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UE Seniors Receive Orr Fellowships

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For the past three years, the Schroeder School of Business at the University of Evansville has welcomed the Orr Fellowship to UE to recruit students for its highly esteemed program. This year, UE seniors Dev Machowiak, Holyn Marshall, and Kaitlin Koenig have been offered Orr Fellowships.

This prestigious fellowship provides Indiana’s top recent college graduates with paid opportunities to work with and learn from Indiana’s best business executives and companies. Fellows are paid a salary by their host company during the fellowship, which lasts two years. Orr fellows receive executive-level mentorship, and have the opportunity to build professional networks. They attend business leader meetings, and become part of a peer network of other talented recent graduates.

During their fellowships, Machowiak will be employed at Bluebridge, Marshall will be working at Angie’s List, and Koenig will be employed at Clear Software. Machowiak is a sociology major from South Bend, Indiana. Marshall is a business major from Bentonville, Arkansas. Koenig is a global business major from Zionsville, Indiana.

In order to qualify for the Orr Fellowship applicants must have:

• Cumulative 3.5 GPA or higher (students with as low as a 3.2 GPA will be considered if they have extensive leadership experience)

• Demonstrated leadership potential (leaders in on- and off-campus clubs/organizations/athletics)

• Strong interest in entrepreneurial business or organizational leadership

• Graduate of an Indiana college or university (or a native Hoosier graduating from any school around the country)

Sethlyn Morgan, director of UE’s School of Business’s Center for Career Success, credits UE alumni Brandon Ford and Connor Donnelly, for encouraging current UE students to pursue the fellowship. Both Ford and Donnelly are former UE business majors. Ford is a past Orr Fellow and Donnelly is currently an Orr Fellow.

“They have provided continuous support through presentations, mentorships and career advice,” says Morgan. “It is always nice to have our alumni come back to UE and foster the professional development and success of current students. They don’t have to do that. I think the fact that they do is a testament to how they feel about the University. And how highly they regard the quality of our students.”

OBAMA SPEECH

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Sheriff’s Office gets New Android App for Mobile DevicesDecember 9, 2015

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iPhone users have already been able to connect with the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office on their mobile devices. Now users of the popular Android OS can get in on the experience.

Today, Sheriff Dave Wedding announced the official launch of the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office Android application. “Our app is now available for immediate download via the Google Play store”, stated Sheriff Wedding. “This new mobile application has all the functionality of the previously released iPhone app and will keep you informed of latest Sheriff’s Office news and emergency alerts.”

The VCSO App features include the ability to quickly access Sheriff’s Office press releases, most wanted review, booking records feed, and public safety information. The VCSO app also allows you to submit crime tips, as well as attach pictures from your phone’s camera. Plus, the app lets you connect to recent report feeds, search answers to FAQs, and gives you access to the VCSO phone numbers with the push of a button.

The app requires Android OS 4.0.3 or greater. Click here to download the app.

Pictured above: Screenshots of the new VCSO Android app from Extend Group.

 

 

Governor Pence Endorses Local Road Funding Legislation

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Governor Mike Pence today announced support for legislation filed by Senator Brandt Hershman to immediately provide $418 million to local governments to fund local transportation infrastructure projects.

 

This local road funding legislation complements the 21st Century Crossroads plan Governor Pence outlined in October, which will make $1 billion in new road funding available over the next four years. Both proposals bring forward new infrastructure funding without raising taxes.

 

“I strongly support Senator Hershman’s plan to help communities fund infrastructure improvements, and I commend his leadership,” said Governor Pence. “Our teams have been working closely on this plan to provide funding at the local level without raising taxes. I will be including this initiative as part of my legislative agenda for the upcoming session and look forward to its passage along with the 21st Century Crossroads plan that Senator Yoder will be authoring. Hoosiers know that roads mean jobs at the state and local level. I couldn’t be more pleased to partner with Senators Hershman, Yoder and Kenley to ensure that Indiana remains the Crossroads of America, and this administration will continue to work with members of the Indiana General Assembly to aggressively fund our infrastructure in a responsible manner.”

