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Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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Complex Legal Groundwork For 2 new Bridges Across Ohio River

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Complex legal efforts part of groundwork for 2 new bridges across Ohio River
Published by Indiana Lawyer by Marilyn Odendahl-December 16, 2015

On the first Saturday in December, nearly 45,000 people walked across a new Ohio River bridge connecting southern Indiana and downtown Louisville.

The walk commemorated not only the completion of the structure, named the Abraham Lincoln, but also marked a historic milestone in a large infrastructure project that has been talked about for decades. A few miles upriver is the other half of the project – a second new bridge spanning the Ohio River.

Spurred by a friendship between two former governors, Indiana’s Mitch Daniels and Kentucky’s Steve Beshear, the construction of the river crossings, which languished for years, was restarted. And as the two states developed the framework of cooperation, the effort has transformed into a unique interstate project that showcases two different methods of financing.

bridges-numbers.gifKentucky took responsibility for building the downtown bridge and elected to go with a traditional design-build model. Here the commonwealth determined the design, solicited bids, awarded a contract and sold bonds to provide funding.

Indiana agreed to construct the east end bridge, referred to as East End Crossing, which connects Utica, Indiana, with eastern Jefferson County, Kentucky. It decided to get funding through a public-private partnership. Indiana contracted with a private consortium to build, operate and maintain the bridge for 35 years. Over the life of the project, Indiana will make “availability payments” to the consortium for the upkeep and use of the roadway.

Before a shovel could break ground on construction, the project required a lot of lawyering. Teams of attorneys had to maneuver through federal highway laws as well as Indiana and Kentucky laws and regulations to hammer out agreements detailing how the states would work together during construction and once traffic begins flowing.

“It was an incredibly complex, complicated legal challenge to pull this all together in a very strict time frame,” said Kendra York, former director of the Indiana Finance Authority. “But we did it.”

One Project, Two Bridges

Initially, the Ohio River Bridges project came with a price tag topping $4 billion. When plans were sketched in 2003, a sizable amount of the funding was to come from the federal government.

The project then stalled until a 2008 National Governors Association meeting when Daniels actively sought out his gubernatorial neighbor Beshear. They renewed the push for construction but soon realized federal funds were going to leave a significant gap that the states would have to cover.

Schultz Schultz
To shepherd the project through the early stages, the governors formed the Louisville and Southern Indiana Bridges Authority and tapped attorney and longtime Daniels associate Steve Schultz to be the executive director.

Work then began in Indiana and Kentucky to find ways to reduce the cost. When the price settled at $2.3 billion, the amount needed to build each bridge was about equal, which led the states to split the project. This opened the door for each state to choose its preferred method of financing.

Although the method is different, paying for both bridges will come from tolls. The project is expected to be completed by the end of 2016 and then motorists traveling over the river will be tolled when they cross either the new Lincoln bridge, the existing Kennedy bridge downtown, or the east end bridge. Tolls initially are projected to range from $1 to $4 for passenger vehicles and from $5 to $12 for medium and heavy trucks, according to the Louisville – Southern Indiana Ohio River Bridges Project.

A caveat to the tolling is that the downtown crossings are expected to carry the most traffic and, therefore, will collect about twice as much revenue as their east end counterpart. According to the 2014 Louisville-Southern Indiana Ohio River Bridges Project Financial Plan, the downtown bridges will gross about $6.4 billion in tolling revenue through 2058 while the east end will gross $3.2 billion.

Again at the direction of the governors, Indiana and Kentucky agreed to evenly split the tolls.

With the overall framework established and both states agreeing to let the other look over their respective shoulders, Indiana enlisted Ice Miller LLP in March 2012 to help fill in the details to make the whole project work.

Dankert Dankert
“Each had to commit to the other to get their job done because the project doesn’t work without both projects being done and collecting tolls,” said Gary Dankert, partner at Ice Miller.

Old Tools, New Uses

The team at Ice Miller, which drew attorneys from construction, real estate, and public finance practice areas, had to craft the bi-state and inter-local agreements along with the public-private partnership contract by the end of 2012.

The agreements were key in laying out the road map and mechanisms for how Indiana and Kentucky would cooperate during construction and after completion with the collection of tolls.

Hoosier attorneys and their Kentucky colleagues had to find ways to write these agreements to bring four state highway and financing agencies together to cooperate across state lines in a manner that complied with their own statutes.

The work was difficult, time-consuming and occasionally arduous. Brenda Horn, partner at Ice Miller, was on a trip to Rhode Island when she dialed into a conference call for the bridges project. She sat on the porch of the bed and breakfast, anticipating a two-hour discussion. The call bled into six hours.

Looking back, Horn said the bridges project provided an challenge for using existing statutes and regulations. The work so interested her that she believes without it, she would have retired.

“It’s sort of like you have all these tools and all of the sudden you’re going to twist them and see if we can make it work,” Horn said. “I feel blessed to have the opportunity to work on something like this that is new and different and challenging.”

TOLL ROAD STATUTE

The Ice Miller team also had to assist with the public-private partnership. The Daniels administration wanted to engage the private sector and after reviewing the different types of partnerships, decided incorporating an “availability payment” would give Indiana the best deal.

The east end bridge contract was awarded to WVB East End Partners, a consortium of Walsh Investors LLC, VINCI Concessions and Bilfinger Project Investments. Along with designing and building the bridge, WVB also agreed to oversee its maintenance, such as fixing potholes, clearing snow and refurbishing the structure, for the next 35 years. As long as the consortium meets the operation standards spelled out in the agreement, the state will make the full payment.

State officials tout this plan as providing an incentive for the consortium to innovate and build the best bridge it can. In addition, the financial risk is shifted from the taxpayers to the private sector because any costs that exceed the availability payment amount will be borne by the consortium.

“We felt like this was how the state could get the most bang for its buck,” said York, now an attorney with American Structurepoint Inc.

For composing the agreement between the state and the consortium, Ice Miller turned to the statute passed by the General Assembly in 2006 for the lease of the Indiana Toll Road. Indiana Code 8-15.5 granted authority to the state to enter into public-private partnerships and set the groundwork for moving forward with the bridge construction.

