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Pet Of The Week

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Jaina web small

This gorgeous girl is 8 years young. Don’t you even think about that “O” word – cats can live for twenty-plus years sometimes, and so she’s not even halfway through her lifespan! Her previous family was moving and could no longer keep her. They only had her for 2 years and got her from another shelter, so Jaina has never really had a truly permanent home. Won’t you give her one in time for Christmas? She promises to bring warmth to your house in this bitter cold. Her adoption fee is $30, and she is already spayed, microchipped, and vaccinated, ready to go home TODAY!

Remaining thankful and giving back

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The McNamara Memo
Your one stop shop for Statehouse news and community info         11.26.2013
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Remaining thankful and giving back
The history of Thanksgiving celebrations has been traced back as far as 1621 when Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians shared their harvests in November. It was in our nation’s first days that we recognized the simple importance of being thankful for what we have and sharing it with others. The importance of family values and civility remained and led to President Lincoln to proclaim a national Thanksgiving Day during the Civil War in 1863.Thanksgiving is one of my favorite holidays because of all the history surrounding its celebration, but most importantly, it is about enjoying quality time with my family.

Unfortunately, the holiday season is not the same for every Hoosier, especially those in need of basic amenities. The holiday season can serve as a reminder of the struggles to make ends meet. Thankfully, there are numerous non-profit organizations that strive to make this time of year memorable for every Hoosier and their family. Volunteering your time at a soup kitchen, collecting or giving cans for food drives or even donating money to these organizations can go a long way to brighten someone’s holiday season.

The Mount Vernon Food Pantry and the Tri-State Food Bank are great organizations that are dedicated to serving Hoosiers every day, especially on Thanksgiving. These organizations do a great job of meeting our region’s needs, but they could always use more volunteers willing to donate food, time or money.

The Mt. Vernon Food Pantry serves any resident or transient working within Posey County.  They are a free outreach that provides a 2-3 day emergency supply of food to households in the county. They are open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 9:00a.m. to 12:00p.m., and every Friday from 3:00p.m. to 6:00p.m. To volunteer, contact them at (812) 838­-3841 or by email at myfoodpantry@yahoo.com.

The Tri-State Food Bank has a very unique program running called Weekend Back Pack – Food for Kids. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 39,973 children in the tri-state area live in poverty. Many kids rely on the school lunch program through the week, and do not have adequate food for the weekend. Through this program the Tri-State Food Bank provides over 2,300 kids each week with nutritious meals for the weekend. You can donate food or sponsor a backpack. Call 812­-425­-0775 or visitwww.tristatefoodbank.org for directions.

Another way to help out someone in need is by volunteering or donating to the homeless shelter of Mount Vernon, Inc.  In any given year, approximately 60 families request housing at the shelter, and the waiting list is continuing to grow. Some items you can donate are pillows, dishes, bed linens and towels. Call Phyllis Alspaugh at (812) 204­-2762 for drop off instructions.

I encourage everyone to find a way to spend a little time helping those in need this holiday season. Even the smallest of gestures can go a long way to make a significant difference in someone else’s life. Enjoy spending quality time with friends and family this holiday season, this is truly what makes this time of year so special.

IS IT TRUE Thanksgiving 2013

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A Tasty Thanksgiving Turkey
A Tasty Thanksgiving Turkey

IS IT TRUE Thanksgiving 2013

IS IT TRUE we wish all of our readers a Happy Thanksgiving weekend?

IS IT TRUE we are thankful for another year of growth in internet traffic with no red hot elections driving the growth?

IS IT TRUE we are thankful that all of the members of the CCO staff and their families have survived another year in good health?

IS IT TRUE we are thankful for the stop in the declining economy and are looking forward to a better future than the last 5 years have been?

IS IT TRUE we will be thankful when the City of Evansville installed rocks in the medians and streetlights along the annexed areas of Burkhardt Road in 2014?

