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Traffic Stop for Speeding Nets Meth, Marijuana and Prescription Pills

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Traffic Stop for Speeding Nets Meth, Marijuana and Prescription Pills

Posey County – Tuesday morning, October 8, at approximately 9:40 a.m., Trooper Kylen Compton stopped the driver of a 2006 Dodge Sprinter for driving 75 mph in a 55 mph zone on SR 62 near Sauerkraut Road. The driver was identified as James Braddock, 44, of Eldorado, IL. While talking to the driver, Trooper Compton detected an odor of marijuana inside the vehicle. A search revealed small amounts of marijuana, meth, pills and drug paraphernalia. Braddock was arrested and taken to the Posey County Jail where he was later released after posting bond.

ARRESTED AND CHARGES:
• James Braddock, 44, Eldorado, IL
1. Possession of Meth, Class D Felony
2. Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance, Class D Felony
3. Possession of Paraphernalia, Class A Misdemeanor
4. Possession of Marijuana, Class A Misdemeanor

Arresting Officer: Trooper Kylen Compton, Indiana State Police

State and 15 schools sue IRS to block impact of employer mandate Zoeller: IRS exceeded its authority, contravened law Congress passed

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Greg Zoeller
Greg Zoeller

INDIANAPOLIS – The State of Indiana and 15 school corporations filed a lawsuit today against the Internal Revenue Service, challenging a new IRS regulation that imposes the costly “employer mandate” requirements of the Affordable Care Act onto state and local governments. The plaintiffs seek declaratory judgments and injunctions that would prevent the IRS from financially penalizing the State and its political subdivisions. They contend the Affordable Care Act or ACA as passed by Congress does not allow financial penalties in states that did not create their own health insurance exchanges; and that the financial penalties – which are based on the total number of employees – cannot be applied to government employers.

“This case is about the fundamental relationship between the State and federal government.  We respect the United States Supreme Court’s ruling last year upholding the individual mandate to buy health insurance; but it did not address the recent IRS regulations extending the reach of the ACA’s employer mandate.  We contend the ACA improperly regulates sovereign states and does not authorize the IRS to do what it is doing in treating the State as a taxable entity.  We are raising this respectful challenge for the federal courts to decide these questions,” Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller said.  As the lawyer for state government, Zoeller’s office filed the lawsuit today in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.

Joining the State as co-plaintiffs are 15 Indiana school corporations:

• Metropolitan School District of Martinsville, Martinsville, Ind.

• Perry Central Community Schools, Leopold, Ind.

• Benton Community School Corporation, Fowler, Ind.

• Community School Corporation of Eastern Hancock County, Charlottesville, Ind.

• John Glenn School Corporation, Walkerton, Ind.

• Monroe-Gregg School District, Monrovia, Ind.

• Mooresville Consolidated School Corporation, Mooresville, Ind.

• North Lawrence Community Schools, Bedford, Ind.

• Northwestern Consolidated School District of Shelby County, Fairland, Ind.

• Shelbyville Central Schools, Shelbyville, Ind.

• Southwest Parke Community School Corporation, Montezuma, Ind.

• Vincennes Community School Corporation, Vincennes, Ind.

• Madison Consolidated Schools, Madison, Ind.

• South Henry School Corporation, Straughn, Ind.

• Southwestern Jefferson County Consolidated School Corporation, Hanover, Ind.

As political subdivisions of the State, school corporations are faced with reducing the hours of their part-time employees in order to avoid the financial penalties of the IRS regulation under the employer mandate.

“The costly and burdensome employer mandate the IRS wrongly applies to government employers such as our school corporation interferes with our ability to efficiently manage our workforce. We always strive to be good stewards of tax dollars in educating our community’s students, but our school corporation’s efforts are undermined by the IRS overstepping its bounds that Congress set.  As public servants who revere the Constitution, we join with the State in asking the federal court to correct the IRS’s overreach,” said Assistant Superintendent Randy Taylor of MSD of Martinsville.

