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IS IT TRUE JANUARY 26, 2017

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IS IT TRUE its time that Evansville City Council, County Commission and County Council stop playing political games concerning the possible funding for the renovation plans for the Vanderburgh County jail? …its time for members of all three elected bodies to sit down like reasonable adults and address the overcrowding issues concerning the jail and to come up with reasonable solutions to how to correct the problems? …if they agree that building an addition to the jail is the answer then they should build for future needs of the jail and not for the current needs?

IS IT TRUE we hear that newly elected Council President Missy Mosby was so pleased with the work of her Finance Chairman (Dan McGinn (R)) she has re-appointed him to serve in that position for another year? …right after his re-appointment McGinn announced that he going to push to get Council to approve tax credit to developers that renovate shopping center with vacant store fronts? …McGinn states that “giving tax credits to shopping mall developers will not cost the tax payers any money”? …all we can say is “really”?

IS IT TRUE that we have been informed by creditable sources that the Zoo really loses several millions of dollars per year (more than previously reported)? …we wonder why in the world would the Mayor want to invest another million dollars in a “penguin” exhibit this year? …Its important to remind the Mayor, its one thing to build something but another to maintain it?

IS IT TRUE we hope that Vanderburgh County Commissioner President Bruce Ungethiem and City Council President Missy Mosby will provide the media with a detailed breakdown concerning board appointments listed on future agendas?  …we would like to know what boards are up for appointments and who are the Commissioners and City Council members recommending for these appointments?

IS IT TRUE the discussion to combined the offices of the County Commission and the County Council into one business pod is slowing moving forward?  …we would appreciate that the powers that be give us details (time frame, costs and office layout and reason for the expansion) concerning this capital project?  …we would like to know who is pushing this idea?

IS IT TRUE we are extremely pleased with the way that newly elected State Representative Ryan Hatfield (D) is conducting himself in that office?  …it looks like Vanderburgh County might have a political star in the making?

IS IT TRUE that the citizens against Trump had the opportunity to voice their displeasure against him last week in a series of peaceful protests?  …beginning this Friday the Pro-Life groups shall stage a peaceful protests throughout America?  …we wish them a peaceful and successful event?

IS IT TRUE that whether we like or dislike Mr. Trump he is now President Trump with all of the power and responsibility reserved for that office alone?…as with all of our Presidents, when they do a good job, the American people are better off?…the time is now to face that reality and to encourage our new president to make things happen that will benefit us all?…tipping points are sometimes beneficial and sometimes lead chaos like we have seen in Venezuela during 2016?…we hope to see a better America in 2020 from both an economic and freedom perspective?

FOOTNOTE: Today “Readers Poll” question is: Was State Senator Veneta Becker was out of bounds when she quietly wrote the law  to increase the local income tax from the current 1% to 1.25% without City Council knowledge?

 

CHANNEL 44 NEWS: Hatfield Proposes Increased Penalties For Animal Cruelty Crimes

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Legislation Proposes Increased Penalties For Animal Cruelty Crimes

A local state representative is hoping to increase penalties when it comes to animal cruelty crimes. Ryan Hatfield is behind a bill that would raise the penalty for anyone convicted of harming an animal. House Bill 1604 comes off the heels of…

Trump Wants To Kill 17 Agencies: Here’s What They Cost

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Trump Wants To Kill These 17 agencies: Here’s What They Cost

Some of President Donald Trump’s planned budget cuts appear to be targeted more at undercutting Democratic priorities than at shrinking the national debt.

A host of planned funding cuts to federal agencies, reported last week by The Hill, are part of the Trump administration’s desire to eliminate roughly $10.5 trillion in spending over the next 10 years – nearly all of the federal government’s discretionary spending.

Yet Trump has vowed not to cut entitlements, such as Medicare and Social Security, and promised to beef up military spending, which represents the lion’s share of federal spending – making it hard for him to do more than chip away at the margins of the nearly $20 trillion national debt.

What, then, would the reported cuts accomplish? The answer appears to be defunding a number of projects seen as liberal darlings – including groups aimed at preserving and supporting the environment, civil rights protections, the arts, minority-owned businesses, and public broadcasting.

Here’s a list of the various federal agencies reportedly on the chopping block, along with some of their key initiatives – and some of the jobs supported.

Corporation for Public Broadcasting

– Budget: $445 million

– Cost per American: $1.37

Republicans have long been known to want to kill government funding for Big Bird. But the CPB is much more than Sesame Street, and taking away public funding may imperil important stories that need to be told.

For instance, the CPB is backing a program through Wisconsin Public Television called Veterans Coming Home – which includes a series depicting what some of the 2.5 million veterans endure as they reenter society, but also funds services, such as job fairs, for returning vets.

