IS IT TRUE January 10, 2014

IS IT TRUE a press release sent out by the mayor’s office said the expansion will result in hundreds of new jobs in Evansville?…this press release will be followed up with a news conference this morning at 10 to provide more details?…the Civic Center Moles tell us this will involve Berry Plastics adding between 250 and 280 jobs and that the pay will average of $18 per hour? …these jobs for the most part will be relocated to Evansville from other American cities that have already experienced the hollow feelings of layoffs or outsourcing?…this is a local win but in the big picture of the American economy it is just moving the chairs around on the deck of a ship with a confused captain?…we do celebrate the local shot in the economic arm that this will bring but realize that this does not necessarily merit dancing in the streets and singing “happy days are here again?â€â€¦Evansville was on the other side of this musical jobs game several years ago when Whirlpool and many other businesses closed up shop here to move our jobs elsewhere?…today is a good day in Evansville?
IS IT TRUE one excuse for the delay in the official groundbreaking ceremony for the downtown convention hotel was given to be that when the ground is frozen you can’t dig into it?…groundbreaking ceremonies do not really dig anyway so that is just another silly and distractive bunch of nonsense?…real digging is seldom ever done by the golden hardhat crews as nice fresh dirt or even a pile of sand is imported for such events so some week member of the golden shovel team is not exposed for being a wimp?…the reality of the situation is that something has been discovered on or under this lot that has tossed the golden shovel crew a curve ball?…there are those that say it is moorings and there are those that say it is contaminated soil but the bottom line is there is something that will have to be remediated and it will cost money that is not in anyone’s budget to clean yet another mess?…the other stark reality is that cleaning this mess whether it costs $10,000 or $10 Million will not add one red cent of value to the end product?…one would think that the site would have been tested before issuing an RFP (request for proposal) but NOOOOOOOOO, that would have taken planning and thinking in advance?…we are not one bit surprised but are once again disappointed at the City of Evansville’s failure to VET?
IS IT TRUE one of our readers pointed out to us that the lot where the Civic Center is now was once part of a downtown rail yard named after the L & N (Louisville & Nashville) Railroad?…given that is true it would make sense that the soils in that immediate area could have seen some contamination at some point in the past?…rail yards by their very nature have a high probability of spillage of diesel fuel and even some of the materials that are passing through?…that category of materials just passing through would most certainly include coal, grain, aggregate, agricultural chemicals, and even industrial chemicals associated with the industries in Evansville during the time the L & N Yard was operating?…that would include plastics ingredients like phosgene, now banned refrigerants, and even asbestos that was standard practice in the ship building industry?…the point being made is that downtown Evansville’s soils have been subjected to all sorts of potentially problematic substances so no one with two brain cells should be surprised if some mitigation of substances is necessary?…what is mystifying is that no one seems to be thinking about such things?…these problems if they are upon us can be solved by throwing enough money at them?…the real sideshow will begin if this becomes an expensive problem to mitigate?
IS IT TRUE one would think that soils analysis would have been done before the Ford Center was built?…that also goes for the Civic Center, the Centre, and the Central Library?…all of these properties are adjacent to the lot where the hotel’s announcement sign sits?…the CCO formally requests that the City of Evansville release the soils testing done prior to the construction of the Ford Center?…this should shine some light on the state of the soils of downtown Evansville?
House Republicans introduce bill to ‘clarify’ marriage amendment
By John Sittler and Danielle Faczan
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – House Republicans introduced a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage Thursday, along with a supplementary bill meant to address concerns that have led some lawmakers to reassess their votes for the proposal.
Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, said the bill addresses questions that “people are validly raising, in most cases†by clarifying that the constitutional amendment would not prevent universities and private businesses from providing domestic partner benefits, wouldn’t impact the state’s domestic violence laws and would not usurp local human rights ordinances.
“Benefits are very clearly not invalidated through the amendment,†Bosma said. Indiana University, for example, would continue to be able to offer domestic partner benefits that it’s leaders had worried the amendment could quash, he said.
Still, the new Republican proposal left some observers – and maybe even some lawmakers – confused about whether the amendment would still ban civil unions – which are legally like marriage.
Bosma, for example, said the amendment would prohibit civil unions, while allowing couples to retain benefits through domestic partnerships.
