Home Blog Page 6649

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

0

nick herman Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, July 01, 2013.

Mathew Canney Intimidation-Class C Felony
Criminal Mischief-Class A Misdemeanor
Battery-Class B Misdemeanor

Kristen Campbell Possession of Methamphetamine-Class D Felony
Unlawful Possession or Use of a Legend Drug-Class D Felony
Attempted Battery by Body Waste-Class D Felony
Possession of Marijuana-Class A Misdemeanor
Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor
Operating a Motor Vehicle Without Ever Receiving a License-
Class A Misdemeanor

Dugniqio Forest Possession of Cocaine-Class D Felony

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at KPhernetton@vanderburghgov.org

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

Hoover Performing Arts Center Fundraiser Wrapping Up

0

EVSC

A committee formed earlier this year that has been raising funds to name the North High School Performing Arts Center after long-time music educator Jerry Hoover, is wrapping up its campaign on July 4th. “To date, more than $80,000 has been raised in support of Mr. Hoover and the wonderful work he has done with students throughout his music education career,” said Caren Whitehouse, chair of the campaign and a 1975 North High School graduate. Donations are still being accepted, as funding will be used not only for the naming, but also to assist deserving high school music students to be able to perform as well as to enhance their performance experience in the Center.

Hoover taught at North High School and directed the choir from 1956 to 1980 and then at Harrison High School as a counselor from 1980 to 2001. Although now retired, he is known throughout the community for leading students in developing their musical abilities and also for lending his personal talents to assist others. “We’re thrilled to have an opportunity to do this for a very special man, teacher, and mentor,” Whitehouse said recently. “Mr. Hoover defined excellence and championed the efforts of his students while serving as choral director at North, and the entire community benefitted from the musical program and productions that took place while he was at the school. We can’t think of a better way to honor Mr. Hoover than to name the new Performing Arts Center after him.” Mr. Jerry Hoover stated that he is “humbled by the efforts to name the Jerry Hoover Performing Arts Center” and “delighted to hear from so many friends, former students and colleagues from across America.”

A group of alumni from North began spreading the word earlier this year about the opportunity to name the Performing Arts Center after their mentor. Those individuals include: Whitehouse, Rev. Rick VanHoose, class of 1962; Steve Fritz, class of 1964, Don Bernhardt, class of 1974, and Ned and Marilyn Conder, friends of Hoover.

A dedication ceremony is being planned for September 12th at 4:00 p.m.at North High School with a reception scheduled afterwards. An alumni choir will sing “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”. All are invited to attend.

For further information, or to donate, contact Caren Whitehouse at 812-483-4889 or at carenwhitehouse@gmail.com.

State Police Dedicate Additional Staff to Process Applications for License to Carry a Handgun

0

ISP

Indianapolis, IN – The Indiana State Police Department is responsible for issuing licenses to carry a handgun to citizens of Indiana that request a license. The Department is required to issue or deny the request – stating the denial cause – within 60 days from the time an application is submitted. Efforts to meet the time frame requirement have not been met due to a significant rise in the number of requests for handgun licenses. This is attributable to the number of shootings across the country, coupled with national news stories debating more restrictive gun laws.

Historically, applications received for a license to carry a handgun averaged around 5,200 per month, but increased dramatically toward the end of 2012. January of 2013 resulted in more than 23,000 application requests being submitted to the state police. The level of demand has marginally decreased in the months that followed, falling to just over 6,500 new license requests in June. However, the overall monthly increase has led to a substantial backlog in applications, pushing processing time to more than 110 days.

To eliminate the backlog, Indiana State Police Superintendent Doug Carter ordered a thorough evaluation of the procedures involved to issue a license to carry a handgun. Based on this comprehensive review, processes are being streamlined and additional personnel have been added to process some 45,000 pending applications. The review process also included plans to address future spikes in application requests. Barring unforeseen circumstances the backlog should be eliminated within eight to ten weeks of July 1st. New license applications received after mid September 2013 are expected to be processed within the required 60 day timeframe.

It is important to note that during the seven months from December of 2012 through June of 2013, the state police received 91,940 applications for a license to carry a handgun. To offer a point of contrast, for all of 2012 there were 62,934 applications received and processed, which resulted in the issuance of 60,906 new handgun licenses.

