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VOICE’s Flower Pot Meetings Continue with Healthy Green Space

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voice

Thursday Morning At Wesselman Nature Society 8:30 a.m.

Facilitated by Leadership Evansville in partnership with Mayor Lloyd Winnecke and the city of Evansville

 

January 8, 2014

 

WHAT:                    EVANSVILLE, Ind. – On Thursday, January 9 at 8:30 a.m. at Wesselman Nature Society on the east side of Evansville, Leadership Evansville host VOICE’s third Flower Pot meeting on “Healthy Green Space,” where any interested citizen, organization, or business is invited to share their knowledge and passion to begin collaborative planning and actions in this topic. At this meeting, participants will:

-        Identify low hanging fruit in this area that they would be able to actively do now, short term and long term

WHO:                       Leadership Evansville Executive Director Lynn Miller Pease, in partnership with Mayor Lloyd Winnecke and the City of Evansville, will host the third VOICE Healthy Green Space Flower Pot Meeting, and will be joined by key stakeholders with a vested interest who have already committed to participate in this Flower Pot, including Keep Evansville Beautiful, Evansville Area Trails Coalition, Vectren, Wesselman Nature Society, the Department of Parks and Recreation and  Department of Metropolitan Development and Welborn Baptist Foundation. Additionally, every citizen is invited and encouraged to participate in the Healthy Green Space Flower Pot meetings to help collaboratively build strategic actions and have ownership in the results because it takes all of us to make a difference.

 

WHEN:                    Thursday, January 9, 2014 at Wesselman Nature Society 8:30 a.m.

WHY:                       VOICE brought together over 1,700 diverse community members to participate in 32 facilitator-led group discussions that allowed them to articulate and document their visions for Evansville’s preferred future. With the first visioning phase concluded, the second phase of VOICE consists of communicating the outcomes and next steps in the form of Big Action Meetings (BAM) so all VOICE participants know their VOICE was heard. Over 250 people attended the VOICE BAM sessions, which revealed the three high-priority topics (Healthy Green Space, City Core, Experiences) to move forward with strategic planning and action. Of these attendees, 70% of them signed up to take action in these topics. Additionally, nearly 200 citizens attended the first round of Flower Pot meetings. LE will continue to facilitate this process.

 

MORE:                     More information at: www.evansvillevoice.com, www.facebook.com/evansvillevoice

@evansvillevoice on Twitter

 

CONTACT:             Lynn Miller Pease l 812-589-3682

 

New education bill will address skills gap

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McNamara_r76The 2014 legislative session began this week. I am looking forward to having productive discussions on how we can improve our state and create a better living environment for all who call Indiana home. In an effort to continue this process, last week I announced a bill that I will be introducing this session.  The bill calls for the creation of the Career and Technical Education (CTE) Diploma. Students have the options of the Academic Honors Diploma and the Technical Honors Diploma, but those options don’t get at the heart of the skills gap problem.  In order to address the skills gap we have to address it where it starts.  The current system doesn’t do that.

Currently, there is a one-size-fits-all approach to graduating high school students with Core 40. Core 40 is designed to produce the same learning skills in all students.  The lack of diversification that currently exists doesn’t allow students to develop the skills necessary for industry and technical education.  For example, the same sets of skills apply from English 9 – English 12. However, manufacturers need workers skilled in Technical Writing, Technical Reading and Technical Communication.

Students simply are not given the opportunity under the Core 40 to develop and strengthen those skills.  The same is true for math skills acquired in Algebra I, Algebra II or Geometry.  One can argue that you need Technical Math and/or Technical Problem Solving courses to be successful in the industrial environment.

This bill will also call upon the Indiana Career Council to appoint a subcommittee that includes members of each council, representatives of career and technical education programs, the Department of Education and community colleges to develop the requirements for the diploma.

The subcommittee will be able to obtain input in developing the diploma requirements from licensed mathematics and English language arts educators. The subcommittee will be authorized to design new curricula or create new courses in developing the diploma. A requirement of at least 40 academic credits, or the equivalent workload, will be designed so that completed courses may be used to fulfill the requirements established for other high school diplomas approved by the State Board of Education. The bill will entreat the Indiana Career Council and the State Board of Education to approve the new requirements and courses before they are offered.

This bill will benefit students, industry and the economy. Students can now have the option to choose a diploma that is in interest to his/her chosen field and will be able to graduated high school with useable skills that companies need. The Diploma will help students build their skills in English, math and science- all within the context of a career that interests them.  More education and training leads to higher earnings and great job satisfaction and makes Indiana a more desirable place to come do business because of the options. With less time spent on remediation and ore time spent on training skills people will be able to work sooner.

