Home Blog Page 6186

YWCA Evansville Commemorates Equal Pay Day

0

Equal Pay Day Rally

FREE – Open to the public

WEAR RED!!

 April 14th 1:00 p.m.
YWCA Parlor, 118 Vine Street

The YWCA of Evansville and other professional and community organizations in Evansville will mobilize on Tuesday, April 14, 2015 to call attention to the persistent and sizable gap between men’s and women’s wages. According to the most recent statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau, the median earnings for U.S. women working full time, year‐round were just 78 percent of U.S. men’s median earnings—a gap of 22 percent. Progress to close the gap has stalled during the last decade and the gap is even larger for women of color and for moms. In Indiana, median earnings for men were $46,300 compared to women’s median earnings of $34,180 — an earnings ratio of just 74 percent.

This pay gap begins early in women’s careers. According to AAUW’s research report Graduating to a Pay Gap, women only one year out of college, working full time, were paid on average just 82 percent of what their male counterparts were paid. After controlling for hours worked, occupation, college major, employment sector, and other factors associated with pay, the gap shrinks but does not disappear. About 7 percent of the gap cannot be explained by these factors commonly understood to affect earnings. At every level of academic achievement, women’s median earnings are less than men’s earnings, and in some cases, the gender pay gap is larger at higher levels of education. While education helps everyone, African‐American and Latina women earn less than their white and Asian peers do, even when they have the same educational credentials.

April 14 symbolizes the day when women’s wages catch up to men’s wages from the previous year. Every year in April, thousands of women’s, civil rights, labor, and community organizations come together for a national day of action promoting fair pay known as Equal Pay Day.

“The bottom line for women and businesses is that pay discrimination happens and steps need to be taken to remedy it. This persistent wage gap not only impacts the economic security of women and their families today; it also directly affects women’s retirement security down the road.” said Erika Taylor, YWCA CEO.

Several speakers have been lined up for the YWCA rally on April 14th at 1:00 p.m. including Christy Gillenwater, CEO of the Chamber of Commerce of Southwest Indiana, Dr. Robert Dion, Chairman of the City of Evansville‐Vanderburgh County Human Relations Commission, and the reading of a special proclamation from Mayor Lloyd Winnecke.

“Women and their families can no longer afford to be shortchanged. The YWCA is committed to working to eliminate the wage gap,” said Erika Taylor, YWCA CEO. “We encourage businesses to pay women fairly, push for laws that will enforce current equal pay legislation and educate women on how to negotiate for higher salaries.”

The YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. The YWCA has been serving the Evansville area since 1911 and from its inception has provided housing and services for women and girls. The Evansville YWCA is a member of the YWCA of the U.S.A., the oldest and largest women’s membership movement in the country.

Over the years, YWCA programs have changed to meet the evolving needs of women and girls. In 1979, the YWCA opened the first domestic violence shelter in Evansville. Other current programs include a Transition Housing Program for women in recovery, Emergency Shelter for homeless women and children, an after‐school and mentoring program, called Live Y’ers, for at‐risk girls in grades three through 12, and a Summer Fun day camp for school‐ aged children. Special programs and events for the general public are also offered. Visit www.ywcaevansville.org for more information.

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

0

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, April 13, 2015

Kevin Carter            Operating a Motor Vehicle after Forfeiture of License for Life-Level 5 Felony

Auto Theft-Level 6 Felony

Victor Lopez             Conspiracy to Commit Dealing in Marijuana-Level 5 Felony

Ronald Gibson         Possession of a Narcotic Drug-Level 6 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

Jennifer Hagan             Theft-Level 6 Felony

Jubell Osuna                Conspiracy to Commit Dealing in Marijuana-Level 5 Felony

Teresa Quiroz                Conspiracy to Commit Dealing in Marijuana-Level 5 Felony

Tyrone Williams     Battery-Level 5 Felony

Strangulation-Level 6 Felony

Gerome Dulin                   Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .08 or More-Level 6 Felony

