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Indiana Grown Members Connected To Local Food Buyers

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INDIANAPOLIS (April 24, 2024)Indiana Grown held a member event Tuesday focused on encouraging schools, hospitals, restaurants and more to buy local. The event featured 57 Indiana Grown members who are ready and able to expand into larger markets.

Members who attended the showcase were highlighting their locally grown, raised, processed and crafted items, like wagyu beef, pork, Indiana wine, craft spirits, specialty produce, sauces, spices, coffee and more.

The event featured guests from Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky shopping for their specialty store, distribution business, hospital or school cafeteria, restaurant or grocery store.

Isaac Hughes with Ideal Meat & Specialty Foods was looking for unique products from local producers to offer to their customers.

“I love events like this because it gives me an opportunity to see things I normally don’t see and that I would be interested in distributing,” said Hughes. “We also enjoyed visiting with our current business partners and welcomed their suggestions of who to see at the show. This event was a great opportunity for me to connect with Indiana Grown members I might not have known existed.”

Indiana Grown was excited to host this first-time event said Caroline Patrick, Indiana Grown director.

“This brand-new event for Indiana Grown was a huge success and we are so thankful to the many members who attended,” said Patrick. “When expanding your small business, it can be hard to be connected with the right audience and this was a great opportunity for our members and for our food buying attendees to feature locally grown, made and crafted products in their schools, hospitals, restaurants, catering services and more across the state.”

Tamika Catchings with Tea’s Me Café from Indianapolis stated she appreciated her fellow members and Indiana Grown teammates.

“Being an Indiana Grown member for only a year and a half, we were grateful to be invited to this first-ever event,” said Catchings. “Walking around and visiting with other Indiana Grown members has been a huge asset because we can seek other members who want to work with us and leverage both of our products for greater success.”

Jennifer Wiese of BeeFree, whose company was started by a mom looking for gluten free snacks for her son who was diagnosed with Autism, highlighted that this event was a great success.

“We loved the opportunity to introduce our products to new customers, and we love sharing our story that our snacks were created by a mom on a mission and our products are sweetened with honey, contain real ingredients that are the perfect on-the-go snack,” said Wiese.

Companies that attended the showcase are listed below:

  • Daniel’s Vinyard – McCordsville
  • Pig’s Tale Charcuterie – Indianapolis
  • Sip & Share Wines – Indianapolis
  • Marsha’s Specialty Desserts & Tierney’s Catering – Avon
  • 550 Wagyu – Lafayette
  • Owen Valley Winery – Spencer
  • Uncle Al’s Breading & Auntie B’s Custom Blending – Converse
  • Agua Blanca Shrimp – Indianapolis
  • Voils Family Farm – Mitchell
  • Abby’s Elderberry – Otisco
  • Cindy’s Candy Corner – Hymera
  • Bee Great – Churubusco
  • Kim’s Key Lime Products – Indianapolis
  • Little Family Foods – Terre Haute
  • Your Grandpa’s Old Fashioned – Carmel
  • Indiana Soap Company – Greenfield
  • Cute as a Cupcake! Cupcakery & Bake Shop – Merrillville
  • Three Flock Farm – Ellettsville
  • Amish Country Dairy – Shipshewana
  • PopKorn Kernels With A Twist – Bloomington
  • Pa and Ma’s BBQ Sauce – Indianapolis
  • Tulip Tree Creamery – Indianapolis
  • West Fork Whiskey Co. – Indianapolis
  • Spicekick Seasoning – Fishers
  • Fungi Meadows – Logansport
  • Miller’s Orchard – Nappanee
  • Fish Lake Organic – Goshen
  • Little Way Farm and Homestead – Vevay
  • MKONO Farm – Bloomington
  • Needmore Coffee Roasters – Bloomington
  • Garcia’s Gardens – Indianapolis
  • Metal Honey Foods – Indianapolis
  • Pure Memory Water – Indianapolis
  • Risin’ Creek Creamery – Martinsville
  • Linneweber’s Sauce Company – Vincennes
  • Hunt Family Farm – Amboy
  • Brick House Vinaigrettes – Indianapolis
  • Healthy Hoosier Oil – Converse
  • Nature’s Tea Company – Indianapolis
  • Aahaa Chai – Indianapolis
  • Bloomington Farm Stop Collective – Bloomington
  • Celtic Glen Heritage Livestock – Spencer
  • Middle Davids Candles – Franklin
  • Kei2Health – Indianapolis
  • Eat Surreal – Indianapolis
  • Wild Spirit Coffee Co- Bloomfield
  • Slaughter Orchard & Cidery – Bloomington
  • Beehive Body Co – Mount Summit
  • Tea’s Me Cafe – Indianapolis
  • Apricot Sun – Carmel
  • Groomsville Popcorn – Tipton
  • BeeFree – Noblesville
  • Culver Duck – Middlebury
  • Bread & Roses Gardens – Bloomington
  • My Sugar Pie – Zionsville
  • Newfangled Confections – Indianapolis
  • 4 Birds Bakery – Indianapolis

