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The Crossings Apartments to receive Crime Free program certification

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The Crossings Apartments will receive the Crime Free Multi-Housing program GOLD Certification this Friday during a 2:00pm ceremony.The ceremony will be held at their office at 2451 Waterbridge Way.
Through their work with the EPD Crime Free Multi-Housing Unit, The Crossings owners and management have been able to improve the quality of life for their renters and decrease the calls for police services by 44% from a year ago.
To learn more about the Crime Free Multi-Housing program, contact Officer Eric Krogman at 812-435-6116.

 

Peppa Pig Live! Peppa Pig’s Big Splash

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SMG Evansville
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TICKET PRE-SALE 1 DAY ONLY!

Thursday, Oct. 29 from 10:00am to 10:00pm.

Pre-Sale Tickets can be purchased through Ticketmaster online, at 1-800-745-3000 or at our Box Office using the passcode: SPLASH
Tickets go on-sale to general public on Friday, October 30 at 10:00am.

  Tuesday, February 2, 2016 at 6:00pm

PEPPA PIG LIVE!

More fun than a muddy puddle! Peppa Pig is hitting the road for her first-ever U.S. theatrical tour, Peppa Pig’s Big Splash! Peppa Pig’s Big Splash is an action-packed live show featuring your favorite characters as puppets and costume characters! Come join Peppa, George, Mummy Pig, Daddy Pig and more in an all singing, all-dancing adventure full of songs, games and muddy puddles!
More Information
Price: $439.50, $29.50
Peppa Pig Party Passes is $119.50 which includes premium seat, after show admission to Peppa Pig’s Party, snack, Meet and Greet, and a party gift.

IURC must reconsider Vectren’s plant modification, rate reimbursement requests

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

 

Even though a utility company completed many of the projects it received approval for regarding modifications of coal-powered generating stations, that does not render an appeal by various environmental groups moot, the Indiana Court of Appeals held Thursday.

Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana filed a petition with the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission for approval of projects to modify four coal-powered generating stations to meet new EPA standards. It sought modifications instead of construction of new natural-gas powered generators. The petition also asked for financial incentives and reimbursement from ratepayers for costs associated with the projects.

Citizens Action Coalition of Indiana Inc., Sierra Club Inc. and Valley Watch Inc. intervened and opposed the action, claiming replacing the current coal-powered generators with new natural gas-powered ones was a more cost-effective plan than the one Vectren proposed.

The commission found the proposal reasonable and necessary, approved it, and granted the company’s request for reimbursement and project costs. The environmental groups appealed, but Vectren argued the appeal is moot because the projects have been completed and in use since the beginning of this year and the appellants should have sought a stay preventing Vectren’s use of its new environmental controls.

The Court of Appeals rejected Vectren’s argument, finding it began work on the projects while the appeal was pending at its own risk. It cannot “singlehandedly prevent Appellants’ ability to pursue an appeal by building the environmental controls at issue while the appeal is pending and then claim that the appeal is moot because they have already built those controls,” Judge Cale Bradford wrote.

The judges found that the commission erred in failing to make findings on the nine factors listed in I.C. 8-1-8.7-3 in granting Vectren’s request, such as project costs and reduction of pollutants that can be achieved, and remanded for the commission to do so.

“Here … the Commission did not mention Chapter 8.7 in its order and maintains on appeal that Chapter 8.7 does not apply and that it ‘did not make any Chapter 8.7 findings.’ As we have already found, Chapter 8.7 does apply to certain projects within Vectren’s proposal. Accordingly, it was not harmless error for the Commission to ignore the statutory factors outlined in Section 8-1-8.7-3(b),” Bradford wrote.

The case is Citizens Action Coalition of Indiana, Inc., Sierra Club, Inc., and Valley Watch, Inc. v. Southern Indiana Gas and Electric Co. d/b/a Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana, Inc., Ind. Utility Regulatory, 93A02-1502-EX-110.

