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Alex Burton Is Encouraging The Community To Donate Bottled Water

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In response to a predicted week of heat, Alex is calling on members of the community to donate bottles of water to the Evansville Rescue Mission

Alex Burton, a current candidate for City Council is calling on all of the candidates and the entire community to donate bottled water to the Evansville Rescue Mission.

 

Alex dropped by the rescue mission to donate a pack of bottled water and realized that there is a true need to provide enough water for those who utilize their services.

 

“These next few days will be extremely hot and it is important that the Evansville Rescue Mission can provide cold water to those who need it walking, standing, and peddling across the city,” Burton says.

 

Alex is confident that the community will support and donate to this cause, just as our community responded to the community’s need for swim items for children at our local pools.

 

“We have to take care of all of the people in our community and this is one way that each and every one of us can participate and help a fellow resident,” he says.

 

Burton will personally reach out to all candidates running for office (Democrat and Republican) to encourage a collective donation of bottled of water. For everyone interested in joining Alex, please meet him at 4:30pm on Wednesday, June 23rd at the Evansville Rescue Mission.

 

 

In light of the recent recall of all Niagara Bottling, LLC, Alex asks that individuals interested in donating to this cause avoid all bottle water associated with this Company. For more information on this recall, please visit Niagara’s website.

CITY OF EVANSVILLE 2015 STREET AND ROAD RECONSTRUCTION LIST

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Six projects on the City of Evansville’s 2015 street paving and road reconstruction list have already been completed. Two more road projects are underway, and 10 other projects are scheduled to begin at a later date or are in the pre-bid stage.

City Engineer Brent Schmitt said multiple sources of information and data were used to generate the project list. “Our office received input from residents attending the Mayor’s Traveling City Hall meetings, through the Citizens Concern Portal, from calls to the Engineering Department staff, traffic count data and feedback at the annual public road meeting held in March,” Schmitt said.

Schmitt said most of the projects are scheduled for resurfacing work, which involves milling and removing the old pavement and laying new asphalt or overlaying asphalt over the existing road.

Golfmoor Road is scheduled for rehabilitation work that will begin around April 20 and will include replacing two drainage culverts, complete ditch grading, plus reconstructing a portion of the roadway.

A contract to remove railroad crossing on Riverside Drive near Tropicana Evansville is currently being written and has not been let for bid. Schmitt said it will be necessary to close Riverside to traffic at that location when construction begins later this year.

Here is the list of 2015 City of Evansville road projects and their status:

Complete:
• Bellemeade Avenue at Kentucky Avenue – Complete
• Burdette Avenue (Covert to Pollack) – Complete
• Margybeth Avenue (Hawthorne Avenue east to the dead end) – Complete
• Green River Road at Virginia – Complete
• E. Virginia Street at Royal Avenue – Complete
• E. Virginia Street at Kimber Lane – Complete
Total approximately cost: $360,000

Underway:
• Mesker Park Drive (Wimberg to St. Joseph Avenue) – Underway – Anticipated complete 4/17/15
• Wimberg Avenue (Mesker Park Drive to Harmony Way) – Underway – Anticipated complete 4/17/15
Total approximately cost: $285,000

Scheduled:
• Golfmoor Road (Wessel Lane to Harmony Way) – Expected to begin April 20th
Total approximate cost: $163,165
• West Buena Vista (N. Third Avenue to N. Fulton Avenue) – Expected to begin May 4th
Total approximate cost: $278,467

Bid Documents Underway:
The following roads will be included in the contract that is being composed. No Contract has been awarded or schedule set.
• Lincoln Avenue (Hwy 41 to Boeke Road)
• Boeke Road (Lloyd Expressway to Washington Avenue)
• St. George Road (from railroad track to 250-feet west of tracks)
• Riverside Drive (Ohio Street to Vine Street)
• W. Franklin Street (St. Joseph Avenue to Mt. Vernon Avenue)
• Mt. Vernon Avenue (Franklin to Harmony Way)
• Oak Grove Road at Kimber Lane
• Walnut Street (Boeke Road to Weinbach Avenue)

First Lady Karen Pence Will Award $23,500 in Grants to 31 Organizations from Across Indiana

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Indianapolis – On Wednesday morning, First Lady Karen Pence will host a reception at the Governor’s Residence for 31 organizations and charities that serve Hoosier families and children across Indiana. There, First Lady Karen Pence will award each organization with a check ranging from $500 to $1,000 in grant money from the Indiana First Lady’s Charitable Foundation.

