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IS IT TRUE SEPTEMBER 13, 2016

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IS IT TRUE when a business are having major budget shortfalls they make serious budget cuts?  …our City Council are experiencing major budget shortfalls challenges so they just give themselves a raise?

IS IT TRUE that 3rd Ward City Councilwoman Anna Hargis CPA recently contacted former City Councilman John Friend CPA to ask him to explain to her about a few item concerning the proposed 2017 budget?  …they talked about 30 minutes?  …we wonder why Ms. Hargis hasn’t contacted Mr. Friend since then?

IS IT TRUE at last nights City Council meeting we thought we heard Finance Chairman Dan McGinn  state that the budget problems were caused by the spending practices over the last 12 years?  …we wonder what former Mayor Winezapfel thinks about Mr. McGinn’s alleged remarks?

IS IT TRUE people are telling us every time Governor Pence goes out of State the Holcomb and Crouch ticket takes a 1 to 2 point lead?  …we hear that political insiders are hoping that during the next 50 plus days the Trump campaign will require Pence to campaign in other States?

IS IT TRUE we are hearing that the voters want to hear what Holcomb -Crouch political platform is all about?  …we already know what Governor Pence is all about?  …it’s time for Holcomb and Crouch take control of their campaign for the next 50 plus day if they expected to be elected?

IS IT TRUE we are hearing that the political message of U S Senatorial candidate Todd Young is getting the attention of the independents thinking voters?  …Representative Young political ads make reference to his military background and his opponent being a well paid lobbyist for the last several years are really getting the attention of the independent thinking voters?  …we predict that Mr.Young campaign has all the markings of a major political upset?

IS IT TRUE one of  last week our non-scientific but trendy “READERS POLL” question was “Who would you vote for If the election was held today for District 77 State Representative seat?” …197 CCO readers voted in  this  poll? …the results were:  Johnny Kincaid -98, Ryan Hatfield-80 and Don’t Know was 19?   …it looks like Ryan Hatfield, Candidate for State Representative District 77 endorsements from the Indiana State Teachers Association, Indiana Fraternal Order of Police, and the Indiana AFL-CIO meant very little to the CCO readers?

IS IT TRUE the results of another non-scientific but trendy “Readers Poll” concerning District 1 County Commissioner race are as follows: Sean Selby (R)-139,  Ben Shoulders (D)-121 and 45 Don’t Know At This Time….it looks like we have a political barn burner in the making?

IS IT TRUE we hear that the last two (2) Vanderburgh County Republican party Saturday breakfasts meetings  have been cancelled because of lack of interest?  … were told by a couple of political workers for candidates for Vanderburgh County offices that they boycotted these events because of the way the Mayor and his party Chairman are quietly supporting their Democratic opponents?

IS IT TRUE that last week CCO poster Joe Wallace said:  “I even have no problem with Hillary having the nuclear codes. She would forget them in a week and eliminate the threat of nuclear war.”?  …this was one funny post?

IS IT TRUE since Mark Owen give up the reins of being party Chairman of the Vanderburgh County Democratic party has only won a very few County elections?  …like Mr Owen or not we think history has proven that he has done one heck of a job as a Chairman of the Democratic party because during his tenure he only lost very few elections and always kept a good sum of money in the political party war chest?

IS IT TRUE that the current Democratic party Chairman Rob Faulkner has a reputation of doing very little to help his party candidates? …if you don’t believe this statement please ask former Mayoral candidate Gail Riecken?

EDITOR FOOTNOTE:  

The next “IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Friday.

Todays READERS POLL question is:  WHO WOULD YOU VOTE FOR IF THE ELECTION WAS HELD TODAY FOR DISTRICT #3 VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSIONER?

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

If you would like to advertise in the CCO please contact us City-County Observer@live.com.

CHANNEL 44 NEWS

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Evansville City Council to Cut Non-Profit Funding

 Evansville non-profits prepare to once again possibly see less funding from the city.

Last year, city council cut funding to non-profit groups by 50 percent.

