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PASSED THE SENATE: Braun’s bipartisan bill to address nursing shortage, the Train More Nurses Act

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Two out of the three bills that have passed the Senate this year so far were written by Senator Mike Braun

U.S. Senators Mike Braun, Jacky Rosen (D-NV), and Susan Collins (R-ME) announced that their bipartisan Train More Nurses Act has passed the Senate.

This bipartisan legislation addresses the nursing shortage that affects communities all across the nation.

It directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Secretary of Labor to conduct a review of all nursing grant programs to find ways to increase faculty at nursing schools, particularly in underserved areas. It also increases pathways for Licensed Practical Nurses to become RegisteredNurses.

Along with the Working Dogs Health and Welfare Act which passed the Senate a week ago, two out of the three bills that have passed the U.S. Senate in 2024 so far were written by Senator Mike Braun.

“We have a serious nursing shortage, and we need new ideas to solve this problem to help Hoosiers get better health outcomes,” said Senator Braun. “I’m glad this bipartisan legislation to get moreAmericans into this important profession has passed the Senate.”

    “Nevada families deserve access to quality health care, but the shortage of medical professionals is hurting their ability to get it,” said Senator Rosen. “I’m proud that our bipartisan bill to address the shortage of nurses in our state has passed the Senate. I’ll keep pushing to make sure it becomes law, which will improve health care access across our state.”

  “In the midst of a growing demand for medical treatments and services, health care providers across Maine continue to face a significant shortage of nurses. One challenge in growing the nursing workforce to meet this demand is the limited supply of nursing faculty available to increase student enrollment and train the next generation ofnurses,” said Senator Collins. “I am pleased that the Senate passed this bipartisan legislation that will identify strategies to close the faculty gap and other potential solutions to strengthen our nursing workforce, ultimately improving access to care, particularly in underserved communities in Maine and across the country.”

 

Working together to collect shoes for those in need

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Working together to collect shoes for those in need

Indiana House lawmakers and Samaritan’s Feet International, a nonprofit dedicated to providing shoes to those in need, are teaming up during the 2024 legislative session to collect new and gently used athletic shoes for Hoosiers in need.

Shoes and socks are in the top five items that students need in the U.S., and trips and falls are the leading cause of injury and death among seniors. Providing older Hoosiers and children a new pair of shoes can have a positive effect on their health, well-being and independence.

Those who want to make a donation can visit samaritansfeet.org/IN2024. By donating $30, a Hoosier in need and someone abroad will receive a Hope Tote drawstring bag with new athletic shoes, socks and an encouraging message. New and gently used athletic shoes can also be dropped off at donation bins placed outside the House Chamber on the third floor and in the south atrium of the fourth floor of the Statehouse. In-person donations will be accepted through March 1.

Samaritan’s Feet is a 501 (c)(3) organization that serves and inspires hope in children by providing shoes as the foundation to a spiritual and healthy life.

Hoosier History Highlights

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January 28 – February 3

This Week in Indiana History


Adam Lambert January 29, 1982 Adam Lambert, American singer-songwriter (For Your Entertainment, Trespassing), was born in Indianapolis.

January 29, 2013  A headstone was placed on the grave of Dr. Samuel A. Elbert at Crown Hill Cemetery over 100  years after his death.  He is considered to be the first  African-American physician in Indiana.

Samuel A. Elbert


O'Bannon January 30, 1930 Frank O’Bannon was born in Louisville.  He grew up in Corydon, Indiana, and served nearly 20 years in the Indiana Senate and 8 years as Lieutenant Governor.  He was in his second term as Governor when he died in 2003.

January 31, 1971 Apollo 14 was launched on its moon mission.  On board were hundreds of tree seeds.  These seeds grew into “moon trees” planted around the nation. There are five in Indiana, including one on the east lawn of the State House. Moon Tree

Pacers February 2, 1967 Indianapolis investors were awarded a franchise from the American Basketball Association. They created the Indiana Pacers, which played their first game on October 14 of that year.

Our Where in Indiana? from last week was taken at Ouabache State Park in Bluffton, Wells County, Indiana.

Ouabache State Park  

Where in Indiana?

Do you know where this photograph was taken?

Visit us on Instagram to submit your answer.

January 28

Follow us on Instagram: @instatehousetouroffice

Indiana Statehouse Tour Office

Indiana Department of Administration

Guided Tours of the Indiana Statehouse are offered Monday through Saturday.  For more information, contact us.

