Home Blog Page 6353

Former Democratic legislator goes to work for Ellspermann

2

By Jacob Rund
TheStatehouseFile.comwelch

INDIANAPOLIS — Former legislator Peggy Welch, a Democrat, accepted a nomination from Republican Lt. Gov. Sue Ellspermann on Monday to become her director of intergovernmental relations.

Welch assumes office July 7 and will serve as the lieutenant governor’s liaison to city, town and county elected officials. She will serve as a member of Ellspermann’s management team.

“I am so pleased that Peggy Welch has accepted this important position in our office,” Ellspermann said in a press release. “I met Peggy when we served in the Legislature, and I developed a great respect for her commitment to serve the people of Indiana.”

Welch is currently the executive director of the Indiana Device Manufacturers Council and previously served as a registered nurse at IU Health Bloomington Hospital for 18 years.

Welch’s government service background includes time spent as the first director of the Monroe County Probation Department, a staff member of U.S. Senator Thad Cochran, and as a member of the Indiana House of Representatives. She was first elected to the House in 1998 and served the state in this position for 14 years.

During her time as a legislator, Welch served on the Ways and Means, Public Health, Government Reduction, and State Budget Committees and was considered to be one of the most conservative democrats in her caucus.

“In both her professional life and her numerous community activities, Peggy has been a model of servant leadership that is so important for our administration,” Ellspermann said in a statement. “As a legislator for 14 years, she also learned the value of maintaining communications and partnerships among all levels of government.”

“I thank Lt. Governor Ellspermann for this opportunity to work with local government leaders to enhance partnerships and collaboration with State government,” Welch said in a press release. “The agencies of the Lt. Governor’s office offer many valuable programs that I am eager to help promote throughout the state.”

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

More than 300 Indiana schools rated Four Stars

0

By Erika Brock
TheStatehouseFile.comtimthumb.php-16

INDIANAPOLIS – More than 300 schools were named Indiana Four Star Schools for 2012-13 by the Indiana Department of Education Tuesday.

“I am honored to name these (311) schools as our Four Star Schools for this year,” Glenda Ritz, Superintendent of Public Instruction, said in a statement. “Winning this award required excellent work by teachers, administrators, students and parents throughout the year and on behalf of the entire Indiana Department of Education I send them my sincere congratulations.”

To achieve this designation, a school must rank in the top 25 percentile in three ISTEP-based categories. To be considered in the calculations, a school must have at least 10 students tested in each subject. Only students enrolled for 162 days during the 2011-2012 school year were included.

Karen White, principal at Saint Lawrence School in Lawrenceburg, said the quality of their teachers is what made them successful.

“The teachers have high expectations and they hold those students to those expectation,” White said.

Saint Lawrence has been an Indiana Four Star School in previous years, but for some schools – such as East Washington Elementary School in Perkins – this is the first time.

East Washington’s principal, Lisa Thomas, said the school had been working diligently at aligning curriculum to what students needed and to help them succeed.

Thomas said the school strives for a family atmosphere, so that “when a student comes to school they just aren’t a student of the school, but they are our student.”

The complete list of the 311 Four Star Schools for 2012-2013 can be found here.

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

Pence says Germans, Hoosiers share common goals, values

0

Pence-trade-day-3
By Ally Marlow
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Gov. Mike Pence told an audience of business and government leaders gathered Wednesday in Berlin that the mutual values and goals of Germany and Indiana will allow an already stable relationship to keep flourishing and help everyone reach prosperity.

Gov. Mike Pence joined executives from the Jäger Group in Hanover, Germany, on Wednesday to announce the company’s plans to expand operations of its subsidiary Jaeger-Unitek Sealing Solutions in La Porte, Ind., creating up to 52 new jobs by 2016. Photo courtesy of the governor’s office.
Gov. Mike Pence joined executives from the Jäger Group in Hanover, Germany, on Wednesday to announce the company’s plans to expand operations of its subsidiary Jaeger-Unitek Sealing Solutions in La Porte, Ind., creating up to 52 new jobs by 2016. Photo courtesy of the governor’s office.
“In America we speak of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” Pence said during a trade mission stop. “In Germany it is expressed as unity, justice, and freedom.”

Pence said in prepared remarks that international trade and relations are vital to global economic success. He asked for his audience to support the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership – a proposed free trade agreement under negotiation between the European Union and United States – in order to strengthen the already strong economic bonds that American has with Europe. Pence said he believes doing so will create security and combat with Russia’s recent aggression.

