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LUNCH WITH GOVERNOR HOLCOMB TODAY AT FORD CENTER

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2024 Lunch with the Governor

Thursday, June 20, 2024 (11:30 AM – 1:00 PM) (CDT

The Evansville Regional Economic Partnership (E-REP) is excited to welcome the Governor of Indiana, Eric Holcomb, to the regional business community for its annual “Lunch with the Governor” signature event. 

Join the region’s business and community leaders in a discussion with Governor Holcomb as he outlines his 2024 ideas, plans, projects, and priorities for Hoosiers; and how to make Indiana the best place to live, work, study, play and stay.

*For more information regarding sponsorship opportunities for this historically sold-out event, please contact Jen Kerns at jkerns@evvregion.com

 

EDITORIAL: IT’S TIME FOR A CHANGE OF LEADERSHIP IN THE LOCAL GOP

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IT’S TIME FOR A CHANGE OF THE LEADERSHIP IN THE LOCAL GOP

by City-County Observer Staff

JUNE 20, 2024

On the surface, it might look like a clash of egos, but to understand what is happening in the once-powerful GOP, of Vanderburgh County we need to look at the root causes.
There is friction in the Indiana State and Local Republican Party with warring factions of MAGA Republicans and Rinos. In Indiana, conservatives flexed their political partisan muscles two years ago by electing new convention delegates and replacing Holi Sullivan with Diego Moralis as Secretary of State.
At the end of 2023, Indiana GOP conservatives recruited like-minded people to run for precinct Committeemen and convention delegates. Record numbers of people filed to run for those party positions throughout the state, causing alarm among establishment Republican leaders. 
The surge in filings was seen as a threat to the status quo, and County GOP Chairs scoured the list of candidates to use the state’s two primary laws to disqualify people who filed. At the same time, many party bosses were signing waivers for friends who did not vote Republican in their last two primaries.
Locally, one such waiver issued by Vanderburgh County Chairperson Mike Duckworth, allowed Amy Canterbury to run for County Commissioner and go on to defeat long-term incumbent County Commissioner Cheryl Musgrave in the Republican primary.
It is no secret that Duckworth has been unhappy with Musgrave since 2018 when Duckworth lost to Democrat Jeff Hartfield in his run for a seat on the Vanderburgh County Commission.
Right after Commissioner Musgrave announced her plans to run for Mayor Winneeke’s seat it immediately caused his inner circle to recruit a Republican to run against County Commissioner Musgrave.
 It was widely known that members of the Mayor’s inner circle approached numerous people to run for Mayor of Evansville against Vanderburgh County Commissioner Musgrave. After many people declined to run against Musgrave, after an exhausting search Mayor Winnecke, his wife Carol, and members of his political inner circle selected Natalie Rascher to run against Musgrave for Mayor.
Duckworth did not support Musgrave in the Republican Mayoral primary, instead, he supported the candidate recruited by then-Mayor Lloyd Winnecke. and his wife Carol.
After the Mayoral election, one of the people who had his filing for PC and delegate status challenged by Chairman Duckworth was Libertarian Mayoral candidate Michael Daugherty. In the hearing that heard over a dozen challenges, Duckworth prevailed in winning all but Michael Dauhrty’s complaint.
After the Election Board meeting, Duckworth abruptly removed the well-respected Republican lawyer and President of the Election Board Joe Harrison who rightly sided with Daugherty at the election board hearing.
Daugherty publicly joined County Commissioner Musgrave in calling for Duckworth’s resignation and stated that he would run for chair. Ken Colbert and Cheryl Batteiger-Smith also criticized Duckworth and called for his resignation.
After the election and vote certification by the Vanderburgh County election board, everyone in the local GOP breathed a sigh of relief that they were duly elected. But Duckworth had one more trick up his sleeve. He filed complaints to the 8th Congressional District Republican Committee to remove Daugherty, Colbert, and Batteiger-Smith from their elected positions as PCs. The hearings resulted in an unprecedented ban on all three delegates from the party until 2030.
The charges against Daugherty focused on his run for mayor as a libertarian. The witness against Daugherty was none other than Natalie Rascher, the former hand-picked mayoral candidate. Rascher told the hearing committee members that Michael Daugherty was the reason she was defeated for Mayor..
It’s a well-known fact that outgoing Mayor Winnecke hurt Rascher’s election chances because he controlled Ms. Rashner’s campaign message which in turn caused her problems during the campaign. The voters wanted to hear what Natalie stood for and not Winnecke.  We like Natalie.  She’s smart, friendly and hardworking.  We hope the next time she runs for public office she and Zach will run her campaign.
We wonder how the local GOP leadership could believe that Mr. Daugherty was the reason Natalie Rashner lost the Mayoral election. The Republicans lost all but one City Council seat in the last city election.  Rascher had a huge war chest of over $1 million compared to the $40,000 spent by the Daugherty campaign.  Oh, Rascher also had the full support of a mayor who has served for 12 years and the full backing of the Vanderburgh County GOP.
Could the real reason for the losses by the local Republican Party in the city elections be because the voters were not excited by the candidates?  Could the loss be because Republicans failed to get the voters to the polls?   Should the GOP leadership have spent less time politicking at the Country Club and more time campaigning with the common folks in city neighborhoods?  Could Rascher have received bad advice from her main backers?
The bottom line is that it would have been better if the local GOP had invested in local resources and built a team to run in the city elections.
In less than a year, Mike Duckworth has led his party to a humiliating loss in the city elections, alienated new volunteers, dished out outrageous punishments to members of his party,
We hope that the local Republican Party can survive until March 2025 when Duckworth’s term ends. or maybe Mr. Duckworth will man up and decide to start putting out the olive branch of peace and start rebuilding the party
FOOTNOTE:  “The City-County Observer does not promote or condone discrimination of any kind including preference based on race, gender identity, or political preference”.

