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IS IT TRUE Weekend January 25-26 2014 #1

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Mole
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IS IT TRUE that Vanderburgh County once again has the distinction of being the #1 county in Indiana for meth labs?…while this distinction could simply mean that our law enforcement is hyper effective and that the “Breaking Bad” wannabes are all tossed in jail we all know the reality is we have a serious meth problem and have for years?…in the last Mayoral election both Democrat Rick Davis and now Mayor Lloyd Winnecke committed to support legislation that would make selling the ingredients for meth require a prescription?…Davis, in particular even exposed how a child’s bicycle was the “open for business” sign at the home of a local meth dealer?…the CCO would like to know why Mayor Winnecke who defeated Rick Davis with the help of local Democrats has been mute on the campaign promise to help take the ingredients for making meth off the shelves of our local stores?…we think taking positive actions to disrupt the meth supply chain is more important to Evansville that dog parks, a downtown hotel, picking up garbage, or even fixing the infrastructure?…we would welcome a position paper from Mayor Winnecke on this campaign promise gone missing?

IS IT TRUE that we have noticed that emails announcing events at the Centre are already going out with the tag line “The Old National Bank Events Plaza” at the end of the emails?…we are fully aware that an agreement was signed by the Vanderburgh County Commissioners to assign those naming rights to ONB for a nebulus investment of UP TO $14 Million in a downtown convention hotel project?…we can’t see any hotel downtown, we have not seen any formal announcement that HCW has gotten loan approval, we have not seen any permit issued to start building, and we wonder just what has been done to close the naming rights deal?…perhaps ONB actually donated a dime or a quarter to the cause thereby fulfilling their obligations under this ill conceived and poorly written agreement?…this place just can’t seem to help itself when it comes to entering into contracts that are one sided against the taxpayers?…the bumpkins are still in charge of government?…in the words of Jerry McGuire we ask our esteemed County Commissioners to “SHOW US THE MONEY” before you give away these supposedly valuable naming rights?

IS IT TRUE in better news SS&C that was attracted to Evansville and now occupies part of the Innovation Pointe building and employs over 80 people has donated $1 Million to the accounting department of USI to add a critical skill to the curriculum?…this is the kind of actions that will help elevate the Evansville business community in the long run to a more competitive level?…the CCO commends SS&C for this generous donation to our public university and sends them wishes for prosperity and expansion right here in Evansville?

EPD Activity Report: January 24, 2014

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EPD Activity Report: January 24, 2014

Pelath seeks best strategy for defeating marriage amendment

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By Ryanne Wise and Erika Brock
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The minority leader in the Indiana House is drafting an amendment to strip the controversial second sentence out of a constitutional proposal to ban same sex marriage.

But Rep. Scott Pelath said he’s not certain he’ll call the language for a vote. Instead, the Michigan City Democrat said he’s analyzing the best way to defeat the proposal.

The constitutional amendment – House Joint Resolution 3 – would, first, define marriage as the union of a man and a woman. The second sentence would prohibit any legal relationship that is “identical or substantially similar” to marriage.

“My first approach is to extinguish the obvious stink bomb of the second sentence and if they are going to insist to move this forward, let’s at least get that monstrous language out of there,” Pelath said. “The second approach is letting HJR 3 die under its own lumbering brontosaurus-like weight.”

Pelath said he’ll talk to members of the Democratic caucus – who hold just 31 of the chamber’s 100 seats – before deciding how to proceed.

An amendment to HJR 3 means the constitutional amendment process would likely restart. That could postpone a possible ratification by voters from this fall to 2016.

Republicans will likely be waiting for Pelath’s decision as well. Rep. Casey Cox, R-Fort Wayne, voted for HJR 3 when it came before the House Elections Committee this week. But later, he said that he may vote against the proposal when it reaches the House floor next week.

Cox said he wants to “reconsider” the second sentence. He cited concerns raised by a lawyer with Indiana University, who said the provision threatens the school’s ability to offer benefits to same-sex partners.

“I thought IU’s council made some points that certainly need further discussion,” Cox said. “The caucus really wanted this to come to the floor. I can understand that. If it remains intact, I certainly reserve the right to vote no.”

The House will also consider House Bill 1153, which is meant to explain the legislative intent of the constitutional amendment. Supporters say the bill clarifies that the second sentence would not apply to same-sex benefits already being offered.

But Rep. Wendy McNamara, R-Mount Vernon, said the companion bill doesn’t ease her concerns.