(317) 233-5293
Estanley@idoa.in.gov


Statehouse Virtual Tour

Indiana Quick Quiz

1. In what stadium did the Indianapolis Colts play when they first came to this city?

2. Ball State University is based in what Indiana city?

3. What area of Indiana is called “The Region?”

4. Earlham College is located in what Indiana city?

Answers Below


For more activities

             in IN

https://www.visitindiana.com/


Answers

1. Hoosier Dome

2. Muncie

3. Northwest Indiana (Chicago area the spills into Indiana)

4. Richmond

HOT JOBS

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THUNDERBOLTS STORM BACK TO DEFEAT BULLS IN OVERTIME 6-5

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Evansville, In.:  Down by multiple goals on four different occasions, the Thunderbolts persisted and rallied late from 5-3 down to force overtime and defeat the Birmingham Bulls 6-5 on Friday night at Ford Center.   The Thunderbolts’ next home game will be on Friday, February 2nd against the Knoxville Ice Bears, puck drop at 7:00pm CT.

 

The Bulls grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first period as Carson Rose scored on a loose puck at 5:09 and again on a cross-ice pass on a power play at 15:10.  Just over a minute later at 16:27, Scott Kirton scored his first goal of the night off a deflected shot at 16:27, assisted by Brady Lynn and Vadim Vasjonkin to pull Evansville to within a 2-1 deficit after one period.  50 seconds into the second period, Brendan Soucie scored for Birmingham to make it a 3-1 Bulls lead, before Kirton scored 50 seconds later at 1:40 from Lynn and Vasjonkin to cut the Bulls lead again to one goal, 3-2.  42 seconds after Kirton’s second goal however, Rose completed his hat trick at 2:22 to make it 4-2 Birmingham.  Not to be outdone, Kirton picked up his own hat trick by scoring on a rush to the net at 8:29, assisted by Vasjonkin and Benjamin Lindberg to trim Birmingham’s lead to 4-3.

 

The Thunderbolts ended the second period and started the third period by successfully killing a major and minor Bulls power play, however Rose scored again for the Bulls off a dump-in at 5:01 to give the Bulls a 5-3 lead.  With 5:46 remaining in regulation, the Thunderbolts got to within a goal once again as Bruno Kreisz scored off a great passing play from Brendan Harrogate and Dmitri Yushkevich to make it 5-4.  With Cole Ceci pulled late, Matthew Hobbs tied the game off a face-off at 18:22, assisted by Kirton and Vasjonkin to force overtime.  In extra time, Myles Abbate became the hero for Evansville by scoring unassisted on a wrap-around at 1:13 to win it for the Thunderbolts 6-5.

 

Pair of Eagles land on Horizon League Academic Honor Roll

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Tennis juniors Guy Finkelstein (Lehavim, Israel) and Quinten Gillespie (Whiteland, Indiana) were honored on the Horizon League Academic Honor Roll Friday for outstanding achievement in the classroom.
 
To be on the honor roll, a student-athlete must have completed three semesters as a full-time student at the institution and have a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.20 as of December 2023.
 
Finkelstein, a computer science major, enters his third season as a Screaming Eagle after earning his first NCAA Division I victory last season against Brescia University. He also was put on the Ohio Valley Conference Commissioner’s Honor Roll List in August.
 
Gillespie, a mathematics major, will suit up for his third season with USI after earning nine wins in 2023. He opened last season by winning his first four matches and combined with Finkelstein to earn three victories at number three doubles in dual match play. Gillespie was also added to the OVC Commissioner’s Honor Roll.
 
Finkelstein, Gillespie, and the rest of the squad will begin the 2024 spring campaign on February 2 against Lipscomb University at the Evansville Tennis
Center.
 

SENATORS INTRODUCE BILL TO COLLECT MORE INFO ON FOREIGN AG LAND OWNERSHIP

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WASHINGTON — Today, Senators Mike Braun and Jon Tester, joined by Senators Joni Ernst, Sherrod Brown, Roger Marshall, John Fetterman, Marco Rubio, Tammy Baldwin, Bill Hagerty, Eric Schmitt, Katie Britt, and Todd Young introduced a bill to collect more information about foreign ownership of agricultural land in the United States.

This bill was prompted by a report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), released last week, titled, “Foreign Investments in U.S. Agricultural Land: Enhancing Efforts to Collect, Track, and Share Key Information Could Better Identify National Security Risks.” 

 Under the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act (AFIDA) of 1978, foreign persons who acquire, dispose of, or hold an interest in U.S. agricultural land are required to disclose those transactions to the USDA.

Last week’s GAO report found that the USDA process for complying with AFIDA is ill-equipped to fully combat nefarious foreign ownership of American agricultural land by foreign adversaries.

According to United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) data from December 2021, foreign investors own approximately 40.8 million acres of U.S. agricultural land. Foreign ownership of U.S. agricultural land increased modestly increased from 2009 to 2015 at an average increase of 0.8 million acres per year. However, since 2017, this number skyrocketed to an annual average of 2.9 million acres. Additionally, between 2010 and 2021, entities or individuals from China increased their ownership of U.S. agricultural land from 13,720 acres to 383,935 acres.

