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Pulmonary Support Group to hold picnic fundraiser

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st marys logo

 St. Mary’s Pulmonary Support Group will hold a picnic fundraiser Saturday, August 17th from 11:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. at American Baptist East Fellowship Hall, located at 6300 Washington Avenue in Evansville.

The event will include bingo games, a K9 demonstration from the Evansville Police Department, jewelry making, a Tai Chi class, a cornhole competition, live music by The Fraley’s, and lots of great door prizes, including a big door prize drawing at 2pm. Those attending the picnic are encouraged to bring an item from their home to include in a White Elephant auction and a homemade dessert to enter into a competition.

The cost is $10 per person, $18 per couple, or $30 for a family of four and includes a two-piece chicken meal complete with mashed potatoes and gravy, macaroni and cheese, green beans, a dinner roll, dessert, and a beverage. All proceeds benefit the St. Mary’s Pulmonary Rehab Support Group, which offers educational and social opportunities for adults diagnosed with lung diseases.

To reserve your tickets, please call 812-485-5230. Payment is required with reservation.

 

City-County Observer selects Senator Vaneta Becker as “Mole Award” winner for 2013

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CCO Chairman of the Board, Ron Cosby, announced today that Indiana State Senator Vaneta Becker has been selected as a 2013 “Mole Award” winner. Senator Becker, a graduate of the University of Southern Indiana, has been selected for her good public policy, tireless committee work, and her many activities within the community. Senator Becker has served in both Vanderburgh and Warrick Counties during her extensive political career in the Indiana House of Representatives and Senate. Cosby said of Becker, “We are honored and privileged to have someone with the political abilities and talents of Vaneta Becker serving our community. She is not only highly regarded, but effective, in getting the job done in Indianapolis for the constituents of this area.”

 

A list of Senator Becker’s accomplishments and awards while in office

 

2012 Indiana Area Agencies on Aging-Legislative Champion Award 2011 Indiana Coalition for Human Services – Oscar McCulloch Social Services Award 2011 Leadership Evansville Celebration of Leadership Winternheimer/Lamar Public Service Award 2011-Indiana Retired Teachers Association -Outstanding State Senator 2011 Lifetime Achievement Award -The Arc 2011 Evansville Teachers Association Friend of Education Award 2010-Albion Fellows Bacon Award 2010-Ark Crisis Center Dedication to Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect 2009 Komen Evansville Affiliate- Bobby Sloan Symbol of Hope Award 2009 Indiana Trial Lawyers Association Legislator of the Year 2008 Legislator of the Year – Indiana Primary Health Care Association 2008 Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence Empowerment Award 2007 Indiana Association for Home and Hospice Care Advocate of the Year 2007 Indiana Council of Administrators of Special Education Legislator of the Year 2001 Indiana Home Care Task Force – Service Award 1999-Lampion Center Advocacy Award 1995 ALCOA-Outstanding Leadership Award 1995 USI Distinguished Alumni Award 1995 Indiana Association of Ophthalmologists Legislator of the Year

 

Sen. Becker’s selection is the fifth selection of this years “Mole Award “winners. She joins the Honorable Judges Brett Niemeier and Wayne Trockman along with Matthew Burkhart of Newburgh and Ben Trockman of Evansville. Judge Niemeier was selected for his work with Evansville’s youth and for his affiliation with the Alternative School that now resides in what used to be Evansville’s North High School. Judge Trockman has been selected for his public policy as well as his work with Vanderburgh County’s first Drug Treatment Court. Matthew Burkhart and Ben Trockman have both been selected as a result of their work in reforming laws and standards of operation. Matthew Burkhart successfully lobbied for reform of Indiana’s child labor laws in respect to children under the age of 14 being able to umpire and referee sporting events. Ben Trockman’s work has encouraged airline companies to re-examine their policies and standards of operation for the physically challenged wishing to travel.

 

This years sixth annual “Mole Awards” Ceremony will be held at 12:00 pm on October 14 in Casino Aztar’s Walnut Room. Invitation to this event is by reservation only and details of this event will be posted at a later date on City-County Observer.

IS IT TRUE, July 29, 2013

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Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics
Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics

IS IT TRUE the Evansville City government is touting the program where $10 Million federal tax dollars were secured to build 40 houses in a dilapidated area of town a big success?…depending on one’s perspective of the situation it may be rationalize to actually be a success?…if one is in the business of making sure new houses are built with tax dollars to house people who could not afford the houses in the first place, damn the costs to society, then this is indeed a big success?…if one is a winner of the “nice house for 15 years at low rent” lottery where the new residents are chosen this would constitute a success? … the reality of the situation is that 40 people, a developer  benefit from this kind of success while the rest of the taxpaying American people pick up the tab?…to the other 117,000 people of Evansville, 6 Million Hoosiers, and 310 Million Americans this is a tax paid for nothing in return?

