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Improving Local Roads by Wendy McNamara

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Dear Friend,

This week, many of our local communities received state matching grants to improve roads and bridges.

This year, I supported legislation establishing the state’s Community Crossings matching grant fund, which will provide about $160 million to Indiana cities, towns and counties on a 50/50 matching basis.

As part of the program, Posey and Vanderburgh counties each received $1 million for road and bridge improvement projects. In addition, five local communities were awarded grants, including Cynthiana ($60,876), Darmstadt ($98,740), Evansville ($707,750), Mount Vernon ($447,434) and New Harmony ($43,665).

Projects eligible for funding through Community Crossings include road resurfacing, bridge rehabilitation, road reconstruction and Americans with Disabilities Act compliance in connection with road projects. Material costs for chip sealing and crack filling operations were also eligible for funds.

More information about Community Crossings can be found by clicking here.

Our transportation infrastructure touches every sector of our economy and drives economic development. I’ll work hard next session to ensure we develop a responsible, long-term funding solution that maintains and improves our roads for future generations.

Sincerely,

State Rep. Wendy McNamara

Governor Pence Makes Appointments to Various Boards and Commissions  

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Governor Mike Pence Recently Made Appointments To Various Boards And Commissions

Indiana Arts Commission

  1. Susan Hardwick [Warrick County], reappointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 State Board of Dentistry 

Kelley M. Merritt [Marion County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Dr. Mark R. Stetzel [Allen County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Indiana Executive Council on Cybersecurity

Tracy E. Barnes [Boone County], appointed to serve at the Governor’s pleasure

 Great Lakes Commission

Daniel W. Schmidt [Hamilton County], appointed to complete a four-year term through December 31, 2018

 Insurance Producer Education & Continuing Education Advisory Council

Kevin L. Bell [Hamilton County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Indiana Land Resources Council

Elizabeth M. Tharp [Putnam County], reappointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 Indiana Pesticide Review Board

Dr. Raymond S. Brinkmeyer [Marion County], reappointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 Indiana Plumbing Commission

Robert S. Synko [Marion County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Real Estate Appraiser Certification Board

Dennis K. “Matthew” Kruse II [DeKalb County], appointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 Indiana Board of Registration for Architects & Landscape Architects

Jerome F. Eide [St. Joseph County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Rehabilitation Services Commission

Dee Ann Hart [Delaware County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Serve Indiana Commission

Alan M. Witchey [Marion County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Stefonie D. Sebastian [Hendricks County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Aleeah Livengood [Clinton County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

David A. Reingold [Tippecanoe County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Johnathan M. Perez [Grant County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Media M. Oakes [Hendricks County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Colton C. Strawser [LaGrange County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Sheila M. Corbin [Hendricks County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Elizabeth D. Savich [Monroe County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Sarah J. Waddle [Marion County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Amanda K. Johnson [Madison County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

TRUMP NEEDS MORE VOTES, LESS APPLAUSE

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                                                          TRUMP NEEDS MORE VOTES, LESS APPLAUSE

                                                                    Making Sense by Michael Reagan

I’ve finally figured out what Donald Trump’s main problem is.

No jokes, please.

It’s because at his core he’s an entertainer who’s looking for applause, not a politician who’s looking for votes.

Applause makes you feel good on stage at the Improv or at the end of a Broadway play. But it doesn’t get you elected.

If Trump really wants to save what’s left of Western Civilization from four years of President Hillary Clinton, he’s got to learn how to get his message out to more voters.

When he gives his big policy speeches, he does fine.

The addresses he delivered recently about fighting terrorism and fixing the economy were generally good.

They’d make good stump speeches and he should shorten them to twenty minutes and repeat at least one of them every day.

But the most important thing about those careful, joke-free teleprompter speeches wasn’t what Trump said or even how he said it.

It was that he was speaking to the whole country, not just the people in the auditorium.

He wasn’t seeking the instant approval of the audience with his “Crooked Hillary” shtick or promises to build a border wall and make Mexico pay for it.

In those two serious policy speeches Trump did what my father did in Berlin in 1987 at the Brandenburg Gate, when he told Mikhail Gorbachev to “Tear down this Wall!”

My father wasn’t merely speaking to the huge crowd in front of him, he was speaking beyond them to all the people on the other side of the Berlin Wall who were not free.

Trump has to start speaking to a wider, broader, larger audience — the independents and Republicans that he’s got to get to vote for him.

He needs to do it every day. He can’t slip back to delivering his applause lines. We’ve heard those jokes.

We’ll soon see whether Trump’s new team of Kellyanne Conway and Steve Bannon can make a difference in his behavior or focus.

