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Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us: Cool Youtube

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Is this a knowledge worker??

Here is a quick little instructional youtube video about what motivates people in work situations. It is interesting in the fact that it states that repetitive tasks that are paid by the piece are good motivators but with jobs that require cognitive thought carrot and stick bonus plans degrade results.

As my advisor in college once told me “only one animal is really stimulated to perform by a carrot tied to a stick”. That animal is sometimes know as Jack!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XAPnuFjJc&feature=channel

The Decision about Barnett’s Salary to be made Next Week

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Tom Barnett

The CCO Supports Honoring the Bargain that brought him here in an Ethical Manner

One of lightning rod issues this year in Evansville politics came when it was revealed that Tom Barnett, the Director of Metropolitan Development for the City of Evansville was drawing two paychecks. One of those paychecks was paid to Mr. Barnett from the City of Evansville the old fashioned way in the amount of $71,178 per year, the maximum allowable under the City of Evansville’s salary schedules. The other paycheck came from GAGE in the amount of $42.643 per year giving Barnett an annual compensation package of $113,821.

The deal for Barnett to get the supplemental paycheck from GAGE was negotiated, written, and signed by Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel on behalf of GAGE as its Chairman of the Board of Directors. No other GAGE board members or officers signatures were on the contract. The Mayor and Barnett have been open with the fact that Barnett’s salary in Paducah, KY a town of 25,720 was already higher than Evansville’s maximum allowable, and that he had an offer in hand for $107,000 from the City of Eustis, FL that has a population of 19,129. Evansville is over 4 times larger than either of these cities.

As the CCO is all about advocating for good public policy, we must point out that this two paycheck arrangement was a prime example of bad public policy. It is bad public policy to have salary schedules that are not competitive with comparable cities. Evansville’s salary schedules in Barnett’s case were not even up to par with much smaller cities with lower costs of living. One bad policy in this case led to another. The two paycheck scheme hatched and implemented by Mayor Weinzapfel spared him the scrutiny of the Evansville City Council in the hiring process. When it all became public, it backfired and Barnett was caught in the crossfire.

Councilman Dan McGinn has told us that he supports the City Council approving Mr. Barnett’s pay for 2011, which was tabled due to confusion, at the level that is the equivalent to the two paycheck scheme and that he should be paid the old fashioned way by one paycheck from the City of Evansville. The City County Observer agrees wholeheartedly with Councilman McGinn.

We also would like to encourage the City of Evansville to go one step further and do whatever study needs to be done to establish and approve salary schedules for all City of Evansville jobs that are competitive with peer cities across the country. Having salary schedules that are not competitive stunts our ability to retain or attract talent to these important positions. Perhaps both talented and willing people already live here to fill these positions if they were seen and compensated in a competitive manner. Taking this step is one necessary step to counter one of the reasons that we continue to have this problem often referred to as “brain drain” where our best and brightest leave the area.

Modernizing the salary schedules for both the City of Evansville and Vanderburgh County employees is good public policy and we encourage the governing entities to get busy and make this happen

2011 is an election year. We need exemplary candidates to come forward for all of the offices that are on the ballot. If the elected offices are not competitive with peer cities then something needs to be done about that too.

The Director of DMD reports to the Mayor of Evansville. The current Director of DMD is paid more than the Mayor. It is also time to raise the salary of the Mayor of Evansville to a level that substantially exceeds the salaries of the people who directly report into that office. Our future as a community depends on attracting qualified candidates who recognize and practice good public policy. Modernizing the salary for the Office of the Mayor of Evansville will make holding that office more attractive to people with knowledge, drive, talent, and experience.

Deduction filing deadline nears for Indiana property owners

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Evansville, IN (December 17, 2010) – The Vanderburgh County Auditor would like to remind residents that the deadline to file property tax deductions is January 5, 2011.