Without that law on the books, the attorneys say the public-private partnership agreement with WVB could not have been done. Along with setting the legal grounds for the agreement, the lease of the toll road also provides some valuable lessons used in the bridge project, such as how to transfer thousands and thousands of parcels very quickly.

The East End Crossing is scheduled to open in October 2016. What the name will be and whether people will have the opportunity to walk it remains to be seen, but looking back over the work they did and the deadline they met, Dankert succinctly summed up the feeling of the team.

“We were thrilled,” he said.•

TRUMP GRINCH

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ZZ Top Presale

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PRESALE PASSCODE:

LEGS

SMG Evansville
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Full Calendar

Ticket Presale starts

Thursday, December 17 from 10am to 10pm.

Use the passcode: LEGS at our Box Office, online or at 1-800-745-3000

Sunday, March 20 at 7:30pm

ZZ TOP

“Hell Raisers” Tour

Find Tickets
ZZ Top is notable for having the most consistently stable lineup in the history of rock music. Singer/guitarist Billy F Gibbons, bassist/singer Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard continue to impress audiences, drawing material from their 15 studio albums, with combined record sales of over 25 million in the U.S. alone. Timeless hits like “La Grange,” “Legs,” “Sharp Dressed Man” and “Beer Drinkers & Hell Raisers” (from which the tour was named) have kept generations of audiences coming back decade after decade.
More Information
Price: $69.50, $59.50
Book a Dinner and Show before the ZZ TOP concert! Call 812-435-5770 ext. 202 or

ext. 302 for details!

ZZ+TOP+TM

Oak Hill School Hosts Lend a Paw Day

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Friday, December 18
8:15 – 2 p.m.

Oak Hill School, 7700 Oak Hill Rd.

 

Christmas is a time of giving and students and PTA at Oak Hill School are doing their part. Tomorrow, students – led by the PTA – will participate in Wildcats Lend a Paw Day. The day will include special activities for students to give back to the community and gives teachers extra time for planning.

 

To help make the day a success, Oak Hill PTA has partnered with ARK Childcare Crisis and Prevention Center, St. Mary’s Foundation Auxillary, Evansville Christian Life Center, Meals on Wheels, Oak Hill Building Bridges and D’Alto Studios.

 

The day will begin around 8:15 with an all school assembly to recap the activities for the day. Students also will learn more about the partnering organizations thanks to a video created by the fifth grade student news crew, The Cat’s Chronicles. The news crew interviewed representatives from each agency and produced the video for students to view.

 

Beginning around 9:10 and continuing throughout the day, students will begin moving through activities that include:

  • Sixth graders will create pinwheels to be sold at the Oak Hill Culture Bazaar in February. The profits will go to a charity selected by the class.
  • Fourth and fifth grade will create butterflies to be used by ARK Childcare as an art installation for their Fairy Tale Ball Fundraiser in February.

 

  • Kindergarten through third graders will each create a decorated placemat that will be shared with Evansville Christian Life Center to use as table decorations for its Christmas meals. (It is anticipated they will serve approximately 400 individuals.)

 

  • In addition, all students in grades K-6 will create a greeting card that will be delivered to inpatient residents of St. Mary’s Hospital by the Auxiliary, and to Meals on Wheels to accompany the meals that are delivered on Christmas Eve/Christmas Day.

 

  • In addition to these service activities, students will participate in activities led by instructors of D’Alto Studios to improve self-confidence, and increase public communication skills.

 

Adopt A Pet

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I’m Sox, an 11-month-old female cat. I’ve been waiting on a home since May! I live in the Cageless Cat Lounge, so I get along great with other cats. My $30 adoption fee includes my spay, microchip, vaccines, & more. Visit www.vhslifesaver.org or call (812) 426-2563 to adopt me!

 

Companies to Add 600+ High-Wage Jobs for Hoosiers

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Governor Pence Highlights 26,555 Committed Jobs in 2015, 14% Increase in Planned Wages

 

Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence joined executives from 17 companies across Indiana today to announce expansion plans that are expected to create a combined 648 new jobs in Allen, Boone, Clark, Hamilton, Marion, Shelby and Vanderburgh counties. These new jobs are anticipated to pay an average annual salary higher than $82,900, which is 85 percent higher than the state’s average wage.

“This year, Indiana set an historic employment record with more Hoosiers working now than at any time in our state’s 200-year history,” said Governor Mike Pence. “And that number continues to rise because job creators, like those joining us here today, recognize the benefits of doing business in the Hoosier state. Companies both large and small are finding success and creating jobs across Indiana because we are a state that works.”

Today’s news is part of another record-breaking year of economic development results, with the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC) securing Hoosier job commitments with 323 companies from around the state, nation and world – up from 285 company commitments in 2014 and the highest on record since the IEDC was established in 2005. Including today’s announcements, these companies have committed to creating 26,555 new jobs over the next few years and investing more than $4.79 billion in their Indiana operations.

These 26,555 positions, which encompass all IEDC projects in 2015, are expected to pay an average hourly wage of $24.87, which is more than a 14 percent increase from IEDC project wages last year and is above both the current state ($21.55/hour) and national average wages. More than 50 percent of the companies committing to expand their operations – 165 in total – will create jobs with average salaries above the state’s average. These higher-wage commitments are expected to pay an average hourly wage of $32.82. Nearly 30 percent of these expansions that will pay salaries above the state’s average are in the manufacturing industry.

“Indiana’s roots in manufacturing and agriculture continue to hold, and we are seeing these industries advance as technology and capabilities progress,” said Governor Pence. “Meanwhile, the Hoosier State’s economy is diversifying with remarkable growth in our technology, life sciences and aviation/aerospace sectors. Companies from Rolls-Royce and GM to Emarsys and Appirio are choosing to invest in Indiana because of our efforts to cut costs and taxes while investing in our Hoosier workforce and communities statewide.”

In 2015, the IEDC secured commitments from 59 companies in the tech industry, a 156 percent increase from 2014. These expansions account for 4,622 planned Hoosier jobs – an 89 percent increase from committed tech jobs in 2014 –  and $159.67 million in planned capital investment in Indiana. These tech jobs are expected pay average annual salaries above $72,000.

