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Sharing the road is a two-way street

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Ron Bacon
Ron Bacon

 

Chances are, you have probably heard the phrase “Share the Road”. This is a campaign known for their efforts to educate motorists on how to safely operate alongside bicyclists on the street. This is likely to remain important as the number of people using bikes will almost certainly continue to rise rather than decline.

 

Southern Indiana provides some of the best scenery in the state and many people in our area take advantage of that either on foot or on bike. One of our biggest attractions in Warrick County is the Blue Grass Fish and Wildlife Area. Like many, I take advantage of this beautiful backdrop and walk these roads daily- usually around 3 to 5 miles a day.

 

In a tragic accident earlier this month, a gentleman riding his bike in nearby Vanderburgh County lost his life after being struck by a car. Unfortunately, he had run a stop sign. This was devastating to the driver and the community.  Thoughtful words of support began to pour in for everyone involved. These, however, are the types of accidents that we can and must work to prevent.

 

While on my daily walks, I have witnessed first-hand some of the problems we are currently facing between cars on the road and people riding bikes, walking or jogging on those same roads. I have noticed that while state law permits bicyclists to use most roads, they do not always comply with traffic laws. This includes things such as stopping at stop signs and looking both ways as well as occupying the correct side of the road.

 

Bicycles are considered vehicles and while motorists must be cautious of them, the same laws still apply to bicyclists as apply to cars. Thus, bikers should be moving in the same direction as traffic and adhere to any and all traffic laws. On the other hand, walkers and joggers are not vehicles. Therefore, those of us who prefer to walk or run are supposed to move against traffic so that they can always see what is coming towards them.

 

I wanted to raise awareness about this issue, not because I want to get bicyclists off of our roads, but because I am currently in the beginning stages of working with Warrick County Officials and the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) to get a grant which would provide for a bike and running lane on some of our county roads.

 

Nearby Vanderburgh County is already home to the Pigeon Creek Greenway Passage, a planned walking, jogging and biking trail along the Pigeon Creek and Ohio Riverfront that will connect to Angel Mounds and the Newburgh Riverfront.  I believe that a similar trail in northern Warrick County would be a great addition to our community as well as an added layer of safety for everyone. It will likely take time to come to fruition; however, ultimately, I would love for this trail to connect to the Vanderburgh County Greenway.

 

For years, there has been a great deal of emphasis placed on teaching drivers how to be on the lookout for bicyclists but I feel it is equally important that we help and encourage bicyclists to also be on the lookout for motorists and obey the rules of the road.   In order to achieve the highest level of safety on our roads, everyone needs to be educated on this issue. Sharing the road is a two-way street and with a bit of heightened awareness by everyone on the roads, we just might save a life.

 

 

Festivals that Showcase our District

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wendy
Summer is coming to a close, and fall is in the air. Just because summer is ending doesn’t mean there aren’t still plenty of family fun events to take advantage of in our community. Some of my favorite upcoming events include the traditional German festival, Kunstfest, which honors the founders of New Harmony. Another event is the annual Mount Vernon River Days festival on the banks of the Ohio River.  Both offer something unique for everyone.This year, the 2013 Kunstfest will be held on September 21 and 22 in New Harmony. This will mark 31 years of this traditional festival. Kunstfest is two days filled with music, delicious traditional foods, art and crafts and historic reenactments. Historic New Harmony will be filled with more than 150 street booths and stands, as well as the regular galleries and shops of this vibrant town.  There will also be historical craft demonstrators, including blacksmithing, broom and rope making, pottery, antique firearms and even bee keeping.

The annual Mount Vernon River Days festival will be held on September 13, 14 and 15. Located on the Ohio River riverfront, this festival will have over 100 food and vendor booths and will showcase fireworks, boat races and a parade. There will also be a 5K color run to benefit local children’s programs and a Bar-B-Que competition. This festival will showcase the city of Mount Vernon and the surrounding community.

I am proud to represent an area rich in tradition and I invite you to come to these special events and experience what we have to offer. Whether it’s your first time or you have run out of fingers and toes to count on, you are in for a truly exceptional experience.