This bill will be one of many I work on this session. If you have any questions or issues that you think need to be addressed in the General Assembly please contact me via email at h76@in.gov or by phone at (317) 232-9671 . I hope everyone is staying warm and looking forward to the Colts heading to another playoff game!

Indiana State Police Investigate Crash Involving School Bus, No Injuries Reported

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user29376-1389204567-media1_a8c6dc_240_180_PrsMe_Vanderburgh County – Seven students and their school bus driver escaped injury this morning after the driver of a pickup truck lost control on an icy road and slammed into the rear of their bus. At approximately 6:45 this morning, a school bus loaded with seven students had stopped on Upper Mt. Vernon Road approximately 450’ west of Dieffenbach Road to pick up another student. A pickup truck driven by Jesse Kemper, Jr, 20, of Evansville, was eastbound on Upper Mt. Vernon Road when his vehicle slid on ice striking the rear of the stopped school bus. No injuries were reported. Kemper’s pickup truck was totaled. The school bus received minor damage. Kemper was issued a traffic citation for speed too fast for conditions. Investigating Officer: Master Trooper Bob Helfrich, Indiana State Police

Andrew McNeil Files Declaration of Candidacy for Indiana’s 8th District Congressional Race‏

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McNeil

(Indianapolis, IN) Andrew McNeil, a resident of Freedom, Indiana
 file documents on January 8th to run in the upcoming May primary 
against Republican Congressman Larry Bucshon. McNeil announced 
on October 8,2013 that he would seek the Republican nomination 
to be the next congressman from Indiana’s 8th district.

McNeil believes it is time to elect new leaders who have the boldness to 
stand for American liberties. “I have decided to run for Congress after 
seeing the nation I love being destroyed from within,” said McNeil. “The 
debt we are placing on our children and grandchildren is, in my mind, 
immoral. This is not the time to make excuses for inaction. It is the 
time to boldly stand for conservative common sense, something Washington 
is in sore need of.”

A 28 year resident of Owen County, McNeil resides in Freedom, Indiana 
with his wife of 19 years, Andrea. Together they have 7 children and own 
a small family farm.

McNeil has been a Territory Manager at a Midwest coffee company for 16 
years and has maintained a small farming business with his family. He 
believes the hardworking people of the United States are the greatest 
engine of economic growth. McNeil recently stated, “Every day it seems 
new regulations are announced that will cripple some new area of our 
economy. I will cut spending wherever I can and I will not vote for 
unconstitutional spending. It is not the government's place to pick 
winners and losers in the marketplace. I will work hard to return power 
to the states, and to the citizens.”

McNeil has been an overseer in his church for many years. He and his 
wife home school their children and teach them the value of hard work 
and to love God, family and country.

If elected, McNeil will vote to repeal Obamacare and will insist on 
Congress balancing its budget. McNeil is a pro-life, Christian 
conservative and a staunch defender of the 2nd Amendment. He feels that 
serving the residents of the 8th Congressional District of Indiana would 
be an honor. McNeil stated, “We need leaders who realize they could have 
the greatest reservoir of resources behind them: the American people.”
For more information about Andrew McNeil and his position on issues 
visit www.andrewmcneilforcongress.com. He can also be contacted via 
postal mail at PO Box 36 Freedom, Indiana 47431.

Teddy Stucki To Seek Office Of Center Township Trustee

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Dear Center Township Voters

Hi my name is Teddy Stucki and I am seeking the office of Center Township Trustee.  I am a lifelong resident of Center Township and lifelong member of the Republican Party.   I have lived in Evansville all of my live and been blessed to have successfully started, ran, and operated my own business since 1981.  I am a graduate of Central High School, Vincennes University, and Purdue University Extension.

I am married to Debbie Stucki who is also a graduate of Central High School and the current Vanderburgh County Clerk.  I have been married for 26 years.  We have one son Teddy 2 who is also a graduate of Central High School and Ivy Tech.  I am a member of Salem United Methodist Church and currently serve as Board of Trustee.  I am also on the Board of Trustees and finance committee of the New Salem Cemetery.