“International trade is vital to our mutual prosperity and leads to good paying jobs on both sides of the Atlantic,” he said.

Pence also lauded already strong ties between Germany and Indiana – and reiterated that the ties should and could extend across Europe and the United States. Germany is Indiana’s third biggest foreign trade outlet. More than $2 billion of goods from Indiana gets exported to Germany – a number that is constantly increasing.

Pence thanked the Germans for this commitment to Indiana product, but also asked for them to keep working towards a brighter future.

Common values and a dedication to freedom is what Pence said cemented the relationship between Germany and Indiana. He said all Europeans should use those same values in an effort to combat Russia.

“Especially now, I believe it is imperative that we who believe in democracy and freedom, stand against the forces that would reshape Europe by aggression,” Pence said. “As some claim territorial gains, they forfeit moral ground.”

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

 

Energize Evansville’s “Fitness in the Park” Joins Deaconess Healthier U Walks

0

 

City of Evansville SealThe City of Evansville and Deaconess Health System announce a season-long community fitness partnership. Mayor Lloyd Winnecke’s Energize Evansville “Fitness in the Park” initiative will be held in conjunction with the Deaconess Healthier U Walks on the third Saturday of each month, April 19 through October. The first event will be this Saturday, April 19, at Garvin Park. The program is free and open to the public.

At each partnership event, the Healthier U Walk will start at 9 a.m., with Mayor Winnecke walking with the group. After the walk, at approximately 10 a.m., Energize Evansville’s “Fitness in the Park” will offer different outdoor fitness activities. This Saturday, Mark Goltiao of Evansville Power Yoga will teach yoga.

“This combined fitness effort is a logical partnership, as our events have a shared goal to encourage people to utilize the wonderful outdoor spaces and parks in our community to become physically active and healthier,” said Mayor Winnecke.

Deaconess President and CEO Linda White said this is the fourth year for the Healthier U Walks. “The addition of Fitness in the Park each month will create a new experience for our loyal walkers and hopefully entice new walkers to our weekly walks,” said White.

The Deaconess Healthier U Walks take place each Saturday, from early April through October. There is no fee, and each participant will receive a free Healthier U T-shirt and pedometer at the first walk they attend. The walks are hosted by Deaconess volunteers from various departments and services, who will offer different health information each week.

A full list of walks and “Fitness in the Park” events are online at www.healthieryouevansville.com. Visit the website to register and receive a weekly email with full details of each week’s walk and the monthly

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

0

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.

JESSICA JEANETTE GUTH
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 26
Residence: 1501 E INDIANA ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/17/2014 3:32:00 AM
Released
Charge Bond Amt
BATTERY-HFF INJ [AM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $0
ROBERT CHARLES KNERR
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 38
Residence: 907 COUNTY RD 1675 E FAIRFIELD, IL
Booked: 4/17/2014 3:03:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
OMVWI [CM] 100
TRAFFIC-RECKLESS DRIVING 0
Total Bond Amount: $100
ABDUL KASEEN RAMEY
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 38
Residence: 1317 KELLER ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/17/2014 1:37:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 6000
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $6250
http://www.dailytitan.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/NoImageAvailable.png
CAROL NMN OSHUNKEYE
Race: Black / Sex: Female / Age: 57
Residence: 100 OSSI ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/17/2014 1:01:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
TRESPASS [AM] 50
Total Bond Amount: $50
NICKOLAS TYSON LUCK
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 28
Residence: 613 SHEFFIELD DR EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/17/2014 12:44:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
WHITNEY RENEE WASHINGTON
Race: Black / Sex: Female / Age: 25
Residence: 2305 MAPLEWOOD CIR EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/16/2014 7:48:00 PM
Released
Charge Bond Amt
DISORDERLY CONDUCT [BM] 0
Total Bond Amount: $0

UE Places First in Quiz Bowl at ASCE Conference

1

UElogoUniversity of Evansville civil engineering students placed first in the quiz bowl portion of the American Society of Civil Engineering (ASCE) Great Lakes Regional Conference on April 11-12. At the event, hosted by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, UE’s quiz bowl team came in ahead of such competitors as the University of Notre Dame, Northwestern University, Purdue University-Calumet, and Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

The objective of the quiz bowl challenge was to test the knowledge of civil engineering students in several categories including:

• Statics/Dynamics • Water Resources Engineering • Structural Engineering • Transportation Engineering • Geotechnical Engineering • Fluid Mechanics/Hydraulic Engineering • Environmental Engineering • Engineering Economics • Engineering Ethics • Engineering Materials • Surveying • Construction Engineering/Management

In the first round, each team answered 40 different questions. The top five teams after the first round then advanced to the last round where they were asked 10 more questions. The final standing was based on teams’ total number of points.

