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Preschool Legislation Passes House

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STATEHOUSE—House Bill (HB) 1004, authored by House Education Committee Chairman Rep. Bob Behning (R-Indianapolis) and co-authored by House Speaker Brian Bosma (R-Indianapolis), passed out of the House today with a 87-9 vote. HB 1004 provides the opportunity for a high quality preschool option to more low-income families.

“I am very pleased that HB 1004 passed out of the House,” said Rep. Behning. “This legislation will help pave a bright future for Hoosier children of poverty and allow parents the opportunity to provide their children with a quality education. Right now children of poverty start almost a year and a half behind their middle-income peers, and HB 1004 aims to change that.”

HB 1004 creates a preschool pilot program. Eligible students must be 4 years old with a family income of no more than 185 percent of the Federal Poverty Level. Indiana is currently one of 10 states that does not offer state-funded preschool programs.

“It is encouraging to see HB 1004 moving through the General Assembly with bipartisan support,” said Speaker Bosma. “A preschool program of this nature will provide high quality education opportunities to Hoosier children and their families which will help prepare them for future success.”

HB 1004 will now be heard in the Senate. To track this bill’s progress, visit http://iga.in.gov/legislative/2014/bills/house/1004/.

 

EPD Merit Commisssion Meeting Time Change

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EPD PATCH 2012The Evansville Police Merit Commission scheduled meeting for

Monday, January 27, 2014 will begin after the conclusion of the Evansville Police Department Appointment, Promotion, and Merit Awards Ceremony at The Centre.  The ceremony will begin at 1:00pm.

The Merit Commission Executive Session will begin at approximately 2:30pm, with the Public Open Session to follow.  The meeting will still be held in the Police Personnel and Training Conference Room, Room 129 of the Civic Center.

 

State Sen. Vaneta Becker’s Bill to Help Protect Children with Severe Allergies Passes Committee

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Becker_2012_tn State Sen. Vaneta Becker’s (R-Evansville) legislation to help protect children with severe allergies unanimously passed the Senate Committee on Health and Provider Services today.

 

Senate Bill 245 would allow doctors and health-care providers to prescribe auto-injectable epinephrine, like EpiPens, to schools. Epinephrine is a form of adrenaline that reverses the effect of allergic reactions in as little as five seconds. The bill would also provide legal protections to school nurses and volunteer personnel who administer it in good faith to a suffering student.

 

“There is no higher priority than protecting young Hoosiers from danger, especially when they are away from their families and in the care of school officials,” Becker said. “Severe allergic reactions can be life-threatening, and schools must be equipped to immediately respond to these emergencies.”

 

Nearly one in 13 children throughout the United States suffers from food allergies, and an estimated three percent suffer from stinging-insect allergies. One study found that 25 percent of children have their first reaction to peanut or tree nuts in the school setting. Becker said her initiative would safeguard these children.

 

SB 245 now moves to the Senate floor for further consideration.

 

Jasmine Guy to keynote USI’s Martin Luther King Day Luncheon

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guy_jasmine-300-_NewsVerticalTickets to the University of Southern Indiana’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Luncheon with keynote speaker Jasmine Guy go on sale to the general public on Monday, December 16. The cost is $15 per ticket.

The event will begin at 11 a.m. January 20 in Carter Hall in the University Center.

Jasmine Guy played Southern belle Whitley Gilbert on “The Cosby Show” spinoff “A Different World,” for which she won six consecutive NAACP Awards.

She has many television credits (“Melrose Place,” “NYPD Blue,” and “The Vampire Diaries,” to name a few) and has also appeared in film and on Broadway. Her first film role was in Spike Lee’s “School Daze.”

In 2004, she wrote the critically-acclaimedEvolution of a Revolutionary (Atria Books), the story of Alfeni Shakur, Black Panther and mother of rap artist Tupac Shakur.

In addition to the keynote, the event, which fills USI’s Carter Hall each year, includes performances by community groups and the USI gospel choir, a hearty meal and dessert.

The event is sponsored by the USI Foundation, Communications Department and Scripps Howard Center for Media Studies, Service Learning Department, and Multicultural Center.

To purchase tickets, and for more information, call the Multicultural Center at 812/465-7188.

