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Vanderburgh County Sheriff Sobriety Checkpoints

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The Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office and the Evansville Police Department conducted a sobriety checkpoint on March 22, 2014 at E. Virginia Street and Tennis Lane.  The checkpoint ran from 11:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.  A total of 50 motorists passed through the checkpoint.  Eleven (11) motorists were investigated for impairment.  Of those, two (2) motorists were arrested for Operating a Motor Vehicle while Intoxicated.

ARRESTED

  • Michael Jaime Santiago, 24 of Evansville. OMVWI as a Class C Misdemeanor, Possession of Marijuana as a Class A Misdemeanor, Possession of a Legend Drug as a Class D Felony.
  • Natalie Ruth Miller, 42 of Evansville. OMVWI as a Class A Misdemeanor (.18 BrAC), OMVWI as a Class C Misdemeanor.
  • Megan Colleen Wheeler, 24 of Evansville.  Misdemeanor Failure to Appear Warrant.

High school summer camp explores careers in healthcare

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USI
Southwest Indiana Area Health Education Center (SWI-AHEC) is offering a three-day summer health careers exploration program for regional high school students interested in careers in healthcare. Designed for students who will be sophomores, juniors, or seniors in fall 2014, the non-residential summer camp will be held June 16, 17, and 18 at the University of Southern Indiana in the Health Professions Center. The fee is $25, and financial assistance is available. Space is limited.

Participants will engage in hands-on, interactive activities with regional higher education institutions and healthcare facilities. Students living in Daviess, Dubois, Gibson, Knox, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick counties are eligible to apply.

“Fifteen of Indiana’s 50 hottest jobs are in healthcare,” said Jane Friona, executive director of SWI-AHEC. “High school students often don’t realize the variety of careers available in health care or the education required to pursue these careers. These camps will engage participants in activities and experiences designed to provide them with this information.”

Funding for the camp is provided through a grant from the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration. Applications are available at http://www.usi.edu/swi-ahec or by calling 812-228-5048.

Founded in 2008, SWI-AHEC strives to ensure a qualified healthcare workforce across 10 counties in southwest Indiana. It is one of eight regional AHECs in Indiana and is hosted by the University of Southern Indiana in the College of Nursing and Health Professions.

For more information, contact Jane Friona, executive director of southwest Indiana AHEC at 812-461-5446 or jefriona@usi.edu.

Take a closer look at latest jobs report before gushing praise‏

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riecken_2012 (175x220)INDIANAPOLIS - Indiana House Democratic Leader Scott Pelath from Michigan City issued the following statement on Monday (March 17) upon receiving word of the state’s unemployment figures for January 2014.


“While others may gush about ‘the largest one-month drop in unemployment in 20 years,’ I look at the report and find myself wondering many things:

“In December 2013, the number of Hoosiers who were employed is listed at 2,960,003 and the numbers of unemployed are 200,694.

“In January 2014, the numbers of employed Hoosiers are listed at 2,950,298, and the numbers of unemployed at 209,305.

“Now, I wasn’t the best math student in school, but those numbers show a decrease in the number of employed Hoosiers of 9,705. Just as important, the number of unemployed Hoosiers—you know, the ones who don’t have jobs—rose by 8,611.

“If you look at the 14 Metropolitan Statistical Areas included in the report, all but one saw an increase in numbers of unemployed. Only one MSA (Elkhart/Goshen) went down.

“Finally, 82 of Indiana’s 92 counties saw their unemployment rates increase from December to January.

“These disparities only serve to heighten the concern that many of us have about the so-called ‘job creation’ engine that the governor, his administration, and his super-majorities like to tout so often. What is so worrisome is that we may talk about unemployment percentages going down, but they are not going down as much as the continued 10-year decline in the household incomes of Hoosiers.

“People can talk about seasonal adjustments all they want, but I continue to be concerned about the raw employment and unemployment numbers. Those tell me who has a job and who is able to take care of their family.

“And if we’re talking about ‘the largest one-month drop in unemployment in 20 years,’ take the time to go back 20 and a half years when the rate dropped from 6 percent in June 1993 to 3.9 percent in July 1993. Now that’s the kind of drop we could afford to repeat.”

