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EPD Activity Report: February 20, 2014

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EPD PATCH 2012

SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.

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

 

EPD Activity Report: February 20, 2014

IS IT TRUE February 21, 2014

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Mole #??

IS IT TRUE of the group of Freedom of Information Act requests regarding the spending of the City of Evansville on legal services all but one of the offices that received these requests from the City County Observer have responded promptly and positively to comply with the law and make those documents available within the time provided by the law?…the good news is that somewhere around the middle of March we will have this information for our readers to peruse and analyze?…the one office that has not yet responded within the 72 hours they legally have to respond is the EVANSVILLE WATER AND SEWER UTILITY?…perhaps they are too busy patching up broken water pipes to dash off a letter to the CCO and we will cut them a short break for that but if we do not get a response they should be aware that the law is on our side in this matter? …that we have learned to expect very little follow through from the City of Evansville Water and Sewer department because of the many political patronage employees they have working for them?

IS IT TRUE the EVANSVILLE WATER AND SEWER UTILITY is the one entity that the people of Evansville need to have staffed with super talented individuals going forward as the lion’s share of future spending mandated by the EPA and otherwise is going to be managed by that department?…we are all familiar with the EPA mandate to repair the sewers at a cost of at least $540 Million and possibly closing in on a Billion dollars if the delays continue?…the other problem that should be obvious after this winter is that there are approximately 1300 miles of cast iron water lines that are already past the expiration date that need to be scheduled for repair?…like many peoples’ arteries, the aged water mains in Evansville are in need of balloon surgery, stints, or outright replacement?…one CCO Mole tells us that Director Allen Mounts says that the fix is estimated at 200 million?…other’s knowledgeable in such things puts the repair price tag at closer to $500 Million?…with perhaps $1.5 Billion in maintenance and replacement work on the horizon Evansville cannot afford to have good old boys (or girls) in the power positions in the EVANSVILLE WATER AND SEWER DEPARTMENT?…what will be needed is the sharpest minds with the sharpest pencils who have a track record of execution and auditable financial performance?

IS IT TRUE that recently the Mayor of Owensboro made a few heads explode at the Civic Center by floating a trial balloon to shift I-69 to cross the Ohio River at the new bridge just east of Owensboro?…while Owensboro has been kicking Evansville’s backside with well planned and executed downtown improvements, this idea of moving I-69 ranks right up there with putting new water meters on dilapidated water pipes?…I-69 has been on the drawing board for over 50 years and billions of dollars have already been spent on the first half of the project?…while it is true that a new bridge to span the Ohio River between Evansville and Henderson will be expensive, it will not be so expensive that abandoning a route chosen in the 1950’s is even feasible?…the CCO suggests that the Mayor of Owensboro climb down off of the delusional ledge he walked out on and concentrate on getting a spur that may be called I-269 to assure a north-south interstate with access to Owensboro is on a drawing board somewhere?…Mayor Payne knows better than to expect this and we suspect he was just seeing if he could get Mayor Winnecke to spontaneously erupt into a chicken fat dance?…Mole #23 tell us he sort of did?

IS IT TRUE that former member of the Soviet Union known as the Ukraine has joined the United States among nations that have had their credit rating downgraded?…from a financial perspective this is not good company to keep in the credit ratings contest?…while we wish the people and the Ukraine well and hope to see them depart from a path to civil unrest or even war, we think giving pause to the thought that the credit of the United States preceded the Ukraine with a credit downgrade?…that is what happens when government is seen as ineffective and when the printing press is used to debase the currency?…deposits are fleeing the Ukraine for safer and more stable banks as well?…we trust that the flight of capital as has happened in Greece, Spain, and now the Ukraine sounds familiar as the calls for the heads of companies who offshore capital has been sounded right here in the good old USA recently too?

City-County Observer Announces Soon-To-Be-Held “Home Owned, Home Grown” Awards Luncheon

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By: Zach Stuard

The City-County Observer is pleased to announce the addition of an awards ceremony honoring “Home Owned, Home Grown” businesses that have gone above and beyond the call of duty to support their communities in ways other than the goods and services offered to the public by their business. This includes such charitable acts that assist non-profits and privately assisting disadvantaged individuals and their families.

