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Ritz asks for free textbooks, more money for schools

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – State Superintendent Glenda Ritz asked lawmakers Thursday for $500 million in additional spending on education during the next two years – including more money for testing as well as free textbooks for all public school students.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz makes requests for the next two year budget. Photo by Aubrey Helms, TheStatehouseFile.com

Most of the new money – more than $334 million – would go to schools to pay for teacher salaries, utilities and other general costs. That would be an increase in state funding of 2 percent in Fiscal Year 2016 and 1.2 percent in 2015.

But Ritz told the State Budget Committee that testing to go with the state’s newly written curriculum standards could cost $65 million – up $20 million from the current program.

“We think that will be the cost,” Ritz cautioned the committee, which is gathering information about spending for the next two years as it prepares a draft of the next budget. “We don’t know for sure.”

The Department of Education is now taking bids for the new testing program, which will replace the current ISTEP exam and must be in place next year.

State Budget Committee Chairman Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, asked Ritz why the state planned to create its own testing program, rather than buying an off-the-shelf model that had been designed by another state.

“I keep thinking we’re making it too hard,” Kenley said.

Sen. Luke Kenley responds to budget requests by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz. Photo by Aubrey Helms, TheStatehouseFile.com

But Ritz said the testing program must encompass a number of parts, some of which are mandated by federal officials but some of which are state specific. In addition, the state has its own standards, something the General Assembly mandated.

Previously, the State Board of Education had adopted Common Core, a set of standards that are being used by more than 40 states, and Indiana was a part of a national organization that was creating a test to measure student knowledge of those standards.

But when the General Assembly moved away from Common Core, the state also dropped out of the group. Now the Board of Education is searching for a vendor to create a test that matches the state’s locally-written standards. Kenley said lawmakers will want a say in that test and the contract.

“Do we get to weigh in?” he asked Ritz. “Or just pay for what somebody else says?”

Ritz said the contract will likely be finalized before the 2015 legislative session is over and she said wasn’t sure what type of input lawmakers want. But Kenley pointed out that state law requires her to bring the proposed testing program to the State Budget Committee for review, which she agreed to do.

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Glenda Ritz makes a budget proposal on behalf of the Department of Education. Photo by Aubrey Helms, TheStatehouseFile.com

The superintendent also pitched her plan to offer free textbooks to all students. Currently, the state reimburses districts only textbook rentals for students who qualify for free or reduced lunch – and that money doesn’t generally pay the full cost. Ritz is proposing to expand that program to cover all of Indiana’s 1 million students.

That’s something Democrats have backed for years, but Republicans have been leery about. Kenley told Ritz that he’s concerned that schools won’t try to control their costs if the state is paying. “I’m struggling,” he told her, “to share this goal with you.”

Republican Gov. Mike Pence and GOP legislative leaders have said that they hope to boost education funding during the next two years. But Pence has said it’s too soon to propose precise amounts. Lawmakers will receive a forecast next week that will predict how much money they have available to spend during the next to years.

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

 

Pence adds torch relay to Indiana Bicentennial celebration

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana will host a torch relay across the state as part of Indiana’s 200th birthday celebration in 2016.

Screen Shot 2014-12-11 at 6.15.53 PMClick the image at right to see the projected route for the torch relay. State officials say the route is subject to change.

Gov. Mike Pence announced the relay Thursday during Statehood Day and he called it a “signature event” for the state’s bicentennial.

“You know the torch is a very important symbol for Indiana because it’s featured right in the middle of our state flag,” Pence said to hundreds of fourth graders gathered at the Statehouse to celebrate Indiana’s 198thbirthday.

The relay will carry the torch through each of Indiana’s 92 counties, starting in Corydon, the original state capitol. The torch will travel about 2,300 miles before it arrives at the Statehouse.

“It will be carried by Hoosiers who will be nominated by their peers,” Pence said. “They’ll pass through areas highlighting Indiana’s natural beauty, historic significance and local importance.”