IS IT TRUE we will be thankful to see the downtown convention hotel deal unfold and hope all goes according to the talking points?

IS IT TRUE we are thankful for the 5 – 1 start for this year’s Evansville Aces basketball team and are very curious to see how winning 25 games (cross your fingers) will help the attendance?  We are thankful that Evansville Aces have won two National NCCA  Championships?

IS IT TRUE we will be thankful to see some real progress with the McCurdy Hotel project next year?

IS IT TRUE we are thankful to have hosted another sold out Mole Awards luncheon and look forward to doing so again next year?

IS IT TRUE we are thankful hear that the Historical Indiana Landmark  group will finally begin to renovate the Greyhound Bus Station building as promised?

IS IT TRUE we will be thankful when the Evansville City Council and the Mayor will find common ground to work together  for the betterment of Evansville?

IS IT TRUE  we are thankful to hear that the powers that be will attack the blight in the 600 block of East Franklin Street in the very near future?

IS IT TRUE  we are very thankful that Mayor has finally realized how valuable the bars and restaurants located on West Franklin Street are to the overall economy of Evansville?

IS IT TRUE we  will be thankful if our elected officials  began to hire people based on qualifications and not political connections?

IS IT TRUE we will be thankful if the City of Evansville  finally receives an audit from the State Board of Accounts  without adverse opinions?

IS IT TRUE we wish only the best for our loyal readers in the coming year?  Once again, have a Happy Thanksgiving!

Government to Replace Verizon Web-Hosting Services on HealthCare.gov

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The Department of Health and Human Services will replace Verizon Communications’s Terremark subsidiary as its Web-hosting provider for the federal health-insurance marketplace, presenting a new challenge to the rollout of the Obama administration’s signature health-care initiative.

HHS won’t renew its contract with Terremark and instead awarded a new contract over the summer to Hewlett-Packard to host the website.

HHS has awarded $55.4 million to Verizon for its work to support the health-law marketplaces since its contract began in 2011, including an award for $9.4 million of new website capacity this month.

This announcement comes on the day that the Obama Administration has aborted the marketing campaign for the site, discouraged people from trying to access it on the day it was promised to be fixed, and announced a 14 month delay in the website for small businesses to sign up for ObamaCare.

Vectren files plan to spend $215M on infrastructure improvements in Indiana-South natural gas system through 2020

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vectren-corporation-logo

This week, Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – South (Vectren) – in a filing made with the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) – outlined the robust gas infrastructure improveme

nt strategy the company will undertake over the next seven years to comply with federal pipeline safety rules and to ensure the company’s 110,000 gas customers in southwestern Indiana continue to receive safe, reliable gas service for decades to come.

The gas system improvements will result in upgrading portions of Vectren’s 3,200-mile network of distribution mains and transmission pipelines that serve nine counties in southwestern Indiana. The work will primarily consist of replacing 300 miles of bare steel and cast iron distribution mains with new mains, most of which will be plastic, as well as inspecting and upgrading Vectren’s transmission pipelines. These plans include acceleration of its pipeline replacement program and bolstering its transmission line integrity management work. Together, these efforts will call for an estimated $215 million in investments.

 

“Each year, we consistently invest in our gas infrastructure to ensure we maintain a safe, reliable system,” said Carl Chapman, Vectren’s chairman, president and CEO. “Over the next decade, this labor-intensive work will increase as federal regulations raise safety standards even higher ensuring the Hoosier state’s gas industry continues its excellent safety track record.”

The filed plan, along with other expected capital expenditures, will have significant benefits for the economy according to a study conducted by the Indiana Business Research Center at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business, including:

  • generating about $1.5 million annually in increased state and local government revenue effects through 2020;
  • supporting approximately 475 jobs annually; and
  • resulting in an economic ripple effect that will lead to an additional $25 million in spending

    annually over the seven-year period, including a statewide impact outside Vectren’s service territory.

