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New auditor Sawyer resigns for ‘family and personal concerns’

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November 26, 2013  |   Filed under: People,Top stories  |   Posted by: 

By Lesley Weidenbener
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – State Auditor Dwayne Sawyer has resigned – just three months after he accepted the position – saying that due to “family and personal concerns” it would be best for him to step down.

Dwayne Sawyer - shown here in August when he was appointed state auditor by Gov. Mike Pence - has resigned the post for what he said are personal reasons. Photo by Megan Banta, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Dwayne Sawyer – shown here in August when he was appointed state auditor by Gov. Mike Pence – has resigned the post for what he said are personal reasons. Photo by Megan Banta, TheStatehouseFile.com.

Pence named Sawyer to the post in August after a long search that included interviews with more than a dozen candidates. The appointment made Sawyer – formerly the president of the Brownsburg Town Council – the first black Republican to serve in a statewide office.

Now, Pence will be tasked with finding a new person to fill the position, which had been held by Republican Tim Berry until he left the job to become chairman of the Indiana Republican Party.

Pence said Tuesday that he had accepted Sawyer’s resignation.

“I respect his decision to step aside,” the governor said. “Hoosiers can be assured that Mr. Sawyer’s resignation had nothing to do with his fiduciary responsibilities for the state or his execution of his duties as auditor.”

In his letter of resignation, Sawyer said, “I have come to the conclusion that it will be in the best interests of my family and the people of Indiana whom I have been honored to serve that I resign from the office of Indiana auditor of state.”

In August, the governor said he had been searching for four specific qualities – professional competence, experience in public office, a history of political activism and the character to oversee our state’s finances with integrity – when he named Sawyer to the post.

He had said then that Sawyer was the strongest candidate among the many he had interviewed.

“It was a pretty touch choice,” Pence said in August. “We had some outstanding men and women that we interviewed from all over the state of Indiana for this position. But again and again it was Dwayne Sawyer who emerged as the best choice for all the people of Indiana.”

Sawyer has private sector experience in financial systems, information technology and project management. He had most recently worked in software development for Positron. Sawyer also worked on financial management solutions while employed by Roche Diagnostics, Dow AgroSciences and Eli Lilly & Co.

 

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Commentary: Leadership needed to resolve education conflict

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November 25, 2013  |   Filed under: Commentary,Top stories  |   Posted by: 

By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – The two sides in Indiana’s huge education war have at least one thing in common.

Commentary button in JPG - no shadowEach side believes that it is completely in the right and that the mess that is Indiana’s education leadership is entirely the other side’s fault.

The debacle began last year when Democrat Glenda Ritz won a surprise victory over the controversial Republican incumbent Tony Bennett, the education reform poster boy, in the state superintendent of public instruction’s race.

Republicans reacted with fury to Ritz’s victory, saying it didn’t mean anything and pretty much vowing to thwart her at every step. Ritz, Democrats and the teachers unions responded in kind by slow-walking many education reform measures implemented by the state legislature and signed into law by Republican governors.

The skirmishing broke into open warfare when members of the Indiana Board of Education, chaired by Ritz but composed otherwise of members appointed by Republican governors, sent a letter to state legislative leaders asking them to play a greater role in running Ritz’s education department. Ritz responded by suing the education board for violating the state’s open records law.

A court tossed that suit – at least temporarily – but then a state board of education meeting descended into a free-for-all with Ritz walking out and the Republican-appointed education board members blasting her as an autocrat.

Ritz’s defenders see her as a courageous victim standing up to bullies – primarily Gov. Mike Pence. And Ritz’s detractors see her as a dithering obstructionist whose sole agenda is stopping anyone else from doing anything.

With faint hope that anyone involved in this silly and destructive battle still is capable of listening to reason, I’m going to point out the fallacies in both sides’ positions.

Let’s deal with Ritz and her amen corner first.

Their argument is that Ritz should be allowed to dictate the state’s education policy because she won the election as state superintendent. But that argument also applied to Tony Bennett four years ago and that didn’t stop most of the folks lined up with Ritz from opposing him with everything they had.

If the Ritz crowd reserves the right to serve as the loyal opposition when doing so suits them, they can’t complain because their opponents do the same.

Five years ago, Bennett’s election didn’t put an end to debates about education policy in Indiana. It just started a fresh round of fighting.

Ditto for Ritz’s election.

