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Detective Brad Chandler Promoted to Sergeant

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Earlier today, Indiana State Police Superintendent Doug Carter promoted Detective Brad Chandler to the rank of Sergeant to serve as district squad leader for the detectives assigned to Evansville.

Chandler is a native of Danville and a 1993 graduate of Danville Community High School.  He later attended Indiana State University where he received a Bachelor’s Degree in Criminology.

In December 1998, Chandler graduated from the Indiana State Police Recruit Academy and was assigned to the Lafayette District where he primarily patrolled Fountain and Montgomery Counties.  He transferred to the Evansville District in April 2003 and was assigned to Gibson County.  Chandler was promoted to detective in August 2010 and primarily investigated criminal cases in Gibson and Pike Counties.

 

Chandler and his wife, Kyla, reside in Gibson County with their five children.

UE Men’s Soccer Visits Lipscomb for Non-Conference Match on Tuesday Senior Mark Anthony Gonzalez is one goal away from 25 in his UE career

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The University of Evansville men’s soccer team (2-10) is on the road for a midweek non-conference matchup at Lipscomb University (4-8-1) on Tuesday, Oct. 20. The match will be held at Lipscomb Soccer Complex and begin at 7:00 p.m. CDT.

 

HOW TO FOLLOW ALONG:

LIVE STATS

http://stats.statbroadcast.com/broadcast/?id=94117

 

WHAT TO KNOW

  • Senior forward Mark Anthony Gonzalez is one goal shy of his 25thcareer goal
  • This is the second of back to back road matches for the Purple Aces (at SIUE, Oct. 17)
  • Evansville has never lost at Lipscomb (2-0-1)
  • UE is looking to end a season-high seven match losing streak (last victory, Sept. 13 at Marshall)
  • The Aces are back at home on Saturday, Oct. 24 to host Missouri State and Indiana Youth Soccer night

 

THE OPPONENT:

Lipscomb enters this contest with back to back defeats, both versus ranked teams (at #13 Elon and at #22 Florida Gulf Coast). The Bisons are 2-2 in the Atlantic Sun Conference this season. Redshirt senior forward Matt Kerridge and redshirt freshman midfielder Logan Paynter have a team-high four goals and eight points each this season. Three LU student-athletes have a team-best two assists each. Junior goalkeeper Micah Bledsoe has a 1.77 goals against average, 46 saves and a .676 saves percentage.

 

HISTORY

The Purple Aces hold the 3-1-2 edge in the all-time series with the Bisons. UE is 2-0-1 at Lipscomb including a 1-0 road victory in 2013. The Bisons claimed their lone win in the series, a 2-0 victory at Evansville (2014).

 

Riecken Releases Economic Development Plan

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Mayoral candidate Gail Riecken today released her economic development plan.  She offers a number of solutions to fix economic problems, beginning with ordinances that will safeguard taxpayers.

“As Mayor I will create a city that is vital and attract more businesses and residents to live and work here,” said Riecken.  “There are a number of approaches we could use to ease the financial issues the Winnecke administration has put the city in.  I want to offer practical solutions to fix our economic problems, starting with ordinances that would protect the taxpayers’ interests in public spending.”

Check out her full plan at www.gailrieckenformayor.com

Economic Development

We have discussed many of the plans that the Riecken administration has for making the entire City of Evansville a more livable, vital city that will attract more business and residents.  There are a number of approaches to take to easing the financial stress we find ourselves under.  Even Mayor Winnecke, with his continued big spending, big borrowing plans for the taxpayers, has admitted that we are in a “tight” situation, financially speaking.  We believe that our current “financial fix” is not just tight, it is unsustainable, and we have several belt-tightening plans aimed at strengthening the local economy and boosting the tax base.

We are offering a number of practical solutions to our economic problems and will start with ordinances that should be passed in order to safeguard the taxpayers’ interests in public spending.