Dr. Bucshon on Omnibus Appropriations

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(Washington, DC) – On Wednesday, the House of Representatives passed the Omnibus Appropriations Bill for Fiscal Year 2014 with a bipartisan vote of 359 to 67. Congressman Larry Bucshon, a physician from Southern Indiana, released the following statement regarding his vote to support the legislation:

“My goal as a public servant is to give everyone a fair shot to make it, provide for their family, and build a better life,” said Bucshon.  “Our vote today guarantees that the government will remain open giving the American people certainty for the future and making divided government work. This bill gets government out of the way so businesses can expand and create jobs, prevents new funding for ObamaCare, and protects the privacy and security of U.S. citizens.

 

“We cut spending for the fourth consecutive year, a first dating back to the Korean War. These reforms get rid of government waste and fund our priorities like national defense, transportation, and education. We protect our medically retired veterans and survivor benefit plans from pension reductions, while increasing pay to those currently serving our country. 

 

“By no means is this bill perfect, but it is certainly another step in the right direction to stop the reckless Washington spending habits that are unfair to American families. Moving forward, I remain committed to tackling the drivers of our debt and balancing our nation’s finances so that our children can have a more prosperous future.”

 

Highlights of the Bill:

 

Fiscally responsible with an overall spending reduction:

 

  • $191 billion below President Obama’s vision for Fiscal Year 2014 in his first budget request.
  • $27 billion below the level set in Paul Ryan’s original Path to Prosperity for Fiscal Year 2014.
  • Passage will result in total discretionary savings of $165 billion since Fiscal Year 2010 and represents the first time since the Korean War that spending has been cut four consecutive years.

 

Protects our military and veterans:

 

  • Amends the Ryan-Murray agreement to ensure that medically retired armed forces personnel and survivor benefits plan recipients receive their full pensions.
  • Fully funds a 1% pay raise for the troops.
  • Provides $286.9 billion and prevents the next found of sequester cuts from imperiling our military readiness and national security.
  • Provides $43.6 billion to provide care for approximately 6.5 million VA patients estimated to be treated in 2014.
  • Includes comprehensive initiative to reduce and end current VA disability claims backlog by 2015.

 

No new funding for ObamaCare:

 

  • Holds the line on ObamaCare funding to postsequester levels– no new or additional funding in this bill for ObamaCare.
  • Eliminates all funding ($10 million) for ObamaCare’s Independent Advisory Board (IPAB).
  • Prevents the Secretary of HHS from siphoning off $1 billion from the Prevention and Public Health Fund (a popular slush fund) to support ObamaCare exchanges.

 

Protects and strengthens your security:

 

  • Prohibits funds to acquire, store, or monitor the electronic communications of a U.S. person from a public service provider under section 501 of FISA.
  • Increases funding for the FBI $232 million above Fiscal Year 2013, prioritizing counter-terrorism and cyber-security activities.
  • DEA is increased by $21 million above Fiscal Year 2013 with special emphasis on prescription drug abuse and methamphetamine.

 

Holds government accountable:

 

  • Includes a provision preventing any funding from being used to implement any future Fast and Furious type activity.
  • Blocks a pay-raise for the Vice-President and senior political appointees.
  • Government-wide prohibition on requiring businesses from having to disclose political contributions as part of the bid process for Federal contracts.
  • Decreases funding for the IRS by $526 million below the Fiscal Year 2013 enacted level.
  • Includes a provision prohibiting funds from being used to target groups for scrutiny based upon their political beliefs or to target citizens for exercising their 1st Amendment rights.

 

Strengthens our national transportation infrastructure:

 

  • Fully funds the MAP-21 level of $41 billion for Fiscal Year 2014 for the federal highway program.
  • Blocks a Senate proposal to institute a new airline passenger fee.
  • Fully funds air traffic control and aviation safety operations in the FAA while reducing overall department funding by $168 million.
  • Increases funding for the Army Corps of Engineers by 10% above the Fiscal year 2013 enacted level focusing these funds on projects related to navigation and flood control, public safety, job creation, and U.S. waterways.
  • Provides over $1 billion for activities related to the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund.

 

Strengthens our borders and current immigration laws:

 

  • Provides for 21,307 patrol agents and 24,800 CBP officers – the highest totals in the history of the agency to further their ability to combat illegal immigration and address issues surrounding our ports and borders.
  • Includes statutory language requiring the Secretary to ensure enforcement of immigration laws and provide for a minimum daily average of 34,000 detention beds – the largest capacity ever.
  • Fully funds E-verify.
  • Blocks the Administration’s and Senate’s efforts to cut ICE enforcement increasing these activities by 4.5% above the request.