Michael Vessels     Attempted Burglary-Level 4 Felony

Public Intoxication-Class B Misdemeanor

Matthew Dunn             Battery with Moderate Bodily Injury-Level 6 Felony

Morgan Foster              Dealing in Methamphetamine-Level 3 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

Kevin Johnson            Battery by Means of a Deadly Weapon-Level 5 Felony

Domestic Battery-Level 6 Felony

Herbert Moore           Battery Against a Public Safety Official-Level 6 Felony

Intimidation-Level 6 Felony

Damareo Thruston        Dealing in Methamphetamine- Level 3 Felony

Operating a Motor Vehicle after Forfeiture of License for Life-Level 5 Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

Zoe Voorhees            Possession of Methamphetamine-Level 6 Felony

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at kphernetton@vanderburghgov.org

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are presumed to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law

Troopers Arrest Evansville Man for Auto Theft

0

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

Last night at approximately 11:00, Trooper Brent Gramig spotted a Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck stopped at a red light on         US 41 near Rusher Creek Road.  The driver of the pickup truck had stopped his vehicle well passed the white stop line. Gramig used his on board computer and discovered the vehicle had been reported stolen out of Evansville.  Gramig followed the vehicle south to US 41 and SR 57 where Trooper Lucas Zeien assisted with stopping the vehicle.  The driver, identified as Dwight Taylor, 57, of Evansville, was arrested without incident.  He was taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where he is currently being held without bond.

 

Arrested and Charge:

  • Dwight Taylor, 57, Evansville, IN
  1. Auto Theft,  Level 6 Felony

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

0

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

http://www.vanderburghsheriff.com/recent-booking-records.aspx

EPD Activity Report

0

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

EPD Activity Report

UE Concrete Canoe Swamp Day Set for Tuesday, April 14

0

 

The University of Evansville student concrete canoe team will test their canoe on Tuesday, April 14, to see if it will float. On Swamp Day, as the students call it, the canoe will be placed in a tank filled with water in front of the Koch Center for Engineering and Science on UE’s campus. The test is scheduled from 5:00-6:30 p.m., and the public is invited to come and watch the proceedings.

The swamp test is part of the UE team’s preparation for the concrete canoe portion of the American Society of Civil Engineering (ASCE) Great Lakes Conference.

“It’s a safety test that all canoes have to pass in order to be eligible to participate in the race portion of the competition. In fact, it’s a test that even regular canoes have to pass in order to be deemed safe for water sports,” explains Mark Valenzuela, UE associate professor of engineering, who is a faculty advisor for the team.

The ASCE Great Lakes Conference will be hosted by Notre Dame on Thursday, April 16. The conference’s concrete canoe races are Friday, April 17, and formal oral presentations about the project in front of civil engineering professionals is Saturday, April 18.

 

Bucshon, Whitfield, Kennedy, and Pallone Introduce Legislation to Combat Prescription Drug Abuse

0

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Representatives Larry Bucshon, M.D. (R-IN-08), Ed Whitfield (R-KY-01), Joe Kennedy, III (D-MA-04), and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ-06) introduced bipartisan legislation to reauthorize the National All Schedules Prescription Electronic Reporting Act, or NASPER Act.  NASPER provides grant funding to States to foster the use of prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) in the fight against the growing prescription drug abuse epidemic.

 

Representative Ed Whitfield:

 

“Prescription drug abuse continues to takes lives, ruin families, and drain on our health care system and its resources. Tragically, drug overdose death rates in the United States have increased five-fold since 1980, and drug overdose now kills more Americans than automobile accidents. The NASPER program will provide States with the necessary investments to build upon the success PDMPs have had in reducing prescription drug abuse through streamlined access to timely, accurate, and secure patient prescription history. This will allow physicians to properly treat their patients while cracking down on the interstate trafficking of prescription medications and patients who are simply doctor shopping.”