Vellky named Academic All-District

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University of Southern Indiana senior forward Madi Vellky named Division II Women’s Soccer Academic All-District IV by the College Sports Information Directors of America. The Academic All-District IV honor is the second of Vellky’s career at USI.

To be eligible for the Capital One Academic All-America program, the student athlete must be a starter or important reserve with legitimate athletic credentials and at least a 3.3 cumulative grade point average (on a 4.0 scale). They must have reached sophomore athletic and academic standing at the institution (true freshmen, red-shirt freshmen and first-year athletic transfers are not eligible) and must have completed at least one full academic year at the institution.

Vellky, who was only one of three perfect 4.0 students athletes on the team, was second on the Screaming Eagles this season with eight points on three goals and two assists. The 4.0 grade point average nursing major concludes her USI career with 39 points on 15 goals and nine assists. The 39 points ranks ninth all-time at USI, while the 15 goals ranks 10th in the history of the program.

USI Women’s Soccer finished the 2015 campaign with a 5-10-2 overall record, 4-10-1 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference.

NCAA DIVISION II (Great Lakes Intercollegiate, Great Lakes Valley, Great Midwest)
Pos. Name School                                             Yr.   Hometown             GPA    Major
GK   Katie Mattingly TRUMAN STATE                So.  Perryville, Mo.          3.80   Health science (pre-dentistry)
D     Jessica Brown ASHLAND                            Jr.   Hamilton, Ohio          3.98   Exercise science
D     Clare Carlson GRAND VALLEY STATE       Jr.   Ada, Mich.                3.92   Engineering
D     Nicole Dominguez LEWIS                            Jr.   Tinley Park, Ill.          3.98   Psychology
D     Courtney Kozak OHIO DOMINICAN             Jr.   Millersburg, Ohio      4.00   Accounting & finance
D     Kelly McGovern MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS       Sr.   Mokena, Ill.               3.89   Cross categorical special education
D     Shannon Quinn GRAND VALLEY STATE    So.  Grand Rapids, Mich. 3.89   Biomedical sciences
M     Ashley Burton QUINCY                                Sr.   St. Louis, Mo.           3.64   Physical education
M     Marti Corby GRAND VALLEY STATE          Jr.   Ada, Mich.                3.60   Pre-med
M     Anna Hoffman TREVECCA NAZARENE      Sr.   Chattanooga, Tenn. 3.89   Education
F     Nicole Boehnke FERRIS STATE                  Sr.   Grand Blanc, Mich.   3.91   Journalism & technical comm
F     Emily Cline DRURY                                      Sr.   Springfield, Mo.        4.00    Biology / Spanish
F     Lexi Herrewig MICHIGAN TECH                  Sr.   Fond du Lac, Wis.    3.45    Exercise science
F     Madi Vellky SOUTHERN INDIANA                Sr.   Dublin, Ohio            4.00    Nursing
F     Jacoby Ziegler CEDARVILLE                       Sr.   Wellington, Ohio       3.72    Nursing

 

AG Zoeller, Rx Task Force Host 6th Annual Prescription Drug Abuse Symposium

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Two-day conference draws 800 attendees, national officials

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller hosted the sixth-annual Indiana Prescription Drug Abuse Symposium in Indianapolis this week, Oct. 28 and 29, to focus on new challenges in the fight against prescription drug abuse, particularly in light of unprecedented HIV and Hepatitis C outbreaks this year triggered by intravenous abuse of diverted medications.

Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy Michael Botticelli and Deputy Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse Dr. Wilson Compton were keynote speakers at this year’s symposium, titled “In the Trenches, A Community Approach.” The symposium offered sessions on arming communities with strategies for curtailing abuse and providing treatment, and focused on collaboration between public health and public safety as well as among all levels of government.

The annual two-day symposium is the pinnacle event for the Indiana Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Task Force, which Zoeller founded in 2012 and which he co-chairs alongside Dr. Joan Duwve, chief medical officer for the Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH).