The 17 companies announcing plans today to create high-wage jobs in Indiana include:

 

  • AgReliant Genetics, the third largest corn seed company in the United States by market share, is investing $6.1 million to expand its headquarters in Westfield, nearly doubling its capacity to meet long-term growth in the agriculture industry. The company, which currently employs more than 140 Hoosiers, plans to create up to 24 new high-wage jobs by 2023.
  • Balance Digital Marketing is doubling its office space at 1 North Meridian Street in downtown Indianapolis, with plans to expand into an additional 1,600 square feet over the next three years. With the addition of a higher education and non-profit practice this year, the company has experienced 33 percent revenue growth and 50 percent employee growth in 2015. As part of its growth, Balance Digital Marketing plans to create up to 36 new high-wage jobs by 2024.
  • Creative Solutions Consulting (CSCI), a woman-owned IT and financial consulting firm, will invest $307,400 to expand its Indianapolis headquarters. The expansion will allow CSCI to provide workforce training in project management, software tools and industry certifications to serve its clients. The company currently employs 49 full-time Hoosiers and plans to create up to 57 new high-wage jobs by 2020.
  • DK Pierce, a women-owned biopharmaceuticals and medical technologies consulting firm, will invest $3.9 million to expand its 15-year-old operations in Zionsville. Named a 2015 Indiana Company to Watch, DK Pierce helps clients bring products for oncology and rare diseases into the market and works to ensure that Medicare, Medicaid and commercial third-party health insurance companies will cover the drugs. The company currently employs 20 associates, including 14 in Indiana, and plans to add 23 new high-wage positions by 2019.
  • Emmis Communications (NASDAQ: EMMS), a diversified media company headquartered in Indianapolis, will invest $6.2 million to support the expansion of two subsidiary companies: NextRadio and Digonex. Together, NextRadio and Digonex occupy nearly one 18,500-square-foot floor at Emmis’ seven-floor worldwide headquarters on Monument Circle. NextRadio and Digonex currently employee 11 full-time associates each with Emmis planning to create up to 55 new high-wage jobs across the two subsidiaries by 2024.
  • Level Up Development, a custom software application development company, is investing $307,500 to more than double its office space at the Stutz Business & Arts Center in downtown Indianapolis. The company plans to launch theConnectorTM ,a data-centric platform as a service (PaaS), and Data Science Service, which will be incorporated in its custom solutions in order to create intelligent data driven web, mobile and infrastructure solutions. To support the new platform and services, Level Up Development plans to create up to 24 new high-wage jobs by 2018.
  • LifeShare Technologies, a provider specialized in communication solutions for seniors and senior living communities, will invest more than $330,000 in the next several years to expand its operations in Shelbyville. The company, which currently employs 10 full-time associates, plans to create up to 24 new high-wage jobs by 2021 in client services, sales and technology roles.
  • Mediaura, a web and software design company, will invest $944,000 to relocate its operations from Louisville to Jeffersonville, Indiana. The company has already begun operating in Indiana after renovating a 12,000-square-foot space near the city’s revitalized walking bridge. Founded in 2003, the company currently employs 16 associates and plans to create up to 30 new high-wage jobs in Indiana by 2018.
  • Microbide, an Ireland-based specialty chemical company, will invest $1.87 million to establish its North American headquarters in Evansville. With plans to launch operations at the University of Southern Indiana’s laboratories early in 2016, the company is considering properties for a full-scale R&D, manufacturing and distribution center. Microbide plans to create up to 18 new high-wage jobs by 2018.
  • MorphoTrust USA, a Massachusetts-headquartered provider of secure credentialing, will invest $6.045 million to expand its operations in Fort Wayne. The company will renovate and equip a new, nearly 20,000-square-foot facility at 3500 E. Coliseum Blvd. to create a space where engineers and others can collaborate on next generation solutions and technology for driver licenses and identification cards, employee ID cards and photo credit cards. MorphoTrust USA employs 93 full-time associates in Indiana and plans to create up to 20 new high-wage jobs by 2019.
  • One View, an Indiana-founded tech firm with 20 years of experience serving the automotive dealer and computer software industries, is expanding its suite of document financial management services, helping its clients better protect, control and search their data. With its growth, One View is looking to expand its team of 16 Hoosiers and plans to create up to 34 new high-wage jobs by 2020.
  • Performance Assessment Network (PAN), a human resources consulting company, is investing $2.27 million to lease and equip its offices in Carmel. Founded in 2000, the company provides an online assessment tool that clients, including law enforcement agencies, Fortune 100 companies and the federal government, use for screening security-related, sales, technical, administrative, management and other key positions. PAN plans to create up to 20 new high-wage jobs by 2019.
  • Pondurance, an information security consulting company, is investing $596,000 to lease and equip a new office in central Indiana. With requirements for many regulated industries to store records electronically, Pondurance helps its clients keep information secure. As part of its growth, the company plans to expand its team of 17 Hoosiers by creating up to 65 additional new high-wage jobs by 2023.
  • Sells Group (SG), a digital marketing firm founded in 2012, will lease a 4,000-square-foot office at 42 Pennsylvania St. in downtown Indianapolis in order to consolidate its two Indiana offices under one roof. SG, which currently employs 16 full-time Indiana associates, is hiring now for development, digital and creative positions and aims to create up to 65 new high-wage jobs.
  • STLogics, a technology holding company serving clients across the nation, will invest $390,000 to expand its headquarters in Indianapolis. Founded in 2004, the certified minority- and woman-owned business plans to create up to 102 new high-wage Hoosier jobs by 2024 across its network of subsidiaries: RadCube, SkillDemand, NLogix, STBigData and STProfessionals.
  • Thieneman Construction, an environmental services firm, will invest $4.17 million to build a new 22,000-square-foot headquarters facility in Westfield, with construction currently underway. The company currently employs more than 40 Hoosiers between its operations in Westfield and Merrillville, and is expanding to meet growing demand from communities across the Midwest for construction on water and wastewater projects. Thieneman Construction plans to create up to 26 new high-wage jobs in Central Indiana by 2020.
  • Vertical Edge Consulting Group, a management and high technology consulting firm, will invest $652,810 to expand its Indianapolis operations and further grow its base of business throughout the Midwest. Founded in 2010, the company also boasts operations in Denver and Tampa and employs 22 associates. Vertical Edge plans to move into a larger Indianapolis office in 2016 and will create up to 25 new high-wage jobs by 2020.