Community Activist Jordan Baer Starts Petition To Bring Back Low Income Dental Clinic

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jordan baer

by Jordan Baer posted without opinion, bias or editing

Local activist Jordan Baer has started an online petition to bring back the low income dental clinic that was closed last year. In the petition, Baer cited several reasons for the need to reinstate the clinic with the most notable being the need for the community to take care of its indigent residents. Baer is petitioning the Vanderburgh County Council and Commission, the Evansville City Council, and Deaconess and St. Mary’s hospitals that began the clinic in 2006.

Baer noted the recent bipartisan progress on repairing the two local city cemeteries as well as the tremendous community progress made towards fighting the city’s blight as examples as to how both Vanderburgh County and the City of Evansville can come together to find a way to reopen this clinic. “If you look at how both the City-County Observer and the Courier & Press rallied together to fight the blight, I really don’t see a reason why anyone can’t sign this petition and help get it out in front of the local residents to sign it as well. ” said Baer.

Baer also stated that both the public and private sectors will have to come together if the clinic is to reopen its doors. Baer estimated that it would probably cost a little under $300,000 a year but said that this figure could easily be reached if the public, private, and non-profit sectors were willing to come back together to jointly fund the operation. Baer said he is willing to meet with both sides to work out a plan that is viable for all interested parties.

When asked why Baer chose the City-County Observer to debut his petition he said the following: “I am truly grateful for the support the CCO has given me. They have allowed me to accomplish things I otherwise wouldn’t have been able to accomplish due to the city’s closed door politically mentality. Hopefully other media outlets will follow in their footsteps like we saw with the housing blight issue.”

You can sign Baer’s petition at the website below:

https://www.change.org/petitions/vanderburgh-county-council-commission-reinstate-funding-for-the-low-income-dental-clinic-recruit-additional-private-funding-sponsors

 

Study will seek answers to transportation funding dilemma

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By Jacob Rund TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Department of Transportation will launch an expansive study seeking new ways to finance road construction and maintenance if a bill passed by the Indiana legislature is signed into law.

House Bill 1104, authored by Rep. Ed Soliday, R-Valparaiso, authorizes INDOT to contract with a third party to study methods that could be used to fund the state’s infrastructure.

The bill comes as revenue from Indiana’s gasoline tax has stagnated or fallen, in part because the increased fuel economy of most modern vehicles means Hoosiers are buying less gas. That’s raised concerns among lawmakers that the state might not have the cash it needs in the future to keep up with road construction.

Federal officials are facing similar questions.

“Infrastructure across America is falling apart,” Soliday said. “The gas tax and the diesel fuel tax is a fixed number. It hasn’t been raised for years. Inflation is eating away at that money.”

Although the gas tax has consistently been relied on to fund the state’s road projects, the tax is set at a fixed rate – one that hasn’t increased since 2003 – and does not account for inflation. That means that the amount of money generated by the tax and available to use on statewide transportation continues to decline.

“We think the study is extremely important because the sources of fuel for various types of vehicles is changing and our current funding system hasn’t kept up with that,” said Kevin Brinegar, president of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce. “Solving and addressing this challenge is a high priority for us.”

Dennis Faulkenberg, a transportation consultant and noted expert, refers to the gas tax as “bread and butter funding” and pointed to the use of the funds for non-highway expenditures as a partial reason for the state’s dilemma.

Faulkenberg also said he hopes the study will find new ways of addressing the funding situation.

“Hopefully the study might bring some things forth that we might see that we don’t know of today,” he said.

Comparatively, the price Hoosiers pay for the upkeep and maintenance of their state’s roads and highways is relatively low. Soliday said the average person, driving about 12,000 miles per year, pays roughly $100 a month in gas tax. He related the cost to a monthly cell phone or cable television payment.

“Which contributes more to our economy?” Soliday said. “The roads or cable TV?”

Among the options expected to be explored are a “miles traveled tax” and an additional fee for owners of electric and hybrid vehicles. The miles traveled tax – which other states are currently exploring – would track the number of miles traveled by a particular vehicle and use the information to calculate a tax rate.

That option has become a controversial alternative elsewhere because the tracking devices have raised privacy concerns. Faulkenberg said the study might look at how the tax could be implemented while still addressing that issue.

The miles traveled tax has also received criticism for the cost of collecting the information from the sensors on each vehicle.

“From studies I’ve seen, the cost of collection for that are about 16 times the cost of collection for the fuel tax,” Soliday said.

