|
|
||||||||
|
Jazz at the Gallery
Committee postpones vote on marriage amendment after lengthy testimony
By John Sittler
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – After three and a half hours of heated testimony and debate, a House committee postponed a vote Monday on a proposed constitutional amendment to define marriage as the union of a man and woman.
Reen Gutgsell is a lesbian Christian that is for the ban on gay marriage. She testified about being a lesbian but also about her beliefs as a Chirstian.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Greg Steuerwald, R-Avon, said he doesn’t know if a majority of committee members plans to approve House Joint Resolution 3 and has not decided when the committee will reconvene.
Much of Monday’s testimony addressed the potential economic impact of the amendment, which has already passed the General Assembly once but must be approved again this year to go on the November ballot for ratification.
Executives from Indiana University, Cummins, and Eli Lilly & Co. testified against both HJR 3 and its accompanying legislation – House Bill 1153 – which is meant to clarify what lawmakers intend with the amendment.
Steve Fry, vice president of human resources and diversity at Lilly, said his company would be severely affected by the passage of HJR 3 because it will hurt the company’s ability to recruit and keep a high quality workforce. He said passage of HJR-3 would “harm the reputation of our great state.â€
Signs that supported and opposed the HJR3 bill lined the hallway outside the House Chamber as a three hour judiciary committe meeting went on.
“This legislation is bad for Indiana, and certainly bad for business in Indiana,†Fry said.
Fry also said recruitment and hiring at Lily would be inhibited even by the public discussion, regardless of how a vote in November turned out.
“It actually matters little how voters will vote on this referendum. The damage to Indiana and our competitiveness will be done,†he said.
Jim Bopp, a Terre Haute attorney and former member of the Republican National Committee, said the idea that the debate on marriage will do damage is “troubling.â€
“What does that tell you? That there are some people that are so intolerant of other people’s views that a simple debate about the question offends them to the extent that they want to leave the state,†he said.
Rep. Ed DeLaney, D-Indianapolis, listens to more questions for conservative attorney Jim Bopp, after an intense discussion lead by questions that Delaney gave Bopp.
“And even more troubling than that is that this is a direct attack upon democracy. You cannot debate and discuss something that some people will be offended by, because they will offended by it?â€
Throughout his testimony, Bopp was interrupted several times by laughter from Freedom Indiana supporters seated in the public balcony.
That resulted in a reprimand by Steuerwald, who had already asked for public quiet and respect earlier in the meeting.
Marya Rose, a vice president at Columbus-based Cummins, said passage of the amendment would cause “irreparable harm†to Indiana’s business climate and reputation.
Cummins “will be reluctant to continue to add jobs in Indiana if our state is a less welcoming and inclusive place for all our employees,†she said.
But Rep. Eric Turner, R-Cicero, an author of the amendment, cited statistics he said showed business officials were wrong in their analyses.
“Eight of the top nine states with the highest rate of job growth in the private sector have an amendment to define marriage,†Turner said.
According to Turner, the four states with the highest gross domestic product per capita – as well as four of the top five fasting-growing per capita income states – all have an amendment to protect their states’ definitions of marriage as one man and one woman.
Micah Clark, executive director of the American Family Association of Indiana, echoed Turner’s sentiments and called the claims of economic harm a make-believe “boogeyman.†He said North Carolina – the most recent state to pass a marriage amendment in 2012 – has experienced economic gains in the calendar year since the 2012 passage of its amendment.
Clark cited the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce saying, “business investment increased more than 4 percent, unemployment dropped, and the state added more than 42,000 new jobs after voting to protect marriage.â€
Some of Monday’s testimony focused on the second part of the amendment. The first part defines marriage. The second prohibits the legislature from creating any legal status for same-sex couples that is identical or substantially similar to marriage.
Jackie Simmons, vice president and general counsel for IU, said passage of the amendment would directly affect the school’s ability to recruit and maintain its staff of more than 40,000 Hoosiers. She said her key concern is the second sentence.
Kentucky has a constitutional provision that is identical in language to HJR 3. In 2004, the Kentucky attorney general issued an opinion that schools would not be allowed to issue partner benefits because that created a violation of the amendment.
Simmons cited this case as cause for concern at IU, which offers domestic partnership benefits.