National Endowment for the Arts

– Budget: $150 million

– Cost per American: $0.46

The NEA supports art, and those who make it, across the country. Eliminating funding would kill hundreds of programs, like Art 365, which grants five Oklahoma artists $12,000 to support their work. Past grantees photographed remote portions of our National Parks and wilderness areas, and used aerial photography to look at churchgoing demographics in Oklahoma.

National Endowment for the Humanities

– Budget: $150 million

– Cost per American: $0.46

The NEH offers research funding to institutions like museums, colleges, and libraries. The agency has backed 16 Pulitzer winners and Ken Burns’ The Civil War series, among other notable endeavors. One recent grantee is Michael Bernath, an associate professor at the University of Miami, who received $6,000 for his project In a Land of Strangers: Northern Teachers in the Old South and the Emergence of American Sectional Identity, 1790-1865.

Minority Business Development Agency

– Budget: $36 million

– Cost per American: $0.11

This federal agency helps minority-owned businesses with the capital, contracts, and markets they need to grow, according to its website. The agency also advocates and promotes minority-owned business with elected officials, policy makers, and business leaders.

The MBDA says it helped a minority-owned construction company in Phoenix, for instance, secure $60 million in loans – which allowed the company to expand operations and hire more employees.

Economic Development Administration

– Budget: $215 million

– Cost per American: $0.66

The EDA supports distressed communities with their infrastructure needs that will help drive regional growth, promotes economic development projects that spur entrepreneurship and innovation at the regional level, and provides direct technical assistance to firms negatively impacted by global trade.

What does this mean? Seven years ago, the EDA gave a $2 million grant to the Pacific Northwest Diabetes Institute to buy new scientific equipment, in turn providing lab space that would support other high-tech companies in the area. The EDA says the grant ended up creating 184 jobs, saving another 110, and attracting another $500,000 in private investment.

International Trade Administration

– Budget: $521 million

– Cost per American: $1.60

The ITA helps American businesses sell more products to overseas markets. One beneficiary was the Iron Fist Brewing Company, located in Vista, California. A representative of the San Diego U.S. Export Assistance Center connected with the brewery at a convention in 2013, and helped them export to Australia, Canada, Finland, Hong Kong, among others. Iron Fist hired two more employees thanks to new export revenue, the ITA reports.

Manufacturing Extension Partnership

– Budget: $142 million

– Cost per American: $0.43

This is a so-called public-private partnership that helps small to medium-size manufacturers become more efficient, build new products, and improve sales and marketing techniques. Missoula, Mont.-based organic soap wholesaler Botanie used their local MEP affiliate to help keep pace with their growing business – by, for instance, using more sophisticated technologies to track inventory. The MEP says it helped Botanie save $280,000 and retain six jobs.

Office of Community Oriented Policing Services

– Budget: $286 million

– Cost per American: $0.88

The majority of COPS’ annual budget is dedicated to hiring more police personnel to help local communities improve their policing. Last October, the Justice Department announced $119 million in grant funding for 184 law enforcement agencies across the country – resulting in 900 created or saved jobs, the office reports. Among the recipients was the Dallas Police Department, which had lost five officers in an ambush a few months earlier; it got $3.1 million to hire 25 officers.

Office of Violence Against Women

– Budget: $480 million

– Cost per American: $1.48

The OVW runs 25 grant programs created through the 1994 Violence Against Women Act, in an effort to reduce domestic violence, sexual assault and dating violence. The police department and city government of Andalusia, Ala., for instance, received a $450,000 grant over three years that will cover domestic violence training for officers as well as the hiring of three additional police officers.

Legal Services Corporation

– Budget: $503 million

– Cost per American: $1.55

The LSC helps poor Americans afford legal services, currently funding 134 independent legal aid organizations with more than 800 offices in the U.S. For instance, the Atlanta Legal Aid Society – which served nearly 33,000 people in 2015, including about 15,000 children – received $3.8 million last year, supporting 109 positions. Two-thirds of clients served were African-Americans.

Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department

– Budget: $156 million

– Cost per American: $0.48

The Civil Rights Division, a part of the Justice Department that employs 750 positions, works to fight discrimination and protect Americans’ voting rights. Recently a Civil Rights Division investigation of the Chicago Police Department found that CPD officers’ practices unnecessarily endanger themselves and result in unnecessary and avoidable uses of force. The city of Chicago and the Justice Department reached an agreement to improve the city’s policing practices.

Environment and Natural Resources Division of the Justice Department

– Budget: $123 million

– Cost per American: $0.38

The ENRD brings cases against those who break pollution-related laws. In one recent case, the division levied a $160,000 penalty against Iowa’s Meadowvale Dairy for violating the Clean Water Act.