 

2013 Deputy Sheriff Application Process

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Sheriff LogoPre-Applications for the 2013-2014 Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office Deputy Sheriff Candidate Pool are available online now. Persons interested in a career in local law enforcement as a deputy sheriff for the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office should complete a pre-application now.

Applications must be printed out, completed and returned to the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office by no later than Monday, September 23, 2013 at 4:00 PM.

The physical assessment and written tests will be conducted on Saturday, September 28th or Saturday, October 5th.

All necessary information for candidates is included with the downloadable pre-application package at http://goo.gl/52xd1F.

IS IT TRUE September 17, 2013

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

IS IT TRUE September 17, 2013

IS IT TRUE Mayor Winnecke fired back yesterday in response to the weekend revelation that Crowe-Horwath has blamed HCW for not being forthcoming with documentation requested by the Evansville City Council to vet the development agreement that Mayor Winnecke and the Evansville Redevelopment Commission both recommended as the right thing to do?…not only did the Mayor lash out at the people demanding vetting he enlisted Rob Hunden of the now famous Hunden Study that has been used by opponents of the hotel deal to prove their case and by the supporters to buffet their claims that this is the last piece of the puzzle to turn downtown Evansville into a vibrant prosperous urban center?…the most interesting statement in Hunden’s response is the statement below:?

“If this deal falls apart, the only alternative for a quality convention hotel will be a 100% publicly-owned project because no private developer will again spend the time or money to go down this road a fifth time,”

IS IT TRUE Hunden seems to have made a fairly profound observation with that statement with respect to a 253 room hotel but his statement does not necessarily apply to a smaller hotel that his own study and his memorandum state does not make sense financially?…the development agreement that the Mayor has signed with HCW does indeed offer direct support to the developer of $20 Million for the hotel and another $5.4 Million in a sweetheart deal for leasing parking spaces?…setting the Ford Center storage building and the infrastructure aside it seems as though the decision that the people of Evansville make is between the following three options?

1. Go forward with the HCW agreement and spend $25.4 Million for ZERO PERCENT OWNERSHIP

2. Spend roughly $50 Million for a 253 room hotel and parking garage and own ONE HUNDRED PERCENT OF THE FINISHED PRODUCT

3. Do nothing and wait a short time for a private developer to build a hotel with 120 – 150 rooms with some much smaller amount of taxpayer dollars

IS IT TRUE there is no guarantee that Option 3 will happen in the near future but market forces usually work when there is a profit to be made and every study published thus far points to a 120 – 150 room hotel as something that can stand alone much like the hotels on the east and west sides of Evansville?…the refusal of HCW to share financial information with the Mayor and the City Council is still disturbing and with many people that decision will disqualify them from preferred partner status?…even the old and the poor are required to bare their financial soul to the Social Security Administration to be approved for disability or long term care assistance?…we see no reason that this common practice is not extended to developers who are seeking public dollars?

IS IT TRUE that official federal government reports that came out recently conclude that under the Obama Administration that the rich have gotten richer and the poor have gotten poorer?…this is exactly the result expected so we wonder why so many people are surprised?…the community organizer who managed to be elected President seems to have turned into a GATED COMMUNITY ORGANIZER if the results of his policies are the measure of his worth?

Letter to Editor: Mayor Blames Crowe Horwath for Stalled Vetting Process

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Mayor Blames Crowe Horwath for Stalled Vetting Process

By: Brad Linzy

In a shocking report last night from News 25, Mayor Lloyd Winnecke called proposed vetting firm Crowe Horwath’s claim that the blame for the stalled vetting process lies with HCW “incredible”. It is not entirely clear whether the Mayor meant “incredible” like “The Incredible Hulk” is “incredible”. Given the tone of his voice and the circumstances, it might be safe to assume he wasn’t calling Crowe’s actions “unbelievably awesome”. Instead, it appears what the Mayor really meant was “incredible” as in “incredulous”, as in “lacking credulity”, as in he thinks they are lying or fudging the truth about why they would refuse a $15,000 vetting contract.