 

Today’s news comes at a time when national publications and site selection consultants are recognizing Indiana as a top location for business growth. Highlights from 2015 include a best-in-the-Midwest ranking from Chief Executive magazine, a top-10-state-for-doing-business ranking from Forbes and a top-three-in-the-nation ranking from corporate site selector Pollina Corporate Real Estate.

Full details about each company’s expansion, job creation plans and committed incentives from the state and local communities are available here.

Former State Rep. Dr David Orentlicher Running For 8th Congressional District Seat

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 Former State Rep. Dr David Orentlicher Running For 8th Congressional District Seat As A Democrat                                       

(Terre Haute, IN)  Dr. David Orentlicher announced last week that he has filed documents with the Federal Election Commission to become a candidate in Indiana’s 8th Congressional District seat as a Democrat .  A former award-winning Democratic state legislator, Orentlicher is running against Republican incumbent Larry Bucshon to make Congress work for the 8th District.  Orentlicher will make a formal announcement in early 2016.

“Bill Clinton was right. If you work hard and play by the rules,” said Orentlicher, “you should be able to provide a good life for your family and a better future for your children. That’s not true anymore, and we need to make sure it is true again. We need to make the American Dream a reality for all Americans. That’s what this campaign is about.”

“It’s not right when so many of our children never have a chance to succeed,” declared Orentlicher. “Far too many children suffer because their parents can’t find good paying jobs, their schools are in decline, and their neighborhoods are plagued with drug use and crime.”

“At one time, government made sure we had a strong middle class,” said Orentlicher. “Now, government works for the special interests. They dominate Congress with their big campaign contributions. And they dominate Larry Bucshon. Most residents of the 8th District no longer have a voice in Washington. The 8th District needs a representative who speaks for the district and a Congress that serves the interests of all Americans. We need to unstack the deck in Washington, DC so everyone gets a fair shake from their government and the United States once again is a land of opportunity for all of its citizens.”

David Orentlicher is an educator, physician, attorney, and former three-term member of the Indiana House of Representatives.  He has practiced both medicine and law, and he teaches at Indiana University School of Medicine in Terre Haute, IU School of Medicine in Indianapolis, and IU Robert H. McKinney School of Law.

While directing the medical ethics program at the American Medical Association, Orentlicher drafted the AMA’s first ever Patients’ Bill of Rights. He also wrote conflicts of interest guidelines that protect the integrity of the patient-physician relationship.

Orentlicher has written many books and articles on a wide range of topics in ethics, law, and medicine. His current project, Economic Inequality and College Admissions Policies, makes the case for revising college admissions policies to address the serious problem of economic inequality in the United States.

Orentlicher’s wife, Judy, is a professor of political science at Indiana University. They have two childreni

MEET DR David Orentlicher

Samuel R. Rosen Professor of Law
Co-director of the William S. and Christine S. Hall Center for Law and Health 
Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law

Education

B.A., 1977, Brandeis University
M.D., 1981, Harvard Medical School
J.D., 1986, Harvard Law School

Courses

Health care law, constitutional law, trust and estates, professional responsibility

Bio

In addition to his positions at the law school, David Orentlicher is an adjunct professor of medicine at Indiana University School of Medicine. Before coming to IU, he served as director of the Division of Medical Ethics at the American Medical Association for six-and-a-half years. While there, he led the drafting of the AMA’s first patients’ bill of rights, guidelines for physician investment in health care facilities that were incorporated into federal law, and guidelines on gifts to physicians from industry that have become the industry standard and a standard recognized by the federal government. He helped develop many other positions—on end-of-life matters, organ transplantation, and reproductive issues—that have been cited by courts and government agencies in their decision-making. He also held adjunct appointments at the University of Chicago Law School and Northwestern University Medical School.

Following law school, where he was a commentary and book review office chair of the Harvard Law Review, he clerked for the Honorable Alvin B. Rubin, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. He has practiced both medicine and law, each for about two years, and is a member of the American Law Institute.

He has held a number of distinguished visiting professorships, serving as Visiting DeCamp Professor in Bioethics at Princeton University, Frederick Distinguished Visiting Professor of Ethics at DePauw University, and George E. Allen Professor of Law at T. C. Williams School of Law, University of Richmond. He has published Matters of Life and Death with Princeton University Press, and is co-author of the casebook Health Care Law and Ethics, now in its 7th edition. He also has written widely in leading legal and medical journals on critical issues in medical ethics, including end-of-life decisions, new reproductive technologies, and organ transplantation, as well as on affirmative action and other questions in constitutional law.

As a member of the Indiana House of Representatives from November 2002 to November 2008, he authored legislation to make health care insurance more affordable, increase the pool of venture capital for new businesses, and ensure better protection of children from abuse and neglect.

Publications

Books and Chapters

  • *Orentlicher, Two Presidents Are Better Than One: The Case for a Bipartisan Executive Branch (NYU Press 2013)
  • *Orentlicher, Hall & Bobinski, Bioethics and Public Health Law (2nd ed., Aspen Publishers 2008)
  • *Hall, Bobinski & Orentlicher, Health Care Law and Ethics (8th ed., Wolters Kluwer 2013; 7th ed., Aspen Publishers 2007; 6th ed. Aspen Law & Business 2003); Curran, Hall, Bobinski & Orentlicher, Health Care Law and Ethics (5th ed. Aspen Law & Business 1998).
  • *Orentlicher, Matters of Life and Death: Making Moral Theory Work in Medical Ethics and the Law (Princeton University Press 2001)
  • Orentlicher, “Genetic Privacy in the Patient-Physician Relationship,” in Genetic Secrets: Protecting Privacy and Confidentiality in the Genetic Era 77-91 (Rothstein, ed., Yale University Press 1997).
  • *Health Care Crisis? The Search for Answers (Misbin, Jennings, Orentlicher & Dewar, eds., University Publishing Group 1995)
  • Orentlicher, “Organ Donation–the Willing Donor,” in Ethics in Emergency Medicine 214-222 (Iserson, Sanders & Mathieu, eds., 2d ed., Galen Press 1995).

