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AUGUST 30 “READERS FORUM”

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

“IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Wednesday or Thursday

Todays READERS POLL question is: Does a political candidate with a strong military background get you attention at the ballot box?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS” posted in our sections.

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CHANNEL 44 NEWS

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ITT Tech Stops Enrolling Students

 ITT Technical Institute has stopped enrolling students altogether at its campuses.

This comes less than a week after the U.S. Department of Education banned the Indiana-based company from accepting new students who use federal financial aid.

Analysts say the ban is a likely death sentence for ITT, which received 79% of its cash receipts last year from the Federal Student Loan program.

The department also placed several other sanctions on ITT, including a freeze on executive compensation and an order that it increase its surety funds in 30 days.

ITT Tech operates more than 130 campuses in 38 states.

EPD Foundation Appoints New Executive Director

 The Evansville Police Department Foundation appoints a new Executive Director.

Jan Davis will be taking over the leadership roll.

The EPD Foundation exists to award financial grants to the department for specialized equipment, education, collaborative community programs and for the support of its personnel.

A private reception in her honor will be thrown in to celebrate Davis Tuesday.

Only local dignitaries, the EPD Foundation Board of Directors and Board of Governors, donors, and friends of the Evansville Police Department will all be in attendance.

Petition Started to Extend EVSC Lunch Periods

 Some local parents are joining forces, hoping to make a change to lunch periods in the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation.

Two moms go together and started an online petition to try to extend the now 20-minute lunch period.

They started it after realizing their children were coming home from school hungry, and saying they don’t have enough time to eat.

EVSC Superintendent Dr. David Smith says if there’s ever a child that can’t finish their meal, they will give them extra time.

But, with 1,800 signatures on their online petition, the moms say it isn’t just a few children who can’t finish their lunch in time.

“And it’s very sad to watch kids put some food in their pockets, or standing over the trash can shoving more food in their mouth,” said Tiffanie Wolf, EVSC parent, helped start petition. “And it’s like sometimes, this is the only decent meal some of these kids are gonna get and they’re taking it from them. and then they’re going back to class hungry.”

The moms plan to take the petition to the next school board meeting, September 12th at 5:30, hoping they’ll consider extending the lunch periods to at least 20 minutes and a reworking of the schedule to allow kids enough time for both lunch and recess. 

USI Volleyball Opens Season Friday

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USI Volleyball Opens Season Friday

University of Southern Indiana Volleyball opens the 2016 season Friday and Saturday when it competes at the Flagler Invitational in St. Augustine, Florida.

The Screaming Eagles take on Brevard College Friday at noon (CDT) before taking on host Flagler College Friday at 6 p.m. USI concludes its opening weekend against Valdosta State University and Brevard Saturday at 10 a.m. and 3:30 p.m., respectively.

Live stats and video for all four matches will be available at GoUSIEagles.com.

USI Volleyball Notes

Openers. USI is looking to win its season-opener for the fourth consecutive year. The Eagles had lost their previous three season-openers prior to the 2013 season.

Neutral site. The Eagles will play six of their first eight matches this season on a neutral site. USI was 6-1 when playing on a neutral site a year ago after going 3-1 on a neutral site in 2014. The Eagles are opening the year on a neutral site for the first time since 2013 after hosting the Dunn Hospitality Invitational in 2014 and 2015.

Scouting the opposition. USI’s opponents at the Flagler Invitational posted a combined record of 58-32 a year ago. While Brevard was 12-17 overall a year ago, Flagler went 23-8 and won the Peach Belt Conference title before losing in the first round of the NCAA II Southeast Regional. Valdosta State was 23-7 and advanced to the semifinals of the Gulf South Conference Tournament in 2015.

Early returns. USI returns five starters and eight letter winners from a team that went 21-11 overall and 10-8 in the GLVC a year ago.

Dig it! Junior libero Shannon Farrell (Munster, Indiana) led the Eagles in a digs last season, amassing the second-highest total (575) in school history. Her 4.87 digs per set in 2015 are the most in program history.

All-around effort. Senior setter Quin Shoultz (Columbus, Indiana) displayed an all-around game in 2015 when she averaged 10.16 assists, 2.22 digs, and 0.54 blocks per set. Shoultz, who led USI in assists and was second in blocks a year ago, twice came within three kills of a triple double last season. She also had a .306 attacking percentage.