However, Bopp said that the University of Kentucky began issuing partner benefits in 2007 and the practice has not been challenged.
Turner said the amendment would not affect the ability for Indiana University, Lilly, Cummins, or anyone else to offer benefits to their employees.
There was also significant debate about the necessity of HB 1153, the companion bill.
Peter Rusthoven, an attorney representing Freedom Indiana, which opposes the amendment, said state law – and the constitution – should be “certain†and the proposed amendment, specifically the second sentence, “creates substantial uncertainty.â€
Rusthoven, who gave what he called “a perspective of conservative jurisprudence,†said the passage of HJR 3 would be “turning over future decisions of what will and will not be recognized over to the courts.â€
Turner and other supporters said they recognized the certainty of litigation – regardless of whether the amendment passed – but said the decision should ultimately be up to the resident of Indiana.
“The future of marriage belongs in the hands of Hoosiers, not judges, not activists,†Turner said.
He said this is an issue that every state has faced, with 35 states allowing their citizens to vote and decide the issue. The amendment passed in 29 of these states.
Turner said it is time to put the debate to rest and let Hoosiers vote because, “there’s only one true poll… and that’s on November 4, 2014.â€
John Sittler is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
Opponents talk children, voting in Franklin College marriage debate
TheStatehouseFile.com
FRANKLIN, Ind. – The president of an Indiana family institution said Monday that the decision over the proposed amendment to ban same-sex marriage should be left up to the residents of Indiana.
Randall Shepard, former chief justice in the Indiana Supreme Court, was the moderator for the debate. Photo by Emily Metheny, TheStatehouseFile.com.
But Jane Henegar, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, said it’s not right for Hoosiers to put the rights of their neighbors up to a vote.
The discussion was part of a debate hosted Monday night at Franklin College that featured Henegar and Curt Smith, president of the Indiana Family Institute.
Both echoed many of the sentiments heard on the House floor Monday, while also adding some of their own opinions.
Henegar opened the discussion by saying passage of the amendment would be a “permanent stain†on the state constitution. She would come back to this phrase often throughout the night, as she urged the General Assembly not to pass House Joint Resolution 3.
Curt Smith, President of the Indiana Family Institute, argued that children do best when raised with both a mother and father. Photo by Emily Metheny, TheStatehouseFile.com
Smith lobbied in favor of the amendment – and it’s accompanying House Bill 1153. He said it’s time to let Hoosiers decide the “role marriage should play in our state’s great life.â€
“I trust Hoosiers,†he said.
But Henegar said it would be “foolhardy and harmful†to pass legislation she said is very unclear. She echoed many House Democrats who have said it is unnecessary to pass a 73-line bill to explain a 16-line amendment.
She said this demonstrates HJR 3 does not contain language that should be put into the state’s constitution. And she said she is not alone in this belief.
“The majority of Hoosiers agree this is not the way we should deal with same-sex marriage,†Henegar said.
The two speakers also addressed how same-sex couples – and parents – affect children in Indiana.
Jane Henegar, executive director for American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana, said the admendment was “a stain on the constitution.†Photo by Emily Metheny, TheStatehouseFile.com.
Smith said families are the “frontline†and it’s “undebatable†that children do best when raised by both their mother and their father. He said he wants to “elevate and lift up†all Hoosier children, and that he wants to also “reinforce and expand†the culture of marriage in Indiana.
He then asked what he called a “tough†question.
“What does a same-sex couple say to that child when they come and say ‘Where’s my mommy?’ or ‘Where’s my daddy?’,†Smith said.
Henegar said that the parents would respond the same way a heterosexual couple would answer the questions of an adopted child.
The debate concluded with both parties thanking Franklin College for the opportunity, and urging voters and legislators alike to think carefully about their decisions.
Passing this amendment would be, “the same as hanging an unwelcome sign on the front door of our state,†Henegar said.
Franklin College students were some of the people in attendance during the debate Monday night. Photo by Emily Metheny, TheStatehouseFile.com.