    Vectren filed this seven-year gas system modernization plan with the IURC, which seeks to recover $215 million of the planned capital expenditures through 2020. Under Senate Enrolled Act 560 and Senate Enrolled Act 251, which focuses on federally-mandated infrastructure needs, Indiana utilities are encouraged to submit their forward-looking capital investment plans to the IURC for review and cost recovery as provided for by this legislation. The IURC will have review, oversight and approval authority in this process.

    For an overview of the seven-year gas system modernization plan outlining the infrastructure upgrades, visit www.vectren.com/safety.

    If the plan is approved as filed, gas bills will not be adjusted for these expenditures until 2015 – a year following the plan’s expected approval – and those adjustments will continue with modest increases in subsequent years as the improvement projects are completed. In year one, 2015, the typical residential natural gas customer would see an average increase of about $1 to $1.50 per month. In 2013, the

page1image28120

average residential customer will pay a total of $570 for gas service. Even with the expected bill impacts for these gas infrastructure investments, due to considerably lower natural gas commodity costs, bills should remain substantially lower than they were during the late 2000s. For example, in 2008, the average annual residential gas bill was $985. See chart.

The filing has no impact on electric rates.

“While these infrastructure
enhancements are vital to meeting
federal requirements and ensuring the safety of our system, affordability of our gas service remains top of mind,” added Chapman. “Natural gas bills sit at decade-lows thanks to low, stable natural gas prices. Furthermore, Vectren South has among the lowest gas rates in the state. Of the 20 gas companies in Indiana, Vectren South is in position #18, meaning only two companies offer lower rates. As these investments continue, we will always strive for a safe and reliable system with a focus on customers’ bills.”

So far, Vectren has conducted pipeline replacement work in six of the nine cities that have bare steel and cast iron mains in the company’s southwestern Indiana service territory. These include Evansville, Francisco, Loogootee, Montgomery, Oakland City, Petersburg, Princeton, Vincennes and Washington. Since 2008, more than 45 miles of gas mains have been replaced, which has led to a 12 percent reduction in leak calls and a reduction in natural gas emissions from our distribution system.

In addition to pipeline testing, maintenance and replacement, other portions of the infrastructure investments will go toward needed system upgrades, such as replacing vintage plastic main installed in the 1960s with today’s more durable standard of plastic and removing gas lines that are attached beneath bridge crossings and relocating those lines to underground locations.

Vectren Energy Delivery of Indiana – South delivers natural gas to approximately 110,000 natural gas customers in Daviess, Gibson, Knox, Martin, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick counties.

About Vectren

Vectren Corporation (NYSE: VVC) is an energy holding company headquartered in Evansville, Ind. Vectren’s energy delivery subsidiaries provide gas and/or electricity to more than 1 million customers in adjoining service territories that cover nearly two-thirds of Indiana and west central Ohio. Vectren’s nonutility subsidiaries and affiliates currently offer energy-related products and services to customers throughout the U.S. These include infrastructure services, energy services and coal mining. To learn more about Vectren, visit www.vectren.com.

Rep. Bacon to hold local town hall meetings

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Ron Bacon
Ron Bacon

STATEHOUSE — Prior to the start of the 2014 legislative session, State Representative Ron Bacon (R-Chandler) will be hosting two town hall meetings in Spencer and Warrick counties.

 

What:            Town hall with Rep. Bacon

When:           Wednesday, December 11 at 6 p.m.

Where:         Rockport City Hall Council Chambers, 426 Main Street in Rockport

 

What:            Town hall with Rep. Bacon

When:           Thursday, December 12 at 6 p.m.

Where:         Warrick Count Courthouse, 1 County Square Room 303 in Boonville

 

Rep. Bacon will be available to listen to constituents, discuss concerns and provide further information on the upcoming legislative session. He encourages all members of the community to come out and participate in the discussion.

 

White House Discouraging Use of Healthcare Website on Sunday out of Fear that it Will Crash

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ObamaCrash

White House officials, fearful that the federal health care website may again be overwhelmed this weekend, have urged their allies to hold back enrollment efforts so the insurance marketplace does not collapse under a crush of new users.