Deduction applications must be filed with the County Auditor’s Office on or before January 5, 2011 for the taxpayer to receive the eligible deductions on their 2011 property tax bills. To ensure that you are not paying higher taxes than you should for next year, be sure to file for any deductions that you are entitled.

If you have previously filed a mortgage deduction, you would only need to re-file if you have refinanced. If you have filed a homestead deduction, you would only need to re-file if you have moved. If you recently purchased a home and filed for your homestead on the sales disclosure form, you would not need to re-file.

For more information, or to review the eligibility requirements for the deductions, go to the Auditor’s website at www.vanderburgh.org/auditor . Deductions can be filed in the Auditor’s Office which is located in Room 208 of the Civic Center Complex. Office hours are from 7:30 AM to 4:30 PM Monday through Friday. The phone number is 435-5293.

IS IT TRUE? December 17, 2010

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The Mole #??

IS IT TRUE? December 17, 2010

IS IT TRUE that Spencer County, Indiana got great news from an economic development perspective yesterday?…that after years of negotiating it has finally been approved to proceed with the coal to pipeline quality gas production plant?….that this project will create roughly 1,000 construction jobs for three years, 200 permanent jobs, and 300 mining jobs?….that plants like this are green and will preserve the long term value of the coal under the ground in greater Evansville?….that this source of pipeline quality gas at the projected prices will save this region money on gas and provide jobs and wealth for the next 30 years?….that there has been some legal maneuvering done to try to blunt the efforts to get this project started?….that each and every one of us would recognize the name of one of the companies that has spent much time and money opposing this worthy project?

IS IT TRUE that an Indiana based start-up company in the green energy business recently signed its first contract to deliver its transformational energy technology?…that this company has some deep ties to Evansville?….that this company could have been based in Evansville if adequate venture capital had been available during its development phase?…..that it still could if there were sufficient investment funds made available in Evansville for emerging and proven businesses?…..that we happen to know about this fish that got away?….that for every fish that gets away, there are hundreds that never even sniff at an empty hook?…that a fisherman that does not bait his hook will starve to death?

IS IT TRUE that it has now been 1,315 days since the announcement was made on May 14, 2007 that the McCurdy Hotel was to be refurbished into luxury apartments?…that it has now been 1,170 days since the Evansville Redevelopment Commission at the request of Mayor Weinzapfel approved the spending of $603,000 to purchase the parking lot.

IS IT TRUE that there are now 695 days remaining in the two years that the EPA had given the City of Evansville to present an acceptable solution to the Combined Sewer Overflow problem?…..that this plan is an expensive and complex endeavor that needs immediate attention to avoid the embarrassment and expense of another round of fines?

IS IT TRUE that exactly 15 days from now Marsha Abell will assume her newly elected role as a Vanderburgh County Commissioner?….that both Commissioners Abell and Winnecke have said that early in their term they will introduce and support a comprehensive smoking ban in Vanderburgh County?… that this move would not even be necessary except for the fact that 2 years ago a resolution to do the same thing was reversed marking one of the only such reversals by a county with over 100,000 residents in the history of the United States?….that going back to the future of 2009 is a positive mood for public health, quality of life, and economic development for Vanderburgh County?…..that the City of Evansville will have yet another opportunity to do the same?

Indy Power Systems inks First Contract: MultiFlex Technology will Save on Energy Bills

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Green Technology Start-Up with Evansville Ties Cashes in on Patent Pending Technology

December 16, 2010 – Indianapolis, IN – Indy Power Systems, an award-winning provider of battery storage and energy management solutions, has reached an agreement with Cincinnati, Ohio-based Melink Corporation to install a 50kW, 200kWh grid energy storage and peak shaving system for their corporate headquarters. Melink is a premier developer and integrator of large Photovoltaic (PV) systems from 50kW to 5MW.