Law Review and Journal Articles

  • *Orentlicher, “Abortion and Compelled Physician Speech,” 43 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 9 (2015)
  • Orentlicher, “Medicaid at 50: No Longer Limited to the “Deserving” Poor?,” 15 Yale Journal of Health Policy, Law, and Ethics 185 (2015)
  • Orentlicher, “Aging Populations and Physician Aid in Dying: The Evolution of State Government Policy,” 48 Indiana Law Review 111 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, “Employer-Based Health Care Insurance: Not So Exceptional After All,” 36 University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 541 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, “Concussions and Sports: Introduction,” 42 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 281 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, Pope and Rich, “The Changing Legal Climate for Physician Aid in Dying,” 311 JAMA 1961 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, “Health Care Reform and Efforts to Encourage Healthy Choices by Individuals,” 92 North Carolina Law Review 1637 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, “The Future of the Affordable Care Act: Protecting Economic Health More Than Physical Health?,” 51 Houston Law Review 1057 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, “A Restatement of Health Care Law,” 79 Brooklyn Law Review 435 (2014)
  • Orentlicher, “The FDA’s Graphic Tobacco Warnings and the First Amendment,” 369 New England Journal of Medicine 204 (2013)
  • Orentlicher, “NFIB v. Sibelius: Proportionality in the Exercise of Congressional Power,” 2013 Utah Law Review 463
  • Orentlicher, “Deactivating Implanted Cardiac Devices: Euthanasia or the Withdrawal of Treatment?,” 39 William Mitchell Law Review 1287 (2013)
  • Orentlicher and David, Concussion and Football: Failures to Respond by the NFL and the Medical Profession, 8 FIU Law Review 17 (2013)
  • Orentlicher, “Rights to Health Care in the United States: Inherently Unstable,” 38 American Journal of Law and Medicine 326 (2012)
  • Orentlicher, “Constitutional Challenges to the Health Care Mandate: Based in Politics, Not Law,” 160 University of Pennsylvania Law Review PENNumbra 19 (2011)
  • Orentlicher, “The Legislative Process Is Not Fit for the Abortion Debate,” 41(4) Hastings Center Report 13 (2011).
  • Orentlicher, “Can Congress Make You Buy Broccoli? And Why It Really Doesn’t Matter,” 84 Southern California Law Review Postscript 9 (2011).
  • Orentlicher, “Controlling Health Care Costs Through Public, Transparent Processes: The Conflict Between the Morally Right and the Socially Feasible,” 36 Journal of Corporation Law 807 (2011)
  • Orentlicher, “The Commercial Speech Doctrine in Health Regulation: The Clash Between the Public Interest in a Robust First Amendment and the Public Interest in Effective Protection from Harm,” 37 American Journal of Law & Medicine 299 (2011)
  • Orentlicher, “Cost Containment and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” 6 FIU Law Review 67 (2010)
  • Orentlicher, “Multiple Embryo Transfers: Time for Policy,” 40(3) Hastings Center Report 12 (2010)
  • Orentlicher, “Rationing Health Care: It’s a Matter of the Health Care System’s Structure,” 19 Annals of Health Law 449 (2010)
  • Orentlicher, “Discrimination Out of Dismissiveness: The Example of Infertility,” 85 Indiana Law Journal 143 (2010)
  • Orentlicher, “Health Care Law: A Field of Gaps,” 19 Annals of Health Law 1 (2010)
  • Orentlicher, “Prescription Data Mining and the Protection of Patients’ Interests,” 38 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 74 (2010)
  • Orentlicher, “Health Care Reform: Beyond Ideology,” 301 JAMA 1816-1818 (2009).
  • Orentlicher, “Presumed Consent to Organ Donation: Its Rise and Fall in the United States,” 61 Rutgers Law Review 295-331 (2009)
  • Orentlicher, “Diversity: A Fundamental American Principle,” 70 Missouri Law Review 777-812 (2005)
  • *Orentlicher, “Making Research a Requirement of Treatment: Why We Should Sometimes Let Doctors Pressure Patients to Participate in Research,” 35(5) Hastings Center Report 20-28 (2005).
  • Orentlicher and Callahan, “Feeding Tubes, Slippery Slopes and Physician-Assisted Suicide,” 25 Journal of Legal Medicine 389-409 (2004)
  • Orentlicher, “The Rise and Fall of Managed Care: A Predictable Tragic Choices Phenomenon,” 47 St. Louis University Law Journal 411-421 (2003).
  • Orentlicher, “Conflicts of Interest and the Constitution,” 59 Washington and Lee Law Review 713-766 (2002).
  • *Orentlicher, “Universality and Its Limits: When Research Ethics Can Reflect Local Conditions,” 30 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 403-410 (2002).
  • Orentlicher, “Placebo-Controlled Trials of New Drugs: Ethical Considerations,” 24 Diabetes Care 771-772 (2001) (invited commentary).
  • Orentlicher, “Beyond Cloning: Expanding Reproductive Options for Same-Sex Couples,” 66 Brooklyn Law Review 651-683 (2000-2001).
  • Orentlicher, “Third Party Payments to Criminal Defense Lawyers: Revisiting United States v. Hodge and Zweig,” 69 Fordham Law Review 1083-1110 (2000).
  • Orentlicher, “The Implementation of Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act: Reassuring, but More Data Are Needed,” 6 Psych. Pub. Pol. and L. 489-502 (2000).
  • Orentlicher, “Paying Physicians More to Do Less: Financial Incentives to Limit Care,” 30 University of Richmond Law Review 155-197 (1996) (cited in the Court’s unanimous opinion in Pegram v. Herdrich, 530 U.S. 211, 220 (2000)).
  • *Orentlicher & Snyder, “Can Assisted Suicide be Regulated?,” 11 Journal of Clinical Ethics 358-366 (2000).
  • Orentlicher, “Medical Malpractice: Treating the Causes Instead of the Symptoms,” 38 Medical Care 247-249 (2000) (an invited editorial).
  • Orentlicher, “Representing Defendants on Charges of Economic Crime: Unethical When Done for a Fee,” 48 Emory Law Journal 1339-1376 (1999).
