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Indiana to expand program for expectant mothers

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Indiana to expand program for expectant, new mothers with substance-use disorders

Federal grant to support more Hoosiers in the next three years

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana will expand its Pregnancy Promise Program to support more expectant and new mothers with substance use disorders. The Indiana Family and Social Services Administration (FSSA) received a three-year, up to $2.7 million federal grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), which will allow it to support an additional 300 pregnant Hoosiers over the next three years, with a focus on those living in rural and under-resourced communities.

“The program’s multigeneration approach supports pregnant women and infants from the prenatal period through 12 months postpartum,” FSSA Secretary Dr. Dan Rusyniak said. “Not only are we helping mothers find treatment and sustain recovery, but we also ensure infants have an established pediatrician, appropriate referrals to pediatric specialists as needed, and developmental support services.”

The Pregnancy Promise Program has supported more than 900 mothers since it launched in 2021. While maternal and infant mortality rates are decreasing slightly across Indiana, data from the most recent Indiana Maternal Morality Review Committee’s annual report shows substance use disorder and overdose continues to be a leading cause of maternal death in the state.

The program has resulted in high rates of sustained recovery for mothers, continuity of medications prescribed to treat opioid use disorder, prevention of preterm births, healthy infant birth weights, and access to resources to address unmet health related and social needs including stable housing, transportation, food security and child care, leading to family preservation and reunification.

The Pregnancy Promise Program partners with Indiana Medicaid managed care health plans to provide case management and care coordination services to participants who receive highly skilled support from an experienced nurse or social worker through the Medicaid health plan, ensuring pregnant individuals are receiving treatment and health care in their local community.

“We are excited about this grant, which will bolster and expand FSSA’s existing program for pregnant individuals suffering from substance-use,” Pregnancy Promise program manager Elizabeth Wahl said. “The program’s goals are clear — to save infant and maternal lives, preserve family units by securing needed resources, ensure reliable access to appropriate care and put an end to generational cycles of substance use and trauma. This program has witnessed families persevere, transform their lives and find hope for the future.”

The grant will expand services for pregnant and postpartum individuals with a primary diagnosis of a substance use disorder; remove barriers and expand outpatient treatment and recovery support services for pregnant and postpartum individuals with a substance use disorder; and promote a coordinated system of care across health care and family support providers.

The FSSA will partner with Centerstone, a community mental health center, and VOA Fresh Start, a residential treatment program, to enhance services. This funding will allow uninsured and under-insured pregnant individuals access to additional support.

Anyone can make a confidential referral to the Pregnancy Promise Program here.

The program has been funded with a five-year award from the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Innovation, which ends Dec. 31. This grant is scheduled to begin Sept. 30.

The state’s highest agriculture honor awarded

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The state’s highest agriculture honor awarded

INDIANAPOLIS (Aug. 8, 2024) — Indiana State Fair the Indiana State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) presented John Baugh, Director of Agricultural Services and Regulations at Purdue University, and Ed Ebert, Senior Director of Market Development for the Indiana Soybean Alliance and the Indiana Corn Marketing Council, with the state’s highest agricultural honor, the AgriVision Award.

Now in its 18th year, the award is presented to individuals who have made significant contributions to the agriculture industry and their communities.

“It was an honor to present John and Ed with the AgriVision Award,” said Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development. “Their vision has guided the foundation of this great industry, and not just statewide, but nationally. We would not be where we are today without their leadership and commitment to supporting agriculture.”

John Baugh has been a tireless advocate for Indiana agriculture for decades. A steady presence at the Indiana Statehouse for the last 35 years, his impact can be seen on legislation that directly impacts agriculture and rural communities. He has, and continues to work closely with state agencies, including the ISDA, State Board of Animal Health, Office of the State Chemist, and many others, to ensure the laws, rules and regulations passed by the Indiana Legislature are based on both science and common sense.

Baugh is a tireless advocate for Purdue University, Purdue Agriculture, and agricultural education throughout the state. Through his efforts, Vincennes and Purdue created joint facilities located adjacent to the Purdue Southwest Agricultural Center in Knox County. Those facilities have enhanced Purdue’s impact on agriculture in the region and strengthened the long-standing relationship between the two institutions. Additionally, he played a key role in assisting the college’s efforts to secure legislative support for the new veterinary hospital. Over the years, Baugh has been the lead for lobbying to secure funding to support the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (ADDL) in West Lafayette and the Heeke Diagnostic Laboratory located at the Southern Indiana Purdue Agricultural Center (SIPAC) in Dubois County.

