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
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
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
The community is invited to a celebration at St. Mary’s Warrick Hospital, Saturday, November 1st from 11a.m to 1p.m.
For several years, the people of Warrick County have depended on St. Mary’s Warrick Emergency Medical Service to offer assistance and ambulance transport during medical emergencies. A unanimous vote from the Warrick County Commissioners guarantees that they can continue to do so for the foreseeable future. A great big “Thank You!†goes out to the many people who offered their support to St. Mary’s Warrick EMS before the vote took place. We want to celebrate this continued service and thank all those in the community for their support.
St. Mary’s Warrick Hospital
1116 Millis Avenue, Boonville, Indiana.
11:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Warrick EMS, ALS ambulances, area fire apparatus, Police K9 demonstrations, and LifeFlight helicopter will be on site.
Kids can dress up as their favorite first responder and trick-or-treat
Face painting
Cookout provided by Dewig Meats
Dear Editor,
Out of 1,008 townships in Indiana, the Indiana Township Association recognizes one township trustee a year for outstanding service. This year, the distinguished Harold Gene Stofer Trustee of the Year award was given to Knight Township Trustee Kathryn Martin.
Mrs. Martin inherited a $152,597 overdrawn cash balance from Mrs. Linda Durham’s tenure as Knight Township Trustee, according to the Indiana State Board of Accounts audit No. B37346. Durham pled guilty to felony charges of theft after she misappropriated $74,544 of Knight Township money.
Within Mrs. Martin’s first eight months in office, the overdrawn cash balance was reduced by $138,363 (The Indiana State Board of Accounts audit No. B44073). By December 31, 2013, the entire overdrawn cash balance was completely eliminated. Today, Knight Township continues to be financially solvent.
According to the Indiana Township Association, it named Mrs. Martin the 2014 Trustee of the Year because, “She demonstrated determination to serve the public despite the township’s financial issues. Trustee Martin was able to turn around a struggling township that was operating in the red, was able to pay delinquent bills, and earned the respect of the community.â€
Knight Township residents deserve to have their township remain financially sound. To ensure this, Knight Township residents should vote to re-elect Knight Township Trustee Kathryn Martin.
Ron Rhodes
Marcia Birge Rhodes
Posted by the CCO without opinion, bias or editing
*NOTE:
When Mrs. Martin received the award, the Indiana Township Association released the Indiana State Board of Accounts audit information in their press release announcing her as the Trustee of the Year recipient. That information is below for your review.
Also, if you choose to publish our letter, please use our names only. We have provided you with our phone numbers for you to verify who we are only. Thank you.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
KNIGHT TOWNSHIP 2014 FINANCIAL AUDIT RESULTS/ANALYIS
2008 – 2010 Audit Period: Jan. 1, 2008 – Mar. 31, 2010 (Audit No. B37346: Durham Tenure)
2010 – 2014 Audit Period: Apr. 1, 2010 – Dec. 31, 2013 (Martin Tenure)
1. Current Trustee’s Commencement of Office: -$152,597 Overdrawn Cash Balance. At the conclusion of the office of the former Trustee Linda Durham (“Former Trusteeâ€), the Township Assistance account had an overdrawn cash balance of $152,597.00. See State’s Audit No. B37346. By way of comparison, the Township Assistance account had a positive cash balance of $355,086 when Former Trustee assumed office on Jan. 1, 2008. See State’s Audit No. B37346. By January 1, 2010, the Township Assistance account was overdrawn, and the Township began the 2010 accounting year with a negative cash balance of $15,919.00. See State’s Audit No. B37346. By the time the Former Trustee left office, the overdrawn cash balance had risen to negative $152,597 as of March 31, 2010. See State’s Audit No. B37346.