The Riecken Administration will:

  • Create an ordinance modeled after other cities that creates a preference for local businesses. The ordinance for the city contracts for construction and services where all other factors related to the qualifications of the businesses are equal.
  • Publicize the qualifications and standards used to approve economic development loans and grants.  The policies would be promoted through the Evansville Bond Bank, Evansville Economic Development Commission, Department of Metropolitan Development and Evansville Redevelopment Commission by holding forums for local businesses and entrepreneurs in conjunction with organizations who have a role in economic development or redevelopment for the City of Evansville. All programs and applications with the city would be available on the City’s website.
  • Create an ordinance modeled after other cities that outlines a reasonable vetting process for the investment of City funds in private or public entities.Midland, Michigan has a process in which a committee of relevant experts are engaged for evaluating and determining the worthiness of public investment in a timely fashion that does not interfere with the ability of the economic development agency’s ability to close deals that are important to the future of Evansville.
  • Add the requirement for the approval of tax abatements for any business that the largest job category for any new employer or existing employer workforce expansion be paid a living wage of at least $15.00 an hour.  The unemployment rate has decreased and at the same time, tax collections are decreasing or stagnating. The citizens of Evansville should not take up the slack for a new employer unless the pay for the bulk of its employees is a living wage.
  • Create an Employment Roundtable made up of representatives from agencies involved in both helping residents find jobs and helping them overcome barriers to remaining employed.  There is so much more to stable employment than applying for or accepting a job offer. Many residents of Evansville to gain and keep employment depend on public transportation, GED classes or other job training, reliable child care, affordable housing, rental assistance, utility assistance, emergency car repairs, etc. We must take a holistic approach to our workforce, and help them help themselves to economic independence.
  • Work with the Convention & Visitors Bureau for Evansville to capitalize on what Evansville does well in the services and retail industries.  Many people come from 50-75 miles away for shopping, entertainment, professional services and medical care. We are truly a destination location in part of Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois. We need to do a better job of promoting what a visitor can typically get on any given day.
  • Bring evaluation of compliance with tax abatement agreements back into a City department.  Examples are the Department of Metropolitan Development, the Controller’s office or the Mayor’s office. The organization that cultivates and gains approval for a tax incentive package should not be the same organization that monitors business compliance.
  • Institute a moratorium on tax increment finance spending in the downtown zone until the tax revenue of the area pays its bond obligations.  The current annual bond obligations for the arena, hotel and medical school surpass the property tax revenue taken in by at least $2 million. The Economic Redevelopment Commission should not take on any new short or long term financial obligations until the books for the downtown TIF zone balance. The riverboat revenue that must pay annual bond payments for these projects is sorely needed in public safety and other infrastructure investments.
  • Institute a moratorium on the Riverboat fund not to spend more that 90% in any one year.  The city needs to be protected in any downturn in Riverboat funds.

SCHEDULE OF GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION HELD AT EARLY VOTING CENTERS

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2015 GENERAL MUNICIPAL ELECTION EARLY VOTING VOTE CENTERS

Early voting is for voters who choose to vote early at the Election Office, Libraries or the designated Vote Centers.  Early voting is from Oct. 6, 2015 through Nov. 2, 2015 at noon in the Election Office.  Any questions call the Election Office at 812-435-5122.
 

LOCATIONS

 

DAYS TIMES DATES

 

Election Office 

Civic Center Room 214

Monday thru Friday 8 am to 4 pm Oct. 6th to Nov. 2nd at noon
Election Office

Civic Center Room 214

Saturday 8 am to 4 pm Oct. 24th & Oct. 31st

 

Central Library

200 SE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd

Monday thru Thursday

Friday

Noon to 6 pm

Noon to 5 pm

Oct. 19th to Oct. 23rd and

Oct. 26th to Oct 30th

McCollough Library

5115 Washington Ave.

Monday thru Thursday

Friday  

Noon to 6 pm

Noon to 5 pm

Oct. 19th to Oct. 23rd and

Oct. 26th to Oct 30th

North Park Library

960 Koehler Dr.

Monday thru Thursday

Friday

Noon to 6 pm

Noon to 5 pm

Oct. 19th to Oct. 23rd and

Oct. 26th to Oct 30th

Oaklyn Library

3001 Oaklyn Dr.

Monday thru Thursday

Friday

Noon to 6 pm

Noon to 5 pm

Oct. 19th to Oct. 23rd and

Oct. 26th to Oct 30th

Red Bank Library

120 S. Red Bank Rd.

Monday thru Thursday

Friday

Noon to 6 pm

Noon to 5 pm

Oct. 19th to Oct. 23rd and

Oct. 26th to Oct 30th

Northeast Park Baptist Church

1215 N. Boeke Rd.

Saturday 8 am to 3 pm Oct. 24th & Oct. 31st

 

