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Commentary: The electorate’s one constant: constriction

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By Dan Carpenter
TheStatehouseFile.com

What do you make of an election (I know you’re dying to read another of these) in which red states vote to raise the minimum wage, blue states elect hard-right GOP senators and governors, the most government-dependent states bite the hand that feeds them, a Congress with a 9 percent approval rating is re-elected virtually en masse, and $4 billion in campaign spending can’t get the majority of the electorate out of the house?

H.L. Mencken comes to mind. But if it’s true, as he famously said, that nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people, how do we account for the belief by an equally eminent journalist, Edward R. Murrow, that the common man is fundamentally wise and benevolent?

Or our greatest president, Mr. Lincoln? “Give the people the facts and they will save the nation.”

The facts were very much on the side of the Democrats and President Barack Obama, and very much not.

As several analysts have pointed out, those Dems who chose to deny the president thrice before the cock crowed could have cited a deficit far lower than Reagan’s, an unemployment rate down to prosperity level, a stock market and capital accumulation at record levels. Republican bread and butter issues, pilfered right away from them.

What the Dems could not get around, however, and there is great irony here, is that the economic comeback has not brought back good jobs and adequate growth in wages for the middle class, the largest contingent of Americans who bothered to vote in any appreciable numbers. As for the poor, well, nobody speaks to their needs because they don’t vote because nobody speaks to their needs because they don’t vote.

Republicans, who have done nothing but expedite the flow of wealth away from the middle class, were able to exploit dissatisfaction with a government that’s left paychecks stagnant for more than a decade and happens to have a black Democrat at the helm right now. Visceral animosity toward a man who wears CHANGE on his face, combined with lack of spare change and folding money in people’s pockets, made for a winning combination for the party that portrays itself as outsiders: selfish dissatisfaction, apathy and a devil. The success of religious bigots and science deniers in these elections speaks to that same fundamental fear of change on the part of a shrinking white majority. Never mind that those candidates are bankrolled by businessmen who do not share the voters’ superstitions.

It’s also been pointed out that the Republicans have no plan, and for the time being need no plan. Just saying no to programs for the masses – minimum wage (never mind those referenda), workplace safety, environmental protection, health care, nutrition – while making life ever-easier for campaign financiers works as long as “liberals” are perceived to be in charge of a lousy economy.

Is the pressure on the GOP now that it controls two branches of government? My belief is that popular expectations are so low that the usual 96 percent or so will go unpunished in 2016. And with Hillary Clinton, a rightist Democrat but still a highly polarizing figure running with a huge war chest against a GOP turkey, the White House should remain in her party’s hands – but the signature message sent by that “on-year” election may again reside in the turnout.

Ronald Reagan’s cheap pitch – “Are you better off than you were four years ago?” – may morph into “Do you expect to be better off four years from now?” The answer will come in ever-growing silence as the ever-smaller faction who has a stake in these opulent biennial games pretend they’re persuading the rest of us.

Dan Carpenter is a freelance writer, a contributor to The Indianapolis Business Journal and the author of “Indiana Out Loud.”

Indiana among 18 states that pay for gambling addiction treatment

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By Michael Ollove

Stateline.org

Michael Rosen, an admitted gambling addict, is well-acquainted with the danger of proximity to temptation. Twice during substantial periods of abstinence, he found himself – by chance, he insists – staying in hotels with casinos. And both times, he didn’t remain in his room. “I couldn’t resist,” he said.

Now 71 and “sober” since 2008, Rosen is a coordinator with the Maryland Center of Excellence on Problem Gambling. His job is to help others with a gambling problem get the help they need to prevent gambling from wreaking havoc with their lives. For many, that help may be the resolve to stay away from one of the five casinos that have sprouted in Maryland since voters approved casinos in 2008.

The center’s funding originated with the state legislation that authorized casinos, which is similar to legislation in many other states where gaming is allowed.

Of the 23 states that allow casino gambling, 18 have statutes that provide services for people with gambling problems, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. All five of the states that authorized casino gambling since 2004 (Florida, Kansas, Maryland, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania) passed legislation creating problem gambling programs at the same time. Some of the other states that previously allowed casino gambling, such as Nevada, New Jersey and New York, have since initiated their own addiction programs.