“If an amendment were to be brought up to remove the second sentence I will fully support this resolution. If the second sentence remains, I will not support the resolution,” McNamara said in a prepared statement provided to the Evansville Courier & Press.

Senate President Pro Tem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, said he’s pleased HJR 3 will get a full debate and vote on the House floor. He expects the bill to pass and move over to the Senate, as soon as next week.

“If it comes here, it will go to the (Senate) Judiciary committee, where it has been repeatedly,” Long said.

Those committee members are likely to pass the HJR 3 without amendment, which would send it to the full Senate for consideration. Sen. Brent Steele, R-Bedford, is the committee chairman.

“I think Sen. Steele recognizes that this is an important subject and we would hope to have the opportunity for full debate on the Senate floor just as I think it’s healthy to have that debate on the House floor,” Long said.

If the bill passes both chambers, it moves to the ballot for possible ratification by voters in November.

Long declined to comment on HJR 3’s second sentence.

“I’ll reserve those comments for later, but obviously I said that I support an explanatory, clarifying piece of legislation, which House Bill 1153 was in my opinion,” Long said. “I think it was important, given the discussion, that has arisen from the second clause, that it be clear what the legislature is trying not to do.”

Erika Brock and Ryanne Wise are reporters for TheStatehousefile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. 

HCAMPS PROGRAM DEADLINE EXTENDED

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Extension needed because of weather-related school closings

The deadline for this year’s HCAMPS (HealthCare Academy for Middle School Pupil’s Success) program has been extended to Friday, January 31st due to weather-related school closings. The previous deadline was Thursday, January 23rd.

St. Mary’s created HCAMPS to give middle school students an opportunity to interact with health care providers, learn about the variety of careers available in the health care industry, and understand the educational requirements for a career in health care.

This year’s program will take place Monday, June 2nd – Friday, June 6th and is open to Vanderburgh, Warrick, Gibson or Posey county students entering 8th grade in the fall of 2014 who have a minimum 3.3 grade point average. Interested students must submit a teacher’s online evaluation, a 150 word essay, and a recent school picture.

HCAMPS highlights include:

Treating “patients” in a simulation lab.

Hands-on experience in the St. Mary’s Emergency Department, Nursery, and Trauma Services Departments.

Touring health science facilities at Ivy Tech Community College, the University of Evansville, and the University of Southern Indiana.

Performing hands-on activities, such as dissecting a cow heart.

The cost of the program is $75. Financial aid is available. For more information, please contact: Margaret L. Moutseous, Project Director HCAMPS, 812.485.4221 or mlmoutseous@stmarys.org

 

John Jackson Charged With Felony Murder

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user30769-1390600554-media1_a3a2a8_192_240_PrsMe_Evansville Police served a Felony Murder Warrant on John Jackson. Investigators believe Jackson killed 33 year old Nicholas Mathew on the night of December 22nd. Mathew died from multiple stab wounds.
Jackson was arrested on December 25th after stabbing a cab driver during a robbery attempt. He has been in jail since then. Items recovered during that investigation linked Jackson to the Mathew murder.
Based on that evidence and other evidence gathered during their investigation, police were able to obtain an arrest warrant this afternoon.
Jackson has also been charged with the Armed Robbery of the Marathon Gas Station at 715 N. Weinbach on December 20th.

Hemp bill moves to full Senate for debate

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By Paige Clarkimages-7TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Industrial hemp grown in Indiana could provide another option for Hoosiers farmers un

der legislation that a Senate committee passed Friday.

Senate Bill 357 – authored by Sen. Richard Young, D-Milltown – would allow farmers to apply for a license to grow and produce industrial hemp.

“Industrial hemp has over 50,000 uses” Young said. “The land that we’ve got here will produce hemp very well.”

Young named several uses for industrial hemp including medicines, textiles, ropes, paper products, plastics, automotive factory material, and building materials.

Two Hoosier mothers testified in support of the production of hemp for medical purposes. Both women have children with Dravet Syndrome, a rare form of epilepsy that begins in infancy.

“Something as simple as a plant might help” my son, Mariah Mershon said.

“The results are powerful, the stories are dramatic,” said Dr. Trent Jones a lobbyist for Parents for Cannabidol. “It is an immediate, dramatic medicine for children that have drug-resisted epilepsy.”

CBD is a compound in cannabis that has medical effects without the psychoactive effects commonly associated with marijuana.

Mershon said her son has suffered from more than 50 seizures in a four-hour time span.

“What’s wine without the alcohol? It’s just grapes. What’s this cannabis without the THC? It’s just a fern,” Mershon said. “We would really like the opportunity to help our son.”