IRS contravenes specific instructions of Congress
As passed by Congress in 2010, the Affordable Care Act permits states to decide whether to operate their own health insurance exchanges or leave that task for the federal government. The unambiguous wording of the ACA says that citizens in a state with a state-run exchange can qualify for federally subsidized insurance; while citizens in states with a federally run exchange can use the exchange to shop for coverage, but will not qualify for federally subsidized insurance. Though some states have chosen to create their own state exchanges, seven states chose hybrid federal-state exchanges and 27 states including Indiana declined to create exchanges.  Since Indiana declined, the ACA therefore required the federal government to operate an exchange usable by Indiana citizens; it opened October 1.

The IRS also administers the federal premium subsidies available to those citizens who use exchanges. In May, the IRS issued a regulation that goes beyond what Congress authorized, contrary to the specific language of the ACA statute.  The IRS regulation offers federal insurance premium subsidies in all states, not just those the ACA specified. That regulation in turn has the effect of charging a future financial penalty against non-compliant employers in all states, even though the ACA that Congress passed authorizes the penalty to be collected onlyin states where a state-established exchange exists.

By exceeding the specific authority Congress granted it, the IRS is interfering with the State’s ability to manage its own employees and thwarting the State’s policy to avoid employer mandate penalties – and that in turn violates the Tenth Amendment, the ACA and the Administrative Procedure Act, the lawsuit alleges. The plaintiffs ask the federal court to issue an injunction blocking the IRS regulation and resulting penalties from being applied against the State and school corporations since that is contrary to the ACA.  Also, the plaintiffs ask the federal court to issue a declaratory judgment finding the IRS regulation and associated tax reporting and certification requirements unconstitutional and void under the Tenth Amendment.

Ripple effect: Avoiding enormous financial penalties
Among the issues with the penalties faced by employers who don’t provide minimal essential health coverage: The employer mandate defines “full-time” as working 30 hours per week on average. That federal definition conflicts with state government’s longtime personnel policy that defines state employees as full time — and eligible for insurance benefits — if they work 37.5 hours per week or more. Full-time state employees already are eligible for health insurance but part-time state employees are not.  A preliminary analysis found the State has fewer than 65 part-time employees who work an average of at least 30 hours per week but fewer than 37.5 hours who would be considered “full time” under the ACA.

Under the employer mandate, large employers who do not offer minimum essential coverage face penalties of $2,000 per employee for all full-time employees in the organization (after the first 30), even if just one employee obtains federally-subsidized insurance through the IRS regulation. For example, if a private company employing 1,000 people does not offer minimum essential coverage and some workers then obtain subsidized coverage through health-care exchanges, the IRS could impose penalties of $2,000 for 970 employees, or a total $1.94 million.  For State government, with approximately 28,000 employees in the executive branch (not including the legislative and judicial branches), the potential penalty for non-compliance could be approximately $56 million or more.  Although the U.S. Treasury Department issued a July 2 statement announcing its intention to postpone enforcement of the financial penalties until 2015, Zoeller said the lack of a formal legally binding document and the potentially draconian penalty amounts prompted the plaintiffs to seek relief from the court.

Zoeller reiterated the IRS regulation potentially subjecting the State to financial penalties it would not otherwise face is contrary to the actual wording of the ACA.  But to mitigate the risk of financial penalties due to the lack of a state exchange, the State Personnel Department recently notified agencies that the State’s definition of “part-time” employee is being reduced from less than 37.5 hours to less than 30 hours per week – below the threshold where either employer-sponsored coverage or federally-subsidized insurance would be triggered.

“It’s very unfortunate that by unconstitutionally interfering with our state personnel policy, the IRS has caused hardship not only to the State but to a number of our state employees who will see their hours reduced through no fault of their own, and it inflicts similar injuries on schools and local governments and their part-time employees,” Zoeller said. One issue in the lawsuit is whether the federal government through the IRS can treat the State government and its political subdivisions as taxable entities like private businesses. The plaintiffs contend it cannot.

