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103 historic farm families presented Hoosier Homestead Awards

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103 historic farm families presented Hoosier Homestead  Awards

AUGUST 15, 2024

INDIANAPOLIS (Aug. 15, 2024) — Recognized for their families’ longstanding commitment to agriculture, 103 Indiana farm families were presented the Hoosier Homestead Award at the Indiana State Fair from Indiana State Department of Agriculture Director Don Lamb.

“The Hoosier Homestead ceremony at the Indiana State Fair is a prestigious event for all involved,” said Lt. Gov. Crouch, Indiana’s Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development. “It is a true honor to celebrate these families for their work and commitment to bettering Indiana agriculture.”

To be named a Hoosier Homestead, farms must be owned by the same family for more than 100 consecutive years, and consist of 20 acres or more, or produce more than $1,000 in agricultural products per year.

Based on the age of the farm, families are eligible for three different distinctions of the Hoosier Homestead Award. They can receive the Centennial Award for 100 years, Sesquicentennial Award for 150 years or Bicentennial Award for 200 years of ownership.

“Keeping a farm operational for 100 years or more is something these families can take great pride in,” Lamb said. “Each of the awarded family farms continues to adapt and evolve through each new generation on the farm to ensure their success.”

Since the program’s inception in 1976, nearly 6,200 families have received the award. Often, a Hoosier Homestead farm is easily recognized because most recipients proudly display their awarded sign on their property.

During the ceremonies, six Indiana farms received the Bicentennial Award for 200 years of continuous ownership: the Thornburg-Caldwell-Slack family from Fayette County, the Hodges family from Morgan County, the Bridges-Royer family from Putnam County, the Dale & Donna Hartwell and Ricky W. Hartwell family from Rush County, the Bass-Rhodes family from Shelby County and the James W. Holmes, Jeffrey W. Holmes, Jason M. Davidson family from Tippecanoe County.

The following list includes the August 2024 Hoosier Homestead Award recipients.

