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Women’s Tennis to Kick off Spring Season

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First year head coach Jayson Wiseman and the University of Evansville Women’s Tennis team kicks off their spring season this weekend.  The Aces start things off with a bang as it will be a busy and eventful weekend to start the season.  On Friday, they will get things started when they travel to Murray State to take on the Racers at 10:00 a.m. CST.  Upon completion of their match with the Racers, the Aces will then travel to Clarksville, TN to take on the Austin Peay Governors at 6:00 p.m. CST.  UE will wrap up the weekend on Sunday when they head to SIU Edwardsville for a 2:00 p.m. CST affair with the Cougars.

 

The Aces are led by lone senior Marina Moreno, who is coming off a 2014-2015 season that boasted an overall record of 14-14 in singles play.  Moreno also was able to go 17-12 in doubles play.  Moreno and the Aces look to improve off their 11-9 overall record in 2015.  They also look to improve upon their 3-4 mark in conference play.

 

UE also features juniors Andjela Brguljan, Elizabeth Mendes, and new transfer Katie Delgado, who joins the Aces from Tyler Junior College in Tyler, TX.  Evansville sophomores include Kennedy Craig and Leah Helpingstine.  Craig saw significant action as a freshman when she compiled a singles record of 20-10 and a doubles record of 12-11.  The last two players on the roster for the Aces are Doreen Crasta and Marine Darzyan, both of which are freshmen.  Both Crasta and Darzyan are coming off solid fall campaigns for the Aces.

 

UE will spend almost the first month of their season on the road.  After this weekend the Aces will be in Chattanooga, TN on February 12th to take on Chattanooga.  The first home action for the Aces will be on February 27th when they take on both UT Martin and Eastern Illinois.

 

 

Riecken calls attention to serious problems with current body cams legislation

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INDIANAPOLIS - Indiana State Rep. Gail Riecken issued the statement below earlier today (Jan. 28, 2016):


House Bill 1019, the “body-worn camera” bill you may have read or heard about recently, passed out of the Indiana House of Representatives on Tuesday and now moves to the Senate for further legislative action.

I want you to know about the proposals I can support, but also, what I see as the biggest problem with this legislation that I felt I could not support House Bill 1019 on its third-reading vote in the House.

What are the good points?

First and most important, law enforcement, who holds the recordings, must allow all persons involved in the video the recording(s) opportunities to view the recordings. The viewers must have an attorney present and they can see the video(s) at least two times. They cannot copy the video. And, if they are denied access to the video(s) and have to go to court, they can get their attorney fees paid by the public unit of that law enforcement agency.

What does this mean? It means immediate access to the recordings by the persons most affected– something not guaranteed now and a great improvement.

Second, all recordings must be held for a minimum of 180 days. Right now, the standard is 30 days. The recording(s) can be held longer if someone requests that in writing – two years; and, if the recording(s) is to be used in court, it will be held through that entire process. This is an improvement.

So, why did I vote against the bill?

There in one very bad point that caused me to vote against this bill and decide it should not go into effect as is and that provision is this: if law enforcement refuses to allow the people in the recording(s) or the public to see the recording(s) and they have to go to court, the burden is on the public—not law enforcement— to prove why they need to see it. This is wrong on two accounts:

  • these folks have not seen what they are to prove in court, and
  • if they do get to see the recording(s), the identifying information must be “obscured”.

Recognizing the improvements for the public I brought together a small group of legislators to rewrite House Bill 1019 and to incorporate some critical changes we think are necessary. Here is the link to that amendment: click here. That amendment, offered by Rep. Ed Delaney, was defeated on the House floor as the bill moved through on 2nd reading.

Watch this House Bill 1019 as it moves through the legislative process. Advocate for clarity and sound thinking. We must make sure there is fairness in the process, that there is transparency in the outcome.

At a recent Ethics training for legislators the presenter’s remark is so timely to this situation:

“Necessity is not an excuse for action. In most cases it is a delusion.”