School corporations who employ part-time workers – such as instructional aides for learning disabled students, substitute teachers, part-time coaches and extra-curricular staff or cafeteria workers – have already reduced the hours of non-benefit-eligible employees in order to avoid financial penalties, the Attorney General added.

Zoeller said it is up to federal policymakers in Congress, not the IRS, to decide whether to extend federal insurance premium subsidies into states that do not have state-run exchanges. He noted the focus of the lawsuit is not directly about whether private-sector workers should be able to purchase insurance at subsidized rates; that’s a decision for Congress. But State government should not be saddled with potentially huge financial penalties because the IRS promulgated a rule that Congress never approved, Zoeller said.

Attorney General defends sovereignty of state government
In May 2010, representing Indiana, Zoeller’s office joined the 26-state legal challenge to the constitutionality of newly-passed Affordable Care Act.  The United States Supreme Court in June 2012 upheld the ACA’s individual mandate, as a tax. But the Court struck down a portion of the federal health care law that would have required states to dramatically expand Medicaid or forgo the program entirely. Zoeller noted U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion striking down the mandatory Medicaid expansion opened the door to states bringing new legal challenges to other portions of the ACA.

“The fact that many citizens lack health insurance is an issue for policymakers, and my office takes no position regarding the congressional debate over funding the ACA.  I never complain when private plaintiffs file lawsuits to challenge the state authority that my office defends; but now our role is reversed and Indiana has initiated this lawsuit asking the court whether the IRS has exceeded its federal taxing authority over state governments. This respectful challenge is an appropriate role for the Office of the Attorney General to vigorously assert the ability of the State and its political subdivisions to manage their workforces in our American system of federalism,” Zoeller said.

If other schools decide to join, the complaint can be amended later to include additional co-plaintiffs.  The public school corporations are represented by Bose McKinney & Evans LLP.

The lawsuit, State of Indiana et al v. IRS et al is one of approximately 3,000 civil suits and 1,200 criminal appeals the Indiana Attorney General’s Office handles at any given time, and Zoeller noted his office’s participation in the case will not distract from its work on other cases representing the State.  The AG’s Office’s solicitor general, Thomas M. Fisher, is overseeing the State’s legal representation in the multi-plaintiff lawsuit. Two similar challenges to the IRS regulation brought by other plaintiffs are pending in federal district courts in Oklahoma and Washington, D.C.

Named as defendants in the Indiana’s lawsuit are the Internal Revenue Service and Acting IRS Commissioner Daniel I. Werfel, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and Secretary of the Treasury Jacob Lew, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.  No court dates have been set yet.

NOTE:  At this link is the complaint filed today in U.S. District Court in the lawsuit State of Indiana et al v. IRS et al.  At this link is a financial circular issued by the State Personnel Department.

“Addressing Domestic Violence: A Changing Landscape “

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ywcaDATE: Friday, October 11th LOCATION: YWCA Parlor TIME: NOON

In its ongoing efforts to promote Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the YWCA will be hosting the Honorable Peter C. Macdonald, retired District Judge, Third Judicial District, Commonwealth of Kentucky for this month’s Personally Speaking Series event. Judge Macdonald will be speaking on the topic “Addressing Domestic Violence: A Changing Landscape”. Domestic violence is a dangerous epidemic spreading across our community, affecting over five million women per year across the United States. These crimes have no regard to age, socio‐economic status, race, religion, or educational background. Without intervention, education and resources, the cycle of violence will continue.

According to the Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence Annual Report 2011‐2012, on one day in Indiana:

  • ï‚·  1,051 domestic violence victims found refuge in emergency shelters or transitional housing.
  • ï‚·  788 adults and children received nonresidential assistance and services, including counseling, legal advocacy

    and support groups.

  • ï‚·  435 domestic violence hotline calls were answered.
  • ï‚·  There were 218 unmet requests for services, most because there were not enough emergency shelters and

    transitional housing units. In one year in Indiana:

  • ï‚·  26,536 men, women and children were served by domestic violence programs.
  • ï‚·  Children under the age of 17 accounted for 6,677 of those served.
  • ï‚·  964 people could not find shelter because they were filled to capacity.
  • ï‚·  There were 63,158 crisis calls to domestic violence programs.

