he EVSC will once again be closed tomorrow, March 5, due to the snow-covered roads. Again, when the EVSC is closed, that means all schools and offices also are closed.
METS Rider Alert
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Due to weather conditions
METS will stop scheduled bus service today 3-4-15 at 6:00pm.
If weather conditions get worse
METS, for safety reasons, may need to close earlier.
METS will communicate changes through the Mayor’s Office,        Evansville Police Department, and local media.
Be Safe — Pleased plan accordingly.
Chief Deputy Strange appointed to the Board of Directors for the Indiana Sheriffs’ Association
Chief Deputy John Strange has been appointed to the Board of Directors for the Indiana Sheriffs’ Association. Chief Deputy Strange is only one of four chief deputy sheriffs from across the entire state that was appointed to the Board. Chief Deputy Strange will also serve on the Board’s committee for Communications and Technology. Sheriff Dave Wedding will serve on the Nominating Committee, Rules and Bylaws Committee, and the Legislative Advisory Committee. The Indiana Sheriffs’ Association was first established in 1930 to promote better communication and exchange information between the sheriffs and law enforcement personnel. The association provides training and educational programs for sheriffs and other law enforcement personnel. The association is a membership organization that is supported and funded entirely from membership dues, corporate sponsorships, advertising in The Indiana Sheriff magazine and donations.
Sheriff Dave Wedding stated, “Chief Strange’s knowledge and executive experience will be an asset to the Board as it is to our Office. Additionally, I am honored to have been asked to serve on these committees and I look forward to working with my fellow sheriffs to enhance the overall quality of service to the communities we have been elected to serve.â€
Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records
EPD Activity Report
CHERYL MUSGRAVE TO BE HONORED AS 2015 MOLE AWARD WINNER
The City County Observer is proud to announce Cheryl Musgrave as a 2015 Mole Award Winner for Good Public Policy. Musgrave currently sits on the Vanderburgh County Board of Zoning Appeals, is a Commissioner on the Evansville Redevelopment Commission, co-hosts the local television program Tri-State Voices, and was recently given credit by State Representative Gail Riecken for the idea of tying local permit approvals to a business demonstrating it is current on its real property and personal property taxes. Her ability to work with people of every party affiliation has kept her relevant to local government and a lauded decision maker for over twenty years. Her work for the community is done while she also is building her own business in Musgrave Consulting, LLC.
Musgrave’s family has long been involved in public service. After her grandfather’s B-17 Bomber crashed during a mission in World War 11 he was a prisoner of war in Nazi Germany. Her father continued the family’s military service as a Sergeant in the United States Air Force, serving on bases in Europe and Alaska during the height of the Cold War. Thereafter her family settled in Greencastle, Indiana, and both of her parents entered politics. Her father served multiple terms on the Putnam County Council and was elected by the body as President. Her mother was elected Township Trustee-Assessor in Putnam County, and as County Chairman of her party.
Cheryl married Robert Musgrave, an Evansville  attorney and the United States Bankruptcy Chapter 13 Trustee, in 1979, the year they both graduated from DePauw University.  They moved to Evansville in 1983, and have made their home in the city’s historic Downtown.
Musgrave was first elected as the Vanderburgh County Assessor in 1994. When she arrived, the office staff still used typewriters and liquid correction fluid to process their paperwork. She updated and streamlined her office, adopting a hands-on approach to the job of assessing property values. She earned her Level I and Level II assessing certifications from the State of Indiana. She offered her staff nationally recognized training courses as well. Thanks to her improvements, Vanderburgh County was often the first county in the state to complete its reassessment.
Musgrave’s understanding of technology resulted in the creation of a website that was the first of its kind. Citizens were given constant access to both property records and sales information. The site went online in 1997, and has significantly altered the real estate industry in Vanderburgh County. Musgrave also took the lead in developing the county’s Geographic Information System an online map used by both the private and public sectors.
