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Coalition announces legislative agenda aimed at public fraud

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – A group of officials representing local, state and federal governments will push a series of legislative proposals meant to protect public funds and speed the recovery of taxpayers dollars lost to fraud.

The Public Integrity Coalition announced a 2015 agenda on Friday that includes additional whistleblower protections for public employees who report misappropriated funds and changes to insurance policies that cover losses due to employee theft.

“The vast majority of our public servants are honest and trustworthy,” said Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller in a statement. “But there are a few who violate the public trust and steal from taxpayers which gives everyone in government a bad reputation.”

Zoeller is among state members of the coalition, which also includes officials at the county, city, town, township and school level as well as the U.S. attorney for Northern Indiana and others.

The group organized in April and developed its agenda throughout the summer. Sen. Ed Charbonneau, R-Valparaiso, plans to carry the coalition’s legislation.

The coalition focused in part on recovering taxpayer funds. When the State Board of Accounts requires an official to repay funds after a misappropriation, the attorney general’s office serves as the state’s collection agent and seeks to recover the money. Since January 2009, state audits have sought repayment of nearly $8 million at all levels of local and state government. Any part of a loss not covered by a surety bond or crime insurance policy is a defendant’s personal responsibility to repay.

“The Public Integrity Coalition’s review found gaps in insurance or bond coverage that tightening up state laws would fix,” Zoeller said. “Deterring wrongdoing is important, and public employees who know that misappropriation is taking place can help. The coalition wants to remove barriers to employees reporting their suspicions so the theft or embezzlement can be halted before it snowballs into a huge loss.”

The proposals include:

Whistleblower protection. Whistleblowers who are terminated, demoted or discriminated against for their efforts would be entitled to receive reinstatement with the same seniority, twice the amount of back pay lost, interest and attorneys’ fees.
Bonds and insurance coverage. Any employee in a public office or school who handles money – including clerical staff – would be required to have a bond or a crime insurance policy. Currently, elected officials already must obtain $30,000 surety bonds, which serve as a type of insurance policy against employee theft. If an audit discovers misappropriation, bonds can be redeemed to reimburse government for the loss.
Searchable bonds. All officials’ bonds would be filed with the State Board of Accounts – in addition to local county recorders’ offices – to make them searchable and more transparent.
Better chance of full recovery, earlier. The law regulating official bonds would be clarified to ensure that enough coverage is in place to protect taxpayers. The bill would also would make the state a party in the insurance policies that local governments and schools purchase.
Town clerk-treasurers and vacancies. Towns would have the ability to sign interlocal agreements with other communities to handle the duties of clerk-treasurers if the office holder dies or resigns. The bill would allow a town to contract with a certified public accountant to fill the vacancy on an interim basis until a new clerk-treasurer is elected.
Charbonneau called the proposals “common-sense business safeguards” and said they will allow “all Hoosiers to have confidence their tax dollars are being used appropriately.”

Since January 2009, more than 250 certified audits identifying nearly $8 million in misappropriation have been referred to the attorney general’s office for collection. In total, the office has sought to collect more than $14 million, including amounts from certified audits that pre-date Zoeller’s administration.

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

EPD ACTIVITY REPORT SEPTEMBER 28, 2014

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EDG Offers “Made in Evansville” Community Pride T-shirts

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artscouncilThe Evansville Design Group announces an exciting new venture, “Made in Evansville.” Many unique products, services, ideas and people have been “made” in Evansville. The Made in Evansville campaign celebrates Evansville’s local pride and history through designs, inspired by or directly printed from vintage logos, labels, and advertisements.

Periodically, EDG will offer new, limited-quantity designs inspired by Evansville products and traditions, in addition to the continuously offered “Made in Evansville” design. The current designs include the Evansville Brewing Association, Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden’s “Monkey Ship”, and the P-47 Thunderbolt.

These designs are being offered on high-quality t-shirts in men’s and women’s sizes. Eventually, EDG hopes to offer these designs on other products as well. Made in Evansville will serve as a fundraiser for the EDG to promote design education and enrichment in our city.