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Evansville and Vanderburgh County law enforcement agencies responded to 2,068 domestic violence calls in 2012.

Peter C. Macdonald served as a District Judge in the Commonwealth of Kentucky from 1978 until his retirement on January 6, 2003. Judge Macdonald’s experience in domestic violence cases has led to his teaching throughout the United States and in seven other countries on that subject, with a specialization in the full faith and credit provisions of the Violence Against Women Act and firearms legislation related to domestic violence. Judge Macdonald appeared on 60 Minutes because of his experience with domestic violence and the military. In March 2003, he completed a three‐year term as a member of the Defense Task Force on Domestic Violence, having been appointed by former Secretary of Defense William Cohen. He is currently serving as a member of the Board of Directors of the YWCA of Nashville and Middle Tennessee and as a member of Nashville Mayor Karl Dean’s Domestic Violence Safety Assessment Team. Judge Macdonald is a graduate of Vanderbilt University and the University of Louisville’s Brandeis School of Law.

Now in its 23rd season, the YWCA’s Personally Speaking series continues to raise money for services to victims of domestic violence. Tickets to these noontime presentations are $6.00 and there is general seating. A complete listing of speakers may be found at www.ywcaevansville.org.

The YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all. The Evansville YWCA is a member of the YWCA of the U.S.A., the oldest and largest women’s membership movement in the country.

Over the years, YWCA programs have changed to meet the evolving needs of women and girls. In 1979, the YWCA opened the first domestic violence shelter in Evansville. Other current programs include a transition housing program for women in recovery, an emergency shelter for homeless women and children, the Live Y’ers after‐school and mentoring program for at‐risk girls in grades 3 through 12, and the Summer Fun day camp for school‐aged children. Special programs and events for the general public are also offered. Visit www.ywcaevansville.org for more information.

YWCA 24‐Hour Domestic Violence Hotline • 866‐367‐9922

Pet of the Week-Dutch

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vhs

Dutch

Dutch – Dutch is a handsome 85 lb. Lab/retriever mix who came to the VHS with his brother when their owner’s health went severely downhill. He is 4 years old. He has come out of his shell a lot since he’s been at the VHS, and he is a very friendly and loving boy now! He is pretty stocky, but he doesn’t take advantage of his strength. He does well on car rides and loves meeting new people. Klutch’s adoption fee is $100. He is ready to go home with you TODAY microchipped, neutered, and vaccinated, complete with a collar and sample bag of food!

 

www.vhslifesaver.org

 

 

Amanda Bienhaus

 

Public Relations, Media, and Special Events

 

Vanderburgh Humane Society

 

(812) 426-2563 ext. 211

 

a.bienhaus@vhslifesaver.org

 

Owensville Man Arrested for Child Molesting

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ISP

 

Gibson County – Tuesday morning, October 8, at approximately 10:55, Indiana State Police arrested Shannon Fryrear, 48, of Owensville, after a criminal investigation revealed he allegedly molested a Gibson County girl on numerous occasions between 2004 and 2007. A felony warrant for his arrest was issued yesterday afternoon. Fryrear was arrested at his mother’s residence located at 201 East Indiana Street in Princeton. He was taken to the Gibson County Jail where he was later released after posting a $4,000 bond.

Indiana State Police initiated a criminal investigation on September 10 after receiving information Fryrear had allegedly molested the Gibson County girl years ago. During the investigation, Detective Tobias Odom and Trooper Wes Kuykendall were able to determine Fryrear had allegedly molested the girl numerous times between 2004 and 2007 when she was between 8 and 12-years-old.

ARRESTED AND CHARGES:
• Shannon Fryrear, 48, 403 Bittner Street, Owensville, IN
1. Child Molesting, Class A Felony

Investigating Officers: Detective Tobias Odom and Trooper Wes Kuykendall

Whose Fault Would Default Be?