The event will last about six weeks and take place in the fall of 2016, the year of the state’s bicentennial.

The Indiana Office of Tourism Development is organizing the project, which is patterned after the Olympic Torch Relay. The route was charted by a committee of representatives from multiple state agencies and the private sector, including the state departments of transportation, natural resources, police, tourism, community and rural affairs and state archives.

A mobile visitor center will accompany the torch and serve as an interactive museum that highlights important milestones during Indiana’s first 200 years.

The torch will be designed by engineering faculty and students at Purdue University.

Nominations for torch bearers can be made at the Indiana Bicentennial Torch Relay website: www.Indiana2016.org/torchrelay. Nominations will be accepted beginning in March.

“We are thrilled to announce this interactive element within our state’s bicentennial celebration,” said first lady Karen Pence, ambassador for the Bicentennial Commission. “Hoosiers from every county in Indiana will have the opportunity to showcase their state pride by choosing how the torch will travel through their county. I look forward to seeing their creativity.”

Volunteer county coordinators will organize torch relay activities in their respective counties.

 

Donnelly bill aimed at preventing military suicides could pass this week

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INDIANAPOLIS — A bill aimed at preventing suicides among military members is expected to pass the U.S. Senate this week.

Sen. Joe Donnelly, D-Ind., authored the Jacob Sexton Military Prevention Suicide Act of 2014 because he believes the U.S. military needs to improve its mental health screening system.

“This will be a major step forward, because it will make mental health screening a requirement for all service members, every year,” Donnelly said. “We must do a better job of identifying those who are struggling with challenges.”

The act has three main components. First, it will require yearly mental health screenings for active military members, as well as members of the guard and reserve. Right now screenings are only required for active members.

The second part of the bill focuses on the protection of privacy for soldiers who ask for help with their mental health problems.

“We must ensure that seeking help isn’t considered a sign of weakness, but rather a sign of strength,” Donnelly said.

Finally, the bill would require the Pentagon to look at existing mental health screening and treatment options for military members and issue a report on ways to improve the system. That report would be due within a year of the bill becoming law.

The Jacob Sexton Act is part of the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act. The House passed the bill last week and Donnelly said he thinks the Senate could vote on it as early as Friday.

Donnelly also said he thinks President Barack Obama will sign the bill into law “very, very quickly” — most likely before the end of the year.

In 2013, 475 soldiers lost their lives to suicide, compared to 132 who were killed in combat.

In the first quarter of this year, 120 military members had already committed suicide.

“It’s become such an overwhelming issue, in terms of the numbers and the stark reality of, we lost four times more to suicide than in combat just last year,” Donnelly said.

Jacob Sexton was among the soldiers in 2009 who chose to end their lives. He was home in Farmland, Ind. on a 15-day-leave from Afghanistan when he shot himself in a Muncie movie theatre. He was 21-years-old.

Sexton’s family worked with Donnelly to create the bill in his honor.

“We owe it to the Sexton family, to Jake Sexton, to families across Indiana and across the country to make sure the numbers are reduced,” he said, “and that we can get them down to zero.”