This peak shaving system will allow Melink to materially lower their electric bill by reducing their peak energy demand and driving down their demand charge premium. Demand charges are premiums attached to electric rates based on the highest use measured. Utility companies measure demand over a fixed period, commonly 15-minute increments. The utility then applies a charge based on the highest (peak) 15-minute demand period over the entire billing period (typically one month). Sometimes the utility applies the demand charge over several months, so that one 15-minute peak can result in customers paying a higher rate for their entire electric bill for six months or more.

Indy Power Systems’ storage solutions also benefit utility companies by eliminating their need to build new power generation stations by reducing peak demand that utilities must meet. This peak shaving system can store energy off-peak for use during periods of peak use. In addition, Indy Power Systems’ storage system is earth friendly in that it gives recycled Lead-Acid batteries a second use as energy storage, extending their useful lives by up to a year or more. The Indy Power Systems package is unique because it utilizes proprietary Multi-Flex™ technology to manage and optimize multiple packs of different used batteries. Used batteries cost 80% less than new batteries per kWh.

About Indy Power Systems
Indy Power Systems is a provider of energy storage and energy management solutions for the utility grid and vehicle markets. The Company’s Multi-Flex™ technology has been recognized by MIT Technology Review and was named one of the “100 Top Stories of 2009” by Discover magazine. For more information, see www.IndyPowerSystems.com

About Melink
Melink Corporation is a provider of energy efficiency solutions for commercial and institutional building
industries. The Company offers HVAC and Building commissioning, commercial kitchen ventilation controls
and solar PV solutions. Clients include Fortune 1,000 companies in the restaurant, retail, hotel/lodging, and
educational industries as well as government and military. For more information, see www.MelinkCorp.com.

Source: IndyPower Systems

Court hears arguments in legal challenge to federal health care law

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INDIANAPOLIS – Today a federal court in Florida heard the arguments of a group of 20 states – including Indiana – in their legal challenge to the new federal health care law. Attorney General Greg Zoeller, who joined the lawsuit on behalf of Indiana in May, issued this statement:

“Indiana and 19 other states who brought this legal challenge ask the court to decide a fundamental question: Can the federal government require individuals to purchase a private health insurance policy or face a penalty? This individual mandate is unprecedented, and raises the specter of what other financial products the federal government might seek to compel individuals to buy regardless of whether they want to or can afford to. Our bringing a respectful legal challenge is the means by which this question about the proper role of federal government eventually can be asked of and answered by the United States Supreme Court,” Zoeller said.

“We also are heartened by the fact that Virginia was successful this week in its separate legal challenge to the federal health care law. Virginia’s challenge had raised legal arguments similar to those in our case in Florida: that the individual mandate to purchase insurance is unconstitutional. The federal court that heard Virginia’s case agreed, and struck down the individual mandate. Although our case is heard in a different court and raises other issues, the same line of legal reasoning has withstood a crucial test,” Zoeller said.

In today’s case in federal court in the Northern District of Florida, U.S. District Court Judge Roger Vinson heard arguments on the merits of the case. The plaintiffs include Indiana, Florida and 18 other states as well as two private individuals and the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB). The U.S. Department of Justice represents the federal government defendants. The court is expected to rule sometime early in 2011. From there, the case is likely to be appealed to a federal circuit court of appeals, and from there potentially to the United States Supreme Court.

From the start of the litigation, Zoeller has spent no additional tax dollars on the legal challenge beyond his office’s regular budget that the Legislature previously approved in 2009. Indiana did not pay a legal fee to join the lawsuit. No outside legal counsel was used; Indiana’s legal work has been performed by a salaried employee of the Attorney General’s office who would have been paid the same regardless of whether Indiana participated. No one from the Attorney General’s Office traveled to Florida today for the courtroom arguments; instead, Solicitor General Thomas M. Fisher monitored the court proceedings by phone from Indianapolis through a court teleconference.