Indiana Grown is excited to continue this showcase into 2025 and beyond.

Retail Food Establishment Inspection Report

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Healthy food. Healthy eating background. Fruit, vegetable, berry. Vegetarian eating. Superfood

 

Retail Food Establishment Inspection Report

media reports March 31- April 6, 2024

Indiana State Police Partners with DEA for 26th Drug Take Back Day

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On Saturday, April 27, 2024, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is sponsoring the 26th nationwide “Prescription Drug Take Back” initiative.  The “Take Back” initiative seeks to prevent prescription drug abuse and theft through proper disposal of prescription drugs.

Collection sites will be set up nationwide for expired, unused, and unwanted prescription drugs which will be properly disposed of without threat to the environment.  This program is for liquid and pill medications.  Vaping pens without batteries and vaping cartridges will also be taken.  Needles, new or used, WILL NOT be accepted for disposal.  This service is free and anonymous with no questions asked.

This initiative addresses a vital public safety and public health issue.  Medicines that languish in home cabinets are highly susceptible to diversion, misuse, and abuse. Rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high, as are the number of accidental poisonings and overdoses due to these drugs.  Studies show that a majority of abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet.

In addition, Americans are now advised that their usual methods for disposing of unused medicines—flushing them down the toilet or throwing them in the trash—pose both potential safety and health hazards.

Once again, the Indiana State Police is pleased to partner with the DEA, and as in the past, unwanted medications may be dropped off at any Indiana State Police Post, except for the Toll Road Post.  The event will be on Saturday, April 27, 2024, between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m.

The Indiana State Police Post in Putnamville will have their collection on Friday, April 26, 2024, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

To locate the State Police Post closest to your home or business, click this link for Indiana State Police on the Map. To find other locations in Indiana or across the U.S. that are participating in the Drug Take Back initiative, click this link to the DEA.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

Four Hoosiers Earn CSC Academic All-America Status

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Four student-athletes from the Big Ten Champion Indiana men’s swimming and diving team earned College Sports Communicators Academic All-America honors, the organization announced Wednesday (April 24).

Juniors Quinn Henninger and Josh Matheny each made the first team while senior Tomer Frankel and junior Carson Tyler captured second-team laurels.

The Academic All-America program celebrates the combination of athletic and academic achievement. Nominated student-athletes have a cumulative GPA above 3.50 and compete in at least four contests during the season.

Combining with the women’s honors, the Indiana swimming and diving program totaled six CSC Academic All-Americans – tied with Texas for the most in NCAA Division-I. Junior Ching Hwee Gan was named the CSC Academic All-America Team Member of the Year on Tuesday, and senior Anne Fowler also earned a first-team selection.

The men’s quartet helped Indiana win its third-straight Big Ten Championship. IU placed fourth for the second consecutive season.