“Civil unions are essentially marriage by another name,†he said. “Domestic partnerships are something different and it depends on what the nuances are on what a statute would say in that regard or somebody’s benefits would say in that regard.â€
But Senate President ProTem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, said he wasn’t sure over the exact definitions of the two terms.
“I can’t define a civil union for you,†he said. “I am not sure I can find anybody that can effectively define a civil union for you. Domestic partnerships are more definitive. They are more of them out there.â€
And Joel Schumm, clinical professor of law at Indiana-Purdue at Indianapolis, said he believes the addition of a 70-line statute makes the legislation confusing. He said the bill only reflects the intent of the current session.
“The biggest problems are that the statute seems contradictory of the language in the constitutional amendment, and what the statute says may not be what voters want or even know about,†Schumm said. “This makes things more confusing and creates uncertainty, which can lead to litigation.â€
But Bosma said, “I believe that the language gives future legislators and generations, and perhaps the current one, the ability to provide for unmarried couples regardless of their orientation. I think that it is a smart addition to make that clear.â€
House Joint Resolution 3, passed two years ago as HJR 6, defines marriage as the union of one man and woman and is designed to protect an existing state law with the same language. The amendment also says that a “legal status identical or substantially similar to that of marriage for unmarried individuals shall not be valid or recognized.â€
House Bill 1153 says that the second part of the amendment “prohibits the state from circumventing†the marriage definition. But it lists a variety of benefits and opportunities that cannot be restricted or infringed upon by the constitutional amendment.
Bosma said the goal is not to take something away from someone that is receiving it today, and that HB 1153 simply clarifies the legislation for educational institutions, schools and counties. He also said powers of attorney, wills and other documents would remain valid.
He said private businesses, organizations or businesses can set their own rules. “It is a decision by them, if they extend those benefits, and their benefit or insurance provider agrees to it, then those are not invalidated,†he said.
“The purpose of the amendment is solely, in my view, to protect the statute,†Bosma said. Indiana is one of only four states to have a marriage-defining law not protected by a constitutional amendment. However, most were passed several years ago, when public opinion was more negative about same-sex marriage.
Now, public opinion polls show that even in Indiana – where the amendment was popular just a few years – voters are split on the issue.
Freedom Indiana campaign chair Megan Robertson said the bill shows that the amendment was not written well the first time.
“It’s disappointing that they obviously feel there is a problem with the original language, enough that they have to have this extra bill to clarify what they originally meant,†she said. “Instead of going back and doing it right on something as important as an amendment to our constitution, they’re just going to push it through. It’s really disappointing.â€
However, Bosma said it’s not unusual for a bill offering a legislative intent to accompany a measure, citing the Rockport coal-to-gas plant legislation as the most recent example. He said the supplementary bill cannot alter the clear language of the amendment but, “it establishes the intent of the legislature in adopting the amendment.†That could be useful in court.
Bosma said the marriage debate will continue regardless of whether the amendment passes and that eventually a lawsuit to be filed to try to overturn it, as has been done in 30 other states. So Bosma said he thought it was “quite appropriate†to give the courts, voters and legislators some clarity on precisely what the language does and does not do.
“To the extent that policy makers can, in an official capacity, answer those questions, I think that’s a positive for the process,†he said.
He went on to say that he was pleased by the General Assembly’s expression of intent.
But Robertson compared the addition of a secondary bill to doing one’s homework wrong the first time. Instead of redoing it and telling people what one really means, “just do it right the first time.â€
She said it is not the legislature’s duty to define what the state constitution says.
“It’s a constitutional amendment, it’s approved by the voters and then it goes into the constitution and stands on its own,†Robertson said. “Unless the people – the voters – are going to approve the secondary bill as well, then it really doesn’t have much standing.â€
There was also some controversy regarding the renaming of the proposed amendment. Robertson said in a statement that it was renumbered to confuse Hoosier voters.
“One thing I’ve heard is that they’ve renamed it because it has half the support it used to have, which I thought was interesting and happens to probably be true,†she said. “I think it’s political gamesmanship that really doesn’t have any place in this process.â€
Freedom Indiana has created a number of signs and advertising that refers to HJR 6.