Members of UE’s quiz bowl team were: Jamie Johnson, James Gabe, Chris Kuester and Heather Passey.

UE placed second overall at the conference which, in addition to the quiz bowl, consisted of concrete canoe, steel bridge, professional ethics paper and presentation, environmental design, surveying, concrete materials, and mystery design.

UE student Jamie Johnson won third place in the professional ethics paper and presentation with her paper: “The Engineer’s Role in Natural Disasters.”

The concrete canoe team with project managers Christina Bernauer and Shannon Osiecki won second place with the canoe “Dark Knight.”  Category awards in the concrete canoe competition included third place in races (led by captain Hannah Okray and paddlers Jaclyn Altstadt, Aubin Fowler, Silas Bohlen, George Carroll, Forrest Plumlee and Levi Leffert), second place in design paper (led by academics captain Abby Browder), second place in presentation (with Alejandro Mojica Cadario, Carroll, Bernauer and Osiecki), and second place in final product.

The steel bridge team, led by Abby Browder and Alex Schwinghamer, improved the bridge design so that they constructed their bridge 30% faster than last year with the help of team members Hieronymus Mitchell, Noble Rassam, Hannah Kirk, and Forrest Plumlee.

Other students who were involved included: Danilo Bortoletto, Helena Leon, David Lopes, and Monica Pinto.  UE faculty advisors who traveled with the students were: Associate Professors of Civil Engineering James Allen and Mark Valenzuela and Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Immanuel Selvaraj.

USI team places in international competition

0

USIA team from the University of Southern Indiana’s Romain College of Business won third place in the 2014 Royal Roads University International Undergraduate Case Competition (RRUIUCC) held April 3-5 in Victoria, British Columbia.

The team included Ryan McGuire, Sarah Krampe, Dylan Cox, Aaron McCullough, and Kyle Hoeing (who served as an alternate). They were coached by Romain College of Business faculty members Jeanette Maier-Lytle and Laci Rogers Lyons.

“Our performance at this competition shows that USI students can compete with top business students from around the world,” Lyons said. “This team represented USI well by making the top three and also by competing with good spirits and integrity.”

The RRUIUCC featured teams from 20 different schools offering bachelor’s degrees in commerce, business, or equivalent degree programs. Teams consisted of four competing students, an alternate, and coaches. Teams analyzed and solved three international business cases, and then immediately presented these solutions to judges. Each round of cases were analyzed and prepared for three hours, but topics and presentation criteria varied each round. Presentations were either 15 or 20 minutes, followed by question and answer sessions of 10 or 15 minutes.

In two rounds, teams presented using PowerPoint aids, but in the “Creative Case” no electronic visual aids were permitted. One round featured a “Local Case” written by a Royal Roads University student about a local organization facing a business problem. After three initial rounds, the top four teams were selected for a final presentation.

Final awards were based solely on performance of a fourth case. The winners were Dublin Institute of Technology (first), University of Alberta (second), University of Southern Indiana (third), and University of Vermont (fourth).USI

The 12th annual RRUIUCC attracted 20 teams from Europe and across North America. Business case competitions challenge highly motivated business students to showcase their knowledge, skills, and talent. Through a relevant and spirited competition, the RRUIUCC inspires university students to strive for the highest levels of critical thinking and professionalism. In addition, this competition relies on business professionals to judge student recommendations, bridging the gap between the corporate and academic worlds.

Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session

0

EVSC

 

The Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, April 21, 2014, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A);  initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9).
The regular meeting of the School Board will follow at 5:30 p.m. in the EVSC Board Room, same address.

Reader Polls Do you think taxpayer dollars should be used to subsidize the new period type street lights in the Historic District Yes (10%, 12 Votes) No (90%, 106 Votes) Total Voters: 118

0

 

riecken_2012 (175x220)

Here is the testimony delivered by State Rep. Gail Riecken (D-Evansville) to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission regarding the rate increase requested by Vectren:

I first want to thank the IURC for coming to Evansville to hear comments about the rate increases that are proposed by Vectren. Our electric rates are already high and to meet the requirements of this new proposal, our gas rates will increase.

As a state legislator I receive complaints, concerns from constituents. And, the concerns I have received about Vectren’s proposal are from homeowners and small businesses.

They are twofold: one, about the increase in rates, and two, about the legislation since 2011, that legislators voted on, to allow utility companies to make the requests such as we have before the IURC today.