Henninger and Tyler contributed to perhaps the greatest team diving performance at an NCAA Championships, combining for five of Indiana’s program-record six medals. Tyler captured national titles in the 3-meter springboard and platform events and earned bronze on the 1-meter board. Henninger was the NCAA runner-up on both springboards and took seventh on platform.

Tyler has a 3.91 cumulative grade-point average as a political science major. Henninger studies finance and has recorded a 3.86 GPA. Both divers have earned Academic All-Big Ten honors from each of their two eligible seasons.

For the second-straight season, Frankel finished top five in the NCAA in both the 100-yard and 200-yard butterfly events. Frankel repeated as a medalist in the 100 fly, taking second in 43.85 which lowered his own program record.

Matheny is a repeat CSC Academic All-American, having earned third-team honors as a sophomore. He finished sixth nationally in the 100-yard breaststroke, his first championship final in the event. At the Big Ten Championships, Matheny placed second in the 200 breast and fourth in the 100 breast. Both Frankel and Matheny competed on the 400-yard medley relay for a third consecutive season, earning IU’s sixth-straight top-five finish in the event.

Matheny owns a 3.82 cumulative GPA as an economics major, and Frankel has a 3.51 studying environmental management. Frankel is a three-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree, and Matheny is a two-time Big Ten honor roll recipient, two-time CSCAA Scholar All-American and 2023 Big Ten Distinguished Scholar.

Gan Named CSC Academic All-American of the Year

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Fowler Makes Second-Straight First Team

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana women’s swimming and diving student-athletes Ching Hwee Gan and Anne Fowler earned College Sports Communicators first-team Academic All-America honors as announced by the organization on Tuesday (April 22). Additionally, Gan was named the CSC Division-I Academic All-America Team Member of the Year.

Both athletes repeat as Academic All-Americans, with Fowler earning her second-straight first team honor. The Academic All-America program celebrates the combination of athletic and academic achievement. Nominated student-athletes have a cumulative GPA above 3.50 and compete in at least four contests during the season.

Indiana swimming and diving has produced a CSC DI Academic All-America Team Member of the Year in consecutive seasons. Last year, three-time NCAA Champion Andrew Capobianco earned the award on the men’s side as a fifth-year senior.

Gan, a junior nutrition science major, has achieved a perfect 4.0 grade-point average during her time at Indiana University, twice earning both Academic All-Big Ten and CSCAA Scholar All-America laurels. In February, she helped lead the IU women to their first Big Ten Championship since 2019 with individual conference titles in the 1,650-yard freestyle and 800-yard freestyle relay as well as a fifth-place finish in the 500-yard freestyle.

At the 2024 NCAA Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships, Gan earned her second-straight medal in the 1,650 free with a bronze-medal finish in 15:46.90. Gan also helped the Hoosiers tie a program-record fifth-place finish in the 800-yard freestyle relay while setting the school standard in 6:54.03. Indiana placed seventh in the team standings for a second-straight season, another program-best.

Fowler, a senior studying health care management and policy, is a three-time Academic All-Big Ten and CSCAA Scholar All-American during her time at Indiana University. Like Gan, Fowler also medaled at the national meet, earning silver on the 3-meter springboard for the second season in a row. Fowler collected additional All-America accolades on the 1-meter springboard, finishing 16th nationally.

The senior scored from all three diving events to contribute to the Big Ten team title, taking silver on the 3-meter board, fourth place on 1-meter and 17th from the platform.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: HOW MUCH ARE COUNTY COMMISSION CANDIDATES SPENDING LOCALLY?

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LETTER TO THE EDITOR:  HOW MUCH ARE COUNTY COMMISSION CANDIDATES SPENDING LOCALLY?

Written By Johnnt Kincaid

APRIL 24, 2024

Looking at a political candidate’s campaign finance reports can reveal some information about them. These reports not only show who contributes to a campaign but also where the money is spent.

Candidates who buy locally build positive relationships with local businesses when they spend their campaign funds locally.

