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Indiana Gov. Mike Pence unveils his preschool proposal for the 2014 legislative session

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By Lesley Weidenbener

TheStatehouseFile.com

CORYDON, Ind. – Republican Gov. Mike Pence proposed a renewed emphasis on charter schools Tuesday, saying the state should supplement salaries for their teachers and make unused buildings available for the schools

Gov. Mike Pence waits for an introduction Tuesday before he spoke about his new education agenda. Photo by Jesse Wilson, TheStatehouseFile.com

Gov. Mike Pence waits for an introduction Tuesday before he spoke about his new education agenda. Photo by Jesse Wilson, TheStatehouseFile.com

He also proposed help for private charter school operators that have multiple locations in Indiana, saying they should be able to mingle funds from different schools so they can be run more like a public district.

Charter schools “have been an essential element in the spectrum of innovation,” Pence said. “And yet, even though they are public schools, they operate with several disadvantages compared to traditional public schools.”

Charters are public schools that operate outside the typical district configuration. They can be “chartered” by universities, a state board, the mayor of Indianapolis or even existing districts and are freed from most regulations placed on traditional public schools. They were originally designed to be small incubators of innovation but a few private operators have taken over a number of the schools and now want to operate them more cohesively.

Pence’s charter school proposals are part of a larger education agenda he outlined during a speech Tuesday at the state’s first capitol building in downtown Corydon. Standing in what had been the House of Representatives chamber, Pence renewed his call for a state-funded preschool voucher program for lower-income families.

The plan calls for vouchers for students whose families have incomes at or below 185 percent of the federal poverty level or about $43,567 for a family of four. The governor has not released a price tag for his plan and said he wants the General Assembly to design the program in 2014 and then consider its funding in 2015, when lawmakers will write the state’s next two-year budget.

Gov. Mike Pence talks to reporters Tuesday at the state's first capitol building in Corydon following a speech about education.

Gov. Mike Pence talks to reporters Tuesday at the state’s first capitol building in Corydon following a speech about education.

On Monday, the governor ordered new cuts in university and agency funding to try to maintain the state’s $2 billion surplus in light of lower-than-projected tax receipts that have fallen below last year’s numbers. Still, Pence insisted Tuesday that the state’s economy is growing enough to help fund the preschool program.

“I simply believe that as our economy continues to grow, we’ll make those budgeting decisions,”
Pence said after his address. “But first, I think the priority here is on what we ought to do. I think the time has come for Indiana to expand access to pre-K education to disadvantaged kids.”

Senate Minority Leader Tim Lanane, D-Anderson, said Tuesday that the “governor’s agenda as it pertains to education is one that provides the need for both credit and concern.”

Lanane supports state-funded preschool but he said, “Simply tacking early childhood education onto an existing voucher program does a disservice to young Hoosiers and our state’s public schools. Any early education proposal must include local input.“

Senate Appropriations Chairman Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, said he expects Pence’s preschool program to cost as much as $200 million annually. He called it a program that “merits discussion” but he said decisions about funding must be made in 2015.

“It’s really not, in my opinion, appropriate to consider these items outside the other budget priorities we have,” Kenley. He said the preschool vouchers and other Pence education ideas “should be forced to compete with every other budget priority the state has.”

Those other Pence priorities include a Choice for Teachers program that would give a stipend to traditional public school teachers who take positions at charter schools that have at least half their students on free- or reduced-lunch or schools that have a D or F in the state’s grading system.

Pence said charter teachers tend to make less than their public school counterparts – an average of $12,000 less.

“Low-performing schools need the help, and charters typically pay less and need the help, too,” Pence said. “Teachers that choose to make the move to a charter shouldn’t have to do so at the personal cost they do today.”

Pence also proposed:

-        A state council charged with repurposing vacant or underutilized school facilities to be used by charters or other public schools.

-        Lifting a cap on the number of dropout recovery schools for adults who have not completed high school.

-        A study that would determine the return on investment of career and technical programs in the state.