To decrease processing time of applications the state police encourage all applicants to submit their application and fingerprints electronically. While all applications are required to be electronically submitted there is an option to submit fingerprints that are either hand rolled or scanned onto paper print cards, or prints that are electronically recorded and immediately emailed to the Indiana State Police for verification and processing. Applications submitted with hand rolled or scanned finger prints take about two weeks longer to process than the electronically transferred fingerprints.

Superintendent Carter and the Indiana State Police are dedicated to meeting the required time frame to issue or deny a license to carry a handgun. We deeply regret the inconvenience far too many Hoosiers have experienced with this process. Members of the state police are working diligently to resolve this backlog and provide Hoosiers with the level of service they have come to expect from the Indiana State Police.

General Information of Interest for the Public & Media

Factors that add to increased processing time:
• Applications that are incomplete
• Submission of hand rolled or scanned fingerprints instead of electronic fingerprints
• Incomplete Criminal History information that has to be confirmed
• Common names with Criminal History information that must to be verified

Applications for License to Carry a Handgun received, by month, from December 2012 to June of 2013:
• Dec 2012: 13,954
• Jan 2013: 23,079
• Feb 2013: 15,945
• Mar 2013: 12,204
• Apr 2013: 11,397
• May 2013: 8,848
• Jun 2013: *6,513
• Seven Month Total: 91,940

* June number not final, subject to change

Issued Licenses to Carry a Handgun from 2009 to 2012
• 2009: 98,639
• 2010: 79,027
• 2011: 61,595
• 2012: 60,906

At the beginning of July 2013 there were 493,205 active licenses to carry a handgun, of which 392,520 were issued to men and 100,685 were issued to women. To see previous reports that reflect quarterly comparisons of active handgun licenses by county and gender of the license holder, please visit this site: http://www.in.gov/isp/2963.htm

The state police remind media and the public that specific information about who possesses a license to carry a handgun is not a public record. The state police will not confirm or deny if a specific citizen possesses a license to carry a handgun.

For more information on the license to carry a handgun application process, inclusive of how to file electronic fingerprints, please visit this site: http://www.in.gov/isp/2828.htm

ObamaCare Delayed: The Official US Treasury Department Narrative

0

Continuing to Implement the ACA in a Careful, Thoughtful Manner

By: Mark J. Mazur 7/2/2013

​Over the past several months, the Administration has been engaging in a dialogue with businesses – many of which already provide health coverage for their workers – about the new employer and insurer reporting requirements under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). We have heard concerns about the complexity of the requirements and the need for more time to implement them effectively. We recognize that the vast majority of businesses that will need to do this reporting already provide health insurance to their workers, and we want to make sure it is easy for others to do so. We have listened to your feedback. And we are taking action.

The Administration is announcing that it will provide an additional year before the ACA mandatory employer and insurer reporting requirements begin. This is designed to meet two goals. First, it will allow us to consider ways to simplify the new reporting requirements consistent with the law. Second, it will provide time to adapt health coverage and reporting systems while employers are moving toward making health coverage affordable and accessible for their employees. Within the next week, we will publish formal guidance describing this transition. Just like the Administration’s effort to turn the initial 21-page application for health insurance into a three-page application, we are working hard to adapt and to be flexible about reporting requirements as we implement the law.

Here is some additional detail. The ACA includes information reporting (under section 6055) by insurers, self-insuring employers, and other parties that provide health coverage. It also requires information reporting (under section 6056) by certain employers with respect to the health coverage offered to their full-time employees. We expect to publish proposed rules implementing these provisions this summer, after a dialogue with stakeholders – including those responsible employers that already provide their full-time work force with coverage far exceeding the minimum employer shared responsibility requirements – in an effort to minimize the reporting, consistent with effective implementation of the law.

Once these rules have been issued, the Administration will work with employers, insurers, and other reporting entities to strongly encourage them to voluntarily implement this information reporting in 2014, in preparation for the full application of the provisions in 2015. Real-world testing of reporting systems in 2014 will contribute to a smoother transition to full implementation in 2015.