Throughout Baugh’s career, he has served as a tireless advocate on behalf of Indiana rural communities. When considering his exhaustive contributions to forming the Indiana Corn Checkoff Law, Indiana Grain Indemnity Fund, rural broadband efforts, chemical applicator licensing issues affecting producers and citizens alike, livestock challenges and agronomic sustainability opportunities, to name a few, Mr. Baugh has proven a reliable source of information for his fellow board members over the years.

“The strength of Indiana’s agricultural industry comes from the dedication, ingenuity and perseverance of Hoosiers and visionaries like John and Ed,” said Don Lamb, director of the Indiana State Department of Agriculture. “Both awardees have dedicated their careers to moving the industry forward, and it was a privilege to honor them today.”

Ed Ebert goes many, many miles to serve the soybean and corn farmers of Indiana. He is always seeking new markets to move tons of Hoosier-grown soybeans and corn to customers both nearby and around the globe. Ebert’s duties are aimed at helping to increase the farmer’s bottom line. To accomplish those goals, he goes the extra mile – in a big way. Ebert has buyers interested in Indiana’s corn and soy crops and related products on six continents, and he has traveled the circumference of the Earth more times than he can count.

In a typical month, you might find Ebert working on a deal with large scale venues to use high oleic soybean oil in their concessions, promoting food-grade soybeans in Indonesia, promoting soybean oil to the food industry in Korea, educating chefs in Vietnam about U.S. Poultry and Pork, promoting U.S. soy in aquaculture diets in China, promoting chicken, duck and turkey in Colombia, talking container export opportunities with the Ports of Indiana, leveraging contacts to coordinate international trade team visits to Indiana farms, promoting the benefits or ethanol and biodiesel or advising the ISA and ICMC CEO Courtney Kingery about crop yields and bushel prices.

Ebert represents Indiana producers well on a statewide and global stage. In fact, in 2023, he and the Indiana Soybean Alliance and the Indiana Corn Marketing Council engaged with 31 countries representing 57% of the world’s population and 36% of gross domestic product to work on projects to move the pile. He has been an invaluable source of knowledge on international commodity markets and is an asset to all Indiana corn and soybean farmers.

EPA Updates the Indoor AirPlus Home Labeling Program for Healthier Indoor Air Quality

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EPA Updates the Indoor AirPlus Home Labeling Program for Healthier Indoor Air Quality

WASHINGTON — Today, Aug. 5, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is announcing enhancements to its Indoor AirPlus home labeling program. These improvements are designed to advance indoor air quality protection and expand market accessibility.

Indoor AirPlus is a voluntary partnership and labeling program designed to improve indoor air quality in homes. Builders that participate in the program use construction practices designed to minimize exposure to airborne pollutants and contaminants in the home. Indoor AirPlus homes are healthier by design. Strategies include mold and moisture control; radon resistance; pest management; improved heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning systems; combustion venting; healthier building materials; and homeowner education. Labeled homes can help reduce the likelihood of common and serious health problems like infectious disease, heart disease, cancer, asthma, allergies, respiratory issues, headaches and more.

“Indoor AirPlus is the premier high-performance home certification program focusing on indoor air quality,” said Dave Rowson, Director of the Indoor Environments Division. “The program updates in Indoor AirPlus Version 2, including new recognition opportunities with a tiered certification structure, will help even more Americans protect their families with improved indoor air quality.”

EPA considered a wide range of stakeholder feedback when developing the updates. This new version encourages broad industry participation, substantially advances indoor air quality protections, and strengthens third party verification and quality assurance.

Under this program update, builders may choose to build Indoor AirPlus Certified homes, or Indoor AirPlus Gold Certified homes. With no other certification pre-requisites, the Indoor AirPlus Certified home is built with key strategies targeting improved indoor air quality. The Indoor AirPlus Gold Certified home is designed to include more advanced protections for improved indoor air quality in conjunction with the energy efficiency benefits of ENERGY STAR certification.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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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.

USI Women’s Soccer picked 5th in OVC

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USI Women’s Soccer picked 5th in OVC

Duggan named to OVC Preseason Players to Watch List

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Soccer is projected to place fifth in the Ohio Valley Conference in a vote submitted by the league’s head coaches and communication directors.

The 10-team OVC will feature a schedule with each team playing each other once for a nine-match conference schedule. The event starts on campus sites with the first round and quarterfinal matches on October 31 and November 3, with the No. 3 and No. 4 seeds hosting matches. The event switches to the site of the No. 1 seed the following weekend with semifinal and Championship matches on November 7 and 10.

Tennessee Tech University topped the OVC preseason poll with 153 points and 12 first-place votes. Southern Illinois University Edwardsville was picked second with 141 points and six first-place votes.