“Our job is not to improve education at the margins, but to continue to push for success for every Hoosier,” Pence said. “We need to do all we can to promote innovation and the best ideas. We need to do this in a fiscally responsible way, and we will. And we need to be accountable, driven by performance and outcomes – which we will do. We will do all of this tirelessly, with a boundless dedication to our kids.”

Lesley Weidenbener is the executive editor of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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 Friday, December 06, 2013

Pascual Perez Residential Entry-Class D Felony

 

Anne Kinyanjui Operating a Vehicle While Intoxicated Endangering a Person with a

Passenger less than 18 Years of Age-Class D Felony

Neglect of Dependent-Class D Felony

Operating a Vehicle with an ACE of .15 or More-Class A Misdemeanor

Demetris Leak Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony

Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

Possession of a Synthetic Drug or Synthetic Drug Lookalike

Substance-Class A Misdemeaor

Timothy Tidwell Maintaining a Common Nuisance-Class D Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

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

Jeff Dunham Brings Funny Back to the Ford Center

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116875aJeff Dunham returned to Evansville with his “Disorderly Conduct” tour yesterday afternoon at the Ford Center. No matter the weather, it didn’t stop fans from pouring into the arena to see the likeable funny man and his famous band of sidekicks.

Dunham opened the show by entertaining the audience with photos that were sent to him by fans or photos he took while traveling with his new wife, Audrey. Jeff along with Achmed, Little Jeff, Peanut and Walter brought down the house with historical and relatable jokes for the audience. Jeff didn’t disappoint when indulging in his snappy repartee with the most popular of his dummies.

“This was Jeff Dunham’s second appearance at Ford Center and fans got exactly what they expected. It was an exhilarating atmosphere of laughter and loud cheers as Dunham and his famous characters entertained the crowd,” stated Ford Center Executive Director Scott Schoenike.

Ford Center continues to fill dates with upcoming events to include University Evansville Men’s and Women’s basketball, Evansville IceMen Hockey, Bill Gaither’s Homecoming Christmas Tour on December 13th , Zac Brown Band December 29th Monster Jam January 10th-11th, Harlem Globetrotters January 17th and Winter Jam January 30th.

Kids Day this Saturday at Ace’s game sponsored by Shoe Carnival

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Evansville, IN: All children age 12 and under receive free admission to the University of Evansville men’s basketball game this Saturday December 14th as part of several promotions going on that day.

The first 1,000 kids receive a free purple Ace’s mini basketball courtesy of Venuworks and the Ford Center.

Free interactive games and activities available for the children on the concourse provided by Shoe Carnival, Indiana National Guard, HADI Shrine Funsters, VenuWorks and University of Evansville. Purple Santa will be there to meet with fans and pose for pictures.

Come see all the action and excitement as the Purple Aces take on Jackson State at 2:05 p.m. in what will be the second game that the Aces wear their sleeved jerseys.

Ford Center continues to fill dates with upcoming events to include University Evansville Men’s and Women’s basketball, Evansville IceMen Hockey, Zac Brown Band December 29th Monster Jam January 10th-11th, Harlem Globetrotters January 17th and Winter Jam January 30th.

Ford Center is managed by VenuWorks of Evansville, LLC.

EVSC on Two-Hour Delay Wednesday

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EVSCEVCS will operate on a two-hour delay on Wednesday. When on a two-hour delay, all schools and programs will begin two hours later than their normal time, with the following exceptions:

•Morning and afternoon classes at the Southern Indiana Career and Technical Center; Early College High School at Ivy Tech; Medical Professions Academy at Central High School; and the Center for Family and Community Outreach, Randall Shepard Academy for Law and Social Justice, and the JROTC Program at Harrison High School will operate from 9:40 – 11:10 a.m. and 12:35 – 2:25 p.m.
•Classes will be cancelled for students on an A.M. alternate schedule  at the Academy for Innovative Studies-Diamond campus. Students on PM schedules will report at the usual time.
•Extended Daycare Centers will open at 6:30 a.m. as usual.
•Breakfast will be served to daycare students only.
•The International Newcomer’s Academy for middle school students at Washington Middle School will be cancelled.