This year they will aim to cut funding down another 25 percent to these groups, saving the city about $60,000.

Some council members, like Anna Hargis believe the cuts in funding to these groups should be done gradually. each year.

However, councilman Dan McGinn does not believe council should play any role in helping non-profits find money.

“These not for profits are formed by wonderful caring people,” said McGinn. “But they form groups because they understand and know that government does not want to or can not afford to. So these are outside of government so my personal opinion is we keep them outside of government.”

City councilman Jonathan Weaver also proposed not paying six of the nine city boards to save about $60,000.

The next city council meeting will be September 26th at 5:30 pm.

Daviess County Town to Hold Wet-Dry Election

 Voters in a Daviess County, Kentucky town will be deciding whether to stay dry or go wet Tuesday.

Maceo is one of 16 remaining out of Daviess County’s 85 precincts that does not allow alcohol sales.

A petition circulated earlier this year.

The number of signatures needed for wet-dry elections is determined by taking 25% of the total voters in the last general election.

In this case, it was based on Maceo’s single precinct.

Out of the possible 920 registered voters at that time, 218 voted in the 2015 general election.

That meant there had to be 55 registered voter signatures to force the election.

This will be Daviess County’s second wet-dry election this year.

Parents Present Petition for Longer Lunch Periods

 Parents with students in the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation voicing concerns over lunch time at a meeting Monday night.

Some parents say their kids do not have enough time to eat and they’d like to see the block extended.

Parents behind the petition say their kids have twenty minutes to eat lunch and that includes the time it takes to go through the line and clean-up. They say their kids tell them they cannot finish their food on a regular bases.

Parent Jenni Webster says, “There are currently three EVSC elementary schools that have taken the initiative and have extended their lunch periods on their own. If that was okay for three, why can’t the rest of us do it? I know EVSC is about equality but our schools aren’t equal. We have schools that have two hundred students, we have school that have 972 students. It’s unrealistic to think that those two schools could do things on the same schedule.”

The moms say the twenty minute lunch is part of a forty minute block that includes recess. Kids can use some of their recess time for lunch but do not want to give up that time.

Superintended Dr. David Smith told the parents during the meeting he was sorry for initially thinking this was a non-issue. Smith says, after seeing the petition, he realized the legitimacy of the concerns and conducted an informal analysis of the cafeteria operations. While he does not think the solution presented by the parents will work, he says adjustments have been made and school principals know they have the power to make decisions.

To see the petition visit https://www.change.org/p/evsc-school-board-give-children-in-the-evsc-longer-lunch-periods

The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles Is Criticizing An Indiana Law Firm

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The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles is criticizing an Indiana law firm

Olivia Covington for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles is criticizing an Indiana law firm for a court order the BMV says will “take money out of Hoosiers’ pockets,” but the attorney who filed the order said the request is meant to protect Hoosiers who are suing the BMV.

The BMV announced Friday that an additional $28.75 million in overcharge refunds had been credited to roughly 5 million customers across Indiana. The announcement came after a class-action lawsuit, Tammy Raab v. Kent W. Abernathy and the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, was filed against the bureau after it was discovered that it had been overcharging millions of customers for several years.

Although former BMV commissioner Donald Snemis said in 2014 that all previous overcharges had been refunded, the proceedings in the lawsuit later revealed that there were hundreds of other overcharges that had not been refunded. Because of the efforts of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit and their legal counsel, a common fund of roughly $30 million was created to credit the refunds to BMV customers, said Irwin Levin, a managing partner at Cohen & Malad LLP Indianapolis and lead counsel in the suit against the BMV.

The BMV said Friday that the refunds were credited to customers’ accounts over the last few months and that the credits could either be put toward a BMV transaction or sent to customers as a check.

However, in a court order filed by Levin in Marion Superior Court Friday morning, counsel for the plaintiffs wrote that the BMV was administering refunds through the common fund without notice or approval from the court. Further, the counsel wrote that because their efforts had led to the creation of the common fund, the BMV is required to set aside part of those funds to reimburse the members of the class-action suit and pay for the fees incurred during the litigation process — an amount that is already exceeding $1 million, Levin said.