Before announcing in March that he would join the multistate legal challenge to the new federal law, Zoeller in February prepared a 55-page report on and analysis of the federal healthcare legislation at the request of U.S. Senator Richard Lugar of Indiana. The Attorney General’s report to Lugar is found here:

http://www.in.gov/portal/news_events/files/IN_Atty_Gen_Impact_Analysis_of_the_Patient_Protection_and_Affordable_Care_Act.pdf

Thunder Nationals Returning to Roberts Stadium

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\Tickets On-Sale Monday, December 13th at 10:00AM
Prices: Adult $20.00 & Children $5.00 + Additional Fees

Tickets available at the Roberts Stadium Box Office, All Ticketmaster Outlets,
www.ticketmaster.com, charge by phone 1-800-745-3000

Evansville, IN- Feld Motor Sports℠ announced today that tickets are now on sale for Advance Auto Parts Monster Jam® Thunder Nationals®, coming to Roberts Stadium Friday and Saturday, Jan. 7 and 8 at 7:30 p.m. both nights. The event will feature Monster Jam monster trucks Maximum Destruction® and BatmanTM, who are making their debut appearance in Evansville this year. Also featured will be Raminator, Rammunition, Quadzilla and Stomper.

On Saturday, Jan, 8, from 4:30 – 6 p.m. join us for the Party in the Pits. Fans with a Saturday night ticket will have the opportunity to get a view of the trucks up close and meet the drivers of the massive monster trucks. Pit Passes are available at select Dairy Queen locations.

Follow us on . Also, sign up on our web page www.smgevansville.com to receive our E-blasts containing concert announcements, discounts and group sales offers!

Rockport Coal Gasification Project Gets Green Light

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Spencer County and Southwest Indiana to Benefit from Jobs Created from Investment

ROCKPORT, Indiana – After four years of planning and negotiation, Indiana’s program to become a national leader in homegrown clean energy production took a big step forward today.

Governor Mitch Daniels made the announcement after the Indiana Finance Authority (IFA) Board voted unanimously to approve a $2.65 billion project to build a new generation substitute natural gas plant in Spencer County, bringing hundreds of permanent and 1,000 construction jobs to southern Indiana and providing savings to energy customers.

“We’re out to pay Hoosiers instead of people elsewhere for the energy we need. We’re out to protect ratepayers against the likelihood of higher long-term gas prices. We’re out to put people to work in rural Indiana. And we’re out to become a leader in the high-tech field of cleaner energy. This project does all that, and it was worth all the work of the four years it took to get here,” said the governor.

The proposed substitute natural gas (SNG) plant would:

Bring $2.65 billion in private investment to southern Indiana for the plant.

Guarantee at least $100 million of savings in today’s dollars but likely be substantially more based on existing public forecasts.

Produce 1,000 construction jobs, 200 full-time jobs at the plant, and 300 mining jobs.

Operate with 99 percent fewer pollutants than a traditional coal plant.

Be designed to capture 90 percent of its carbon dioxide emissions.

According to the agreement, IFA will enter into a 30-year contract with Indiana Gasification, LLC, a subsidiary of Leucadia National Corporation, to purchase 38 million MMBtus of substitute natural gas – approximately 17 percent of the total used by non-industrial customers in the state—when SNG production begins in late 2015.

Among the benefits of the plant:

IFA will purchase gas at a formulaic price for 30 years, providing Hoosier energy customers an insurance policy against jumps in the price of natural gas. The plant will be built and operated by Indiana Gasification, which will assume the entire risk for construction and operation.

Indiana Gasification is required to provide a $150 million reserve to protect Indiana ratepayers during times when the price of SNG goes above the market price for natural gas. Indiana’s coal resources will be used to produce SNG, essentially the same as the natural gas which is currently used to heat many Hoosier homes.

In addition to SNG sold under contract to the IFA, the plant will produce additional SNG and other byproducts (sulfuric acid, argon, and other rare gases) that will be sold to generate incremental revenues, half of which will be passed on to benefit the ratepayer. Vitreous slag, which is one of the byproducts of the facility, will be given to the state for free and used for other processes such as building roads.

In a state emergency, the IFA has the right to direct the physical gas for use anywhere it deems necessary in the state.