Analysis: Gambling issues could take back seat in 2014 session

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By Lesley Weidenbener

TheStatehouseFile.com

Lesley Weidenbener, managing editor, TheStatehouseFile.com

Lesley Weidenbener, managing editor, TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Rarely does a legislative session go by when gambling issues don’t bubble up – and even become part of the last minute negotiations needed for agreement on a budget or other significant new law.

Analysis button in JPGBut key policymakers and gambling experts said 2014 might be an exception.

At a legislative preview conference last week, Casino Association of Indiana President Mike Smith said the gambling industry won’t take the lead on any proposals when lawmakers return to the Statehouse in January.

“I don’t expect much to take place in the short session,” Smith said, describing the 2-1/2 month length of the 2014 meeting. Lawmakers meet for four months in odd-numbered years when they draft a budget.

Ed Feigenbaum, publisher of the Indiana Gaming Insight newsletter, echoed those thoughts.

“There aren’t really going to be a whole lot of initiatives we can think about this year,” said Feigenbaum, who has been covering gambling issues since Indiana first approved casino gaming 25 years ago.

“The downturn of revenues is not news,” he said. “There’s not a whole lot we can do about it.”

State tax receipts from gambling are indeed down – but that is as expected. New casinos in Ohio have been draining customers from Indiana’s operations for about a year. And even earlier, the economic downturn had depressed the industry.

Consider this:

-       In 2009, wagering at the casinos topped $2.8 billion. Last year, it was $2.56 billion, an 11.8 percent drop.

-       The drop in wagering taxes paid to the state is even greater – 15 percent – because the tax is graduated. The more a casino makes, the higher rate it pays. When wagering is down, casinos reach the higher rates more slowly.

-       The casino industry employed 16,000 people in 2000, a number that has dropped to roughly 12,000 today. That’s even though two more casinos have opened since then.

Last year, lawmakers considered a number of measures meant to bolster the industry. They included letting the racetrack-based casinos have live dealers at their table games, letting the riverboat casinos move inland and rebuild on land, and giving the casinos a tax break on some of their marketing expenses.

Only the latter proposal became law and it has saved the casinos millions of dollars. But it’s unclear whether it has actually staved off losses to new competition.

Smith said last week that lawmakers will likely introduce bills to authorize live dealers and land-based casinos again next year. But he said they aren’t likely to get much attention.

In fact, new House Public Policy Chairman Tom Dermody, R-LaPorte, was circumspect in predicting whether the bills could move forward at all – even though he supported the concept of live dealers last year. Now, Dermody said, he can’t just consider his own opinion or the impact on his district.

As the chair of the committee that covers gambling, Dermody said he must consider the impact on the larger industry and the state. And it’s clear he’s still trying to figure that out.

“I don’t think anything is going to happen this session,” he said.

But that doesn’t mean gambling issues are dead. Smith made clear that the industry will be back in 2015 to push for a rethinking of the way the casino industry is regulated and taxed.

“We have to look at our whole business model,” Smith said. That could mean a larger look at the casinos’ tax rates, which tend to be higher in Indiana than in other states.

But Smith said there’s not time for that in a short session.

“I would expect that in 2015,” he said, “we’ll see a pretty concerted effort on a lot of properties’ part to try to improve their marketplace.”

Lesley Weidenbener is executive editor of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

 

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, December 09, 2013

 

Nathan Bickett Theft-Class D Felony

 

Micah Clements Domestic Battery-Class D Felony

Interference with the Reporting of a Crime-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Dereck Evans Theft-Class D Felony

Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Crystal Johnson Theft-Class D Felony

 

Maxine Kemper Theft-Class D Felony

Assisting a Criminal-Class D Felony

 

John McCoy Battery Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury-Class C Felony

Strangulation-Class D Felony

Criminal Mischief-Class A Misdemeanor

Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury-Class A Misdemeanor

 

George Traylor Failure to Register as a Sex or Violent Offender-Class D Felony

(Enhanced to C Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

 

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.

Code Enforcement Official’s Letter to the City Council

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deputy Dawg

Among other assertions, Evansville Code Enforcement Officer Donna Holderfield owns up to being directed to “not enforce code violations” on certain political people.