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

A 2014 Gift of the Magi

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A giant Manhattan penthouse and a summer home in the Hamptons. That was all. There was nothing Sabrina could do but plop onto her designer couch and cry.
Christmas was a week away, but Sabrina didn’t have enough money to buy the one gift her husband, Beckett, had dreamed of: hair transplants.
Beckett, meanwhile, had been desperate to scrape $20,000 together to buy Sabrina the Christmas gift she longed for: saline implants.
But money was tight. True, their fortunes had improved dramatically since the economic collapse of 2008. As the housing bubble burst and a massive correction rippled through the world’s economies, Sabrina found herself out of work.
Beckett also lost his job in 2008. As an investment banker at a large New York firm, his risky investments, and occasional illegal dealings, lost billions for his employer. It’s amazing he wasn’t in jail.
As the massive flow of commission checks and bonuses halted, Sabrina and Beckett lost their penthouse and summer home to foreclosure.
“It’s not fair!” said Sabrina, sobbing.
Fortunately, Sabrina and Beckett would not suffer for long — because Wall Street would not suffer for long.
Wall Street banks were too big to fail, after all — their failure would have sent the economy into an unimaginable tailspin that would have had an effect greater than the Great Depression.
The Federal Reserve began buying up the bad debt the banks were holding — or laundering that bad debt, as some economists refer to it — essentially whitewashing the many bad business decisions, some of them criminal, that the bankers had made.
Former Federal Reserve official Andrew Huszar, who managed the Fed’s $1.25 trillion mortgage-backed-security buying spree, explained in The Wall Street Journal that the Fed’s “quantitative easing” (QE) has been enriching Wall Street bankers at the expense of the public.
“The central bank continues to spin QE as a tool for helping Main Street. But I’ve come to recognize the program for what it really is: the greatest backdoor Wall Street bailout of all time … . The banks hadn’t just benefited from the lower cost of making loans. They’d also enjoyed huge capital gains on the rising values of their securities holdings and fat commissions from brokering most of the Fed’s QE transactions.”
Sabrina and Beckett surely benefited from the Wall Street windfall.
Beckett was soon making huge commissions and bonuses as an investment banker. Sabrina was soon making big commissions, too, selling real estate to wealthy bankers.
The two had almost made a full recovery to regain their lavish, pre-2008 lifestyle. But since their credit hadn’t yet fully recovered, they had to make sizable down payments to buy back their penthouse and summer home. That is why they lacked the funds for Christmas gifts.
But then Sabrina got an idea. She knew a mortgage broker and appraiser who could overstate the value of her penthouse so she could get an inflated home-equity loan!
When Christmas Eve arrived, Sabrina explained to Beckett how she was able to secure the money she needed to pay for his hair transplants.
Beckett began laughing uncontrollably.
“What is so funny?” said Sabrina.
“You didn’t need to borrow against the penthouse,” he said. “My bank did so well this year, my bonus was big enough to pay for your saline implants!”
“Oh, Beckett!”
Suddenly, Sabrina noticed something different about her husband’s male-pattern baldness: It was gone!
“What happened to your hair?” she said.
“My bonus was so big, I had enough to fly to Beverly Hills to have my hair implants done!”
Sabrina and Beckett laughed at all the unnecessary trouble Sabrina had gone through the previous week.
It was a Merry Christmas after all.
—–
©2014 Tom Purcell. Tom Purcell, author of “Misadventures of a 1970’s Childhood” and “Comical Sense: A Lone Humorist Takes on a World Gone Nutty!” is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist and is nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons Inc. For info on using this column in your publication or website, contact Sales@cagle.com or call (805) 969-2829. Send comments to Tom at Purcell@caglecartoons.com.

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Reports

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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 December 14, 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

 

ST. MARY’S WELLNESS CENTER TO OFFER COUPLE’S SOCIAL DANCING

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St. Mary’s Wellness Center at Epworth Crossing will present three different opportunities for a great date night.

Couple’s Social Dancing will be offering Night Club Two-Step Level Two, East Coast Swing Level One, and West Coast Swing Level One beginning in January and February. The classes are taught by David and Donna Koring, who have been instructors since 2003.

Each class lasts for five weeks and is $65 per couple. Pre-registration is required.
Dates and more information can be found below:

  • Night Club Two-Step Level Two.
    Monday evenings from 7:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
    January 12, 19, 26, and February 2 and 9.
  • East Coast Swing Level One
    Tuesday evenings from 7:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
    January 13, 20, 27, and February 3 and 10.
  • West Coast Sw

Managing Holiday Stress

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By: Janie Chappell, Deaconess Cross Pointe

Stress and depression can make your holiday miserable. It’s common, particularly among women who are always feeling that they need to be “everything to everyone.” As a result, we neglect our own emotional and even physical well-being. Here are some tips on how to prevent and deal with stress and depression over the holidays.