Conway is a pro who knows what she’s doing. But you can hire the best people on the planet and it won’t help if you don’t listen to them.

While Team Trump is in a hiring mood, how about finding someone who actually knows how to stage a campaign speech?

When Trump was in Wisconsin earlier this week talking about the economy and how the Democrat Party’s has failed and betrayed black people, I don’t think I saw a single black person.

It was incredibly amateurish stagecraft.

It’d be like giving an important policy speech about the plight of out-of-work coal miners to an audience of nuns or guys in three-piece suits.

I realize Trump isn’t exactly surrounded by black supporters. And I know the part of Wisconsin he was in was 95 percent white.

But couldn’t someone in his campaign have found fifty black people to be in the crowd so the media couldn’t react in the knee-jerk way they did?

My father’s media genius, the late deputy chief of staff Michael Deaver, would have had a thousand blacks in that audience even if he had had to pay them to be there.

Trump has to do a lot more learnin’ and a lot more hirin’.

And if he doesn’t do it real soon he’ll be back running his business empire, living a quiet life in Trump Tower and getting in almost as many rounds of golf each week as President Obama.

Vanderburgh County Council Meeting Agenda

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AGENDA

VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCIL SEPTEMBER 14, 2016
8:30 A.M.
ROOM 301

  1. OPENING OF MEETING
  2. ATTENDANCE ROLL CALL
  3. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
  4. INVOCATION
  5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES –
  6. PERSONNEL REQUESTS:
    1. (A)  SUPERIOR COURT/Request to fill vacancies for Bailiff and Court Reporter
    2. (B)  TREATMENTCOURT/RequesttofillvacanciesforCaseManagerandAdministrativeAssistant
    3. (C)  DADS/Request to fill vacancy for Counselor II
    4. (D)  PROSECUTOR/Request to fill vacancies for IV-D/ Receptionist and Enforcement Officer and Victim Witness Assistance/Legal Secretary
    5. (E)  CLERK PERPETUATION/Request to fill vacancy for Extra Help
    6. (F)  HEALTH DEPARTMENT/Request to fill vacancies for Public Health Nurse, Clinic Nurse/1⁄2 MCH, and LHMF/Health Educator
  1. APPROPRIATION ORDINANCE: (A) PROSECUTOR
    (B) LEPC
    (C) HIGHWAY
  2. TRANSFERS: (A) SHERIFF(B) SUPERIOR COURT (8) (C) BURDETTE PARK
  3. REPEAL:
    (A) HEALTH DEPARTMENT
  4. OLD BUSINESS: (A)
  5. NEW BUSINESS:

(A) TRAVEL REQUESTS:

(D) TOURISM CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT
(E) SUPERIORCOURTSUPPLADULTPROBATION

(D) CUMULATIVE BRIDGE (E) HEALTH DEPARTMENT (F) HIGHWAY

  1. CLERK (2)
  2. AUDITOR (2)

3. TREASURER
4. HEALTH DEPARTMENT (3)

  1. (B)  SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT DISTRICT/Budget Public Hearing
  2. (C)  EVANSVILLE-VANDERBURGHAIRPORTAUTHORITYDISTRICT/BudgetPublicHearing
  3. (D)  GAGE/Tax Phase-in Compliance

12. AMENDMENTS TO SALARY ORDINANCE:

  1. (A)  SHERIFF (G) HIGHWAY
  2. (B)  SUPERIOR COURT (3) (H) PROSECUTOR – VICTIM WITNESS ASSISTANCE

(C) DADS (I)

  1. (D)  PROSECUTOR IV-D (J) SUPERIOR COURT IDOC GRANT
  2. (E)  CLERK PERPETUATION (K) HEALTH DEPARTMENT – LHMF
  3. (F)  HEALTH DEPARTMENT
  1. PUBLIC COMMENT
  2. REMINDER NEXT MEETING DATE/TIME: October 5, 2016 @ 8:30 am County Council October 5, 2016 @ 9:00 am Budget Adoption
  3. ADJOURNMENT

SUPERIOR DRUG COURT

NO PERSONNEL AND FINANCE MEETING SCHEDULED

Free Fraud Prevention Workshop For Poseyville Residents

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Free Fraud Prevention Workshop For Poseyville Residents

WHO:

Amy Wardlow, Outreach Services Specialist, Office of the Indiana Attorney General

WHAT:
Free fraud prevention workshop

WHEN:
6 p.m. Central Time, following Community Table
Thursday, September 1, 2016

WHERE:
St. Paul’s United Methodist Church
46 South Cale Street
Poseyville, IN

WHY:
A presentation will be given on the latest scams and how consumers can avoid becoming a victim of fraud or identity theft. Participants do not have to register and there is no charge to attend.