At the same time, administration officials said Tuesday that they had decided not to inaugurate a big health care marketing campaign planned for December out of concern that it might drive too many people to the still-fragile HealthCare.gov.

Sunday marks the day after November 30, the day that President Obama and HHS Director Kathleen Sebilius promised that the website would be humming along like Amazon or Kayak. The most recent claim by the administration is that the website should be capable of handling 50,000 users at a time. As a point of comparison the City County Observer with a single server under contract is capable of handling 300 users at the same time for a monthly fee of roughly $200.

The Obama Administration has also deemed an 80% success rate to be exemplary which would get them a C+ in most American universities and constitute failure in a private enterprise.

A health care lemon: Americans have a right to an Obamacare refund

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Lemon in a suit

When I was a teenager, my mother broke her own rule of never buying someone else’s trouble and purchased a used car. We were quite excited because it was beautiful and sleek, and it was a convertible.

The salesman said the car was practically new and was the deal of the century. Before long, it was discovered that the engine was completely shot, and the car was essentially a beautiful piece of junk. The salesman did not know my mother, and in the end, gladly refunded her money and took the car back.
This kind of story is, of course, the reason that used-car salesmen have such a bad reputation. Just behind used-cars salesmen are politicians, who have also been known to sell people a bill of goods with no substance. Obamacare is such a bill of goods, one that was promoted as one thing and turned out to be something quite different. In the real world, it is frequently possible to gain legal relief in the case of a fraudulent deal, but in the case of Obamacare, we are being told that it is the law of the land and that you simply must live with it.

When you place misdeeds by the government beyond the reach of normal mechanisms of recourse, you establish a condition ripe for abuse. If a bill is passed under false pretenses, shouldn’t we question its legitimacy and. at the very least, reintroduce the bill after disclosing the aspects that were hidden previously? If the bill still passes after such disclosure, it would then become legitimate. We must remember that we are talking about one-sixth of the U.S. economy. We should not be playing fast and loose with the laws and details surrounding the most important possession we have: our health. I think this would be a fair-minded solution to anyone who does not have ulterior motives in health care reform.

It is important that we learn to be compassionate even toward those with whom we disagree. How compassionate is it in a free society that is supposed to be for, of and by the people to say, “Too bad sucker. This is now the law of the land” — no matter how it was passed? The reason that solutions such as amendments and repeals were established was to remedy unforeseen problems associated with various legislative endeavors. The last thing we need are political victories that impose complex legislative rules on others. Rather, we should be looking for solutions that work for all the people, are fair and not based on deceit and ideology. The patriots who founded America were trying to escape from rulers who were certain that only they knew what was good for everyone else.

There have been numerous suggestions regarding affordable health care reform that were made by people and groups outside the current administration, which deserve discussion. If we truly wish to give everyone who is an American citizen affordable health care, let’s analyze some of these other suggestions and select the best components of each one and work together to create a better choice. We can leave intact the various insurance plans that currently exist with the goal of creating something so much better that people will voluntarily choose it, rather than being forced into it.

As a nation, we need to decide how important honesty is. If dishonesty is employed to achieve a goal, do we just say, “OK, you put one over on us,” or do we address the solution legislatively, as we would in a civil case? What we have done with Obamacare is similar to boarding an airplane and then finding out that there are some severe mechanical problems about which we were not previously informed. We are then told that we cannot get off the plane once we’ve boarded and, therefore, everyone needs to help fix the problem and stop complaining. Obviously, we cannot stand for such outrageous behavior.

Fortunately, there are signs that the media are beginning to awaken and assume their duty of objective reporting. We must all realize that if we accept corruption as a means to an end, we will soon be like well-known radical elements in the world who feel that lying, cheating and even killing by beheading is OK and will even be rewarded in heaven, as long as these acts are perpetrated against the enemy.