Ritz’s folks will say that their opposition to Bennett was justified because he stood for things they don’t like – vouchers, a flawed school grading system and pointless round robins of student testing.

The fact that I tend to agree with them – most studies the education reformers point to as evidence their innovations work are every bit as baked as the average Grateful Dead concertgoer – is beside the point.

The folks who oppose Ritz do so from conviction and concern about this state’s children. Telling them that they can’t exercise a right of opposition that Ritz supporters resorted to themselves is an exercise in hypocrisy – particularly since the educational reform crowd scored wins (governor, super majorities in the House and Senate) in last year’s election, too.

Now, let’s deal with Gov. Pence and his Republican education chest-thumpers.

Their argument for most education reform measures is that they will empower parents. But how does ignoring the votes cast by parents against Bennett and his “reform” measures empower those parents?

The verdict that the voters delivered last fall was a mixed one that can be read several ways, but at the least it signaled the voters either were unsure about Bennett’s policies or didn’t understand them.

Instead of taking time to explain those measures to the state’s parents, the governor and his crew have acted as if Bennett had been restored to office in a landslide and resorted to pure power politics. Like the Vietnam War general who proclaimed it was necessary to destroy a village in order to save it, they have denied parents’ choice and educational accountability in order to preserve them.

This last bit of advice is for both sides.

Any idiot can escalate a fight. It takes leadership and maturity to resolve a conflict and bring people together.

And becoming the mirror image of that which you oppose – or even despise – isn’t a victory.

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

 

Evansville Water & Sewer Utility Board Meeting Agenda

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cityofevansvilleClick on this link to read:         2013-11-26agenda

THE EVANSVILLE LOCAL PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT BOND BANK MEETING

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cityofevansvilleNOTICE OF REGULAR MEETING OF

THE EVANSVILLE LOCAL PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT BOND BANK

DECEMBER 17, 2013 AT 11:00 A.M.

ROOM 307

CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX

ONE N.W. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. BOULEVARD

EVANSVILLE, INDIANA

 

The Board of Directors of The Evansville Local Public Improvement Bond Bank will meet to conduct such business as may properly come before it on

December 17, 2013 at 11:00 a.m. in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex, One N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana.

For further information, contact Russell G. Lloyd Jr., City Controller, Room 300, Civic Center Complex, One N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana 47708-1833; Telephone: (812) 436-4919.

Board Of Trustees Of The EVSC will Meet

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EVSCThe Board of School Trustees of the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation will meet in executive session at 5:00 p.m. on Monday, December 2, 2013, 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 I.C. 5-14-1.5-6.1(10). The purpose of the meeting is to consider filling a vacancy on the Board of School Trustees.

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

 

METS RIDER ALERT- Update

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City of Evansville Seal

METS will be CLOSED

Thanksgiving Day.

No buses will operate. Normally scheduled bus service will resume Friday morning.

USI and West Connection buses will not operate Wednesday 11-27, Thursday 11-28, and Friday 11-29.

The METS Rider alert for USI and West Connection has been revised for Wednesday, November 27, 2013. No Classes at USI, but one bus will operate on a limited schedule. The West Connection will operate on a regular schedule.
Normally scheduled service resumes Monday 12-1-13.

Evansville Kings Indoor Soccer Team End Preseason Undefeated at 3-0

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EVV KINGS LOGO

‘New Royalty’ Wins Preseason Rematch vs. River City Saints at Metro Sports Center

 

By Scottie Thomas

This past weekend saw the conclusion of the Preseason for the Evansville Kings Semi-Professional Indoor Soccer Team.  The rematch featured the River City Saints in Metro Sports Center, home to the Evansville Kings.  The result and even the score was the same, 7-5.  The crowd hit a new high of 193 on the season, up from the previous 172 at the first game vs. Paducah.

The game started out with an early goal from River City in the first period, again.  The Evansville Kings responded with a goal of their own in the next few minutes.  This time the score was 2-1 at halftime the home team ahead.

The second half saw yet another flurry of goals, five more by the Evansville Kings as they continue the pattern of being a strong 3rd quarter team.  River City scored three of their goals, as well, in the fourth to close the game at a score of 7-5.

Daniel Dormeier, who missed the game last weekend, roared with two goals, as well as Jeremy Tudela with a pair of his own scores.  Austin Andrekus scored early with a header off of the goalie’s kick.  Ryan Moll and Danny Pratte also contributed with a goal apiece.  Seven is total of goals scored in each of the three Preseason Games for the Evansville Kings.

