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Financial Assistance for 2014 Farm Bill

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NRCS offers voluntary programs to eligible landowners and agricultural producers to provide financial and technical assistance to help manage natural resources in a sustainable manner. Through these programs the agency approves contracts to provide financial assistance to help plan and implement conservation practices that address natural resource concerns or opportunities to help save energy, improve soil, water, plant, air, animal and related resources on agricultural lands and non-industrial private forest land.

Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)
EQIP provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers in order to address natural resource concerns and deliver environmental benefits such as improved water and air quality, conserved ground and surface water, reduced soil erosion and sedimentation or improved or created wildlife habitat.

Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)
The Conservation Stewardship Program helps agricultural producers maintain and improve their existing conservation systems and adopt additional conservation activities to address priority resources concerns. Participants earn CSP payments for conservation performance—the higher the performance, the higher the payment.

Agricultural Management Assistance Program (AMA)
AMA helps agricultural producers use conservation to manage risk and solve natural resource issues through natural resources conservation. NRCS administers the AMA conservation provisions while the Agricultural Marketing Service and the Risk Management Agency implement other provisions under AMA. Agricultural Management Assistance is not available in Indiana.

Other Financial Assistance Programs

Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG)
CIG is a voluntary program intended to stimulate the development and adoption of innovative conservation approaches and technologies while leveraging Federal investment in environmental enhancement and protection, in conjunction with agricultural production. Under CIG, Environmental Quality Incentives Program funds are used to award competitive grants to non-Federal governmental or nongovernmental organizations, Tribes, or individuals.

Emergency Watershed Protection Program (EWP)
The purpose of the Emergency Watershed Protection Program (EWP) was established by Congress to respond to emergencies created by natural disasters. The EWP Program is designed to help people and conserve natural resources by relieving imminent hazards to life and property caused by floods, fires, drought, windstorms, and other natural occurrences. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) administers the EWP Program; EWP-Recovery, and EWP–Floodplain Easement (FPE).

 

Senior status not likely to slow Judge Barker

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Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com  barker-sarahevans0414-1col

Attorneys and judges alike say whenever Judge Sarah Evans Barker is on the bench, there is no question who is in charge in that courtroom. This is a judge they universally describe as well-prepared, well-organized and authoritative, but not averse to occasionally introducing a little humor in the proceedings.

It is not surprising that when Barker, U.S. District judge for the Southern District of Indiana, announced her plans to take senior status June 30, many in the legal community caught their breath. Then they learned that she will be continuing to work at full bore until a successor is appointed, and only at that time will she cut her caseload slightly.

barker-sarahevans0414-1col.jpg District Court Judge Sarah Evans Barker hopes to have more time to spend with her grandchildren as she transitions to senior status. (IL Photo/ Marilyn Odendahl)
Upon hearing of Barker’s intentions, Ronald Elberger, her law school classmate and former Bose McKinney & Evans colleague, smiled.

“It means she is still going to be in the federal court, which is good news,” he said.

Thirty years ago, Barker was tapped for the federal bench. She was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 1984, becoming the first woman to serve as a District Court judge in Indiana.

Even before she put on a judicial robe, Barker had been kicking at the glass ceiling. In 1972, she was the first female hired as assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Indiana. Nine years later, she was appointed U.S. attorney, then being just one of two women to serve in that position.

elberger-ron-mug Elberger
Barker said she knew that serving as a federal judge would be challenging and take all the talent she had, but it would also be interesting and rewarding.

“You have an extended reach as a judge into our society to affect the relationship and the course of events and the interpretation of law,” Barker said. “So you do that with a modesty, you do that within the parameters of your role and with a sense that your part is only to give things a little nudge, not to be preemptive in terms of reorganizing people’s lives and affairs.”

Along the way, Barker always took time to mentor and help attorneys build their careers. She played matchmaker, pointing lawyers to opportunities both in the profession as well as in the community.

Sam Laurin, partner at Bose, faced Barker two times as a young attorney, barely six years into his practice. One day, he asked if the court could end session early so he could go home for his daughter’s birthday. Barker readily obliged, and then they spent a few minutes off the record talking about their children.