We are better than this. We must reject the notion that slick political maneuvering and dishonesty are inevitable in government and must be tolerated. We no more need to tolerate such things than we need to tolerate tyranny. The choice is ours. Let us call upon our leaders and representatives to change the culture to one of trust and decency consistent with our Judeo-Christian values. If they refuse, we the people must remove them from office, which is our duty to ourselves and to our progeny.

Source: Dr. Benjamin Carson

IS IT TRUE November 27, 2013

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

IS IT TRUE November 27, 2013

IS IT TRUE sign wars seem to be breaking out in the City of Evansville and some of it defies logic?…the City County Observer learned yesterday that two Franklin Street establishments that are locally owned and operated have been victimized by the Area Planning Commission for having storyboards in front of their businesses to advertised today’s specials like burgers or plate lunches?…these story boards are not billboard size, offend no one, and are not a trip hazard like the city sidewalks all over Evansville are?…the most recent threat leveled at a local business by the APC is a $500 fine aimed at Smitty’s for a small story board telling of specials of the day?…just east of Smitty’s the Lamasco Bar has had to deal with the same in-your-face stormtrooper tactics more suited to a Gulag than to a locally owned businesses in a medium sized Midwestern town that purports to be business friendly?…similar story boards are placed on the more favored by enforcement Main Street and we have heard no reports of any threats there?…selective enforcement has been standard practice in Evansville for many years in nearly every city department that there is?…some businesses are threatened with fines for the same actions of others that get nothing but smiles and handshakes?…some homeowners get fines and threats of fines from code enforcement while others are allowed to let their property rot to the ground without a single word?…the CCO is absolutely certain that the City of Evansville has bigger problems to deal with than a storyboard on a Franklin Street sidewalk?…we encourage our readers to go to Franklin Street and check out the many businesses offering good food and entertainment without public assistance?…we also encourage you all to call the Office of the Mayor and tell him to put the stormtroopers from the APC into a their place which we hope will be a business friendly place?

Smitty's Storyboard (a $500 fine target of the APC)

IS IT TRUE that the absence of having the audit of the City of Evansville by the Indiana State Board of Accounts in hand by the end of the year is concerning?…in most years back in the day when Evansville could actually balance a checkbook audits were started in March, completed in July, and released in August before the budget hearings?…since the City pulled an HHS (federal dept. of health and human services) with a software package neutering their ability to count audits have been taking longer and the results have been progressively worse?…with the 2012 audit now promised to be released in 2014 it leads one to believe that there are really some issues to be dealt with coming to roost in January or whenever the audit is made public?…some of the statehouse moles are even rumbling about an effort to sanitize the audit so it looks better than it is being driven from powerful people in Evansville?…this would not be the first time in recent history that reports have been scrubbed for public consumption?

IS IT TRUE while the APC refuses to allow small residential windmills on a private commercial site and persecutes Franklin Street eateries there is another sign in Evansville that was exposed by WFIE for hinting a free sexual activity if one buys a lap dance?…to our knowledge the sign at the Busybody Lounge on Fares Avenue that stated “FREE ____ JOB with LAP DANCE” has not been cited or fined?…while the owner(s) of the Busybody can advertise as they wish for the APC to go after someone advertising a hamburger but ignore the sign at the Busybody is a gross example of unequal protection under the law?…if you wonder why Evansville is laughed at and thought to be hayseed look no further than the selective enforcement of laws born of clueless obsession instead of protective reality?

IS IT TRUE that some county officials are harboring thoughts of turning management of Burdette Park over to a company already overseeing county facilities?…that some local non-profit organizations are dancing on and even crossing the line with respect to offering political forums for their preferred candidates for offices?…there are two sure fire ways for a 501(c)3 to put their non-profit status on the chopping block and both have to do with politics?…lobbying is one and openly promoting candidates for public office is another?…we hope this tempting but forbidden practice is nipped in the bud asap or the CCO will start outing the organizations that have been doing so by name?