Until today the CCO did not even know the identity of the code enforcement officer who sent out the letters to the Frankin Street merchants. Last night Ms. Holderfield made the letter on the following link public by presenting it to the Evansville City Council

Letter_Presented_to_City_Council

IS IT TRUE December 10, 2013

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CCO Flying Monkey
CCO Flying Monkey

IS IT TRUE December 10, 2013

IS IT TRUE we shall start today’s IS IT TRUE with a correction?…yesterday we stated that the City of Evansville had aggressively sought an option on the McCurdy Hotel from the Kunkel Group prior to unleashing the “CODE POLICE” on that property and the old Whirlpool Building?…the reality is that it was some other Kunkel owned property(s) that the City sent an FC Tucker commercial realtor to get an option on but those properties were not disclosed in Kunkel’s letter to the editor?…that was our mistake and we are glad to offer the correction?…we stand by our position however that the “CODE POLICE” attacks on other Kunkel properties was prompted by their disinterest in playing ball with the Office of the Mayor to whom the “CODE POLICE” are beholding?

IS IT TRUE we reiterate that with Mayor Winnecke, Chief of Staff Steve Shafer, and Building Commissioner Ben Miller openly stated to the media that the attempt to option some Kunkel property(s) and the unleashing of the Flying Monkeys of the Code Police were unrelated is simply not believable?…the cover story for code enforcement decisions all over Evansville is that it is a complaint driven process?…while in some instances that may be true and it may even be policy when it comes to the McCurdy Hotel that is not the truth?…complaints are known to have been filed over the last 5 years during the properties slide of degradation and nothing visible has been done to enforce the codes?…there was an article in the CCO in the summer of 2010 where we designated the weeds growing up the side as the Mayor’s Beanstalk, and the 3 foot grass as a snake infested jungle that resulted in a forced mowing?…other than the success of the “grass police” not one visible improvement has been made at the McCurdy and neither Kunkel or Centre City Properties LLC of Carmel has been compelled by local government to do any work on the building until Kunkel’s recent heresy of not giving Mayor Winnecke the option he wanted?…if this does not look like using code enforcement as an extortion squad nothing ever will look that way?…on the miniscule probability that Winnecke, Shafer, and Miller are telling the truth THERE IS STILL NO ONE WITH AN IQ OF OVER 80 WHO WILL BELIEVE THEM?

IS IT TRUE the code enforcement officer who set off the fire storm on Franklin Street by sending out threats to fine businesses for story board signs and unpermitted banners stirred the pot a bit more last night by reading a letter to the City Council regarding the travails of her job?…in her letter Donna Holderfield writes about a vicious vendetta that has been launched against her by the owner of the Lamasco Bar?…the City County Observer did not even know her name until she made her letter public?…neither Amy Word (owner of Lamasco) or any other merchant had told us the name of the code enforcement officer who patrolled Franklin Street?…as a result her name was not in any media until she put it there?…in her letter (see accompanying story) she does indeed sound as though she was “just doing her job” and that is what most people always thought?…she did shed some light on the fact that during her career she had been directed to NOT TO ENFORCE THE ZONING ORDINANCE ON CERTAIN POLITICAL PERSONS”, effectively testifying publically that Evansville is selective in its enforcement?…she makes some compelling statements about the City of Evansville being shorthanded and having to inspect 80 properties per day (one every 6 minutes)?..her letter is published elsewhere for you to read?…we welcome a rebuttal letter from Amy Word as she is attacked pretty harshly in the letter?

IS IT TRUE speaking of short-handed, mismanaged, or just plainly ineffective the snow removal in Evansville during the last several days seems to have sunk to a new low?…we do not know why the snow is not being removed but after 3 days many of streets in the City of Evansville still look like the North Pole?…it isn’t sexy to smile before a snow plow but snow removal is a vital function to keep the economy humming and the City is once again blowing it on the blocking and tackling assignments?…we would all be better served by getting back to basics and forgetting about parks, temples to fun, and chicken dancing until we learn how to execute on basic infrastructure?