Eagles falter down the stretch, lose 82-78

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INDIANAPOLIS 82, SOUTHERN INDIANA 78

INDIANAPOLIS (15-3, 9-1 GLVC)

Loyd, Jordan 5-11 12-15 24; Barker, Lucas 5-8 2-3 15; Rambo, Tyler 5-8 2-3 12; Maize, Ernest 4-6 3-3 11; Davidson, Eric 3-5 0-0 7; King, Jimmy 2-5 0-0 5; Retic, Joe 1-3 2-2 4; Etherington, Alex 1-6 0-0 2; Crocker, Jamel 1-3 0-0 2. Totals 27-55 21-26 82.

SOUTHERN INDIANA (13-7, 5-5 GLVC)

Stein, Alex 6-9 4-4 16; Edwards, George 7-10 1-3 15; Taylor, Jeril 4-15 4-4 12; Britt, Travis 4-6 0-0 11; Tisdell, T.J. 3-4 5-7 11; Norman, Jacob 1-1 2-2 4; Seniour, Shane 2-5 0-0 4; Macklin, Cortez 1-3 0-0 3; Drummond, Bobo 1-9 0-0 2; Carter, Davis 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-62 16-20 78.

Indianapolis………………   41   41  -   82

Southern Indiana…………..   40   38  -   78

3-point goals–Indianapolis 7-16 (Barker, Lucas 3-4; Loyd, Jordan 2-4; King, Jimmy 1-2; Davidson, Eric 1-3; Etherington, Alex 0-2; Retic, Joe 0-1), Southern Indiana 4-21 (Britt, Travis 3-4; Macklin, Cortez 1-2; Taylor, Jeril 0-6; Seniour, Shane 0-2; Drummond, Bobo 0-6; Stein, Alex 0-1). Fouled out–Indianapolis-None, Southern Indiana-Tisdell, T.J.. Rebounds–Indianapolis 33 (Maize, Ernest 8), Southern Indiana 33 (Taylor,

Jeril 8). Assists–Indianapolis 10 (Loyd, Jordan 5), Southern Indiana 15 (Taylor, Jeril 3; Drummond, Bobo 3; Britt, Travis 3; Edwards, George 3). Total fouls–Indianapolis 17, Southern Indiana 22. Technical fouls–Indianapolis-None, Southern Indiana-None. A-1407 UIndy is ranked 22nd in the D2SIDA NCAA II Media Top 25.

 

Aces earn exciting 85-78 win at Southern Illinois

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Evansville is back home Sunday to face Wichita State

 CARBONDALE, Ill. – One of the most exciting games in recent memory took place at SIU Arena as the University of Evansville men’s basketball team staged a late comeback in regulation before earning an 85-78 overtime win over Southern Illinois on Thursday evening.

 

Trailing by seven inside of four minutes remaining, Evansville (18-4, 7-2 MVC) fought its way back.  Mislav Brzoja, who set his career mark with 25 points, nailed a three to tie it up in the final minute.  After Southern Illinois (18-4, 7-2 MVC) hit a triple with six seconds left, UE had one last chance to send it to overtime.  The Aces called two time outs to set up a last-second play.  D.J. Balentine made it count, nailing a triple with a second left to send it to overtime.  In the extra session, the Aces outscored the Salukis, 14-7, to take the win.

 

“This was a great game, both teams deserved to win,” head coach Marty Simmons said.  “What makes tonight feel good is that SIU is a really good team and this is such a hard place to play.  Winning in this league is extremely difficult.”

Balentine matched Brzoja’s team-high of 25 tallies.  He drilled two buzzer beaters in the game, including the most important one that sent the game to OT.

 

“To come out with a win is great for us,” Balentine said.  “We knew that we had two timeouts left and we were able to set up that last play.  I did not have much room on that play, but we do it every day in practice and I knew it was good when I let it go.”