Shirts can be viewed and ordered from www.madeinevansville.com and picked up after October 17 at the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana (318 Main Street, Suite 101, Evansville, IN 47708), Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

Open forum weekend

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Commentary: Yeah, thank you for your service

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By Dan Carpenter
TheStatehouseFile.com

For all the stirring platitudes about never forgetting their sacrifices, the U.S. government historically has found it far easier to send men and women off to war than to care for them when they come marching and limping home.

Dan Carpenter is a columnist for TheStatehouseFile.com and the author of “Indiana Out Loud.”
Dan Carpenter is a columnist for TheStatehouseFile.com and the author of “Indiana Out Loud.”
Compounding the insult upon injury is the tendency of politicians to use troops and veterans as fodder in their own domestic wars for self-aggrandizement.

Aggravating that crime is the bald hypocrisy of accusing the other side of indifference toward veterans while refusing to put money where the mouthing, and the need, are.

Commentary button in JPG – no shadowMaking war is capitalism, Marx will tell you. Making whole those who have to fight them is socialism, where nobody profits but the ordinary Joes and Janes who did the fighting.

It’s been ever thus, even if Fox News would have you believe the current medical scandal at the Department of Veterans Affairs is another Barack Obama invention.

It started before they drove the Bonus Army out of Washington in 1932, violently ending a protest over deferred pay from World War I.

It started before Coxey’s Army marched on D.C. in 1894, demanding bonuses.

It started about when the nation did, in 1783, when Revolutionary War veterans descended on the then-capital of Philadelphia and demanded Congress reverse the denial of separation pay.

I don‘t go back quite that far, but I did a lot of news reporting on the widespread complaints of inadequate medical care and other benefits by Vietnam Era vets; and continuing disgruntlement by veterans and their organizations – both militant and “establishment” – on through to the present.

One day during the 1980s, I was being led with other journalists on a tour of the Roudebush West 10th Street VA Medical Center by a supervising psychiatric nurse. It was a congenial exercise in PR for the most part. Then someone asked why there was a waiting list for some important services.

“That’s what you get,” the man said before briskly moving us on, “when you elect Ronald Reagan president.”

Reagan, the champion of military spending, made veterans’ benefits part of his equally famous social services cuts. But it’s been the wars of the Bushes that have really swamped the VA. And the proudly patriotic conservatives don’t seem to mind as long as the party label’s right. They reelected President George W. Bush and then-Rep. Steve Buyer, R-Ind., back at mid-decade without demanding that they rethink budget cuts for veterans’ services. Buyer, as chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, acquiesced to VA underfunding that his predecessor, Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., had consistently fought. Having former VA chief and U.S. senator Max Cleland, a triple amputee from the Vietnam War, campaign for Buyer’s opponent in 2006 didn’t help enough, if any. But then, Cleland had lost his Senate seat in 2002 to a rightwing assault that likened him to Osama bin Laden. What have you done for us lately, Max?

Underfunding of veterans’ needs continues. As does politics. Republicans who successfully filibustered last winter against socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders’ bill to relieve the VA of the pressures of scarce resources are now demanding the head of the VA director and using this current issue, grave as it admittedly is, as a club against Obama, public health care in general and Democrats in November. (Meanwhile, their comrades in the House, who cut embassy security funding, are re-investigating Benghazi.)

Veterans’ organizations, to their credit, are firing back, Indy’s own American Legion being an unfortunate exception thus far. A bitter war of words is under way. Without doubt, the next shooting war is on its way as well. More veterans to love.

