IS IT TRUE JULY 29, 2015
IS IT TRUE “when people fear the government we have Tyranny but when government fear the people we have Liberty”?
IS IT TRUE that Normally, this space is reserved for our daily IS IT TRUE. Today, it will be, although in reverse with you giving your thoughts and observations.  You, the reader, telling us your opinions and how you feel about this lengthy Downtown Hotel process.  We ask that you stay on topic, refrain from personal attacks and stay focused.
This Hotel project was started early during the second term of Mayor Weinzapfel. Â During the beginning phases of Ford Center, Mayor Weinzapfel contemplated that the Executive Inn would need a major renovation or be replaced. Â It turned out the decision was determined when the operator of the Executive Inn defaulted on the loan and the bank holding the note took over the hotel. Â Within months, the Bank defaulted and was taken over by the Feds and the hotel was closed. BAM. Â No hotel. Weinzapfel at first attempted to find a developer to renovate the Executive Inn, but that failed. Â Then another developer was selected and again that failed. Â By the end of his term, he had signed a development agreement with the Kunkel Group to build a new hotel.
Upon entering the Mayor’s Office, Winnecke terminated this agreement with the Kunkel Group and sought new proposals.  He dramatically changed the scope of the project by adding apartments and commercial space.  Negotiations continued and a new developer was selected. Cost began spiraling out of control and the City Council set a firm lid on the financial size of the project.  This financial figure was based on expected revenues and later proved astutely correct after a new IU Medical School was selected to also be developed.  These financial amounts are still very very close.  Had the Council not set these maximum amounts, a new I U Medical School would not have been possible.
OUR QUESTION TO YOU.
Give us your opinion of the progress and development by the Mayor and City Council. Grade their performances.  Cite their success and failures.  Finally, give us your opinion on where we are headed and what roadblocks you expect.  It’s rather a forum today on this very complicated and long process in obtaining a Downtown Hotel.  Will we ultimately have what we want?  Do we need it?
Will be able to stay within the very close budget?  IS IT TRUE It’s your day to speak out?
Please take time and vote in today’s “Readers Poll”. Don’t miss reading today’s Feature articles because they are always an interesting read. New addition to the CCO is the Cause of Death reports generated by the Vanderburgh County Health Department.
Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
ANALYSIS: LAME DUCK ATTITUDE HAS BEGUN
Monday evening’s City Council meeting was quite an eye opener for any interested political observer.  It’s obvious the City Council has taken on a “Lame Duck” attitude towards their responsibilities.  Council members were lifeless and listened to Bob Warren ramble for about 30 minutes on how the newly down-sized Convention Hotel is the savior of future convention business.  He cited many undocumented numbers and facts supporting his assumptions.  We also found it interesting that Mr. Warren stated the people who wrote and developed the Hotel Study were wrong and that he was actually the one who was correct about future predictions of how successful the new Convention Hotel will be. Council members silently sat and listened during his presentation and were readily observed texting their friends on their phones and gazing into the distance.  Few questions were asked and he wasn’t challenged on his assertions and self-promotion.
Next, Council listened to a mind numbing presentation made by the Director of Jacobsville, being accompanied in by the Director of ECHO. Â They kept saying that Jacobsville is a wonderful place in which to live. Council continued to look around the room, and/or just continued texting on their phones. Â The Director of ECHO tried to sell the idea of how wonderful the painted Mural on a building behind McDonald’s is. Â She told Council the $40,000 plus abstract Mural was created for the purpose of welcoming visitors to the North Main and Jacobsville area. Â It was obvious that the City Council members could have cared less about what she was saying. Â We were surprised Council didn’t ask one question about the proposed $15 million dollar “Pork Barrel” plan to installed a “Bike Lane” Â and off street parking on North Main street. Then came the final kicker, the Director of Jacobsville Join In announced they are looking at providing WiFI for everyone living in the Jacobsville area. Instead of Council asking who was going to pay for this and how much will it cost the taxpayers, they stared blankly and kept on texting. Â Another example of the “Lame Duck” attitude.