Salvation Army

1040 N. Fulton Ave.

Saturday 8 am to 3 pm Oct. 24th & Oct. 31st

NOBEL PEACE PRIZE

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USI to dedicate 50th anniversary sculpture

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Commissioned piece is work of nationally-renowned sculptor Richard Hunt

A new sculpture commemorating USI’s 50th anniversary will soon grace the USI campus. The 14-foot, 2,000-pound stainless steel piece, created by nationally-renowned sculptor and Chicago-based artist Richard Hunt, and titled, “From Our Past Toward Our Future,” will be dedicated at 11 a.m. Thursday, October 22.

The welded and fabricated abstract stainless steel sculpture will sit atop a 2-foot high base, and will be situated near the southeast side of the main lawn of the Quad, facing the Liberal Arts Center. An artist reception will be held preceding the event at 10 a.m. in the Ruth M. Kleymeyer Hall of Presidents in the David L. Rice Library.

“It’s a spontaneous creation that was inspired by my experience of the environment, feeling and history of the campus,” said Hunt.

Born in Chicago, Illinois, on September 12, 1935, Hunt, an internationally-acclaimed artist has become one of the most prolific artists working in America today. With more than 125 major public commissions across the nation to date, he is considered a master of welded steel sculpture.

Hunt developed an interest in art from an early age; from seventh grade on attending the Junior School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC). He went on to study there at the college level, earning a Bachelor of Arts in Education in 1957. A traveling fellowship took him to England, France, Spain and Italy the following year. While still a student at SAIC, he began exhibiting his sculptures nationwide and, during his junior year, one of his pieces, “Arachne,” was purchased by the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 1962, he was the youngest artist to exhibit at Seattle’s World Fair.

In 1967, Hunt’s career in sculpture began to take him outside the studio with his first large-scale public sculpture commission, “Play” (the first sculpture commissioned by the State of Illinois Public Art Program). The piece marked the beginning of what Hunt refers to as “his second career,” one that gives him the opportunity to work on sculpture that “responds to the specifics of architectural or other designed spaces and the dynamics of diverse communities and interests.”

Hunt has received honors and recognition throughout his career and, in 1971, was the first African-American sculptor to have a major solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. His work can be found in numerous museums as well as both public and private collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery and National Museum of American Art in Washington, D.C., the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

In 1968, he was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson as one of the first artists to serve on the National Council on the Arts, the governing board of the National Endowment for the Arts. He has received numerous fellowships, prizes and awards and holds 16 honorary degrees from universities around the country. He holds memberships in the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Academy of Design. In 2009, he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the International Sculpture Center. This year he is receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award from Partners for Livable Communities in Washington, D.C.

The commissioning of the 50th anniversary sculpture was made possible through a generous gift of James A. Sanders. Sanders, an honorary degree recipient of the University of Southern Indiana, has been a friend of the University for over 40 years and deeply involved with the arts and humanities. He is a Life Director of the USI Foundation Board of Directors, and currently serves as an honorary chair of Campaign USI: Elevating Excellence. He also served as director of Historic New Harmony from 1985 to 1995. An American antiques expert, he lectures and teaches widely and is a sought-after consultant and appraiser. In 2005, he received the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana’s Arts Advocate of the Year Award. Sanders had a distinguished career in education. He taught English and journalism in the Henderson, Kentucky, public schools, was a teacher and coordinator for the Evansville-Vanderburgh School Corporation, and served as the district state supervisor for marketing instruction.

Ivy Tech Education Students Donate School Supplies to Glenwood Leadership Academy

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Ivy Tech Community College Southwest announces today that students in the Education program will be donating school supplies to Glenwood Leadership Academy as part of a service learning project. The school supplies were donated by Ivy Tech faculty, students, and community members. The items donated include school necessities such as backpacks, folders, pencils, crayons, tissue boxes, children’s shoes, and more.