Cheryl was asked to serve on the Legislative Committee of the Association of Indiana Counties and was Legislative Co-Chairman of the County Assessor Association. Many of her suggestions and innovations have been incorporated into Indiana law.
Musgrave was elected Vanderburgh County Commissioner for District Three in 2004, and a year later became President of the Board of Commissioners. She was praised for her efforts to help victims of the Evansville tornado of November 2005Â and also for accomplishments in economic development, improved government performance and road projects.
She was a member of the 1999-2000 Lugar Series Class. Â The Lugar Series selects approximately 20 women annually to participate in a year-long leadership training program.
In the summer of 2007, Governor Mitch Daniels appointed Cheryl as Commissioner of the Indiana Department of Local Government Finance in an effort to respond to widespread outrage and protests at local property tax assessment increases. Cheryl reigned in the growth of local governments’ budgets. She also led reforms in consolidating assessing at the county level. During her tenure, the State Legislature through a series of public referenda eliminated all but 13 of the state’s 1,016 township assessors.
Musgrave, a Republican, is a long term resident of the City of Evansville and is known for her no nonsense pragmatism when it comes to due diligence regarding the spending of public money. Her public policy background and accomplishments make her well deserving of a Mole Award. Our annual luncheon honoring Mole Award winners will again be in late October, and details about this year’s event will be released very soon.
AG Zoeller urges Supreme Court to reinstate Indiana’s synthetic drug ban
State files appeal to reverse Court of Appeals rulings on constitutionality of statute
INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller is urging the Indiana Supreme Court to overturn two Indiana Court of Appeals’ decisions that recently struck down a portion of the state’s ban on synthetic drugs.
In similar decisions in two cases on Jan. 27, 2015, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled a portion of Indiana’s synthetic drug ban was unconstitutional because its definition of what substances are illegal is too hard to find in some circumstances. The statute bans a list of more than 80 chemical compounds in addition to their look-alikes, as well as any substance declared a synthetic drug by the Board of Pharmacy. It is the latter set of drugs that are the subject of these appeals. The State filed its appeals of these rulings on Feb. 26.
“The statute is designed to be flexible and allow the Board of Pharmacy to update the banned synthetics list because the man-made nature of these drugs allows manufacturers to come up with endless new versions of these deadly products,†Zoeller said. “The result is continued access to these drugs, which creates in young people the tragic misconception that synthetics sold at the retail level are safer than the traditional drugs they are designed to mimic. We cannot afford to take a step backward and allow more youth to get their hands on these poisons.â€
The use of synthetic drugs has increased dramatically in recent years, with the first reports of synthetic drugs appearing in the U.S. around 2009. Poison control centers across the country received 2,668 calls about exposures to synthetic drugs in 2013 and 3,677 exposures in 2014. According to a 2014 Indiana University study, nearly 14 percent of high school seniors in Indiana say they have tried synthetic marijuana. Synthetic drugs come in many different forms and when ingested, the substances cause serious and harmful effects that can be deadly.
State Sen. Jim Merritt (R-Indianapolis) is the author of Indiana’s original synthetic drug ban, which first became law in 2012. In response to the recent Court of Appeals’ rulings, he has authored new legislation in the current session in attempt to make the law more clear should the rulings remain in place. Senate Bill 93 would explicitly state where in the Indiana Administrative Code and on the Internet the public can find the Pharmacy Board’s orders banning additional synthetic drugs.
“Thankfully, Indiana has some of the strongest laws in the country regarding dealing and possessing synthetic drugs, but these laws, and our safety, have been jeopardized by this ruling,†Merritt said. “As an attempt to clarify our state’s current law against synthetic drugs, I authored Senate Bill 93. As long as synthetic drugs are prominent in our communities, Hoosier lives are at risk.â€
SB 93 recently passed the Indiana Senate and now moves to the Indiana House of Representatives for further consideration.
Zoeller works with local and state partners to enforce Indiana’s synthetic drug laws, and has supported efforts to crack down on synthetic drug use at the state and national levels.
