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EPD Activity Report November 2, 2014

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EPD Activity Report

Number of students using vouchers jumps dramatically

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The number of students using state-funded vouchers to attend private schools has jumped by more than 47 percent this school year, according to preliminary numbers confirmed by state education officials.

In all, 29,146 elementary, middle and high school students – about 3 percent of the overall student population – are now using vouchers. That’s compared to 19,809 last year.

Democrats released the numbers Friday, saying they are evidence that the voucher program supported by Republicans is stealing money from public schools.

“If we continue to see this kind of explosive growth in vouchers over the next few years, how is that going to help make our public schools whole again?” said Rep. Greg Porter, the ranking Democrat on the budget-writing Ways and Means Committee. “If more funding is provided for education, how much will have to be siphoned off to pay for vouchers?”

But supporters maintain the voucher program simply gives lower- and middle-income parents a choice in where their children will be educated.

Majority House Republicans announced earlier this month that they intend to boost funding for schools during the 2015 legislative session – although they didn’t offer specifics. But Democrats say if the number of students using vouchers continues to increase, public schools might not actually receive any of the additional money.

Public schools receive funding based on the number of students that are enrolled. Schools that lose students when some transfer to private schools receive fewer dollars.

That money is then used to fund the vouchers, although private schools don’t generally receive as much per student as their public school counterparts. Any savings – the difference between the voucher and what the public school would have received – is then reinvested in education.

“Every dollar that goes toward vouchers is taken away from public schools that do not have the ability to pick and choose who they get to educate,” Porter said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for House Republicans did not immediately return a message seeking comment on the Democrats’ claims or the new voucher numbers. Neither did a spokeswoman for Gov. Mike Pence, who has supported the program.

The Department of Education confirmed that the numbers released by Porter are accurate. But the agency won’t release a full report on voucher use until January when officials have gathered more data, said spokesman Daniel Altman.

The voucher program has been growing since then-Gov. Mitch Daniels and the Republican-controlled General Assembly launched it in 2011 as the broadest such program in the nation. In the first school year that vouchers were available – 2011-2012 – more than 3,900 students took advantage of the program.

The state paid $15.5 million for the vouchers that year.

During the 2013-2014 school year, when nearly 20,000 students participated, the state spent roughly $81 million on the program.

The cost for just the first half of the current school year is $57.9 million, according to the Department of Education. That could bring the total cost of the full year to more than $115 million.

The growth in the program is due in part to changes lawmakers made last year that increased the number of students who are eligible.

In general, the program offers tuition assistance to families whose income is 150 percent of the federal free and reduced lunch program or less. Originally, it was open only to students who had tried public school first.

But last year, the General Assembly added several more ways a student could qualify. Students who have a disability, live in a school district that received an F grade from the state’s accountability system, or have a sibling who received a voucher are eligible for a voucher. Those pathways allow students to attend a private school with a voucher without ever trying public school.

That led to a significant jump in the number of students who qualify – and in the number who are using vouchers without ever trying a public school first.

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

Shots Fired – 900 block of Independence Avenue

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At Approximately 4:13a on Saturday, November 1st Patrol Officers responded to the 900 block of Independence Avenue for a report of five gun shots being fired. The reporter advised that a house and vehicle were struck by the shots. Officers arrived and found a gray Chevrolet SUV parked in a drive way with two bullet holes in the rear lift gate and the rear glass shattered. Officers also found a bullet hole in the front door of a residence on Independence Avenue and a second bullet hole in the siding to the left of the door. Bullet holes were observed in interior walls of the residence as well. No shell casings were found and at this time there is no suspect information.

Sergeant Bob Taylor Retires after 33 Years of Dedicated Service

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After 33 years of dedicated service to the Indiana State Police and to the citizens of Indiana, Sergeant Bob Taylor is announcing his retirement.

Taylor is a native of Elkhart, IN, and a 1975 graduate of Elkhart Memorial High School. He later attended college at University of Evansville where he received his Bachelor’s Degree in Criminal Justice. Taylor joined the Indiana State Police and successfully completed the academy in 1979. He was assigned to the Evansville District where he primarily patrolled Vanderburgh County. Between 1981 and 1989, anytime Former Governor Robert Orr traveled to the Evansville area he would specifically ask for Taylor to be on his protective team. In 1984, Taylor received the “Sagamore of Wabash” award from the governor for his dedicated service while serving on the protective team.

