Home Blog Page 6353

YWCA Evansville and Mayor Lloyd Winnecke Commemorate Equal Pay Day on April 8th

1

 

ywca

Equal Pay Day Rally

FREE – Open to the public

WEAR RED!!

When: April 8th 1:00 p.m.
Where: YWCA Parlor, 118 Vine Street

The YWCA of Evansville and other professional and community organizations in Evansville will mobilize on Tuesday, April 8, 2014 to call attention to the persistent and sizable gap between men’s and women’s wages. According to latest US Census Bureau on average, full‐time working women earned 77 cents for every dollar earned by men. In the state of Indiana, the gap is even wider with women earning just 73 cents for every dollar earned by a man. The gap is even worse for women of color in Indiana with African‐American women earning 67% and Latina women earning 55% of men’s wages. Over a lifetime of work this loss adds up, as women lose out on over $500,000 in a lifetime due to the wage gap.

April 8th symbolizes the day when women’s wages catch up to men’s wages from the previous year. Every year in April, thousands of women’s, civil rights, labor, and community organizations from across the United States come together for a national day of action promoting fair pay known as Equal Pay Day. The YWCA is encouraging the community to wear red on April 8th to show that women are “in the red” with their pay.

“Equal pay for equal work sounds like common sense to most people, yet 51 years after President Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act into law the pay gap persists and women continue to be short changed.” said Erika Taylor, YWCA CEO.

Members of the Human Relations Commission, the Chamber of Commerce, the Evansville Human Resources Association, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. and Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. will stand with the YWCA at 1:00 p.m. on April 8th when Evansville Mayor, Lloyd Winnecke, will issue a special proclamation at the Equal Pay Rally.

The YWCA will also announce that a special committee comprised of business leaders and human resource professionals is being formed to work together to address the wage gap in our region. “The Evansville Human Resources Association supports equal pay for equal
work and opposes compensation practices that are discriminatory,” said Tela Erdell, EHRA President. “The EHRA believes that employers should create compensation programs that are designed to ensure appropriate treatment of all employees and those compensation programs should be determined by the market and employer needs. EHRA encourages
organizations to perform compensation audits to ensure that compensation practices aren’t discriminatory.”

“When women are short changed, families are short changed. The YWCA is committed to bringing key community stakeholders together to work to eliminate the wage gap in our region,” said Erika Taylor, YWCA CEO. “We encourage businesses to pay women fairly, push for laws that will enforce current equal pay legislation and educate women on how to negotiate for higher salaries.”

The YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. The YWCA has been serving the Evansville area since 1911 and from its inception has provided housing and services for women and girls. The Evansville YWCA is a member of the YWCA of the U.S.A., the oldest and largest women’s membership movement in the country.

Over the years, YWCA programs have changed to meet the evolving needs of women and girls. In 1979, the YWCA opened the first domestic violence shelter in Evansville. Other current programs include a Transition Housing Program for women in recovery, Emergency Shelter for homeless women and children, an after‐school and mentoring program, called Live Y’ers, for at‐risk girls in grades three through 12, and a Summer Fun day camp for school‐aged children. Special programs and events for the general public are also offered. Visit www.ywcaevansville.org for more information.

Schools label few teachers, administrators as ‘ineffective’

6

Vast majority of educators rated in top 2 categories

By Jacob Rund and Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — Only a tiny fraction of Indiana’s educators were deemed ineffective while more than one quarter earned the highest possible marks during the first year of a state-mandated evaluation system.

teacher evaluations a-f schools -003Performance results released Monday by the Department of Education revealed that only one of every 250 educators was ranked in the lowest category. And less than 3 in 100 were rated as needing improvement.

Those two bottom categories block pay raises and require individual improvement plans.

The data from last year’s 55,000 evaluations also showed schools that earned overall A grades from the state gave more of their educators higher ratings, while those that received F grades had the most scored ineffective.

“It confirms what I think we already thought was true,” said Teresa Meredith, president of the Indiana State Teachers Association, the state’s biggest education union.