John Sittler is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
IS IT TRUE January 14, 2014

IS IT TRUE January 14, 2014
IS IT TRUE the City County Observer received an anonymous email yesterday that had some attachments with it detailing a proposal by GAGE to change the scoring form for tax abatements that are oftentimes offered to companies that are expanding or being attracted to the region?…after looking these proposed scoring sheets over it is clear that these proposed new scoring sheets simplify the process and remove some of the subjective areas that politicians of Christmas past have used to give more points to their cronies and favorites?…the CCO would like to take this opportunity to thank and congratulate Debbie Dewey and the GAGE staff for getting simplification and objectivity to the threshold of acceptance with both the City of Evansville and Vanderburgh County?…this is something that was recommended years ago but was resisted by the powers that be at that time?…this is a very positive step toward codification of an objective fair process into the tax abatement process that has been abused much too long?…we encourage both the city and county governments to adopt the recommendations of Ms. Dewey as the law of local lands when it comes to scoring tax abatement applications?
IS IT TRUE Evansville has once again been the subject of a national publication and this time it is the Wall Street Journal that came to town to profile one of the attributes of the City of Evansville?…this time the Facebook site “scooter people of Evansville†is probably to blame for the unflattering article?…this follows the previous national exposure of being the fattest city in America, the most miserable city in America, Jon Stewart’s crap in the street capital of America, or even the jilted boyfriend down the chimney getting stuck capital of America?…this time the lampooning is over the number of scooters in Evansville and the distinction of these so called “liquor bikes†because one of the reasons people ride scooters is too many DUIs?…the Wall Street Journal opined on Evansville’s scooter riders as “There are riders wearing pajama bottoms in broad daylight, with their thong underwear protruding from the tops of their jeans, toting cases of Bud Light Platinum and occasionally passed out next to their bikes in a parking lot?”…even Mayor Winnecke was quoted in the WSJ for his opinion on the explosion of scooters in River City?…there were even references to pictures of locals dragging lawn mowers and deer carcasses behind these vehicles?…we and others are hoping the city wasn’t depending upon this article to lure Fortune 500 companies to Evansville?…the only positive is that our best locally owned coffee shop, Penny Lane Coffee got themselves into the picture with one of the more well known scooter riders out front?
IS IT TRUE it seems as though City Councilman and potential mayoral candidate John Friend and his future opponent Mayor Lloyd Winnecke have found something they agree on?…that is their joint opposition to Governor Pence’s proposal to eliminate the personal property tax on corporations?…the basis for this agreement of these antagonists lies in the fact that it will remove $7.3 Million per year from the General Fund?…it also eliminates the ability of the City Council, Mayor, and County Commissioners to selectively decide who gets tax amnesty through the tax abatement process?…they must not like losing that bit of power?…one would think that both of them would realize that eliminating taxes on production equipment carte blanch may just be a competitive edge for Indiana in the business attraction game?…there have been (and still are) many businesses in Evansville that enjoy an exemption from property taxes via the formerly biased tax abatement process?…among the companies that have benefitted from this exclusive and often capricious offer are both Old National Bank and Vectren?…perhaps Governor Pence has this one right and the local opposition is misdirected?
IS IT TRUE that there is a move afoot to use public dollars to repair and refurbish the mansard roofed French architectural treasure known as the Owens Block Building?…only five years ago then Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel and DMD Director Tom Barnett were boasting about a Henderson based investor that was going to turn this building into high cost townhouses with subterranean garages?…we guess that along with the McCurdy and the downtown hotel all went to hell in a hand basket after much publicity and brouhaha?…we wish the City of Evansville well in this endeavor?…we do realize that the cost to make this happen may be so far above market value that it is not feasible?…if this is not feasible when compared to a demolition and rebuild project we hope the powers that be will have the good sense to abandon this quixotic task and opt to demolish it instead?…the old girl is pretty but she may not be worth it?…it is too early to make that determination right now?
Evansville Water & Sewer Utility lifts water conservation notice; water main breaks likely to persist
Conservation helped avoid a citywide boil advisory; water quality never compromised
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Evansville Water & Sewer Utility (EWSU) has lifted the request for water conservation and thanks the community’s residents and businesses for their actions to use less water over the past few days. Water quality was never compromised as the Utility addressed various impacts to the system as a result of cold weather-related events over the past week. Today, reservoir levels at Evansville’s water treatment plant have returned to normal; however, water main breaks are likely to continue through the winter.