The Regular Season is set to kick off on Saturday, December 7th, 2013 away at River City Saints (Louisville, KY).  That game will have Kick-In time of 7:00 p.m. [ET].  This will be the third time this Inaugural Season the two teams will face each other.  The entire schedule will be posted on the team’s website (evansvillekings.wix.com/pasl) and on the Facebook Page.

Thank you to our sponsors: Metro Sports Center, Husk Signs, Tyler Saxe, Financial Advisor with Wells Fargo Advisors, Beans & Baristas, Complete Nutrition, Shoe Carnival, City-County Observer, John Friend Financial Group, D-Patrick: German Cars, The Shades 4 U Foundation & Buffalo Wild Wings on Evansville’s east side.

For more information about the Evansville Kings, visit them on Facebook or on Twitter @EVVKings, or visit their website, http://evansvillekings.wix.com/PASL.  You can also call Metro Sports Center, home of the Evansville Kings, at (812) 479-5425.

School Board Announces Plan to Fill Board Vacancy

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EVSC

The Evansville Vanderburgh Board of School Trustees announced tonight that it would interview six candidates who have expressed their interest in the soon-to-be vacant school board seat at a specially-called public meeting on December 2.

EVSC School Board President Sally Becker announced her resignation during the November 18 meeting of the Board of School Trustees. She is moving from Evansville in order to be nearer family, leaving her seat on the School Board open for the remainder of her term.  Her last meeting will be on December 16.

Chris Kiefer, School Board vice president, said tonight that there were 16 interested individuals who submitted their information to the board for consideration to fill Becker’s seat in District 2 from January through December 2014.  That list of candidates was narrowed to six during the School Board’s executive session this afternoon.  Kiefer said the six candidates will be contacted and apprised of the next meeting and the public interview process. Letters will be sent to the remaining candidates thanking them for their submission.

The School Board will meet in executive session briefly at 5 p.m. on December 2, just prior to the 5:30 p.m. public meeting in the EVSC Board Room, located in the Administration Building at 951 Walnut Street, Evansville

Two-Vehicle Crash Closes SR 61 for nearly 2 hours, One Driver Seriously Injured

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ISPMonday morning, November 25, at approximately 11:30, Indiana State Police and Pike County Sheriff’s Department responded to a two-vehicle crash that injured two people and closed SR 61 for nearly two hours.

Preliminary investigation revealed Joshua Miller, 18, of Petersburg, was driving a 2006 Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck northbound on SR 61 approximately ½ mile south of CR 800 South when he fell asleep and drove left of center. Christopher Hadfield, 33, of Elberfeld, was driving his 2000 Sterling tractor-trailer southbound on SR 61 and observed the pickup truck driving left of center. Hadfield attempted to avoid the pickup truck by driving partially off the roadway, but the pickup truck collided into the trailer’s left rear axle. After the initial collision, the pickup truck spun around and came to a final rest on the east side of S.R. 61. Miller was taken to Deaconess Hospital in Evansville where he is currently being treated for non-life threatening injuries. Miller’s passenger, Emily Jacobs, 22, of Huntingburg, was taken to Jasper Memorial Hospital where she was treated and released. The pickup truck Miller was driving was totaled. Hadfield was not injured. Everyone involved in the crash was wearing seat belts. The highway was closed for approximately two hours while troopers investigated the crash.

Mayor Winnecke to Celebrate One Million Visitors to “Amazonia”

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mesker zoo Mayor Lloyd Winnecke will welcome the one millionth visitor to Amazonia this week.   According to Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden officials, based on attendance estimates (walk-ins and scheduled group tours), the one millionth visitor to experience the 20,000 square foot rainforest exhibit should occur tomorrow, November 26.

“When approached about marking this milestone, I was eager to personally welcome the visitor to Amazonia, which has been a great source of pride for our community,” said Mayor Winnecke. “I invite all residents from the Tri-State and beyond  to visit Amazonia and enjoy exploring the balmy 78 degrees tropical rainforest on a wintery day or any day of the year.”

Opening in 2008, Amazonia was part of a large scale zoo addition that included a new front entry way, restaurant, and gift shop.  Since this investment in the zoo, attendance has increased by 31% annually.

Established in 1928, Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden is Indiana’s first zoo.  For more general zoo information, visit www.meskerparkzoo.com.