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laurin Laurin
Laurin knew to be prepared when going to Barker’s court and to never be late, a lesson he learned when opposing counsel arrived after the appointed hour.

“The trains are going to run on time in her court, but there is time for occasional levity as well,” Laurin said.

The Southern District of Indiana is one of the busiest District courts in the country and that, Barker said, is one of her primary motivators for her decision to transition at this time – an additional judge will bring relief to the docket. Once she becomes a senior judge, a vacancy will open on the five-member court and once a new judge is appointed, she will cut her caseload to 80 percent. Her reduced caseload, combined with Senior Judge Larry McKinney’s caseload, will essentially add a sixth judge to the Southern District.

“For me, part of the fun has been to come in every day and see what arrives in my inbox and then to see if I am up to the challenges it presents,” Barker said. “I’ll just keep doing it that way.”

Three decades has filled her docket with a wealth of cases, but she does not want to choose which was more special, comparing it to asking a mother to choose her favorite child. Every case deserved her careful attention and best effort, she said.

When rendering an opinion, Barker maintained the judge has the role and responsibility to stay limited to the legal question being presented by the case.

She pointed to her decision in the complaint over the state’s voter ID law, eventually upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States in Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, as an example. There, she said, she addressed the ID law as it was argued and on the basis of the facts and law as presented found the statute to be constitutional. She emphasized she did not rule on the wisdom of the voter law, nor did she tell the Legislature what she thought the state should do.

“That sort of captures my sense of what a judge does,” Barker said. “You decide the case before you, you don’t decide wider issues.”

Likewise, in deciding Buquer v. City of Indianapolis, City of Franklin, Johnson County, 1:11-cv-0708, she found the state’s immigration law to run afoul of the Fourth Amendment.

The judge’s role, Barker continued, is to render a decision on the case presented. From the bench, the judicial officer should look at the parties, look at the mechanics of the case as to whether it was brought in the proper venue at the right time, and are the right issues being raised when attacking the statute.

One of the cases that solidified Barker’s judicial reputation was the Bridgestone/Firestone Tire Products multidistrict litigation that involved more than 800 lawsuits from all over the United States and overseas. The case was assigned to Barker in 2000 and took a decade to resolve with the first four years being the busiest.

To help with the massive litigation, Barker called upon U.S. Magistrate Judge V. Sue Shields and appointed Debra McVicker Lynch, now a magistrate judge with the Southern District, to the special master position.
debbie lynch Lynch
Lynch had developed an interest in being a judge during the two years she served as Barker’s first female law clerk. She has no doubt Barker had her in mind when she asked the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation for a special master.

“I think what’s really important that doesn’t get out often enough about her is that she didn’t strive to be the first, she strived to be one of many women,” Lynch said of Barker. “I really think it’s important to be said that she was not just the first but she always tried to be one of many, many women in leadership positions.”

At the first pretrial conference of the Bridgestone/Firestone litigation, Barker’s courtroom was a sea of mostly male lawyers dressed in black and gray suits. Lynch remembers entering with Barker and Shields – three women in charge of a major case that involved numerous issues and countless plaintiffs.

Barker and her decision to put women on the team must have sent a strong message. At the next pretrial conference, Lynch said, more women lawyers were in attendance.

Outside the courtroom, Barker continued to champion women. She was a driving force behind the Women in Law Conference, previously sponsored by Indiana Lawyer, which brought the female members of the bar together to network and talk about issues in their practices, including balancing work with families.
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Indiana Court of Appeals Chief Judge Nancy Vaidik remembers picking up the phone shortly after she had arrived in Indianapolis and hearing Barker introduce herself and offer an invitation to lunch. Vaidik is now following Barker’s lead by mentoring and helping young women as well as her law students at Indiana University Maurer School of Law.

“Judge Barker knew she had a responsibility,” Vaidik said. “She told me she knew if she screwed up she would set back other women. Her most lasting legacy is not the cases and not (being) the first woman. It is her generosity and mentoring of other women in her own funny, smart, lady-like way.”•

 

 

 

Wildlife habitat help available

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Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com

stelprdb1119530 Hoosier landowners interested in establishing or improving wildlife habitat on their property are now able to submit applications through the Natural Resources Conservation Service.