 

Sen. Braun introduces bills highlighting priorities for the Older American Act

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WASHINGTON—Senator Braun, Ranking Member of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, introduced four bills highlighting his priorities for the Older Americans Act (OAA) reauthorization. These bills address long-term care programs, nutrition programs, national resource centers, and disease prevention and wellness programs for seniors. The OAA was last reauthorized in 2020 and will expire on September 30, 2024.

“Every American deserves to live their golden years with dignity and respect. The priorities I have introduced for the Older Americans Act reauthorization ensure essential services are delivered efficiently for older Americans so they can continue to lead healthy, productive, and meaningful lives independently or in care homes.” — Senator Braun

Senator Braun introduced the following bills:

  1. The Long-Term Care Transparency Act with Senator Bob Casey, Chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, aims to increase transparency by requiring the Administration on Aging to collect and report findings by States’ Long-Term Care (LTC) Ombudsman programs to Congress. States’ LTC Ombudsman programs resolve problems related to the health, safety, welfare, and rights of people living in nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and other residential care settings.

“Long-term care ombudsmen provide an essential service, ensuring that nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and other residential care communities are providing quality care for older adults and people with disabilities. Congress has an obligation to empower these workers and provide them with the resources they need to keep our seniors safe. This new bipartisan bill will give Congress more information about the needs of long-term care ombudsmen around the Nation, allowing us to assess their needs and help them do their jobs.”—Senator Bob Casey (D-PA)

 

Endorsements: National Association of State Ombudsman Programs, Elder Justice Coalition, ADvancing States, and National Council on Aging

 

  1. The Innovative Nutrition for Seniors Act with Senator Gary Peters would increase local flexibility to improve the reach of nutrition services under OAA.

 

Endorsements: National Association of Nutrition and Aging Services Programs, Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, and National Council of Aging

  1. The Evidence-Informed Health Promotion Act would allow health and wellness programs to be evidence-informed to expand the reach of services, particularly for seniors living in rural areas.

Endorsements: USAging, ADvancing States, and National Council of Aging

  1. The Senior Center Transparency Act aims to increase transparency and give policymakers more information on how resource centers are serving older Americans.