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obama biden

President Obama is trying to establish the idea that any default on the national debt will be 100 percent the fault of the House Republicans. He has said, for instance, that Congress must “remove the threat of default and vote to raise the debt ceiling.” The treasury secretary, Jack Lew, said on Sunday that the administration would have “no option” to prevent a default.

But this is nonsense. The president is bound by his oath to uphold the Constitution and, as the distinguished–and liberal–historian Sean Wilentz points out in the New York Times today the 14th Amendment says that “the validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law” is sacrosanct and “shall not be questioned.” He
points out that the language was put in the 14th Amendment precisely to prevent Congress from welching on the enormous debt run up during the Civil War.

In an emergency, the president can certainly act to prevent a default, and thus uphold the constitutional mandate. Indeed, he would be violating his oath of office not to.

Default is nothing more than a failure to pay the interest and principal due on a debt in a timely manner. According to figures in a Power Line post, right now the government is spending about $17 billion every business day. It takes in about $14 billion in revenues. Thus it needs to borrow about $3 billion every business day to make up the difference.

A failure to raise the debt ceiling would prevent the government from borrowing that money. But it would not prevent the government from paying the interest on the debt, which amounts to only about 8 percent of revenues. Nor would it prevent the government from rolling over existing debt, which it does routinely.

What it would have to do is prioritize what bills it pays, leaving some unpaid. Families often have to do this to cover temporary cash shortfalls and there’s not a reason in the world the treasury can’t do the same. It would be embarrassing, to be sure, for the richest country on earth to have to stiff a few creditors for a while, but it would not be a default and would have few if any global financial consequences. States often do this, including Obama’s Illinois, which has debt problems that make the federal government’s look like a day at the beach.

So if this country defaults on its debt, it will be 100 percent the fault of President Obama. He has the power to prevent it. He needs only to exercise it.

Source: John Gordon

New Coaches, Administrator Named at EVSC

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EVSCNorth High School Baseball Coach
Jeremy Jones has been appointed head baseball coach for North High School, effective Oct. 8.  Jones is a social studies teacher at Washington Middle School and has been the head baseball coach for Bosse High School since 2012.  He holds a B.S. degree from USI and a Master’s of Education degree from Indiana Wesleyan.


North High School Head Swim Coach
Errick Lickey has been appointed head swim coach for North High School, effective Oct. 8.  Lickey is a special education teacher at North High School and served as assistant swim coach last school year.  He has a B.S. degree from USI.


Transformation Strategist

Kelsey Wright has been appointed transformation strategist for the Office of Transformational Support, effective Oct. 8.  Wright served as an elementary teacher at Indianapolis Lighthouse Charter School from 2010-2013 and just began as an EVSC Data Coach in August in the EVSC Administration Building.  Wright holds a B.S. degree from Ball State University.

Meth Lab Map of the United States

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A startling map of the United States showing the number of meth lab incidents per state shows the Midwest leading the pack with Missouri, Tennessee, Indiana topping 1,000 per year each which looks to be more than all of the states west of the Rocky Mountains combined.

It is also worth noting that Vanderburgh County has more instances that most of the states.

Meth Lab Map HuffPost

Source for Map: Huffington Post

Storage Wars 2 v. 2

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By Jason Dowd Vice President of Pinnacle Computer Services

www.pinncomp.com or 1-812-476-6662

In our last exciting installment https://city-countyobserver.com/2013/08/19/storage-wars-part-1-2/, we discussed RAID. Using RAID it was very common by the end of the 90’s to see servers with so much storage that the drives had to be placed in an external unit and connected to the computer via a thick, bulky, and highly length constrained SCSI cable.

If you have an external hard drive that you attach to your computer via a USB cable, that’s pretty much the idea except that your small, inexpensive external USB drive probably has more storage capacity than the disk arrays of even large database servers in the late 90’s. Mine is 2 Terabytes with transfer rates of nearly 1 Gbps, and it cost me less than $150.