  • Orentlicher, “Cloning and the Preservation of Family Integrity,” 59 Louisiana Law Review 1019-1040 (1999).
  • Orentlicher, “The Misperception that Bioethics and the Law Lag Behind Advances in Biotechnology,” 33 Indiana Law Review 163-172 (1999).
  • *Orentlicher and Hehir, “Advertising Policies of Medical Journals: Conflicts of Interest for Journal Editors and Professional Societies,” 27 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 113-121 (1999).
  • Orentlicher, “The Alleged Distinction Between Euthanasia and the Withdrawal of Life-Sustaining Treatment: Conceptually Incoherent and Impossible to Maintain,” 1998 University of Illinois Law Review 837-859.
  • Orentlicher, “Affirmative Action and Texas’ Ten Percent Solution: Improving Diversity and Quality,” 74 Notre Dame Law Review 181-210 (1998).
  • Orentlicher, “Spanking and Other Corporal Punishment of Children by Parents: Undervaluing Children, Overvaluing Pain,” 35 Houston Law Review 147-185 (1998).
  • *Orentlicher, “Practice Guidelines: A Limited Role in Resolving Rationing Decisions,” 46 Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 369-372 (1998) (symposium issue on ethical issues in managed care).
  • Orentlicher, “The Supreme Court and Terminal Sedation: Rejecting Assisted Suicide, Embracing Euthanasia,” 24 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 947-968 (1997).
  • Orentlicher, “The Legalization of Physician-Assisted Suicide: A Very Modest Revolution,” 38 Boston College Law Review 443-475 (1997) (cited in a concurring opinion in Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 805 (1997)).
  • *Orentlicher, “The Supreme Court and Physician-Assisted Suicide–Rejecting Assisted Suicide But Embracing Euthanasia,” 337 New England Journal of Medicine 1236-1239 (1997).
  • Orentlicher, “Destructuring Disability: Rationing of Health Care and Unfair Discrimination Against the Sick,” 31 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 49-87 (1996).
  • *Orentlicher, “The Legalization of Physician-Assisted Suicide,” 335 New England Journal of Medicine 663-667 (1996).
  • *Orentlicher, “Psychosocial Assessment of Organ Transplant Candidates and the Americans with Disabilities Act,” 18 General Hospital Psychiatry 5S-12S (1996).
  • Orentlicher, “Paying Physicians More to Do Less,” 30 U. Rich. L. Rev. 155 (1996)
  • Orentlicher, “Health Care Reform and the Threat to the Patient-Physician Relationship,” 5 Health Matrix: Journal of Law-Medicine 141-180 (1995).
  • Orentlicher, “Organ Retrieval from Anencephalic Infants: Understanding the AMA’s Recommendations,” 23 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 401-402 (1995).
  • Orentlicher, “Physician Advocacy for Patients under Managed Care,” 6 Journal of Clinical Ethics 333-334 (1995).
  • Orentlicher, “Managed Care and the Threat to the Patient-Physician Relationship,” 10 Trends in Health Care, Law & Ethics 19-24 (1995) (symposium issue on managed care).
  • Orentlicher, “The Limitations of Legislation,” 53 Maryland Law Review 1255-1305 (1994).
  • Orentlicher, “The Influence of a Professional Organization on Physician Behavior,” 57 Albany Law Review 583 605 (1994).
  • *Orentlicher, “Rationing and the Americans with Disabilities Act,” 271 J.A.M.A. 308 314 (1994).
  • Glasson & Orentlicher, “Caring for the Poor and Professional Liability: Is There a Need for Tort Reform?,” 270 J.A.M.A. 1740 1741 (1993) (an invited editorial).
  • *Orentlicher, “Corporal Punishment in the Schools,” 267 J.A.M.A. 3205 3208 (1992).
  • *Orentlicher, “The Illusion of Patient Choice in End of Life Decisions,” 267 J.A.M.A. 2101 2104 (1992).
  • *Wolf, Boyle, Callahan, Fins, Jennings, Nelson, Barondess, Brock, Dresser, Emanuel, Johnson, Lantos, Mason, Mezey, Orentlicher & Rouse, “Sources of Concern About the Patient Self Determination Act,” 325 New England Journal of Medicine 1666 1671 (1991).
  • *Orentlicher, “HIV Infected Surgeons: Behringer v Medical Center,” 266 J.A.M.A. 1134 1137 (1991).
  • *La Puma, Orentlicher & Moss, “Advance Directives on Admission: Clinical Implications and Analysis of the Patient Self Determination Act of 1990,” 266 J.A.M.A. 402 405 (1991).
  • *Orentlicher, “Denying Treatment to the Noncompliant Patient,” 265 J.A.M.A. 1579 1582 (1991).
  • *Orentlicher, “The Right to Die After Cruzan,” 264 J.A.M.A. 2444 2446 (1990).
  • *Orentlicher, “Drug Testing of Physicians,” 264 J.A.M.A. 1039 1040 (1990).
  • *Orentlicher, “Advance Medical Directives,” 263 J.A.M.A. 2365 2367 (1990).
  • *Orentlicher, “Genetic Screening by Employers,” 263 J.A.M.A. 1005, 1008 (1990).
  • *Winters, McIntosh, Cheitlin, Elon, Graboys, King, Murdaugh, Orentlicher, Ports, Rainer, “Ethics in Cardiovascular Medicine. Task Force II: The Relation of Cardiovascular Specialists to Patients, Other Physicians and Physician-Owned Organizations,” 16 Journal of the American College of Cardiologists 11-16 (1990).
  • Johnson, Phillips, Orentlicher & Hatlie, “A Fault Based Administrative Alternative for Resolving Medical Malpractice Claims,” 42 Vanderbilt Law Review 1365 1406 (1989).
  • *Orentlicher, “Cruzan v Director of Missouri Department of Health: An Ethical and Legal Perspective,” 262 J.A.M.A. 2928 2930 (1989).
  • *Orentlicher, “Physician Participation in Assisted Suicide,” 262 J.A.M.A. 1844 1845 (1989).
  • Orentlicher, “Does Mother Know Best?,” 40 Hastings Law Journal 1111 1122 (1989) (reviewing M. Field, Surrogate Motherhood (1988)).
  • Note, “Organizational Papers and the Privilege Against Self Incrimination,” 99 Harvard Law Review 640 654 (1986).
  • Supreme Court Case Comment, “Monopolization and the Duty to Cooperate: Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp.,” 99 Harvard Law Review 275 283 (1985)
  • *Graves, Hudgins, DeLung, Burnett, Scanlon & Orentlicher, “Computerized Patient Flow Analysis of Local Family Planning Clinics,” 13 Family Planning Perspectives 164 170 (1981).