We recognize that this transition relief will make it impractical to determine which employers owe shared responsibility payments (under section 4980H) for 2014. Accordingly, we are extending this transition relief to the employer shared responsibility payments. These payments will not apply for 2014. Any employer shared responsibility payments will not apply until 2015.

During this 2014 transition period, we strongly encourage employers to maintain or expand health coverage. Also, our actions today do not affect employees’ access to the premium tax credits available under the ACA (nor any other provision of the ACA).​

Mark J. Mazur is the Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy at the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

Breaking News: ObamaCare’s employer mandate delayed until 2015

15

obama biden

ObamaCare’s employer mandate delayed until 2015

The Obama administration will delay ObamaCare’s requirement that businesses with more than 50 workers provide health insurance by one year.

The Treasury Department said that the administration will start enforcing the mandate in 2015, rather than Jan. 1, 2014, in order to give business more time to prepare. The surprise move comes as federal officials prepare to implement key provisions of the healthcare law.

It means that one of healthcare reform’s key requirements will be implemented after the 2014 midterm elections, when ObamaCare is expected to be a key issue for vulnerable Democrats.

2013 Fourth of July Fireworks

0

2013 Fourth of July Fireworks
Downtown Evansville

(EVANSVILLE, IN) – July 2, 2013– On Thursday, July 4, 2013, thousands will flock to Downtown Evansville to celebrate Independence Day on Evansville’s spacious riverfront.
The festivities will begin at 9:00 a.m. when the 2013 Shriners Fest hosts food vendors, rides and games. For a full list of Shriners Fest activities on July 4th please visit hadishrinersfest.com.
And for the finale, presented by Tropicana Evansville, Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Indiana, and The Growth Alliance for Greater Evansville –the Thunder and Lightning Fireworks Show will begin shortly after 9:00 p.m. on Thursday, July 4th.

The fireworks show is absolutely FREE thanks to our wonderful community sponsors: Tropicana Evansville, Toyota Motor Manufacturing, Indiana, Mulzer Crushed Stone, Dunn Hospitality, South Central Radio Group, and the Growth Alliance for Greater Evansville.

In the event of inclement weather, the fireworks show may be canceled or delayed. Please check www.evansvillegage.com for details and updates.

Guilty of Being Southern, by: Lee Habeeb

6

Over the years, my African-American friends have shared with me stories of the senseless traffic stops they’ve endured for nothing more than driving while black. There’s an acronym for it: DWB. They admit it happens less than it used to, but it’s wrong, it’s bad, and Americans should not face a presumption of guilt for being who they are.

Which is why Paula Deen and the recent U.S. Supreme Court case involving the Voting Rights Act make for an interesting counterpoint. Both stories involve what’s perhaps the last socially acceptable form of bigotry left in America: bigotry against the South. It’s a brand of bigotry reinforced by our nation’s biggest media outlets — and by justices on the Supreme Court.

Let’s start with Paula Deen, who admitted to once — 30 years ago — having used the “n” word. If it had been, let’s say, Alec Baldwin instead, the media would have quickly given him a pass, because, after all, he’s one of them. Alec is a media guy. He’s smart and talented and thinks what they think about life. He’s also a northerner. He was born on Long Island! And my God, there’s no racism there.

Racism is a disease people catch when they cross the Mason-Dixon line.

Paula is from Georgia, and from that one slip, which she admitted and for which she apologized, was imputed all kinds of guilt. She was guilty of being born Southern, plain and simple. And the punishment she’s facing is so disproportionate to her three-decade-old lapse that it cries for someone in the media to defend her. No one has. No one will.

The Food Network will soon learn that their knee-jerk decision to fire her without any proof of discrimination, any proof of a racist past or present, will backfire. And fans who know she was fired, and canned by sponsors, for being born in the South, and for being proud of it — they’ll be waiting for her return, and will reward the network that hires her.

That brings me to the ruling in Shelby County v. Holder. What the Supreme Court essentially told the nation in that case was this: The states in the South used to do some really bad things a long time ago when it comes to elections, but they don’t anymore, so we are taking them out of the penalty box and treating them like any other state. As Justice Roberts said succinctly for the majority, “History did not end in 1965.”