If the BMV continues to distribute the refunds without accounting for the attorney fees, then Levin said the plaintiffs in the suit will be forced to bear a disproportionate amount of those fees. Thus, Levin and his firm are seeking a preliminary injunction to require the BMV to set aside a portion of the common fund for attorney fees. The plaintiffs have not determined the exact amount of fees it will request to be reimbursed for, but the order Levin filed on Friday said it will not exceed one-third of the fund.

“By cashing in credits without setting aside any amount for fees and costs of the litigation that resulted in the creation of the common fund, defendants are creating irreparable harm to the members of the Class who do not have their credits cashed in before the judgment in this case, because those Class members will be left to shoulder a disproportionate share of the expenses incurred in the litigation that resulted in the common fund,” the court filing said.

Adam Krupp, chief legal counsel for the BMV, took aim at the court order and at Levin, in particular, on Friday, saying in a statement through the BMV that the actions Levin requested through the preliminary injunction would essentially be the same as taking money away from Hoosier taxpayers.

“BMV has been issuing refunds since before the current lawsuit, which Mr. Levin claimed was filed to benefit BMV’s customers. Mr. Levin also claimed to be representing the best interests of Hoosier taxpayers,” Krupp said. “It is stunning and inappropriate for Mr. Levin, or any lawyer, while claiming to represent Hoosiers’ best interests, to directly seek to take money out of Hoosiers’ pockets.”

But Levin dismissed Krupp’s accusations, saying that he is not trying to take money out of taxpayers’ pockets or stop them from receiving their refunds. He also said he was not taking the attacks personally, but instead said Krupp’s words come from a place of being caught red-handed.

“The BMV was caught with its pants down,” Levin said. “You would hope that they would say, ‘Wow, we made a mistake,’ but they didn’t.”

Levin also said he thinks the timing of the refunds raises a red flag – the refunds were announced on Sept. 9, less than three weeks before the start of the trial on Sept. 28.

“The BMV has been at war with its customers since 2013, and they now know that the trial is only weeks away,” he said. “This is an example of government at its worst.”

Indiana Bar Exam Passage Rates Continue To Decline

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Indiana Bar Exam Passage Rates Continue To Decline

IL www.inmdianalawyer.com

The Indiana Bar Exam saw another drop in overall passage rate of its test takers as results of the July 2016 bar exam were released Monday.

The overall passage rate for the July 2016 Indiana Bar Exam was just 61 percent, a steep decrease compared to last July’s 72 percent passage rate.

A total of 508 people took the July 2016 test, with 309 passing. The overall passage rate for first-time takers was 68 percent.

This July, 94 people were repeat takers, the highest number in recent years for a July bar exam. Sixty-three people retook July 2015’s test; 80 people retook the test in 2014, and 73 people retook it in 2013. July’s number of repeat takers was more on par with the February bar exam, where 94 people retook it in February 2012 and 104 people took it again in the years 2014-16.

The overall passage rate for repeat takers was 28 percent for the July 2016 exam.

The percentage of students passing the bar has been in decline in Indiana and around the country in recent years. The July passage rate went from 78 percent in 2010 to 72 percent in 2014 and 2015 to this year’s 61 percent. The February bar passage rate, which typically is lower than the July exam due to more repeat test takers, also dipped. It went from 69 percent in 2010 to 61 percent in 2014. It bumped up to 64 percent in 2015 only to see a dramatic 13 percentage point drop in the 2016 results, which the Indiana Board of Law Examiners president called “stunning.”

The list of successful July bar exam applicants is available here. They must meet other requirements to be eligible for admission.

EVANSVILLE OTTERS ADVANCE TO FINALS

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 The Evansville Otters have advanced to the Championship Series of the Frontier League playoffs with a 3-1 series win against the #2 ranked, Joliet Slammers.