Exercise
The most important tip in reducing stress is to exercise. Even just a few minutes a day can help eliminate the hormones produced by stress that cause the physical and emotional damage such as: increased blood pressure, heart disease, depression and immune-suppressive-related disorders that range from common cold to cancer. Speaking simply, stress is hard on our bodies and physical activity can help reduce that damage.

Volunteering
Volunteering your time to help others is another good way to lift your spirits and meet other caring people. You can’t help but feel more encouraged when you help someone else. Also, seeing others who are less fortunate than ourselves can help give us a better perspective and help develop a sense of gratitude. Making a gratitude list of all the things that ARE going right can be very beneficial. Some people do it first thing in the morning or at night before going to bed. Being aware of all the things in life that you have to be grateful for can help you change your perspective.

Emotions
It’s important to acknowledge your feelings and not try to pretend they don’t exist. “Stuffing your feelings” only makes them compound and get bigger. Especially if there’s been a big change in the past year that will affect the holidays. The death of a loved one, a divorce, family issues, etc. can make the holidays difficult. Finding a support system with whom you can share those feelings without being judged—whether it’s a counselor, close friend, pastor, relative, etc.—can help make the feelings less powerful. Talking about feelings will lessen the impact on you and those around you. Journaling can be very helpful in identifying, channeling and alleviating emotions that are causing stress. Get yourself a designated notebook that you can devote to any kind of feelings and how they are affecting your life.

I’ll suggest “be realistic”—even though that suggestion isn’t always realistic! Norman Rockwell doesn’t show up at my Christmas celebrations every year either. As families evolve and grow, traditions and rituals will change too. For example, as my kids have gotten older and have their own spouses, jobs, etc. and we find it increasingly difficult to get together to do all the things we USED to do. So we now pick and choose traditions that are most important to us. As a mother, I still struggle with that; however, I find that if I can do a gratitude list, it helps me a lot.

Family Conflicts
As far as family conflicts and challenges go, work on accepting people as they are. You know how hard it is to change anything about yourself—accept that you’re not going to be able to change anyone else. If you have some issues or disagreements that DO need to be worked through, save them for another time rather than during a family holiday. Also, cut people some slack. They could be having the same holiday stress too. Much of the time, when people respond out of stress, it’s more about how they’re feeling themselves than how they’re feeling about you, or about anything you did/didn’t do.

Take care of yourself.
I know we already mentioned exercise, but it also goes beyond that. Things like eating healthfully, minimizing sugar and alcohol intake, getting enough rest, and finding time to do the things you enjoy are all important. Enjoying some music, escaping into a good book, etc. can help. Relaxation techniques, which can be as simple as practicing deep breathing when you feel angry or down, taking yourself to a quiet place where you can meditate on a favorite experience or visualizing a special place you’ve been, etc. can help your mood and spirit.

Learn to say no.
Saying yes when you should say no can leave you feeling resentful and overwhelmed. You can’t possibly do everything that is asked of you. When you’re asked to do something—whether it’s by a family member or a colleague, sometimes just saying, “Let me think about that and get back to you,” can be helpful. It buys you some time to think about whether you really want to do something or not, and it can help you figure out an acceptable way to say no, if that’s what you decide you want to.

Planning Ahead
The holidays are filled with expectations, certainly….social and financial especially. Plan ahead in terms of what activities and purchases are most important to you—budget your time AND your money. You won’t buy happiness by buying a truckload of gifts. In that same thought, you don’t buy happiness by spreading yourself so thin that you don’t have quality time with anyone you care about. You don’t have to say yes to every invitation if it will take time away from people you really care about. One question you may ask yourself is: “What is the most important use of my time and resources?” Then figure out how to align your actions with your priorities.

