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IceMen Top Rush in Shootout, Set Two-Game Attendance Record

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Records:  Evansville: 16-22-4-1; Rapid City: 17-22-2-2

Goalies:   IND – Battochio (SL), 12-13-2-1, 39 saves

               EVN – Bengtsberg (W), 5-9-2-1, 33 saves

Scoring:

1st Period: 1. EVN – Himelson 2 (Hobbs, 6:38)

2nd Period:  2. RC – Pommells 11 (Gauthier, 2:12)

3rd Period:  No Scoring

Overtime: No Scoring

Shootout: RC – Pommells (save), Ferriero (save); EVN – Wideman (goal), Hobbs (save), Leveille (goal)

EVANSVILLE, IN – A crowd of 7,073 fans helped cheer the Evansville IceMen to a 2-1 shootout victory over the Rapid City Rush Saturday at the Ford Center. They also came together to set an IceMen record.

The 15,302 combined fans from “Star Wars Night” January 16 and “Capes and Crowns Night” Saturday set an attendance record for back-to-back IceMen home games.

Evansville converted on a 3-on-2 rush to start the scoring, when Andrew Himelson caught a pass from Danny Hobbs and beat Rapid City goalie Danny Battochiofrom between the circles 6:38 into the game. The IceMen were stopped on two first period power plays, but outshot the Rush 13-6 in the frame.

Rapid City tied the score 2:12 into the second period, when Spencer Pommells fired a shot over the right shoulder of IceMen goalie Christoffer Bengtsberg on a 3-on-2 rush. The Rush were unsuccessful on three power plays in the period, including a late two-man advantage, as the teams entered the final period even at 1-1.

The goaltenders stole the show in the third period, as Bengtsberg stopped all 14 Rapid City shots and Battochio made 15 saves to keep the game tied at the end of regulation. Evansville had parts of two power in overtime, but could not convert as the teams went to a shootout.

In the skills competition, Bengtsberg stopped both Rush attempts, while Alex Wideman and Daultan Leveille both scored to give the IceMen the 2-1 shootout win.

The IceMen stay home to take on the Fort Wayne Komets on Tuesday at 6:15pm. One lucky fan in attendance will receive a free iPad, presented by Computers Plus. It will be the first of four games next week, three of which will be in Evansville.

UPCOMING HOME GAMES

Tues. 2/9 – Fort Wayne at Evansville (6:15pm) – Ford Center

                        Fat Tuesday – Mardi Gras

Fri. 2/12 – Kalamazoo at Evansville (7:15pm) – Ford Center

                        Youth Backpack Giveaway, presented by Old National Bank

Sun. 2/14 – Cincinnati at Evansville (6:15pm) – Ford Center

                        Heart Night – Valentine’s Day

 

Celebrate Responsibly this Super Bowl

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The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office and the Evansville Police Department, in partnership with the Governor’s Council on Impaired & Dangerous Driving and the Indiana Criminal Justice Institute (ICJI), would like to remind all Indiana motorists to celebrate this year’s Super Bowl responsibly by driving sober and safe.

“This Super Bowl family and friends will come together and root for their favorite team. Super Bowl fans love to celebrate, but this comes with a responsibility to do so safely,” said Sheriff Dave Wedding. “We want to remind motorists this Super Bowl weekend that drinking and driving don’t mix. Please celebrate responsibility and help keep our roadways safe.”

During the 2015 Super Bowl there were nearly 740 traffic collisions in Indiana. Of those, 45 were alcohol-related, with 60 percent involving a driver with a blood alcohol content of 0.08 or greater. In Vanderburgh County, seven (7) intoxicated motorists went to jail over the 2015 Super Bowl weekend.

The Evansville-Vanderburgh County Traffic Safety Partnership, the Governor’s Council, and ICJI would like to remind motorists that accidents and deaths resulting from impaired driving can be prevented by taking the following precautions:

  • Before the celebration begins, plan a safe way home
  • If you do drink, use a taxi, public transportation, ridesharing service or designate a sober friend or family member, and give them your keys
  • If you see a drunk driver on the road, call 911
  • If you know someone who is about to drive or ride impaired, take their keys and help make arrangements to get them home safely

“Accidents involving impaired drivers is something we can all prevent,” said Council Chairman, Todd Meyer. “Together, we can work to keep each and every motorist safe during Super Bowl weekend.”

For more information on Indiana’s efforts on impaired driving prevention and enforcement, please visit: http://www.in.gov/cji/2354.htm.

 

Monthly Revenue Report

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The monthly revenue report for January, along with commentary from State Budget Director Brian Bailey, has been posted on the State Budget Agency webpage. The report and commentary can be found here: http://www.in.gov/sba/2659.htm. Charts visualizing revenue data are located on the Management and Performance Hub under the State Tax Revenue section: http://www.in.gov/mph/staterevenue.html.