Overseas Private Investment Corporation

– Budget: Self-sustaining

– Cost per American: $0

Using both loans and loan guarantees, OPIC works to help businesses with annual revenues below $400 million invest in large scale operations, such as airports and water systems. Over the past five years, 71 percent of OPIC projects were in partnership with U.S. small businesses, accounting for over $600 million annually in U.S. exports, according to the State Department. One recent OPIC effort, for instance, provided an $87 million, 17-year loan, to a U.S. company, Al Tamweel Al Saree, to extend loans to micro and small-sized Iraqi businesses.

UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

– U.S. Funding: Estimated $10 million

– Cost per American: $0.03

The IPCC issues reports from the world’s leading climate scientists on the state of global warming, and its impact on human populations. According to NASA, 2016 was the hottest year on record.

Office of Electricity Deliverability and Energy Reliability

– Budget: $262 million

– Cost per American: $0.81

Created after the 2003 blackout left nearly 50 million Americans and Canadians without power, the OE invests in the electric grid to make it more modern, reliable and secure. The agency recently released a comprehensive report on how America can improve energy allocation.

Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy

– Budget: $2.9 billion

– Cost per American: $8.95

The EERE works to create and sustain American leadership in the transition to a global clean energy economy. What does that look like? In one recent demonstration project, the EERE helped a South Carolina-based BMW plant use bio-methane gas from a nearby landfill to power some forklifts.

Office of Fossil Energy

– Budget: $878 million

– Cost per American: $2.71

With projects like the development of clean coal technology, this office works to reduce the carbon footprint of fossil fuels. Its Petra Nova project, based in Thompsons, Texas, is now the world’s largest post-combustion carbon-capture system. Petra Nova received $190 million from the Department of Energy, and has the potential to capture 1.6 million tons of CO2 per year from an existing coal-fired power plant.

St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children Birth Records

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Chelsey and Bill Kroeger, Newburgh, Ind., sons, William Nash, and Maddex Wayne, Jan. 14

Amanda and Drew Seitz, Evansville, daughter, Hazel Anne, Jan. 15

Meagan Phillips, Owensboro, Ky., son, Jameson Jamar, Jan. 16

Kendal Daum and Joseph Garmon, Dale, Ind., daughter, Bella Dee, Jan. 16

Catrina and Zackery Campbell, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Cambrianne Sue, Jan. 17

Shayla and Robert Horst, Henderson, Ky., daughter, Conley Jo, Jan. 17

Mackenzie Kizer and Derek Smith, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Samantha Joann, Jan. 17

Brianna Skelton and Aaron Slaton, Evansville, son, Paxton Lee, Jan. 17

Tasha Goins and Armando Jimenez, Evansville, sons, Jose Joel, and Juan Javier, Jan. 18

Sheyanne Harris, Evansville, son, Dawson Cole, Jan. 18

Michelle and Joshua Petrig, Evansville, daughter, Ella June, Jan. 19

Olivia and Brent Pinkston, Fort Branch, Ind., son, Owen Arthur, Jan. 19

Erica and David Land, Evansville, daughter, Berkley Nova, Jan. 19

Amber Walker and Adam Schmitt, Evansville, daughter, Aubree Rene, Jan. 19

Dawn and Justin Wiles, Fairfield, Ill., daughters, Alaina Kay, and Libby Elise, Jan. 20

Jessica Meeks , Evansville, son, Ja’Marion El’Shaun Capri, Jan. 20

Tara and Joseph Reinhart, Owensville, Ind., daughter, Trinidey Leigh, Jan. 20

Lauren and Nick Burch, Evansville, daughter, Grace Elizabeth, Jan. 20

Rebecca Workman and Jerry Monks, Sebree, Ky., son, Malaki Lee, Jan. 21

Kelsey and John Hillenbrand, Evansville, daughter, Caroline Jane, Jan. 23

Attorney General Curtis Hill Shares Concerns Regarding Legislation To Expand Statewide Needle “Exchange”

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Supreme Court Upholds Man’s Life Sentence

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Supreme Court Upholds Man’s Life Sentence

Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com

An Elkhart County man who smoked synthetic marijuana then stabbed his girlfriend to death was unable to convince the Indiana Supreme Court that his sentence of life without parole was unconstitutional.

Michael T. Shoun was convicted of murdering his 17-year-old girlfriend in 2013 and sentenced to spend the remainder of his life in prison. Shoun appealed, arguing he has an intellectual disability and his punishment is unconstitutional under Article 1, Section 16 of the Indiana Constitution which provides that all penalties be proportional to the offense.

The Supreme Court affirmed the sentence in Michael T. Shoun v. State of Indiana, 20S00-1601-LW-00061.

In an opinion written by Justice Steven David, the unanimous court dismissed Shoun’s contention that the Elkhart Superior Court should have sua sponte determined that he has an intellectual disability and is therefore ineligible for a life sentence. In particular, the Supreme Court noted Shoun’s own counsel withdrew Shoun’s motion for a hearing under the Disability Chapter after determining he could not meet the burden to prove Shoun had a disability that manifested prior to age 22.