 

Jaylon Brown finished with 15 points for UE while Egidijus Mockevicius had 10 points and a game-high 8 rebounds.  The Aces shot 55.4% on the night while holding SIU to 44.8%.  The Salukis finished with a 39-26 edge in rebounding.

 

Anthony Beane hit 10 shots to scored 30 points while Sean O’Brien finished with 16.

 

For the second game in a row, the Aces got off to a slow start as the Salukis opened up a 7-2 advantage in the opening minutes.  Evansville came back to score the next four points before SIU scored seven in a row, including a trey by Anthony Beane, to go up 14-6.  Their lead reached double figures for the first time at 18-7 before Mislav Brzoja countered on the next possession with a triple.

 

Midway through the half, SIU took their largest lead of 13 points at 27-14.  Evansville was able finish the half on an 18-8 run to trail by just three points at the half.  D.J. Balentine capped off the period with a triple, marking his 11th point of the half.  His bucket at the buzzer sent UE to the locker room down 35-32.

 

Egidijus Mockevicius dunked it on the first possession of the second half before a Balentine triple tied it up at 37-37.  A 13-5 run saw the Salukis go back up by 8 with just over 14 minutes left at 50-42 before UE scored 11 in a row to take its first lead of the game.  Back-to-back 3-point possessions by Brzoja started the run before Jaylon Brown capped it off with a triple.

 

Southern Illinois would retake the lead and push that advantage to seven points at 66-59 with 3:31 remaining.  Evansville cut the gap to one, converting on three baskets in a row to make it a 66-65 contest under the 2-minute mark.

 

Down 68-65 with under a minute remaining, Brzoja got the job done once again, nailing another triple but on the ensuing play, Leo Vincent hit a three to put SIU back on top.  An interesting sequence took place in the last six seconds.  Purple Aces head coach Marty Simmons called consecutive time outs as the Aces inbounded the ball to get it on UE’s side of the floor.

 

In the last time out, Simmons set up Balentine for what would be the game-tying trey as the game went to overtime tied at 71-71.

 

Adam Wing opened the extra session with a long two.  After Sean O’Brien put the Salukis back on top with a three, Brzoja tied his career mark with 21 points as his triple gave the Aces a 76-74 lead.  The lead pushed to five points with under two minutes left as Brzoja hit a free throw to make it a 79-74 game.  SIU got within one at 79-78 on a Beane triple before Balentine hit a huge layup to make it an 81-78 game with under a minute left.

 

Following an SIU miss, Jaylon Brown was fouled with the Aces clinging to the 3-point edge and calmly hit both free throws to go up 83-78.  Balentine added two free throws for the final score of 85-78.

 

“This team has great character,” Brzoja said.  “We never gave up, this was a great team win.”

 

Evansville has now won three in a row in Carbondale, marking the first time doing so since 1996-98.

 

Next up for UE is Sunday’s home contest against Wichita State.  The Aces welcome the Shockers into town for a 3 p.m. game that will be televised on ESPNU.

 

Evansville man receives maximum sentence after plea

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Today an Evansville man received the maximum sentence after pleading guilty to multiple charges against him stemming from a three-vehicle wreck in July.

Jerald Clark III, 31, pleaded guilty to Auto Theft, Level 6 felony; Resisting Law Enforcement, Level 6 felony; Operating a Vehicle as a Habitual Traffic Violator, Level 6 felony; Resisting Law Enforcement, Class A misdemeanor; Leaving the Scene of an Accident, Class A misdemeanor; and Leaving the Scene of an Accident with Bodily Injury, Class A misdemeanor.

He was sentenced to 8 ½ years in the Department of Correction for those crimes.

Prosecutors noted that Clark, who has been arrested more than 35 times since 2003, has an extensive criminal history including drug and battery convictions. The prosecutor’s office is pleased with the result of the plea because he received the maximum sentence from Vanderburgh Circuit Court Magistrate Judge Michael Cox.

Slow Start Plagues IceMen in Wichita

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(Thunder jump out to 3-0 lead, snap nine-game skid with win over Evansville.)