Essays and Reports

  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Ethical Issues in the Patenting of Medical Procedures,” 53 Food and Drug Law Journal 341-351 (1998) (with Jarrard).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Managed Care Cost Containment Involving Prescription Drugs,” 53 Food and Drug Law Journal 25-34 (1998) (with Quigley).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “The Use of Anencephalic Neonates as Organ Donors,” 273 J.A.M.A. 1614-1618 (1995) (with O’Neill).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Financial Incentives for Organ Procurement: Ethical Aspects of Future Contracts for Cadaveric Donors,” 155 Archives of Internal Medicine 581-589 (1995) (with Leslie).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Ethical Issues in Managed Care,” 273 J.A.M.A. 330-335 (1995) (with Harwood and Johnson).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Ethical Considerations in the Allocation of Organs and Other Scarce Medical Resources Among Patients,” 155 Archives of Internal Medicine 29-40 (1995) (with Leslie).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Disputes Between Medical Supervisors and Trainees,” 272 J.A.M.A. 1861-1865 (1994) (with Leslie and Halkola).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Reporting Adverse Drug and Medical Device Events,” 49 Food and Drug Law Journal 359-365 (1994) (with Leslie).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Ethical Issues in Health Systems Reform: The Provision of Adequate Health Care,” 272 J.A.M.A. 1056-1062 (1994) (with Harwood).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Strategies for Cadaveric Organ Procurement: Mandated Choice and Presumed Consent,” 272 J.A.M.A. 809-812 (1994) (with Leslie).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Ethical Issues Related to Prenatal Genetic Testing,” 3 Archives of Family Medicine 633-642 (1994) (with Leslie, Halkola, Feigenbaum).
  • Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Physician Assisted Suicide,” 10 Issues in Law & Medicine 91-97 (1994).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Gender Discrimination in the Medical Profession,” 4 Women’s Health Issues 1 11 (1994) (with Harwood).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Physician Participation in Capital Punishment,” 270 J.A.M.A. 365 368 (1993) (with Halkola).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Caring for the Poor,” 269 J.A.M.A. 2533 2537 (1993) (with Johnson and Conley).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Mandatory Parental Consent to Abortion,” 269 J.A.M.A. 82 86 (1993).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Guidelines on Gifts to Physicians from Industry: An Update,” 47 Food and Drug Law Journal 445 458 (1992) (with Johnson).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Confidentiality of HIV Status on Autopsy Reports,” 116 Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine 1120 1123 (1992) (with Halkola).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Physicians and Domestic Violence: Ethical Considerations,” 267 J.A.M.A. 3190 3193 (1992) (with Schweickart and Halkola).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Conflicts of Interest: Physician Ownership of Medical Facilities,” 267 J.A.M.A. 2366 2369 (1992) (with Johnson and Conley).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Decisions Near the End of Life,” 267 J.A.M.A. 2229 2233 (1992) (with Schweickart and Halkola).
  • *Board of Trustees, “Requirements or Incentives by Government for the Use of Long Acting Contraceptives,” 267 J.A.M.A. 1818 1821 (1992).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Sexual Misconduct in the Practice of Medicine,” 266 J.A.M.A. 2741 2745 (1991) (with Halkola).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Use of Genetic Testing by Employers,” 266 J.A.M.A. 1827 1830 (1991).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Gender Disparities in Clinical Decision Making,” 266 J.A.M.A. 559 562 (1991) (with Halkola).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Guidelines for the Appropriate Use of Do Not Resuscitate Orders,” 265 J.A.M.A. 1868 1871 (1991) (with Knight).
  • Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Gifts to Physicians From Industry,” 265 J.A.M.A. 501 (1991) (an editorial).
  • *Board of Trustees, “Legal Interventions During Pregnancy: Court Ordered Medical Treatments and Legal Penalties for Potentially Harmful Behavior by Pregnant Women,” 264 J.A.M.A. 2663 2670 (1990) (with Halkola).
  • *Council on Scientific Affairs and Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Conflicts of Interest in Medical Center/Industry Research Relationships,” 263 J.A.M.A. 2790 2793 (1990) (with Loeb).
  • *Board of Trustees, “Frozen Pre embryos,” 263 J.A.M.A. 2484 2487 (1990).
  • *Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Black White Disparities in Health Care,” 263 J.A.M.A. 2344 2346 (1990).
  • *Council on Scientific Affairs and Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Medical Applications of Fetal Tissue Transplantation,” 263 J.A.M.A. 565 570 (1990) (with Evans).
  • *Council on Scientific Affairs and Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, “Persistent Vegetative State and the Decision to Withdraw or Withhold Life Support,” 263 J.A.M.A. 426 430 (1990) (with Evans).

Book Reviews

  • Orentlicher, Book Review, Euthanasia and Law in the Netherlands, 25 Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 387-391 (2000).
  • Book Note, Medical Malpractice: Theory, Evidence, and Public Policy, 99 Harvard Law Review 2001 2007 (1986).