The plant is designed to capture 90 percent of the carbon dioxide it produces as a co-product with the SNG. Indiana Gasification intends to sell compressed carbon dioxide as a liquid and transport it to the Gulf Coast to be used in enhanced oil recovery.

In 2006, Daniels began discussions with a group about constructing a SNG facility in Indiana. Subsequently, legislative sessions of the general assembly enabled the contract, which was announced today. The enacted legislation authorizes the IFA, on behalf of the state, to enter into negotiations for 30-year contracts for the purchase and sale of SNG for the benefit of Indiana customers.

The IFA has now completed its negotiations and will file a petition to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) for approval of the agreements related to this project. Indiana Gasification is in the final stages of negotiating its loan guarantee with the U.S. Department of Energy, which is critical to meet the terms established in the agreement. Depending on the completion of the IURC process and the federally mandated environmental impact study, construction is set to commence in early 2012.

An executive summary along with the forms of agreements may be found on the IFA’s website at: http://www.in.gov/ifa

Audio from today’s announcement, which the governor participated in live via Skype, can be found at the following link: http://www.in.gov/gov/files/Audio/121610.mp3

Included is a question and answer session with Governor Daniels and Indiana Public Finance Director Jennifer Alvey.

Source: Office of the Governor

Disruption Without Apologies

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Breaking the Poverty Habit with Disruptive Innovation

Al Doerksen, CEO
International Development Enterprises

The thing about poverty is that people get trapped for generation after generation by expectations of same old same old. “We are poor, we have always been poor and it is our destiny to be poor. It is our caste. It is our class. It is our future.”

John Kenneth Galbraith wrote about this in The Nature of Mass Poverty, first published in 1979. He wondered why some groups had stayed poor for centuries. He found that many poor societies simply accommodate their poverty. He found that many of the poor found it easier to accept the status quo than to contemplate an alternate better future.

He used these observations of expectations also to explain why post World War II injections of Marshall Plan cash were so successful but why subsequent injections of foreign aid cash in developing countries have not always been successful.

In Galbraith’s experience, only a minority of the poor were able to imagine a better future and make the positive moves to get there.

Times have changed, to a degree, since the 1970’s. More of the poor have received an education. More than that, the widespread availability of television, cell phones and the internet have allowed millions of poor people develop new expectations, new visions and new hopes.

Innovation, at least the right kind of innovation, can propel these hopes to reality. We are speaking, in fact, of disrupting generations of hopelessness and misery, and creating the opportunities for changing the rules, changing the expectations, changing the measures, changing the outcomes, changing the future. These technologies are rightfully named “disruptive technologies”. They properly disrupt the expectation traps of the past and replace them with well-founded expectations of improved incomes and livelihoods along with accelerated hope and visions for the future.

Creating such “disruptive innovations” is both a privilege and our duty, especially if we believe that the poverty traps faced by too many millions is both reprehensible and unnecessary. In some contexts, “revolution” is a negative experience. At other times, it is entirely positive. (It might depend on how many people get hurt!) Likewise, some disruptions are also negative, but at other times, many disruptive innovations are nothing but positive, and we should embrace them.

I’m thinking of a small scale farmer we just visited in Ziway. His family had been poor for a long time. Along came a disruptive innovation, a rope pump. Not exactly intended for irrigation, it worked just fine anyway. What came out of the pump wasn’t just water, however. New hopes came pouring out. Within months this farmer had increased his land under production/irrigation, and had acquired a diesel pump. The rope pump had disrupted generations of despair, and had rewritten the future. It made me proud to be with IDE. It made me believe in the power of disruptive innovation. Without apology.

IS IT TRUE? December 16, 2010

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The Mole #??

IS IT TRUE? December 16, 2010

IS IT TRUE that it was just brought to our attention that an elderly lady was seen slipping on the ice on a downtown Evansville sidewalk this morning and busting her bottom?….that a person that works downtown and is friendly toward the CCO called to report that occurance?….that regardless of legal obligation that a City Administration that allows dangerous conditions in its target development area is part of the problem?…that we hope this elderly lady is okay?