County Award Name Award Year Award Type
Adams Bohnke 1897 Centennial
Adams Girod 1906 Centennial
Adams Kent L. Steiner 1890 Centennial
Allen Dafforn 1874 Sesquicentennial
Bartholomew Schroer 1886 Centennial
Benton Pitts 1880 Centennial
Benton Pitts 1911 Centennial
Blackford Schwarzkopf 1872 Sesquicentennial
Blackford Albert LeRoy Stallsmith 1904 Centennial
Carroll Boyer-Garrigues 1923 Centennial
Carroll George & Lois Wallace 1914 Centennial
Cass Geroge E. Ferguson 1858 Sesquicentennial
Cass VerBryck 1895 Centennial
Clay Hofmann (Modesitt) 1881 Centennial
Clay Hofmann (Unger) 1865 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Clinton Dean Walker 1846 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Daviess David L. Brown 1896 Centennial
Daviess Joseph L. Disser 1919 Centennial
Daviess Fuhrman 1918 Centennial
Dearborn Murtaugh 1855 Sesquicentennial
Decatur Manlief 1873 Sesquicentennial
Decatur Charles & Mary Torline 1874 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Delaware Abshire 1864 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Delaware C Clifford Green 1874 Sesquicentennial
Dubois Bartelt-Peters 1913 Centennial
Dubois Bockting 1839 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Dubois Meyer 1920 Centennial
Fayette Thornburg-Caldwell-Slack 1824 Sesquicentennial & Bicentennial
Franklin Kuntz 1916 Centennial
Franklin Miles Homestead Farms LLc 1874 Sesquicentennial
Franklin Wessel 1858 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Fulton Applegate-Crippen-Rock 1911 Centennial
Fulton Heater 1874 Sesquicentennial
Fulton Shewman 1918 Centennial
Grant Grindle 1852 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Greene Roudebush 1918 Centennial
Hamilton Honnold-Muir 1902 Centennial
Henry Kirklin 1874 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Howard Duncan Farm Legacy LLC 1864 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Howard J & B Family Farms LLC (53 acre) 1899 Centennial
Howard J & B Family Farms LLC (80 acre) 1849 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Huntington Philip Shafer 1923 Centennial
Jackson Bell-Alwes-Mellencamp 1918 Centennial
Jackson Claycamp 1869 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Jackson Shoemaker 1924 Centennial
Jasper Gilmore-Brandenburg 1895 Centennial
Jasper Wilma Jean Lehe 1922 Centennial
Jasper Walter 1873 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Knox Borgmeier 1904 Centennial
Kosciusko Messmore-Werstler 1923 Centennial
Kosciusko Shock 1866 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
LaGrange Koon-Barroquillo 1918 Centennial
Madison Haines-Wood 1854 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Madison Sears 1924 Centennial
Madison Thomas A. Tooley 1913 Centennial
Marshall Stuntz / Bollenbacher 1869 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Miami Berglan 1874 Sesquicentennial
Miami Peter Fisher-John H. Balsbaugh-Raymond E. Mussleman 1837 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Miami Gahs 1874 Sesquicentennial
Miami Patricia Hardwick & Shirley Kerns 1855 Sesquicentennial
Miami Kranz 1874 Sesquicentennial
Miami Shewman 1869 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Montgomery Cowan 1834 Sesquicentennial
Morgan Harmon & Nancy Crone 1836 Sesquicentennial
Morgan Haase 1905 Centennial
Morgan Hodges (1840) 1840 Sesquicentennial
Morgan Hodges (1822) 1822 Bicentennial
Newton Romine 1874 Sesquicentennial
Noble Harvey and Simon 1862 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Noble Zimmerman 1919 Centennial
Posey Papenmeier 1923 Centennial
Pulaski Bergdolt 1899 Centennial
Pulaski Heater 1872 Sesquicentennial
Putnam Bridges-Royer 1823 Bicentennial
Ripley Drockelman 1860 Sesquicentennial
Ripley Miller 1910 Centennial
Ripley Shorten-Volz-Miller 1917 Centennial
Ripley Smith 1868 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Ripley Wilson 1923 Centennial
Rush Gray-Eakin 1835 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Rush Dale & Donna Hartwell and Ricky W. Hartwell 1821 Sesquicentennial & Bicentennial
Shelby Bass-Rhodes 1823 Centennial & Sesquicentennial & Bicentennial
Shelby Kolkmeier 1905 Centennial
Steuben Libey 1920 Centennial
Steuben Levi Pocock 1868 Sesquicentennial
St Joseph Michalski 1887 Centennial
Sullivan Shields 1894 Centennial
Tippecanoe James W. Holmes, Jeffrey W. Holmes, Jason M. Davidson (Davidson) 1824 Bicentennial
Tippecanoe Inskeep-McDole; Gilbert-Dilley; Tishler-Diem 1877 Centennial
Tipton Meyncke 1924 Centennial
Union Greenmeadow Farm Inc-Caldwell 1923 Centennial
Vanderburgh Friedrich Schaefer 1869 Sesquicentennial
Vigo Chickadaunce 1913 Centennial
Wabash Daihl 1873 Centennial & Sesquicentennial
Wabash Kirtlan 1924 Centennial
Wabash Schuler 1920 Centennial
Warren George K Kerner 1872 Sesquicentennial
Warrick Zint 1902 Centennial
Wayne F. Park Ammerman 1919 Centennial
Wells Price 1919 Centennial
White Diemer 1895 Centennial
White George B. Kilmer 1916 Centennial
White Otto Vieregge 1915 Centennial

ISDA

For more information about the Hoosier Homestead Award program, please visit isda.in.gov. Photos from the ceremony are available here.