Bosma said the numbering is merely a reflection of when the legislation was filed and that there probably won’t even be an HJR 6 this session.
Bosma also addressed concerns about how the amendment could affect business in Indiana. Officials at two of the state’s largest employers – Cummins and Eli Lily & Co. – have said they are worried about how the amendment will affect who they can hire.
“If I thought it was disastrous for Indiana I wouldn’t be doing it,†Bosma said. “I certainly don’t think it is,†he said, noting that eight of the top 10 “fast growth states†– including the entire Top 5 – have a similar amendment.
Still, pressure has been mounting on lawmakers about the marriage fight. Advance America – a conservative group – started television ads about the issue this week while Freedom Indiana delivered letters from 6,000 Hoosiers to lawmakers.
Bosma said he recognized that legislators could possibly face political fallout from their decision on the marriage issue. He said he tried to follow his father’s advice to “do what’s right and let the politics shake out for itself.â€
“I’ve done nothing other than encourage people to vote their conscience and to do what they think is right on this issue,†he said.
He said it would be up to each member to make up his or her mind as to how to make their decision, but that, “I don’t believe most people here make their decisions based on threats, or promises, or concern for their political future.â€
Bosma said he had received a pledge of unlimited campaign funding to make this issue go away. He refrained from naming the person because he or she might have violated state and federal law.
“I was shocked to receive it and brought it to that person’s attention what it sounded like,†he said.
Bosma said much of his support for the amendment – and the bill – stemmed from his desire to see the issue decided by the people of Indiana. He said he did not think it was appropriate for this issue to be decided by one activist judge with one plaintiff.
“My preference is that the decision in this regard, whatever it may be, is made by elected officials and ultimately the people and not by an activist judge,†he said.
“I think the right place for these decisions to be made, including the decision as to what a marriage is or is not, is by the elected officials, and, ultimately, the people,†Bosma said.
House Minority Leader Rep. Scott Pelath, D- Michigan City echoed Bosma.
“They don’t want a single judge redefining marriage,†Pelath said. “They don’t want an activist judge making a decisionâ€
Pelath said the marriage amendment may be the “issue of the session,†although he wants to focus on other things.
He said his chief concerns with HJR 3 were corporations providing benefits for employees, domestic violence laws, wills, living wills, visitation rights and local ordinances.
According to Pelath, the reasoning behind HB1153 was that the Republicans “felt guilty†abou the questions raised by the amendment. But he said “it doesn’t actually do anything.â€
John Sittler is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
PEF and EVSC Announce Summer Musical 2014
Title Sponsor:Â Old National Bank
The Public Education Foundation and Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation announced today (01-09-2014) their 26th Annual Summer Musical: FIDDLER ON THE ROOF, to be presented July 10-13, 2014 in the Aiken Theatre at Old National Events Plaza (formerly The Centre) in downtown Evansville. Show times are July 10, 11 and 12 at 7:00 p.m. and Sunday, July 13 at 2:00 p.m.
In the little village of Anatevka, Tevye, a poor dairyman, tries to instill in his five daughters the traditions of his tight-knit Jewish community in the face of changing social mores and the growing anti-Semitism of Czarist Russia. Rich in historical and ethnic detail, FIDDLER ON THE ROOF has touched audiences around the world with its humor, warmth and honesty. Its celebrated score by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, features songs loved the world over: “Sunrise, Sunset,” “If I Were A Rich Man,” and “Matchmaker,” to name a few. FIDDLER ON THE ROOF is simply Broadway at its very best. (Synopsis courtesy of Music Theatre International website)
All Tri-State students currently in Grades 8-12 are invited to participate in auditions, which will be held March 18, 19, and 20, 2014, 3:30-8:00 p.m. in the auditorium at Harrison High School.
In addition, current 6th and 7th grade students are invited to audition on Monday, March 17, 2014, 3:30-8:00 p.m. in The Shoulders Family Commons at Harrison High School.
Rehearsals will begin immediately after the end of the school year and will be held at the Southern Indiana Career & Technical Center. Students interested in participating must be able to commit to the program, including all rehearsals and show times (May 28 through July 14.)
The 2014 musical staff includes:Â Producers:Â Jack Schriber & Amy Walker; Director: Sue Schriber; Vocal Director: Terry Becker; Orchestra Director; Richard Bernhardt; Choreographer: Jan Stovall; and Artistic Designer: Jaye Beetem.