Ivy Tech & Glenwood Leadership Academy

Donation Delivery

Friday, October 23rd

Noon-1p.m.

Glenwood Leadership Academy

901 Sweetser Ave.

Evansville, IN  47713

The school supplies will be delivered to Glenwood Leadership Academy (GLA) on Friday, October 23, at Noon. Education Program Chair Dr. Cassandra Gray, and the students who participated in the fundraising, will be at the school until 1p.m.

“Our goal with service learning projects such as this is to emphasize the importance of giving back to the community,” said Ivy Tech Education Program Chair Dr. Cassandra Gray. “We want our students to realize that even a small donation such as this can make a real difference in a child’s life.”

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Indiana State Police Laboratory Achieves Major Milestone with 5,000th CODIS Match

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SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
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 CODIS is the Combined DNA Index System which came into existence by legislative act in 1996.  As originally enacted, the law required people convicted of crimes against persons or burglary to provide a DNA sample, or profile, for the database.  In 2005 the law was expanded to include DNA profiles of persons convicted for any felony offense.

The samples are collected at Indiana Department of Corrections locations, county jails and probation and community corrections facilities across Indiana.  Once collected the samples are submitted to the Indiana State Police Laboratory in Indianapolis where they are analyzed and converted into profiles.

Aside from DNA profiles of convicted felons, DNA evidence recovered from crime scenes believed to have originated from an unknown suspect is also entered into CODIS.  Examples of crime scene DNA evidence collected could include a bloodstain on a broken window or seminal material from the victim of a sexual assault.

Each week, the CODIS software compares all submitted profiles to one another and identifies any matches between profiles collected from crime scenes with known DNA submissions of convicted felons.  When matches occur, they can provide valuable lead information to law enforcement agencies.

On average there is a match made 48% of the time.  This means that for every two unknown profiles a match results in a potential investigative lead to one of the two DNA profiles.  The match may be to the name of an offender in CODIS or may match to an unknown DNA profile linked to two or more crime scenes.  These matches may allow for different investigating agencies to collaborate and work toward solving crimes when the same DNA profile is linked to crimes in different jurisdictions anywhere in Indiana or across the United States.

On Monday, October 19, 2015 the Indiana State Police Laboratory CODIS software made its 5,000th match.  While it took nearly 19 years to achieve this milestone, the march to 10,000 matches will take less time.  Consider that on average each year there are DNA profiles added from roughly 15,000 convicted offenders, as well as DNA evidence from about 1,000 case profiles.  Presently there are more than 255,000 DNA profiles available for comparison, and typically an additional 300 profiles are added each week.  Every Indiana County has had at least one CODIS match.  DNA profiles submitted by Indiana offenders has been matched to crimes, or persons being investigated for criminal acts, in 43 other states.

Aside from CODIS helping to solve crimes, matches can also be used to aid in the identification of human remains.  DNA from the personal items and relatives of missing persons can be entered and searched against unidentified remains recovered throughout the United States to help identify and return them to their families.

The Indiana State Police Laboratory has aided police agencies all over Indiana with DNA analysis as well as the analysis of non DNA material to advance criminal investigations.  Such analysis is often the turning point of an investigation that results in identifying the suspect of a crime.

Photo Legend:

Photo file “DNA Sample Collection Kit” shows an example of what is used to collect a DNA profile

Photo file “DNA Sample Storage Files” shows how collection kits are filed

Photo file “DNA Helix” is illustrative of what DNA looks like under extreme magnification

Rep. Bacon will host series of town hall meetings

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State Rep. Ron Bacon (R-Chandler) will host a series of town hall meetings throughout October.

Bacon will be available to discuss issues which constituents would like to see addressed during the upcoming legislative session. He encourages all interested members of the community to attend.

6 p.m. (EST) on Tuesday, Oct. 20

Winslow Community Center
411 E. Porter St.
Winslow


6 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 21

Chandler Community Center

405 Community Center Dr.

Chandler

 

6 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 27

Lynnville Volunteer Fire Department
416 W. State Route 68
Lynnville

 

A complete list of town hall meetings can also be found at in.gov/h75. For media inquiries, please contact Courtney Bearsch at 317-234-9006 or email Courtney.Bearsch@iga.in.gov.