 

Results

 

  • General Fund collections for January totaled $1,443.7 million, which is $23.9 million (1.7%) more than the monthly estimate and $78.1 million (5.7%) above January 2015 revenue.
  • Sales tax collections totaled $699.7 million for January, which is $0.8 million (0.1%) above the monthly estimate and $16.5 million (2.4%) above revenue in January 2015.
  • Individual income tax collections totaled $629.4 million for January, which is $2.0 million (0.3%) below the monthly estimate but $36.5 million (6.2%) above revenue in January 2015.
  • Corporate tax collections totaled $26.1 million for January, which is $24.2 million (1,262.2%) above the monthly estimate and $28.9 million (1,039.9%) above revenue in January 2015.  Lower corporate tax refunds for the month are contributing to better than expected corporate collections for January.
  • Riverboat wagering collections totaled $28.0 million for January, which is $2.2 million (7.2%) below the monthly estimate and $7.1 million (20.3%) below revenue in January 2015.
  • Racino wagering collections totaled $7.9 million for January, which is $0.5 million (5.8%) below the monthly estimate and $2.1 million (21.1%) below revenue in January 2015.

 

Commentary

 

Year-to-date General Fund collections totaled $8,352.8 million, which is $7.2 million (0.1%) higher than estimated, and $60.9 million (0.7%) above collections for the same period last year.

 

Sales tax collections through seven months of fiscal year 2016 were $44.6 million (1.0%) below estimate and $21.1 million (0.5%) below collections through seven months of fiscal year 2015.

 

Individual income tax collections through seven months of fiscal year 2016 have grown by $105.2 million (3.6%) over the same period a year ago and were $54.5 million (1.8%) above the year-to-date estimate.

 

Corporate collections seven months into fiscal year 2016 were $27.6 million (6.4%) below year-to-date collections of fiscal year 2015 and $22.2 million (5.2%) below the year-to-date estimate.

 

Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive Session

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The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, February 8, 2016, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A); initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9).

The regular meeting of the School Board will follow at 5:30 p.m. in the EVSC Board Room, same address.

It’s Halftime

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The 2016 legislative session reached the halfway point this week, with House Republicans moving forward on passing agenda items focusing on road funding, supporting public educators and curbing illegal drugs:

House Bill 1001 would establish a comprehensive plan to fund Indiana’s short- and long-term infrastructure needs at the state and local level.

House Bill 1002 would create the Next Generation Hoosier Educators Scholarship to attract high school students to the teaching field.

House Bill 1395 would eliminate ISTEP and establish a commission to create a framework for implementing a more streamlined test in 2017.

House Bill 1004 would enhance teacher licensing and career opportunities by allowing educators holding a valid out-of-state teaching license to teach in Indiana if they meet certain requirements.

House Bill 1005 would allow schools to devise and implement their own Career Pathways and Mentorship Program in order to support educators just entering the field as well as recognize and reward experienced teachers’ work beyond the classroom.

House Bill 1235 would provide that minimum sentences for the worst drug dealers cannot be suspended.

House Bill 1390 would allow consumers to purchase medications containing pseudoephedrine (PSE) without a prescription if they have a prior relationship with a pharmacy or purchase a smaller dose. A prescription would only be required in the small number of cases where a person does not have a pre-existing relationship with a pharmacy and refuses the smaller dosage or tamper-resistant options.

House Bill 1157 would prevent drug felons from obtaining PSE and includes penalties for illegal possession of the drug.

House Bill 1211 would create a new criminal charge and establish a reporting requirement for meth fires, and House Bill 1102 would enhance substance abuse and addiction treatment.

If you have questions or input as we continue moving Indiana forward, please contact me at (317) 232-9816 or h76@iga.in.gov.

Nightingale Home Healthcare sues state, feds alleging discrimination

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IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

The CEO of Nightingale Home Healthcare claims the negative patient surveys that have put his company on the brink of death were part of a campaign of retaliation by state health department officials after he complained about “racially tinged” remarks allegedly left on his voicemail from a health department employee.

Dr. Dev Brar, CEO of Carmel-based Nightingale Home Healthcare, said in a federal lawsuit filed Thursday that since he complained about the alleged racial comments, the Indiana State Department of Health has conducted more frequent inspections at Nightingale facilities and issued harsher reports after those surveys.

The alleged racial comments were recorded inadvertently when a health department employee failed to hang up after leaving a message for Brar, who is Indian, the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit claims that two health department officials—Randall Snyder, the director of the division of acute care, and Kelly Hemmelgarn, a program director responsible for state inspections—retaliated against Nightingale after he reported the remarks to officials.