2014 will mark the last summer musical for Jack and Sue Schriber, Jan Stovall and Richard Bernhardt. Jack has been a producer of the show since the program began in 1989. 2014 will mark Sue’s 22nd show as director, Jan Stovall 20th show as choreographer, and Richard Bernhardt’s 7th show as Orchestra Director. Collectively, this represents 75 years of summer musical experience. The summer musical program will continue, there will just be some new faces on the staff in 2015.
For more information, or to make a donation in support of the Summer Musical, visit the PEF website at www.pefevansville.org or contact Amy Walker, Executive Director of the Public Education Foundation, at 422-1699 or 480-7406.
The mission of the Public Education of Evansville, Inc. (PEF) is inspiring and rewarding student-centered innovation in public education. PEF board, supporters and staff believe that high quality public education is fundamental to the economic, cultural and civic health of our society; and that all students deserve the best possible public education in order to realize their full potential.
Follow PEF on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Public-Education-Foundation-of-Evansville-Inc/), Twitter (PEFEVV), and at www.pefevansville.org .
For More Information Contact:Â Amy Walker, Executive Director, 812 422-1699 (office) or 812-480-7406 (cell).
Vanderburgh County Democratic Party 2014 Event Schedule
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DAY/DATE |
TIME |
EVENT / INFORMATION |
Jan 11 |
6:00pm (EST) |
8th District Holiday Party ï‚· Location: Village Inn 242 Hwy 57 Petersburg, IN Potatoes, and Dessert Bar |
Jan 14 |
5:00pm |
Office Holders and Candidates Meeting
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Jan 15 |
12:00 Noon |
Finance Reports Due to County Clerk ï‚· Noon on January 15, 2014 is the deadline for all candidate committees, legislative caucus committees, and political action committees to file their annual campaign finance reports for 2013.
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Jan 17 |
4:30pm – 6:30pm |
Fundraiser for District 77 State Rep. Gail Riecken
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Jan 23 |
6:00pm |
Stephen Melcher 16th Annual Reception & Dinner ï‚· Location: Western Rib-Eye & Ribs 1401 Boeke Rd Evansville, IN ï‚· Cost: $350.00
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Feb 7 |
12:00 Noon |
Last Day to File in the Primary Election
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Mar 4
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5pm-7pm |
Jonthan Weaver’s Mardi Gras Fundraiser  Location: TBA |
Mar 12
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5:30pm – 7:30pm |
Kathryn Martin for Knight Township Trustee Second Annual Chili Dinner  Location: Marigold Bar – 2112 S Weinbach Ave |
May 31 |
TBA |
Indiana State Democratic Party Convention ï‚· Location: JW Marriott Hotel & Covention Center ï‚· More details TBA soon! |
PET OF THE WEEK
 Caboodle is the famous cat whose gorgeous eyes are featured on the VHS YouTube homepage! She is one year old, and was surrendered  as a “neighborhood cat†from Mt. Vernon. Since then, she has been spayed, microchipped, and vaccinated, and has taken up residence in the cageless cat lounge with several other kitties. In other words, she’s ready to go home with you today! Caboodle’s adoption fee is $30, which includes all of the services she’s already received, plus 30 days of free pet health insurance and a goody bag to take home.
City On The Verge Of Making Yet Another Epic Mistake
Written by Jordan Baer. Â This article is posted by the City County Observer without opinion, bias or editing
If you surf the City-County Observer quite frequently like I do, you’re probably well aware that those in the driver’s seat at the Civic Center have been no stranger to making mistakes of epic proportions. Such mistakes as the Homestead Tax Grab, Earthcare, and Global Blade Technology are silent but violent. Due to these mistakes being mostly financially related, they show very little tangible remnants of failure outside of a building that has been looking for tenants long before Earthcare and GBT became household names.
The only thing worse than the above financial disasters have been the tangible urban planning mistakes whose negative consequences are already beginning to set in. For quite awhile, we’ve watched the city, the chamber, and now one of our universities focus on an “innovation corridor†along I-69 while the Hercules Motor Plant district located in the northwest corner of the Lloyd Expressway and U.S 41 sits rotting despite the fact that the entire area enjoys great road access, great rail access, and great road and rail access to our airport and ports.