 

Representative Joe Kennedy, III:

 

“There are few people in this country that have been spared the heartbreak of watching a loved one, neighbor or friend fall victim to opiate addiction. It’s an epidemic striking red states and blue states, small towns and big cities, neighborhoods rich and poor. The bipartisan coalition behind this bill today is a testament not just to the breadth and depth of the problem but to the commitment in Congress to address it.  NASPER works to strengthen one important piece of the solution – prescription monitoring. It will empower states and advocates on the front lines of this crisis to build successful PDMPs that can communicate across state lines and help identify at-risk behavior – a key first step in fending off addiction before it starts.”

 

Representative Larry Bucshon, M.D.:

 

“Prescription drug addiction has become an epidemic affecting too many of our families in Indiana. As a physician, I’ve seen firsthand how addiction can turn lives upside down. That’s why I’m proud to join a bipartisan effort to address this problem and bring relief to our communities. Reauthorizing NASPER will give states and local communities the resources necessary to monitor prescription drug use and to make sure prescription drugs are not crossing state lines. By not interfering with physicians’ ability to care for their patients, this bill promotes good medical practices and helps stop addiction in its tracks.”

 

Representative Frank Pallone, Jr.:

 

“The misuse of prescription drugs has escalated at an alarming rate over the last two decades with corresponding increases in both overdose deaths and addiction.  Many people, especially teenagers, believe prescription drugs are safer than illegal drugs because they are manufactured and prescribed by doctors.  However, with prescription drugs accounting for over 20,000 deaths in the United States each year, that is a potentially lethal misconception.  I am pleased to re-introduce the bipartisan NASPER Act in order to help ensure that prescription drugs are used only for intended purposes with legitimate prescriptions.”

 

Background:

 

NASPER originally became law August 11, 2005 and is administered by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) within the Department of Health and Human Services. It is designed to assist states in combating prescription drug abuse of controlled substances through prescription drug monitoring programs, or PDMPs.

 

The reauthorization of NASPER would allow SAMHSA to provide grants to states for the establishment, implementation, and improvement of PDMPs offering timely access to accurate prescription information. This is critical to a provider’s ability to screen and treat patients at risk for addiction. Recognizing the importance of data sharing between state PDMPs, The NASPER program also promotes greater information sharing by requiring grantees to facilitate PDMP interoperability with at least one bordering state, while simultaneously protecting against unauthorized access to patient records. The NASPER reauthorization language would also encourage States to explore ways to incorporate access to their PDMPs into provider workflow systems such as electronic health records and e-prescribing. Making prescriber access to PDMPs faster and more efficient will facilitate great usage of these effective warning systems.

 

 

IS IT TRUE APRIL 14, 2015

78

IS IT TRUE City Councilwoman Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley stole the show last night in her questioning of City Controller Russ Lloyd, Jr? …Brinkerhoff-Riley questioned the City’s invoice to the Utility for 2015 payments in the amount of approximately $2.5 million in late December to keep the City’s general fund from being negative at the end of year? …this $2.5 million was revenue that should have been paid to the City in 2015 but was necessary to pay bills in 2014? …the City now will be short that amount for its 2015 budget? …for the City to end on a positive note on December 31, 2014, it required these 2015 funds plus sitting on over $5 million in 2014 bills?

IS IT TRUE Russ Lloyd, Jr agreed with City Council and acknowledged that a spending plan was necessary for 2015 in light of revenue not matching expenditures? …rather than offer suggestions for lowering spending, the Controller listed off City fees, such as golf, burials, parks and recreation and bus fare, that could be raised to generate more revenue? …City Councilwoman Connie Robinson lamented the fact that the poor and working class residents of Evansville would be hardest hit by fee increases?

IS IT TRUE that City Controller Russ Lloyd, Jr is the king of cash advancements?  …in October of 2014 Russ approach the Vanderburgh County Treasurer, Ms. Susan Kirk and asking for and receiving advancement $2.8 million which was needed to shear up deficiencies in the City’s General Fund?… that this the fund pays our police, firefighters and the day to day city expenses?  …even after the advances the City Controller General Fund balance as of October 31, 2014 was upside down by $16.7 million dollars?