“This year, a small community in Southern Indiana saw an unprecedented spike in HIV infections and became the face of the national opioid epidemic,” Zoeller said. “This crisis was in addition to reports that show prescription drug abusers are turning to heroin, and the continued rise in heroin overdose deaths. Though the state’s efforts to stem the flow of prescribed opioids into communities are working, we now have new challenges to address in our ongoing battle to reduce abuse in Indiana and save Hoosier lives.”

According to a 2015 ISDH report, the number of heroin overdoses in Indiana more than doubled from 2011 to 2013. A 2014 study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that approximately three out of four new heroin users report having abused prescription opioids prior to using heroin.

Setting record attendance with more than 800 registered attendees this year, the Indiana Prescription Drug Abuse Symposium is the largest statewide collaboration of professionals from local, state and federal agencies, academia, clinicians, pharmacists, treatment providers, counselors, educators, state and national leaders, and advocates impacted by prescription drug abuse.

“Meetings that bring together public health and public safety are critical to breaking down silos that impede our progress,” Director Botticelli said in his keynote. “This issue is personal for many of us in this audience today… It’s not somebody else’s kids; it’s our kids. The goal today is to shine a spotlight on this epidemic and make sure we all walk out of here committed to doing something about it, whether we are a faith leader, elected official, law enforcement or private citizen. We all have a role to play.”

Other prominent speakers at the symposium included Indiana State Health Commissioner Dr. Jerome Adams and Attorney General Zoeller. Symposium sessions covered the following topics among others:

  • Lessons learned from the Scott County HIV crisis
  • Naloxone (opioid overdose antidote) training
  • Opioid abuse prevention strategies targeting youth
  • Opioid addiction in vulnerable populations
  • Syringe exchange programs

A full agenda for this year’s symposium is available here.

“Every community in Indiana has been touched by opioid misuse, addiction and overdose. Opioid misuse is preventable, opioid addiction is treatable, and opioid overdose is reversible,” Dr. Joan Duwve said. “This symposium is a way for all of us to come together to learn from one another, and from national experts, and then take what we’ve learned back to our local communities where families are struggling to keep children alive and get loved ones into treatment and recovery.”

Zoeller created the Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention Task Force in 2012 to reduce the abuse of controlled prescription drugs and decrease the number of deaths associated with these drugs in Indiana. The Task Force has grown to approximately 100 members including legislators, state and federal regulators, clinicians, pharmacists, treatment providers, educators and law enforcement. The Task Force holds quarterly meetings in addition to meetings held by the following individual committees: Education, Enforcement, INSPECT (state prescription drug monitoring program), Treatment & Recovery and Drug Take Back.

The Task Force has advanced a number of initiatives to reduce prescription drug abuse in Indiana. A key achievement was developing safer prescribing guidelines for physicians and working with the Legislature and Medical Licensing Board to adopt new rules consistent with the guidelines. Within six months of these rules taking effect, there was an 11 percent decrease in the amount of opioids prescribed in Indiana.

Significant legislative accomplishments include providing more oversight for pain clinic operators, stronger reporting requirements to the state’s prescription drug monitoring program INSPECT, greater access to addiction treatment services and to the overdose antidote naloxone, and – most recently – allowing communities with an HIV or Hepatitis C outbreak to establish syringe exchanges that discourage shared needle use and direct people to treatment options. Other key legislative successes from the 2015 legislative session include ensuring that Medicaid and the state’s Healthy Indiana Plan cover addiction treatment services and appropriating new funds for the growth of mental health and addiction services.

FREE DIABETIC RETINAL EXAM EVENT COMING TO ST. MARY’S

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During November – Diabetes Awareness Month – St. Mary’s Health partners with Intelligent Retinal Imaging Systems (IRIS) to hold a FREE diabetic retinal exam event. This is part of the 2nd Annual 30/30 Retinal Screenings Campaign.

