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Melissa Etheridge’s Holiday Trio Victory Theatre

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December 14 at 7:30 PM

Evansville, IN- This holiday season, Victory Theatre is bringing Melissa Etheridge’s Holiday Trio to Evansville, December 14. Etheridge is one of rock music’s great female icons. Etheridge’s popularity built around such memorable songs as “Bring Me Some Water,” “No Souvenirs” and “Ain’t It Heavy” for which she won her first Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal. Etheridge hit her commercial and artistic stride with her fourth album, Yes I Am, featuring the massive hits “I’m the Only One” and “Come to My Window,” a searing song of longing that brought her a second Grammy. The six times platinum album spent more than two and a half years on the album chart. Etheridge is scheduled to release MEmphis Rock and Soul, a new album honoring Stax Records, in fall of 2016.

For this special holiday show Melissa will be performing songs from her 2008 holiday album, A New Thought For Christmas. Songs will include fan favorites and holiday classics such as “Merry Christmas Baby,” Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas,” “O Night Divine” and more.

On June 20, 2016, Etheridge released a song called “Pulse.” The singer wrote the song in reaction to the mass shootings that took place in Orlando on June 12, 2016. As she told Rolling Stone, “We want to try to make sense. We want to try to heal. We want to bring some meaning, some purpose. We also want to put it down forever in history. That’s how I’m coping.” All proceeds from the sale of “Pulse” will benefit Equality Florida, the state’s largest LGBT civil rights organization.

Tickets On Sale this Friday, August 19th at 10:00 AM.

Jockey colony justifies hype with crowded standings

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Mena is atop with16 wins,

six others have at least 12

as jockey colony justifies hype

Osorio’s agent: ‘Everybody is getting opportunity

to ride good horses, and it shows in the results’

Going into the 2016 Ellis Park meeting, the jockey colony shaped up as its best in years, if not decades or even ever, based on accomplishments.  It has lived up to that hype, though what might not have been expected was just how much parity there would be: With 10 racing dates left in the meet, Miguel Mena tops the standings with 16 victories, but six other riders are within four victories.

Corey Lanerie, a two-time Ellis titlist and 11-time Churchill Downs champion, and 2015 Ellis leading rider Didiel Osorio have 15 wins apiece, followed by Robby Albarado and Brian Hernandez Jr. (both winners of a Breeders’ Cup Classic) at 14, former Chicago and New Orleans kingpin James Graham at 13 and the up-and-coming Chris Landeros at 12. Behind them are 2011 Preakness-winning jockey Jesus Castanon (nine), Midwest stalwart Francisco Torres (eight), newcomer Declan Cannon (seven) and the venerable Jon Court and Joe Rocco Jr. at six apiece.

Mena vaulted to tie Osorio for the lead Saturday with a three-victory day, then took the outright lead by winning Ellis’ seventh race Sunday on 20-1 shot Field Goal.

“This meet might be the strongest ever,” Mena said. “There are so many good riders with good business. I’m just glad we’re doing well. It’s a very competitive meet, as you can see. I’m just lucky to be on top at the moment.”

The competition makes for excellent wagering, the parity reflecting that the business is spread around and one can’t just bet on the leading jockey, assuming he’s on the best horse. While new Hall of Fame inductee Steve Asmussen leads the trainers’ standings with 12 wins, four more than second-place Ian Wilkes, he’s also had far more starts (52) than anyone else.

“It’s anybody’s game,” said Ellis Park racing secretary Dan Bork. “It says we have very competitive racing. We have an outstanding jockey colony here from top to bottom, along with the trainers. World-class trainers, world-class riders. I think it’s by far the best colony here in years.”

Jose Santos Jr., agent for Osorio, said they figured it would be challenging to repeat last year’s Ellis crown when Lanerie opted to ride mainly at Ellis instead of Saratoga and Albarado returned for the second summer, though both frequently are out of town riding stakes.

“Everybody is getting their opportunity to ride good horses, and it shows in the results,” Santos said.

Jon Court, a six-time Ellis champ and the only rider ever to win five meets in a row, says the competition has meant jockeys must spend more time working horses in the morning if they want to keep their mounts.