There will be information on the importance of protecting personal and financial information, and how to check your credit report and place a freeze on your credit.

For those unable to attend, information on the latest scams and consumer complaint forms are available at www.IndianaConsumer.com.

Woman’s outburst politically ambiguous; disorderly conduct conviction stands

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals upheld a Michigan City woman’s disorderly conduct conviction after finding the focus of her speech was politically ambiguous and the state acted rationally in impairing her speech while trying to serve an arrest warrant.

Dorothy Williams shared a home with her elderly mother, her brother, Robert Sanders Jr., and a minor niece. Police knocked on Williams’ door of her Michigan City home in November 2014 looking for Sanders because they had an arrest warrant. Williams yelled and said he was not there and slammed the door. Police requested a search warrant and set up a perimeter around the house.

During this time, Williams left with her niece and walked her to a car for school. Police then wouldn’t let Williams back into the house for safety reasons, causing her to get irate. She screamed and cussed at the officers, and said she needed to get back to her mother. She was loud enough to cause some neighbors to come out of their homes, to which she said, “tell my neighbors to look and see how the Michigan City police department [is] treating me … and an elderly woman.”

Her outburst, which lasted two to four minutes, led to her arrest for disorderly conduct. After obtaining the search warrant, officers found Sanders hiding in the attic of Williams’ house.

She was convicted of the charge and appealed, claiming her speech was political, an affirmative defense under Article 1, Section 9 of the Indiana Constitution.

Judge Edward Najam wrote that the appeals court has concluded that speech in which the speaker refers to herself, even when prompted by a police officer’s conduct or statements, and even when coupled with political statements, permits a reasonable fact-finder to conclude the focus of the entirety of the speech is ambiguous and therefore not political.

Williams’ statements during the incident refer to herself or her mother, they refer to her own conduct, and they were directed at least in part toward her neighbors, Najam wrote. Those statements are plainly not political, so it was reasonable for the fact-finder to conclude that the focus of her entire speech was ambiguous. As such, Williams didn’t meet her burden to establish her affirmative defense.

Najam also noted that the state’s arrest of Williams was rationale because her outburst was distracting officers from securing a perimeter around her residence.

The case is Dorothy Williams v. State of Indiana, 46A03-1511-CR-1913.

Call for Artists: The Art of Autism

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CALL FOR ARTISTS
Please click here for more information and a prospectus
The Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana, in partnership with the St. Mary’s Center for Children, the Easter Seals Rehabilitation Center, and the ARC of Evansville will proudly present The Art of Autism from October 13th through 27th, 2016.  The exhibit will feature artwork by individuals on the autism spectrum and will highlight their talent and creativity from childhood through adulthood.  

The arts have the capacity to inspire and enrich all lives, regardless of condition or diagnosis.  Opening up arts spaces to individuals on the autism spectrum, giving them a unique platform for self-expression and storytelling, and celebrating their valuable and purposeful lives, is to the benefit of our entire community.

The exhibit, part of the Art and Science of Autism Spectrum Conference presented by St. Mary’s Center for Children, will open with a free, public reception and brief presentation by Dr. Mark Osteen.  The gallery will open from 5-7:30 PM on Thursday, October 13.  Dr. Osteen will speak at 6 PM for approximately thirty minutes on the topic of autism spectrum and the visual arts.  The exhibit will remain open until October 27.  For more information about the exhibit, including additional information on submissions, please contact the Arts Council at (812) 422-2111. 

ST. MARY’S WELLNESS CENTER TO HOLD TAI CHI FOR ARTHRITIS CLASS

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St. Mary’s Wellness Center will hold two eight-week “Tai Chi for Arthritis” classes beginning the second week of September. This course is supported by the Arthritis Foundation as a safe and effective way to ease the symptoms of arthritis – including pain, depression, and decreased range of motion. It is designed to be easy and enjoyable for people of all ages, physical conditions, and experience levels.

The cost is $75 for all eight classes. Registration is required by Thursday, September 8. Classes will be taught by local Certified Instructors Mike Goebel and Susan Reid and held at St. Mary’s Wellness Center at Epworth Crossing.  Class times are:

  • Mondays from 1:30 – 2:30 p.m., September 12 – October 31
  • Thursdays from 1:30 – 2:30 p.m., September 15 – November 3

Please call 812-485-5725 to reserve your spot. Other class listings are available at StMarysEpworth.com/classes.