$3.7 Million Funding Available for Recycling and Waste Diversion Projects in Central Indiana

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$3.7 Million Funding Available for Recycling and Waste Diversion Projects in Central Indiana

Virtual information session on Sept. 4

The deadline for Central Indiana businesses to submit proposals for up to $3.7 million in funding to implement Central Indiana Waste Diversion Program (CIWDP) projects is Oct. 1, 2024.

Funding for successful applicant projects is through the Indiana Department of Environmental Management’s (IDEM) Recycling Market Development Program. Eligible waste diversion and recycling projects are restricted to Marion, Hamilton, Hancock, Shelby, Johnson, Morgan, Hendricks, and Boone counties, and implemented by private sector entities. Proposed projects must demonstrate waste diversion from landfills and incinerators and a dedicated Indiana-based market for commercial use of the material.

Applications should demonstrate an understanding of the infrastructure, supply chain, and changing economy for recyclers and seek solutions where organizations and communities can most effectively use monies to increase waste diversion in Central Indiana. Funding criteria includes the amount and type of waste diverted from landfills through the project and the potential for productive reuse of the diverted waste, with priority given to the largest amount of waste diversion potential through the project.

The Recycling Market Development Board will make final funding determinations in early Spring 2025.

To apply, visit recycle.IN.gov. For additional information about the Recycling Market Development Program, call 800-988-7901.

IDEM will host an information session on Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. to discuss this funding opportunity. The webinar will provide a summary of the CIWDP, including timeline, requirements, and application guidance. Interested entities with potential waste diversion and recycling projects that focus on Central Indiana are invited to attend. 

EPD Participating in “Cops on a Rooftop”

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EPD Participating in “Cops on a Rooftop”

5/15/2024

This Friday, August 16, 2024, the Evansville Police Department and the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office will be participating in the Special Olympics of Indiana’s, Dunkin Donuts “Cop on a Rooftop” event. At this event, Dunkin Donuts partners with local law enforcement and the Special Olympics of Indiana to raise money and awareness for the Special Olympics Torch Run and other Special Olympic events.

Several Evansville Police Officers and Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Deputies will be on hand at the Dunkin Donuts location, at 848 S. Green River Rd., this Friday from 5:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. During this statewide fundraiser, hundreds of local law enforcement officers will stake out Dunkin’ rooftops all over the United States to heighten awareness and raise money for the Special Olympics.

Guests who donate to the Special Olympics will receive a free donut coupon. You can make that donation in the drive thru that morning either by cash or the Venmo app. Come see us Friday morning and help us raise more than other agencies participating in the state. We will have Special Olympian athletes with us that morning also. We hope to see you there!

HOT JOBS

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On-Site Customer Service Rep II

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Canaan, CT
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Responds to customer inquires regarding products, provides quotes, and handles order entry. GPC’s policy is to recruit, hire, train, promote, assign, transfer…
3 days ago

On Site Customer Service Representative

Motion Industries (MOT) 3.7 3.7/5 rating
East Peoria, IL
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May assist customer by troubleshooting via telephone or email and identifying correct part. GPC’s policy is to recruit, hire, train, promote, assign, transfer…
3 days ago

Customer Service Representative

Motion Industries (MOT) 3.7 3.7/5 rating
Dayton, OH
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Under close supervision, the Customer Service Representative is responsible for accurately fulfilling customer orders and managing incoming customer calls.
1 day ago

AR Specialist II

Motion Industries (MOT) 3.7 3.7/5 rating
Birmingham, AL
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Processes incoming payments on an exception basis. GPC’s policy is to recruit, hire, train, promote, assign, transfer and terminate employees based on their own…
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Mechanical Technician- RP01

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Assist customers by answering specific technical questions to help the customer understand the work to be done. Ability to read hydraulic schematics.
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Service Technician- AI

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Fabricator-1

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Under direct supervision, the Fabricator makes, repairs, adapts, and rectifies tools, dies and other pieces of mechanical equipment with high precision…
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Service Technician II- AI

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Assist customers by answering specific technical questions to help the customer understand the work to be done. Ability to read hydraulic schematics.
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Electrical Technician- RP01

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Service Shop Manager

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Anchorage, AK
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Retail Food Establishment Inspection Report

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Healthy food. Healthy eating background. Fruit, vegetable, berry. Vegetarian eating. Superfood

Media reports July 21-27, 2024

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.