Let’s rewind the clock to September 5th. Just after the 8-1 Council vote to secure Crowe as an outside firm to perform the additional vetting this Mayor said to the Courier Press, “…we certainly appreciate the fact that council has outstanding questions. We think it’s our role to facilitate to make sure they get their questions answered.”

Now, a scant 10 days later, the vetting process has ground to a halt and this Mayor is blaming the outside firm – the one without a single dog in this fight – for stalling the vetting. Furthermore, he again trots out Rob Hunden – the guy to whom his Administration paid $105k to produce a study he could use to gain support for a predetermined goal of building a 250 room hotel – to say those in opposition of the deal are “cherry picking” information from his report, which is not only a mischaracterization of what we’re doing when we try to use relevant quotes from the report, but is a total distraction from the story at hand, namely the stalled vetting this Mayor vowed to help facilitate.

Distraction is the key word here. The only political move this Administration and his toadies have given the current situation – beyond the honorable tact of disavowing support for the HCW deal – is to distract and confuse, to lay down a smoke screen of misdirection and innuendo and redouble their efforts to have the City Council delay the vote they previously had said should not be delayed while they scramble to convince Councilmembers and probably themselves there is a CPA firm out there who will take on this backroom “vetting” without the ability to release the actual findings to the client (the City Council).

Even Councilwoman Robinson is jumping on the Hope Train. She told the Courier Press, “We don’t want to throw in the towel because one company said no.” By this statement, it is clear Councilwoman Robinson believes we should go forward and find a CPA firm to “vet” this deal without actually releasing all the requested information to the City Council. If I am wrong, I hope she corrects me.

In what was perhaps the least shocking, but nonetheless appalling, among Monday’s developments were the statements of Councilman Weaver who managed to in a single breath defend HCW and call into question both the maturity and trustworthiness of some of his colleagues. The Councilman criticized the leaking of internal emails to “bloggers”, using that as a defense of HCW’s refusal to cooperate.

One thing is for certain – this deal is dead. The support is not in the community for this taxpayer funded hotel deal with HCW and the City Council members know it. The votes for this deal were not there at the last meeting, so they voted for vetting 8-1. This latest development is the final nail in the coffin. The chickens for this deal have had their heads severed. Their bodies are currently running around frantically looking for a good place to die. Let the blame game begin.

Hunden Memorandum to Mayor Winnecke Regarding Hotel Statements

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MEMORANDUM

TO: Mayor Winnecke
FROM: Rob Hunden, Hunden Strategic Partners
DATE: September 14, 2013

RE: Response to Incorrect Statements

John Dunn and others have made statements that are incorrect regarding the proposed hotel deal.
Any concerned taxpayer would rightly want to know how such deals work, but some pronouncements have been incorrect and confused the public. It is a complicated project and one that is not easily summed up in sound bites or quick analysis. It has been attacked as being too expensive, not fair to other hotels and simply a bad deal for the city. None of these attacks are true.

John Dunn, in particular, has cherry picked our report and also used half-truths or misstatements to
convince people of his position on television, in newspapers and other forums.

Dunn’s most glaring misstatement is that the hotel will be creating another convention center that
will compete with the Centre. Not true. The full-service convention hotel is exactly what the Centre
needs to attract and host groups. The proposed hotel will be a full-service convention hotel, which
includes some of its own function space in order for it to bring in new meetings business, help support the convention center and support its own group business when there are no conventions at the Centre. This is the definition of a full-service hotel: a hotel with food and beverage and meeting space. Without these critical amenities, this hotel would be no different or better than the existing number of limited service “rooms-only” hotels that do nothing to generate demand. Limited service hotels like Dunn’s only absorb existing demand. So there is no new convention or conference center. There is simply, and finally, a full-service convention hotel that is required to make the (convention) Centre actually work. Without that function space, the hotel will not be able to induce as much demand and would be forced to compete more with the existing hotels in town. With the function space, it can generate much of its own, new business.

Dunn states that the HSP study says that only a 125 – 150 room hotel is called for downtown. What our study suggests is that 150 rooms is the largest size of hotel that a bank will finance (i.e. what is feasible in the private market), for all of the reasons discussed in the study. But what we also strenuously state is that in order to do its job of saving a failing convention center and revitalizing the group industry locally – the whole purpose of the project – it needs to be a larger, full-service hotel of 240-270 rooms with meeting space and food/beverage options.