Taylor was promoted to the rank of corporal in 2000 and served as a district duty officer. In 2007 he was promoted to the rank of sergeant and was responsible for supervising troopers in Knox County. In 2010 he was assigned to serve as the evening post commander at the Evansville District. During his 33 years of service, Taylor spent many years as a field training officer, a member of the tactical intervention platoon team and as an aircraft accident investigator.

“Sergeant Taylor has been a tremendous asset to the Evansville District. His 33 years of dedicated service to the Indiana State Police and to the citizens of this state is a direct reflection of his professionalism and integrity. Sgt. Taylor will be dearly missed by everyone at the Evansville District,” said Lieutenant Brian Bailey, Commander of the Evansville District.

Shots Fired – 326 S. Kentucky Avenue

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At approximately 3:35a on Saturday, November 1st Patrol officers responded to the Marathon Petroleum Station located at 326 S. Kentucky Avenue for reports of gun shots. A caller to Central Dispatch reported hearing five shots. According to the caller the crowd began fleeing from the parking lot when the shooting started. Officers located five spent shell casings. No reports of anyone or anything being hit were reported. Camera footage showed a male wearing a gray hoodie and white pants with a skeleton mask firing the shots into the air and then leaving the view of the camera.

Plaza Park International Prep Academy Technology Show

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Plaza Automotive Technology Show
Monday, November 3, 11 a.m.-1 p.m.
Outside Plaza Park International Prep Academy
7301 Lincoln Ave.

Tech Teacher Mark Pemberton at Plaza, started this annual tradition last year, to teach students about different types of automobiles, engines, the science behind how they work, etc…

New Book by Jim Redwine

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ECHOES OF OUR ANCESTORS:

The Secret Game

A new novel by Jim Redwine

Jim Redwine has announced book signings of his most recent book, ECHOES OF OUR ANCESTORS: The Secret Game, December 6, 2014 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Alexandrian Public Library in Mt. Vernon and during parts of both days of the Christmas in New Harmony Artisan Market the weekend of December 6 and 7. Jim will also be available to personally autograph copies on December 13, 2014 from 2 to 4 p.m. at Barnes and Noble Bookstore on the corner of Lincoln Avenue and Green River Road in Evansville, Indiana.

Jim’s new novel tells the exciting story of a long hidden but important football game that occurred between representatives of Haskell Indian Institute (now the Haskell Indian Nations University) and professionals from the then Kansas City Cowboys in 1924 at a secret location on the Osage Indian Nation near Pawhuska, Oklahoma where Jim was born.

The book is based upon events that actually occurred.  Famous persons such as, John “Big Skee” Levi, Osage Chief Fred Lookout, Jim Thorpe, “The Wild Horse of the Osage” Pepper Martin, Deputy U.S. Marshall Frank “Pistol Pete” Eaton and an assortment of grifters, gamblers and con men including Pretty Boy Floyd, Titanic Thompson, Hubert “Daddy Warbucks” Cokes and Arnold Rothstein were involved.

“Haskell Indian Institute used the game to solicit contributions to build a new football stadium while others saw the game as an opportunity to get rich. $200,000 was bet on the game, then the whole matter was hidden from the scrutiny of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association and the nascent National Football League,” Redwine said in a recent interview.

Jim Redwine is a graduate of Pawhuska High School, Indiana University, I.U. School of Law and the Indiana Judges College. He has served as a Posey County, Indiana judge since 1981. He writes a regular weekly column, “Gavel Gamut” for four area newspapers in Indiana and Illinois. Jim is also a member of the faculty of the National Judicial College for whom he has taught hundreds of judges from Palestine, Ukraine, Russia, Jordan, Bahrain and America. He lives at JPeg Ranch in rural Posey County, Indiana. He and his wife, Peg, have three grown children, seven grandchildren, a dog and a cat.

Trial court lacked authority to order dad to pay for child’s college

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Jennifer Nelson for www.theindianalawyer.com

Tackling an issue of first impression involving a request for payment of post-secondary education expenses, the Indiana Court of Appeals held that a child support order under I.C. 31-16-6-6 refers to the parties’ most recent order concerning support.