 

Holds the EPA accountable and promotes investments in energy:

 

  • Decreases EPA funding by $143 million below the Fiscal Year 2013 enacted level. Overall EPA funding has been reduced by $2.1 billion or 20.4% since Fiscal Year 2010.
  • Since Fiscal Year 2010, the EPA staffing has been reduced by 2,059 bringing staffing to the lowest levels since 1989.
  • Provides additional resources to promote domestic onshore energy and minerals development.
  • Strategically targets funds to ensure a balanced investment into nuclear, fossil, and renewable to improve our energy independence and fight higher energy prices.
  • The bill prohibits the Department of Energy from forcing manufacturers to stop producing incandescent light bulbs.

 

Secures our embassies abroad and continues the Benghazi investigation:

 

  • Boosts embassy security by providing $5.4 billion to ensure the protection of personnel and facilities – $25 million more than President Obama requested.
  • Prohibits aid to Libya until the Secretary of State confirms Libyan cooperation in the Benghazi investigation.

 

Promotes health and disease prevention:

 

  • Provides $6.9 billion for the Center for Disease Control.
  • Provides $29.9 billion for the National Institutes of Health to support lifesaving research.
  • Restores a FDA user fee revenue used to expedite the approval of life-saving drugs and medical devices that was lost due to sequestration.

 

Prioritizes critical research investments:

 

  • Prioritizes National Science Foundation funding to programs that strengthen U.S. innovation and competitiveness.

 

Maintains protections of 2nd Amendment rights:

 

  • Maintains all important 2nd Amendment policy provisions including prohibitions on various criteria related to the import and export of certain firearms.

 

Three seperate gunfire incidents reported in Evansville lastnight, one man injured

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EPD PATCH 2012Evansville Police are investigating three more incidents involving gunfire. All three happened Thursday night into Friday morning.

The first happened at 9:45pm in the 1500 block of Savanah Dr. An apartment was struck by at least one bullet. No one inside was injured. There was no suspect description given to police.

The second incident happened at 10:15pm in the 800 block of Jackson. A witness told police that 4 black males arrived in the area in a Chevy Suburban. The 4 walked away from the SUV and the witness could no longer see them. The witness then heard several shots being fired and saw the 4 men running back to the SUV. They left the area before officers arrived. There were no reports of injuries from that incident.

The third incident happened at 1:45am in the 300 block of W. Missouri. During that incident, 28 year old Johnathan Gahl was shot in the abdomen. There were several other people, including small children, in the house at the time. One of the occupants, Angela Thompson, told investigators that two black males entered the house and demanded money. One of the suspects then shot Gahl. Thompson was “pistol whipped” by the other suspect when she said she was calling 911. Both suspects left in a white Chevy Monte Carlo or Impala before officers arrived. Gahl was taken to the hospital for treatment. He is expected to survive. There is no word on his current condition. There were several other people in the house, including small children, at the time of the shooting.

Gahl is the 4th person that has been shot this year. All of the shooting victims have survived.

 

IS IT TRUE January 17, 2014

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Mole

IS IT TRUE January 17, 2014

IS IT TRUE that the traffic on the City County Observer has made a dramatic increase with daily average pageviews is up by 40% since December 2013?…big offsets have not been the growth model of the CCO over the 4 years of counting professionally with Google Analytics?…the growth has always been steady at about 2% per month with an occasional spike because we scooped a story or had the nerve to ridicule the ridiculous while other media sources were silent or courteous?…we have no real idea why this offset came with the beginning of the new year but we will take it and keep pushing the envelope?…one suggestion was that the CP may have had a group of subscribers whose subscription ended on December 31 that have made the change?…if this is so we welcome them all?

IS IT TRUE it seems as though the proposed refurbishment of the Old Riverhouse into a new Comfort Inn has been placed on hold by the property owner?…the front story is that another project must be completed first and we buy that explanation?…had the “code police” and the “tax rebate police” been more helpful with the Comfort Inn project it may have stayed the apple of this private developer’s eye and we may actually have a hotel construction project happening right now in downtown Evansville?…blunting the efforts of a self funded private developer to place a hotel in downtown Evansville while paying an incentive to the “preferred” developer of a downtown convention hotel is about par for the course in a town that maintains nothing and is addicted to subsidized construction projects?…we long for a day when subsidies are not the coin of the realm?