The NRCS in Indiana maintains the Environmental Quality Incentives Program, which provides selected residents with assistance to address and improve the wildlife habitat and environmental situation on their properties

EQIP has absorbed the former Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program and continues to issue funds to target eligible applications with a core set of wildlife habitat development practices.

“The benefits of these habitats reach well beyond their boundaries,” State Conservationist Jane Hardisty said in a press release. “Not only do these habitats provide ample food and shelter for wildlife but they also help filter and cleanse water; prevent flooding in local communities by holding water; and improve soil profiles.”

The deadline to submit an application for EQIP is May 16, 2014. Applications received by the deadline will be evaluated and considered for funding in the current fiscal year. Any applications received after the May 16 deadline will be considered for funding in the future.

Those interested in applying through EQIP should contact their local NCRS office.

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

Indiana unemployment rate drops to 5.9 percent

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By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The state’s unemployment rate continued to fall in March, dropping to less than 6 percent for the first time since July 2008.

unemployment graphicThe state’s rate of 5.9 percent is better than the national rate and those in surrounding states.

“Our rate has dropped by 2 percentage points in one year, which is the third largest decline in the nation,” said Scott Sanders, commissioner of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development. “The Hoosier labor force has grown by more than 25,000 in the first quarter of 2014 alone, which is also remarkable.”

Indiana added 3,200 private sector jobs in March and the state ranks eighth in the nation in total private sector job growth since July, 2009, the low point of employment in the state. During that time, Indiana has grown 215,500 private sector jobs, lead in part by strong growth in the manufacturing sector.

State officials also said claims for state unemployment insurance in March were nearly 10,000 below March 2013 levels and are at their lowest since 2007. Initial claims for unemployment insurance are at their lowest levels since 2000.

Indiana’s unemployment was 6.1 percent in February and 7.9 percent one year ago.

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

Eagles tie for 17th at Midwest Regional

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Michael Robertson, Sports Information Internmedium_grant_saylor-4933

 

 

NOBLESVILLE, Ind. – The University of Southern Indiana men’s golf team finished in a tie for 17th at the Midwest Spring Regional held at the Purgatory Golf Club in Noblesville, Indiana. The tournament was hosted by the University of Indianapolis.

The Screaming Eagles shot a two-day 622 (305-317), 36 strokes off the pace set by Wayne State University. The Warriors won the tournament with a team score of 596 (294-302).

Freshman Grant Saylor (Newburgh, Indiana) led the Eagles finishing in a tie for 34th. Saylor posted a first round 73 and followed it up with a second round 80 for a tournament total of 153. Saylor was followed by junior David Janney (Indianapolis, Indiana), who finished in a tie for 80th with a two round total of 157 (78-79).

The next action for the Eagles is in the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championship April 20-22. The three-day tournament is being held at Otter Creek Golf Course in Columbus, Indiana.

Illinois State Defeats UE Tennis, 6-1

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NORMAL, Ill. – Junior Marketa Trousilova posted wins in both singles and doubles, but Illinois State improved to 9-8 on the season with a 6-1 victory over the University of Evansville women’s tennis team on Friday afternoon.

Trousilova along with Marina Moreno won their sixth singles tilt in a row. The pair defeated Emmie Marx and Sierra Stone by an 8-7 final. At top singles, Trousilova defeated Phyllis Tiggers, 7-6, 6-2. She is 9-2 in her lasts 11 singles efforts.

Things went the Redbirds’ way from that point as they took the doubles tally with wins in the first and third flights. Top doubles saw Kelsey Costales and Natasha James fall to Tigges and Madeliene Baillon, 8-3. No. 3 doubles saw Heather Nisbet and Kadi Ilves top Andjela Brguljan and Mina Milovic by an 8-3 final.

Second flight singles saw Moreno fall to Marx, 6-1, 7-5. No. 3 singles saw Costales defeated by Stone, 6-3, 6-3.

Flight four saw Brguljan fall to Carolina Abello in three sets, 6-7, 7-5, 10-8. Milovic was defeated by Baillon in flight five, 6-0, 6-1. Illinois State won No. 6 singles by default as Ilves was credited with the win.