“As schools’ letter grades go down, the number of highly effective teachers shrinks,” she said.

But even schools with F grades rated less than 1 percent of their educators as ineffective. The law’s author — House Education Chairman Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis — said he’s not sure the system produced enough lower ratings to be realistic.

“In every field in life, you have a bell curve in terms of proficiency,” Behning said. “You don’t predetermine how many people are on each side but it needs to be somewhat balanced. This bell curve is so one-sided that it doesn’t it even look like a bell curve.”

The evaluation data is the product of a 2011 law passed by the Indiana General Assembly requiring public school districts to establish a system to review their licensed educators. That would include an assessment of anyone working for the school district that needs a license to do his or her job — including teachers, counselors, administrators and others.

The law doesn’t mandate a specific evaluation system but does require student test results to play a “significant” role in determining the ratings. Classroom observations and school performance can be other factors. Districts were able to develop their own systems for determining teacher ratings or choose among several models.

School districts rated educators on a 1-4 scale — 1 being ineffective and 4 being highly effective. The data also includes a “not evaluated” category for teachers and other educators who were unable to complete the school year for various reasons.

Statewide, schools rated 26.4 percent of educators as highly effective, 61.2 percent effective, 2 percent as needing improvement and 0.39 percent ineffective. About 10 percent were not evaluated.

Schools with A and B grades had more educators rated highly while those with Cs, Ds and Fs rated more teachers as needing improvement and ineffective.

Those schools with lower grades also had higher percentages of educators in the “not evaluated” category. More than 14 percent fell into that category at schools with F grades.

Meredith said the category likely includes some teachers who realized they would receive a poor rating and quit or retired. It could also include educators that schools fired before the evaluation process finished, she said.

That still means the system is working, Meredith said, because it’s rooting out poor teachers. “I don’t want an ineffective teacher teaching next to me,” she said.

The state law requires every public school district to evaluate their teachers and all but charters to report the information to the state. However, roughly 70 districts settled their collective bargaining agreements before the law took effect on July 1, 2011 and were therefore not required to submit data. Those districts will be subject to the law when their contracts expire and new ones are established. Charter schools must begin reporting results for the 2013-2014 school year.

Senate Education Chairman Dennis Kruse, R-Auburn, said he was surprised to see more than 90 percent of teachers and other educators had received ratings of effective or highly effective. But he said the results— assuming districts took their responsibilities seriously and used rigorous standards — are “really good.”

And Kruse said the anecdotal evidence he’s seen backs up the data.

“I’ve visited quite a few schools the last couple years — in my district and across the state — and I am impressed with a lot of the teachers in classrooms,” Kruse said. “I’m impressed with what they’re doing.”

But he warned against using the new data to compare educator ratings between districts. That’s because each district determined how it developed the evaluations.

Of the school districts that submitted data, about 115 reported using RISE, the state-adopted model for educator evaluation and development, and 60 said they used a modified version of RISE. Another 62 reported they had used locally developed plans for teacher assessment criteria. The remaining 29 used another system or did not report.

Districts can change evaluation systems on a year-to-year basis.

The highly-rated Crawford County Schools used the RISE system with a few tweaks and ranked nearly every one of its educators as effective or highly effective. Only one received a needs improvement rating and none were deemed ineffective.

Superintendent Mark Eastridge said the evaluation process was valuable. “It’s really gotten my administrators and myself and teachers very in tune with quality instruction and what’s going on in our classrooms on a day to day basis,” he said.

“We’ve been a very successful school corporation for awhile,” he said. “But now we’re being much more intentional about looking in the classroom and seeing what’s happening.”

He said administrators used the evaluation process to identify resources or practices that are successful and should be shared to other teachers and schools.

But Eastridge said he expected schools that are struggling would identify ineffective teachers using the system. And while most schools rated no educators as ineffective, a few did have several in the lowest category.

Madison Junior High in Jefferson County rated four teachers as ineffective, Crestview Elementary in Lawrence Township in Indianapolis had five, Kokomo High School in Howard County had six and the Theodore Roosevelt Career & Technical Academy in Gary had seven.