 

First Lady Karen Pence started the Indiana First Lady’s Charitable Foundation in August of 2013 as a way to recognize and lift up organizations and charities across the state. At the inaugural First Lady’s Luncheon held in April 2014, the Foundation awarded its first major grant of $100,000 to the Art Therapy Program at Riley Hospital for Children.  At this year’s luncheon, the Foundation awarded the second major grant of $65,000 to Feeding Indiana’s Hungry, which supports food banks and food pantries in all 92 counties. Throughout the year, the Foundation will award smaller grants to organizations across the state.   This reception is the fourth of its kind. The third annual First Lady’s Luncheon will be held March 8, 2016.

 

Wednesday, June 24:

 

10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. EDT – First Lady Karen Pence to award $23,500 in grants to 31 organizations from across Indiana

*Media are welcome to attend.

Governor’s Residence, 4750 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis

 

Representatives from the following organizations will be on hand to receive their award and recognition:

 

Grant Recipient Website County
Youth Villages – Indiana www.youthvillages.org Monroe, Bartholomew, Marion, Dubois, Clark, Jefferson
Euell Wilson Center http://.euellwilsoncenter.org Allen
Great Commission Church of God www.greatcommissionchurchofgod.org Marion
Hoosier Burn Camp, Inc. www.hoosierburncamp.org Tippecanoe
Christ Child Society of Fort Wayne www.christchildfw.org Allen
Dayspring Center www.dayspringindy.org Marion
College Mentors for Kids, University of Notre Dame Chapter http://www.collegementors.org/ St. Joseph
Fort Wayne Children’s Zoo http://kidszoo.org/ Allen
Beachfront Dance School, INC. www.beachfrontdance.org Lake
Mustard Seed Furniture Bank of Fort Wayne, Inc. www.mustardseedfortwayne.com Allen
Ransburg YMCA, c/o Arsenal Technical High School Boys & Girls Swim Team https://www.facebook.com/RansburgYMCA Marion
Grace Learning Center www.citizens4homelesss.org La Porte
Girls on the Run of Northwest Indiana www.gotrofnwi.org Lake
North Spencer Community Action Center N/A Spencer
Caring Friends Daycare Ministry www.caringfriendsdaycareministry.com Vanderburgh
McMillen Center for Health Education http://www.mcmillencenter.org/; http://www.brushdental.org/ Allen
Restore Outreach/The Gathering www.restore1more.com Vanderburgh
Ozanam Family Shelter Corp http://ofsevv.org/ Vanderburgh
Indiana Music Education Association Foundation www.imeamusic.org Marion
Miles for Merry Miracles www.m4mm.org Floyd
Arthritis Foundation Indiana http://arthritis.org Marion
Hope Central http://encounteringhopeministries.com/ Warrick
Family Promise of Greater Indianapolis http://www.familypromiseindyihn.org/ Marion
Evansville African American Museum www.evansvilleaamuseum.org Vanderburgh
YWCA of Evansville, IN, Inc. www.ywcaevansville.org Harrison
HOPE Medora Goes Pink Breast Cancer Awareness, Inc. https://www.facebook.com/pages/Hope-Medora-Goes-Pink/372327292897252?fref=ts Jackson
Lifebridge-Community www.lifebridge-community.org Marion
Gene Stratton-Porter Memorial Society www.genestratton-porter.com Noble
New Way Community Church http://newwaycommunitychurch.org/ Marion
Tri-Town Safety Village www.safetyvillage.us Lake
The PEERS Project of Indiana www.peersproject.org Marion

 

The Indiana First Lady’s Charitable Foundation is a 501 ( c ) (3). The First Lady receives no compensation. Donations are tax deductible. Learn more about how to make a donation or request a grant on the Foundation’s website at: www.IndianaFirstLadysCharitableFoundation.org

 

Governor Pence to Visit Vanderburgh County Today

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Governor Mike Pence will visit Vanderburgh County. In the morning, he will ceremonially sign SEA 370, which designates the Republic Aviation P-47 Thunderbolt as the official state aircraft of Indiana. Later in the afternoon, he will keynote the Southwest Indiana Chamber of Commerce June Luncheon and will join executives from the auto parts manufacturer Fisher Dynamics, a division of Fisher & Co., for a ribbon cutting ceremony to celebrate the company’s first operations in Indiana. The Governor will also tour the Shoe Carnival Distribution Center in Evansville. Details below.