In order to launch our first annual City-County Observer “Home Owned, Home Grown” Business Recognition Luncheon members of our staff have compiled a selection of five “Home Owned, Home Grown” businesses that we know to have given back to the community in various ways. We have selected five businesses ourselves in order to expedite this first small business awards luncheon and it is the wishes of the City-County Observer management and staff  that our readership would nominate additional 7 businesses that are “Home Owned, Home Grown” that give back to the community in some form. Next year all twelve nominees for this award will be nominated and selected by our readers.

We are looking to select a total of twelve businesses to honor. Five of these have been selected by our staff and another seven businesses will be chosen from a pool of suggested nominees from you, our readers. Upon finalization of our twelve selections the City-County Observer awards committee will determine the City-County Observer “Home Owned, Home Grown” Business of the Year to receive a “Mole Award” for 2014.

It is important to note that all twelve businesses selected as a “Home Owned, Home Grown” business will receive a plaque recognizing their accomplishments at the very first City-County Observer Home Owned, Home Grown Business Recognition Luncheon to be held this spring. To nominate a business please submit your nominations to Mollie Darke-Schreiber at mdarke07@yahoo.com. The deadline to nominate a business ends on Friday, February 28th at noon.  National chains or franchises are not eligible to participate in this awards recognition program.

Beginning next week the City-County Observer will be running a feature on the first five businesses selected as a “Home Owned, Home Grown” Award Winner, and will be featuring the rest of the reader nominated selections as they are finalized. The City-County Observer is both excited and honored to give these businesses the recognition they deserve. We look forward to recognizing the backbone of our local economy ; “Home Owned, Home Grown” businesses.

Nashville Platinum-Selling Country Artist, Beau Braswell,

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ice

 

 

 

 

Singing National Anthem at I.C.E. Racing Series

Meet and Greet, Autograph Signing and Photo Opportunities Open to the Public After Event

 

EVANSVILLE, IN – Nashville Platinum-Selling Country Artist, Beau Braswell, will be singing the national anthem, previewing his new video, “Sideways,” and signing autographs at the 38th Annual I.C.E Racing Series event, www.icespeedway.com, at the Ford Center on Friday, February 21st.

 

Beau is also an accomplished motorcycle racer with six AMA National Championships and two AMRA World Motorcycle Championships. His song, “Sideways,” a song about his experience racing flat-track motorcycles, was picked by the AMA Pro Racing in Daytona Beach to be the flat track series’ theme song. The music video for the song will premiere on CMT in March.

The I.C.E Racing Series event starts at 7:00 p.m., with a special Pit Party happening from 6:00 p.m. to 6:45 p.m. Pit Party Ticket-holders can visit the racers before the event, get up and close to the ice racing machines, get autographs and pictures with their favorite racers. These tickets are available for just $5 after the purchase of a general admission event ticket. Tickets are available at the Ford Center Ticket Office, at ticketmaster.com or by phone at (800) 745-3000.

Rock Art By Siau

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A Reception You Don’t Want to Miss!
Photo courtesy of www.evansville.edu

Born and raised in Evansville, Jon Siau attended Harrison High School. He received his Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from the University of Evansville, and taught fine arts at North High School from 1971 to June of 2013. His students won local, state, and national academic and artistic awards. Siau was also honored numerous times at the local, state, and national level as an exemplary educator and as an accomplished artist. Rock Art by Siau is just one example of the breadth and depth of Jon’s varied body of work. From the entire Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana Board and Staff, thank you Jon Siau and ROCK ON!

 

Opening Reception: February 21st, 
5:00pm – 7:30pm

Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana
318 Main Street
Evansville, IN
Rock Trivia Contest at the reception! The winner will receive a caricature of one person of their choosing by artist, Jon Siau. You MUST be present to win, and the winner will be announced at 6:00pm.