I was elected to the Center Township Advisory Board in 2010.  I am the only ELECTED member on the board seeking the office of Center Township Trustee.    Over the past 3 years I have really wanted to further my community service and that is why I am asking for your support in the upcoming caucus for Center Township Trustee.  My son is now taking over the family business therefore I would be a full time employee and it would be my only job unlike some of the other candidates running. Some of the things I would like to do as trustee would be to continue cross training of all employees, so everyone knows how to do every job in the office and be proficient at them.  I would also like to provide more information and updates to the website to make it a more user friendly. I also look forward to working with the McCutchanville Fire Department.  These are just a few ideas I would like to implement if elected.

In closing I would like to reiterate that if chosen I would be a full time office holder and it would be my only job, I would also like to acknowledge the fact that while in office I will not seek or accept a pay raise.  Thank you for your time and I would appreciate your support in the May 6, 2014 primary for Center Township Trustee.  You can contact me at 422-2471 or teddystucki1@gmail.com.
I’m dedicated to doing the job and doing it right!

Sincerely,

Teddy Stucki

Healthy Green Space Meeting

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Healthy Green Space 
Flower Pot Meetingvoice
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Wesselman Nature Society
8:30 a.m.
RSVP: voice@evansvillevoice.com| 812-425-3828
 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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nick herman

 

Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, January 06, 2014

 

Tina Armstrong                 Theft-Class D Felony

 

Adam Brandt                     Possession of a Schedule I Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

Unlawful Possession of Syringe-Class D Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Alex Brandt                        Possession of a Schedule I Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

Unlawful Possession of Syringe-Class D Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Enzio Compton                 Burglary-Class B Felony

Theft-Class D Felony

 

Alfred Gullatt Jr               Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury to a Pregnant Women-Class C Felony

 

Lauren Nelson                  Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Class D Felony

                                                Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Brandon Stewart              Dealing in Marijuana-Class D Felony

 

David White                      Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Jenna Willis                       Theft-Class D Felony

 

John Demunck                  Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

 

Bryant Hooper                  Dealing in Marijuana-Class D Felony

 

Donald Robb                      Battery Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury-Class C Felony

Domestic Battery-Class A Misdemeanor

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Richard Torres                   Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class A Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

(Habitual Substance Offender Enhancement)

 

Lawrence Winstead Jr   Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-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.

 

IS IT TRUE…JANUARY 8, 2014

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Kathryn Martin, Knight Township Trustee
Kathryn Martin, Knight Township Trustee

IS IT TRUE that the proposed downtown Convention Hotel project groundbreaking event has been cancelled because of alleged underground mooring issues?  …we hope the proposed hotel site doesn’t have any toxic materials issues on this site?  …we hear that it may cost the city taxpayers big bucks to correct any site issues before building on this site?

IS IT TRUE we hear that Knight Township Trustee Kathryn Martin shall be filling her re-election papers to run as a Democrat Friday?  …that Mrs. Martin recently had lunch with a member of the Vanderburgh County GOP Central Committee?  …that the member of this committee asked Kathryn to consider filing for re-election as a member of the Republication  party and not as a Democratic officer holder?  …she was told if she did change her party affiliation she would run unopposed?  …she was also told if she didn’t she would have a Republican challenger?  …if anyone needs to verify this statement please call Kathryn at the Knight Township office at (812) 477-1596?

IS IT TRUE we hear that former Evansville City Councilmen and Fire Chief Keith Jarboe has decided not run for 2nd District County Commissioner?

IS IT TRUE we can’t believe that the Indiana State Board of Accounts hasn’t  released the 2012 City of Evansville audit?  …that this audit was due to be made public on November 1, 2013?  …if this audit has problems we predict that the Mayor shall blame the former Mayor for all negative findings?

IS IT TRUE it is always prudent when starting a construction project to test everything including the soil for contamination before locking in a price?…in the event where refurbishment of older buildings is concerned asbestos testing and even seismic testing will put any uncertainties to rest or shine the light of reality onto the budget?…failing to do such things in an effort to make haste or to get every photo op possible is one of the reasons that politicians are so inept at pricing and timing of projects?…it has only been a short three years since Evansville witnessed a political epiphany when arena project manager John Kish remembered to do seismic testing on the old Executive Inn only after the Haiti earthquake?…one would think that testing for soil contamination and seismic issues would be pretty basic preparation steps?…keep your ears open over the next few days for an admission of oversight from the Mayor’s office regarding the lot where the “Coming in Fall 2015” sign stands announcing a new convention hotel?…the most interesting information will be the cost of the cleanup and the amount of the delay?

IS IT TRUE it was reported last night that this latest arctic vortex has created freezing in all 50 of the United States of America (including Hawaii) for the first time since monitoring has been done?…it looks like we will be getting a break today from the deep freeze?…in a move that emphasizes just how cold it is, the Chicago Zoo took their female polar bear indoors yesterday to protect her from the cold?