The realities must be discussed in the context of the economic development challenge that the city and county have before them: a dead convention center that has been that way for years. The city isn’t simply trying to develop a hotel for sport. It’s an economic development project to help make the convention Centre function again. It will also help the arena, generate jobs, create new restaurants and bring downtown a new tower of apartments. Altogether, the project will make the downtown function at a much higher level.

Will the new hotel hurt existing hotels? No more so than if John Dunn and one other hotelier open
a limited-service hotel at about the same time. This hotel is adding 253 rooms to the market. This is the equivalent of two of Dunn’s new Courtyards. We show that just like the market will absorb his hotel in short order due to market growth, the market will absorb this hotel in a short period of time, which means a very limited effect on existing hotels. The great news about this hotel, unlike a Courtyard, is that this hotel will actually generate a significant portion of its own business right away (we estimate that 57% of its rooms nights will be new to it or other hotels in the community) and within one to two years will be absorbed 100% into the growing local market, just like Dunn’s hotel has been. If the city or HCW were proposing a 300 or 400 room hotel, one could understand his concern. We specifically recommended 240-270 rooms so that it would both grow group demand AND be absorbed easily into the market without a major oversupply event.

HSP has studied other markets where convention center hotels were added with public subsidy and the results for the competitive set ended up, in nearly every example, being better than the index for the rest of the country and compared to cities that did not invest in their hotels. Indianapolis is a great example of a city that continued to invest in their hotels and they have all, in the aggregate, improved their performance over time. Cincinnati, which did not invest in any convention hotel over the same period, saw their hotel market suffer in relation. And this was accomplished in Indianapolis, which has a tiny corporate market compared with Cincinnati. There are numerous other examples where a rising tide brought on by the convention hotel lifted all boats.

John Dunn also stated that the city did not ask him to participate in this project. On the contrary, during our initial study I met with Dunn Hospitality and asked them if they would be interested in the
project. Dunn’s reaction was that they specialized in limited service hotels, did not understand how a full-service hotel could work and was not interested in the development. The RFQ that the city issued was open to any developer who had developed full-service hotels of at least $30 million. Based on Dunn’s statements to me, the implication was they were never interested in a full-service hotel.

The public and elected officials should also understand that this is the fourth time the city has
attempted to attract a qualified developer for this project. It failed three times before because it had
unrealistic expectations of what the needed public investment would be. After scaring away strong developers the first two times, the city attracted only locals who had no previous large hotel development experience the third time. The city was smart to take a breath, study the matter and then go out to the market and, knowing that they would need to invest much more to get the right hotel, encouraged qualified developers to submit for the right project. HCW is a qualified and well capitalized developer and submitted the best bid. One of the key alternative developers in the process suggested a 100% publicly-financed hotel project, which is how half of the convention hotels in the US have been funded. This would surely not have gone over well in Evansville, but these are the choices when it comes to this type of development. The city chose the privately owned, publicly-induced financial model. The city therefore gets the product it wants and needs, but puts the operating risk on the private sector. It also gets a more vibrant downtown with more restaurants and more people working and living downtown.

Cost. Is the hotel project complicated? Yes? Is it a major public investment? Yes. The public investment is paying for all of the public assets and extra amenities necessary to create a convention hotel product that will attract groups to downtown Evansville, and is paying for things that private developers and banks will not finance because they are public amenities (parking garage, connectors, connector building, infrastructure improvements, public portions of the hotel, etc.). Will this project continue the positive transformation of downtown? Yes. Does Evansville have the funding to support this project and many others after it? Yes. Is this the best deal that Evansville can get for this project? Yes.

If this deal falls apart, the only alternative for a quality convention hotel will be a 100% publicly owned project, because no private developer will again spend the time or money to go down this road for the fifth time.