Bob Craft, a spokesman for the North American Industrial Hemp Council, addressed the concern that industrial hemp could be used to produce marijuana or other psychoactive drugs.

“They’re two different plants, two different products,” Craft said. “It would make more sense to prohibit poppy-seed dressing in the grocery store because poppy can be used to produce opium than it does to outlaw industrial hemp.”

Industrial hemp contains less than .03 percent of tetrahydrocannabinol – known as THC – which is below the federal limit and does not cause a “mind-altering” sensation.

The bill “could provide a new source of income for our farmers, allow new industries to develop in our state and go a long way towards protecting and improving Indiana’s beautiful and natural environment,” said Neil Smith, a lobbyist for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

Smith said hemp was commonly grown in Indiana until 1937.

“Hemp in Indiana would provide thousands of new, sustainable and well-paying jobs. It will provide a new tax base for state and local governments,” he said. “Hoosier farmers would profit greatly from hemp.”

Smith said Canadian farmers earn $200-$250 net profit per acre form growing hemp, according to Seed and Grain Sales.

Greg Bomba, an executive at Flexform Technologies, said his company uses the natural fibers of hemp in the transportation and office furniture industries.

Young said that automotive factory materials made from industrial hemp are 20 times stronger and lighter than steel. Also, these parts will not “rust, crush or burn.”

Bomba’s company imports 2,200 tons of industrial hemp annually because it’s the “perfect product.”

However, because hemp is not locally grown, Bomba said his company spends $600,000-$1 million to import it from countries like China, Canada and India.

“(Hemp) is being used, it’s being imported into the state,” Craft said, “The market exists in Indiana.”

Ten states have already passed legislation to legalize the production of industrial hemp.

“I see no reason why Indiana shouldn’t be one of the leaders in hemp,” said Jack Cain, another lobbyist for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. “I think our soil is a little more fertile than Kentucky. ”

Officials in Kentucky recently said they want their state to be the nation’s leader in the hemp industry.

“This is a great bill.” Cain said, “It will generate jobs and a lot of activity from an economic standpoint.”

The Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee members passed the bill to a standing ovation.

“I love you guys,” shouted an excited bystander when the bill passed 7-0. “You just made a bunch of Hoosiers happy.”

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

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR NAMED FOR FREEDOM HERITAGE MUSEUM

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image001-1 The Freedom Heritage Museum is pleased to announce that Jack Buttrum has been named as their first Executive Director.  In his new role, Mr. Buttrum will be responsible for overseeing all operations for the museum and will be spearheading various events, projects and programs of the museum with direction given from the Board of Directors.     Mr. Buttrum stated, “I look forward to working with our board, staff and community as we grow The Freedom Heritage Museum into its potential.”

A lifelong Evansville native, Jack Buttrum has family ties to World War II as his older brother, and several cousins, served in the military.  Buttrum believes it is important that younger generations learn about Evansville’s role during World War II and the sacrifices families made to protect the freedom of the nation. The Freedom Heritage Museum will give visitors a glimpse of Evansville’s history while viewing historic artifacts in the collections including airplanes, military vehicles and production equipment.

About Jack Buttrum:

Jack Buttrum is a Construction Administrator for Jacob’s Engineering. He has been with Jacob’s since 2005 and is currently in charge of site safety at the Kellogg’s facility in Pikeville, KY.

Buttrum was also the president and owner of Swanson Nunn Electric Company for 30 years. He received his Bachelor of Science from Purdue University. He also holds an honorary associate degree from Ivy Tech Community College, where he served on the board of directors for six years and headed the board for three.

Buttrum is also highly active in the Evansville community and has held positions in several community organizations including the Evansville Housing Authority, the Private Industry Council, and the Community Action Agency. In 1988 Buttrum was named minority advocate of the year in Indiana.   In addition, he received the following honors: Sagamore on the Wabash, a Kentucky Colonel, a Delta Flying Colonel, 1990 Indiana Minority Advocate of the Year, the Rotary Civic Award Recipient in 1989, a Rotary Paul Harris Fellow, and a Fellow of the National Electrical Contractor’s Academy of Fellows.

About The Freedom Heritage Museum:

An institution created to collect, preserve, and make accessible the objects produced, and the personal accounts of Evansville’s local home front and the veterans during World War II so that future generations become educated about their efforts and sacrifices and that we remember and honor them for protecting the freedoms we have today.

 

 

 

For more information, please call 812-476-2442. www.freedomheritagemuseum.org

Does marriage amendment need amended?