Recently, he joined with 42 other state attorneys general in urging oil companies to collaborate with their franchises to help eliminate synthetic drugs from retail locations that operate under their brand names, including gas stations and convenience stores.
Despite synthetic drug bans in all 50 states, in 2014, enforcement agencies confirmed more than 130 instances of branded gas stations having sold synthetic drugs.
A copy of the letter can be found here: http://bit.ly/16SlYfD. More information about Zoeller’s synthetic drug efforts can be found here: in.gov/attorneygeneral/2974.htm.
The Court of Appeals decision is not yet in effect, and would not take effect until after the Indiana Supreme Court rules. Although the Court of Appeals ruling did not declare the entire synthetic drug statute unconstitutional, it believed that the list of the newest synthetic drugs banned by the Indiana Board of Pharmacy should be easier to find. The Board already makes the list easily accessible on its website and in legal publications like the Indiana Register and Indiana Administrative Code.
When offenders appeal their convictions and sentences, the Attorney General’s Office represents the prosecution in the appeal, and also defends state statutes from legal challenges. The AG’s Office on Thursday filed nearly identical appeals of the Court of Appeals’ rulings in two cases: Christopher Tiplick v. State and Aadil Ashfaque v. State. The AG’s Office asks the Indiana Supreme Court – the state’s highest court – to reverse the Court of Appeals’ rulings invalidating part of the law and reinstate the entirety of the synthetic drugs statute. Here is an excerpt from the State’s brief in the Tiplick case:
“Due process is not offended by the notion that citizens must look at a few statutes and a handful of administrative rules, all of which are easily accessible to the public, in order to determine the legality of a desired course of conduct. The Court of Appeals’ contrary conclusion has far-reaching implications given the broad array of areas in which criminal and administrative law intersect . . . . Indiana’s system simply mimics decades old federal law addressing the problem that the legislative branch could not act quickly enough to keep pace with the constantly changing chemical structures of ‘designer drugs.’â€
Now that the State has filed its appeal, defense lawyers for the two defendants will have the opportunity to file a response. The Supreme Court will decide at a later date whether to “grant transfer†and take the case for further review, and whether to schedule oral arguments. The two appeals can take place even as the Legislature considers possible changes to the statute.
NOTE: The State’s briefs in its petitions to transfer, filed in the Indiana Supreme Court in the Tiplick and Ashfaque cases, are attached.
Streaming movie service now available through EVPL
Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library cardholders now have access to hundreds of thousands of movies, TV shows, music albums and audiobook titles instantly through a new service just launched by the Library, hoopla digital. Through hoopla, users can stream materials on their computer or temporarily download items to their mobile device, and it is free with a valid EVPL card.
Enjoy movies from Hollywood studios, niche and hard-to-find films, and albums and audiobooks from best-selling artists and authors. There is no waiting to borrow popular titles, and the automatic return feature eliminates late fee worries.
Customers can borrow up to ten hoopla items per month. Movies and television episodes are available for three days after check-out, music albums are available for seven days, and the loan period for audiobooks is 21 days.
Cardholders can visit www.evpl.org/hoopla or download the free hoopla digital app on their device to get started. Signing up is easy and requires an email address, library card number and PIN.
Governor Pence Statement Regarding Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Speech Before Joint Session of Congress
Urges Indiana Delegation to Attend the Speech
Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence today issued the following statement regarding Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s speech before a joint session of Congress.
“As Governor of Indiana, I offer a warm welcome to Prime Minister Netanyahu as he speaks before a joint session of Congress today and encourage every member of the Indiana delegation to attend the address in order to demonstrate the continued bipartisan support for the U.S.-Israel relationship. The unfortunate talk of a boycott of the Prime Minister’s speech only plays into the hands of Israel’s enemies when this historic moment gives us the opportunity to demonstrate the deep and bipartisan support of the American people for the State of Israel.â€