Tomorrow, the Purple Aces look to end the regular season on a high note when they make the trip on I74 from Normal to Peoria, Ill. to face Bradley. The match will begin at 1 pm.

Men’s tennis advances in GLVC Tourney

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Dan McDonnell, USI Sports Informationrp_primary__NIK5612

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

#24 Southern Indiana (17-6): 5
#38 Rockhurst (9-6): 3

ST. LOUIS—The No. 24 University of Southern Indiana men’s tennis team capitalized on a pair of doubles victories by winning three singles matches en route to a 5-3 win over No. 38 Rockhurst University in the opening round of the Great Lakes Valley Conference Championship Tournament Friday morning.

USI (17-6) got wins at No. 1 and No. 2 doubles to build a 2-1 advantage heading into singles play. Sophomore Jack Joyce and senior Santiago Lopez, both of whom were named to the All-GLVC team Thursday night, paired for an 8-6 victory at No. 1 doubles, while sophomore Joel Stern and freshman Josh Walden posted an 8-6 triumph at No. 2.

Joyce and Lopez each picked up straight-set wins at No. 1 and No. 2 singles, respectively, while Stern sealed the victory with a straight-set victory at No. 4 singles.

The Screaming Eagles, who are advancing beyond the GLVC Tournament first round for the sixth straight season, face the No. 1 seed from the GLVC West Division, Drury University, in the semifinals Saturday morning at 9 a.m. USI is the No. 2 seed from the East Division, while Rockhurst was the No. 3 seed in the West.

Drury (19-2), ranked No. 12 nationally, defeated the No. 4 seed from the East Division, Lewis University, 5-0, in the opening round Friday morning. Also advancing into Saturday’s semifinals were the No. 1 seed from the East, the University of Indianapolis, and the No. 3 seed from the East, McKendree University.

UIndy, ranked No. 31 nationally, defeated the No. 4 seed from the West Division, Truman State University, 5-0, while McKendree edged the University of Missouri-St. Louis, the No. 2 seed from the West Division, 5-4.

The GLVC Championship is Sunday at noon, while the consolation bracket match is Sunday at 9 a.m.

Injection Helps Treat Hard-to-Control Type 2 Diabetes

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Adding daily shot improves blood glucose levels when standard regimen fails, study finds
Patients with type 2 diabetes who can’t control their blood glucose levels with the drug metformin alone do better after adding injections of the drug liraglutide compared to oral doses of another drug called sitagliptin, researchers report.

In the study, Dr. Richard E. Pratley, of the University of Vermont College of Medicine in Burlington, and his colleagues randomly assigned patients whose blood glucose wasn’t sufficiently controlled by metformin (Glucophage) to receive 26 weeks of treatment with liraglutide (Victoza) by injection or sitagliptin (Januvia) by mouth.

The researchers found that the patients did better on liraglutide, although between 21 percent and 27 percent of patients reported nausea, compared to 5 percent of those on sitagliptin, according to the report published in the April 24 issue of The Lancet.

Liraglutide “was well-tolerated with minimum risk of hypoglycemia. These findings support the use of liraglutide as an effective agent to add to metformin,” they wrote in a news release from the journal.

In a commentary accompanying the study, Dr. Andre J. Scheen and Dr. Regis P. Radermecker of the University of Liege in Belgium noted that patients may think it’s easier to take one sitagliptin pill a day compared to daily injections of liraglutide. And liraglutide, they added, is more expensive, but it has improved benefits in terms of blood glucose control and weight reduction.

Commentary: A hate not easily forgotten

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By Jenny LabalmeJenny-Nov.-2012-2-274x400
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – There are some faces you never forget.

Not long after Frazier Glenn Cross, according to police, brazenly shot and killed three individuals in Overland Park, Kan., I was reading an online story about him. There was an Associated Press photo of him taken about 30 years ago. I said to my husband, “I know that face and I think I photographed him when I worked as a photographer years ago in North Carolina.”

Commentary button in JPG – no shadowI trudged down to our basement. In a file box wedged in a corner, I found a folder of old photos. Sure enough, there was the black and white photo of him at a Ku Klux Klan rally in Raleigh, N.C. I can’t find the exact date I took this, but it was in the mid-1980s. I remember the assignment well.