 

This week Governor Pence announced major infrastructure investments on I-65 in Lake County, I-69 in Greene and Monroe counties and the modernization of State Road 37 in Hamilton County. Last Sunday, Governor Pence joined Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear for a ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark completion of the Abraham Lincoln Bridge in Clark County.

 

IceMen Halt Streaking Walleye With Comeback Win

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Trailing 2-0 midway through the second period, the Evansville IceMen battled back to score three unanswered goals on their way to a 3-2 win Wednesday against the Toledo Walleye at the Huntington Center. The win snapped a three game skid for the IceMen and ended Toledo’s ten game unbeaten streak.

Toledo capitalized on two of its first three power-play opportunities to jump out to a two-goal lead. Alden Hirschfeld scored on a rebound with 4:11 left in the first period to put the Walleye in front during a man-advantage. Hirschfeld picked up another power-play goal just over five minutes into the second period to give the Walleye a 2-0 lead. It was his league-leading seventh power-play tally of the season.

Meanwhile, Evansville failed to convert on its four power-plays in the first two periods and were kept off the board when Daultan Leveille was stopped on a penalty shot by Walleye goaltender Jake Paterson. However, the IceMen cut the lead in half when Justin MacDonald was caught from behind on a breakaway by Jared Nightengale, who accidentally swept the puck through the five-hole of his own goaltender to give Evansville life.

MacDonald buried his second goal of the game on a rebound for the equalizer 4:25 into the third period, and Leveille completed the comeback after he scooped up a rebound and shot it over a sprawling Paterson during Evansville’s fifth power-play to put the IceMen ahead 3-2. Evansville goalie Matt Zenzola made 29 saves in the victory in his ECHL debut, while Paterson stopped 32 in the loss.

Evansville returns home to host the Cincinnati Cyclones Friday at 7:15pm at the Ford Center. Tickets are available at www.ticketmaster.com or the Ford Center Ticket Office. Discounted tickets are available for groups of ten people or more by calling an IceMen Account Executive at 812-421-GOAL (4625).

The Hoosier Lottery is presenting IceMen Bingo Friday. All fans 18-years-old and over will receive a bingo card with hockey related squares to check off during the game. The first 100 people to turn in their card with a Bingo will receive a Hoosier Lottery Prize Pack. Then, the first five people who turn in a full Bingo card will receive a different prize.

The IceMen then head to Cincinnati Saturday night for the rematch at US Bank Arena, before wrapping up the week in Fort Wayne Sunday at Memorial Coliseum.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/recent-booking-records.aspx

COA split over inmate’s ability to sue for unpaid wages

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

The Indiana Court of Appeals was divided Wednesday over whether an inmate who worked for a private company that contracted with the Department of Correction to employ offenders was allowed under Indiana statute to make a claim for unpaid wages.

Chuck Adams worked in ArvinMeritor Inc.’s brake shop, where he eventually earned $1.10 an hour. Comparable work done by non-inmates at a Plainfield, Indiana, facility paid at least $11.71 per hour, Adams alleged.

After he was injured on the job and allegedly improperly treated, he filed a lawsuit for unpaid wages against Meritor and state defendants, which was joined by other inmate brake shop employees. Adams’ lawsuit also stated a personal injury claim against other medical and state defendants. The trial court granted the defendants’ Trial Rule 12(B)(6) motions to dismiss the wage claim, after finding Adams had no private right of action to sue for such wages. The court also granted the defendants’ motion on the personal injury claim on the basis that Adams did not exhaust his administrative remedies.

The majority noted Meritor is a private enterprise subject to the Wage Payment Statute. At the time Adams filed his complaint, the only limitation in I.C. 11-10-7 on an offender’s wages was that he or she was not eligible for unemployment compensation benefits. I.C. 11-10-7-4 provides “at least an implied right to sue for failure to pay the prevailing wage” because the Legislature later amended the chapter to specifically exempt criminal offenders in a facility operated by the DOC, Judge Margret Robb wrote for the majority.

“There may be other impediments to Adams’s recovery of the wages to which he claims he is entitled which will be discerned at a later stage in the development of the record. But Adams’s complaint, filed prior to May 9, 2013, has on its face stated a claim upon which relief could be granted,” she wrote.