IS IT TRUE we wonder how is it that a scheme to take $10 Million federal tax dollars from the people of this country to enrich private investors by $1.7 Million, pay a developer and Hope $1.15 Million up front, and squander the other $7.25 Million of houses that are currently only worth $4.8 Million constitute a success?…this is nothing more than selective redistribution of federal tax dollars?…the purpose of the federal government is to do things that directly benefit us all and not a select few?…the other purpose of government at all levels is to know the numbers well enough to have the good sense not to call something that is essentially a giving tax dollar away scheme with tax dollars “a success” and to stay away from such programs?…the frivolous use of other people’s money to do this project is reflected all over this country that is increasingly becoming entitlement minded?…programs like this did not save Detroit and will not save Evansville?…only well thought out plans that involve private investment and deployment of high value human capital (jobs) will do that?

IS IT TRUE the City County Observer and most of its readers would like to know where can we go to buy federal tax credits at 83 cents on the dollar?…if regular folks were eligible to be a investor for a day we could all buy up tax credits at 83 cents on the dollar and pay our taxes at a discount too?…the whole program from top to bottom is disgusting and bad public policy on the federal level?

IS IT TRUE even if one is okay with redistribution schemes (which we are not) that pay for today’s shiny new houses with tax dollars from the future the numbers associated with this program just don’t add up to creating value?…speaking of paying for this year’s shiny objects with next year’s tax dollars, isn’t that exactly what got Sherman Greer fired from his job?…out of one side of the mouth of the City of Evansville comes the words “YOU’RE FIRED” while out of the other side comes the word “SUCCESS” for actions that are pretty close to identical?…the CCO of course does not support what Mr. Greer did but can’t let the hypocrisy that fell from the mouth of the City of Evansville in these two recent events of interest go without being pointed out?

A humorous look at the disaster named Detroit: by Ron Hart

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It was a nice summer day. Kids were enjoying their summer break, diving for murder weapons in the Detroit River, when news broke of the city filing for bankruptcy. “I am shocked,” said – no one. Even Motown’s Stevie Wonder saw it coming.

As we do an autopsy on Detroit, once the symbol of American industrial might, we learn several undeniable facts. The city’s bankruptcy is the direct result of decades of insidious liberal rule, heavy-handed union thuggery and a dependency culture. Sound familiar?

An endless succession of corrupt mayors propagated the untenable notion of equal outcomes through a flawed notion of economic and social justice. Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was convicted of large-scale corruption. As punishment, he should have been sentenced to serve another term as mayor.

While the city continues to heavily tax its citizens, it cannot provide even basic services. In Detroit, it takes 58 minutes for police to respond to a crime; the national average is 11 minutes. Perhaps it can change the 911 number to 912 to lighten the load on police responders. Maybe George Zimmerman will relocate there and start a Neighborhood Watch. Detroit is an embattled and divided city, one of the few with a North Koreatown.

Perhaps the feds will bail it out using some archaic regulatory justification like Detroit being a sacred burial ground of Mafia leaders. Maybe, to keep the police force employed, tax credits could be offered to criminals to attract them back to the city, to keep them employed as well.

Detroit’s population has gone from 2 million to 800,000. Airlines and bus services have gone bankrupt: they cannot compete with feet. Detroit has two seasons: winter and killing.

Half the people do not pay their property taxes. Some 45,000 homes have been abandoned; many have become crack houses. Mayors probably demanded the owners be taxed half their crack profits to fund the shortfalls of government union pension funds. The city has seized property for taxes. This caught the attention of the Obama administration, which is always looking for fresh new ideas.

Any substantive reforms proposed for Detroit raised the specter of racism for even the suggestion of fiscal sanity. Liberals love crises they create because they can promise more, take more, and blame their enemies. They then continue to play the card they know best, crying racism when the poverty rate is three times the national average. That game eventually ends, as it has in Detroit.

Left behind is a disillusioned city of uneducated citizens raised on dependency. Dependency robs people of their ambition, pride and ability to see beyond what politicians tell them they are “owed.”

The liberal solution is always to throw more of someone else’s money at the problem, money that filters through corrupt, graft-grubbing hands. The reason Detroit city councilmen are so upset about the bankruptcy is that they have lost control of the city budget and can no longer demand bribes.

