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Introducing Indiana’s Bureau of Better Aging and the Division of Disability and Rehabilitative Services (DDARS)

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FSSA is proud to announce a new chapter in how Indiana supports older adults and caregivers across our state. The Division of Aging is now the Bureau of Better Aging and will be structured within the new Division of Disability, Aging and Rehabilitative Services (DDARS) under the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration.

This structure reflects our renewed commitment to ensuring that every Hoosier can age with dignity, connection, and purpose. The Division of Disability, Aging, and Rehabilitative Services (DDARS) will house four bureaus:

  • Bureau of Child Development Services (BCDS)
  • Bureau of Disabilities Services (BDS)
  • Bureau of Better Aging (BBA)
  • Bureau of Rehabilitative Services (BRS)

As part of DDARS, the Bureau of Better Aging will benefit from enhanced collaboration, streamlined resources, and a stronger infrastructure to support individuals across the lifespan.

What’s not changing?
All existing services and support for older adults will continue without interruption. This change does not affect eligibility, access, or the quality of programs you rely on. You can continue to expect the same trusted supports from your local Area Agencies on Aging and service providers.

Why the name change?
The name “Bureau of Better Aging” reflects our forward-thinking vision: one that embraces innovation, holistic well-being, and inclusive community living. By joining the work of these divisions, we are creating more integrated systems that better serve people’s evolving needs as they age—while preserving what’s working well today.

We look forward to continuing our work together to make Indiana a place where everyone can thrive at every stage of life.

WoofStock: Live Music Event to Benefit New WHS Shelter

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Sunday, August 17, 2025 | 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Myriad Brewing Company, Newburgh

AUGUST 3, 2025

Warrick County, IN — Mutts at Myriad presents WoofStock, a family-friendly concert benefiting Warrick Humane Society and its capital campaign for a new shelter. The event takes place Sunday, August 17, from 12:00–5:00 PM at Myriad Brewing Company in Newburgh.

Admission is a donation of any amount to WHS. All proceeds support the construction of a much-needed new facility for the area’s only no-kill shelter.

Live performances by local artists HoneyVines and Between the Frets will headline the afternoon. Guests can enjoy food from Mother Truckers Pizzeria (while supplies last), a WHS merchandise table, a puppy snuggle station, and information on the “Building Hope for WHS” shelter project.

The event is outdoors. Lawn chairs are encouraged.

WHS thanks Myriad Brewing Company, HoneyVines, and Between the Frets for their support.

Celebrating 812 Day!

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

 

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.

UNCLE TOM”S GAZA

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redline

GAVEL GAMUT

By Jim Redwine

www.jamesmredwine.com

(Week of 04 August 2025)

UNCLE TOM”S GAZA

I read Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin when I was in the Seventh Grade because my Seventh Grade Social Studies teacher told our class the book missed the true meaning of the Civil War. My teacher was also my Junior High football coach and I liked and respected him. He was a solidly built white man about thirty-five years old. He ran his Social Studies class using the same system he used to coach.

He gave clear instructions and we players and students followed them. We won football games and accepted his interpretation of America’s cultural history the same way we players absorbed extra wind-sprints for mistakes on the practice field in 90º heat in September.

Both our football team and our Social Studies class were comprised of white kids as Oklahoma had not as yet integrated its schools. I do not know if there was a Social Studies class for Junior High, what we then called Colored kids, in my small hometown. Thus, I have no knowledge if they would have been taught Uncle Tom’s Cabin was enlightened or misguided or if it was simply ignored.

I remember the firmness in my teacher/coach’s voice as he described Mrs. Stowe’s novel as a book of fiction written by a northern Yankee whose uninformed views on slavery were influenced by her family’s brand of the Christian religion. As our Christian instructor told us, “The Civil War was not about slavery but State’s Rights”. That was not what I had been told by my Osage Indian Sunday School teacher or my parents. It was confusing.

However, football was more important than whether some long-dead writer was an accurate observer or a fervent abolitionist. So, I took in the lecture and let it roll off as most of the other stuff. That is, until the day my friends, Abby and Jack, brought the issues of State’s Rights and human rights into perspective.

Abby sat near me in class and Jack sat right next to her. Jack liked Abby but was unskilled in the ways to a girl’s heart. He sought her attention but thought to get it through pre-teen means. When our teacher left the classroom to get a book, Jack saw his chance to garner Abby’s ardor by slipping a thumbtack on her chair. She sat down on it just as the disciplinarian returned. She yelled and our teacher immediately went into coach mode.

At that time I had not learned about the tender mercies of Simon Legree but I got a preview from the Coach. He had always been ready with one of the paddles he kept hanging from the chalkboard. But this time the lesson of the power structure between teacher and student was graphic. Coach chose a thin paddle and pressed two thumbtacks through it. Then he proceeded to apply maximum behavioral modification to Jack.