The best of five series against the #4 ranked, River City Rascals, will begin at Bosse Field on Tuesday, September 13 at 6:35pm, followed by Game #2 at Bosse Field on Wednesday, September 14.

Game #3 will be at River City on Friday, September 16. Game #4, if necessary, will be played at River City on Saturday, September 17.

Game #5 will return to Bosse Field, if necessary, on Monday, September 19 at 6:35pm.

Special Playoff Package Pricing

Fans can get tickets for both Games #1 and #2 at one price: General Admission: $8
Reserved Pavilion: $12
Premium Field Box: $12

VIP: $16

Kids 10 and under will receive a voucher for a free meal each night. Kids free ticket vouchers can be picked up at any Old National Bank location. (Supplies are limited.)

Tickets available at www.evansvilleotters.com or by phone at 812-435-8686 ext. 21.

YESTERYEAR: The Evansville Coffin Company

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YESTERYEAR: The Evansville Coffin Company

The Evansville Coffin Company was a fixture in the North Main Street commercial district for decades. Organized in 1881, the business manufactured “fine funeral furnishings” for markets across the nation. The four-story factory on the northeast corner of Main and Michigan encompassed half a city block and was producing 500 coffins a week by the end of its first decade. Evansville’s plentiful supply of lumber, numerous railroad lines, and access to river transportation enabled the city to become a major manufacturer of furniture, wagons, coffins, and other products. The coffin company reorganized in 1944 but closed less than a decade later.

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.

Evansville/Vanderburgh Air Quality Forecast

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Air quality forecasts for Evansville and Vanderburgh County are provided as a public service.  They are best estimates of predicted pollution levels that can be used as a guide so people can modify their activities and reduce their exposure to air quality conditions that may affect their health.  The forecasts are routinely made available at least a day in advance, and are posted by 10:30 AM Evansville time on Monday (for Tuesday through Thursday) and Thursday (for Friday through Monday).  When atmospheric conditions are uncertain or favor pollution levels above the National Ambient Air Quality Standards, forecasts are made on a daily basis.

Ozone forecasts are available from mid-April through September 30th.  Fine particulate (PM2.5) forecasts are available year round.

Monday
September 12
Tuesday
September 13
Wednesday
September 14
Thursday
September 15
Friday
September 16
Fine Particulate
(0-23 CST avg)
Air Quality Index
moderate moderate good NA* NA*
Ozone
Air Quality Index
moderate moderate good NA* NA*
Ozone
(peak 8-hr avg)
(expected)
51-60 ppb 51-60 ppb 36-45 ppb NA* NA*

* Not Available and/or Conditions Uncertain.

Air Quality Action Days

Ozone Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when maximum ozone readings averaged over a period of eight hours are forecasted to reach 71 parts per billion (ppb), or unhealthy for sensitive groups on the USEPA Air Quality Index scale.

Particulate Alerts are issued by the Evansville EPA when PM2.5 readings averaged over the period of midnight to midnight are forecasted to reach 35 micrograms per meter cubed (µg/m3).

Forecast statistics documenting the reliability of these air quality forecasts are compiled on a monthly, seasonal (May through September for ozone), and an annual basis.  Compilations of these statistics are reported in Vanderburgh County Health Department’s Annual Report and available on request.

Current conditions of OZONE and FINE PARTICULATE MATTER are available in near real-time on the Indiana Department of Environment Management’s website.

Eagles Set For Big Week, Home Opener

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 University of Southern Indiana Volleyball has another busy slate this week as it plays three matches, starting with a trip to Nashville, Tennessee, to take on NCAA II Midwest Region foe Trevecca Nazarene University Tuesday at 6 p.m.

Later in the week, the Screaming Eagles open their 2016 home and Great Lakes Valley Conference schedules as they play host to William Jewell College Friday at 7 p.m. and Rockhurst University Saturday at 3 p.m.

Friday’s match features a free combo meal (includes a hot dog, chips and a bottled drink) for USI students with a valid ID; while USI students can enter a raffle to win a $500 Campus Store shopping spree each time they come to a USI Volleyball home match. The drawing is October 28 when the Eagles host Missouri University of Science & Technology.