2. Elimination of Overdrawn Cash Balance. The State’s Audit No. B44073 reflects that the current Township Trustee, Kathryn Martin (Current Trustee), and Township Board have worked to completely eliminate the overdrawn cash balances in both the Township Assistance Account and Payroll Withholdings Account by Dec. 31, 2013. The Township achieved the elimination of the overdrawn cash balances in the following manner:
a. Township Assistance Account – Overdrawn Cash Balance. During her first eight (8) months in office, the Current Trustee and Board reduced the Township Assistance Account’s overdrawn cash balance by $138,363.94. The Township achieved this reduction in the Township Assistance Account’s overdrawn cash balance by difficult reductions in disbursements for Township Assistance during the balance of the 2010 accounting period. By way of illustration, disbursements for Township Assistance were $471,684 in 2010, compared to $572,675 in 2009, meaning that the Township reduced disbursements for Township Assistance by $100,991 in 2010. See State’s Audit No. B37346. Through these difficult reductions in disbursements for Township Assistance, the Township reduced the overdrawn cash balance from $152, 577 at the commencement of the Current Trustee’s office to $14,232. 71 by the end of the 2010 accounting period on Dec. 31, 2010. By December 31, 2013, the overdrawn cash balance in the Township Assistance Account had been completely eliminated. See State’s Audit No. B44073.
b. Payroll Account — Overdrawn Cash Balance. In 2012, the IRS determined that in 2009, during the tenure of the Former Trustee, the Township had failed to pay federal payroll withholdings totaling $1,218.95, thereby resulting in an overdrawn cash balance in the Township’s Payroll Account for the 2012 accounting year. Again, by Dec. 31, 2013, the Current Trustee had caused this overdrawn cash balance to be completely eliminated. See State’s Audit No. B44073.
3. 2014 – No Current Deficit. Through the elimination of the overdrawn cash balances incurred during the prior accounting period (Jan. 1, 2008 – March 31, 2010), the Township begins the 2014 accounting year with no overdrawn cash balances.
By Dan Carpenter
TheStatehouseFile.com
Following the education money in Indiana is easy. Just find the rabbit with the pocket watch and dive down the hole behind him.
Where to begin? How about with Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard and the City-County Council jockeying over a tax increase to leverage donations to provide preschool to a couple thousand kids – while the state, which has the constitutional responsibility for education, sits on a $2 billion surplus.
Then there’s Gov. Mike Pence, turning down $80 million in federal dollars for preschool for the poor because he’s running for president and doesn’t want to Commentary button in JPG – no shadowalienate the Birchite wing of his party, which demonizes Washington and, for that matter, public schools altogether.
Then there’s the Indiana House Republican agenda for 2015, which would (and no doubt will) shift funding from poor urban districts to suburban and rural districts, with the promise of a bigger pie for all. This, from a government that’s consistently bled urban districts by cutting their funding and siphoning it away to charter schools and private schools. It’s a promise you can take to the bank, and hope for a bailout.
Finally, there’s the massive spending by corporate-backed outside “reform†outfits on certain candidates in the race for the Indianapolis Public Schools board – an “investment†in local education that surely will result in more charter schools and further diminishment of a school system that needs all the help it can get if it’s to hold on to its middle-class constituency while serving as a last resort for the poor.
All this money – city, state, federal, private. Going all these directions – to the well-off, the profiteers, the salaries of the nonprofits, the six-figure experts, and in the case of the $80 mil, to some other state where children’s needs trump rightwing ideology and crass personal ambition.
When Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League and former mayor of New Orleans, visited Indianapolis a few years ago, he pointed out that the schools down there that had seen improvement post-Katrina were not necessarily examples of the merits of charters and teacher union-busting, as the public school bashers would have it. Rather, they were beneficiaries of a huge infusion of federal ameliorative funding. “No civilization in the history of the world,†he said, “has declined because it spent too much on education.â€
In Indiana of late, we are spending too much education money that could be going to education. And we are leaving education money unspent rather than spend dubious political capital. We pay lip service to the little capsules of our future while refusing, with lame rationalizations and the meanest of motives, to pool the money that’s out there waiting.
You’ve got it, Alice. Curiouser and curiouser.
IS IT TRUE the City County Observer Mole Luncheon is completely sold out and has been forced to expand into two rooms in the Tropicana Convention Center?…there are three political parties that have bought tables including the Democrats, the Libertarians, and the Tea Party?…only a few Central Committee Republicans chose to avoid the “Mole Awards” from a party perspective?… that many other responsible Republicans will be there as individuals and we welcome them along with the eclectic mix of independent thinkers of all kinds who frequent the CCO?