Amanda Lee Austin filed a petition Feb. 28, 2014, for her ex-husband, Michael Dwain Neal, to pay college expenses for their second child, A.N., who at that time was 19 years old. He asked the trial court to deny her petition because A.N. had been emancipated by law when she turned 19 on Jan. 30, 2014.

The trial court ordered Neal pay for a portion of A.N.’s college expenses. He appealed in Michael Dwain Neal v. Amanda Lee Austin, 49A02-1404-DR-225, and the Court of Appeals unanimously reversed.

The judges looked at the language of I.C. 31-16-6-6, which was amended effective July 1, 2012, to change emancipation age and at what age a parent was no longer responsible for paying for college expenses.  In order to make their decision, the judges had to decide what the Legislature meant when it referred to established child support orders. They noted it was an ambiguous term.

Neal argued subsection (d) barred Austin from filing the petition. It reads: If a court has established a duty to support a child in a court order issued after June 30, 2012, the: parent or guardian of the child; or child; may file a petition for educational needs until the child becomes nineteen (19) years of age.” He claimed because A.N. already was 19 and the most recent agreed child support order was approved after June 30, 2012, Austin’s petition is barred.

The two divorced in 2000 and a support order was entered then; an agreed order was approved by the trial court in July 2012, in which the older child, who was 20 at the time, was considered emancipated.

The judges decided that the statute necessitates that where the most recent order establishing a child support obligation was issued after June 30, 2012, the child must file a petition for educational needs before becoming 19.

“Mother and A.N. are not the sort of unsuspecting parties that we believe the General Assembly’s 2013 amendments were focused on. Here, subsequent to the 2012 amendment, Mother participated in the court system and obtained a support order (i.e. the Agreed Order) that specifically referenced the updated statute’s effect of establishing nineteen as the age of legal emancipation. Thus, Mother was aware of the statute’s requirement that a petition for educational support must be filed before A.N. turned nineteen,” Judge Margret Robb wrote.

Christian Rock Band Casting Crowns “Thrives” at Ford Center

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It was a celebration of faith as Christian Rock band Casting Crowns brought their “Thrive Tour” to Ford Center Thursday night along with special guests Mandisa and Sidewalk Prophets. The evening began with Sidewalk Prophets’ “Just Might Change,” which had the audience immediately on their feet. Afterwards Mandisa moved concert goers by speaking about her testimony and performing some of her hits including “Good Morning,” “Stronger,” and “Overcomer.”

The audience cheered as one as Casting Crowns opened with hits “Lifesong Sings, “Whole World Hears” and selections from their newest album, Thrive, including “All You’ve Ever Wanted,” “This is Now,” and much more. They ended the show with an encore performance, eventually leaving the stage singing “Glorious Day,” as the audience gave a standing ovation.

“Over 4,000 fans enjoyed the music and ministry of Casting Crowns, Mandisa, and Sidewalk Prophets in their first appearance at Ford Center,” said Cliff Reiser, President of Rush Concerts. “We look forward to bringing more Contemporary Christian music to Evansville.”

Upcoming events at Ford Center includes Eric Church November 22, Hadi Shrine Circus Nov 27-30, Kenny Rogers December 7, Monster Jam January 10-11, Miranda Lambert January 15, Harlem Globetrotters January 18, Winter Jam 2015 January 29, Luke Bryan February 11, and Disney on Ice: Princesses & Heroes February 19-21.

For more information on Ford Center visit:
www.thefordcenter.com www.facebook.com/fordcenterevansville www.twitter.com/thefordcenter.

SECOND POLITICAL MAILER CHARGES THAT CHRIS KIEFER FAILED IN HIS LEADERSHIP POSITION

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AN anonymous political group has recently mailed two (2) political mailers that charges that President of the EVSC School Board, Chris Kiefer has failed in his leadership position.

This first mailer charges that EVSC School Board President Chris Kiefer lead the charge to increase the Superintendent of Schools annual salary over $180,000, not including perks, allowances and benefits.

This mailer also alleges that  Evansville/Vanderburgh County schools are getting failing grades under EVSC School Board President Chris Kiefer leadership.

Attached is a link to the second mass mailer concerning President of the EVSC School Board for you’re viewing.

Another Anti Kiefer Mailer 1

Another Anti Kiefer Mailer 2

Posted by the CCO without opinion, bias or editing.Â