It turns out that the decision by the court last week came less than a year after an African American was reelected president for a second term, an election in which African-American turnout in the southern states was well above the national average. Moreover, African Americans in the southern states registered at higher rates than did white people in those same states.

Mississippi, my home state and once the worst of the Jim Crow offenders, had the highest rate of African-American turnout in the nation. And Mississippi has more elected black officials than any other state. Not just more per capita — more, period.

Judging from the hysterical reports in the media, and from the headlines of the lead editorials in America’s biggest newspapers, someone could have easily concluded that the court had overturned the entire Voting Rights Act, not just one provision — and that it was now open season for white racists in the South to bring back poll taxes and literacy tests and to make a push to return not to the 1950s but to the 1850s, to slavery itself.

“An Assault on the Voting Rights Act,” shouted the headline of the New York Times editorial.

“A setback for voting rights,” declared the Los Angeles Times.

Where did the media elite’s sense of outrage come from? It’s simple, actually. To admit that the South had changed would mean letting go of their own cultural and moral superiority, of their sense of regional superiority with respect to the issue of race. Media and academic elites believe that, but for proper adult supervision, the South will return to its racist roots and that they alone can protect helpless black southerners from the perfidy rooted in white southerners’ DNA.

In his questioning from the bench back in February, as George Will pointed out, Justice Breyer revealed not only his distrust of southerners, but his disdain: “Imagine a State has a plant disease, and in 1965 you can recognize the presence of that disease. . . . Now, it’s evolved. . . . But we know one thing: The disease is still there.” Breyer’s disease metaphor was not only crude and condescending, it was rank regional bigotry — and from a sitting Supreme Court justice, no less.

That the southern states had now surpassed many northern states on the issue of electoral fairness did not matter to Breyer. That’s the thing about progressives: They don’t really care for progress, or facts. And here’s a fact that Justice Breyer didn’t care about: Massachusetts, as Chief Justice Roberts noted, now has “the worst ratio of white-voter turnout to African-American turnout.” Can it possibly be that northerners are more racist than Southerners?

Does Breyer not remember the Boston busing riots in the 1960’s? Or Newark’s? Some of the Irish and Italian racism in northern cities was especially ugly. But from Breyer’s lofty perch, only the South is still susceptible to this virulent “disease” called racism, so much so that it still needs a great big regional timeout.

Perhaps someone should send Justice Breyer a link to Joel Kotkin’s piece in The Daily Beast on the rise of the South, which included facts media elites either refuse to believe or willfully ignore. Over the past five decades, he reported, the South has seen dramatic gains in population. It was once a major exporter of people to the northern states. Today, Kotkin noted, the migration tide is flowing the other way. “The hegira to the sunbelt continues, as last year the South accounted for six of the top eight states attracting domestic migrants,” he reported.

Those six states, Justice Breyer might want to know, were red states: Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, and Georgia. The top four losers? Blue states named New York, Illinois, New Jersey, and California.

And it wasn’t just white folks heading South. The nation’s African-American population grew 1.7 million over the past decade — and 75 percent of that growth occurred in the South. The percentage of the nation’s African-American population living in the South hit its highest point in half a century, as more black people moved out of declining cities in the Midwest and Northeast.

If the South is such a racially backward place, Justice Breyer, why are so many African Americans moving here?

In response to the latest census figures showing that Texas was home to eight — eight! — of the 15 fastest-growing cities in America, did media types commission some reporting on the subject? No. What you instead got was snide commentary like this from Gawker: “What is it that makes Texas so attractive? Is it the prisons? The racism? The deadly weather? The deadly animals? The deadly crime? The deadly political leadership?”

It would be funny if it wasn’t so willfully ignorant — and so emblematic of how liberal thought leaders think about the South. They refuse to acknowledge that the region has changed, let alone that it has become an economic powerhouse. Alabama and Kentucky are two of the top auto-manufacturing states in the country. The Gulf Coast corridor between Louisiana and Florida is now the fourth-largest aerospace hub in the world. Boeing’s Dreamliner is being assembled in South Carolina.

It’s quite a story. Black and white Americans are moving in record numbers to a part of the country that liberal elites think of as backward, where taxes are low, unions are irrelevant, and the locals cling to their guns and their faith.