In John Friend’s recent analysis, he suggests that the city is paying for 62% of this deal and that is
much more expensive than the Fort Wayne project. He also says that the average subsidy for a convention hotel is only 25%. This is not true. As anyone who read our report knows, we profiled nearly 50 convention hotel deals across the US. About half of them were 100% bought and paid for by the public sector issuing bonds for the whole project. The other half averaged a 31 percent subsidy. In total, the average subsidy between all of them, including those 100% subsidized, is more than 60%. On the total project cost, which includes public and private elements, the City’s investment is limited to $37.5 million, which includes $20 million for the hotel (46.5% of hotel total) and $17.5 million for its own public projects. The developer’s investment is not limited and is required to be whatever it takes to get the quality of project built that they have agreed to. This continues to increase, while the city’s investment and risk remain the same. Locked into the development agreement, the city’s participation in the hotel is 46.5% ($20 million/$43.8 million total). This percentage could decrease if the project cost increases, as the developer will have to fund the difference. For the total $76.3M project, the city’s portion is now less than half as the administration has negotiated an increase in private investment since the April 2013 presentation to the City Council.

Comparing this deal to Fort Wayne’s similar project is like comparing apples and oranges. The Evansville deal includes a large garage (not counted in the Fort Wayne figures), three connectors, a connector building, a higher quality hotel and brand with more amenities and space, is a union project, is being built in a much stronger economy (Fort Wayne was bid and built at the worst part of the recession, when bidders were desperate and commodity costs were at their lows). Having the same concerns as John Dunn, we asked two different construction companies to review the HCW budget. We asked companies and professionals who built the convention hotels in Fort Wayne, Indianapolis and Louisville. In addition to the issues stated above, which they said lowered Fort Wayne’s costs, our construction estimators said the Doubletree hotel is of higher quality and it is a taller structure being built in a seismic zone. There are six primary areas they said lowered Fort Wayne’s costs, all legitimate. After their review, they state that our costs are appropriate. Even so, the city still has the ability to review and approve budgets.

As it relates to Fort Wayne’s $47 million hotel deal, the incentives were as comprehensive as
Evansville’s, although with many different components. It included a $6 million state CREED tax credit, the fullest tax abatement allowed by Indiana law (worth millions over ten years), occupancy guarantees (supported by an annual cash contribution of $250,000), a publicly-built garage, connectors and other infrastructure items. Despite the fact that their deal, for the reasons described above, was much less expensive, they still needed to throw every economic incentive at the deal that was available. When one considers the Fort Wayne hotel, White Lodging was only willing to take on $16 million in equity and debt for the 250-room project. The public provided the other $12 million on the hotel and an additional $19 million for related projects (garage, connectors, similar to Evansville). In Evansville’s case, HCW is willing to take on at least $23.8 million for the hotel. So when truly comparing the deals, Fort Wayne committed $31 million out of $47 million in public funding (66%) for their hotel project and related amenities and White only put in $16 million. Here, the developer is putting in $23.8 million on a much more compelling hotel, plus building a $15 million apartment tower at their cost. On the hotel alone, HCW is putting in 49% more ($23.8 million vs. $16 million) than White did in Fort Wayne. The city’s contributions (46.5% on the hotel), as discussed, are in line with the market and comparable deals, and the public amenities and assets being built are more comprehensive.

Based on the cost adjustments above, and assuming everything else was equal, the cost for Evansville’s hotel vs. Fort Wayne’s is justified and explained. Evansville is getting a higher quality product with more components.

The alternative to this deal, as discussed, is a 100% public bond-financed project, which is the opposite direction than most want to go, since it would cost the public twice as much while losing HCW, their apartment tower portion, and their national restaurant expertise.

Any city considering this type of deal faces the same challenges, both in the total cost, the attacks from other hoteliers and negotiating a fair deal for taxpayers. You have negotiated a fair deal. You also are creating one of the most transformative mixed-use hotel-based projects we have seen, especially in a market the size of Evansville. The benefits outweigh the costs and even the local hoteliers should see their fortunes increase due to this project.