The lawsuit accuses Hemmelgarn of making an anonymous complaint to government officials about Brar using the title “Dr.,” since Brar is not licensed to practice medicine in Indiana. It also states Hemmelgarn sent a health department surveyor illegally “rummaging through desks, boxes and file cabinets” at a recently closed Nightingale office.

The alleged retaliation culminated in 15 days of inspections conducted in October and November, according to the lawsuit, during which health department surveyors were allegedly instructed to “find instances of immediate [patient] jeopardy that would justify” Nightingale losing its contracts with the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

“Surveyors acting under the direction of Snyder and Hemmelgarn made statements to Nightingale that ‘we are going to shut you down’ before the survey was even completed,” states the lawsuit, which was filed in U.S. District Court in Indianapolis.

The Medicare and Medicaid programs pay for 98 percent of Nightingale’s nearly 900 patients. On Dec. 10, the federal Medicare program decided to terminate its contract with Nightingale, because the state surveys claimed at least two patients had been put in “immediate jeopardy” by poor care from Nightingale.

The lawsuit names Snyder, Hemmelgarn, a health department surveyor, the Indiana State Department of Health and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services declined to comment on the lawsuit. A spokeswoman for the Indiana health department referred questions to the Indiana Attorney General’s office.

“Allegations in a civil lawsuit are the opinion of the plaintiffs’ lawyers filing them and may be refuted in court. The plaintiffs’ lawyers have the burden of proof, not the government defendants,” wrote Bryan Corbin, a spokesman for the attorney general, in an e-mail.

Nightingale, one of the state’s largest home health providers, filed for bankruptcy reorganization on Dec. 10, the same day Medicare decided to terminate reimbursements. On Jan. 25, it won a temporary injunctionpreventing Medicare from immediately terminating payment for its services.

According to state inspection reports, one patient, who had a urinary tract infection, received no visits from Nightingale staff for a month after his usual nurse went on medical leave, the Medicare agency said. He developed sepsis and was taken by ambulance to a hospital. He was discharged nine days later but returned to the hospital within 24 hours and died two weeks later.

A second patient was supposed to have his blood drawn for testing, but the agency said Nightingale staff members failed to show up to do so on several occasions. When staff members did show up, they often were unable to successfully draw blood, with one employee saying “she would have to have a refresher course in lab.”

The patient ended up hospitalized with a solid swelling of a blood clot in his chest and measurements of blood coagulation at critical levels.

But Brar asserts state officials have singled his company out for criticism. The suit says the state conducted “an inordinate number of surveys of Nightingale and hospice compared to similarly situated providers, with no rational basis for doing so.”

“Not only is the state playing games with my company, but they’re playing games with Hoosiers lives,” Brar said.

Adopt A Pet

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Midge is a 7-year-old female Chihuahua/Jack Russell mix. She’s very shy like most older small dogs, and she needs an older home with children above age 5. She’ll go home spayed, microchipped, & up-to-date on shots TODAY for $120. Call (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption information.

The Governor’s Week in Photos

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1) A Hoosier Win // January 30, 2016. Governor Mike Pence and First Lady Karen Pence join Senator Dan Coats and wife, Marsha Coats, at Indiana University’s Assembly Hall to cheer on the Hoosiers as they defeated the Minnesota Gophers Saturday.

 

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2) Promoting a Healthier Indiana // February 2, 2016. Governor Mike Pence visits with friends from the American Heart Association at the Statehouse Tuesday.

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3) Infrastructure Investment // February 2, 2016. Governor Mike Pence joins the Indiana Toll Road Concession Co. in announcing the commencement of a $200 million, two-year road improvement project on the Indiana Toll Road that is expected to create hundreds of construction jobs in northern Indiana.

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4) Remembering Governor Ed Whitcomb // February 4, 2016. Governor Mike Pence shares a laugh with former Governor Ed Whitcomb. Indiana’s 43rd governor passed away on Thursday, February 4 at his home in Rome, Indiana.

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“Governor Ed Whitcomb was a great man whose life of courage, service and adventure inspired generations of Hoosiers and he will be deeply missed,” said Governor Pence. “Governor Whitcomb was a treasure to our state and I mark his passing with a sense of personal loss as will thousands of Hoosiers whose lives were touched by this remarkable leader.”

 

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Governor Pence’s Press Office | 200 W. Washington St. Indianapolis, IN 46204 | 317-232-4567

 

3rd Annual New Tech Institute Hoosier Veterans’ Consortium

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3rd Annual New Tech Institute Hoosier Veterans’ Consortium

Wednesday, Feb. 10, 9:30-11 a.m.

Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center, Assembly Hall

1901 Lynch Road, Evansville

 

Background:  Combat veterans from all major military conflicts during the past 75 years will be attending this event. New Tech Institute students will interview the veterans about their experiences and gain a new appreciation for these individuals and what they have done for our country. The interviews will be done at the beginning of the time frame above, and a luncheon will follow.