 

Scoring 1 2 3 Final
Evansville 1 1 0 2
Wichita 3 0 1 4

 

Shots 1 2 3 Total
Evansville 9 12 12 33
Wichita 13 9 3 25

 

  PP Penalties
Evansville 0/4 3 for 6 minutes
Wichita 1/5 3 for 6 minutes

 

 

Records:  Evansville: 15-20-4-1; Wichita: 10-25-4-4

 

Goalies:   WIC – Shantz (W), 8-16-0-3, 31 saves

EVN – Bengtsberg L-), 4-8-2-1, 21 saves

 

Scoring:

1st Period: 1. WIC – Nelson 8 (Alberga, Neal, 4:00); 2. WIC – Nelson 9 (Martell, Milan, 4:14); 3. WIC – Miller 10 (Nelson, Kerbashian, 13:15); 4. EVN – Hobbs 6 (Harpur, 19:12)

2nd Period:  5. EVN – Dunn 8 (Himelson, Leveille, 8:23)

3rd Period:  6. WIC – Nelson 10 (PP, Issackson, Kerbashian, 6:06)

EDITORIAL: Parks And Recreation Smoking Ban Deserves Further Discussion

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Parks And Recreation Smoking Ban Deserves Further Discussion

The City-County Observer believes the partial smoking ban recently passed by the board of the Dept. of Parks and Recreation deserves further discussion. The smoking ban includes both traditional cigarettes and electronic cigarettes, and covers all of the department’s facilities EXCEPT the golf courses, including the Par 3 courses at Howell and Wesselman parks. Also excluded from the ban are the Mesker Park Zoo and Botanical Gardens and the parks attached to those facilities. The ban does cover local neighborhood parks. We see this as problematic in several ways.

We wonder what reasoning is behind the ban’s exclusion of the largest and busiest segment of our local parks. Is it meant to give a “pass”to the smokers who are literally “paying to play?” If so, we don’t believe such an elitist policy is in the public interest. If it is a safety issue, the Parks Board has missed the mark. In dry weather, a carelessly tossed cigarette butt could do severe damage to a golf course, wooded area of the parks or cause a terrible loss at the zoo, including the lives of the animals and/or the high-end displays.

A smoking ban with no exceptions makes better sense to us than the one that was passed, but does anyone believe that this ordinance could be enforced properly? We don’t believe that it is possible to enforce the policy at all. There are no park rangers, and EPD already seems to have its hands full keeping law and order throughout the city without hunting down smoking ban violators.

We really wonder how the board members envisioned this working out. For us, it brings to mind the famous episode of The Andy Griffith show when Gomer Pyle decided to be enforce Mayberry traffic laws on his own by making some “Citizen’s Arrests.”  We can find no viable way to accomplish any semblance of enforcement.

Smoking bans are very fashionable these days, but we believe the decision to do so selectively is without merit. Promotion of healthy activities is one of the basic purposes of Parks and Recreation department’s mission, so a blanket ban would be understandable, although it would still prove unenforceable.

We think this is a “feel good” law that no one will feel good about if they stop and think about it. We hope the Parks Board will reconsidered their action.

FOOTNOTE: we wonder why member of the Parks Board are paid an extremely generous annual stipend for serving on this politically appointed board.  Other people serving on important City Boards and Commissions receive nothing?

Is Medicaid Expansion Near a Tipping Point?

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Is Medicaid Expansion Near a Tipping Point?

 By Christine Vestal of Stateliness New

Supporters of Republican Gov. Gary Herbert’s Medicaid expansion plan rally at the Utah State Capitol. Legislators rejected his plan last year. This year, Herbert and other proponents of expansion may wait out the presidential election before pushing the issue again.

Louisiana this month became the first state in the Deep South to make the politically charged decision to expand Medicaid health insurance to low-income adults under the Affordable Care Act.