Other Publications

  • Orentlicher & Caplan, “Legislation and End-of-Life Care,” 283 J.A.M.A. 2934-2935 (2000) (reply to letters to the editor).
  • Orentlicher, “Principle, Practice, and the Right to Die,” 2(3) ASBH Exchange 1 (1999).
  • Orentlicher, “Mother deserves murder charge,” USA Today, May 24, 1999, 26A.
  • Orentlicher, “Hope for those in need of marrow transplants,” Indianapolis Star, December 29, 1998, A11.
  • Orentlicher, “With proper safeguards, a medical ID will be a lifesaving health policy,” Insight, August 24, 1998, 24.
  • Orentlicher, “Terminal Sedation,” 338 New England Journal of Medicine 1230 (1998) (reply to letters to the editor).
  • Orentlicher, “Medical Trials for Assisted Suicide,” Louisville Courier-Journal, September 3, 1997, 11A.
  • Orentlicher, “Trends suggest ‘duty to die’ may supplant ‘right’ question,” Portland Oregonian, June 27, 1997, B9.
  • Orentlicher, “Why we must preserve the right to die,” Baltimore Sun, October 29, 1996, 9A.
  • Orentlicher, “Navigating the Narrows of Doctor-Assisted Suicide,” Technology Review 62-63 (July 1996).
  • Glasson & Orentlicher, “Mandated Choice for Organ Donation,” 273 J.A.M.A. 1176-1177 (1995) (letter to the editor).
  • Glasson & Orentlicher, “Essential vs Discretionary Health Care in System Reform,” 273 J.A.M.A. 919 (1995) (reply to a letter to the editor).
  • Orentlicher, “Rationing and the Americans with Disabilities Act,” 271 J.A.M.A. 1903-1904 (1994) (reply to a letter to the editor).
  • Glasson & Orentlicher, “HIV Testing: AMA Code of Ethics,” 271 J.A.M.A. 1160 (1994) (letter to the editor).
  • Glasson & Orentlicher, “Gifts From Industry: Laundering Money or Supporting Education?,” 271 J.A.M.A. 505 (1994) (reply to a letter to the editor).
  • Clarke & Orentlicher, “Parental Consent for Abortion,” 269 J.A.M.A. 2211 (1993) (reply to a letter to the editor).
  • Clarke & Orentlicher, “Self-Referral by Physicians,” 328 New England Journal of Medicine 1278 (1993) (letter to the editor).
  • Clarke & Orentlicher, “Reporting Abuse of Competent Patients,” 268 J.A.M.A. 2378 (1992) (reply to a letter to the editor).
  • Clarke & Orentlicher, “‘Futility’ as a Criterion in Limiting Treatment,” 327 New England Journal of Medicine 1240 (1992) (letter to the editor).
  • Clarke & Orentlicher, “Diagnosis of Brain Death and Organ Donation,” 268 J.A.M.A. 1859-1860 (1992) (reply to a letter to the editor).
  • Emanuel, Emanuel & Orentlicher, “Advance Directives,” 266 J.A.M.A. 2563 (1991) (letter to the editor).
  • Orentlicher, “Webster and the Fundamental Right to Make Medical Decisions,” 15 American Journal of Law and Medicine 184-188 (1989).

Presentations

  • “Two Presidents Are Better Than One: The Case for a Bipartisan Executive Branch,” at University of Pennsylvania School of Law (April 2, 2013)
  • See Prof. Orentlicher’s comments on CNN about the oral arguments before the Supreme Court on the constitutionality of Obamacare.
  • See Professor Orentlicher’s comments at NY Times online on the Virginia federal court’s invalidation of the “individual mandate” to purchase health care insurance
  • See Professor Orentlicher’s comments on topical issues at Politico.com
  • “The Constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” 28th Annual Jefferson Fordham Debate, University of Utah S. J. Quinney College of Law (February 6, 2012)
  • “Controlling Health Care Costs through Agency Oversight: The Conflict between the Morally Right and the Socially Feasible,” Journal of Corporation Law Symposium (February 18, 2011)
  • “Cost Containment and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” Florida International University Law Review Symposium (November 12, 2010)
  • “The Broken Presidency: How It Has Failed Us and How We Can Fix It,” American Political Science Association Annual Meeting (September 3, 2010)
  • “Universal Access to Health Care: The Lessons of History,” 32nd Annual Health Law Professors Conference (June 5, 2009)
  • “Stem Cells: Ethical Considerations,” Ballenger Eminent Persons Lecture Series (March 25, 2009)
  • “Expensive New Drugs: Are They Worth It?,” University of Illinois College of Medicine (October 29, 2008)
  • “Health Care Reform in the United States: The Lessons of History,” Harvard Medical School Alumni Perspectives in Health Care in 2008 and Beyond (September 28, 2008)
  • “A Right to Health Care Under the Constitution: Why Not?”, Constitution Day Program, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine (September 17, 2008)
  • “Implementing Best Practices: Converting Good Ethics into Good Law,” Confronting the Ethics of Pandemic Influenza Planning: The 2008 Summit of the States (July 14, 2008)
  • “Life and Death and the Courts,” Illinois Advanced Judicial Academy (June 7, 2002)
  • Congressional testimony on the “Pain Relief Promotion Act of 1999” (H.R. 2260), before the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives (June 24, 1999)
  • “Medical Futility,” Consortium on Bioethics and Social Responsibility, Oriel College, Oxford University (March 30, 1998)

Letter To The Editor From George Lumley ON Troubled Asset Program

4

Letter To The Editor From George Lumley

It look like my “Let’s Fix That” campaign is making some progress.

Attached below is a link to the Office of The United States Special Inspector General website and their letter to the United States Secretary of the Treasury.

SIGTARP – Office of the Special Inspector General For The Troubled Asset Relief Program – Watchdog for American Taxpayers headlines Evansville this week  https://www.sigtarp.gov/Pages/home.aspxhttps://www.sigtarp.gov/Pages/home.aspx Their official US government site spotlights Evansville Indiana activity under their “Audit and Other Reports”. The report/letter dated December 14 is still on their main page.https://www.sigtarp.gov/Audit%20Reports/SIGTARP_HHF_Blight_Elimination_Risk.pdf

This letter https://www.sigtarp.gov/Audit%20Reports/SIGTARP_HHF_Blight_Elimination_Risk.pdf details some of the problem that we need to fix in Evansville and the State of Indiana.https://www.sigtarp.gov/Audit%20Reports/SIGTARP_HHF_Blight_Elimination_Risk.pdf

It is my opinion that this attitude or culture of our leaders putting special interest ahead of everyone’s best interest is one of the biggest contributors to our declining neighborhoods. It looks like I have found some support on this Issue as it relates to federal funds. I hope I can find as much support for revamping the Tax Sale/Land bank/Brownfields issue to bring resources to the neighborhoods that need it verses allowing the current culture to funnel all available resources to downtown special interest.

George Lumley

DBA “Let’s Fix That”