Commentary: HJR 3, Mike Delph, tragedy and farce

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By John Krull

TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The final sad absurdity of the proposed Indiana constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage put arch-conservative state Sen. Mike Delph, R-Carmel, in the position of demonstrating that even Karl Marx can be right upon

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occasion.

Commentary button in JPG - no shadow“(German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich) Hegel remarks somewhere that all great, world-historical facts and personages occur, as it were, twice. He has forgotten to add: the first time as tragedy, the second as farce,” Marx once noted.

Marx could have been speaking of House Joint Resolution 3 – the proposed constitutional gay marriage ban – that started as a tragedy and, courtesy of Delph, ended as a farce.

The tragedy sprang from the nature of HJR 3. Its supporters made the argument that Indiana had to write into its fundamental law a ban on couples of the same gender entering into contracts to love and support each other – which is what marriage is in the civil sense – in order to preserve the institution of marriage and protect children.

Such an argument springs from a premise that at best misunderstands and at worst misrepresents what constitutions are and are supposed to do.

In the most basic sense, a constitution in a self-governing society is a contract that sets forth the terms under which a free people agree to be governed. As such, constitutions generally seek to preserve the rights and freedoms of citizens – not abridge them, as HJR 3 would have done.

In America, when we have used constitutions to curtail the liberties of certain citizens – say, African-Americans or women – the consequences of such repressive measures have been both costly and tragic.

Perhaps, over time, it was the sense that this constitutional amendment ran against the grain of the American experience by limiting freedom for some, but not all, citizens that encouraged many Hoosiers to think again. And their uneasiness produced enough political pressure to encourage first the House and then the Senate to alter HJR 3 enough to delay its adoption.

Tragically, though, the lawmakers didn’t come to their senses until Hoosiers had spent several weeks snarling at each other – and gay and lesbian citizens of the state had had to contemplate the possibility of perpetual existence as second-class citizens.

As the curtain closed on the tragedy, it was time for the farce.

Delph heard his cue.

After the Senate Republican caucus last week nailed the door shut on HJR 3’s last chance to find a spot on the ballot this fall, Delph, an HJR 3 supporter, took to Twitter to begin a marathon that began first as a tirade and descended quickly to a temper tantrum.

All through the weekend, Delph railed, with geometrically decreasing coherence, about God, country, natural rights and constitutional practice. He also lashed out at weak-willed church leaders, lily-livered legislative leaders, the media, liberals and any person, place or thing that didn’t seem inclined to see things exactly his way.  For good measure, he also threatened to kick – I’ll observe decorum – someone’s posterior.

As an added bonus, he called a press conference for Monday at which he promised big news. The big news turned out to be that Mike Delph was unhappy.

Really unhappy.

Really.

Really.

Really.

Unhappy.

(Nice to know. Thanks for sharing, senator.)

Delph could have used a point of privilege on the Senate floor to express his pique, but apparently decided that stamping his feet, waving his arms and holding his breath were more senatorial approaches.

Undignified as it was, Delph’s outburst did demonstrate a couple of things.

The first was that he outed the HJR 3 support movement without realizing it. The leading proponents of HJR 3 had taken great pains to separate their support from religious motivations, perhaps because they knew that making the measure a question of faith would create First Amendment problems.

When Delph belittled church leaders for not standing with him, though, he made clear just how much he and others expected Indiana state government to endorse and establish in fundamental law his and their idiosyncratic theology.

The second thing Delph showed was that Marx got at least one thing right.

HJR 3’s story started as a tragedy, but once the tragedy had abated, it was time to send in the clowns.

And there was Mike Delph, waiting in the wings.

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

Indiana House Republicans Just Say No To Privatization Review

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INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana House Republicans today decided that there was no need to have a comprehensive review of the effectiveness of the state of Indiana’s efforts at privatizing numerous taxpayer services, according to House Democratic Leader Scott Pelath from Michigan City.

By a party-line vote, the House majority rejected Pelath’s proposal to conduct a cost-savings review of all state contracts that involved privatization of services over the past decade and make sure that a similar study is a part of all deals made in the future. The Democratic leader attempted to include the study in Senate Bill 394.