And yet Americans heard almost nothing about this great migration. We know why. The ideological prejudices of our media and academic elites won’t permit them to admit the obvious. They’d prefer to focus, as Breyer did, on the old South because they are more comfortable with that narrative and more invested in it, while a new one marches on right under their upturned noses.

In the downtown of my hometown of Oxford, Miss., sits a statue of our local hero, William Faulkner. “The past is never dead,” he once opined. “In fact, it’s not even past.”

The line has some truth. But if I had told Faulkner in his time that Mississippi would soon have more African-American elected officials than any other state in the nation, he would have laughed me off.

If I had told him that a Japanese auto company would be making American cars in Tupelo and employing thousands of locals, he would have thought I was crazy. And yet there a new Toyota plant sits, near the birthplace of Elvis, less than an hour’s drive from Faulkner’s home.

The fact is, white Yankees migrants like me (I moved from Jersey), and African-American migrants from Chicago, and businesses from all over America — and the world — are investing in the South, and investing with our most precious capital: our lives. We are moving South because we see something here that academics, media types, and our most progressive Supreme Court justices can’t.

The future.

Letter To The Editor By Jordan Baer

11

jordan baer

EDITORS COMMENTS: Posted without opinion, bias or editing.

In just a few weeks, it will have been a full calendar year since I began the task of lobbying for drastic reform at both city cemeteries- Oak Hill & Locust Hill.
https://city-countyobserver.com/2012/07/16/evansvilles-grave-injustice-by-jordan-baer/
What started out as a simple goal of finally fixing what has been a decades old problem has now surprisingly turned into a full blown battle against those dedicated to maintaining the status quo of neglect, dilapidation, and disrepair. This has been the case in just about every task I’ve worked on in this city. It has been the same gang with the same excuses with the only difference being a new case of demolition by neglect each time. It’s getting old, and it’s getting old fast.
First of all, I would like to thank those who have done what they can do for these cemeteries. The first people to join the cause were 5th Ward Council Member John Friend who introduced Resolution C-2012-16 and 6th Ward Council Member Al Lindsey who cosponsored this much needed legislation. Next, a ton of credit goes to 4th Ward City Council Member Connie Robinson who actually took the time to go and view these cemetery conditions for herself.
https://city-countyobserver.com/2012/07/31/councilwoman-connie-robinson-appalled-by-condition-of-oak-hill-cemetery/
As most residents in this area know, having a council member, or any city official for that matter, actually go out and survey the problems first hand is something new and unheard of here in the Evansville area. I thank Connie for doing this and God Bless You Please Mrs. Robinson.
Finally, I would like to thank those who directly handle and manage the cemetery grounds that have made a few improvements to Oak Hill after it was brought to their attention by the city council. This group includes the mowing crew as well as Chris Cooke- Our local Superintendent of Cemeteries.
http://agraveinjustice.blogspot.com/2012/10/update-slow-but-steady-progress-at-our.html
Although much progress has been made, the conditions of either cemetery are beyond anything acceptable, and truthfully, I’m at a loss for words as to why anyone would find either cemetery in acceptable condition. You’ve seen the pictures and it doesn’t look pretty. Toppled head stones, out of line plots, and covered up grave markers are just a few of the problems that have plagued these cemeteries long before you, I, or any other CCO supporter has been alive.
http://local.evpl.org/views/viewimage.asp?ID=1120820
Last week, I returned to the historic confines of both Oak Hill and Locust Hill Cemeteries, and it didn’t take long before these conditions were out in the open for all to see once more…
http://agraveinjustice.blogspot.com/2013/06/a-grave-injustice-still-lingers-oak.html
https://www.facebook.com/jordan.baer1/media_set?set=a.10101317136390040.1073741839.12913772&type=3