 

Wednesday, June 24:

 

9:45 a.m. CDT – Governor Pence to ceremonially sign SEA 370, which designates the Republic Aviation P-47 Thunderbolt as the official state aircraft of Indiana

*Media are welcome to attend.

Evansville Airport Freedom Heritage Museum, 7503 Petersburg Road, Evansville, IN

 

12:00 p.m. CDT – Governor Pence to keynote the Southwest Indiana Chamber of Commerce

*Media are welcome to attend.

Old National Bank Events Plaza, 715 Locust Street, Evansville, IN

 

1:45 p.m. CDT – Governor Pence to join auto parts manufacturer Fisher Dynamics for ribbon cutting ceremony

*Media are welcome to attend.

2301 St. George Road, Evansville, IN

 

2:30 p.m. CDT – Governor to tour the Shoe Carnival Distribution Center

*Media are welcome to attend.

Shoe Carnival Distribution Center, 14701 North Hwy. 57, Evansville, IN

 

“LET’S FIX THAT” SECOND IN A SERIES

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BY GEORGE LUMLEY

Four land banked lots, two with zombie houses still standing will be reutilized as community gardens.

Evansville has various forms of land banking.  Unfortunately most forms of land banking are detrimental to a thriving neighborhood. Thriving neighborhoods rely on resident land owners and residential housing actually having residents.

Let’s fix that hopes to reutilize 16 zombie properties, (vacant, blighted, and land banked properties) just across Barker Ave. from the Reitz Baseball fields, Norman “Red” Mosby city pool, and children’s playground.  Four of these lots, 2813, 2815, 2817, and 2819 Dennison will be reutilized by Charles “Stu” Stuart to create a community garden.

The four lots have been in various states of land banking for as many as fifteen plus years.  The house that used to be at 2815 Dennison first went to the tax sale in 2003 and was demolished by the city in 2005.  This would indicate that it was probably abandoned by the resident and land banked prior to 2000.  The reason for moving a house from a residential property to a land banked one varies.  Common causes include simple abandonment, intentions to create a rental, foreclosure, hold for speculation in valuation, bank profit motives, or simply a desire not to part with it, to name a few.

When the city raised the structure at 2815 Dennison in 2005 and added the usual cost ($3,000 to $5,000) to the property taxes, and persuaded the current land bankers, whoever may have had an interest in the property such as the owner, bank lien holder, or tax sale purchaser, to quit paying the property taxes and allow the property to be sold again at a subsequent tax sale. This creates a profit opportunity for the next one in line to continue land banking the property.  The property, now a vacant lot, can be purchased (tax and lien free) for as little as $1.00.

You ask why anyone would want to buy a vacant lot and pay taxes on it if they have no use for the lot.  Usually it’s a profit motive.  You might call it gambling.  Often someone decides they want the lot and the owner, with only $1.00 invested, stands to gain substantially.  Yes only $1.00 invested because the taxes do not have to be paid.  The $1.00 purchase entitles the buyer to ownership for three years without paying anything in addition.  Tax assessments and code violation cost will accumulate but are not paid unless the owner finds someone who can repurpose the property from land banking to a beneficial use and makes a sale.  The buyer pays the back taxes and nice profit to the owner with the $1.00 investment.

The properties with houses such as 2819 Dennison are land banked much the same way.  Tax records show it first went to the tax lien auction in 2006 and was purchased for the taxes owed indicating that it was probably salvageable but in a state of serious decline.  The structure was not improved and the tax sale buyer let the property go back to the tax sale process.  By this time the properties become unsalvageable.  This property sold a couple of times in the tax sales and is currently titled in the name of Vanderburgh County indicating that the commissioners could not even get a minimum bid.

2813 Dennison is the victim of another type of land banker – our lending institutions.  The resident in this case was forced out under foreclosure procedures but then the bank did not complete the process to take possession of the property.  Often the owner does not even realize that they still have an ownership interest in the house.  The bank may even pay the property taxes to keep the property from the tax sale.  It appears the banks can make more off the insurance than doing the right thing and offering the property for reutilization to the highest bidder. Without residents these properties soon become zombie houses, too costly to repair, and headed for long term land banking.