IS I TRUE that after convicted swindler Bernie Madoff has been under lock and key for over 4 years for bilking investors out of $17 Billion the reparation dollars keep rolling in and one would think that those dollars would be earmarked for the victims of Madoff’s fraud?…that just ain’t true?…the same federal government that aided Madoff in carrying out his scam by ignoring warnings about him for years is lining up like pigs at the trough to capture the $2 Billion settlement negotiated from J. P. Morgan for a role they may or may not have had in benefiting from Madoff’s antics?…while Morgan found it easier and cheaper to write a $2 Billion check than to pay for a prolonged court fight, any money recovered that has Madoff’s fingerprints on it should go to the victims and not to the federal government that pays $700 for hammers and $500 for toilet seats?…the best use of any dollars taken by the feds would be to prosecute some of their own for dereliction of duty or even aiding and abetting fraud in the Madoff case?

Convenience store association says cold beer ban discriminatory

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 by Marilyn Odendahl for the indianalawyer.comimages-10

Along with the usual reasons including giving consumers more options, providing price competition and sparking new investment in the state, Indiana convenience store owners have added a new argument to their push to sell cold beer – it’s their constitutional right.

Three gas marts have joined the Indiana Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association to file a complaint in federal court, charging that the state’s current practice of regulating beer by temperature is arbitrary and leads to discriminatory treatment that violates state and federal constitutions.

The complaint, Indiana Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association, Thorntons, Inc., Ricker Oil Company, Inc., Freedom Oil, LLC and Steve Noe v. Alex Huskey, in his official capacity as chairman of the Indiana Alcohol Tobacco Commission, The Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission and The State of Indiana, 1:13-CV-0784, was filed May 14 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.

For nearly the last five years, the Indiana Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association has lobbied the Legislature unsuccessfully to be able to sell cold beer. Now the organization is turning to the courts.

Changing alcohol laws through means other than the General Assembly is not uncommon, said Scot Imus, the association’s executive director.

As an example, he pointed to the 1963 bulletin issued by the Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission that authorized liquor stores to sell cold beer. The Indiana Supreme Court upheld the cold beer sales in 1964, and the Legislature finally followed suit when it incorporated the language of the bulletin into the 1979 Acts.

However, Attorney General Greg Zoeller maintains alcohol laws are the purview of the General Assembly rather than the judiciary. The attorney general’s office is representing the ATC and defending the statute, which as Zoeller pointed out, is the current decision of the elected members of the Legislature.

“This subject has been debated in the legislature for a number of years and it will be the state’s position that the legislature is the proper forum for any changes to our laws and not the courts,” Zoeller stated May 14 in response to the complaint.

Constitutional grounds

In their complaint, the Indiana plaintiffs focus on the single issue of whether the regulation of beer by temperature is constitutional.

“We are the only state in the union regulating who can sell beer based on temperature,” said John Maley, Barnes & Thornburg LLP partner, who represents the plaintiffs. “There is no rational basis for this 50-year-old disparate treatment, particularly when liquor stores adjoining the convenience stores can sell chilled beer and adjoining convenience stores can sell only warm beer but can sell chilled higher-content drinks such as wine.”

The group asserts the state’s limitations on sales of cold beer violate the equal protection clause and the equal privileges clause of the U.S. Constitution. Also, the filing charges Indiana’s practices violate the equal protection clause of the state’s constitution.

Finally, the complaint contends that the law also violates Article 1, Section 1 of the Indiana Constitution.

This section echoes the Declaration of Independence in its provision, noting that all people have the inalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. The convenience store association then points to the Indiana Supreme Court decision in Herman v. State, 8 Ind. 545, 558 (Ind. 1855), which determined that “the right of liberty and pursuing happiness secured by the constitution, embraces the right, in each compos mentis individual of selecting what he will eat and drink.”

The complaint by the Indiana retailers comes several months after a similar group in Kentucky was successful in making their argument against a state statute. Those plaintiffs charged that barring grocery and convenience stores from selling liquor and wine while permitting drugstores and others to do so is differential treatment that violates the equal protection provisions of the U.S. and Kentucky constitutions.

In Maxwell’s Pic-Pac, Inc. v. Dehner, 887 F.Supp.2d 733 (2012), the U.S. District Court Western District of Kentucky at Louisville agreed.

“Here the attenuated or non-existent relationship between the Statute’s classification and any number of potential legislative goals leaves the Court with no other conclusion than that the Statute offends the Equal Protection Clause and, for that reason, must be struck down as unconstitutional,” Judge John Heyburn II wrote for the court.