Returning leader. Junior outside hitter Shelbi Morris (Brazil, Indiana) is USI’s leading returning attacker from the 2015 season. Morris finished third on the team a year ago with 2.84 kills and 2.52 digs per set a year ago.

USI WOMEN OPENS SEASON WITH TOURNAMENT

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USI WOMEN OPENS SEASON WITH TOURNAMENT

The University of Southern Indiana women’s soccer team begins the 2016 regular-season campaign and a five-game homestand by hosting the Dunn Hospitality Invitational Labor Day weekend at Strassweg Field. The tournament features USI, the University of Findlay, Kentucky Wesleyan College, and the University of Illinois Springfield.

KWC and Illinois Springfield kick-off the tournament at 5 p.m. Friday before USI opens the regular season against Findlay at 7:30 p.m. The tournament concludes Sunday when Illinois Springfield takes on Findlay at 11:30 a.m. and USI opposes KWC at 2 p.m.

Live coverage of the tournament can be found at GoUSIEagles.com.

Following the tournament, the Screaming Eagles reach the halfway point of the homestand and complete their non-conference schedule by welcoming Oakland City University to Strassweg Field on September 7 for a 7 p.m. match-up.

Week 1 Eagle Notes: 

Returning to winning ways: The Eagles have posted winning records five of the last seven seasons after posting a 5-10-2 overall record, 4-10-1 Great Lakes Valley Conference, in 2015.

At home in 2015: USI struggled at home last season, recording a 2-4-1 mark in 2015. The Eagles were outscored 9-6 at Strassweg Field last fall, losing three of the four matches by one goal. The squad is 81-64-12 overall at Strassweg Field since the creation of the program in 1996.

Leading scorers return IN 2016: The Eagles return six of the top seven scorers from 2015, led by sophomore forward Ryley Hancock (Evansville, Indiana). Hancock had nine points on two goals, including a game-winner against Northwood University, and a team-high five assists. Senior defender Kelsey Smith(Evansville, Indiana) is second among the returning scorers with eight points on a team-high four goals, including a pair of game-winning goals.

Schoenstein begins his first year: USI Head Coach Eric Schoenstein enters his first season as the head coach of the Eagles after a pair of seasons as an assistant coach. Schoenstein is no stranger to USI soccer, playing a pivotal role during the Eagles’ men’s soccer dominance of the Great Lakes Valley Conference with USI winning league titles in 1988, 1989, 1990, and 1991. The Evansville, Indiana, native is still among the all-time leaders at USI, ranking third in goals scored (34); fifth in assists (22); and third in total points (90).

USI leads Findlay 2-0-2: USI leads the all-time series with Findlay, 2-0-2, tying the Oilers last year, 2-2, on the road. The Eagles had goals by midfieler/defender Carissa Dyer (Crescent Springs, Kentucky), a sophomore this season for USI, and forward Madi Vellky in the 2-2 tie.

USI has dominant hold of series record with KWC: The Eagles have dominated the Panthers since the start of the series in 1996 when KWC was a member of the GLVC. USI holds a 15-0-0 advantage in the series and won the last meeting 2-1 in overtime in KWC’s last year in the GLVC.

Eagles are unbeaten versus Oakland City: USI holds a 4-0-0 series record over Oakland City University. The Eagles moved the series lead to 4-0-0 after posting a 7-0 win on the road in 2010.

 

States Say ‘Bah! Humbug!’ to Sales Tax Holidays

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States Say ‘Bah! Humbug!’ to Sales Tax Holidays

By Stateliness News

Shoppers walk past balloons and cameras at the opening of a new retail store in Boston. Massachusetts scrapped its sales tax holiday this year — to the chagrin of retailers.

Many back-to-school shoppers used to be able to count on sales tax holidays at this time of year. But more states are disappointing them by rejecting or cutting back on the small tax breaks, as they seek more and steadier revenue to keep budgets balanced.

Massachusetts lawmakers this year decided not to give shoppers a late summer holiday from having to pay the state’s 6.25 percent sales tax on items with a price tag under $2,500 — as it had in recent years. Legislators did so in the face of a budget deficit that has been projected to be as high as $1 billion.

Florida legislators trimmed the state’s back-to-school tax holiday this year from 10 days to three and limited the tax break to purchases of clothing under $60 and school supplies under $15. Louisiana trimmed shoppers’ holiday savings by saying they had to pay 3 percent on their purchases this year instead of giving them the full 5 percent break.