Around this same time in the late 90’s, someone had the following clever idea. Instead of having every server connect to its own, separate disk array, what if we just had one big disk array to which every server connected?

That is the basic ides of a storage area network, or a “SAN” as it is known in the industry. Now, when we configure logical disks in the array, we also specify which connected server gets to use that logical disk. Also, those bulky, length constrained SCSI cables have been replaced with standard copper and optical networking cables which can be run for much greater lengths.

Currently, SAN’s are a mature technology and are pervasive in large organizations with adoption in medium-sized organizations growing at a feverish pace. However, in spite of maturity and wide adoption, the SAN space is currently brimming with innovation mostly from small and niche players scrambling for a piece of the storage pie. At the same time there are also a few large vendors who, due to questionable business practices and/or loss of technological leadership, are seeing significant loss of market share.

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336TB of Storage in 5U of rack space. Just look at that baby!

As such, this is an extremely exciting space to watch. But for anyone who either owns a SAN or is thinking of investing in one, it also makes the going quite treacherous. The main thing you need to realize is that five years from now, this space is going to be littered with the smoking corpses of the vendors who didn’t make it, and when that time comes, you probably won’t want to own one of their products.

Unfortunately, just because a vendor is large and stable with a broad install base doesn’t mean they have the best product or necessarily even a very good one. And some large vendors in this space as well as others have an interesting revenue model: every few years, you have to buy all new equipment and pay for the professional services to migrate you to it. If this seems unethical, that’s because it is, but a surprising number of large companies you’ve probably heard of seem to live by precisely this model.

We can’t give you too much specific vendor guidance in this article, but we will explore several key decision points for SAN selection and implementation.

 

 

 “Fibre Channel or iSCSI? How about both!”

How about both! When connecting a SAN to servers, these are the two basic technology choices: iSCSI and Fibre Channel. There are other options, but we don’t see much of them. iSCSI seems to have some obvious advantages as it runs over standard networking equipment while Fibre Channel requires its own, separate infrastructure which is expensive. However, when it comes to performance vs. price per port, Fibre Channel is still the king. But if you want your Fibre Channel infrastructure to be fault tolerant, it will cost you more.

One of our favorite implementation strategies is to provide primary connectivity between servers and SAN via Fibre Channel and use iSCSI as a failover. This is a configuration that works very well and is quite cost effective. However, your SAN must support Fibre Channel and iSCSI at the same time. Most do, but some don’t.

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“Fibre Channel and iSCI battle it out for world domination”.

 

Also important here: if you decide to brave the world of 10Gbps Ethernet for your iSCSI connections, make sure you get input from your SAN vendors about exactly what Ethernet switches you should be using. This technology is still finicky as well as pricey.

Firmware Upgrades

Always ask a perspective SAN vendor about their firmware upgrade process. Some vendors will require that you buy more storage than you need so you can migrate data away from disk enclosures before upgrading their firmware if you want to keep your data available during the upgrade process. The biggest issue with this is that migrating such large amounts of data can take days or even weeks, and you will have to spend that much time for each enclosure you need to upgrade. So a process that can be easily done in an hour with no downtime for some SANs can be a process that takes months on others.

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Some SAN vendors’ firmware upgrade process.

 

 

NAS or File Server?

“NAS” stands for “Network Attached Storage”, but that isn’t really very descriptive. SANs present data to servers in a form indistinguishable from a hard drive. A NAS on the other hand presents data to clients or servers in a form indistinguishable from a file server. The two are very different and most SANs come with no NAS functionality. However, many SAN vendors offer an additional piece of equipment that serves the data on the SAN up as a NAS. That is, in a form readily digestible to users.

Our experience, however, is that this is largely a waste of money, and that you are probably better off just building a file server or two and attaching them to the SAN like any other server. Then let them take care of the presentation to users.

There is certainly more that can be said on the current and anticipated future of this space, but for that you will have to join us for “Storage Wars – Part 3” coming soon!