I’ll leave the issue of the state legislature passing this legislation. But, in full disclosure, I did not vote for the two bills, SEA 251 and SEA 560.

The bills are now law and the best thing we can do is make sure the position of consumers is protected in the IURC formal approval process.

My comments about Vectren’s rate increase proposal are particular to the $217 million plan for Vectren’s South territory, our area.
Vectren’s project includes gas main replacements and upgrades to transmission and distribution pipelines. The plan recovers the project costs over a seven year period, starting this year.

I would like to digress a minute here to make an important note.

The Vectren North plan includes extensions into rural areas that currently do not have natural gas service.

As a legislator and electric ratepayer, because a proposal could be for electric infrastructure improvements, I am concerned. We consumers in the South territory may someday see a proposal in the South territory for extensions to new areas that benefit other entities and that we pay for.

This idea of expanding to new areas and the existing ratepayers paying for it or a good part of it has too many opportunities for utilities where the responsibility for growth should be the corporations and shareholders, not the ratepayers.

I guess if Walmart were a monopoly, they could just raise their prices whenever they wanted to expand, and their customers would pay for it.

And, if not the corporations and shareholders, then, taxpayers should be considered for economic development rather than ratepayers.

A friend of mine explains it this way: “If I truly believed we were expanding service to benefit Grandma and other populations who did not have access to natural gas, I would mostly be ok with it. But that’s not why that section was put in the bill. We are making ratepayers pay for economic development. From … perspective, that’s the role of a taxpayer. Ratepayers pay for utility service, nothing more nothing less. “

I can’t imagine the legislators that voted for this new law believe that it is the intent of the law to be used for ratepayers to pay for economic development outside their service area. The law should be clarified.

There is another justification for SEA 560, I think given in committee that advocates cited to support the legislation.

That was that the use of the tracker model of charging ratepayers for improvements would benefit consumers; one, because there wouldn’t be great jumps in our bills since increases would happen every six months; and, two, that the tracker model would eliminate financing costs, and therefore, a benefit or savings to consumers.

SEA251 and SEA 560 are law and they reflect policy changes that are dramatic in Indiana and deserved more discussion before the legislature voted on them.

However, this is now and we need to talk about what we can do to make sure consumers are protected and the benefits realized are fair to both the utility companies and the consumers.

I have these concerns and questions that I would like the IURC to consider in your review.

1.) How can the consumer be assured of the savings in Vectren’s proposal.

Stated another way, what proof has Vectren established in their plan that their plan will save money to the benefit of the consumer.

2.) The utility has the ability to come back every six months and request a revision.

What assurance does the consumer have that there won’t be some costs revised in the plan that should not be included in in the rate increase proposal but should be the burden of the company and shareholders.

For example, specific safety issues that may have resulted from mismanagement where the remedies are by federal mandates. Those mandates should not be the burden of the ratepayer but the burden of management and shareholders. They may be interpreted as permissible costs in SEA 251. If so, the legislature needs to change the law.

There should be clear determination what is company responsibility and should be company paid and what is consumer driven and should be consumer paid and I look to the IURC to make those determinations.

3.) Are we going to know how long we are going to have to pay for the improvements in the proposal. Stated another way, is the plan clear when the tracker should drop off.

4.) The new tracker law (IC 8-1-39-14) from SEA 251 limits annual rate increases to 2% of the utility’s total retail revenues each year. As has been reported NIPSCO has interpreted the new tracker law, IC 8-1-37-13(a), to mean those increases can be compounded each year during the seven year recovery period.

This issue is surely going to court. How will the IURC address this issue with Vectren in this proposal.

I agree with the OUCC in their testimony recommending that the IURC impose specific conditions, if the IURC approves the plans, including no double-recovery for infrastructure.

5.) Another concern with revenues is that there is no clearly defined term “total retail revenues” in the law referring to the utility issues or at least not in Title 8. I would request the IURC’s opinion if the term “total retail revenues” is clearly defined in law and, if not, should the term be clarified.

Just a couple of comments more…

6.) I endorse the ongoing reporting requirements OUCC has recommended, including Vectren meeting with the OUCC and other interested stakeholders at least eight weeks prior to each fall tracker filing. It is at that time Vectren should supply additional project cost and scope details for all to analyze the upcoming year.

And finally,

7.) The term “reasonable or reasonableness” is a consideration in all IURC reviews. I have often wondered where the consumer fits into that concept. As I have advocated before, would it not be fair to include the consideration of “affordability”, that is “affordability” to the consumer.