Morehead State University picked up 122 points with two first-place votes for a predicted third-place finish. The University of Arkansas at Little Rock earned 98 points for fourth place. Southern Indiana (91) and the University of Tennessee at Martin (90) were fifth and sixth, respectively. Southeast Missouri State University (86), Eastern Illinois University (61), Lindenwood University (38), and Western Illinois University (22) round out the poll.

As part of the OVC’s preseason announcement, senior midfielder Maggie Duggan (Defiance, Missouri) represented USI on the 2024 OVC Women’s Soccer Preseason Players to Watch List. Duggan, a team captain, returns to the field this season following a season-ending injury in 2023 after starting the first four matches last season. A key component to USI’s midfield, Duggan scored a goal last August against the University of North Alabama in a 1-1. It was Duggan’s first career goal. In 2022, Duggan was vital to USI’s defensive success, helping the Screaming Eagles earn seven shutouts and a 0.82 GAA.

USI plays one final preseason tune-up match at home against Middle Tennessee State University on Saturday at 2 p.m. before opening the 2024 regular season on the road with a first-ever visit to Arkansas State University on August 18. The Screaming Eagles will host their home opener at Strassweg Field on August 22 against Robert Morris University. The first OVC contest of 2024 is September 22 when Southern Indiana travels to Southeast Missouri.

2024 OVC Soccer Predicted Order of Finish
(as voted on by the league’s head coaches and communication directors)
1. Tennessee Tech (12) 153
2. SIUE (6) – 141
3. Morehead State (2) – 122
4. Little Rock – 96
5. Southern Indiana – 91
6. UT Martin – 90
7. Southeast Missouri – 86
8. Eastern Illinois – 61
9. Lindenwood – 38
10. Western Illinois – 22

2024 OVC Soccer Preseason Players to Watch
Avery Richardson, Eastern Illinois
Eyglo Thorsteinsdottir, Lindenwood
Kaitlin Graeber, Little Rock
Anna Lohrer, Morehead State
Sophia Elfrink, Southeast Missouri
Matea Diekema, SIUE
Maggie Duggan, Southern Indiana
Izzy Patterson, UT Martin
Katie Toney, Tennessee Tech
Kayla Turner, Western Illinois

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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

Five-run fifth carries Otters to series opening win

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Despite the power being out at Crushers Stadium, the Otters bats had electricity Wednesday night in a series opening 7-1 win over the Lake Erie Crushers.

The Otters (31-41) hurried to a 5-0 advantage over the Crushers (40-32) in the second inning.

Following an error, the Otters struck for the first run of the game on an RBI-single from Mason White. Two batters later, the Otters stitched together three straight RBI-base hits from Giovanni DiGiacomo, Delvin Zinn and Gary Mattis. After the damage was done, it was 5-0 Otters.

As the game progressed, the pitchers locked in. Lake Erie wasn’t able to find the scoreboard until the 7th, when a pair of doubles brought in a single run.

Evansville’s bats answered in the eighth, with back-to-back RBI-singles from Amani Larry and DiGiacomo – finalizing the scoring at 7-1.

The Otters out-hit the Crushers 10-6, with DiGiacomo leading the way with three. Mattis and White each also had multi-hit games. Larry’s RBI-single in the eighth was his first hit and RBI of his professional career.

Parker Brahms (4-6) was great on the bump, allowing just one run on four hits, with a walk and five strikeouts across seven full innings. Alex Valdez and Jakob Meyer each pitched a scoreless inning to close out the game.

The Otters and Crushers conclude the series tomorrow, first pitch of the scheduled doubleheader is 2:00 p.m., with game two beginning shortly after game one. Game times could change due to power availability. FloBaseball and Otters Digital Network game coverage might not be available due to the ballpark still being without power. Check Otters social medias for updates regarding game time and streams.

Updates from 2024 Paris Olympics

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Indiana senior Carson Tyler finished seventh in the men’s springboard semifinal, well above the cutline to make Thursday’s final. With a total 438.00, Tyler scored 48.20 points better than his prelim showing and was 27.05 points off the top three. The NCAA Champion in the event will battle for the podium Thursday at 9 a.m. ET.

Tyler’s Hoosier training partner and Tokyo silver medalist Andrew Capobianco finished 15th in the same event. Capobianco handled his high degree of difficulty list until the fourth round, as he couldn’t reach vertical on his 207C. He recovered with scores of 81.90 and 83.60 in the final rounds yet couldn’t make up enough ground to advance.

Results

Men’s 3-meter springboard semifinal

  1. Carson Tyler – 438.00
  2. Andrew Capobianco – 407.65