As happened recently in Washington, D.C., corrupt politicians make it hard for nonunion businesses to come to a city. Wal-Mart, which could provide a poor population with needed goods at great prices, as well as jobs, was targeted. Only politicians in Detroit and D.C. would accuse a 99-cent store of price gouging. The result: good businesses move elsewhere, resulting in a Mad Max, apocalyptic, hellscape of a town.

The process of bankruptcy is a good one. It helps you and others who watch it realize how you got there. I really hope President Obama will not butt in. As it does in corporate America, reorganization purges bad management and cleanses debts to provide a fresh start. I hope the process will be unfettered by the Detroit-in-waiting, Washington, D.C.

Detroit exemplifies the anxiety we all have about what could happen to America. Our trajectory is that of Detroit, given the liberal Obama administration. Denial is not a strategy. We must look at Detroit and determine if that is what we would like to be. To paraphrase our president, “If he had a city, it would look like Detroit.”

No city or country can expect to survive when its people take more than they give. Until people reject the lies that liberals codify into law and reject the ideology of “progressivism,” they will continue to go financially and morally bankrupt. Detroit is a warning to us all.

Source: OC Register

Mother Arrested for DUI while Transporting Two Children

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Early Sunday morning, July 28, at approximately 12:05 a.m., Trooper Wes Alexander stopped the driver of a 2000 Pontiac for driving left of center on Red Bank Road south of Claremont. The driver was identified as Charlotte Kelley, 39, of Evansville. Trooper Alexander detected a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage while talking to Kelley. She was also transporting her 11-year-old son and 9-year-old daughter. Further investigation revealed Kelley had a blood alcohol content of .17%. She was arrested and taken to the Vanderburgh County Jail where she is currently being held without bond.

ARRESTED AND CHARGES:
• Charlotte Kelley, 39, Evansville, IN
1. Driving While Intoxicated with a Passenger less than 18, Class D Felony
2. Driving While Intoxicated, Class A Misdemeanor

Arresting Officer: Trooper Wes Alexander

America is driving down the same road that bankrupted Detroit: Parallels with Evansville are striking

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Detroit Suburb from Air
Detroit Suburb from Air

It is all but impossible to conceive of a more vivid example of the devastation wrought when a coalition of liberal Democrats and Big Labor bosses holds unchallenged sway for five decades over a beautiful, prosperous and growing American city like Detroit circa 1960. In that first year of the 1960s, Detroit was America’s fourth largest city and its 1.8 million residents enjoyed the highest per capita income in the country. Chrysler, Ford and General Motors dominated the automotive market, profits flooded their coffers and hundreds of thousands of workers enjoyed high pay and generous benefits.

And today? In a bracing five-part series published July 22-26, the Washington Examiner’s Sean Higgins described the city’s fall in these terms: “Detroit is now the most dangerous big city in America, according to FBI statistics, with a crime rate five times the national average. The city’s economy crumbled, too. Unemployment was 7.2 percent in 1970 but soared to 19.7 percent by 1990. Today it is a staggering 18.6 percent, far above the national rate of 7.6 percent. The city is nearly $20 billion in debt. Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder appointed an emergency manager in March. It may be decades before Detroit digs itself out of the financial pit into which it has fallen.”

More than anywhere else in America (with the possible exception of Chicago) Detroit has been a one-party union city.

Things are so bad in Detroit, according to National Review’s Mark Steyn, that “40 percent of its streetlamps don’t work; 210 of its 317 public parks have been permanently closed; it takes an hour for police to respond to a 9-1-1 call; only a third of its ambulances are drivable; one-third of the city has been abandoned; the local realtor offers houses on sale for a buck and still finds no takers.” This is Detroit, the city once described as “the arsenal of democracy” because its factories so quickly switched from making Fords to Flying Fortresses. The city that put the world on wheels and drove the American economy to previously unimagined prosperity.

The last time Detroit elected a Republican mayor was 1957. Only one Republican has made it to the city council since 1970. More than anywhere else in America (with the possible exception of Chicago) Detroit has been a one-party union city. Democratic politicians backed by the United Auto Workers and public employees unions have ruled virtually as they pleased. Along the way, many of the politicians ended up in jail on corruption charges and the bureaucrats made out with sweetheart deals on pensions and health benefits. Those sweetheart deals now account for most of the $20 billion in debt that put the city into bankruptcy.

There are too many disturbing parallels between Detroit and America. The national debt of $17 trillion gets a lot of attention, but the reality is the government’s actual debt, counting the unfunded liabilities of Social Security, Medicare and federal employee and retiree benefits, exceeds $86 trillion, according to former congressmen Chris Cox and Bill Archer. As they say, things that can’t go on forever, won’t.