Efforts to revive North Carolina’s holiday, which was scrapped two years ago, failed this year. And legislators in Kansas, Maine, Nebraska, Rhode Island and Wisconsin have rejected proposals for new back-to-school tax holidays.

The backpedaling reverses a trend of providing tax-free shopping days that dates to 1980, when Ohio and Michigan eliminated the sales tax on automobiles as a way to boost sales during a recession and get people to buy American cars, many of which were produced in those states.

At one time or another, about 20 states, mostly in the South, have experimented with granting holidays, with a peak of 19 states in 2010.

Traditionally, states’ sales tax holidays tend to coincide with the start of the new school year. But some states have lifted taxes on items far beyond backpacks and notebooks.

Several states, including Maryland, Missouri and Virginia, have separate holidays for energy-efficient appliance purchases.

Others, including Louisiana and Mississippi, have holidays for firearms and hunting supplies.

States in the Southeast also have had holidays before hurricane season begins in June on purchases of emergency supplies.

Retailers love sales tax holidays, because they come with built-in advertising campaigns to encourage shoppers to turn out and spend.

But while retailers have persuaded legislators that the feel-good tax breaks are good for the economy, studies have shown otherwise.

States bordering other states with tax holidays see their own as a way to stem the flow of consumers across state lines.

And lawmakers love a tax cut, especially when short-lived.

Florida, which has no state income tax and relies more heavily on the sales tax than many other states, has found tax holidays to be a way of giving its taxpayers a break while other states are cutting income taxes.

But Scott Drenkard of the nonpartisan Tax Foundation says the holidays are nothing but “gimmicks.”

“Policymakers are telling their taxpayers, ‘We did something for you this weekend.’ It’s politically expedient, but poor tax policy.”

If governors and legislatures really want to make a difference for taxpayers, Drenkard said, they should implement “365-days-a-year” tax changes.

The Tax Foundation and other opponents say the holidays don’t help retailers because buyers simply “shift” purchases they were going to make any way.

They don’t help lower-income people much either, according to the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP).

“Wealthier taxpayers are often best-positioned to benefit from the holidays since they have more flexibility to shift the timing of their purchases to take advantage of the tax break — an option that isn’t available to families living paycheck to paycheck,” the ITEP said in a policy paper last month.

‘Absolutely Vital’

The holidays do cost state and local treasuries money — more than $300 million this year, the ITEP estimates.

Cost is what prompted Massachusetts to not renew its weekend-long holiday this year. In June, the state’s budget office announced tax revenue was coming in as much as $750 million short. Later estimates put the budget gap at nearly $1 billion. Legislators said the holiday’s $25 million price tag was too high this year.

Republican Gov. Charlie Baker had supported the holiday in the past. This year’s tight budget made it tough to both have the holiday and increase funding for his priorities — such as education, helping local governments and fighting the opioid epidemic — his press secretary, Billy Pittman, said.

This is the first year since Massachusetts started having a back-to-school holiday, in 2004, that it hasn’t had one, other than 2009, during the recession.

Not everyone is happy about it. Jon Hurst, president of the Massachusetts Retailers Association, said the need for the tax holiday is greater than ever, for two reasons: because consumers can cross the border to sales-tax-free New Hampshire, and because “savvy consumers” can try to avoid the sales tax by shopping on the internet.

“No consumer in Massachusetts is farther than an hour’s drive to New Hampshire to buy things tax-free,” Hurst said. “The sales tax holiday is absolutely vital in Massachusetts.”

In some Massachusetts cities, like Pittsfield, retailers have advertised that they would pay the sales tax for customers on a given weekend, to make up for the lost holiday.

But efforts like that don’t deliver the same results as the state declaring a holiday, Hurst said, adding that the holiday can put shoppers in a buying mood, so that they often buy more than just the goods that are tax-exempt.

The state also benefits from the income tax on workers putting in double and triple shifts, Hurst said.

Hurst predicted fewer sales — not only of tax-free items but also of impulse buys — resulting in a decrease in state sales tax revenue.

Cutting Back

Rather than scrap their holidays, Louisiana and Florida chose to cut back on them.