We’ve seen a complete lack of transparency during the hotel project as very few people have seen all the competing proposals. We’ve also watched the Great Lawn of Lies be exposed time and time again for what it is and was- An excuse to tear down an arena that didn’t need to be torn down. And finally, we’re now watching the ECVB prepare to construct sprawl fields in a lot far away from the city’s inner core, while a current ball field lot sits open just across from Don Mattingly Way, Bosse Field, a neighborhood that openly embraced the project, and just down the road from the Ford Center and a lot that just might turn out to be a hotel someday. If only this was all just a wicked nightmare.
With all these failures in tow, it appears the city is now ready to make yet another mistake that will prove to be a mistake that creates a legacy of mistakes. Just a few weeks ago, we learned from the City-County Observer that the city is now focusing on using the Old Greyhound Bus Station lot in their bid to lure the I.U Medical School to Downtown Evansville. This decision, if followed through, is a losing proposition. Like all of the previous failures listed above, there is a better alternative, and it’s an alternative that has now been available for roughly 40 years.
Back in 1971, the city of Evansville’s school corporation made a terrible decision. They decided to vacate their only downtown high school in favor of the current one that for many years was farther north than North High School. This decision resulted in demolition of Old Central High School in 1973. Thanks to those at HistoricEvansville.com, we also know that this decision didn’t just affect the city’s urban planning, it also destroyed what could possibly be argued as one of the best architecturally designed buildings in the school corps profile…
http://historicevansville.com/image2.php?id=educational%2FOld+Central+-+postcard+6.jpg
Of course, by now you’re saying, “that’s great but why pick a lot just because of past architecture?†The answer to that is that this isn’t picking a lot just because of past architecture. You see, some of the effects of Old Central High School being on the lot are still intact for IUMS to benefit from such as the YMCA (Old Central Gym). Let’s take a one on one look at the advantages of the site compared to those of the Old Greyhound Bus Station Lot…
Old Central- Directly Across from the METS Bus Terminal
Old Greyhound- On Lot of Previous Bus Terminal
Old Central- Directly Across from the YMCA
Old Greyhound- Directly Across from the YWCA
Old Central- 2 Blocks from the Victory, 3 Blocks from the Ford Center, 4 Blocks from the Hotel on the Same Road
Old Greyhound- 4 Blocks & 1 Over from Victory, 4 Blocks & 2 Over from The Ford Center, 4 Blocks & 3 Over from the Hotel
Old Central- Down the Road from Deaconess Hospital and a Jacobsville Area Desperately Needing Revitalization
Old Greyhound- Down the Road from Tropicana Casino- the Last Place You’d Want a University
Old Central- Across MLK from over 3 Historic Apartment Complexes
Old Greyhound- Across from a Bank, Office Space, and That’s About It
Old Central- Catty Corner to a Public Parking Garage
Old Greyhound- Across the Street from a Private Parking Garage
Old Central- Would Serve as a Gateway to Downtown With Future Expansion to the Northwest & Northeast
Old Greyhound- Is Landlocked, in the Middle of Downtown, and Stuck in the Entertainment District
Old Central- Has the Opportunity to be the Focal Point of Downtown with a Reconstructed Bell Tower
Old Greyhound- Let’s Just Hope They Don’t Tear Down the Historic Bus Station
According to the unofficial report on the Vanderburgh County Assessor’s website, the two parcels of land that make up the lot Old Central High School sat on are owned by the YMCA and Vanderburgh County. I can’t imagine negotiations with either of these two being as rough as they have been currently. Not to mention, a fuse of cash coupled with a med school neighbor would do wonders for the YMCA.
Back in 1969, USI, then ISUE, made a TERRIBLE decision. They moved all of their campus out of the former Centennial School Building on the corner of 12th & W. Illinois St. and onto the current campus (http://historicevansville.com/site.php?id=centennial). This decision has no doubt been the catalyst for sprawl on the far Westside while contributing to the decline of Franklin Street before the Franklin Street Events Association took over. Having grown up in a house just one block from the old Centennial School lot, I can’t help but wonder just how different Franklin Street and the area around it would look today if USI had made the right decision and stayed.