That next Saturday I checked out Uncle Tom’s Cabin from the public library and read about slavery from the northern viewpoint. The aphorism “Power Corrupts” became an on-the-ground example to me. Those thoughts have reoccurred now I am an adult and have observed the corruption of the Israeli Zionists immense power over their neighbors, especially the Palestinians.

As I re-read Uncle Tom’s Cabin these past two weeks, my thoughts have been, where is a Harriet Beecher Stowe’s outrage at what is the incomprehensible cruelty of babies being starved and mothers being bombed. Harriet, we need you to visit Mr. Trump as you did Mr. Lincoln. Or, perhaps, we all need to read your book again.

For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com

Governor Braun Announces Cooperation Agreements with Federal Immigration Enforcement

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INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Mike Braun today announced a series of partnership agreements with federal immigration authorities to assist in deporting individuals unlawfully in the United States. The agencies announcing new cooperation agreements are the Indiana Department of Homeland Security, Indiana State Police, Indiana Department of Correction, and Indiana National Guard.

In a statement, Governor Braun reiterated the state’s partnership with federal immigration authorities, as first laid out in his January 28 executive order ensuring full cooperation:

Indiana is not a safe haven for illegal immigration. Indiana will fully partner with federal immigration authorities as they enforce the most fundamental laws of our country.” — Governor Braun

The Indiana Department of Homeland Security has approved a 287(g) agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

The 287(g) program authorizes ICE to enhance collaboration with state and local law enforcement partners to protect the homeland through the arrest and removal of aliens who undermine the safety of our nation’s communities and the integrity of U.S. immigration laws.

This agreement is under a ‘Task Force’ model, authorizing designated Indiana Department of Homeland Security officers to perform immigration enforcement functions such as arrests, issuing detainers, taking and maintaining custody, and operating as a joint task force with ICE.

The Indiana State Police have entered into a similar agreement to assist and collaborate with federal immigration authorities in their work.

The Indiana Department of Correction has signed a Warrant Service Officer memorandum of agreement, authorizing designated Indiana DOC personnel to assist with immigration enforcement duties in jails and correctional facilities.

The Indiana Department of Correction has also started an agreement with federal immigration enforcement to identify and deport removable aliens who have been arrested for a crime and booked into Indiana correctional facilities.

The Indiana Department of Correction is working with ICE to make available up to 1,000 beds at Miami Correctional Facility.

Governor Braun is also anticipating further partnership between the Indiana National Guard and federal immigration authorities. As previously announced, Camp Atterbury will be available for temporary use by the Department of Homeland Security to house illegal aliens subject to deportation, with safety in mind for staff, detainees, and surrounding communities. This mission will not interfere with the Indiana National Guard’s ability to respond or their training readiness.

National Nonprofit Petco Love Invests in the Vanderburgh Humane Society to Save and Improve the Lives of Pets in Southwestern Indiana

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Evansville, IN  The Vanderburgh Humane Society has received a $25,000 grant investment from national nonprofit Petco Love in support of their lifesaving work for pets in the Southwestern Indiana region.

Petco Love is a national nonprofit leading change for pets by harnessing the power of love to make communities and pet families closer, stronger, and healthier. Since its founding in 1999, Petco Love has invested nearly $421 million in adoption and other lifesaving efforts. And Petco Love helps find loving homes for pets in partnership with Petco and more than 4,000 organizations — like ours — across North America, with more than 7 million pets adopted and counting.

“Our investment in the Vanderburgh Humane Society is part of more than $12M in investments recently announced by Petco Love to power local organizations across the country as part of our commitment to create a future in which no pet is unnecessarily euthanized,” said Susanne Kogut, president of Petco Love. “Our local investments are only part of our strategy to empower animal lovers to drive lifesaving change right alongside us. We launched Petco Love Lost, a free national lost and found database that uses photo-matching technology to simplify the search for lost pets.”

“Petco Love’s commitment to supporting animal welfare agencies is so apparent in everything they do,” said Amanda Coburn, VHS Director of Advancement. “They have their finger on the pulse of what organizations are facing across the country, and they provide significant support without cumbersome requirements that take valuable time away from animal care. That matters!”

In their grant proposal, the VHS described how a national reduction in adoption rates, particularly for large dogs, is taking a toll on the organization. This has resulted in increased daily care costs (food, medical care, payroll, cleaning supplies, and water utility usage) alongside a reduction in projected annual adoption fee revenue. They said they will, “utilize this investment to continue to support our animal care staff, adoptions team, medical team, and volunteers so they can provide the best possible day-to-day care and enrichment for our pets while working diligently to find them loving homes.”

The Vanderburgh Humane Society is a nonprofit organization that serves more than 12,000 families per year. Since 1957, the VHS has cared for our community’s pets and the people who love them through several lifesaving programs and services.

Step right up and claim what’s yours! 

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