“We’ve got some great riders here,” Court said. “It’s a very deep, talented colony to contend with this meet. You just have to be ready. I’ve been working more horses, where years in the past it was a little bit of a vacation from that morning grind.

“There are a lot of young riders who were really looking to initiate a jumpstart of their career at this meet. The downside is it’s been tough to materialize because the talent is deep. The top five, 10 riders are multiple title-winners and multiple stakes-winners, Grade 1s and world-recognized.”

Indeed, Castanon said when he first came to Kentucky, Ellis was “the one place to be” to get a toehold on the circuit. “Now it’s a little tough,” he said.

Ask the 29-year-old Cannon, from Ireland and in his first year in America after riding in Europe and the Middle East.

“I’ve been on a good roll the last six weeks,” he said. “I’m working really hard and making good relationships with trainers. But the jockey colony here is really tough. There are a lot of jockeys here with a lot of riding titles behind their name. I’m doing really well considering how tough it is. I’ve ridden around the world, and I know when I’m with good riders. And these are really good riders.”

Channing Hill, who last year relocated from Chicago to Kentucky, said you better be ready to take advantage when opportunity knocks, as he did in winning a 2-year-old maiden race Friday on Reedini when scheduled rider David Flores got stuck in New York because of flight cancelations.

“This is a terrific jockey colony,” said Hill, himself a Grade 1 winner at Saratoga and who has won on five of his 29 mounts this meet, with six seconds. “It’s almost too good for the meet here. I say that as respectfully to Ellis as I can. But you see some places that have a little better purse money but not near the depth of this jockey colony. But that just shows you how good Kentucky racing is, how everybody wants to stay here and be home.”

Ellis Park riding standings top 10

Jockey wins (mounts) purse earnings

1 Miguel Mena 16 (97) $388,786

T-2 Corey Lanerie 15 (84) $347,756

T-2 Didiel Osorio 15 (118) $294,052

T-4 Robby Albarado 14 (67) $338,789

T-4 Brian Hernandez 14 (51) $311,185

6 James Graham 13 (92) $262,776

7 Chris Landeros 12 (85) $337,921

8 Jesus Castanon 9 (51) $192,320

9 Francisco Torres 8 (67) $148,646

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below is a list of the felony cases filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office today.

Matthew Robert Bailey Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony

Possession of a synthetic drug or synthetic drug look-alike substance, Class A misdemeanor

 

John Jerome Banks Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Possession of paraphernalia, Class C misdemeanor

Amanda Carol Fryman Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Samuel Terrell Mogbo Theft, Level 6 felony  

Leslie Dawn Rogge Possession of methamphetamine, Level 6 felony

Jeanetta Marquesha Jonte Matlock Assisting a criminal, Level 6 felony

Roxanne Jo Sanders Intimidation, Level 5 felony

Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Intimidation, Level 6 felony

Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor

Criminal mischief, Class B misdemeanor

Court Grants Habeas Writ In Case involving Repealed Drug Statute

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Court Grants Habeas Writ In Case involving Repealed Drug Statute

Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

A man convicted of Class A felony possession of three grams of cocaine within 1,000 feet of a “youth program center” in March 2008 will either be released from prison or resentenced after the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals granted his habeas corpus petition.

Walker Whatley was arrested at his home on a warrant, and during a search, the officer discovered a bag with more than three grams of cocaine in Whatley’s pocket. That offense would be a Class C felony normally, but because he was within 1,000 feet of a “youth program center” under I.C. 35-48-4-6, his charge was elevated to a Class A felony. He was within 800 feet of Robinson Community Church, which held programs throughout the month for people under the age of 18, but most were religious-based. The church did host a Girl Scout troop twice a month on Wednesdays. The pastor of the church at the time noted no youth programs occurred on Thursdays, the day Whatley was arrested. There was also no signage to alert someone of the youth programs.

If sentenced under the Class C felony, he faced a range of two to eight years; under the Class A felony, he faced a sentence of 20 to 50 years. The trial court sentenced Whatley to 35 years.

The statute at issue involving “youth program center” has since been repealed.