Also the Supreme Court found the sentence was proportional to the crime.

Shoun was already supposed to be serving time for a habitual traffic offender conviction but had fled a work release facility to be with his girlfriend. He stabbed her so many times the coroner could not count the number of wounds and some of her organs were severed and removed. Moreover the medical exam found that the girlfriend was alive while the wounds were inflicted.

“Shoun’s (life without parole) penalty is not only based upon his status as a prior offender, but is also independently supported by the nature of his crime,” David wrote. “That is, he mutilated (his girlfriend) while she was still alive. …Again, the nature of the offense here is so severe that it cannot be said that the LWOP penalty is disproportionate.”

Kuester’s Hardware Store

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Fred Kuester’s first store, seen here at the corner of Lincoln and Weinbach, opened in 1937, in what was then a sparsely-developed part of town. Advertising itself as “the hardware store and more,” the business became a fixture in the retail community for decades as Fred Kuester, an Evansville native, gained a national reputation as a pioneer in the industry for his store designs, varied merchandise, and other innovations. Branches later operated on Diamond Avenue, Vann Avenue, in the North Park, Fairlawn and Lawndale shopping centers, and in venues as distant as Owensboro, Kentucky, before the business was phased out after the death of Kuester’s widow in 2000.

FOOTNOTES: We want to thank Patricia Sides, Archivist of Willard Library for contributing this picture that shall increase people’s awareness and appreciation of Evansville’s rich history. If you have any historical pictures of Vanderburgh County or Evansville please contact please contact Patricia Sides, Archivist Willard Library at 812) 425-4309, ext. 114 or e-mail her at www.willard.lib.in.us.

USI Softball earns votes in NFCA Preseason Top 25 Poll

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NFCA Preseason Top 25 Coaches’ Poll

 University of Southern Indiana Softball begins the 2017 season in February receiving consideration for the National Fastpitch Coaches Association Preseason Top 25 Poll.

USI, which is essentially 30th with nine votes, returns seven position starters and three pitchers off a team that went 35-21 overall and 21-9 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference a year ago.

Included in that list of returning players are five All-GLVC honorees, two All-Region performers and the reigning GLVC Player of the Year in senior All-American catcher Haley Hodges (Portage, Indiana).

Hodges, who was named first-team All-America by Herosports.com, the NFCA and the Division II Conference Commissioners Association, is coming off a historic 2016 season that saw her set single-season school records for home runs (22), RBIs (72), walks (45) and runs scored (58).

Surrounding Hodges in the lineup is a first-team All-GLVC outfielder in sophomore Olivia Clark-Kittleson (Carbondale, Illinois), a pair of second-team All-GLVC honorees in junior first baseman Marleah Fossett (Brownsburg, Indiana) and sophomore designated player/pitcher/outfielder Caitlyn Bradley (Forest, Indiana), and a third-team All-GLVC shortstop in senior Lexi Reese (Lebanon, Indiana).

Clark-Kittleson hit .351 with nine RBIs and 18 runs scored before injury cut her 2016 season short. Fossett hit .336 with 11 doubles, six home runs and 37 RBIs, while Bradley hit .300 with 12 doubles, a triple, two home runs and 23 RBIs in her first year of collegiate softball. Bradley also earned All-Midwest Region honors a year ago.

Reese had a huge year for USI as a junior when she hit .326 with 16 doubles, 10 home runs and 40 RBIs.

In the pitcher’s circle, the Eagles return Bradley and fellow sophomores Haylee Smith (Florence, Kentucky) and Courtney Atkisson (Bringhurst, Indiana). Smith led the Eagles with a 2.91 ERA and 11 complete games as a freshman, while Bradley went 6-3 with a 3.04 ERA.

Atkisson is coming off a strong fall campaign that saw the emergence of freshman pitcher Jennifer Leonhardt (Louisville, Kentucky). Leonhardt earned third-team All-State honors as a senior after posting a 2.40 ERA and 250 strikeouts during her senior season.

USI opens the year February 14 when it travels to Florence, Alabama, to take on defending NCAA Division II champion and preseason No. 1 University of North Alabama.

The Eagles also are slated to play preseason No. 6 Grand Valley State University March 6 at The Spring Games in Clermont, Florida, while the University of Indianapolis (No. 16) and the University of Missouri-St. Louis (No. 23) are the only GLVC teams to open the year in the NFCA Top 25 preseason poll.

Following their doubleheader with North Alabama, the Eagles host the Midwest Region Crossover February 24-26 at Deaconess Sports Park in Evansville. USI opens its home schedule March 15 with a doubleheader against Midwest Region foe Kentucky Wesleyan College.