DCS announces changes in financial assistance programs

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INDIANAPOLIS (June 19, 2024) – Beginning July 1, families who provide a home through adoption or eligible guardianships to a child in Indiana’s foster care system will receive financial supports equal to 100 percent of the amount the child received while in foster care.

The Indiana Department of Child Services (DCS) provides these subsidies through its Indiana Adoption Assistance Program (AAP) and Guardianship Assistance Program (GAP). Financial supports help ensure caretakers who adopt or take guardianship of children in DCS care are best positioned to meet the needs of those children. Finding the right, safe and permanent home in a timely manner is a top priority for DCS, and these supports play vital roles in accomplishing that.

Currently, families receive at least 50 percent of the amount the child was entitled to while in foster care and may negotiate higher amounts based on the individual circumstances of the child and family. With the change to 100 percent, caretakers across the state will be equipped more than ever to provide for the needs of Hoosier children. This step will also eliminate the need for most financial negotiations and help remove a barrier that can delay permanency for children.

DCS Director Eric Miller, MPA, MBA, noted that nearly 2,000 Indiana children find permanent homes through adoption and more than 1,000 others find permanency through guardianship each year.

“We often hear from families who are interested in adoption or guardianship, but they worry they might not be able to afford the additional costs that are necessary to meet a child’s needs,” Miller said. “By making assistance more readily available, we are creating more opportunities for Hoosier children to find their forever home and better supporting the families who make that happen.”

This change is the latest move by DCS to remove barriers to permanency for Indiana children. In July 2023, with approval from the Indiana General Assembly, DCS implemented a kinship stipend program to support unlicensed kinship caregivers. These individuals can be a relative, godparent, stepparent or another person with whom the child has a close personal connection. More than half of all Indiana children in foster care are currently placed in kinship care. As of the end of May, DCS has issued more than $10.1 million in stipends, benefiting more than 4,000 children in unlicensed kinship placements.

Information on the Indiana Adoption Assistance Program can be found here. Details about the Guardianship Assistance Program are available here. To learn more about Indiana’s adoption program, visit https://www.indianaadoptionprogram.org/

HOW DOES CONSIGNMENT HELPS THE ECONOMY?

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HOW DOES CONSIGNMENT HELP OUR ECONOMY?

by HOPE DRAKE-CEO OF MOLLY’S UPSCALE BOUTIQUE

june 28, 2024

Have you ever looked in your, or a family member’s, closet, garage, or storage area and thought you might run screaming into the street if you must sort, store, or move those items again? You are not alone. According to a Harvard Business Review published in December 2023, in 2021 the research and consulting firm Global Data estimated that each U.S. household holds on to a trove of potentially reusable goods worth $4,517, on average—and a similar pattern holds internationally. How much furniture, computers, cables, books, clothing items, and dare I mention my flaw, purses do you have hidden away? Why do we hold on to these items? Sometimes to the point where all value is lost. For some, it is an emotional attachment, or the mountain is too overwhelming to face. Then, of course, there are the various monetary aspects. We are capitalists. Items are tangible representations of our memories, emotions, and status. Whatever your reason, there is a solution for you and chances are you drive right past it every day!

Consignment. The process of allowing a connected reputable dealer to resale your goods, based on fair market value for a split of the proceeds. Hang on! Don’t turn the page yet! Consignment and thrifting do not hold the stigma they did for your grandparents. It is no longer just for those struggling to get by, rummaging through smelly bins and racks in sketchy rundown buildings. Consignment stores today are as varied as any other form of retail establishment. From local brick-and-mortar to entirely we-based and extremely clear-organized boutiques that only take certain items to those that take items from furniture to children’s clothing. Each offers different services, a level of attention to your goods, and varying levels of turnaround, so make certain to ask questions to find the best one for you. You are probably saying, “Great! But how does this lower the cost of my eggs and milk?” It is all about the resources. 

If you shop for consignment or utilize it to sell your items, you give them a second life. You are doing so much more than collecting some cash you are helping someone on a restricted budget look nice, get a better job, or just feel good about themselves. Consignments help to protect the environment, democratize luxury goods, and most importantly bring down inflation. 