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

THE FOUNTAIN OF TRUTH

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Gavel Gamut

By Jim Redwine

(Week of 02 June 20144)

THE FOUNTAIN OF TRUTH

 

Juan Ponce de Leon (1460 – 1521) “discovered” what he called Florida (place of flowers)in 1513. This discovery was a surprise to the Calusa Indians already living there. The Calusasdrove him out once but he was a slow learner and returned to Florida only to receive an arrow inhis thigh from which he died.Ponce de Leon was looking for gold and the fabled Fountain of Youth. Had he stumbledinto Florida today he would have been met by a tribe consisting of slow moving, white hairedpeople wearing an assortment of checkered shorts and speaking in several dialects of Italian andYiddish. However, the arrows would still be flying at him from the car windows and honkinghorns.The only youth to be found in Florida comes from Hispaniola and other less exoticclimes. This portion of the Sunshine State culture amuses itself by darting in and out and inbetween the vehicles of old people whose rear bumpers are an irresistible attraction. With the old people driving in erratic jerks and young people being jerks, a mere trip tothe store can often result in impassioned (well, not too passionate by the old people) displays ofarms and middle fingers. Ponce de Leon only went to Florida because his boss, the King of Spain, fired him asGovernor of Puerto Rico and replaced him with Columbus’s son. Ponce de Leon had originallycome to America along with Columbus on his second voyage. This sense of being “dissed” bythe King burned a hole in de Leon’s psyche such that he kept looking for redemptive revenge. Ofcourse, he sought his redemption as all Europeans did, at the expense of the Native Americans.In this instance, the Indians won.Ponce de Leon may have been the first tourist to Florida but, as millions of pasty facedmigrants from New York, New Jersey and even Indiana would prove he was only the first.Florida has no natives. The Indians, Calusa, Seminole, etc., have been evicted. People born inFlorida flee the state to avoid the invasion from the snow birds. And, because The Fountain ofYouth is now sought only in the tender care of plastic surgeons, all the explorers are dead.There are activities for old people in Florida, mainly shuffleboard, bocce and golf.However, golf in Florida has its own rules. Everyone must play as fast as their pacemakers allow and crowd right up against the tottering foursome in front of them while the shot sprayers behind occasionally do hit the ball more than seventy-five yards right into the forward group. Of course,these conditions result in about the same kind of pleasantries as occur on the streets.Ah, well, Peg and I will soon return to JPeg Ranch where all I need to worry aboutdodging are Peg’s orders.

Indiana delegation looks to new leadership to fix VA issues

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.comtimthumb-1.php

INDIANAPOLIS – Hoosier lawmakers said Friday they look forward to new veterans affairs leadership after Secretary Eric Shinseki resigned under pressure over problems involving cover ups and wait times for care at government-run hospitals.

But lawmakers said the resignation doesn’t solve the VA’s problems.

“Congress and the American people must not lose sight of the work the still lies ahead,” U.S. Rep. Todd Young, R-9th District, said in a statement.

“The problems that have recently come to light in Phoenix and elsewhere only serve to underscore what most of us already suspected was true: The level of care our country provides to our veterans is not commensurate with the sacrifices they’ve made on behalf of their country,” Young said. “The resignation of one man does not change the fact that we must make bold reforms to address these serious problems.”

U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, D-7th District, called Shinseki’s service “honorable” but said a change was necessary.

“We need to clear the air and move toward long-term solutions to the systemic problems within the VA that have resulted in substandard service for the men and women who have served our country in uniform,” Carson said in a statement.

Carson was among several Indiana lawmakers who acted quickly Friday to commend Shinseki’s lifelong service.

But a number of House and Senate members had also been calling for his resignation, a chorus that had been growing since an interim report found the VA’s problems are systemic, rather than isolated at a hospital in Phoenix where they were first discovered.

Indiana Rep. Susan Brooks, R-5th District, called for Shinseki’s resignation last week.

“Fixing the current systemic problems within the Department of Veterans Affairs clearly requires new leadership with in-depth health care system experience,” Brooks said. “The next secretary must comprehensively retool the VA’s health care system to ensure veterans receive the quality treatment they deserve.”

President Barack Obama, who accepted Shinseki’s resignation Friday, said that Sloan Gibson, the agency’s deputy secretary, will take over until a permanent replacement is named.