Judge Melissa May dissented on this point, believing Blanck v. Ind. Dep’t of Corr., 829 N.E.2d 505, 509 (Ind. 2005), and Kimrey v. Donahue, 861 N.E.2d 379, 382 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007), trans. denied, do not permit reversal based on only an implied right of action.

“The majority implies a cause of action on the premise that such was the legislature’s intent. But our Supreme Court has cautioned that legislative intent is best determined by what the statutory language itself includes and not include,” May wrote.

The judges all agreed that summary judgment was proper for the defendants on Adams’ personal injury claim because he did not exhaust administrative remedies. He argued the DOC’s grievance procedure could not provide him the specific relief he wanted – monetary damages. But that does not render the administrative remedy “unavailable,” Robb wrote.

The judges also affirmed the decision of the lower court to conduct a hearing in his absence.  The case is Chuck W. Adams, Charles E. Howard, et al. v. ArvinMeritor, Inc., et al., 49A02-1406-PL-465.

CIVIL DISCOURSE NEEDED TO ADDRESS TERRORIST THREAT

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By Tom Purcell

Last week was an ugly day for civil discourse.

Innocent employees were enjoying themselves at an annual Christmas party when two shooters, clad in military gear and carrying assault rifles and numerous magazines, began mowing them down — killing 14 and wounding at least 17.

A thoughtful person would be furious — furious with the two well-trained shooters, a husband and wife, who had carefully planned to carry out such an attack.

He was an American citizen. His wife was born in Pakistan.

He was 28-year-old Syed Rizwan Farook. She was 27-year-old Tashfeen Malik. They had a 6-month-old child, who they left with the grandmother before slaughtering innocent people.

He worked with the victims, government employees and was, according to his father, a very religious Muslim. Neighbors said he and other men were working in the wee hours in his garage.

A thoughtful person would want to know what motivated this latest attack. A critical thinker would want to get to the root cause. Until we understand the root cause of our problems we will never solve them.

But thoughtfulness and critical thinking are running short in public discourse these days.

Before some of the victims had their last breath — before the blood began to dry — our growing number of knee-jerk political hacks were using the tragedy to attack their political opponents.

ThinkProgress initially reported that the shooters were white — gleefully criticizing “conservatives” who said the attacks appeared to follow tactics used by Middle Eastern terrorists. The article was removed once it was discredited by actual facts.

Other media outlets quickly injected Planned Parenthood into the dialogue. “It’s a few blocks away,” wrote one MSNBC tweeter — despite the fact that its location was a few miles away and had nothing to do with the shootings.

Disappointed that the shooters didn’t fit their desired narrative, the partisan focus shifted toward our need for more anti-gun laws.

Look, we do need to eliminate loopholes in the way firearms are being purchased in our country, but the rifles the shooters used last week were obtained illegally through a friend and modified to impose maximum damage.

In France, where the gun laws are much stricter than U.S. gun laws, assault rifles are also banned — but that didn’t stop terrorists from getting them.

According to The Guardian, the “western Balkans are awash with guns left over from the wars of the 1990s” and “Europe’s open borders and growing trade in illegal weapons means assault rifles are relatively easy to come by on the black markets.”

If Prohibition can’t stop alcohol consumption and anti-drug laws can’t stop America’s heroin epidemic, do you really think our gun laws will stop determined fanatics from getting them?

The point is if we want to thoughtfully address the cause of mass shootings in America, civil discourse is the only solution.

Mental health is a common denominator in many mass shootings. So let’s address it civilly.
Congressman Tim Murphy (R-Pa.), a psychologist, has put forth thoughtful legislation to overhaul American’s mental health care system and take specific steps to help people with mental illness. Can our political class please move this bill along in a meaningful, nonpartisan manner.

The fact is the threat of attack from religious ideologues is growing. I know this because ISIS, the terrorist organization that inspired last week’s attack — and that carried out the horrific attack in Paris — has promised more attacks in America.

The threat is real — and public discourse that mocks political opponents and blames our woes on red herrings isn’t going to solve this problem.

Adopt A Pet

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