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by Marilyn Odendah for theindianalawyers.comGay-Marriage-Hands-No-Text-14146794_158577_ver1.0_320_240_1383695408391_1219149_ver1.0_320_240

Questions over how to fix the troublesome second sentence of Indiana’s increasingly controversial marriage amendment have sparked much speculation and led to one unexpected – and untested – solution.

Less than a week after the Indiana General Assembly began the 2014 session, the constitutional provision banning same-sex marriage was headed to the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee. As federal judges scrutinize similar bans in Utah and Ohio, the Indiana amendment appeared set to gain approval from both chambers before the end of January.

However, when legislators vote on the amendment, they could also be casting votes on an accompanying bill meant to explain the intent of the General Assembly. House Bill 1153, introduced by Rep. Eric Turner, R-Cicero, attempts to skirt concerns with the amendment by listing what the constitutional

ban would not restrict.

The measure drew immediate and strong reaction from the opposite side of the aisle.

Rep. Matt Pierce, D-Bloomington, described HB 1153 as a “catalogue of flaws in the amendment,” and questioned if the bill, should it become law, would have the effect the Republicans believe it will.

“They know the second sentence is fraught with all kinds of unintended consequences and they’re trying to explain them away without amending the proposed amendment,” Pierce said.

House of Representatives Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, maintained the bill answers the “valid questions” that have arisen from the proposed marriage amendment. Turner’s legislation, he said, addresses concerns over the potential impact on human rights ordinances while spelling out that domestic partner benefits, powers of attorney and other agreements people enter into will still be valid.

“I think it’s clear that regardless of what the Legislature does, even if it does nothing, there’s going to be a lawsuit filed here as there has been in 30-plus other states on these issues,” Bosma said. “So we felt it was quite appropriate to give the courts and voters, if it passes, and legislators some clarity on precisely what the language does and does not do.”

Making a tweak

The process for amending the Indiana Constitution requires that a proposal be approved by two consecutive General Assemblies, then ratified by the electorate.

Over the past 10 years, amendments defining marriage as between one man and one woman have been filed in the Statehouse but were stalled in the Democrat-controlled House. The current proposed provision was first approved during the 2011 legislative session and must be green-lighted this session or the process to constitutionally ban same-sex marriage will have to start over.

Much of the focus on the amendment has been with the second sentence, which could be interpreted as banning heterosexual relationships. To fix this problem, the possibility has been raised of rewriting or dropping the sentence and still continuing with the ratification process.

Geoffrey Slaughter, partner at Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, is among those who believe an alteration would require a new beginning.

geoff slaughterSlaughter

He pointed to the legislative process where a bill that undergoes even a minor change has to be reapproved by both the House and Senate. That procedure seems to set a precedent for starting over whenever a proposed amendment to the state constitution is altered, he said.

Neither Indiana caselaw nor legislative history provide a clear answer. In 1965, lawmakers did not start the amendment process over when, during the second presentation, it dropped language in a proposed change to Article 10 of the Indiana Constitution. Five years later, the General Assembly corrected scrivener errors in an overhaul of Article 7 that substantially changed the state’s judiciary. The amendment was subsequently challenged on several grounds in the Indiana Court of Appeals and Supreme Court, but the judges demurred on ruling whether the revisions were substantial enough to cause a restart.

In 1994, when the Legislature set about amending Article 16 which, ironically, details the steps for amending the state constitution, the process started over because a phrase was removed from the end of a sentence.

Former Senate President Pro Tem Robert Garton, R-Columbus, is considered the driving force behind getting that General Assembly to go back to the beginning. His insistence on following the rules was reinforced when, as a young state senator, he watched two Senate presidents get hauled away to jail.

Looking at the wording in the constitution, Garton asserted any change made to the same-sex marriage amendment would require the process start over. Specifically, the language of Article 16 says “the amendment” rather than “the revised amendment” or “the changed amendment,” which to Garton means no changes are allowed on second presentation.

“The constitution is not that difficult to read,” he said. “It’s rather plain language, ‘the amendment’ is ‘the amendment.’”

Moving forward 

Although HB 1153 is viewed as alleviating the need to rework the amendment, it may not insulate the proposed provision in the courtroom.

Pierce raised the question of whether the courts would even consider the interpretation provided by the bill when faced with a challenge to the same-sex ban. The Indiana Constitution is not subservient to the state statutes, he said, which makes it likely that the judiciary will look at the language of the amendment and make its own interpretation of the second sentence.

However, Bosma said HB 1153 keeps the process moving forward and enables the General Assembly, and possibly the public, to make the decision about what constitutes marriage.