At least one other state — South Dakota — is expected to extend Medicaid coverage this year. But in the lead up to the November presidential election, supporters of the ACA aren’t holding out much hope that more states will join in extending Medicaid coverage to more people — although the governors of Alabama, Virginia and Wyoming say they want to, as do key legislators in Maine and Nebraska.

Meanwhile, newly elected Republican Gov. Matt Bevin in Kentucky and Republican lawmakers in Arkansas are threatening to roll back or modify their states’ existing expansion programs.

After a new president is elected, the situation could change and more states could join in expanding coverage, predicted Joan Alker, executive director of Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families, which advocates for greater health care coverage for the poor.

Ever since the Supreme Court’s 2012 decision making Medicaid expansion a state option, the issue has been more political than practical. Many Republican governors and lawmakers have rejected the deal, fearing they would lose their jobs if they were seen cooperating with President Barack Obama on a law most conservatives abhor.

With Obama out of office, that could change. “The ideological opposition to the president will have to start fading when he’s out of office,” Alker said. “At that point, the facts and the evidence will start to matter more.”

Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, agrees. If a Democrat is elected president, the new administration could be expected to continue the Obama administration’s approach of approving proposals from Republican-governed states to shape expanded Medicaid programs to fit their individual state needs and politics.

Even greater flexibility could come if a Republican is elected president, Salo said. In that case, the GOP-led states that have so far shunned expansion would likely seek authority to revamp their programs more radically than the Obama administration has allowed. Until then, Salo said, “Governors are probably thinking, ‘Maybe I’ll just keep my powder dry.’ ”

Congress voted 60 times on repealing the ACA before successfully passing legislation earlier this month to undermine the law and phase out Medicaid expansion. Obama vetoed it. Would a newly elected Republican president instead sign it and eliminate health coverage now extended to millions more poor people? Most analysts doubt it and predict expansion will endure, even if other parts of the ACA are changed.

Hard to Take Back

So far, 31 states and the District of Columbia have taken the federal government up on its offer to fund all but a fraction of the cost of providing health care to about 8 million low-income adults not previously eligible for the federal-state program. Of them, 10 states were run by Republican governors at the time of expansion.

Defunding or eliminating Medicaid expansion would mean taking away billions of federal dollars from the states and their ability to provide health care for their residents. It also would mean cancelling health coverage for millions of people, many of whom could be sick and in need of immediate care. That’s not something any administration is likely to do, Salo said.

For similar reasons, it will be difficult for Arkansas and Kentucky to roll back their Medicaid coverage. Kentucky’s Bevin promised during his fall campaign to dismantle the state’s Medicaid expansion, which is among the nation’s most successful at reducing the uninsured rate and cutting state health care costs.

But in December, Bevin changed his mind and announced he would not eliminate the expansion, but instead transform the way Medicaid is delivered. Without providing details, Bevin said a new system would be in place by the beginning of 2017.

In Arkansas, Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who was elected in 2014, has supported the state’s expansion, but said he was willing to make changes to the program to satisfy critics in the GOP-dominated Legislature. Because of Arkansas unique requirement that at least 75 percent of lawmakers must approve any appropriation and its conservative legislative majority, the future of the state’s Medicaid expansion has been shaky from the start.

Greater Flexibility

Under the Medicaid expansion, the federal government pays the full price of covering newly eligible adults with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level ($16,242) through 2016 and then gradually lowers its share to 90 percent in 2020 and beyond.

Opponents of expansion in the states say they fear the 10 percent share states will have to pay will burden their budgets over the long run and force them to neglect other priorities. They also argue the federal government can’t afford higher Medicaid costs and could eventually renege on its promise to pay 90 percent of the bill.

To entice more states to expand, President Obama asked Congress in his 2017 budget proposal this month to allow states to get a full three years of 100 percent federal funding if they take up the option this year or next. The Republican-controlled Congress is not expected to approve the proposal.

In general, the Obama administration has been lenient in approving state requests to modify traditional Medicaid rules. Six states — Arkansas, Iowa, Indiana, Michigan, Montana and New Hampshire — have expanded their Medicaid programs under so-called waivers to federal rules.