In the face of a $2 billion budget shortfall, Louisiana decided to levy a reduced 3 percent tax during its hunting equipment holiday next month rather than exempt it entirely from the state’s 5 percent sales tax, just as it did on school supplies last month. It also eliminated the state holiday for goods purchased to prepare for hurricanes.

The reduced tax rate for school supplies and hunting equipment applies to items up to $2,500. Two big-ticket items for $2,500 each would qualify, according to the Louisiana Department of Revenue. But one purchase for more than $2,500 would not.

Florida’s shortened back-to-school holiday this year will still cost the state about $26 million in sales tax revenue, according to a legislative analysis. But having its normal 10-day holiday instead of the three-day break would have cost another $20 million. The disparity? Most of the holiday shopping is done on the weekend.

One fan of tax cuts who is not a fan of the holidays is Republican state Sen. Tom Lee, who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee. He prefers giving Floridians cuts in other taxes, as the Legislature did this year.

Lawmakers lowered the property tax and a tax on manufacturers. Both cuts were sought by Republican Gov. Rick Scott.

“I think the tax-free holiday makes great politics and lousy economics,” Lee said. “They are wildly popular, but they cannibalize on spending decisions that would have been made anyway.”

 

 

 

New Hires at Ivy Tech Community College

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Maheshwar Sah has accepted the position of program chair for pre-engineering at Ivy Tech Community College. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering from Nepal Engineering College and a master’s degree and Ph.D. in Electronics Engineering from Chonbuk National University. Sah previously worked for Ivy Tech in Fort Wayne as well as IU-PU Fort Wayne as an adjunct professor. He was also a visiting scholar at the University of California-Berkeley in the Nonlinear Electronic Laboratory.

Andrea Grillo has accepted the position of CNA/QMA director for Ivy Tech Community College. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Nursing from the University of Southern Indiana. Grillo previously worked for Southwestern Indiana Health Services Academy as a CNA and QMA instructor. Grillo is a psychiatric mental health nurse through the American Nursing Credentialing Center (ANCC), as well as a certified CNA/QMA instructor through the state of Indiana.

Dierdre deGravina has accepted the position of nursing faculty for Ivy Tech Community College. She holds a bachelor’s and master’s degree in Nursing Education from WGU Indiana. DeGravina previously worked at Deaconess Health System as a staff registered nurse (RN).

USDA Announces $18.9 Million to Improve Research Facilities at 1890 Historically Black Land-Grant Colleges and Universities

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GREENSBORO, N.C., Aug. 29, 2016 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) today announced $18.9 million in renewal awards to build or improve agricultural and food science research facilities and equipment at historically black Land-Grant Colleges and Universities. Today’s announcement builds on USDA’s ongoing efforts to foster strong partnerships with the 1890 community, ensure equal access to USDA programs and services, and support educational opportunities for the next generation of farmers and ranchers.

“These awards help colleges and universities make improvements that support cutting-edge academic research and foster 21st century innovation that will shape the future of American agriculture,” said Dr. Joe Leonard, Jr., USDA Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, who today announced the awards during a visit to North Carolina A&T University. “For more than a century USDA has built strong partnerships with historically black colleges and 1890 Land-Grant Universities, and the 1890 Facilities Grant Program ensures that partnership will continue to benefit students for many more years to come.”

The awards announced today are made through the 1890s Facilities Grants program, which provides funding for the acquisition and improvement of food, agricultural, and human sciences facilities and equipment, including libraries, so that the 1890 land-grant institutions, including Tuskegee University, may participate fully in the production of human capital in the food and agricultural sciences.

North Carolina A&T is receiving an award of $1.12 million, which will be used to construct a Complex for Urban and Sustainable Agriculture, Food, Education and Research (C-U-SAFER) building and to establish a student farm. The complex and farm will provide students opportunities for multi-disciplinary projects, as well as help the school leverage extramural support from outside organizations with an interest in sustainable agriculture, local and community food systems.