U.S. Sen. Joe Donnelly, D-Indiana, said he’s pleased to have a “fresh pair of eyes on this calamity.”

“This isn’t just about one man — it is about a culture change. We need to hold accountable those who were carrying out or encouraging these practices day to day, and we must ensure that the VA health system provides the responsiveness and quality care our veterans deserve,” Donnelly said.

U.S. Sen. Dan Coats, R-Indiana, said he supports continued investigations into the VA issues.

“The culture of the VA must change, and we need to look at solutions outside of government-run facilities,” Coats said. “My focus remains on ensuring Hoosier veterans receive the care they not only earned, but deserve.”

TheStatehouseFile.com is a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

COA affirms remand to prior judge over father’s objection

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Dave Stafford for www.theindianalawyer.com              indianalawyer

A special judge appointed in a paternity case ruled correctly that matters in the case remanded by the Court of Appeals should be heard by the prior judge who heard the evidence, the appellate court held in a second appeal on the matter.

In In re the Paternity of V.A., (Minor Child), R.A. v. B.Y., 39A04-1310-JP-512, father R.A. requested a change of judge under Trial Rule 76(B), which was granted. He appealed a prior trial court ruling to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.

Jefferson Circuit Special Judge James B. Morris took the case after Judge Ted Todd granted father’s change-of-judge motion. When Morris received the matter on remand, he ruled that Trial Rule 63(A) requires a judge who hears evidence to make all rulings relating to that evidence.

“On appeal, Father contends that Trial Rules 76(B) and 63(A) conflict, and his right to a change of judge under Trial Rule 76(B) trumps Trial Rule 63(A)’s preference for the judge who heard the evidence,” Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik wrote for the panel. “We conclude that the rules do not conflict; rather, they govern different aspects of Father’s case — Father’s change-of-judge request under Trial Rule 76(B) applies prospectively to his modification petition, and Trial Rule 63(A) operates retroactively to ensure that the remanded issues are considered by the judge who heard the evidence, Judge Todd. We affirm.”

A separate appellate panel heard another appeal from the same case, affirming Morris’ denial of father’s motion to correct error and an order reinstating his visitation time with a child he had in 2003. He and the child’s mother never married, and their relationship ended in 2011.

In In Re: The Paternity of V.A., a Minor Child, R.A. Father v. B.Y., Mother, 39A01-1307-JP-304, as prior appeals were pending, father filed a motion to modify support and custody the same day that Morris assumed jurisdiction. Morris denied the motion on the basis that he lacked jurisdiction to rule.

“(W)e cannot hold the court abused its discretion when it denied Father’s motion to correct error,” Judge Melissa May wrote for the panel in this appeal. “We accordingly affirm the denial of Father’s Motion to Correct Error regarding the dismissal of his petition to modify custody and support.”

National tobacco expert Dr. Stanton Glantz to speak to Smokefree Evansville!

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ImageProxy.mvcAs a professor of medicine and member of the Institute for Health Policy Studies and the Cardiovascular Research Institute at the University of California, Dr. Glantz can tell Evansville about the problems of tobacco and e-cigarettes and about the solutions to the health devastation that tobacco use and secondhand smoke that include having strong policy to reduce exposure, educating every Evansville resident as well as companies, organizations and students. Evansville has a rare opportunity to meet and hear the man who led the charge to restore funding to tobacco programs in California and who has written the books providing a “Way to Win the Battle for Health” vs “The Tobacco Use Epidemic in the United States.” Current tobacco use rate in California is 12.6%; current Indiana rate is 24%. Please come take advantage of this opportunity and meet Dr. Glantz!