Last month, the Courier & Press decided to pay Oak Hill Cemetery a visit. How nice of them to finally join the party and report on the neglect going on at these cemeteries. For a newspaper that doesn’t want a half baked hotel plan, they seem quite content with a less than stellar cemetery grounds. One would think that with the amount of cemetery advertisements popping up on their site they would have joined the CCO last year in fighting to repair these iconic grounds.
https://city-countyobserver.com/2012/12/07/spend-the-money-on-the-cemeteries-not-cp-advertising-by-jordan-baer/
Thankfully, Chris Cooke took them on a walk through Oak Hill Cemetery in an effort to get the word out about cemetery erosion. What the following image should prove to those who want to maintain the status quo in these cemeteries is that denial is not a river in Egypt.
http://www.courierpress.com/photos/2013/may/24/141084/
The bottom line is this: there is ample amount of evidence that both of these cemeteries are suffering from erosion and neglect, and these conditions are only getting worse. The hardest part to accomplish in the goal of getting these conditions corrected was to get someone to go in front of the City Council and demand cemetery repair, maintenance, and perpetual care funds be replenished back to their proper levels. I did this last summer, and it was quite a battle. Initially, at the first council meeting discussing these funds there were not enough votes to get these funds. It, like every other project, took a lot of political will power to eventually round up enough support.
At the end of the day, I was able to secure these funds thanks to John Friend, Al Lindsey, and Connie Robinson on the City Council. These funds are believed to be around the $70,000 mark ($35,000 per cemetery). No other city official was willing to do this from the mayor all the way down to the mowing crew. So, it shouldn’t be too much to ask for the city to give us a plan of action as well as a rough estimate for a timetable as to when these cemeteries might be fully repaired.
Although having Chris Cooke and the lawn mowing workers make subtle improvements such as avoiding hitting head stones with lawn mowers, placing broken stones on stop of the rest of the stone, and standing head stones up that had fallen are all good improvements, they are far from reaching the goal of having a completely repaired cemetery that is the pride of residents from all over Evansville.
Any comprehensive plan of action will have to involve the mayor’s administration- particularly Mr. Todd Robertson who was the one who spoke at the Council Meeting about the cemetery funds. One person on one level of city government will not be able to solve this problem alone. Like Mr. Robertson said in an Eyewitness News interview, it is a “long standing” problem. It will not be solved overnight. Therefore, any plan of action must include, but not limited to, the following…
1. What are the main problems facing the cemeteries?
– i.e Toppled head stones, lost grave markers, out of line rows, damaged grave markers, and diminished repair/maintenance/perpetual care fund(s).
2. What is the size and scope of these problems?
– i.e Approximately how many head stones are broke, damaged, or lost and how many are out of line? How much needs to be placed in the proper perpetual funds and accounts?
3. What resources will it take to fix these problems?
– i.e How much labor, what kind of labor, what kind of materials, how much/many materials, and what kind of political support is needed?
4. Roughly how much funding would be needed to fix these problems?
– i.e What would the total bill be for labor, materials, and funds to replenish the proper cemetery accounts?
5. Approximately how long will it take to fix these problems?
– i.e How many years? How many phases?
6. What problems can volunteers solve? What problems can only qualified staff members solve?
– i.e What problems can the public volunteer to help solve? What problems must qualified individuals be utilized or newly hired to solve?

These questions, which should serve as a backbone for a comprehensive plan of attack, should be debated, answered, and addressed in front of the public eye and not behind closed doors. And once a plan is formed, we will then know what kind of problems we are dealing with and what you, I, and the rest of the city needs to do about it.
Make no mistake, these problems can be solved. Recently, I came upon a company website of a man named John Walters who many call the “Graveyard Groomer,” whose business deals with rehabilitating dilapidated cemeteries in the Indiana and Kentucky areas. When you look at his before and after images, you will see that the pictures a posted above could easily be fixed by someone like this.
http://www.graveyardgroomer.com/Before-and-After.htm
A quote from him stuck out to me: “It don’t take a rocket scientist to do this, but it does take a heart.
And I got one of them.” That’s the mentality we need here with our two great cemeteries. The fact is, death is undefeated. One day, you will be buried in a place like this…
And I will be buried in a place like this…

We all need to take care of these cemeteries!

IS IT TRUE July 2, 2013

20
Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics
Mole #3 Nostradamus of Local Politics

IS IT TRUE July 2, 2013

IS IT TRUE that City Councilwomen Missy Mosby shall have primary opponent who is extremely credible and very well liked throughout the entire community? … that this shall be his first time to run for political office and shall be extremely well funded? …you can expect to hear more details about Ms. Mosby’s future campaign opponent when he announces his “blue ribbon” election campaign committee in the very near future?