The individual teacher ratings are confidential. State law requires that if an educator receives a rating of ineffective or improvement necessary, the evaluator and the educator will develop a remediation plan.

Also, districts are required to notify parents if a student is to have teachers rated as ineffective for two consecutive years.

The state also released information Monday regarding Indiana colleges and their teacher prep programs. The information includes the total teacher evaluation scores listed by category for recent graduates of colleges around the state. The only teachers included in the evaluation were those with three years of experience or less. The statistics are broken down by category — teachers with one year of experience, those with two years of experience, and three years of experience.

Kruse said the goal is to help colleges learn how well their graduates are prepared for the classroom and to let superintendents know where to find the best teachers.

“I think the competition it creates at the colleges will be good,” Kruse said. “They’ll have to have their teachers rated well or they won’t be getting new students to enroll.”

The data shows that first year teachers are less likely to be rated as highly effective and more likely to be rated as ineffective than their colleagues.

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

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

0

nick herman

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

 

Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, April 04, 2014

 

Mary Dausman                 Theft-Class D Felony

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Joseph Johnson                Invasion of Privacy-Class A Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

 

Frankie Pollard Jr             Residential Entry-Class D Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Gabrielle Vailes               Theft-Class D Felony

 

Melanie Brown                Possession of a Schedule IV Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

 

Crystal Clark                       Theft-Class D Felony

 

Casey Ellis                           Failure to Register as a Sex Offender-Class D Felony

 

Jennifer Hamlett             Theft-Class D Felony

 

Lyndsay Hahn                    Theft-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Terrance Miles                 Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Class D Felony

 

Joseph Sisco                      Domestic Battery-Class D Felony

 

 

 

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at KPhernetton@vanderburghgov.org

 

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law

 

EPD Activity Report: 4.6.2014

0

EPD PATCH 2012

 

 

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

 

EPD Activity Report: 4.6.2014

IS IT TRUE April 7, 2014

93
Mole #??
Mole #??

IS IT TRUE April 7, 2014

IS IT TRUE that if one were to believe what is being circulated in the mass media of Evansville one would have to conclude that the wrath of the city is now aimed at Dunn Hospitality and it’s CEO John Dunn?…if it’s not some self serving group that has put up a Facebook page that attempts to make Dunn Hospitality look like the reincarnation of Bernie Madoff who is out to starve 200 (yes that is 200 out of the 117,000 who live in Evansville) union families to death, the local Scripps-Howard affiliate newspaper the Courier and Press doing their best to imitate the state owned Pravda that once spread the propaganda of the USSR?…whether the people of this little burgh like it or not the unacceptable tarring and feathering of John Dunn has its roots in the Communist Manifesto written by Karl Marx and proven to be folly everywhere it has been attempted?…property rights are one of the foundations of the United States of America but in Evansville today we have a Mayor, at least one member of the City Council, and a couple of mass media outlets piling on a man and his company for exercising their rights as property owners and entrepreneurs?…every one of you who holds resentment toward Dunn Hospitality for being good stewards of their employees, crediters and shareholder’s interest should either come out of the closet and join the Communist Party or hang your heads in shame?

IS IT TRUE in an editorial yesterday Tim Etheridge, the editor of the Courier and Press accuses Mr. Dunn of “throwing a wrench into the timetable of the construction project”?…that is not exactly the whole truth Tim, and you know it?…Dunn Hospitality filed the complaint after they were officially notified that a Hilton franchise had been applied for ON MARCH 21, 2014 and being granted until APRIL 4, 2014?…this could have all been over with if HCW had actually applied for the franchise in December when they told Evansville Living Magazine they had already done so?…HCW threw a wrench in the construction schedule by waiting until March to set the application in motion after getting the commitment for local financial assistance 6 months ago?…it is unfair and disingenuous of the Courier Press to lay the blame onto John Dunn?