Soliday said those costs and the overall amount the program might raise are key metrics when considering any potential road-funding alternative.

“I want to know what the costs of collection are,” he said. “I want to know what it will raise and what it will cost to raise it.”

Under the bill, the study, conducted by INDOT and a contracted third party, must not last longer than two years and will include an inventory of Indiana’s transportation infrastructure.

INDOT declined to discuss the details of the study until Gov. Mike Pence signs HB 1104 into law. But officials released a statement expressing their support for the bill.

“INDOT supports House Bill 1104,” the statement said. “But it would be premature and speculative for us to discuss the bill until it is signed into law by the governor.”

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

Vanderburgh County Recent Booking Records

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 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671
                                JEFFREY                                WAYNE                                REICH                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 30
Residence: 2848      PENNSYLVANIA EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/24/2014 9:24:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
                                SHANITA                                ROSE                                LEE                            
Race: Black / Sex: Female / Age: 22
Residence: 1030      W FRANKLIN ST                                                EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/24/2014 2:11:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
THEFT OTHER >200 <100,000 [DF] 500
THEFT OTHER >200 <100,000 [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: $500
                                JUSTIN                                THOMAS                                BROWN                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 35
Residence: 1404      CULVER DR                                                    EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/24/2014 1:49:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
NARC-DEALING SALVIA OR SYNTH CANNABINOID >2 GRAM [DF] 0
TRAFFIC-DRIVING W/LIC PRIOR SUSP PRIOR OF [AM] 100
NARC-POSS SCH I,II,III,IV [DF] 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
                                JASON                                LEE                                GALT                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 25
Residence: 705       SOUTH BURHKART EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/24/2014 1:24:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
OMVWI [CM] 0
OMVWI-REFUSAL 0
OTHER AGENCIES CHARGES 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
                                LAURA                                ANN                                ELLINGTON                            
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 50
Residence: 100       OSSI ST EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/24/2014 12:29:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
INVASION OF PRIVACY [AM] 1000
Total Bond Amount: $1000
                                LAWRENCE                                GEORGE                                WINSTEAD                            
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 34
Residence: 710       N FOURTH AVE                                                 EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/24/2014 12:09:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE FELONY 5000
Total Bond Amount: $5000
                                MICHAEL                                BRUCE                                HARDY                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 38
Residence: 1406      SWEETSER AVE EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/23/2014 11:00:00 PM
Charge Bond Amt
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
TRAFFIC-DRIVING W/LIC SUSP W/INJ [DF] 0
OMVWI-PRIOR OR PASSENGER <18 IN VEH [DF] 0
OMVWI-REFUSAL 0
TRAFFIC-DRIVING W/LIC PRIOR SUSP PRIOR OF [AM] 100
TRAFFIC-RECKLESS DRIVING 100
CRIMINAL RECKLESSNESS [AM] 100
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
                                TERRY                                DWAYNE                                THOMAS                            
Race: Black / Sex: Male / Age: 43
Residence: 3004      LOWE LN EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/23/2014 8:34:00 PM
Released
Charge Bond Amt
TRAFFIC-RECKLESS DRIVING WITH DAMAGE 100
Total Bond Amount: $100
                                NICKOLAS                                TYSON                                LUCK                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 28
Residence: 613       SHEFFIELD DR EVANSVILLE, IN
Booked: 3/23/2014 6:54:00 PM
Charge Bond Amt
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
                                SAMANTHA                                L                                FULKERSON                            
Race: White / Sex: Female / Age: 35
Residence: 702       N WOODS AVE                                                  EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/23/2014 6:37:00 PM
Released
Charge Bond Amt
ALC-PUBLIC INTOX [BM] 50
Total Bond Amount: $50
                                ROGER                                KEITH                                BRAND                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 29
Residence: 2301      FRISSE AVE EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/23/2014 5:10:00 PM
Charge Bond Amt
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
FAILURE TO APPEAR-ORIGINAL CHARGE MISD 250
Total Bond Amount: NO BOND
                                CODY                                ALAN                                DAVIS                            
Race: White / Sex: Male / Age: 26
Residence: 1637      JOYCE AVE                                                    EVANSVILLE          , IN
Booked: 3/23/2014 11:18:00 AM
Charge Bond Amt
PETITION TO REVOKE PROBATION 0
Total Bond Amount:

IMPACT Visiting Days At UE

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UElogoUpcoming IMPACT Visit Days:

  • Saturday, April 5, 2014
  • Saturday, July 12, 2014

Registration begins at 8:00 a.m. (CT). By visiting campus during an IMPACT Visit Day, you will have the opportunity to:

  • Speak to faculty from all academic departments and student life offices
  • Take a campus tour led by a current UE student
  • Attend information sessions about scholarships and financial aid
  • Meet with admission counselors
  • Be our guests for lunch
  • Meet with a Career Advisor regarding the Career Advantage Program. (Students who select to meet with a Career Advisor must complete the Do What You Are assessment.)

If you are interested in attending an IMPACT Visit Day, please use the following online registration form. A confirmation packet will be sent with directions to campus and parking information. All information must be completed to schedule your attendance. If you have questions about the event, please e-mail e-mail admission@evansville.edu.

Hoosier Millionaire host, Tony Lamont to speak at USI

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Tony Lamont, director of media for Clover Lane Media, LLC in Indianapolis and host of the Hoosier Millionaire television game show, will speak about his experience in a variety of media, connecting and communicating with audiences, and job opportunities in the field. The presentation will take place at 6:30 p.m., Wednesday, March 26 in Kleymeyer Hall in USI’s Liberal Arts Center.Lamont has more than 30 years of experience in the broadcast industry and holds the honor of being the only African American broadcaster in Indianapolis history to emcee events for two sitting presidents: Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. Lamont’s career began as club DJ, later opening the door to radio where he served as a morning show host. Along with his other responsibilities, he also is the co-executive producer for Living by Design, a community talk show.

He is best known for serving first as announcer and later the host of the Hoosier Millionaire game show, where he was called “the world’s largest voice.” That voice will be heard once again with the upcoming 25th anniversary of the Hoosier Lottery and the return of the game show.

Free and open to the public, the event is sponsored by USI’s Communication Department Diversity Initiative.

EPD Activity Report: March 23, 2014

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EPD PATCH 2012

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EPD Activity Report: March 23, 2014

A successful 2014 legislative session

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The 2014 legislative session has come to a successful close with many notable accomplishments to mention.  When Speaker Brian Bosma and the rest of our caucus announced our 2014 legislative agenda, Working on Progress, we set our sights on five priorities: preparing kids for their careers, equipping our workforce, connecting crossroads to communities, stopping burdensome regulations, and cutting taxes. I am proud that within ten weeks we were able to achieve our goals.

My focus continues to be on jobs, education and addressing the skills gap facing Hoosiers. It is no secret that students in Indiana are expecting to enter the workforce after graduation. However, students will have trouble finding rewarding careers if they do not have the necessary skills to enter competitive job markets.

Through House Enrolled Act (HEA) 1003 , we further incentivized schools and businesses to collaborate through select educational partnerships, which in turn, will increase potential earnings of Hoosier workers. Additionally, tax credits will be offered to businesses that hire students who have successfully completed cooperative programs. This will help Hoosier students gain real-world experiences while also helping Indiana businesses that need specific skill sets to fill open positions.

Another agenda bill that spurs commerce, economic development and employs thousands of Hoosiers is HEA 1002 . This legislation frees up more funding, upwards of $400M from the state, to build and maintain the state’s highway system by transferring a portion of the funds allocated in the 2013 budget to be used now. By investing this money now, the federal government will chip in close to $1.6B throughout the life of the projects. Indiana’s fiscal integrity over the past few years has positioned us to be able to make these prudent investments, which will greatly benefit our state.

During session fellow legislators and I were able to address many different types of legislation. However, we were able to do this while looking to trim the size of government and address outdated and unnecessary laws and regulations that make government inefficient. HEA 1005 was a direct effort to bring a more efficient government to Indiana, and we were able to cut red tape that ties the hands of businesses that are looking to expand in Indiana. The private sector is always striving to be more efficient, and the public sector can certainly follow that lead – not to mention Washington D.C. Moving forward, we must continue to allow the free market to function, and look for ways to trim the government.

The measures took in the 2014 agenda will bring economic growth and push our state forward. We were able to accomplish so much while still concentrating on other issues and keeping in mind the overall goal, to make Indiana the best state to live, work and raise a family.