IS IT TRUE a study was released recently that counts Indiana as the #1 (as in worst) in smoking with pregnant?…the same study showed that during the 50 years since the first surgeon general’s report on the toxicity of smoking cigarettes that Indiana is still among the states with the highest smoking rates among adults?…with a smoking rate of over 50% above national averages and 100% above the “healthy” states it is no wonder that health insurance premiums in Indiana are off the charts expensive?…taking Evansville as an example the median household income is $35,949 and the currently available family health insurance plan costs roughly $18,000 per year (pre subsidy) something has got to give?…a market where health insurance for a family costs 50% of the median income is not sustainable and can be expected to collapse?…many other states and cities are in equally dire or worse situations?…without regard to subsidies this cannot work in the long term?…the best way to reduce the premiums is to get healthy?

IS IT TRUE this writer was attracted to California to establish the first Innovation Hub 2 years ago and was surprised yet encouraged to hear President Obama announce a national Innovation Hub initiative in North Carolina on Wednesday?…the President clearly had been in contact with California officials over the last week as there were calls coming in from “anonymous” sources asking detailed question about the program since the first of the year?…when California established the Innovation Hub program all funding was local and it still is?…the Innovation Hub in Palm Springs that this writer runs started with a budget of just over $200,000 per year all from local sources?…the Accelerator Campus that is 43,000 square feet and has the capacity to house 15 manufacturing companies was launched in the second year and is now FULL?…the cost to get the entire program into its third year with 50,000 square feet, 24 businesses, and the staff needed to sustain it has been less than $2 Million including operating expenses?…we are all wondering how the dickens the President expects the folks in North Carolina to spend $200 Million to do the same thing?

IS IT TRUE California was right to require exclusively local funding?…California was right to impose no bureaucratic reporting rules on the Innovation Hubs?…California was right not to impose Davis-Bacon laws on Innovation Hub construction projects?…California is now reaping great rewards with 16 Innovation Hubs in place and performing well?…with a single Innovation Hub budget of $200 Million this writer suspects that the national initiative is being set up for the failures that come with massive federal subsidies, arcane rules, and oppressive regulations?…we wish the President well with this initiative but will watch the implementation process closely?…if this goes the way the ACA website and the Jobs Act of 2012’s crowdfunding provision have gone there will still be no national Innovation Hub in place when President Obama leaves office 3 years from now?…this writer will be watching the State of the Union address and counting the number of times any reference to Innovation Hubs is made?…this has been a surreal week?…this writer has a date with national talk radio on this subject in about 40 minutes and will try hard to respect the Office of the President of the United States when responding to the questions on the cost differential?

EPD Activity Report January 16, 2014

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EPD PATCH 2012SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ.

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

EPD Activity Report January 16, 2014

Senate committee passes cursive writing requirement – again

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By Paige Clark
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Sen. Jean Leising, R-Oldenburg, has not given up.

For the third straight year she has convinced the Senate Education Committee to pass a bill that requires schools to teach cursive writing.

“Mr. Chairman and members of the committee I so appreciate you taking the time to hear cursive writing one more time,” said Leising as she gave “a refresher” on the cursive bill she has presented twice before.

“This has a lot to do with brain development,” Leising said, “We shouldn’t automatically take for granted that our brain reads from left to right. It is actually a training our brain goes through connecting letters.”

In 2010, the State Board of Education made cursive writing optional for school curriculums. It was part of the board’s adoption of Common Core, a set of national standards that are now on hold in Indiana.

“Cursive writing got demoted because of the Common Core standards,” said Sen. Leising, “The Common Core did not include, specifically, any references to cursive writing and there was a shift towards keyboarding.”

Leising said she is not opposed to keyboarding. But she and “over 90 percent” of Hoosiers still support cursive writing being taught in school.

A group of Indiana University students wrote to Leising to show support for Senate Bill 113. Their names were signed on the back. But not everyone thought the lobbying technique worked.

“I think (the letter) reaches out to us to tell how ineffective teaching cursive writing is in schools, because I can’t read over half the names of all those kids who had cursive writing all the way through school,” said Sen. Carlin Yoder, R-Middlebury. “I would much prefer to be able to read a printed name that I could actually read who it is.”

Leising argues legibility should not be the focus of this debate.

“It’s still an identifiable mark”, said Leising. “It is their mark, their signature.”

The bill now moves to the full Senate for consideration.

Paige Clark is a reporter for the StatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. 

METS Rider Alert – MLKing Day Bus Schedule‏

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Monday’s METS bus schedule. Please note: USI and West Connection buses will not operate on Monday, January 20, 2014. All other buses will operate as normally scheduled.