Stateline - gambling addiction chart

It is a paradox: On the one hand, states expose tens of thousands of their residents who are susceptible to gambling addiction to temptation—a temptation that is aggressively marketed to them. On the other hand, states are also offering to help those citizens who succumb.

Proximity Matters

Numerous studies have reported that between 3 percent and 6 percent of American adults are so-called problem gamblers. But investigators at the Research Institute on Addictions at the University of Buffalo found the rate doubles in populations living within 10 miles of a gaming establishment.

In response, many states have tied the expansion of gambling to programs to mitigate the effects of problem gambling. Maryland, for example, assesses casinos $425 for each of the slot machines they operate and $500 for each table game. The resulting revenue, between $4 million and $5 million a year, is split between the Center for Excellence, which runs a gambling addict hotline, trains counselors in gambling addiction and does public education (including to adolescents in the public schools), and the University of Maryland, where researchers will study the epidemiology of gambling addiction, a subject addressed far less than substance-related addictions.

The fund is small change compared to how much revenue  Maryland casinos bring in. According to the Maryland Lottery and Gaming Control Agency, in fiscal year 2014, the four casinos then operating in Maryland (a fifth, the Horseshoe, opened near downtown Baltimore in August) generated $833 million in gross revenues, which produced $328 million for the state’s education trust fund.

By comparison, Massachussetts, where the first casinos will open in 2017, requires that each casino (so far, the state has authorized three) pay $5 million into a public health trust fund for problem gambling. The fund will also receive 2 percent of annual casino revenues, which are anticipated at $300 million to $500 million.

Keith Wythe, executive director of the National Council on Problem Gambling, considers Maryland generous in its financial commitment to problem gambling services. That doesn’t mean he believes it’s enough. But doing something, he said, is better than doing nothing, which is what most states historically did when it came to problem gambling. The question, Whyte said, is whether states are meeting the need produced by the increase in gaming.

“I think Maryland will spend something like $2.5 million a year (on gambling addiction services), which is good compared to the massive $14,000 a year it used to spend,” Wythe said. “But it’s based on an arbitrary tax on machines, rather than an independent needs assessment.”

If a state hasn’t researched the impact of the new gaming houses in the communities where they are located, he said, it can’t know if its funding of gambling addiction programs is adequate.

Paying for Treatment

While Whyte praises Maryland for trying to build a statewide network of counselors, he notes that other states, such as California, Connecticut, Indiana, Missouri and Oregon, are providing funding for the treatment of individuals. In Connecticut, for example, the state offers free gambling addiction treatment at 16 locations. That is important, Whyte says, because most insurers don’t reimburse for it.

On the other end of the spectrum are states, such as Texas and Virginia, which Whyte said have “extensive legalized gambling and little or no formal spending on treatment.”

Lori Rugle, program director of the Maryland Center, agrees that Maryland needs to better understand the effect gambling has on individuals and communities. “We need from a public health perspective to be sure we are adequately funding the consequences of increased gambling,” she said. “We don’t have near adequate data on that.” More research is also needed to produce evidence-based treatment models, she said.

Rugle’s center – with four full-time employees — is not a treatment center but a resource for helping to train Maryland providers on gambling addiction and treatment. Its website initially featured a directory of counselors in the state, but that was taken down after the Capital News Service reported this summer that at least half of the listings contained errors, such as wrong phone numbers or names of counselors who didn’t treat gambling addiction.

The center does not push abstinence, but a “harm-reduction” approach. As Rugle explained, that means helping problem gamblers establish limits that enable them to gamble without jeopardizing their assets, their families and their jobs. For many, that means cutting off their access to money, often by setting up direct deposit to an account that only a spouse or someone else can use.  In that case, the problem gambler and spouse may agree on an allowance for gambling.

But Rugle said many gamblers find it impossible to gamble in moderation, largely because scientists have discovered that gambling addiction is a biologically based disorder. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of Mental Disorders, the text on mental illness most relied upon by the medical profession, health insurers and the pharmaceutical industry, reclassified pathological gambling alongside other addictive behaviors. Gambling is the only addiction listed in the DSM not related to a substance.

