edu/southwest/6633.html.

 

To apply visit https://www.ivytech.edu/apply-now/, or call 1-888-IVY-LINE.

 

Adopt A Pet

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Mr. Hopkins is a 7-month-old male New Zealand/American mix. He is a sweet & social bunny. Since he’s solid white with red eyes, this is sometimes a “turnoff” to adopters. But he doesn’t want to let his eye color define him! His $30 adoption fee includes his neuter and cardboard carrier. Contact the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 for adoption details!

 

UE’s Professional Athletic Training Program Earns Five Year Accreditation

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The program is now one of only five schools in the country that has an accredited program at both the master’s and bachelor’s level*

 

The University of Evansville’s Professional Athletic Training Program has been granted five-year accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education (CAATE) with the next comprehensive review occurring during the 2021-22 academic year.

 

UE hosted a site visit with a CAATE review team in January 2017 after an intense period of self-study, which began in the fall of 2015, and a self-study application that was submitted June 1, 2016.  The site visit team reviewed extensive reports and interviewed members of the athletic training team to evaluate and verify the institution’s ongoing ability to meet the standards for accreditation.

 

The UE athletic training program is now one of only five schools in the country that has an accredited program at both the master’s level and bachelor’s level, giving students options for pursuing their athletic training degrees.

 

The athletic training program utilizes three universities and colleges, three out-patient rehabilitation clinics, and eleven high schools to provide their students with clinical placements within the Evansville area.

 

Kathy Liu, PhD, ATC, program director, states, “We are very proud of our programs here at UE. With a successful undergraduate program and a growing graduate program, gaining this accreditation will allow us to provide additional opportunities for students deciding on their career aspirations.”

“We recognize the faculty, staff, and administrators at the University of Evansville for their commitment to the advancement of education in athletic training, as well as the dedication to the preparation of qualified athletic training professionals,” said a representative from CAATE.

The University of Evansville is the smallest Division I CAATE-accredited school in the country. Athletic training students are challenged with rigorous course work and hands-on experiences, such as their involvement with UE’s Division I athletic programs, from their first week on campus. University of Evansville athletic training students have the flexibility to explore many branches of study and develop diverse skill sets through the athletic training, physical therapist assistant, pre-physician assistant, pre-med and Doctor of Physical Therapy-combination degree programs.

 

To arrange an interview, please contact me at ac283@evansville.edu or at 812-598-8940.

 

VCSO Begins 2017 Deputy Sheriff Applicant Process

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Preliminary applications for the 2017 – 2019 Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Sheriff candidate pool are now available online. Anyone meeting our hiring requirements and who is interested in a career as deputy sheriff for the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office is invited to complete a pre-application.
Applications must be completed, printed and returned to the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office no later than Friday, July 21, 2017.

All necessary information for prospective candidates is included with the downloadable pre-application package, which is available by clicking here.

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below are the felony cases to be filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Kelly Sue Wedding: Theft (Level 6 Felony)

Rachel Nicole Collins: Dealing in a schedule IV controlled substance (Level 3 Felony), Possession of methamphetamine (Level 6 Felony), Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony), Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony)

Lauren Marie Puthoff: Domestic battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony), Battery resulting in bodily injury (Class A misdemeanor), Carrying a handgun without a license (Class A misdemeanor)

Shavaz Shacville Kay: Carrying a handgun without a license (Level 5 Felony), Maintaining a common nuisance – controlled substances (Level 6 Felony)

Alaina Deniece Johnson: Domestic battery by means of a deadly weapon (Level 5 Felony)

Jason Dwayne Fulks: Burglary (Level 5 Felony)

Jeremy Robert Michael Miller: Battery against a public safety official (Level 6 Felony), Intimidation (Level 6 Felony), Battery resulting in bodily injury (Class A misdemeanor), Resisting law enforcement (Class A misdemeanor), Disorderly conduct (Class B misdemeanor)

William Douglas Locklear: Theft (Level 6 Felony), Criminal trespass (Class A misdemeanor)

Michael Angeles King: Unlawful possession of syringe (Level 6 Felony)

DeJong Montez Graves: Invasion of privacy (Level 6 Felony)

Tommy Wayne Alstatt: Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life (Level 5 Felony)

Ryan Christopher Decker: Burglary (Level 5 Felony), False informing (Class B misdemeanor)