“I think it’s right for the Legislature to make this decision and not a judge and that’s why I, personally, support the amendment,” he said. “If I thought it was disastrous for Indiana, we wouldn’t be doing it.”

Jane Henegar, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, disagreed, saying the amendment should not be put to popular vote. It limits individual rights that the Founding Fathers enshrined in the Bill of Rights to protect personal freedoms from harm.

 

henegar-jane-mugHenegar

Henegar said the Legislature should not try to be clever in fixing the amendment and instead should defeat it. The ACLU of Indiana is preparing if the constitutional provision does pass through the Statehouse.

“We’ll look at every option and try to refute (the amendment) in whatever form it may survive the Legislature,” Henegar said.

Shifting ground

Since the General Assembly approved this most recent version of the marriage amendment three years ago, public attitude toward the subject has shifted dramatically. Perceptions of same-sex couples have changed not only in the public square but also in the federal courts.

“What are we really doing this for,” asked Jon Laramore, partner at Faegre Baker Daniels LLP, “because the federal courts may trump the effort, at least in some respects.”

 

Jon LaramoreLaramore

Unanswered is the question of whether states that ban same-sex marriage will have to recognize those marriages performed in states that do not prohibit that type of union. Indiana’s law against gay marriage and its potential constitutional ban would only be binding to state courts. The federal courts could apply federal law to rule that same-sex marriages performed in Iowa or Illinois are also valid in Indiana.

Even before Indiana’s amendment reaches the court, it may become a moot point. Voters will have final say on the provision if it appears on the 2014 ballot.

Garton’s experience with the same-sex marriage ban is telling. He voted for an amendment prohibiting marriage between individuals of the same gender but he was not upset when the measure failed to get through the House. The opinions from the opposition resonated with him, especially the arguments that characterized the ban as a civil rights issue.

He does not have a definite answer as to whether a ban should be enacted but his uncertainty reflects how opinions have turned around.

“I can’t say I’m comfortable with it,” Garton said of same-sex marriage. “The issue has changed, public attitude has changed. It’s a question if it should be in the Constitution.”•

 

Indiana State Police Release Clandestine Lab Results for 2013

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The Indiana State Police Meth Suppression Section has released the state-wide law enforcement clandestine lab seizure incidents reported for 2013. To view the statistics for lab seizures, children affected, arrests, injuries, and lab types, go to the Indiana State Police meth website at www.meth.in.gov and click on the “statistics” link on the left. The website provides information from 2000 through 2013, so a historical perspective is provided. Additionally, a map has been added to illustrate the total number of meth labs reported by law enforcement in each county from 2001 through 2013. The information includes ISP lab seizures as well as lab seizure incidents from other police agencies reported to ISP.

Eight Indiana State Police personnel were initially certified to begin processing meth lab crime scenes in 1991. The Indiana State Police began organizing and planning the Methamphetamine Suppression Section (MSS) in 2005 when the first restrictions were placed on the purchase of products containing pseudoephedrine (PSE) and ephedrine, which are precursor drugs used in the manufacture of methamphetamine found in over the counter cold remedies. Since that time, additional restrictions have been placed on the sale and purchase of PSE products. However, lab seizures have continued to rise to the point that based on information received from other states Indiana will be first in the country in clandestine lab incidents for 2013. Currently, MSS consists of nineteen sworn personnel who are tasked with the full-time responsibility to investigate, educate, and partner with other law enforcement agencies and stakeholders to assist all communities in Indiana with combating the growing epidemic of the local manufacture of methamphetamine.

Report suspected meth activity anonymously online at www.meth.in.gov or by calling the Meth Tip Line at 1-800-453-4756.

For question about this release or to schedule an educational program for your group contact:
First Sergeant Niki Crawford
Indiana State Police Meth Suppression Section
1-877-MSS-METH (677-6384) Indiana only
Office: 317-234-4591

Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session

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EVSCThe Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, January 27, 2014, in the John H. Schroeder Conference Centre at the EVSC Administration Building, 951 Walnut, IN 47713, Evansville, IN. The session will be conducted according to Senate Enrolled Act 313, Section 1, I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1, as amended. The purpose of the meeting is for discussion of collective bargaining, (2)(A);  initiation of litigation or litigation that is either pending or has been threatened specifically in writing, (2)(B); purchase or lease of property, (2)(D); and job performance evaluation of individual employees, (9).

The regular meeting of the School Board will follow at 5:30 p.m. in the EVSC Board Room, same address.