Multiple public safety agencies, neighborhood groups, and local businesses will come together on Tuesday night for National Night Out.
This event is a chance to see what is being done to make Evansville a better community. There will be games, food, and live music.There will also be demonstraions from several units of the Evansville Police Department. The demos include K-9, Bomb Squad, and the SWAT Team.
This free family friendly event will be held at Wesselman’s Park on Tuesday from 6:00pm-9:00pm.
National Night Out set for Tuesday night
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, August 2, 2013.
 Mary Martin          Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony
Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance-Class D Felony
Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor
Joseph Nickel                  Assisting a Criminal –Class D Felony
Alfred Thomas Jr         Domestic Battery-Class D Felony
Domestic Battery-Class A Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to a Class D Felony due to Prior Convictions)
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
Disorderly Conduct-Class B Misdemeanor
Rita Wilson                  Residential Entry-Class D Felony
Battery-Class B 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 law.
BREAKING NEWS. IS IT TRUE AUGUST 5, 2013

IS IT TRUE we have just been told by extremely reliable sources that the push by the Mayor to get fast track approval of the new downtown Convention Hotel shall be put on hold for at least 40 days?  …that the reason given for this action is to allow City Council to do the proper vetting of this multi- million dollar project before  they  invest our hard earned tax dollars?  …this is a developing story and we shall keep you posted as things progress?
Two teens injured in “scooter” crash
Two Evansville teens were injured Sunday night when they collided with a car at the intersection of Missouri and Governor.
The teens, 14 and 13, were treated at a local hospital for serious but non-life threatening injuries.
According to the driver of the car and several witnesses, the operator of the scooter was going east on Missouri and failed to yield the right of way to southbound traffic on Governor. The scooter operator ran into the passenger side of the car and both of the teens were thrown from the scooter.
While investigating the crash, officers descovered the scooter had been reported stolen on Saturday night.
The investigation into the crash is continuing. Police have also began a criminal investigation in reference to the stolen scooter.
SCORE SEMINAR TO BOOST SMALL BUSINESS & ENTREPRENEURS
Evansville, Indiana – SCORE Evansville in conjunction with eighth district Congressman Larry
Bucshon and WorkOne Southwest presents a seminar to address the most pressing questions entrepreneurs and business owners have today.
SCORE President Jack Buttrum says “SCORE Evansville is about helping small businesses, one business at a time. Our volunteers mentor, coach, advise and listen to anyone in the community who has a desire to go into business and is challenged with the business they already manage.â€
Eighth District Congressman Larry Bucshon states, “Hoosier businesses are facing a lot of uncertainties that are making it difficult to be successful,†said Bucshon. “One of my top priorities in Congress is helping to create much needed jobs. Our business seminar will help equip local business owners with the necessary tools and information to be successful.â€
WorkOne Southwest Executive Director, Jim Heck, “Small businesses and entrepreneurs may not have the professional Human Resources staff of larger companies and it may be more difficult for those owners to access information regarding personnel matters. Seminars like these are important to provide information to keep those businesses thriving.â€
The Seminar will take place on Wednesday, August 7, 2013 at the Ivy Tech Community College located at 3501 North First Avenue in Evansville. Registration begins at 7:30 a.m.; and opening remarks by Congressman Bucshon and Mayor Lloyd Winnecke are at 8:00 a.m. The one hour sessions will begin at 8:30 a.m. and end at 12:00 noon. Registrants may attend one or more of the sessions depending on their schedule and topics interested in – all of which promise to be beneficial to all sizes of businesses.
Three sessions will be offered in the informative and free programs.
* Healthcare and Your Business Congressman Larry Bucshon and Todd Glass,
Attorney with Fine & Hatfield. The effects on business of federal changes to health insurance regulations.
* Strategic Thinking in Human Resources Kendra Vanzo, Executive Vice President & Chief Human Resources Officer of Old National Bancorp. An
integrated approach to recruitment, hiring, training, evaluating, rewarding, and retention.
* Working Collaboratively Gene Recker, Manager, Education and Entrepreneurial Support, University of Southern Indiana. Gaining commitment among the management team.
To register for this free Seminar, please call Samantha Reeder at 812-465-6484 or Tom Stein at 812-480-0884; or visit http://bucshon.house.gov.