IS IT TRUE the 96 speed humps that were ordered by the City of Evansville in March for April delivery before the City Council had even been asked to okay their purchase have been traced to the Engineering Department?…we still do not know who in the Engineering Department took it upon themselves to belittle the City Council to the point of irrelevance but we would welcome an explanation from Department Head Pat Keepes who surely had to have been in the loop to spend $8,821 taxpayer dollars without City Council approval?…the real question that needs to be answered is just which line item in the approved 2012 City of Evansville budget justified this purchase?

IS IT TRUE our MOLES tell us that this same practice has been going on in the Water and Sewer Utility with Johnson Controls water meters?…the question to be answered there is are these replacements part of a routine maintenance program of replacement and if so are they cost effective with the mechanical meters already in use?…if it is possible to replace the mechanical meters with new Johnson Controls meters out of the maintenance budget it begs the question of why do we need to borrow $46 Million to replace them all at once?…if it turns out to be the case that the Johnson Controls meters can be installed cost effectively through a planned routine replacement schedule over 20 or 30 years without borrowing any money then why don’t we just do that and be done with $46 Million of borrowing for yet another shiny object?

IS IT TRUE the Mole Nation is saying that the Winnecke Administration is now claiming privately that the overall downtown convention hotel construction costs is being reduced about $10 million dollars? ..we can’t wait to see where the proposed cuts are coming from?…this could be from the elimination of the storage building that SHOULD BE PAID FOR FROM ARENA FUNDS?…it could be by reducing the amount of subsidized retail and restaurant area?…it could even be from elimination of the apartments that have been represented to be an unsubsidized side deal all along?…it could just be that the County and the CVB are agreeing to kick in a total of $10 Million between them which would not reduce the project by a dime and would simply shift $10 Million of the corporate welfare away from the City of Evansville coffers and onto theirs?…whatever happens the time to make a deal in the original agreement with the Branson, MO based hotel developer expired yesterday?…before continuing the discussions there needs to be an extension to the agreement to negotiate ratified?…all discussions until that point are nothing by simple discussions with no legal standing?…any agreement that shakes down the County and the CVB for part of the $37.5 Million subsidy does not reduce the subsidy at all it only changes the taxpayer base that the subsidy is coming from?

IS IT TRUE after a series of reader’s polls it is clear that the demographic that makes up the readership of the City County Observer has no interest in seeing Evansville City Councilman Jonathan Weaver considered as a viable candidate for the Democrat nominee for Mayor of Evansville in 2015?…during the last few weeks Mr. Weaver has lost polls to Sheriff Eric Williams, Troy Tornatta, former Mayor Weinzapfel, Councilman John Friend, and a real live dog from Nashville named BLUE?

Princeton Woman Arrested for DUI and Resisting

1

user29376-1372768352-media1_728792_192_240_PrsMe_

Gibson County – Early Tuesday morning, July 2, at approximately 1:20 a.m., Princeton Police and Indiana State Police stopped the driver of an Oldsmobile on South Main Street near Clark Street in Princeton for having an expired plate and for not indicating a turn. The driver pulled into the parking lot at Building Blocks Daycare. Princeton Officer Jason Swan and Trooper Paul Stolz immediately noticed the driver appeared confused and her pupils were dilated larger than normal. The driver was identified as Leeanne Hartle, 28, of Princeton. Both officers believed she was under the influence of a drug other than alcohol. During the roadside investigation, Hartle became uncooperative and attempted to walk away. After a brief struggle, she was handcuffed and taken into custody. Further investigation revealed she was under the influence of methamphetamine. She was taken to the Gibson County Jail where she is currently being held on bond.

ARRESTED AND CHARGES:
• Leeanne Hartle, 28, Princeton, IN
1. Resisting Law Enforcement, Class A Misdemeanor
2. Operating a Vehicle while under the Influence, Class A Misdemeanor

Arresting Officer: Trooper Paul Stolz, Indiana State Police
Assisting Officer: Officer Jason Swan, Princeton Police

Assisting Agency: Gibson County Sheriff’s Department