Another presentation also caught our attention.  When the $84,000 Hotel Consultant that was hired by the City’s Redevelopment Commission (ERC) came before Council to give them an update on the Convention Hotel, only Friend, Brinkerhoff-Riley and O’Daniel asked her any of the detailed questions.  The others remained silent. Much to our surprise, she had very little information to share with them.  However, we did find out that so far the Hotel Consultant has been paid about $24,000 for her consulting work.  We are surprised that members of Council didn’t ask her why and what for since the taxpayers have little or nothing to show for her work.  Unfortunately, she knew very little about the Hotel project? Another example of a “Lame Duck” attitude.
Get ready for a well orchestrated campaign by the Winnecke Team to shut down any future questions about the details of the Downtown Convention Hotel and IU Medical School. Don’t expect any “in your face†detailed discussions concerning the 2016 Budget because it looks like it’s “Game Over.”  It’s obvious that City Council has raised the white flag of surrender to Mayor Winnecke and his handlers!  It look like the day of governmental “Checks and balances” are gone!
Please take time and vote in today’s “Readers Poll”. Don’t miss reading today’s Feature articles because they are always an interesting read. New addition to the CCO is the Cause of Death reports generated by the Vanderburgh County Health Department.
Copyright 2015 City County Observer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Rep. Sullivan’s Mineral Rights Legislation Signed Into Law
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STATEHOUSE – State Representative Holli Sullivan (R-Evansville) authored House Enrolled Act (HEA) 1617, which increases workforce development by clarifying Indiana’s mineral rights laws, was ceremoniously signed into law by Governor Mike Pence.
“As a professional, I understand the importance of having efficient avenues for conducting business and this legislation streamlines the process for developers when mineral rights become difficult to establish,†said Rep. Sullivan. “This clarification to Indiana’s code will help secure jobs as developers will be able to continue their work and not stop projects prematurely.â€
HEA 1617 clarifies Indiana law and allows a developer to harvest mineral rights on a plot of land where the owner is unknown or if initial action to find the owner is unsuccessful. Instead of stopping the process, developers can now go to court to create an established lease for mineral rights so that production can continue.
“We appreciate Representative Sullivan’s efforts as this bill resolved a long-term issue for this industry when mineral estates with unknown ownership are encountered,†said Bruce Stevens, President of the Indiana Coal Council. “Properties of this nature can cause significant operational difficulties for underground mining operations and the passage of this bill provides a process to remedy those situations allowing operations to continue.â€
By not requiring developers to find unknown mineral owners before continuing their work, mining minerals decreases complexities and becomes more effective. The legislation also allows for a lease and procedure to be created so that unknown mineral owners are correctly compensated if or when they come forward with proof as the mineral rights owner within seven years.
ST. MARY’S MEDICAL CENTER DESIGNATED LEVEL II PEDIATRIC TRAUMA CENTER IN ILLINOIS
St. Mary’s Medical Center is proud to announce we have been designated by the Illinois Department of Public Health as a Level II Pediatric Trauma Center for Region 5, which covers 20 southeast Illinois counties.
This designation enables critically injured patients without access to a trauma center in their area to get the critical care they need by transferring to St. Mary’s. It also allows us to serve as a resource for rural hospitals and Emergency Medical Systems (EMS) of Southern Illinois and adds to the Level II Adult Trauma Center designation received in 2012. St. Mary’s continues to be the most comprehensive trauma center for adults and critically injured children south of Indianapolis existing on one campus. St. Mary’s is part of Ascension, the nation’s largest Catholic and non-profit health system.
This achievement recognizes St. Mary’s Trauma Center’s dedication to providing optimal care for injured patients 24-hours-a-day, as well as our commitment to trauma prevention and the continuing education of medical staff on our trauma team.
Governor Pence to Hold Press Conference Regarding New Appointment
Will Also Offer Remarks at Woodrow Wilson Foundation’s 2015 Cohort Announcement
Indianapolis – Tomorrow, Governor Mike Pence will offer remarks at the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Teaching Fellows/Woodrow Wilson Foundation MBA Fellows in Education 2015 Cohort Announcement at the University of Indianapolis. Later in the afternoon, the Governor will hold a press conference regarding a new appointment. Details below.