Voluntary Banishment

Maryland, like other states, also uses other tools for problem gamblers. Problem gamblers can have themselves barred from Maryland casinos, which may also bar them from affiliated casinos outside of Maryland. Violators can be arrested for trespass and lose their winnings. Once someone appears on the exclusion list, the casinos are also not supposed to entice them through any direct advertising.

According to the Maryland Lottery and Gaming Control Agency, the voluntary exclusion list includes 631 names. In September, there were 11 violations and nine in October.

The state also has a voluntary exclusion program for the lottery. But Steve Martino, head of the agency, said lottery violations are almost impossible to detect unless someone wins a big prize and tries to collect.

Laurie is a 50-year old gambling addict who asked that her real name not be used. She lives in Baltimore, not far from the gleaming new Horseshoe Casino that opened last summer down the street from the stadiums where the Orioles baseball team and Ravens football team play. A woman of modest means, she estimates she lost between $40,000 and $80,000 to gambling over six years before she quit two years ago and began attending Gamblers Anonymous meetings. Even before Horseshoe opened, she had herself banned from all the casinos in Maryland, West Virginia and Delaware. She had no choice.

“I knew that with (the Horseshoe) just 10 minutes or 15 minutes from my house, I would be a goner,” she said. “Every time I came up on I-95, my steering wheel would have turned in that direction.”

Emily Metheny is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Net Neutrality, Pet Neutrality, Whatever

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IS IT TRUE WEEKEND: COUNCILWOMAN STEPHANIE BRINKERHOFF-RILEY NORTH MAIN STREET PROJECT STANCE

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IS IT TRUE that the Jacobsville Area Community Corporation and Jacobsville Join In (ECHO Housing) have a funny way of showing their gratitude for the excellent work done by City Councilwoman Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley in the Jacobsville area?  …that last week when the Councilwoman urged the group of North Main citizens and business people to redesign the infrastructure project for North Main to garner support from the 15 of 35 businesses who oppose the plan, she was booed?  …that Brinkerhoff-Riley was accused by a select few mislead people of trying to derail a project that she clearly is trying to save by getting more businesses on board and lowering the cost of the projected $13 million plus bond?

IS IT TRUE that Councilwoman Brinkerhoff-Riley has in the last 12 months found nearly $300,000 in City funds for projects in the Jacobsville area?  …that the $10,000 used by the Jacobsville Area Community Corporation to put on this year’s Christmas Parade on North Main came from Brinkerhoff-Riley’s request to the City? ….that $20,000 in funds from HUD were secured by Brinkerhoff-Riley in a finance ordinance earlier this year for playground equipment in Jacobsville Park? …that $200,000 was secured by Brinkerhoff-Riley from the ERC to create the requisite 5% buy in by the City for ECHO’s tax credit application to the State of Indiana to build Garfield Commons? …that Brinkerhoff-Riley also motioned and secured the necessary votes to move $15,000 in CBGD funds to ECHO Housing for its partnership with Community One in requesting federal Neighborhood Improvement Plan funds for Jacobsville, which are funds available for repairs in owner occupied housing?

IS IT TRUE that the leadership of the Jacobsville Area Community Corporation and Jacobsville Join In (ECHO Housing) seemly have an attitude that one is only as good as what they have done for them lately?  …they on the verge of ultimately losing their most effective political advocate (Brinkerhoff-Riley) because the way they are insulting her?

IS IT TRUE that Brinkerhoff-Riley’s plea for a more practical and cost effective design is exactly what should be done? …that spending all of the Jacobsville TIF revenue on North Main Street is a waste of taxpayer funds when that street sits within a walking distance of a sea of blighted homes, broken sidewalks and sits atop one of the City’s combined sewer overflows that sends raw sewage into the Ohio River periodically?  …that the TIF funds would be better spent throughout the district removing blight, fixing sewers, and replacing broken sidewalks?