IS IT TRUE the that CP editor Etheridge goes on to accuse Mr. Dunn of “poor sportsmanship and poor citizenry” before lampooning him again for waiting until the last minute to file a complaint?…that former Courier and Press sports reporter called Tim Etheridge must not understand that UNTIL DUNN HOSPITALITY RECEIVED AN OFFICIAL NOTICE FROM HILTON, THEY COULD NOT HAVE FILED ANYTHING?…as with the Office of the Mayor, the Evansville Redevelopment Commission, and several members of the Evansville City Council it seems as though the powers that be in this little town have no comprehension of the fundamentals of business when it comes to collective rights over individual rights?…any prospective business that is thinking of coming to Evansville or any Evansville business that is thinking of expanding needs to pay very close attention to how Dunn Hospitalities rights are being ridiculed by the local press and leadership of Evansville?…looking from afar the Socialist Pressure Cooker put into place by the Mayor of Evansville and his sycophantic mass media buddies that are attempting to fan these Marxist flames against a private businessman with 5 hotels and a corporate headquarters in place are reason to remove Evansville, Indiana from the list of expansion candidates until this Marxist Posse of Komrads has passed?

IS IT TRUE that as a business owner and a citizen John Dunn has every right and reason to protect his multi-million dollar investment legally?…that is precisely what he is doing and the elected mob in the main stream media know it?…we wonder how the Courier and Press would feel if the City of Evansville and Old National Bank put together a $34 Million incentive package for the City County Observer to compete head to head with them in the printed newspaper business?…we bet the red queen would be howling for the heads of the City officials who okayed a deal that threatened their investments?

IS IT TRUE we should all ask ourselves why anytime the City does not get its way that the insults and obstructions to commerce get personal?…whether it is with the CVB, the EHA, Gage, or several other entities where a Mayor was challenged, the City’s response is always a personal attack and a character assassination campaign?…it seems as though that is all they really know how to do?…one thing is for certain and that is if John Dunn would have been in charge of VETTING for the City of Evansville that there would have been no Earthcare debacle, no McCurdy melt down, and there sure as hell would not have been 4 false starts on a downtown convention hotel?…if Evansville wants to apply tar and feathers for the lack of job opportunities and the failing infrastructure it needs to first look in the mirror?  …we are glad we have the Dunn Hospitality Group in our midst?

Tax revenue stabilizes in March but still behind for fiscal year

2

Lesley-Stedman-Weidenbener-mug-The-Statehouse-File1-306x400

By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – State tax receipts beat projections in March but a key lawmaker said it’s not enough to clear concerns about the state’s finances.

Revenue topped $1.02 billion last month – about 1.4 percent more than estimates released last December. That’s also 11.6 percent more than in March 2013.

Senate Appropriations Chairman Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, said that sounds like good news. “But it’s actually not,” he said. “Not if you dig deep into the numbers.”

For the fiscal year – which began July 1 – total tax collections are still about $71 million behind the estimates used to write the current two-year budget. And in March, sales tax collections – the state’s highest single source of revenue – remained behind projections.

“I’m scratching my head,” Kenley said. “The economy is not that bad and the stock market is crazy. But our revenues are just not robust.”

Kenley pointed to corporate tax receipts – which are 15 percent higher than projected this fiscal year – as the one positive sign. The increase in revenue is despite cuts in that tax rate. Kenley said that could be the result of companies shifting revenue to Indiana from states that have higher tax rates.

Republican Gov. Mike Pence has already ordered agencies to cut back to try to accommodate the lower than expected revenue. And Kenley said Indiana government remains in good fiscal health, thanks to roughly $2 billion the state had in the bank at the end of the last fiscal year.

But to maintain that, state officials must be careful about future spending, he said. That will be important next year as lawmakers write the next two-year budget.

Kenley said he’s already thinking about it. “We can’t let these things slip,” he said. “We have to keep our good position.”

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

Transportation officials deal with pothole problems

2

timthumb.php-13

By Hannah Troyer
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – This winter may have been tough with record amounts of snowfall and frigid temperatures, but dealing with the aftermath may be tougher.