IS IT TRUE August 5, 2013
IS IT TRUE August 5, 2013
IS IT TRUE the Mole Nation is telling us that Mayor Winnecke is about to share what he will certainly promote as good news that the City of Evansville has reached a tentative development agreement with HCW on the now 5 years since announced downtown convention hotel?… we understand that Mayor Winnecke will make the formal announcement Monday at 10:00 am at the proposed hotel site and that all members of the Evansville City Council are all welcome to attend?…Mayor Winnecke is even agreeable to provide Scott Danks legal counsel for the City Council with a copy of the completed agreement early next week for his review?…Mayor Winnecke is also hoping to fast track whatever this agreement that HE has made in a vacuum through the approval process before the 2012 financial audit has been completed?…the City Council will be asked to make time in the schedule for the first reading on August 12th followed by the second and third readings at their August 26th meeting?…that is conveniently before the completion of the 2012 audit and the 2013 budget hearings?…we guess the Evansville Redevelopment Commission will act as ordered and without time for learned deliberation on the agreement before coming to Council?…our readers can expect a wham bam thank yam am style of special meeting of the Redevelopment Commission will be scheduled for Thursday or Friday?
IS IT TRUE that the Evansville Redevelopment Commission has been railroaded by the Office of the Mayor before to buy a parking lot with a recent market value of $150,000 for a price of $603,000, to okay deal after deal after deal to approve a crony of former Mayor Weinzapfel to build a downtown hotel, and to even put the McCurdy Hotel at risk for a deal with a contributor to the Weinzapfel for Mayor campaign that never was?…we hope this version of the ERC has the good sense to think this through and not trust the numbers as presented by any Mayor of Evansville?…it was the ERC that the media spun as a cast of idiots over these other deals leaving the backroom dealings of the other players unexposed until the CCO sprung the stories?
IS IT TRUE it seems as though in the rush to hurry up and authorize spending $37.5 Million on a downtown convention hotel for absolutely nothing in return, $10 Million or more on Roberts dog park, $45 Million on high tech water meters, and who knows what other trivial pursuits, the City of Evansville has allowed Mesker Amphitheatre to degrade into a weed infested jungle?…local photographer Matt Camp has published the following photographs taken of the Mesker Amphitheatre this summer that look like the punch line of “Welcome to the Jungleâ€?…as long as the City of Evansville continues to exhibit utter contempt for maintaining that which we already have, there should be no new projects of any recreational or entertainment purposes?…intentional negligence was the plan that worked to destroy Roberts Stadium and it looks like the same playbook is being used over at Mesker?…this city and all of its people should hang their head in shame at the failures of administration after administration to take care of anything?
IS IT TRUE we wonder just when does the failure to be transparent cross the line into unethical behavior and/or abuse of power?…President Nixon learned that lesson the hard way as did President Bill Clinton?…creating or participating in an atmosphere that is designed to deceive the taxpayers is on the dark side of the line of ethical behavior?…the sneaky way in which the Homestead tax credit fiasco went down was clearly unethical as was the way that Earthcare Energy was handed a check for $200,000 without City Council approval?…the questions of crossing the line of unethical behavior by recent city administrations has clearly been breached?…the real question is whether there will ever be any consequence in local government for unethical behavior in office?



Public forum to discuss transportation issues in Evansville and Vanderburgh County has been rescheduled
A public forum to discuss transportation for the disability community has been rescheduled. The meeting scheduled for August 6 has been rescheduled for August 13, 2013.
The Advisory Board on Disability Services has invited METS director Tony Kirkland to a discussion on transportation issues concerning the Metropolitan Evansville Transit System
(METS) and METS Mobility. Please join staff from the METS Department and the Advisory
Board on Disability Services for a discussion on transportation issues for people with disabilities.
When: August 13, 2013
Where: Central Library (Downtown) Browning Room
Time: 4:30pm-6:30pm
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
Evansville, IN – Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Thursday, August 1, 2013.
Derryl Motley II Invasion of Privacy-Class A Misdemeanor
(Enhanced to a Class D Felony due to Prior Convictions)
Public Intoxication-Class B Misdemeanor
Phyllis Vieck Neglect of Dependant-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.