We are all being strangled by the increased prices of everything from a McDonald’s Big Mac to eggs, gas, and interest rates. As a shopper, you are utilizing one of the only retail spaces that are minimally impacted by the inflationary prices you see currently from the gas pump to the grocery. For example, a Michael Kors purse that is $398 at Dillard’s will typically enter the resale market for %65% to 50 of that cost as a new with tag item. When you buy better quality and longer-lasting items at a reduced cost you stop the influx of questionably sourced, cheaply made, possibly hazardous, items. This fast fashion takes up space in landfills, never breaking down, possibly releasing toxic gases as it is exposed, ultimately causing more environmental harm and requiring more land to be turned into landfills. Ultimately, you are reducing manufacturing pressure and the demand for new production slows, reducing resource and energy demand from already over-stretched sources. Shopping upscale consignments helps to control unwanted foreign influence and pressure on companies that have traditionally shared a symbiotic relationship with the United States. When pre-loved items are given a second life there is a whole ecosphere around you affected.

Before you think I am just some dealer trying to make a fast buck or conspiracy theorist and run away, look at the following. What do Coach, Levi, Dicks, Apple, Nike, and Gucci have in common?  The reclaiming, refurbishing, and resale of their goods are not as new but rather as preloved.  In 2021 a new global report by a market research firm GlobalData showed that the secondhand clothing market is growing 11 times faster than traditional retail. True, corporations are capitalist by nature, but they became the behemoths of their arenas because they saw the future and its needs and then adapted to meet them. Right now, that direction is in protecting resources that represent their brands’ expected quality while preserving their cost basis. These companies along with many others are doing this via the reclaiming, repurposing, and resale of their once discarded goods to a wider variety of socio-economic levels with an eye on the protection and renewal of our increasingly more precarious resources. 

I could talk about the memories and other emotions we connect to items. Maybe another day I will share some of the stories I have heard as items have come into my shop.  I could talk to you about how to be a good person you should do x, y, or z. However, I believe that is a “you” decision. Instead, in an age where we have deep fake news, and misguided reporting I choose to give you facts, insight, and awareness knowing that at the end of the day, every one of you realizes that we are on this boat of life together and we only get one chance to try and keep it afloat. It is simple, reduce, recycle, reuse. Consign, helps your budget, the environment, and the economy. Then, keep making the world great again. 

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

 

FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

HOT JOBS

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Otters drop back and forth series opener

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Evansville Otters let one slip away against the Schaumburg Boomers, dropping the series opener at Bosse Field on Tuesday night 9-8.

The Otters (13-21) had the lead going into the top of the eighth inning, but the bullpen allowed the Boomers (21-12) to plate the go-ahead run and steal a win to begin Evansville’s nine-game home stand.

Schaumburg jumped on the board first with three runs in the third inning. The Otters answered with a pair in the bottom of the frame.

David Mendham and Randy Bednar both walked with one out. Later, Mendham scored on a balk and Pavin Parks drove in the other run with an RBI base hit to make it a 3-2 game.

The Boomers added another in the fourth before Mason White hit his second home run of the season over the right-center wall in the home half of the inning, once again bringing Evansville within one.

In the fifth, Evansville took their first lead of the game. Parks scored on a throwing error by the Boomers shortstop to get the ball rolling. Mike Peabody then singled to center field, driving in another pair of runs to take the lead 6-4. The final run came with a White single to score the fourth run of the inning.

In the eighth inning, the Boomers scored four runs to take an 8-7 lead.

Evansville gave up another unearned run in the ninth inning. Despite the attempted comeback, getting one back in the final inning, Evansville’s comeback ended a run short.

Jon Beymer (0-2) received the loss. Christian Lopez (3-2) pitched a one-two-three in the seventh and earned the win.

Parks led the offense with three hits. White and Peabody notched a pair of RBI each.

The Otters will look to shake the loss off tomorrow against the Boomers. The first pitch is scheduled for 6:35 p.m. CT. Coverage is available on the Otters Digital Network and FloBaseball.