EWSU has responded to a record number of water main breaks – 99 already this year and 79 since the Jan. 9 conservation notice – in Evansville’s 600 miles of pipes. Nearly 50 EWSU employees, plus several contractors, have worked 1,200 hours addressing the water main breaks since extremely low temperatures hit Evansville a week ago. Since Thursday, EWSU has been tracking and reporting active water main breaks on its website: http://ewsu.com/index.aspx?page=3128. As of Monday morning (Jan. 13), there are 41 active water main breaks.
“Thank you to the many Evansville Water and Sewer Utility professionals who have been taking quick action and working day and night – and in challenging weather conditions – to repair numerous water main breaks throughout our City,†said Mayor Lloyd Winnecke. “As a result of those repairs, combined with vigilance over water quality at the treatment plant and conservation efforts by our community members, the City’s water quality was never impacted and we were able to avoid a citywide boil advisory.â€
Although all EWSU filtration pumps are operating in good condition and the Utility’s tanks and wells are in good supply, EWSU Executive Director, Allen Mounts, said the Utility is still addressing water main breaks, which are likely to continue throughout the winter, and has issued boil advisories to a few areas. “Cold snaps put additional pressure on our water system,†Mounts said.
“We expect water main breaks to happen on a random basis throughout the city, more frequently in the winter months.â€
Water main breaks can lead to water outages and a reduction or loss of water pressure, which can lead to the need for a boil advisory. Normally, a boil advisory lasts for at least 48 hours.
Quick tips during a boil advisory
Use tap water for:
- Flushing toilets
- Washing clothes (unless the water is cloudy)
- Taking showers (for adults and older children)
Use boiled water for: • Drinking
- Preparing food; washing fruits and vegetables
- Making ice
- Mixing infant formula
- Brushing teeth
- Giving water to pets
Use extra caution:
- Most filters do not remove bacteria or viruses.
- When away from home, be aware of coffee makers, vending machines and soda dispensers
with water line supply that may be under boil advisory notice.
- It is best to sponge bathe infants and toddlers with cooled water that has been boiled.
Call the Utility’s dispatch department at (812) 421-2130 if you see a water main break. Check out water main breaks on the Utility’s website: http://ewsu.com/index.aspx?page=3128 as well as boil advisories: http://ewsu.com/index.aspx?page=2885.
VANDERBURGH COUNTY RECENT BOOKING RECORDS.
 THIS SECTION SPONSORED BY DEFENSE ATTORNEY IVAN ARNAEZ. WHEN YOUR  READY TO FIGHT FOR YOUR FREEDOM, CALL  ATTORNEY ARNEAZ LAW @ 812-425-6247.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES
Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, January 10, 2014
Matthew Burden            Domestic Battery-Class D Felony
Strangulation-Class D Felony
Theodious Robinson     Felon Carrying a Handgun-Class C Felony
Resisting Law Enforcement-Class A Misdemeanor
Tanner J. Hatton             Domestic Battery-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.
Â
Gunfire incidents send two to the hospital, leaves home damaged
Evansville Police are investigating two incidents that left two people shot and one home damaged by gunfire. Both happened around 2:00am and within minutes of each other.
The first incident happened at 116 W. Oregon. In that incident, two people were shot. Angie Mueller (25) was shot in the abdomen and Mark Baughn (52) was shot in the leg. Both were treated at a local hospital and both are expected to survive. Mueller was able to give investigators information on the possible suspects.
A second 911 call for shots fired was made just after the Oregon call. That call was made in the 400 block of S. Morton. A house was struck by at least two bullets, but nobody was injured. Based on initial information, investigators believe the Morton Ave shooting may have been retaliation for the Oregon shooting. Investigators believe the incidents are gang related.
At least one handgun has been recovered during the investigation. There have not been any arrests in connection with the shootings. The investigation is still on-going.
Anyone with information about these events is asked to call EPD at 436-7979 or the WeTip Hotline at 1-800-78-CRIME.
Â
Wayne Parke’s “Hired Gun” Poll Suspect By: Brad Linzy
Wayne Parke’s “Hired Gun” Poll Suspect By: Brad Linzy. Â Posted without opinion, bias or editing.