Source: Washington Examiner

Middle class has been left behind by Obamanomics

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“Even though our businesses are creating new jobs and have broken record profits,” President Obama said in his economics address last week, “nearly all the income gains of the past 10 years have continued to flow to the top 1 percent.”

It’s odd that Obama touts these facts, because the facts indict his policies. This is even stranger: Many Republicans want to downplay these facts, even though they provide the GOP with an opening.

Obama’s first term, with all its tax hikes, regulations, mandates, subsidies and bailouts, saw stock markets rise, corporate earnings break records and the rich get richer, while median income stagnated and unemployment remained stubbornly high.

Obama rightly calls the last few years “a winner-take-all economy where a few are doing better and better and better, while everybody else just treads water.

Median household income has fallen by 5 percent since 2009 — when the recession ended and Obama came into office — as the Wall Street Journal pointed out after Obama’s speech. But corporate profits and the stock market keep hitting record highs.

How does Obama think these are points in his favor?

If he’s using this data to prove he’s no Marxist, fine. Point granted. But Obama seems to think that middle-class and working-class stagnation under Obamanomics somehow calls for more Obamanomics.

The unstated premise is this: More government means more equality, while the free market favors the rich and tramples on the rest.

Liberals and mainstream journalists believe this, but so do some Republicans. When Mitt Romney dismisses the lower 47 percent of earners as hopelessly liberal, he’s buying the notion that free enterprise is a system for the wealthy.

But Obama’s own facts help undermine that: Government grows, the wealthy, the big, and the well-connected pull away, and the rest of us struggle.

One reason: Obamanomics leans heavily on trickle-down economics. How does Obama promise to create jobs? With more loan guarantees to sell jumbo jets and more subsidies to make solar panels — taxpayer transfers to the big companies with the best lobbyists, with some crumbs hopefully falling to the working class.

Also, Obama’s regulations crush small businesses, protecting the big guys from competition. This hurts Mom & Pop and would-be entrepreneurs, but it also hurts the working class. New businesses are the engine of job growth, but new business formation has accelerated its decline in the last few years, hitting record lows.

This gives Republicans an opening to explain that they can deliver on Obama’s promises of helping the middle class and the working class, but they can do it by reversing Obamanomics — cutting everyone’s taxes, undoing the most onerous regulations, ending trickle-down corporate welfare and so on.

Call it free-market populism, or libertarian populism.

Trig’s Supermarkets, in Wisconsin, is an emblematic victim of Obamanomics. Trig’s employs about 1,100 people, with about two-thirds working part-time, according to local TV station WJFW. Under Obamacare, anyone who works more than 30 hours per week is considered full time, though, and Trig’s will be forced to provide health-care coverage for them.

The company crunched the numbers and decided this would spell bankruptcy. So, they told their workers their hours would be cut to below 30 per week. Nobody is happy with this, but the alternative was laying off all 1,100.

In a couple of ways, this story shows how Obamanomics undermines its stated goals and creates an opening for free-market populism.

Big-government regulations are supposed to hold big business accountable. But Trig’s story shows how they often do the opposite. Recall Walmart loudly supported Obamacare’s employer mandate, and Costco’s founder — who also spent at least $180,000 trying to elect Obama — publicly lobbied for Obamacare.

Walmart and Costco can afford the costs of government — and Costco even got a shout-out from Obama in his economics speech. Smaller employers aren’t so lucky.

Government tends to benefit the big and well-connected, and that’s not Mom & Pop. Every small-business owner is a potential Republican if the GOP becomes the party of free-market populism.

More important, though — and more numerous — are the hundreds of Trig’s employees seeing a reduction in hours. Obamacare was supposed to help them. Obama, on his economic-policy tour, suggests more government intervention will help them. But Obamacare is hurting them. Why should more of the same help?

Obama is right about the middle class being left behind. The working class is faring even worse. This doesn’t call for more Obamanomics. It calls for unrigging the game that Washington has rigged.

Source: Tim Carney

Bucshon Applauds Toyota Expansion Announcement

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220px-Larry_Bucshon,_official_portrait,_112th_CongressRepresentative Larry Bucshon (R-Ind.) released the following statement after Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana announced plans to expand production of the Highlander SUV in Princeton.  The $30 million expansion will create 200 new jobs.

 

Representative Larry Bucshon said:  “Today’s announcement is great news for Southwestern Indiana. I want to thank Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana for their continued commitment to investing in our local economy and for creating much needed Hoosier jobs. I commend everyone at Toyota for their hard work and dedication and look forward to seeing their operation grow.”

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