IS IT TRUE that Jacobsville Area Community Corporation and Jacobsville (ECHO Housing) with the financial help of Evansville DMD wasted $31,000 of taxpayers money on an unattractive exterior abstract mural on North Main Street behind McDonald’s? …we urge you to drive down town and view this “fleecing of Evansville taxpayers dollars”  project?  …that the Evansville DMD has also spent many hundred of thousands of taxpayer dollars in purchasing vacant property on North Main for additional off street parking?  …that DMD also spent over $500,000 to purchase the vacant CVS building on North Main Street to be use for new offices for the not-for-profit ECHO HOUSING in the near future?

IS IT TRUE we hope Evansville City Council agrees with Ms. Brinkerhoff-Riley’s more practical and cost effective design for North Main Street project?  …taxpayers of this community deserves a well thought out and conservative approach to spending our hard earned tax dollars when it comes to funding public projects?

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Report

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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 November 15, 2014

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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

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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

Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features Sergeant Anthony Emery of the Indiana State Police Human Resources Division. Sgt. Emery discusses the selection process and requirements for the upcoming Indiana State Police 75th Recruit Academy.

Download the program from the Network Indiana public website at www.networkindiana.com. Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/ and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.

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MYERS

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Contact Information:
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For full details, view this message on the web.

Pence wants HIP 2.0 approval now; delay could cause confusion

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Thousands of Hoosiers who are buying health coverage through a federal insurance exchange could face confusing changes if Indiana gets permission to offer its own program sometime next year.

Open enrollment starts Saturday in the federal marketplace. Last year, some 25,000 Indiana residents whose incomes are between 100 percent and 138 percent of the federal poverty level bought their coverage through the exchange – and qualified for a federal tax break that lowers their premiums.

But Gov. Mike Pence has for months been seeking permission to serve that same population by expanding the Healthy Indiana Plan, an alternative to Medicaid that uses federal dollars to subsidize care for lower- and middle-income individuals and families.

Federal officials have not yet acted on the request – although talks between the state and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have continued – despite urging from Indiana government, health care and social services leaders.

“The time has come for a decision from the federal government on this issue,” Pence said on Thursday.

Additional delays could create problems for the population of Hoosiers who would qualify for HIP 2.0, the name the governor has given to the proposed expansion.

Those people currently qualify for the tax credit available from the federal exchange. But if the U.S. Health and Human Services Administration approves HIP 2.0, they’ll lose the tax credit because they’ll qualify for the new state program. Those customers would then have to switch health insurance plans midstream or face paying back their tax credits.

A switch might not be necessary – or would probably affect fewer people – if federal officials approve the Indiana proposal soon. State officials say they could be ready to start enrolling Hoosiers in January. But there’s been no indication from Health and Human Services about when a decision could come and officials at the agency don’t comment on pending waivers.

State officials say a decision can’t come soon enough.

“We have worked with HHS in good faith to put forward a consumer-driven proposal that they have full legal authority to approve,” said Michael Gargano, deputy secretary at the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration, said in a statement.

If approved, HIP 2.0 will replace a traditional Medicaid expansion called for by the federal Affordable Care Act. All non-disabled adults ages 19-64 who earn between 23 percent and 138 percent of the federal poverty level would be eligible. In 2014, that means a maximum income of $16,105 annually for an individual and $32,913 for a family of four.

But federal officials have questions about the proposal, which calls for participants to pay some of the cost of the coverage or the care. It also uses medical savings accounts, which Pence says helps Hoosiers direct their own health care.

Pence said the negotiations are ongoing and substantive but need to come to a close soon.

“They’ve been taking place in good faith,” Pence said. “We are just determined to build on the successful experience that Hoosiers have had with the Healthy Indiana Plan.”

Lesley Weidenbener is executive editor of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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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 Thursday, November 12, 2014

Terry Powers II           Theft-Level 6 Felony
Battery-Class B Misdemeanor

Jvon Sydnor                 Robbery-Level 5 Felony

Sarah Brown                   Theft-Level 6 Felony

Christopher Payne        Residential Entry-Level 6 Felony
Criminal Mischief-Class B Misdemeanor

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.