Phillips’ ninth-inning home run leads Otters to win

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SCHAUMBURG, Ill. – On a gorgeous Tuesday night at Wintrust Field, the Evansville Otters took down the Schaumburg Boomers 5-2 to take a 2-1 lead in the five-game series.

Dakota Phillips stole the show once again. In the Otters’ (35-45) ninth, he blasted a three-run go-ahead homer to right-center propelling the club to victory.

The Boomers (39-40) scored their only two runs of the game in the opening inning.

After a rocky start from southpaw Braden Scott (4-9), he settled down and dominated the rest of the contest. His final line was eight innings pitched, allowing the pair of runs on six hits with seven strikeouts and two walks.

It took the bats some time to get going, but they answered in the fourth inning to even the score at two. Pavin Parks hit a sacrifice fly to score the first run, followed by a Phillips RBI single to center field.

Afterwards, pitching commanded the game until the ninth. The Schaumburg arm had already struck out three in the inning, but a wild pitch extended the frame. One walk later, Phillips took care of the rest with the three-run home run.

Parks (Sv. 4) went from shortstop to the mound and closed out the ninth, striking out one. The two-way player remains perfect in save opportunities.

David Mendham, Gary Mattis and Phillips had two hits each to lead the offense.

Back to the grind tomorrow, the Otters look to win the series against the Boomers with a 6:30 p.m. CT first pitch. Coverage is available on the Otters Digital Network and FloBaseball.

Gov. Holcomb announces Executive Director Joel Thacker to step down from the Indiana Department of Homeland Security

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Gov. Holcomb announces Executive Director Joel Thacker to step down from the Indiana Department of Homeland Security

Governor appoints Jonathan Whitham as acting executive director

INDIANAPOLIS-Governor Eric J. Holcomb announced today that Joel Thacker will be stepping down as the executive director of the Indiana Department of Homeland Security (IDHS). The City of Carmel announced today his new role as fire chief.

Gov. Holcomb named IDHS Chief of Staff Jonathan Whitham as the acting executive director effective Aug. 31. 2024.

“Joel has been a consistently effective leader when the Hoosiers needed it most during some of the state’s largest natural disasters,” Gov. Holcomb said. “He’s never been afraid to roll up his sleeves and help wherever, whenever he’s needed, understanding an emergency ‘s need for urgent response. Joel was critical when my administration set out to provide better tools, training and resources to firefighters across the state as I know he’ll be there for those in need in his next chapter in life.”

Thacker was appointed as executive director of IDHS in June 2022 after serving as the state fire marshal and director of the Fire and Building Safety Division since 2020. Prior to his role as state fire marshal, Thacker served as fire chief with the Plainfield Fire Territory.

Under his leadership, IDHS accomplished the following:

  • Expanded the Hub and Spoke Program by building out hands-on fire training centers around the state to ensure that firefighters travel no more than 45-minutes to a training facility.
  • Provided $10 million for Volunteer Firefighter Personal Protective Equipment to ensure safety.
  • Streamlined the State Disaster Relief Fund for easier access for public and individual assistance after a state declared disaster.
  • Increased the maximum amount qualifying individuals can receive from $10,000 to $25,000.
  • We have provided nearly $15 million over the biennium for emergency medical services readiness training programs, equipment and 911 interoperability study.

“It has been a great honor to serve the citizens of Indiana for the last 4 plus years,” Thacker said. “With the support of Governor Holcomb and the General Assembly, we have been able to help communities and individuals recover from the impacts of natural disasters as well as provide new training opportunities and equipment to first responders statewide.”