As the Indianapolis Department of Public Works fights for more money to combat the large number of potholes on local roads, counties around the state are also struggling to patch up the craters.

“The extreme temps we experienced with the ice and snow for prolonged periods of time” have contributed to more potholes, said Dennis Faulkenberg, president and CEO of Appian, an Indianapolis transportation consulting firm.

“Then you add the spring warm up and the rains which allow moisture to get into the cracks formed – it is a tough problem. But it is eye-opening for public and elected officials to see the problem facing our roads and streets and the amount of money it will take to fix,” Faulkenberg said.

Faulkenberg says there is no way to measure how bad the pothole situation is in Indiana counties. He says the extra $100 million approved for counties for road projects during the 2013 legislative session will help pay to fix the higher number of potholes. But he said the money may have come too late for some counties.

Local governments “will have to stretch every dime, which they’ve already been doing,” Faulkenberg said. “They have done a Band-Aid fix with the money they have. The extra money will help, but several years of neglect are showing with the pothole problems.”

Officials at the Indiana Department of Transportation seem concerned with a possible financial strain caused by an effort to fix state and US highways. The agency continued to monitor the pothole situation throughout the winter when not plowing snow or undertaking other winter maintenance projects.

“The majority of our funding goes to infrastructure,” said Will Wingfield, a spokesperson for INDOT. “The operational budget – which has the money for pothole fixings – has the ability to move funds to make sure that we are doing expected patch repairs. It was a rough winter. We invested more in snow operations and pothole patch jobs.”

Because of this increased investment, Wingfield says INDOT may have to postpone some summer projects until the next fiscal year to ensure a proper amount of funding for pothole and road repairs.

Wingfield also said that potholes are not necessarily an easy fix. INDOT and local road repair organizations address potholes within a day or two after a report is filed. But that doesn’t always completely solve the problem.

“We try to educate and tell people that potholes require regular maintenance,” Wingfield said. “One pothole may have to be patched multiple times.”

For any more permanent relief, Hoosiers may once again be at the mercy of Mother Nature, hoping she will bring warmer temperatures. Plants that produce the asphalt used to pave roads cannot open until temperatures reach 40-50 degrees.

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

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

0
SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671.
JAMON ROBERT NORTON
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 29
Residence: 5741 SAND RIDGE DR EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 7:28:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
VCCC FILED PTR 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
GREGORY ROY HAWES
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 30
Residence: 607 MONROE AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 4:31:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 500
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $750
GARY MICHAEL MOORE
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 29
Residence: 2512 N SHERMAN ST EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 4:20:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
NARC-POSS MARIJUANA, HASH OIL, HASHISH, < 30 G [AM] 100
WEAPON-HANDGUN W/O A LICENSE [AM] 100
Total Bond Amount: $450
GEORGE ANDREW WALLACE
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 37
Residence: 1618 S NEW YORK AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 2:19:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
OMVWI-B A C .15% OR MORE [AM] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
VICTOR ULISES LICONA REYES
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 20
Residence: 903 PRINCETON CT EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 2:07:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
RAPE- [BF] 0
BATTERY-HFF INJ [AM] 100
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
ELMER DEAN WALLACE
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 43
Residence: 500 E WALNUT ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 1:37:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
NARC-POSS METHAMPHETAMINE [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
COREY GENE TRUEBLOOD
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 34
Residence: 8507 CARLSBAD DR EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 1:07:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
CHILD NEGLECT [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
TIA CHRISTINE FRANZ
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 27
Residence: 233 W MICHIGAN ST EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 12:55:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
DISORDERLY CONDUCT [BM] 50
Total Bond Amount: $50
ANDREW RAY THOMAS
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 26
Residence: 233 W MICHIGAN ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 12:40:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
DISORDERLY CONDUCT [BM] 50
Total Bond Amount: $50
RICHARD LEE RICKARD
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 46
Residence: 11600 MURPHY RD POSEYVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 12:30:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $250
MIKAYLA SACHEEN ROSS
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 18
Residence: 1402 E WALNUT ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/7/2014 12:22:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: $250
KENNETH TORIENCE YOUNG
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 19
Residence: 1417 S WEINBACH AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 9:56:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
RESIST LAW ENFORCEMENT [AM] 100
Total Bond Amount: $100
JERRY ALLAN ATTEBURY
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 52
Residence: 8401 PETERSON ROAD BLAIRSVILLE, IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 6:25:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
OMVWI-B A C .08 <1.5 [CM] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
SCOTT ALLEN BASTAIN
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 41
Residence: 15 W MISSOURI ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 6:08:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
THEFT OTHER >200 <100,000 [DF] 300
WRIT OF ATTACHMENT 1000
Total Bond Amount: $1300
JUSTIN KYLE MCCRAW
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 25
Residence: 409 E FRANKLIN ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 4:08:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
BATTERY-HFF DOMESTIC PRESENCE OF CHILD < 16 [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
LAURA ANN ELLINGTON
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 50
Residence: 100 OSSI ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 3:34:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
INVASION OF PRIVACY [AM] 500
Total Bond Amount: $500
KENNETH JOSEPH CIMON
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 39
Residence: 2505 W MILL RD EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 2:23:00 PM
CHARGE BOND AMT
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE FELONY 2500
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
LEE ANN VOWELS
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 34
Residence: 2913 MADISON AVE EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 11:27:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
ABK FILED PTR 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
PHILLIP MICHAEL JOHNSON
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 28
Residence: 1322 PARRETT ST EVANSVILLE , IN
Booked: 4/6/2014 9:54:00 AM
CHARGE BOND AMT
SEXUAL BATTERY [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND

Political Survey Questions For Contested GOP Primary Races

4
Republican Party Symbol
The City County Observer has decided to ask candidates running for Vanderburgh County Council and County Commission seats in the May 6, 2014  Republican primary races questions we feel our readers need answers to.  We shall post answers to the following questions by both Republican primary candidate Bruce Swaim, John Montrastelle Marsha Abell and Bruce Ungethiem without opinion, bias or editing.  Every candidate running in contested Republican primary seats have been asked the exact same survey questions.  Posted below are the questions submitted to the GOP candidates by the City County Observer.
 
1) Why do you feel that you can do an effective job as our next Vanderburgh County Councilman or County Commissioner?
 
2)  Explain why your education and professional expertise qualify you take on the task of leading our county in a positive direction for the next 4 years.
 
3)  Tell our readers what you feel are the strengths about your opponent?
 
4)   Tell our readers what you think are the short comings of your opponent?
 
5)  What are the main challenges the county faces for the next 4 years?
 
6)  What’s your stance on future tax increases for the next 4 years?
 
7)  What areas of county government can we make creative cuts to help keep budgets in line with income stream?
 
8)  What new county funded programs do you think should be considered during the next 4 years?
 
9)  Do you feel elected county officials should or shouldn’t be allowed to hire family members to work in county funded jobs?
 
10) Whats your opinion on political patronage appointments? 
 
11)  Do you feel that candidates running for public office should or shouldn’t accept political donations from those doing business with the County?
 
12)  Do you feel that professional services should be formally bid out ?
 
13)  Closing remarks shall cover any issues about your campaign as deemed necessary.
 
The City County Observer has e-mailed political survey questions to Pete Swaim and John Montrasttelle Republican candidates for County Council and Marsha Abell and Bruce Ungethiem candidates for County Commission in the upcoming May 6, 2014 GOP primary election.  All register Republicans are eligible to vote.  However, anyone registered to vote in other political party primaries may crossover to vote in the Republican primary.  The deadline for the candidates to return this political survey to the City County Observer is noon on April 11, 2014.  Answers will posted the City County Observer on April 15 and 17,  2014.  Answers to the above question will be posted in the City County Observer without opinion, bias or editing.

EPD Activity Report: April 5, 2014

0

EPD PATCH 2012

 

 

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.

 

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

EPD Activity Report: April 5, 2014