The IRIS 30/30 Retinal Screening Campaign emerged from a sense of community and desire to raise awareness around the risks of ophthalmic diabetic complications. IRIS will provide at least 30 Diabetic Screening Events in 30 days across the country. By collaborating with primary care and eye care providers, these screenings will be provided at no cost to the patient. This year, IRIS and its partnering leaders in telehealth aim to screen more than 1,000 patients across the United States.

WHO:  diabetic patients and those at-risk for diabetes

WHEN:  November 4 & 5. 8:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.

WHERE:  3801 Bellemeade Ave, Suite 100

HOW:  Reserve a 5 minute appointment by calling 812.485.1402

Jason Crawford, CEO of IRIS, says “Our mission is to end preventable blindness. In order to accomplish this goal, we have to educate people about diabetes and the need for annual eye exams. I cannot think of a better way to do that than by offering our partners the tools to do these tests free of charge during the month of November.”

During the first IRIS 30/30 Campaign in November 2014, the organization and its partners uncovered eye disease in 35% of the patients screened. “The patients that were identified with pathology had little knowledge of the risks of diabetes, let alone that they themselves had active retinal disease. Our partners, in collaboration with IRIS, were able to further educate the patients on their disease and direct them to the right specialist to receive treatment”, commented Sunil Gupta, MD, retinal surgeon and founder of IRIS.

About St. Mary’s Health 

St. Mary’s Health, in partnership with St. Vincent Health in Indianapolis, is a member of Ascension Health – the nation’s largest Catholic and non-profit health system. We are a faith-based health ministry serving communities in Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky. With a medical staff of more than 750 physicians, St. Mary’s specializes in cardiac, surgical, orthopedic, rehabilitation, neurosciences, women’s, children’s, seniors, emergency, and trauma services. For more than 140 years, St. Mary’s has been guided by its mission of serving all persons, with special attention to those who are poor and vulnerable. For more information, please visit our website at www.stmarys.org.

About IRIS

IRIS provides an automated retinal imaging system and FDA-cleared cloud-based interpretation platform to primary care practices as a more efficient and easily accessible way for patients to receive their annual Diabetic Retinal Exam. IRIS and its partners are improving quality, expanding access, and reducing costs for Diabetic Retinopathy Exams across the United States. For more information, visit www.retinalscreenings.com

Unique CNA Program for Students at AIS-First Ave.

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Certified Nursing Assistant Program Started at Academy for Innovative Studies

3:45 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 29

Academy for Innovative Studies – First Ave. (3013 First Avenue)

 

Background:  This fall, the Academy for Innovative Studies-First Avenue, began a unique partnership with SWIHSA (Southwestern Indiana Area Health Services Academy) to offer a one-semester Certified Nursing Assistant Program for students at the school who met qualifications.  There are currently 12 enrolled. The program – the first of its kind taught during a high school day in Evansville – is designed to give students career knowledge that will prepare them with a specific skillset to use in the work world immediately following their high school graduation, or sooner.  Students are learning Medical Terminology, Infection Control, Communication Skills, Documentation Skills, and Vital Signs.

 

Beginning at 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, a CNA Family and Community Partners’ reception is planned, to give families and students a chance to interact and thank partners that are making this career program possible.  Several individuals in the community, as well as organizations have donated funding, materials, and other items to make this possible.  Each student must have $1,070 In order to participate in this program, and individuals and organizations have filled that need this fall.  This semester’s sponsors include the following:

 

SWIHSA (Southwestern Indiana Area Health Services Academy)

Heritage Center

AHEC (Area Health Educational Center)

Work One

EVSC Student Response Fund

Vanderburgh County Recent booking Records

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

EPD Activity Report

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Adopt A Pet

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Brutus is a 1-year-old male Whippet/terrier mix! This sweetie can be shy, but he warms up quickly with just some treats and snuggles. He has moderate energy, and enjoys walks but won’t be wild living in a smaller space. His $120 adoption fee includes his neuter, microchip, vaccines, and more. Visit www.vhslifesaver.org or call (812) 426-2563!