Whatley appealed and was victorious in the Court of Appeals, but the Indiana Supreme Court reversed in a 3-2 decision in 2010. He was unsuccessful in his state post-conviction relief attempts, and then turned to the federal courts. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana denied his petition for habeas relief, declining to address his claims on the merits after holding he defaulted the claim.

Whatley argued that the statute was unconstitutionally vague, and the 7th Circuit agreed, finding issues with the Indiana Supreme Court’s ruling.

“The court’s analysis pointed to no objective criteria for a reasonable person to determine whether a particular facility qualified under the statute – that is, to determine whether a facility hosted youth programs on a regular versus an irregular basis – and instead delegated to the defendant or the facility itself the determination of whether its youth programs were held on a regular basis,” Judge Ilana Rovner wrote. “This circular analysis of a subjective and standardless term was both incorrect and unreasonable under Supreme Court precedent that requires criminal statutes to be based on discernable standards.”

The 7th Circuit also ruled that the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that fair notice is not required for strict-liability statutes is inconsistent with U.S. Supreme Court precedent that requires fair notice for all criminal statutes.

“The lack of an intent element in the statute does not cure the vagueness problem; it makes it worse by making unknowing defendants absolutely liable for violating an indeterminate standard,” she wrote.

The 7th Circuit concluded that under Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 97-98 (2011) and Brady v. Pfister, 711 F.3d 818, 824-25 (7th Cir. 2013), nothing in the record of the state courts supports the outcome of the case. The appellate judges found the courts’ reasoning to be unreasonable.

“Had Whatley possessed drugs within 1000 feet of a YMCA or a Boys and Girls Club, there would be no doubt that his conduct was within the core of the law. The State conceded in its argument to the Indiana Supreme Court that churches are not inherently places where children gather, and a handful of weekly events does nothing to provide fair notice or to discourage arbitrary enforcement of the statute,” Rovner wrote in Walker Whatley v. Dushan Zatecky, superintendent, 14-2534.

The 7th Circuit reversed the denial of his petition and remanded with instructions to grant the writ ordering that, within 60 days, Whatley either be released or he resentenced under the Class C felony statute. If he is resentenced, he should be given credit for the time served under the Class A felony conviction.

BREAKING NEWS: CHANNEL 44 TV

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Donald Trump Lands Tri-State, Attends Private Fundraiser

 Republican Presidential Nominee Donald Trump returns to Evansville.

He landed at Tri-State Aero Monday afternoon and is expected at Steve Chancellor’s residence for a fundraiser in his honor.

44News Reporter William Wolkoff was at Tri-State Aero when Trump landed and 44News Reporter Heather Good reports at the site of Chancellor’s home.

 

Mayor Winnecke And City Council Discuss The 2017 Budget

 Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke and the city council are discussing the 2017 budget.Council members say the total budget will be around $337 million. They also say the city will have an increase in water, gas, and electric bills of a combined $330,000.

During his time in office, Mayor Winnecke has pushed for funding to rebuild Roberts Park into a walkable green space. But council members say it probably won’t fit into next year’s budget.

Finance Chairman Dan McGinn says: “His pet-project is Roberts Park. He understands that may have to be put off for another year or two. So at least at this time, there is no request for budgeting for Roberts Park.”

McGinn says, council members are advising Winnecke to be careful with the budget next year

OTTERS TAKE SERIES AGAINST MINERS

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EVANSVILLE, IN, August 14, 2016 – The Evansville Otters emerged victorious by a score of 6-1 against the Southern Illinois Miners on Sunday evening at Bosse Field, pounding out ten hits throughout the contest. Matt Wivinis picked up the win for Evansville, surrendering only six hits and one run in six innings pitched. Southern Illinois struck first in the second inning following a single with runners at the corners to bring the score to 1-0. However, the Otters would not remain on the losing end of the scoreboard for long. The bottom half of the second featured Evansville hitters showcasing a focused, patient approach, highlighted by four timely singles and two walks. The fourth inning would prove to a highly entertaining inning for those in attendance. Rolando Gomez and Josh Allen would take off for the races by remarkably hitting back to back triples en route to a two-run frame. Each respective team’s pitching was lights out after the fourth, exemplified by neither club scoring over the latter half of the game.