If Holiday Stress Becomes Serious
Prolonged stress CAN deplete some brain chemicals that affect mood, which can lead to a major depression. So how do you know if you’ve developed a more serious problem? If for more than 2 weeks you notice a deep sadness every day; you find you can’t gather the energy to take care of your activities of daily living; if you’re crying frequently; eating or sleeping more or less; and/or having thoughts of suicide, you need to talk to your doctor right away. If you’re prone to depression, or have been diagnosed in the past, it is even more important to pay particular attention to these signs and try to act before they become overwhelming.

Some individuals may become extremely depressed or potentially suicidal due to the stresses and emotions of the holidays. If you or someone you know is struggling, please contact your doctor or contact Deaconess Cross Pointe at 812-476-7200 or 800-947-6789, 24 hours per day, 7 days per week—even on the holidays.

Wrapping It Up
The tips above are all things you CAN do to de-stress your holiday season. They may seem overly simplified or possibly unrealistic, but they are do-able! There is no magic answer for anyone. Try different tips to find the right balance for you so that this holiday season is fun of joy, peace, and good health!

If you’d like more information on these or other behavioral health topics contact Janie at 812-471-4521 (direct line) or by calling Cross Pointe 812-476-7200 or 800-947-6789. You may also visit The Deaconess Cross Pointe website.

Pet of the Week

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Hi, I’m Buddy! I’m a 1-and-a-half-year-old male brindle pitbull mix! I’m a very active guy who loves to play. I’d like to meet any other dogs in my potential new home, if there are any! I’ve been at the shelter longer than ANY of the other dogs, most likely just because of my breed. Sometimes I’m pretty energetic in my kennel, so people pass me by, but I’m a loving & well-behaved boy when I’m visiting with people! I’m just as wonderful as all those other breeds! Take me home TODAY for only $100 neutered, vaccinated, and microchipped! www.vhslifesaver.org

50 Tons of Litter and Counting!

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IMG_6128
“Wow.” That’s the response I often hear when volunteers see the difference they make in an area after picking up litter.
This January, the Clean Evansville Initiative will be going into its fourth year of cleaning up areas of the city on the first Saturday of each month. Many hours have been spent making the community a more inviting, healthy outdoor environment. All done by an army of dedicated volunteers!
Since the creation of the program, it’s been estimated that almost 50 tons of litter has been collected from areas throughout Evansville; 19 tons of litter was collected in 2012; 15.5 tons in 2013, and this year we have cleaned up 14.3 tons. Our efforts are becoming effective; there is less litter to pick up. On top of less litter in targeted areas, we have encouraged neighborhoods associations and other civic groups to clean areas around them through our program Great American Cleanup—which will kick off March 7th 2015 at Howell Park on Evansville’s West side after our cleanup.
In a perfect world, we wouldn’t need to clean up litter as often as we do. But because we don’t, we encourage people to help in keeping their community clean by not littering. Have pride for the city that you live in!
How can you help? Come to a Clean Evansville event, they are on the first Saturday of each month. Get your friends, family, and neighbors together for a neighborhood cleanup. And please do not litter.
Together, we can solve this problem!
Here are the dates and locations for the 2015 Clean Evansville cleanups:
January 3 Jacobsville Area
February 7 Covert/Green River/Pollack
March 7 Barker Ave/Howell Park
April 4 Anthony Oates Area
May 2 Kratzville/Mill/Ist Ave
June 6 41/Diamond/Fares/Kentucky
July 5 Riverfront/Downtown
August 1 Wesselman Park Area
September 5 Riverside / Kentucky
October 3 Cedar Hall/Fulton—OPERATION HOT MESS
November 7 Washington Ave/Lincoln Ave
December 5 North Green River / Morgan

For more information on the Clean Evansville Initiative, contact Keep Evansville Beautiful or visit www.cleanevansville.org/.