Mayor Winnecke Issues Press Release on Hotel Vetting

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Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke
Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke

Independent Financial Review of the Downtown Convention Hotel Project

“First and foremost, the city laid out an extensive process in the development agreement with HCW that will protect the city’s investment. The approved bonds would not be sold until the bank conducted its own due diligence and provided a commitment letter.
The Administration and HCW agreed to a third party financial evaluation so that an outside entity could review and provide a report as to the credit worthiness of HCW and its ability to fund its portion of the project per the Development Agreement. In fact, HCW has already provided two banking references indicating its ability to fund its portion of the project. HCW also agreed to a background check of the partners involved with the investment.

The City Council recommended Crowe Horwath, a CPA firm without prior experience in reviewing third party financial evaluations between municipalities and private third party participants.

The Crowe Horwath engagement terms called for HCW to also be part of the agreement and disclose specific personal financial information. HCW, maintained from the beginning of Councils request for financial information, that it was willing to provide personal information, but only to a third party company that has experience in financial analysis independent of either party, and any potential conflict of interest; one that performs on behalf of municipalities and protects the rights of the third party supplying such information.

HCW has experience with other public-private ventures and recommended a company known as Springsted, which is one of the largest and most established independent public sector advisory firms in the United States. As an independent advisor, Springsted has no relationship or affiliation with any underwriting firm or private developer. This ensures they work solely on behalf of the clients they serve, providing objective advice and candid evaluations whether they are issuing bonds, selecting investment vehicles or negotiating a development agreement.

Additionally, Crowe communicated directly to HCW this past week that is was not equipped to make the appropriate recommendations, as they are a CPA firm and handle clients in a manner (disclosure and liability) that does not necessarily lend itself to addressing the requirements of a third party financial analysis process.

As of today, we have been notified that Crowe Horwath has removed itself from this process as they were not able to craft a non-disclosure agreement that would protect the private proprietary financial information of the private party to the review process.

HCW has provided the City attorney and City Council’s attorney, a two page non-disclosure agreement that provides the financial information the city needs to determine the financial ability of HCW to comply to the Development Agreement and the protection HCW needs to feel comfortable in disclosing its personal information.

At this point, we are still willing to accommodate Council and answer any final questions that they may have, whether it is engaging another firm or adhering to the defined process already established in the development agreement.

It is our hope that this work can be done in the future to allow a vote on this very important project.”

Lloyd Winnecke, Mayor
City of Evansville

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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nick hermanBelow is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, September 13, 2013.

Brandon Whitledge Failure to Register as a Sex or Violent Offender-Class D Felony

(Enhanced to C Felony Due to Prior Convictions)

John Moore Jr Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor Enhanced to 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.

Vetting Firm Bows Out, Mayor’s Office Holds Onto Hope

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City Council Attorney, Scott Danks
City Council Attorney, Scott Danks

City Council Attorney Scott Danks stated Sunday that he has received confirmation from Crowe-Horwath that the accounting firm has no interest or intention of accepting the task of vetting the development agreement signed by the Mayor of Evansville and approved by the Evansville Redevelopment Commission. The decision by Crowe-Horvath was made based on the refusal of the selected developer HCW of Branson, Missouri’s mandate that no financial information supplied for the purpose of vetting could be shown to or spoken about to the Evansville City Council (Crowe’s client) or the Office of the Mayor of Evansville.

The news of HCW’s secrecy and Crowe’s unwillingness to vet the deal has not deterred Mayor Winnecke’s office from trying to breath life into a deal that is rapidly losing a thin base of support in the City Council and among the people of Evansville. Upon hearing the news, the Mayor’s Office asserted that they are still planning discussions with HCW for today.

The Finance Chair of the City Council John Friend, CPA has called the deal “as good as dead” and two other members of the City Council (O’Daniel and Lindsey) have publicly announced they will be voting no. Five votes are needed to defeat a resolution and sources tell the CCO that there are sufficient no votes to kill this deal should the Mayor’s Office succeed in resurrecting it for vetting.

This weekend’s news has made it clear to all involved or interested that Mayor Winnecke and the Evansville Redevelopment Commission along with City Council members Jonathan Weaver and Missy Mosby have chosen to support this deal with this developer without the benefit of a typical vetting procedure.

The question arises about who will vet any documentation that HCW may choose to provide the Mayor’s Office should their “HAIL MARY” efforts produce a formal financial grant application package.