Up next, the Otters will have an off-day on Monday before starting a road series against the River City Rascals on Tuesday. The Otters return to Historic Bosse Field next Friday, August 19th with first pitch at 6:35pm.

IS IT TRUE AUGUST 15, 2016

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IS IT TRUE this afternoon the Evansville City Council will begin to review the 2017 proposed?  …get ready for the political games to begin?

IS IT TRUE the City of Evansville is going to experience major problems concerning the 2017 budget?   …it looks like former Councilman and Finance Chairman John Friend, CPA productions concerning the 2017 is spot on?

IS IT TRUE the word at the Civic Center is that the City employees are getting ready to experience big increase in their Health Insurance deductibles costs?

IS IT TRUE we hear that City employees should expect higher deductibles costs that  will increase the employees out of pocket health coverage costs for 2017?

IS IT TRUE  during the preliminary  2017 budget review by the Administration it was discover that the new premium for Employee Health Insurance would  had to be increased by a large amount per month ?   …the City decided to increase the deductibles costs paid by the employees in order to reduce the projected monthly premium  costs for 2017?

IS IT TRUE when former Mayor Frank McDonald Jr left office he had $58 million dollars in the General Fund?

IS IT TRUE when former Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel left office he had $4 million dollars in the General Fund?

IS IT TRUE when former Mayor Russ lloyd Jr left office he has $232,000 in the General Fund?

IS IT TRUE at the end of 2015 Mayor Winnecke had $207,000 in the General Fund?

IS IT TRUE at the beginning of 2016 Mayor Winnecke got a $12.5 million dollar advancement from Tropicana to help ends meet? …the City put $6.5 million in the General Fund to help shore up deficit balances?  …we have no idea what the city did with the remaining balance of this cash advancement?

IS IT TRUE that today is the last day for our current “Readers Poll”?  …it looks like City Councilman Dan McGinn is being crushed by the people voting on this 10 day “Readers Poll” question?  …so far the results of our poll question concerning the Homestead Tax Credit Resolution sponsored by Councilman Dan McGinn are: YES-79, NO-739 and NO IDEA--99?

FOOTNOTE: “IS IT TRUE” will be posted next Thursday?

Todays READERS POLL question is: Do you support Councilman Dan McGinn’s Homestead Tax Credit resolution that reduces the percentages of our tax credits?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “ AUGUST 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.

City County Observer has been serving our community for 15 years.

Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribute.

TAXPAYER ALERT: THE CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU IS A MISGUIDED FEDERALLY SPONSORED AGENCY

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THE CONSUMER FINANCIAL PROTECTION BUREAU IS A MISGUIDED FEDERALLY SPONSORED AGENCY

In 2011, Congress created an agency known as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, also known as the CFPB.

The intentions of the CFPB were good. They were supposed to help citizens take more control of their personal finances through education.

Their mission was to protect and help Americans that are at constant risk of being taken advantage of by unfair business practices.

Protect America’s Consumers was formed to protect the hard-earned money of all Americans by educating and empowering them to work together against these practices.

Congress needs to reform the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
so that it can go back to helping the American people.

HOWEVER, THERE IS ONE PROBLEM

When Congress formed the CFPB they didn’t make them accountable to anyone – not even the President.

The CFPB can do whatever it wants, spend what it wants and taxpayers are left footing the bill. There is no one to stop them or tell them “No”.

PADDING THEIR POCKETS

The CFPB set their own salaries making themselves the most lavishly paid in all of federal government. There are nearly 1,500 people who are employed by the CFPB and the average salary is $10,000 every MONTH. Hundreds of staffers are paid more than Supreme Court Justices, Members of Congress, and all 50 state Governors Over a dozen staffers that you have never heard of pay themselves more than Vice-President Biden.

HOSITILE ENVIROMENT 

Dozens of official complaints have been filed against the CFPB for both gender and racial discrimination.

There’s no sign of it stopping either as the number of complaints nearly tripled last year.