Senator Braun and Senator Tester’s AFIDA Improvements Act of 2024 will take the following actions to improve the USDA’s processes, drawn largely from recommendations from the GAO report:

The AFIDA Improvements Act of 2024 will:

1)   Streamline CFIUS Data Sharing: Require USDA to enter into a memorandum of understanding with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) to govern data sharing between USDA and CFIUS member agencies within one year of enactment.

2)   Modernize the AFIDA Handbook: Direct USDA to update the agency’s handbook for officials to collect AFIDA data within one year of enactment. This handbook was last updated in 2006.

3)   Implement Current Law: Require USDA to develop and report to Congress a timeline to meet specific implementation benchmarks for an online AFIDA submission system and public database. While Congress has required USDA to implement an online system by 2025, GAO discovered that USDA “has not developed timelines for creating an online submission process [or] a public database.”

4)   Improve Data Verification and Monitoring: Direct and empower USDA to take any such actions as are necessary to validate foreign ownership data collected under AFIDA.

5)   Identify Suspected Non-Filers: Direct USDA to better leverage Farm Service Agency data to identify individuals who have illegally not filed transactions with foreign persons under AFIDA.

6)   Collect Data from Every Foreign Investor: Require reporting for foreign persons with a minority stake in an agricultural land asset, including through ownership tiers or shell companies.

STATEMENTS OF SUPPORT:

Senator Braun: “Many Americans are worried about adversarial foreign countries buying up American farmland and jeopardizing our food supply chain. This bipartisan bill will improve the USDA’s system for collecting information on purchases of farmland by foreign nationals better identify transactions that should have been reported but weren’t.”

“Most folks understand that food security is national security, and that our foreign adversaries wouldn’t hesitate to undermine our country by messing with our food supply,” said Senator Tester. “We need policy changes to better track who is buying up our farmland and to crack down on bad actors like China who want to get a foothold on American soil. My new bipartisan bill will ensure we have the data we need to successfully execute my ongoing push to block our foreign enemies from buying up our farmland.”

“If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it. USDA hasn’t done a good enough job of measuring foreign farmland ownership and certainly appears to be incapable of managing this issue that’s top of mind for farmers and consumers alike,” Senator Marshall said. “This bipartisan legislation forces transparency and accountability from the USDA by requiring them to collect, track, and share key information on foreign investments. Food security is national security; adversarial nations’ uptick in foreign land ownership presents unique threats to our food supply. We must get a better handle on these investments.”

“Foreign adversaries, especially China, have bought up prime farmland across this country for decades, but we don’t have a good handle on how much and where because of lax, outdated disclosure laws. It’s a problem for family farmers and rural communities, and it’s a threat to our national security,” said Senator Brown. “This bill is essential to update the rules and shine a light on foreign entities that own agricultural land across the country.”

“Farmland is one of the most precious resources we have as Americans,” said Senator Ernst. “As an Iowan, I’ve long fought to ensure that we can protect our food and ag systems from bad actors seeking to exploit loopholes. This critical effort will allow us to better scrutinize and track foreign land investments and ultimately safeguard our homeland.”

“Wisconsin’s farmland is the lifeblood of our rural communities, and we need to protect it for generations to come. When foreign investors buy up our agricultural land, it not only can jeopardize our local economies, but it also can put our food supply and national security at risk,” said Senator Baldwin. “Our bipartisan bill will help ensure Americans know exactly who is buying American agricultural land and the potential risks it poses.”

“Americans are rightfully worried about foreign adversaries, like China, owning our farmland and threatening our food security. Our bipartisan bill addresses that concern head-on by giving the USDA better tools to track foreign land purchases, and to report them to our national security agencies in real-time.” – Senator Rubio

“It’s time for USDA’s antiquated AFIDA reporting process to get with the times. They need to work more with CFIUS to ensure we can protect our domestic food supply and national security from any potential threats from foreign countries. This is an issue that worries folks across the country, and it’s important that we take action to ensure our farmland is not in the wrong hands.” – Senator Eric Schmitt.

 “This is an important national security issue on the minds of many Hoosiers, particularly in our Indiana agriculture community. As we seek to counter the Chinese Communist Party’s efforts to manipulate markets, this legislation will provide critical information and transparency to better protect our homeland.” – Senator Todd Young

 “Food security is national security. We can’t lose sight of the fact that the Chinese Communist Party is our greatest geopolitical and national security threat, and everything they do is as our adversary. This bipartisan, commonsense bill helps ensure the proper tools are in place to safeguard American farmland from the CCP and other foreign adversaries, so hardworking families across our nation will continue to have a reliable food supply for generations to come.” – Senator Katie Britt