The Federal Government has $70 Trillion of off Balance Sheet Liabilities
By: Matt Phillips
There are plenty of ways to tally up the US government’s federal debt. The total Treasury debt outstanding was about $16.74 trillion at the end of July. But the US owes about $4.84 trillion to itself, mostly in the form of debt that is issued to entities such as the Social Security trust fund. So many analysts tend to focus on the $11.91 trillion in debt that is publicly available to be traded.
As we noted earlier this week, the recent revision of US GDP—which boosted the size of the world’s largest economy by about $590 billion in 2012—instantly shrank the debt-to-GDP ratio to less than 70%. That debt load looks downright manageable if you compare it to burdens on the books of troubled European countries, for example.
But that’s just the stuff that’s “on the books.†Like many countries, the US has large stockpile of potential and actual liabilities that don’t show up on as actual debt outstanding. In fact, a new working paper by University of California-San Diego economics professor James Hamilton estimates that the US was on the hook for more than $70 trillion in off-balance sheet liabilities at the end of 2012. Yes, trillion.
​
How is that possible? Well, here’s Hamilton’s tally.
Housing related commitments
$6.112 trillion—Debt of government sponsored entities such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage buying government-sponsored entities that the US was forced to fully nationalize during the financial crisis.
$1.408 trillion—The notional value of the mortgages that the government-sponsored entities packaged up and sold off to investors after “guaranteeing†them. In other words, the amount that the housing agencies agreed to pay investors if those mortgages went bad and homeowners defaulted. Obviously, it’s unlikely that they all go bad at once. But if you want to be conservative, it makes some sense to look at them as a whole.
Student and other loan guarantees
$325 billion—Hamilton’s estimate of the amount the US is on the hook for guaranteeing student loans and other government-backed lending such as small business loans and loans from the Export-Import Bank of the United States.
FDIC
$7.406 trillion—The value of the deposits insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the government scheme aimed at preventing small depositors from losing their money in bank collapses. The FDIC is funded through fees on member banks. And its deposit insurance fund was roughly $33 billion at the end of 2012. That’s a pittance compared to all of the deposits the US insures. But, it’s also unrealistic to think that the country’s entire banking system would go bust at once. Essentially, in a near-impossible worst-case scenario, the Feds would be on the hook for this much.
The Federal Reserve
-$1.128 trillion—As a quasi-independent arm of the federal government, the Fed’s actions do have implications for the US government’s shadow balance sheet. For instance, during the financial crisis, as the Fed lent out money to quell the crisis, it drove shadow liabilities up by roughly $1.13 trillion between 2006 and 2008. But as those lending programs have been wound down, the Fed has basically been cutting the size of the government’s shadow balance sheet. In 2012, the Fed’s share of the shadow balance sheet decreased by $1.128 trillion.
Social Security
$26.5 trillion—This giant figure represents the net present value—in other words the amount of additional cash the Social Security Administration would need to sockaway in steady investments today—to pay for the all benefits participants will be entitled to later.
Medicare
$27.6 trillion—Likewise, this the best guess as to the “present valueâ€â€”or how much more cash would have to be invested now—to pay for all the Medicare-related costs government actuaries expect older Americans to incur in the future.
Other government trust funds
$1.86 trillion—An estimate of the possible liabilities the government faces for a range of spending on other trust funds such as the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund and the Military Retirement Fund.
Total: $70.08 trillion
Does this staggering amount of debt spell imminent doom for the country? Not really. As we’ve said before, it’s highly unlikely that the US would have to come up with all of this money at any one time. Nor are all of these costs absolutely going to happen as actuaries predict. For example, if the US really doesn’t have the money to pay for all of the Social Security benefits retirees are entitled to in a few decades, those benefits could be trimmed then, or other alterations could be made to the program—such as pushing the retirement age back, which would cut the costs of the program.
On the other hand, it is important to remain cognizant of the fact that the US government—and most other governments of large advanced economies—are usually on the hook to pay for many things that don’t show up on the annual budget. Of hazy liabilities, Hamilton writes: “Acknowledging their size is a necessary first step for making wise policy decisions.â€
Source: Quartz