Women only make up 36% of the “Executive Leadership” of the CFPB and they make up a small percentage of the roles deemed to be “Mission-Critical” to the agency.

CFPB employees even nicknamed a division with many African-American employees as “the plantation”.

A former employee even painted a picture where black employees were constantly belittled – even to the point where they were stereotypically offered fried chicken at company lunches.

FOOTNOTE:  PLEASE TAKE A MOMENT TO VIEW THE VIDERO POSTED BELOW THAT RECAPS THE UN-ACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOR OF TOTALLY TAXPAYER FUNDED AGENCY CREATED TO PROTECT THE AMERICAN CONSUMERS.  WE URGE YOU CONTACT YOUR UNITED STATES CONGRESSMAN AND SENATORS TO ASK THEM TO REPEAL THE APPROVAL OF THIS MISGUIDED FEDERALLY SPONSORED AGENCY.

Vicki Hubiak President Of HR Solutions Is Second CCO 2016 “Outstanding Community Service” Award Winner

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We are pleased and excited to announce that Vicki Hubiak President of HR Solutions has been selected as the second CCO “OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD” winner For 2016. Vicki is extremely well thought of in our community and she gives a great deal of her time and financial resources to help those in need.

It was 1994, and Vicki Hubiak faced a career crisis. For 15 years she had been climbing the ladder at Peabody Energy, all the way to employee relations manager of the Midwest Division, before the age of 40. In 1990, however, Congress had passed an amendment to the Clean Air Act to significantly reduce acid rain within five years. By 1994, the amendment had taken its toll on the coal industry, and Hubiak was spending much of her time handing out pink slips to employees. The work became, in her words, “overwhelming” and “depressing.”

Hubiak resigned from the only employer she had known since attending the University of Evansville, set up a desktop computer in the walk-out basement of her Henderson, Kentucky, home, and went to work as a human resources consultant and certified resume writer. Despite her departure, Hubiak was respected so much by her former bosses that she signed Peabody as one of her first clients.

Twenty-one years later, the woman who took a leap of faith in becoming an entrepreneur has turned a business in her basement into a $10 million company. She is president and owner of HR Solutions, Inc. in Evansville, which serves businesses and individuals with five core services: staffing, executive recruiting, outplacement, executive coaching, and training. Hubiak and her staff of 15, including her son, Nicholas, recently purchased and moved into the former Umbach & Associates building on Saint Joseph Avenue near the intersection of the Lloyd Expressway after outgrowing their longtime location across the street. The new building is named the HR Solutions Business Complex with 18,000 sq. ft. and is also an income property for her business.

“I never thought it would be to the level it is today,” Hubiak says with a shake of her head and a smile. “One thing I learned early on is that when you go above and beyond, and exceed expectations, you connect with people. I love working with our team. We’re ever-changing and growing and learning every day.”

HR Solutions has many clients providing temporary, temp-to-hire, and contract employees ranging in numbers of one to more than 170. More than 100 of these positions are at $18 an hour or more. It’s the job of HR Solutions to advertise for these positions, then review applicants to find the best qualified candidates. Detailed testing sessions, reference checking, background checks, and in-depth interviews by Hubiak’s staff whittle down the list, and clients interview the finalists. Many of their candidates tell them they have never been through such an in-depth hiring process and that the process has a lifelong benefit to them, while providing HR Solutions clients with a highly pre-qualified talent pool and excellent job skills match.

“All of our clients feel we are an integral part of their business,” says Hubiak, about the relationships she and her team have built with their clients. “High-quality staffing and recruiting is what we do for all clients. Whether they need one employee or 100, our process of pre-qualification is the same. What we do works, because we are able to give our clients the cream of the crop of candidates. Most of our employees reach the point of being fully trained and are ready to become an employee of the client. By this time, the company can see that the employee is performing at a high level, is a good cultural fit and that they have a good, solid work ethic. They’re high quality.”