The defendants in the Indiana case have until July 5 to respond to the complaint. A pretrial conference has been scheduled for July 24 before U.S. Magistrate Judge Debra McVicker Lynch.

To John Livengood, president and CEO of the Indiana Association of Beverage Retailers, the pivot to the judicial branch is the equivalent of a Hail Mary pass by a team that could not get to the 20-yard line.

States have the right under the 21st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution to make laws regarding how alcohol is sold, Livengood said. Consequently, he believes the convenience stores have an uphill battle ahead.

Legislature will act

Under Indiana law, package liquor stores with a liquor dealer’s permit can sell warm or cold: liquor, beer, wine and malt beverages. Yet, they cannot offer much beyond that other than tobacco products, bar supplies and lottery tickets.

Convenience stores, defined as selling goods that may include milk, bread, soda, snacks and automotive fuel, are allowed to sell alcohol under a beer dealer’s permit. Indiana statute prohibits holders of beer dealer’s permits to offer beer that has been iced or cooled.

Changing the Indiana Code to enable more retailers to sell beer cold always comes back to the basic question of “What is good public policy?” said Sen. Ron Alting.

altingAlting

The Lafayette Republican is the current chair of the Senate Public Policy Committee and served in a leadership position on the Interim Study Committee on Alcoholic Beverage Issues during the summers of 2008 and 2009.

In the end, the committee unanimously recommended to the General Assembly that only package liquor stores be allowed to sell beer cold.

“I just don’t buy this that we’re living in prehistoric times here,” Alting said, referring to a criticism of Indiana’s alcohol laws.

In fact, he said the businesses that are complaining do not realize how good they have it under current statute and, he warned, they should be careful what they wish for.

While some legislators have introduced bills easing the limits on cold beer sales, other legislators have floated bills that added restrictions on grocery stores, convenience stores and pharmacies. These attempts would have required the food and drug stores to segregate the alcohol into a separate area where access was restricted to adults 21 and older.

However, Imus said the previous measures proposed in the Statehouse included lifting restrictions on liquor stores. He called it absurd that liquor stores can’t sell limes to go with the Corona beer.

Livengood countered the loss of cold beer sales would be a devastating blow to Hoosier liquor stores. Other states that have a viable package liquor store industry typically provide something to those entities that is not available to the other retailers, he said. While some states may make liquor and wine sales exclusive to liquor stores, Indiana has chosen to make these stores the proprietor of cold beer.

Alting is doubtful the convenience store owners will prevail in their lawsuit. He sees the state as clearly having the right to regulate alcohol but concedes no one can be certain of what the court will decide.

And if the court agrees with the convenience store association, Alting said the Legislature will not just sit back and pop a cold one.

“It would bring a lot of bills drafted by a lot of colleagues in the House and Senate,” he said.•

Justices block gay marriage in Utah

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Proposition 8 rally outside of the Supreme Court

Jennifer Nelson January 7, 2014

The Supreme Court of the United States issued an order Monday stopping gay marriage in Utah. The justices stayed a permanent injunction that struck down the state’s ban on same-sex marriage.

“The application for stay presented to Justice Sotomayor and by her referred to the Court is granted. The permanent injunction issued by the United States District Court for the District of Utah, case No. 2:13-cv-217, on December 20, 2013, is stayed pending final disposition of the appeal by the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit,” the justices wrote in the order in Herbert, Gov. of UT, et al. v. Kitchen, Derek, et al., 13A687.

Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes, whose office asked for the stay, said in a statement, “There is not clear legal precedence for this particular situation. This is the uncertainty that we were trying to avoid by asking the District Court for a stay immediately after its decision.  It is very unfortunate that so many Utah citizens have been put into this legal limbo.

“Utah’s Office of Attorney General is carefully evaluating the legal status of the marriages that were performed since the District Court’s decision and will not rush to a decision that impacts Utah citizens so personally.

“I believe this was a correct decision by the Supreme Court.  There is an order to the legal process and this decision is just another step in that process.  Both legal teams have much work to do before the case is presented before the 10th Circuit Court on an expedited basis.  I believe the stay indicates an interest by the Supreme Court in this case and as I have said before, pursuing the legal process to get a final answer from the highest court benefits all citizens of Utah,” Reyes said.

More than 1,000 gay and lesbian couples had gotten married since a federal judge ruled Dec. 20 that the ban on same-sex marriage violated gay and lesbian couples’ constitutional rights.