Funding awards for 2016 include:

  • Alabama A&M University, Huntsville, Ala., $952,989
  • Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, Ala., $952,989
  • University of Arkansas-Pine Bluff, Pine Bluff., Ark., $904,537
  • Delaware State University, Dover, Del., $700,649
  • Florida A&M University, Tallahassee, Fla., $917,871
  • Fort Valley State University, Fort Valley, Ga., $1,003,446
  • Southern University, Baton Rouge, La., $839,111
  • Kentucky State University, Frankfort, Ky., $1,085,670
  • University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Princess Anne, Md., $806,685
  • Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Mo., $1,185,476
  • Alcorn State University, Lorman, Miss., $885,952
  • North Carolina A&T State University, Greensboro, N.C., $1,120,427
  • Central State University, Wilberforce, Ohio, $1,299,243
  • Langston University, Langston, Okla., $991,763
  • South Carolina State University, Orangeburg, S.C., $873,535
  • Prairie View A&M University, Prairie View, Texas, $1,510,894
  • Tennessee State University Nashville, Tenn., $1,089,527
  • Virginia State University, Petersburg, Va., $993,968
  • West Virginia State University, Morgantown, W. Va., $826,068

Abstracts for the 2016 funded projects can be viewed on NIFA’s reporting website.

Previously funded projects include a Tennessee State University project that constructed a 25,000 square-foot Agricultural Biotechnology Building. It contains more than 12 state-of-the-art labs for cutting-edge research. Prairie View A&M University is currently upgrading their International Goat Research Center to better support animal and veterinary sciences research, teaching, and outreach programs in animal health. The renovations and supporting equipment will assist in developing a Center of Excellence in Caprine Research, providing agriculture students with experiential learning opportunities and facilitating delivery of programs to limited-resource farmers and ranchers.

NIFA invests in and advances innovative and transformative initiatives to solve societal challenges and ensure the long-term viability of agriculture. NIFA’s integrated research, education and extension programs support the best and brightest scientists and extension personnel, and have resulted in user-inspired groundbreaking discoveries that are combating childhood obesity, improving and sustaining rural economic growth, addressing water availability issues, increasing food production, finding new sources of energy, mitigating climate variability and ensuring food safety. To learn more about NIFA’s impact on agricultural science visit www.nifa.usda.gov/impacts, sign up for email updates or follow us on Twitter @usda_NIFA, #NIFAimpacts.

This month USDA is celebrating historic progress over the last eight years to improve the quality of life and access to opportunity for all Americans. Learn more online in The People’s Department: A New Era for Civil Rights at USDA.

 

Spitting satisfies ‘fighting’ element of disorderly conduct statute

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Jennifer Nelson for www..theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Supreme Court Monday found that the term “fighting” in the disorderly conduct statute is ambiguous and only covers physical altercations, but still upheld a man’s conviction based on his spitting on his wife during an argument.

Michael Day and M.D. were about to divorce and continued to share their marital home while they figured out what to do with the house. Day wanted to sell it immediately but M.D. wanted to speak to an attorney first. Day initiated an argument with his wife over the house, screaming at her and spitting on her face as she lay in bed. She called 911 four times during that argument, leading to police coming to the home. Day was still screaming when police showed up.

He was charged with and convicted of Class B misdemeanor disorderly conduct, alleged to have knowingly or intentionally engaged in “fighting and/or tumultuous conduct” with his wife. He appealed, claiming the statute requires both a public disturbance and a physical altercation.

The Court of Appeals affirmed in a split decision, with Judge John Baker writing in his dissent, “I simply cannot believe that a verbal argument between members of a household, within their own home, can be the sole basis of a criminal conviction for disorderly conduct.”

The Supreme Court unanimously affirmed the conviction, although they agreed with Day on his point that “fighting” in the statute only covers physical altercations. The justices noted that “fighting” is ambiguous and could include both physical and verbal altercations or it may just include physical altercations.

Using the rule of lenity, they interpreted the term narrowly, meaning it covers only physical altercations. But, Day can still be convicted under the statute because by spitting on his wife, that constitutes a physical altercation, Chief Justice Loretta Rush wrote.

The justices rejected Day’s claim that the statute doesn’t apply to altercations in private, and is applicable to public disturbances. Rush noted that the language of the statute doesn’t limit it only to public and that previous disorderly conduct statutes did include a public element, but the 1976 amendment discarded that element and remains almost entirely intact today – devoid of a public disturbance element.

The case is Michael Day v. State of Indiana, 24S05-1606-CR-358.

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Adopt A Pet

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Atty is a 10-year-old female Puggle. She’s an older gal who needs a quieter home without young children. She has done well with other dogs but would still like to meet any who may be living with her. Atty’s $120 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more! Call the Vanderburgh Humane Society at (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption information!