Maybe that would pare down a project or maybe the corporation and shareholders might choose to invest some of their high earnings and finance some of the costs.

Please accept the following questions I received the day of the hearing that I did not see prior to the meeting—some that I may have covered in my testimony:
· Since Vectren has asked for a detailed amount of money, there must be a detailed maintenance plan that should be made public to show support for the increase
· Why is there current funding falling short?
· Why is Vectren hesitating to reinvest some of their profit into infrastructure improvements?
· Will all Work be put out for public bid- if not why?
· Will any of the increase be shown to shareholders as a profit in anyway?
· Will all money ask for be used exclusively for improvements only.
· Will any of the improvements be used to expand Vectren Gas Network to new Customers?,
If so why are Vectren profits not going towards the capital expansion
· After improvements are completed will the increases be dissolved?
· Why does Vectren advertise when they are a monopoly here in Evansville?
· As a customer of Vectren part of my bill was to go towards maintenance and improvements why now is this amount falling short?

Thank you for your time and consideration.

IS IT TRUE April 17, 2014

50
Mole #??
Mole #??

IS IT TRUE that an Evansville plant that produces printing and packaging products publicly announced Wednesday they will be closing in June?… 59 employees of Chesapeake Pharmaceuticals and Healthcare Packaging will be out of work?…it seems as though the employees of this packaging plan were told Tuesday by management that the plant was closing down in two short months?…the CCO sympathizes with these employees and wishes that our local government had been spending more time and effort to save these jobs than they have posing for the cameras at golden shovel events for the downtown Evansville fun and games money pits?…it is truly ironic that a business that serves the pharmaceuticals industry would be announcing a shut down only a few days after the announcement that the IU Medical School announced downtown Evansville as its chosen location?

IS IT TRUE that the State of Indiana released the data with respect to high school graduation rates and the big picture is that little change has occurred since 2012?…the state’s high school students graduate at a rate of 88.6% outperforming the EVSC schools that fell to 81.9% from 82.8% a year ago?…Warrick County schools graduated a full 91.5% of their students but the winner of the local public schools was taken by Posey County with a 94.8% rate?…the Catholic Diocese high schools achieved a graduation rate of 98.5%, but the biggest prize of all goes to the Charter School known as Signature High School that graduated 100% of their students?…this comes right after Signature moved up to be named the #6 ranked high school in the entire United States?…the Signature school continues to be the shining diamond in Evansville and the State of Indiana proving that with the right team in place that national significance can really happen here in River City?…it would merit some people’s attention to study a bit on what is going on at Signature High and replicate it elsewhere in the EVSC?…it would also be of interest to see what percentage of Signature’s graduates stay in Evansville to start their professional lives and families?

IS IT TRUE it was announced yesterday that the City of Evansville has commissioned a consultant to do a master plan for the parks department?…this is the first such plan that anyone we can find can even remember?…it is just a coincidence that this announcement came only hours after the CCO chided the City Administration for never planning anything?…nevertheless we thank and congratulate the administration for initiating some planning and encourage them to do some more?…making the parks that we have desirable places to be through planning, execution, and management is a path to goodness that haphazardly building dog parks and centennial parks well never achieve?…this is a good sign and we hope to see more of it?

IS IT TRUE that contrary to some rumors that have been floating around, Vectren officials have told the CCO that Vectren has not contributed any money or in kind activities to the group that is working toward using taxpayer dollars to put some fancy street lights in the Historic District?…Vectren absolutely owns up to having provided a quote to the group for the installation work?…this is refreshing to learn that the ratepayers of Evansville will not be subsidizing fancy street lamps in an expensive residential district with increases in their utility bills?…we wish our city government has this same level of understanding about what is appropriate and what is not?

IS IT TRUE that the Wheeler Neighborhood Association is meeting tonight at 6:30 P M at the Central Library?  …that this group encompasses the area surrounding the Historic District and has more important concerns and goals other then expensive fancy historical street lights?  …that this evening the Wheeler Association group will be discussing important neighborhood issues such as health, safety and the overall general environment the downtown area?  …that the Community Police shall be given the Wheeler  group the area crime report  update for the last 30 days?  …we hear that this most active neighborhood group membership  truly represents the cross section of people living in  the downtown area may be discussing the proposed expensive fancy lighting  project for select area of Historic District?  …we can’t wait to hear if the Wheeler Neighborhood Association members are going to activity join the champaign launched by a few  Historical District residents  call for the city to help fund the fancy  and  expensive historical lighting with taxpayers money?