Stan Glantz meet and greet
June 4th 4pm Browning Room B Central Library

Stan Glantz E-cig presentation 6:30-7:30pm Ivy Tech’s Vectren Auditorium

LETTER TO THE EDITOR of the City County Observer

posted without opinion, bias and editing
Follow link and post your comments!> https://city-countyobserver.com/2014/05/08/letter-to-the-editor-smokefree-community/

Dear CCO Readers

A lot of information has been going around regarding the recently overturned smoke-free air ordinance by the Indiana Supreme Court. There is one simple solution to all of this; pass a new smoke-free ordinance that includes the casino. Those who work in the smoky environment cannot afford another day of having their health put on the line for a paycheck. In an interview with Tropicana’s general manager Jason Gregorec said, “People have a choice to game or not and with this gamers like adult beverages and like to smoke.” This is an interesting statement considering that Americans for Nonsmokers’ Rights says that studies show that 80% of casino patrons do not smoke. He goes on to say that allowing smoking is a “competitive advantage” over the Illinois casino. This is also hard to believe when 73% of Illinois voters support Illinois’s smokefree law that includes casinos, racetracks, and other gaming facilities according to “Commercial tobacco-free Illinois Frequency Questionnaire,” Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, June 1, 2008. Ohio Voters also approved smoke-free casinos in their state survey and Nate Forbes co-owner of Horseshoe Casino Cleveland said that one of the top two comments he has received about the casino is how people are so thankful for it being a completely smoke-free environment.

Gregorec also went on to say how he saw firsthand how the casino industry in Illinois was negatively affected after going smoke free in 2008. This is true but the state of the economy was more to blame and not the smoke free law. The Center for Policy Analysis (CFPA) conducted a survey in 2011 of reasons why Illinois patrons stopped going to the casinos as much and 40% said the cost of gasoline and 35% said it was because of the increased cost of living. Following the recession Illinois unemployment rate went from 6% to 12.4% and the cost of gasoline went up over a dollar a gallon. In this survey not a single person indicated that the smoking ban was the reason for gambling less frequently in Illinois.

Evansville has already proven that we accept the smoke free ordinance and want all workers to have the same chances when it comes to their health. There are more than 500 state-regulated gambling facilities across the United States that are required to be 100% smoke-free indoors. Tropicana needs to get with the times and show that they stand up for their workers and patrons by accepting that the future is smoke-free.

Sincerely,

Vanderburgh County Smoke Free Committee

 

USI announces third annual Sculpt EVV festival

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USI

The third annual Sculpt EVV Community Art and Music Festival will be held from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Saturday, June 7, at the corner of S.E. Second Street and Jefferson Avenue in the Haynie’s Corner Arts District in Evansville.

The event is free and open to the public and includes food vendors, an art fair, live music, games, drum lessons with the Boom Squad and more.

Artist and University of Southern Indiana alumnus Mark Brendel and USI students will work with youth to build a neighborhood sculpture incorporating recycled materials that will teach them to play chess as well as serve as a pollinator for hummingbirds and butterflies. They’ll be working from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Other activities include a pop-up African art display of work from USI’s teaching collection; the unveiling of a community mural by respected artist, Eric Braysmith, assistant professor of English, and the reading of a poem written by Marcus Wicker, USI assistant professor of English.

Dr. Hilary Braysmith, USI associate professor of art history and project director for Sculpt EVV, has worked with Evansville Brownfields Corporation to allow students in a summer art class to transform an unoccupied house at 313 Jefferson Avenue into an immersive art experience.

“The house will not function as a gallery to display art but as an artwork,” Braysmith said. “The Brownfields Corporation works with the City of Evansville to acquire, hold and redevelop properties in blighted areas determined by the city. This project enables USI students to practice the rarest form of neighborhood revitalization through aesthetic interventions—the use of a structurally sound, though unoccupied house. Such house projects are extremely rare and I have never heard of one where undergraduates are the designers.”

For more information, find Sculpt EVV on Facebook.

Sponsors of the Sculpt EVV Community Art and Music Festival include the University of Southern Indiana, City of Evansville, The Potter’s Wheel Ministries and Memorial Community Development Corporation.

Event partners are the African American Museum, Evansville Museum of Arts, History and Science, and the Goosetown Neighborhood Association.