“This proposal would have given the people of Indiana the first real chance to see just how effective we have been since our state decided that privatizing taxpayer-funded services was the wave of the future,” Pelath said.

“There has been ample evidence to suggest that the people of Indiana have suffered more than benefitted from this ill-conceived venture, but a thorough examination certainly is in order to gauge what has taken place to this point.”

The state’s most notorious efforts at privatization have been the 75-year lease of the Indiana Toll Road to a foreign investor and the ill-fated decision to have IBM Corp. handle the lion’s share of the state’s welfare services.

“We all know how the IBM affair ended: with a system so broken that even a champion of privatization like former Gov. Mitch Daniels had to concede it didn’t work,” Pelath noted. “Now the state and IBM are stuck in court, and the real losers in the deal are Indiana taxpayers, who are being forced to foot the bill for an ever-increasing amount of legal fees resulting from this mess.”

While the toll road lease has many more years to run, the chunk of cash the state received in the deal already has run out, and the list of state and local infrastructure improvements needing to be funded remains lengthy.

“The value of the toll road deal remains in dispute, but there is little argument that the IBM contract was a complete disaster,” Pelath said.

“However, the push to privatize remains alive in Indiana,” he continued. “Make no mistake: there is an ongoing program to place more and more public services into the hands of private interests. All the risks that we have seen still remain, but there continues to be little interest from the leaders of our state’s government in taking a comprehensive look at what has been wrought.”

Pelath’s proposal would have provided that look by examining the benefits of the privatization contracts that have been put in place, and ensuring that similar studies take place on privatization deals into the future.

“Since we are talking about hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars at stake here, I believe we need to be more vigilant in making sure that the public’s interests are protected,” he said. “Transparency and accountability should be our primary concern, and I am disappointed those sentiments are not being shared by those in charge of our state right now.”


REMI THE TUXEDO KITTY-PET OF THE WEEK

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Remi new web smallRemi is a 1-year-old tuxedo kitty. His previous family surrendered him due to a sudden development of allergies, and he’s now waiting patiently in the cageless cat lounge for his new forever family! This sweet boy has been here since May, and for the life of us, we can’t figure out why he is continuously overlooked. Since he lives with so many other cats here, he would do fine sharing his food, water, and litterbox with other cats in his new home. Best of all? He’s already neutered, and he is part of our Valentine’s Day adoption special! His adoption fee is only $14 through February 28th!

 

Wedge Found Guilty

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 SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.
 DON’T GO TO COURT ALONE. CALL IVAN ARNAEZ @ 812-424-6671
nick hermanAt around 10:30 last night, Andrew Wedge was found guilty of Dealing in Methamphetamine – B Felony. Wedge was also found guilty of Possession of Methamphetamine – D Felony, two counts of Maintaining a Common Nuisance – D Felony and Possession of Paraphernalia – Class A Misdemeanor. 

The jury heard a day and a half of witness and expert testimony before finding the defendant guilty. Magistrate Kelli Fink will sentence Wedge March 19 at 9 A.M. He faces between 6-20 years.

 

Wedge was arrested in April of 2013 after the Meth Suppression Unit found 135 1-pot reaction vessels in a Maxwell Avenue storage garage that was being rented by Wedge.

 

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.

 

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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

Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Wednesday, February 19, 2014.

 

John Cox                              Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class B Felony

 

Richard Gregory               Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class B Felony

Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

 

James Jourdan                  Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class B Felony

 

Brittany Pirtle                   Dealing in Methamphetamine-Class B Felony

 

Herbert Moore                 Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Class D Felony

 

Mark Slaughter                 Intimidation-Class D Felony

 

Michael Gauer                  Unlawful Possession of a Firearm by a Serious Violent Felon-

Class B Felony

Dealing in a Synthetic Drug or Synthetic Drug Lookalike Substance-

Class C Felony

 

Crystal Hampton              Theft-Class D Felony

 

Edward Rodriguez           Domestic Battery-Class A Misdemeanor

(Enhanced to D Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

Criminal Confinement-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.

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