Wednesday, July 29:
10:30 a.m. EDT – Governor Pence to offer remarks at the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Teaching Fellows/Woodrow Wilson Foundation MBA Fellows in Education 2015 Cohort Announcement
*Media are welcome to attend.
University of Indianapolis – Alumni House, 4029 Otterbein Ave., Indianapolis
2:00 p.m. EDT – Governor Pence to hold press conference regarding a new appointment
Statehouse – Room 101, 200 W. Washington Street, Indianapolis
AMERICANA ON A BUN
By Tom Purcell
It’s July, and we know what that means: time to celebrate the American hot dog.
July is National Hot Dog Month, you see, a glorious month when the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council tells us about the history of the dog and shares new recipes.
According to the council, sausages, such as hot dogs, have been around a long time. They were mentioned in Homer’s “Odyssey†as far back as the ninth century B.C.
Frankfurt, Germany, credited by many as the originator of hot dogs (frankfurters), celebrated the 500th birthday of the hot dog in 1987. (There is some dispute surrounding the original city and creator of the hot dog, however.)
The American hot dog “comes from a widespread common European sausage brought here by butchers of several nationalities,†the council says.
There are a couple of notable dates in the American hot dog’s evolution, however:
In 1871, the council says, “Charles Feltman, a German butcher, opened up the first Coney Island hot dog stand selling 3,684 dachshund sausages in a milk roll during his first year in business.†(A dachshund is a small German dog with short legs and a long body.)
Then in 1893, during the Columbian Exposition in Chicago, several visitors were introduced to dachshund sausages wrapped in a bun (though there is still some dispute over the origin of the bun). The little hot dogs were a hit.
That same year, the portability of the hot dog in a bun made the tasty item a natural for baseball games. Hot dogs and baseball games have been a happy couple ever since.
So how did dachshund sausages get the name “hot dog,†you ask?
“Some say the word was coined in 1901 at the New York Polo Grounds on a cold April day,†the council says. “Vendors were hawking hot dogs from portable hot water tanks shouting ‘They’re red hot! Get your dachshund sausages while they’re red hot!’â€
Well, as legend has it, a “New York Journal sports cartoonist, Tad Dorgan, observed the scene and hastily drew a cartoon of barking dachshund sausages nestled warmly in rolls. Not sure how to spell ‘dachshund’ he simply wrote ‘hot dog!’â€
In any event, the hot dog has since become an American staple, as in the famous 1974 advertisement: “As American as baseball, hot dogs, apple pie and Chevrolet.â€
According to the council, Americans each eat 60 hot dogs on average every year. We consume 155 million on Independence Day alone. From Memorial Day to Labor Day, we consume more than 7 billion.
Which brings up another American pastime: protesting the American hot dog.
About this time every year, people who hate hot-dog eating tell us that hot dogs are killing us — that they have too much fat and sold.
We are told by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals that hot dogs can include “glass, plastic, metal, bone, rodents, and other miscellaneous ingredients … .â€
That sounds like a Harry Potter recipe. It also sounds mighty tasty, so long as it’s ground up, stuffed into a sausage casing, grilled to perfection, smattered with mustard and washed down with an ice-cold beer.
We are told that animals used to make sausages are treated inhumanely. Though I agree we must do better in the way we treat farm animals, we should treat all God’s creatures with dignity and respect — then eat them.
In any event, it is summer. It’s time to grill up some iconic American dogs and wash them down with an ice-cold American beer that also originates from German immigrants.
If you can find one of those. In 2012, Budweiser was sold to a Brazilian/Belgian company.
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
 Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, July 27, 2015.
Joseph William Tarlton Battery resulting in bodily injury to a pregnant woman, Level 5 felony
Intimidation, Level 6 felony
Marcus Tyler Tinsley Battery against a public safety official, Level 6 felony
Resisting law enforcement, Class A misdemeanor
Trent Lamar Dixon Operating a motor vehicle after forfeiture of license for life, Level 5 felony
Rodney Wayne Williams Operating a vehicle as a habitual traffic violator, Level 6 felony
Craig Alan Douglas Battery on a person less than 14 years old, Level 5 felony