Now, as IUMS seeks a new campus, we must make sure we don’t repeat the USI mistake. In an era of New Urbanism, now is the time to put together a genuine plan for Downtown Evansville, and that starts with IUMS. Since the demolition of Old Central, there’s been a void left in the middle of Downtown. As I listened to the bell tower above Oak Hill Cemetery roar with music last month (thanks to cemetery superintendent Chris Cooke), I fail to understand why the city doesn’t recognize that now is the time to build back Downtown Evansville’s iconic bell tower image.
With a little under four weeks to go, the city still has time to undue what’s been done. For once, I would like to see our city leaders do the right thing and put together a proposal that addresses multiple needs and advantages of Downtown. This broken record is heading around again, will the fourth verse be like the third, second, and first?
COA reverses treble damages in business deal gone bad
by Jennifer Nelson for theindianalawyers.com
A trial court erred in awarding treble damages to an Indiana man who entered into a business venture with a North Carolina couple that ended up costing him more than $1 million in money owed to him, the Indiana Court of Appeals concluded Thursday.
E.J. Agnew and Golden-AGI LLC sued Joel and Ruby Bowden and their companies, Golden Companies Inc. and Golden Purchasing and Staffing, after learning that he was owed profits from the Bowdens from a joint business venture they entered into to develop business with U.S. auto and truck producers and arrange for the production and delivery of parts from overseas manufacturers.
They entered into the 50/50 ownership deal in 2004 that created Golden AGI LLC. They were to split profits from a deal with a manufacturer in India, but Agnew later earned the Bowdens, who lived in North Carolina, used money from the India deal to pay off debts in a separate deal supplying parts to Cummins. He also learned that Golden AGI income and expenses were comingled with that of other Golden entities and that the Bowdens never intended to operate GAGI as a functional business entity.
Agnew sued for money damages in 2009; the Bowdens sought dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction, which was denied. At the bench trial, Agnew’s expert David DeWitt, a licensed CPA, testified regarding the profits derived from the India deal. He said Agnew’s share was at least $1,754,278, which is the amount the trial court awarded to Agnew. The trial court also awarded treble damages based on the conclusion the Bowdens committed conversion. The Bowdens appealed.
“The Bowdens’ wrongful failure to distribute net revenue in accordance with the 50/50 agreement constitutes a failure to pay a debt, not criminal conversion. The money withheld from Agnew was not a separate, specifically identifiable chattel,†Judge Ezra Friedlander wrote in Joel Bowden, Ruby Bowden, Golden Companies, Inc., and Golden Purchasing and Staffing, Inc. v. E.J. Agnew and Golden-AGI, LLC, 49A05-1301-PL-23. As such, the trial court erred in awarding treble damages under I.C. 34-24-3-1. The judges ordered the judgment reduced to the original $1.75 million awarded to Agnew.
The Court of Appeals found the trial court’s reliance on DeWitt’s expert testimony regarding damages was not erroneous and that the Indiana courts have personal jurisdiction over the North Carolina couple in their individual capacities.
EVPL Director to serve as 2014 ILF president
Marcia Learned Au, CEO/Director of the Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library, officially becomes President of the Indiana Library Federation for 2014. In 2013 she served as Vice President/President Elect of the association.
The Indiana Library Federation is one of the largest library associations in the United States and holds the largest state library convention in the country. The mission of ILF is to foster the professional growth of its members and to promote all types of libraries in Indiana. “In a time of dynamic change it is essential that ILF is able to provide organizational leadership, advocacy, and through its efforts strengthen and support Indiana’s library community,†says Au of the ILF’s role.
Au has over thirty years of professional library administration experience in public libraries, twenty-four of those in Indiana. She serves on the board of directors and committees of numerous professional library industry groups as well as community organizations
Lockhart Found Guilty
A Vanderburgh County Jury deliberated for under two hours before finding Malaysia D. Lockhart (06/12/1986) guilty of two counts of Possession of a Firearm by a Serious Violent Felon – B Felonies.
Lockhart faces between 6-20 years and will be sentenced on February 07, 2014 at 11:00 by Judge Kelli Fink. Lockhart was arrested following an investigation in May of 2013.
For further information on the case listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton, Director of Public Relations 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.