There are many clients that Hubiak has worked with since the day she started her company in the basement of her home. Hubiak has instilled in her staff a strong desire and commitment to building relationships with clients. These clients range from large manufacturing companies to small family-owned businesses, and include industries such as healthcare, engineering, pharmaceutical, energy, and finance. This spring, Hubiak is heading the search for a new CEO for a major healthcare provider. Clients like this and others have turned Hubiak’s home business into a multi-million dollar operation, but individual successes please her the most.

“I just hope we continue to make a difference with people,” Hubiak says about her company’s future. “We’ve helped people who simply don’t understand why they cannot get a job. By listening, and coaching them, giving feedback, and helping them improve their computer skills, we can guide them. We fully prepare people for an interview, not only to speak about their skills and experience, but by making sure they understand the expectations and the culture of the company where they’re interviewing.”

As a businesswoman, she is recognized in the community as a driving force for giving back both through her service on nonprofit boards and committees, and monetarily. Over the years, Hubiak and many others on her staff have put in time and resources to help local nonprofits, notably the Women’s Fund of Evansville, SCORE, YWCA, Boys and Girls Clubs, United Caring Shelters, Aurora, Girl Scouts, Ronald McDonald House, Evansville Rescue Mission, American Red Cross, and Tri-State Food Bank.

Hubiak is especially proud that her company is able to serve as an H-1B sponsor for Tianlin Xu, a Purdue University graduate from China whom HR Solutions recently placed in a chemistry lab analyst position at a local manufacturing company. Hubiak and staff members BethAnn Langlois and Amanda Smith are working with an attorney through the American Staffing Association to assure that Xu can stay in the U.S. through what is called H-1B status, which allows U.S. employers to temporarily employ foreign citizens in specialty occupations for three to six years.

“Tianlin sent BethAnn a big bouquet of flowers; she was so happy,” Hubiak says of Xu. “This employee has made a big commitment through her education and training, and I’m so glad we were able to do this. This process can be complicated and companies will sometimes shy away from the financial burden and the legal process. This was a milestone for us in being able to sponsor her. Our company grows from meeting people, and learning, and listening, and helping others. We exceed expectations and give back. I believe in that. I have a passion for that.”

PROFESSIONAL PROFILE

Vicki L. Hubiak, CMF HR Solutions, Inc., an OI Gobal Partner

EDUCATION/CERTIFICATIONS

B.S. – Business Administration/Marketing

UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE

Certified Management Fellow

INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CAREER CERTIFICATION

Certified Compensation Professional

AMERICAN COMPENSATION ASSOCIATION

Certified Professional Resume Writer

PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION OF RESUME WRITERS

Women-owned Business Enterprise (WBE)

PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS

Member, Board of Advisors, The Women’s Fund

Member, Board of Advisors, USI

Member, Board of Directors, SCORE; Past Assistant Vice Chair

Past Member, Board of Directors, Community Marriage Builders

Past Member, Board of Directors, WorkOne

Past Member, Raising Incomes Committee

Past Board of Directors, Junior Achievement

Past Board of Directors, Evansville Association for the Blind

Past Board of Directors, YWCA

Past Board of Directors, Ronald McDonald House

Member, Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM)

Member, Evansville-Area Human Resource Association, Inc. (EHRA)

Member, Professional Association of Resume Writers

Member, Metropolitan Evansville Chamber of Commerce

Past Member, Henderson-Henderson County Chamber of Commerce

Past Member, ANEW – A Network of Women

This years awards luncheon will be held at Tropicana-Evansville Walnut rooms A and B. The registration begin at 11:30 am, the event officially starts at 12 noon on October 26, 2015. Last years event was a sellout.

Last years winners of the “Outstanding Community Services Awards” were: Vanderburgh County Commissioner Joe Kifer, well respected local attorney Joe Harrison, Jr, Indiana State Auditor Suzanne Crouch and former Vanderburgh County Sheriff and 8th District Congressmen Brad Ellsworth, Dr. Dan Adams, Dr Steven Becker MD, Tracy Zeller-President of Tracy Zeller Jewelry Holly Dunn-National Movation Speaker on Domestic Violence, Cheryl Musgrave who sits on the Vanderburgh County Board of Zoning Appeals and retired political icon Betty Hermann.