IS IT TRUE on this writer’s recent walk through downtown Evansville to see if the Ford Center has stimulated a renaissance, it is blatantly obvious that very little has happened as a result of that $127 Million “investment”?…there have been some business started and others closed but the net change is essentially zero?…on a second walk around after dark, I must admit that the vibe has changed dramatically for the worse?…for the first time in many years a walk through downtown Evansville was sort of disturbing from the number of aggressive acting people just hanging around?…several even had pit bulls on a leash either for their own protection or to intimidate others?…the city leaders have always said they wanted lots of activity downtown and Friday night they sure did have it?…I somehow think this was not what they were hoping for as one downtown loft dweller shared that she would not be staying beyond the term of her lease?…maybe a new movie called “Fort Apache Evansville” can replace the similar file about The Bronx form the 70’s?
IS IT TRUE the Meijers hyper store situation is clearly that there will not be a store in the near future?…this has been confirmed by the Meijers Corporation that did confirm they do own the land on which a store could be built?…with a construction cycle of up to two years even if the store were started next spring it would be 2017 before it opens?…this evokes the memories of the on again – off again downtown convention hotel which started with a bang in 2008 and still has not really broken ground?…deals like these should be kept under wraps until they are real?…were it not for the impatience of headline seeking fools in political office they would be?
IS IT TRUE the latest RCP Senate poll averages are looking hopeful for the democrats chances of holding onto the Senate?…during the last week the projections for republican pickups has dropped from 8 to 6 which is still a control position but it is only by one?…the overall probability in Nate Silver’s 538 analytic has however risen to nearly a 2/3 probability for a republican take over?…the one thing that seems the most probable in this writers opinion is that some races are so close that some surprises will happen?…some old timers like McConnell may get sent packing which would be a surprise, an independent may win Kansas, but New Hampshire may flip to republican?…the only certainty is uncertainty?
IS IT TRUE Three million dollars can barely buy a new townhouse in Brooklyn these days, but it could be enough to purchase a bundle of more than 6,000 foreclosures up for auction in Detroit?…the cost of dealing with the many blighted buildings included in the Detroit mega-auction means a $3.2 million bid received last week—roughly the minimum allowable bid of $500 per property—will likely prove too high to turn a profit?…“I can’t imagine that you are going to make money on this,†says David Szymanski, chief deputy treasurer of Wayne County, which is selling the properties?…with tens of thousands of dilapidated homes to support brand new temples to sport, Detroit seems to be the poster child for Evansville, Indiana in the decision making category?
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
Early Saturday morning, October 25, at approximately 12:32, Trooper Josh Greer was patrolling SR 66 west of Epworth Road when he spotted a white Chevrolet Camaro traveling eastbound at a high rate of speed. Trooper Greer clocked the vehicle by radar at 102 mph in a 50 mph zone. Greer immediately activated his emergency lights and siren, but the driver continued east at a high rate of speed and then turned south onto Grimm Road. The driver then slowed down, pulled into the Islamic Mosque located at 4200 Grimm Road and surrendered without further incident. The driver was identified as Derrick Lee Mays, 19, of Newburgh. Mays was arrested and taken to the Warrick County Jail where he later posted bond and was released.
ARRESTED AND CHARGES:
• Derrick Lee Mays, 19, 5855 Anderson Road, Newburgh, IN
1. Resisting Law Enforcement
2. Reckless Driving
The Evansville Water & Sewer Utility announces the Annual Fall Leaf Pick-up will begin Monday, October 27, and continue through Friday, December 19, for a period of eight (8) weeks. The annual leaf collection service is available to City residents who pay for trash service with their water bill, including newly-annexed areas. Apartment complexes, mobile home communities and business/commercial customers are not eligible.
Leaves must be contained in Bio-Degradable Plastic or Paper Leaf Bags or in containers and must be placed in manageable, organized piles on the same day of trash service but separate from where the normal weekly trash is collected. The bags should be placed at the pickup location before 6 a.m. on the normal days of collection. These bags should only be placed at the pickup location on your normal day of trash collection.
Leaves not in Bio-Degradable Bags that do not meet these requirements will not be picked up. Residence with leaves not in the Bio-Degradable Bags will be notified to re-bag their leaves in Bio-Degradable Bags and they will be picked up the following week. If a customer put their Leaves out according to the requirements but feels they were missed, they can call Republic Services at 812-424-3345 within two (2) days to report a possible missed pick-up.