I was a young, just-out-of college photojournalist, working for The Independent, a Durham, N.C.-based weekly newsmagazine. I was following an editor’s directive to photograph the event in North Carolina’s state capitol. Some of my photos of the rally ended up on the front page of The Boston Globe. At that time, Cross went by the name Frazier Glenn Miller. He was the grand dragon of the Carolina Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. The rhetoric spewed at the rally was filthy and disgusting.

In my two decades as a photographer and journalist, I don’t think I’ve ever been more uncomfortable and unsettled covering a news event. Most of the Klansmen were dressed in paramilitary outfits as they marched. I still remember the sounds as their combat boots slapped the hard pavement and the Confederate flags flapped in a stiff wind. A few of the Klansmen were dressed in white robes with pointed white hoods, including a man I photographed whose stare down my telephoto lens was so evil. As I look at this photo today, I can still see the hate emanating in the black and white and gray tones of the photo I took close to 30 years ago.

Frazier Glenn Miller, also known as Frazier Glenn Cross, has been charged in connection with the shootings of three people in Kansas. He’s shown here at a white supremacist rally in North Carolina in the 1980s. Photo by Jenny Labalme.
Frazier Glenn Miller, also known as Frazier Glenn Cross, has been charged in connection with the shootings of three people in Kansas. He’s shown here at a white supremacist rally in North Carolina in the 1980s. Photo by Jenny Labalme.
While North Carolina and many states are more diverse now than they were three decades ago, I remember being stunned and puzzled that people could be so misguided and filled with such negative thoughts. After photographing the event, I remember wanting to drive as far away as I could from these people.

It’s not easy, though, to escape hate.Frazier-Glenn-Miller-Labalme-photo1-400x266

Part of the reason I could recall, 30 years later, that I had photographed Frazier Glenn Miller was that I remembered his face not because of his features, but because of the rage and animosity his face revealed.

That look haunted me then.

It haunts me still.

Jenny Labalme is the executive director of the Indianapolis Press Club Foundation and a freelance journalist.

UE Women’s Golf Travels to MVC Championship

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MVC CHAMPIONSHIP CENTRAL

 

rp_primary_katterhenry 2EVANSVILLE, Ind. – A fourth place finish at the Indiana State Invite has the University of Evansville women’s golf team feeling good as they prepare for the Missouri Valley Conference Championship, which will take place from April 20-22.

Panther Creek Golf Club in Springfield, Ill. will play host to the tournament. Fifty-four holes comprise the event with 18 holes being played on each of the three days of action. The course was professionally designed by PGA Hall of Fame golfer Hale Irwin and opened in 1992. In its short history, the course has played host to several high profile events including the LPGA’s State Farm Classic, the Illinois State Amateur and the Great Lakes Valley Men’s Championship.

Evansville has faced stiff conference competition over the last three weeks. True freshman Kayla Katterhenry has emerged as one of the top golfers in the league over that stretch. The native of Newburgh was victorious in two of those events while finishing third in Terre Haute. Her victories came at the Saluki Invitational and the Bradley Invitational.

Katterhenry finished the regular season with the No. 2 average in the Valley. Her 76.29 was behind only Danielle Lemek of Bradley. In head-to-head competition, Katterhenry beat Lemek in two out of three events.

Aside from Katterhenry’s third place finish, Paige Crafton had a solid outing. After posting an 82 in the opening round, Crafton improved by six strokes on Monday to finish in a tie for 11th place with a 158.

Just behind her was Cathy Doyle, who checked in with a 159. Doyle missed the opening match of the spring, but has come on strong since that point. In four events, the junior has registered three top 17 finishes while her lowest finish was a 26th.

Freshman Maggie Camp has also come on strong as of late. In the final round at Indiana State, camp shot her low round of the spring, a 77, on her way to a tie for 30th place. An interesting note on Camp is that she gets better as tournaments go along. This spring, her second-round totals are 20 strokes lower than her opening round.

Illinois State has had the upper hand in the league, winning five of the last six conference championships. Sandwiched in the middle was a victory by Missouri State in 2012. The Bears topped the Redbirds by three strokes that season. Evansville came home in ninth place last season.