Finding a reuse for these zombie properties was a little difficult but getting the properties was easy.  What would we do with four adjoining lots without a resident owner on either side.  With a single lot and owner on each side, one of the adjacent owners will want the lot, or they will want to split the lot, or they will want to fight over who gets the lot after the city does the civil duty of hauling off the trash.  After Stu stepped up and proposed a community garden I went to the individuals holding a property interest and they were more than happy to sign over their interest to the community garden project.

Stu’s “Howell Community Gardens” is an exciting reutilization for these properties.  Stu plans on partnering with the Howell General Baptist Church and other organizations to raise vegetables for a local food pantry.

Students to Receive Free Bicycles at Ivy Tech’s 10th Annual Public Safety Academy

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Middle school and elementary school students in the Ivy Tech Community College Public Safety Academy will receive a new bicycle, helmet, and bicycle lock this week at Ivy Tech. The bicycles are awarded to students who demonstrate good attendance, good behavior, and a good attitude while participating in the Public Safety Academy, and other summer activities in the community. The Academy is a partnership with the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation’s (EVSC) 21st Century Community Learning Centers, the City of Evansville Department of Parks & Recreation, the YMCA of Southwestern Indiana, and the Boys & Girls Club of Evansville.

 

Ivy Tech Community College Public Safety Academy – Annual Bicycle Giveaway Event

Ivy Tech Community College

3501 N. First Avenue

Tuesday, June 23 at 2:30 p.m.

Wednesday, June 24 at 2:30 p.m.

 

Over 219 bicycles will be awarded to students this year, the majority of them at Ivy Tech Community College this Tuesday, June 23 and Wednesday, June 24 at 2:30 p.m.  In addition, 2 adaptive bicycles, specifically designed for children who are physically unable to ride a standard bicycle, will be given away.

 

Bicycles will be presented to the students by representatives from public safety agencies, EVSC, local dignitaries, and community leaders. Students will also be treated to an afternoon of fun, including activities, snacks, a tour of Ivy Tech, and a video on bicycle safety. The event is funded by generous donations from individuals and businesses across the tri-state.

 

The Evansville Bicycle Club and Gerling Law will be assisting with the event and will help adjust the bike seats and helmets to ensure a proper fit.

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.

Finding a Safe Haven

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As a grandfather, nothing brings me more joy than my grandkids. The little ones are a constant reminder of how precious life truly is. My respect for life led me to see what Indiana is doing to protect the most vulnerable members of our society.

 

Too often we hear stories of newborn abandonment with tragic outcomes. According to the Ambulance Medical Technician Children of Hope Foundation, there are roughly 200 abandoned newborns each year throughout the nation. We never want to see these sad headlines, and my heart aches for any parent who feels that they cannot care for their newborn.

 

All 50 states have what is known as a Safe Haven Law, which allows parents to anonymously relinquish an infant without fear of arrest or prosecution. Under Indiana law, a parent, family member, friend, social worker, minister, priest or any responsible adult may give up custody of a baby less than 30 days old to a hospital emergency room, fire station or police station. The law has served to save the lives of 13 babies in Indiana.

 

However, since the law’s inception in 2000, Safe Haven Indiana reported that still yet, another 13 babies’ lives were lost because they were improperly abandoned. Currently, if a parent wishes to abandon their child, he or she must walk into an emergency provider facility. For some, the situation is so overwhelming they choose to abandon their child in an otherwise unsafe environment.

 

In an effort to expand upon Indiana’s Safe Haven law, I co-authored House Enrolled Act (HEA) 1016 this session with the intent of beginning a conversation about the installation of newborn safety incubators, which are temperature controlled devices that lock and notify authorities as soon as a child is placed inside. These incubators provide a safe and completely anonymous method for a parent to relinquish their child.

 

This summer, the Legislature will study standards and protocols for these devices, and then report their findings before the General Assembly convenes in 2016. These issues are very sensitive and require a great deal of thoughtful consideration and planning before they become law. I am encouraged that the study committee will thoroughly vet this concept to ensure that the incubators provide a life-saving alternative for parents in desperation.

 

The introduction of newborn safety incubators, along with targeted awareness of the law, could help curtail newborn abandonments in Indiana. Certainly, we will continue to promote options available to parents in difficult situations before they ever have to consider utilizing a newborn safety incubator. While we might not be able to reach everyone in this difficult situation, we can focus our efforts and look for positive alternatives to abandonment, which could help save a life.

 

To learn more about HEA 1016 and newborn safety incubators, visit iga.in.gov.