Since the beginning of the year, over $200,000 has been given to the Republican candidates for Vanderburgh County Commissioner. Amy Canterbury, a newcomer to local politics, started with no funds in her political coffers and she raised $153,676 between January 1 and April 12, 2024.

Vanderburgh County Commissioner Cheryl Musgrave started the year with $103,209 in her campaign watches and raised $52,758 for the primary. This gave each campaign about $150,000 to use to persuade your vote.

Amy Canterbury spent $110,010 since the first of the year.on her campaign, $42,500 went to Matchstick Media, an Ohio media consulting firm that does creative for nationwide political campaigns. Another $10,250 was paid for a polling company from Washington DC, and $23,835 went to KAP Print in Texas for direct mail. Canterbury’s total out-of-market spending was $75,585 or 70% of total spending.

Cheryl Musgrave spent a total of $56,055 on her primary campaign. Her financial report reveals that she spent the overwhelming majority of her political war chest locally.  Her campaign advertising dollars were spent locally instead of using an out-of-market media buyer. The only truly out-of-town expenditure was $500 for data. The total out-of-town spending by the Musgrave campaign was less than one percent of her campaign budget.

Political officials and candidates should foster positive relationships with local businesses. There’s no better way to promote local businesses than to directly do business with them. Spending money locally shows that you are committed to the success of our community.

FOOTNOTE: This article was posted by the City-County Observer without bias or editing.

TODAYS VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCIL & PERSONNEL & FINANCE MEETING AGENDA

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PERSONNEL & FINANCE MEETING – APRIL 24, 2024 @3:30 PM
VANDERBURGH COUNTY COUNCIL – MAY 1, 2024 @3:30 PM
CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX, ROOM 301

1. OPENING OF MEETING
2. ATTENDANCE ROLL CALL
3. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
4. INVOCATION
5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
A. County Council Meeting – April 3, 2024
6. PERSONNEL REQUESTS:
A. Superior Court
1. Request to allow advanced Step placement for Court Reporter 10001370-
137130
2. Request to fill vacancy for a Small Claims Secretary 10001370-137180
3. Request to fill vacancy for a PT Bailiff 10001370-137195
B. Drug and Alcohol Deferral Service
1. Request to fill vacancy for a Director 10001380-138111
C. CCPI-Work Release/Superior Court – INDOC Grant Work Release
1. Request to retitle and reclassify Residential Officer jointly funded by 11222505-
930460 and 93140000-931460
D. Clerk
1. Request to fill vacancy for a Senior Clerk-Circuit/Superior 10001010-101116
2. Request to fill vacancy for a Circuit/Superior Counter Clerk 10001010-101134
3. Request to fill vacancy for an M/T Subpoena Summons Clerk 10001010-101158
E. Assessor
1. Request to fill vacancy for a Real Estate Deputy Residential II 10001090-109156
7. APPROPRIATION ORDINANCE:
A. Auditor
B. Community Corrections Project Income – Home Detention
C. Community Corrections Project Income – Treatment Court
D. Community Corrections Project Income – Work Release
E. Cumulative Bridge
F. Convention Center Operating Fund
8. REPEALS – None
9. TRANSFERS:
A. Superior Court
B. Reassessment/County Assessor
10. SPECIAL APPROPRIATION:
A. Solid Waste Management District – Jean Carlson, Director
11. OLD BUSINESS:
A. Health First Indiana (HFI) – Joe Gries, Administrator Health Department
12. NEW BUSINESS:
A. P&F Meeting ONLY Veterans Memorial Coliseum Infrastructure Improvements –
Jeff Justice
B. Youth First – Parri Black, President & CEO
13. AMENDMENTS TO SALARY ORDINANCE
14. PUBLIC COMMENT
15. REMINDER OF UPCOMING MEETING DATES/TIMES:
A. County Council Meeting – May 1st @3:30 PM
B. Personnel & Finance Meeting – May 29th @3:30 PM
16. ADJOURNMENT