The states have sought approval for a combination of changes that would allow Medicaid enrollees to purchase private policies on a state exchange, while requiring them to pay small copayments and premiums, engage in healthy behavior, seek employment and, in Indiana’s case, contribute to a health savings account. The federal government has approved most requests, but has drawn a line at allowing states to cancel a Medicaid enrollee’s policy for failure to meet any of the requirements.

Some Republican-led states want to go further. Salo predicted that Texas, for example, might ask a Republican president’s administration for permission to operate an expanded Medicaid program much like a block grant, in which the federal government provides the money and the state sets most of the rules.

The Issue Won’t Go Away

Whether to expand coverage has been a contentious point between not only Democratic governors and Republican-led legislatures, but between GOP governors and Republican legislatures. And some governors have sidestepped legislators to do it.

After replacing Republican Bobby Jindal this month as governor of Louisiana, Democrat John Bel Edwards signed an executive order extending Medicaid to nearly 300,000 poor residents effective July 1. So far, the Republican-led Legislature has not pushed back.

Governors in four other states — Alaska, Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia — have approved Medicaid expansion without legislative consent. In Ohio it was Republican Gov. John Kasich, a presidential candidate.

In South Dakota, second-term Republican Gov. Dennis Daugaard is asking the GOP Legislature to approve extending Medicaid to as many as 55,000 poor residents, including Native Americans. His proposal, which is contingent on federal approval, would for the first time allow Medicaid coverage for Indian health services both on and off the reservation.

In Virginia, Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe is seeking expansion. So is Republican Gov. Matt Mead in Wyoming. But their Republican legislatures have rejected it before and are likely to again. Alabama Republican Gov. Robert Bentley has declared support for expansion but is not expected to push the GOP-dominated Legislature to approve it this year.

Republican Govs. Gary Herbert of Utah and Bill Haslam of Tennessee pushed for it last year but ran into opposition from their Republican legislatures — an obstacle that remains this year.

In some states, the opposition shoe is on the other foot. In Nebraska, a bipartisan bill was introduced last week that would expand Medicaid using the so-called “private option” pioneered by Arkansas, in which newly eligible beneficiaries would receive private insurance on the exchange rather than under the existing Medicaid plan. So far, Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts has opposed expansion.

In Maine, two Republican senators — Roger Katz and Tom Saviello — have sponsored a bill to extend Medicaid. But Republican Gov. Paul LePage, who already has already vetoed five attempts to enact Medicaid expansion, vowed to do it again.

Facts and Evidence

Research shows that major fiscal and health benefits have accrued to states that have expanded Medicaid, and contrary to claims from opponents, job losses have not occurred. Hospitals also reported fewer unreimbursed expenses.

A study published in the journal Health Affairs this month concluded that more patients got care for chronic illnesses and fewer residents said they skipped medications or had problems paying medical bills in states that expanded, compared to nearby non-expansion states.

More than 6 million more people would become eligible to receive coverage under the health law’s Medicaid expansion if all remaining states opt in to the program, according to an analysis by Families USA, which advocates for expansion. But states like Florida and Texas, with the highest uninsured rates and the most to gain, continue to reject federal funding.

Historically, health care has been a bipartisan issue, George Mason University professor of health economics Len Nichols said. And it could be again.

“Once Obama is gone, it’s not ‘Obamacare’ anymore,” Nichols said. “It’s American law.” At that point, he said, it will be hard for any state to reject a deal that is “good for their budget, good for their economy and good for the health of their residents.”

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016.

Jamon Inez Randolph Dealing in marijuana, Level 5 felony

Carrying a handgun without a license, Class A misdemeanor

Steven Wayne Kuhen Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony

False informing, Class B misdemeanor

Jason Edward Galloway Intimidation, Level 5 felony

Theft of a firearm, Level 6 felony

Domestic battery, Level 6 felony

Battery resulting in bodily injury, Class A misdemeanor