IS IT TRUE that on December 29th, 2014,  City Controller Lloyd showed up at the Water Utility Department requesting that $2.5 million dollars be transferred into the General Fund of the City?  …if that transfer had not occurred the General Fund balance as of December 31, 2014 would have been NEGATIVE by $2.2 million dollars?

IS IT TRUE after the Evansville City Council voted 9-0 in favor of a resolution asking for the repeal of RFRA, State Representative Gail Riecken said, “I am very pleased the Evansville City Council has followed my lead on standing up against RFRA and showing that Evansville is a welcoming and inclusive city”?  …she also stated “that this is a step in the right direction but we can’t stop here, we need to push for a local law that protects LGBT citizens from discrimination”?

PLEASE TAKE TIME TO READ OUR READERS POLL QUESTION AND CAST YOUR VOTE ACCORDINGLY.

COA agrees lawsuit may continue in Indiana under Journey’s Account Statute

0

Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

Although a plaintiff in a lawsuit stemming from a car accident in Indiana used bad judgment when he filed the suit in federal court in Illinois, where he lives, there was no error by a Tippecanoe County court to allow the lawsuit to later proceed when filed there based on the Journey’s Account Statute, ruled the Court of Appeals.

Jerome Woroszylo sued Lafayette, Indiana, resident Israel Munoz for damages in November 2013 in federal court in Illinois after the two were involved in a car accident in Indiana on Nov. 29, 2011. Munoz filed a motion to dismiss, which the federal court granted in April 2014, based on lack of personal jurisdiction over Munoz. The case was dismissed instead of transferred to federal court in Indiana, and Woroszylo then filed a complaint two weeks later in Tippecanoe County against Munoz.

Munoz sought to also dismiss the state court action because it wasn’t filed under the two-year statute of limitations applicable to personal injury claims. The trial court denied the motion based on the Journey’s Account Statute.

On interlocutory appeal in Israel Munoz v. Jerome Woroszylo, 79A02-1409-CT-679, Munoz argued the circumstances of the dismissal of the complaint in Woroszylo’s action in federal court amounted to negligence under the terms of the Journey’s Account Statute, so that statute did not operate to save his claim from dismissal in Indiana.

When dismissing the case, the Illinois judge called Woroszylo’s decision to file in Illinois – where he and his treating physicians reside – an “elementary mistake and ill-advised strategy.” But there’s no evidence Woroszylo filed the lawsuit in Illinois with intent to abuse judicial process or create undue delay, Judge L. Mark Bailey wrote.

“Woroszylo’s decision to file suit in the Northern District of Indiana was bad judgment. Bad judgment is not, however, bad faith,” he wrote. “Indeed, we note that while the federal court had discretionary authority to decline Woroszylo’s request that his case be transferred into the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, if Woroszylo had brought suit in an improper venue in an Indiana state court, transfer to an Indiana court with proper venue would have been mandatory under Indiana’s venue rules. This reflects Indiana courts’ general preference for deciding cases on their merits and for avoiding the construction of procedural obstacles to the presentation of such cases. Indeed, the very same policy is served by the Journey’s Account Statute.”

EVSC Virtual Academy to Host Informational Session

0

 

Students in kindergarten through grade 12 and their families interested in learning more about virtual learning are invited to attend the EVSC Virtual Academy’s informational meeting Tuesday, April 21, at 6 p.m. at the Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center, located at 1901 Lynch Rd. in Evansville.

At the meeting, students and families will learn more about the EVSC Virtual Academy, review the content of the courses offered, receive instruction expectations, ask questions and more.

The EVSC Virtual Academy offers full- and part-time online instruction for students in grades 9 – 12 and full-time enrollment for students in kindergarten through eighth grade. The online curriculum is taught and facilitated by licensed EVSC teachers. The high school curriculum includes required and elective courses and numerous Advanced Placement courses. Students enrolled in online courses have regular contact with teachers to ensure they are progressing successfully.

For more information, individuals can contact Janet Leistner, director of EVSC Virtual Academy, at 435-0939 or visit www.evscschools.com/evscva.