Over the weekend Vanderburgh County Republican Party Chairman Wayne Parke released a poll taken by Public Opinion Strategies [POS], a polling firm started by former Mitt Romney and John McCain campaign pollsters.
This poll appears to show that Mayor Lloyd Winnecke himself and his idea of converting the old Roberts Stadium lot into a park enjoy widespread and overwhelming support in Evansville.
What Mr Parke did not say was that this pollster has been accused in the past of engaging in many questionable and biased polling practices such as “push polling” and “hired gun” or “advocacy polling”. Hired gun polling is defined as “Polls commissioned and carried out to promote a particular point of view. Hired gun polls are associated with reckless disregard for objectivity. A synonym for the term hired gun poll is the term advocacy poll—although the hired gun metaphor connotes a much sleazier and less professional image.
Selective reporting of poll results is one mark of hired gun polls. Another is questions worded to reflect the positions of sponsors. Both practices blatantly violate accepted ethical standards in the polling field.”[1] In one well documented example of POS’s hired gun polling practices, the pollster helped the liberal Robert Wood Johnson Foundation produce a poll that appeared to show that Floridians overwhelmingly supported Medicaid expansion.[2] In this classic example POS posed the following question to participants: “In order to cover more uninsured adults, the federal government would cover all of the increased costs to expand health care coverage through Medicaid for the first three years. The federal government would then cover 90 percent of the increased costs permanently with the state of Florida paying 10 percent.
Knowing this, would you say the state should or should not accept the federal money to expand health care coverage through the Medicaid program to cover more uninsured adults?”” The question is posed in a way that makes it difficult for even Medicaid opponents to answer in the negative. This is just one example of POS using hired gun tactics to illicit a desired result.
In other instances, POS has produced internal hired gun polls for political campaigns whose results differ significantly from the scientific polls produced by other independent pollsters. Here is an example: in the 2012 New Mexico Senate race between Martin Heinrich (D) and Heather Wilson (R), the POS polling showed the eventual winner, Heinrich, to be actually losing by 1%. At the time, most other polls had the Democrat winning comfortably. He eventually won by about 5.7% – a comfortable margin – winning 51% of the vote. [3]
Based on the available evidence, without the benefit of seeing the actual questions used in the Parke commissioned poll, it is this author’s belief that this poll is biased, untrustworthy, and unfit for serious publication. POS isn’t a “polling” firm. It’s a PR firm. As its name suggests, they are in the “public opinion” business. They are hired guns who help their clients – in this case Wayne Parke and Lloyd Winnecke – by providing an illusion of inflated support.
Sources:
1: http://cstl-cla.semo.edu/renka/Renka_papers/polls.htm#Ugly_Polls
2: http://mediatrackers.org/florida/2013/02/08/timesherald-champions-medicaid-push-poll-hides-activist-influence
3: http://www.nmtelegram.com/2012/10/29/wilson-internal-puts-her-up-in-senate-race/
Bill to drug test welfare recipients will be back
Hannah Troyer
TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – A bill that would require some welfare recipients to undergo drug testing is not part of the House Republican agenda but is likely to pass the House again this year, a key lawmakers said Thursday.
House Speaker Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, said the controversial bill is “one we’re going to enthusiastically endorse and move forward on.â€
“We’ve had this battle before and I think the time is right to move forward on that issue,†he said. “And we will see that bill move forward I think.â€
Last year, the bill passed the House but not the Senate. It would have required all recipients of the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families – the state’s case-assistance welfare program – to take a written test to determine drug abuse tendencies. Those identified would be pooled together and half subjected to a random drug test.
Critics of the bill, including Rep. Cherrish Pryor, D-Indianapolis, said they see the bill as unfair and, to some, unconstitutional.
“The problem is that we are assuming people using food stamps and TANF are doing drugs and that’s not true,†said Pryor. “It is not fair to stereotype anyone. My second concern is that it affects kids. If you cut assistance to parents, you harm the kids. I hope they don’t introduce the bill and focus more on preventative measures.â€
Bosma brushed off the bill’s critics, saying the argument about constitutionality is a typical complaint.
“If we didn’t take action because one party or another said it’s not constitutional, we wouldn’t do much around here,†said Bosma.
Hannah Troyer is a reporter at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.