Thacker’s last day as the executive director of IDHS is Aug. 30, 2024.

Whitham will maintain his current role as chief of staff while assuming the duties of acting executive director of IDHS. Before his role as chief of staff, Whitham served as general counsel for IDHS since 2014. He also worked as a part time firefighter and EMT at the White River Township Fire Department.

“Jonathan has been walking alongside Joel every step of the way and will provide a seamless transition for staff, partners and stakeholders,” Gov. Holcomb said.

Whitham earned a bachelor of arts degree from Indiana University and a law degree from Indiana University McKinney School of Law.

“I’m honored to be asked to step in during such a crucial time in public safety,” Whitham said. “Indiana has experienced a record number of disasters and we’ve seen the benefits of being prepared under Joel Thacker’s successful leadership. I will continue to focus the agency on preparedness, so Hoosiers remain secure in the state I’m blessed to call home. It is my passion to protect and I’m ready to get to work!”

Victory: IU Health takes necessary steps to protect patients’ privacy

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Victory: IU Health takes necessary
steps to protect patients’ privacy

Attorney General Todd Rokita’s office secured another win for medical privacy, ensuring through court-directed discovery that IU Health has proper privacy controls and training in place to protect Hoosier patients’ private health information.

IU Health management initially denied allegations that Dr. Caitlin Bernard violated a patient’s privacy at a political rally.

IU Health officials even continued those denials after that same doctor’s peers serving on the Indiana Medical Licensing Board found that she DID violate privacy laws. This repeated refusal by IU Health to even acknowledge a violation of patient privacy prompted the Office of Attorney General to probe whether and how IU Health was conducting patient privacy training in light of its mishandling of the Bernard matter.

When IU Health officials refused to answer questions, the Office of the Attorney General had no choice but to file a lawsuit to require their cooperation and answers.

“This is a win for patients, but also for the group’s 36,000 health care providers who can now trust they’ve received accurate training that is consistent with HIPAA privacy laws and Indiana patient confidentiality rules,” Attorney General Rokita said. “One of my office’s main priorities is to protect patient privacy because when it’s not, we no longer have reliable, honest healthcare.”

The Sept. 15, 2023, lawsuit was filed on behalf of the people of Indiana against IU Health and IU Healthcare Associates for their failure to properly report, review and enforce HIPAA and Indiana law violations.  Attorney General Rokita and his team verified through discovery in this case that IU Health has now taken necessary actions to better train employees to help protect the medical privacy of Indiana residents.

Through this lawsuit, Attorney General Rokita’s office confirmed IU Health has undertaken the following actions:

  • Trained employees to specifically avoid talking about patients in public areas;
  • Informed its employees they are required to notify public relations staff prior to any communication so that management can verify patient authorization; and
  • Conducted employee training on what constitutes Protected Health Information.

On June 30, 2022, Dr. Caitlin Bernard spoke with an Indy Star reporter at a political rally about her 10-year-old patient. IU Health later issued a media statement on July 13, 2022, that said Dr. Bernard had not violated privacy laws. After hearing over a dozen hours of testimony, the Indiana Medical Licensing Board, which is comprised of doctors, voted 5-1 that Dr. Bernard violated HIPPA. IU Health issued another statement on May 26, 2023, claiming it disagreed with the board’s decision and believed Dr. Bernard had not violated any privacy laws.

“IU Health rejected the best interest of patients and taxpayers alike when they set the tone by initially refusing to cooperate with our office,” Attorney General Rokita said. “We are pleased the information this office sought over two years ago has finally been provided and the necessary steps have been taken to accurately and consistently train their workforce to protect patients and their health care workers”.

Though voluntarily dismissing it without prejudice, Attorney General Rokita said they could always refile at a later date if necessary. As a government regulator responsible for HIPAA compliance, the State anticipates and expects hospitals and covered entities to continue significant and continual training to physicians and staff that addresses the importance of patient and data privacy.

The voluntary dismissal is attached below.