IS IT TRUE that since November 31, 2010 the Vanderburgh County Democratic Headquarters has been closed? ….that no official reason for its abrupt closing was given by Party Chairmen Mark Owens?….that the Political Coordinator, John Paul Josey submitted his resignation and now looking for other gainful employment? ….we wish him well because we feel he did an outstanding job in that position? ….if any of readers are looking for a quality, hardworking and dedicated employee contact Mr. Josey on his Facebook to talk with him about gainful employment?

IS IT TRUE that Mole #3 has predicted that Lloyd Winnecke shall soon be announcing that he shall be a candidate to run in the Republican primary for Mayor of Evansville? ….that all signs are pointing to that Winnecke will be announcing that he shall be a candidate for the Republican nomination for next Mayor of Evansville first part of January 2011? ….that Mole #3 knows more then he’s reporting on this subject?

IS IT TRUE that digging into the recently released census data is addictive and informing?….that during the last 10 years that the City of Evansville lost 3.9% of its population (after annexation), saw housing prices drop in most census tracts, saw no statistical improvement in college education (17.8%) levels, and saw earnings drop by as much as 39% in some census tracts?….that Louisville had an 8.4% population gain, a small rise in housing prices, a 3% increase in college graduates to 24%, and slightly lower earnings?…that a Louisville official was quoted as saying “whatever we are doing is just not working very well” when asked about the Louisville results?….that if Louisville’s performance indicates “not working” that Evansville’s performance is comatose?

IS IT TRUE that these comatose census results are a golden opportunity for local leaders and those who want to be leaders to come forward first with a list of objectives for the next ten years and second with a plan on how to achieve those goals?…that there are those among us that believe that consolidated government will magically make Evansville’s performance competitive on a national level?…that consolidation may save a dollar here and a dollar there through staff reductions?….that the City of Evansville has been and still is capable of becoming competitive with or without consolidation?…that being competitive requires taking advantage of the golden opportunity to realize the root causes for our comatose performance, identify solutions, plan to achieve them, and then follow the plan?….that this will work for the City of Evansville as a stand alone entity, for a consolidated Evansburgh, for the State of Indiana, or even for the United States of America?

IS IT TRUE that Bob Whitehouse, interim director of the Evansville Convention and Visitors Bureau pulled off a major coup this week by securing the annual meeting of the Jehovah’s Witnesses for the City of Evansville through the year 2015?….that this group typically fills most of Roberts Stadium for these meetings?….that many just drive in and out but that Mr. Whitehouse’s diligence in keeping this group coming to Evansville during the three year absence of a downtown hotel is commendable?

IS IT TRUE that on the same day the City of Fort Wayne announced that the 2012 Indiana Democratic Convention had been awarded to the Grand Wayne Convention Center where White Lodging recently opened a Downtown Marriott Hotel?….that Evansville would have been in a perfect position to have been awarded the 2012 Indiana Democratic Convention if the Executive Inn Dilemma would have been planned and handled in a manner that it was opening in 2011 as it should have?….that with the two recently named top two contenders for the Democratic nomination for Governor of Indiana both being from Evansville that this convention would have been particularly appropriate for our new Downtown Convention Hotel and the Centre?

IS IT TRUE that it has now been 1,314 days since the announcement was made on May 14, 2007 that the McCurdy Hotel was to be refurbished into luxury apartments?…that it has now been 1,169 days since the Evansville Redevelopment Commission at the request of Mayor Weinzapfel approved the spending of $603,000 to purchase the parking lot.

IS IT TRUE that there are now 696 days remaining in the two years that the EPA had given the City of Evansville to present an acceptable solution to the Combined Sewer Overflow problem?…..that this plan is an expensive and complex endeavor that needs immediate attention to avoid the embarrassment and expense of another round of fines?