All fans can participate in the Premiere Tan serving contest between sets two and three for all home matches.

USI Volleyball Notes

Tough trip: The Eagles saw their perfect 4-0 mark to start the year fall by the wayside as they went 1-3 at the Augustana Invitational. USI suffered a pair of three-set defeats to then No. 13 Winona State as well as a 3-0 loss to then No. 22 Augustana. The Eagles closed the weekend on a strong note as they dropped Chadron State in three sets to improve to 5-3 on the year.

Statistical leaders: Freshman outside hitter Mikaila Humphrey (Floyd Knobs, Indiana) leads USI with 2.84 kills per set, while junior libero Shannon Farrell (Munster, Indiana) is averaging a team-best 4.90 digs per set. Senior setter Quin Shoultz (Columbus, Indiana) is averaging a team-high 8.16 assists per set, while junior middle hitter Te’Ayla Whitfield(Fort Wayne, Indiana) is chipping in a team-best 1.03 blocks per frame.

All-Tournament: Farrell was named to the Augustana Invitational All-Tournament team after averaging 6.42 digs per set during the four-match weekend.

Countdown to 1,000: Farrell needs 67 digs to become the 11th player in program history to reach the 1,000-dig plateau in her career. She currently ranks 16th in program history with 933.

Scouting the competition: USI went 2-1 against this week’s competition a year ago. The Eagles posted three-set wins over William Jewell and Trevecca Nazarene, but suffered a straight-set defeat to Rockhurst.

Trevecca Nazarene, a member of the Great Midwest Athletic Conference, is off to a 4-4 start to the season after splitting last week’s action at the Scott Jones Classic in Nashville.

William Jewell enters this week’s action with a 4-4 overall record after going 2-2 at the Country Inn & Suites Invitational in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, last weekend.

Rockhurst, the 2015 NCAA II Midwest Region champions, went 3-1 last weekend to improve its record to 5-3 on the campaign. The Hawks play Benedictine College and Bellarmine before visiting the Eagles Saturday.

 

UE Constitution Day speaker

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Michael Austin, University of Evansville executive vice president of academic affairs, will be the speaker at UE’s Constitution Day lecture on Monday, September 19, at 7:00 p.m. in Eykamp Hall in Ridgway University Center. Admission to the lecture, which is part of UE’s annual observance of Constitution Day, is free and open to the public.

Austin is the author of That’s Not What They Meant! Reclaiming the Founding Fathers from America’s Right Wing. The topic of his lecture will be “What the Founders Fought About (and How They Worked It Out).”

Robert Dion, chair of the Constitution Day Committee and an associate professor of political science, said, “We are thrilled to have Dr. Austin as our speaker this year for Constitution Day. At a time when the American political sphere seems so dysfunctional and polarized, it is good to look back to the example set by our Founders over 200 years ago. There are lessons to be learned from them about compromise and cooperation.”

Austin’s presentation will explore some of the major compromises of the Founding era and explain how they were resolved. It will focus on historical and contemporary attitudes toward political opponents and argue that, in the times that our government has worked best, both leaders and citizens have engaged in rigorous political debate without fundamentally delegitimizing their opponents. This is a citizenship skill that is rarely taught but absolutely essential to the society that the Constitution created.

Austin explained that “the Constitution contains multiple ways to prevent things from happening and only a very few ways to make changes or move policies forward. The framers understood how easy it would be for the Republic to become a majoritarian tyranny, so they set in motion a process that would require debate, disagreement, and compromise.”

“This is the only way that anything can get done in our system of government,” he added. “It means other points of view will always exist, strong disagreements will always arise, and compromises will always be required in order to make our system of government work. These are not bugs; they are features.”

Austin earned his PhD in English literature from the University of California at Santa Barbara. He earned his MA and BA degrees in English from Brigham Young University.

For more information about the lecture, call 812-488-1150.