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THUNDERBOLTS EDGED 3-2 IN PEORIA

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Peoria, Ill.:  In a very close back-and-forth game from start to finish, penalties cost the Thunderbolts and put the game just out of reach, 3-2 Rivermen the final score on Sunday afternoon in Peoria.   The Thunderbolts’ next home game will be on Friday, January 26th against the Birmingham Bulls, puck drop at 7:00pm CT.

Matthew Hobbs opened the scoring in the first period for Evansville, on a rebound chance at 14:54 from Aiden Wagner and Brendan Harrogate.  A pair of penalties in the second period resulted in a pair of Rivermen power play goals in the second period, both by Jordan Ernst at 12:59 and 19:38 to give the Rivermen a 2-1 lead going into the third period.  At even strength, Evansville was at it’s best, and tied the game up in the third period as Lincoln Hatten scored from Dmitri Yushkevich and Hobbs at 6:11 to make it a 2-2 game.  Penalties would haunt Evansville once again however, as Dawson Baker put the Rivermen back in front by a 3-2 score at 11:31.  Despite pulling Cole Ceci late, the Thunderbolts could not get the equalizing goal, falling in regulation time 3-2.

Hobbs finished with a goal and assist, and Hatten also scored one goal.  In goal, Ceci finished with 32 saves on 35 shots faced.  The Thunderbolts and Rivermen meet again on Friday, February 23rd at Peoria Civic Center.

 

Thomas leads UE women’s basketball in loss to Southern Illinois

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The Purple Aces went 17-21 from the free throw line 

CARBONDALE, Ill. – The University of Evansville women’s basketball team struggled to contain Southern Illinois offense in a 99-60 loss on Sunday.

Freshman forward Neveah Thomas came two points shy of her career-high against the Salukis Sunday afternoon. Thomas and guard Kynidi Mason Striverson were the only two Purple Aces in double digits on offense while forward Maggie Hartwig pulled down 10 rebounds. UE had its second-best Missouri Valley Conference game blocking shots with five put-downs.

The Aces got off to an early start as forward Nevaeh Thomas had the first points of the game 40 seconds in. But it would take three more minutes for UE to add a point at the line going down by double-digits with 2:10 left in the first quarter. A corner three from guard Alana Striverson put Evansville into double-digits before the end of the first quarter.

It was a much slower start on offense in the second quarter as Mason Striverson had the Aces first basket over two and a half minutes into the quarter. The bucket spurred a shot-for-shot stretch between the two teams. But three straight threes in a row for the Salukis stopped UE’s offense in its tracks. Evansville’s guards got the team back on track as Thomas ended the half with two made free throws to make it a 49-24 game.

The Aces opened scoring in the second half as well with Hartwig making a second-chance layup. But SIU rattled off six points before Hartwig could make another layup. The teams traded shots until under five minutes to go. UE then had its best scoring run starting with another Striverson three culminating in six points. Two fast runs from the Salukis had Evansville facing a 35-point deficit heading into the final quarter.

Back-to-back layups began the fourth quarter for the Aces, but it soon returned to a shot-for-shot game. Southern Illinois was able to put together three short runs in the quarter to keep UE from getting anywhere close. Evansville ended its scoring on a Mason Striverson three and didn’t make a basket for the final two and a half minutes for the 99-60 loss.

The Aces return home to Meeks Family Fieldhouse next week for a pair of games. UE will welcome UIC to town first on Friday Jan. 26 for the team’s annual Pride game. Tip-off from Meeks is set for 6 p.m. on Friday.

Trailblazer Track and Field picks up multiple National Qualifiers at Butler Invitational

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INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. – The Vincennes University Men’s and Women’s Indoor Track and Field teams had an opportunity Saturday to take part in the first track and field competition at the Indiana Farm Bureau Fall Creek Pavilion on the Indiana State Fairgrounds.

VU once again faced off against a loaded field of NCAA Division I athletes, including athletes from Western Michigan University, SIU-Edwardsville, Valparaiso, IUPUI and host Butler.

The Trailblazers more than held their own against this high level competition, coming away with two event victories and four NJCAA National Qualifiers.

The Vincennes men’s team was led by three top-five finishers in the 200 meter dash, led by Desroy Jordan who took the top spot with a time of 21.68 seconds, good enough to qualify for Nationals.

Olamipo Ladipo and Tumaini Skinner were the next VU finishers with Ladipo taking third at 22.36 seconds and Skinner placing fifth at 22.44 seconds.

This trio teamed up with Clinton Laguerre in the 4×400 relay to place second with a time of 3:27.02.

Cohen Gallant was the next highest VU finisher, taking third in the 60 meter sprint with a time of 7.07 seconds.

Olegs Kozjakovs became the second VU National Qualifier, taking fourth in the Pole Vault after clearing a height of 4.54 meters.

Jeremiah Ziebart and Jacob Smith each placed top-10 in the shot put Saturday, with Ziebart posting a throw of 12.23 meters and Smith ending at 9.08 meters.

Ziebert would also take 12th in the weight throw with a distance of 11.50 meters along with Jacob Wickman at 12.37 meters in 10th and Jake Terrell at 13th at 10.73 meters.

The VU men’s track team was rounded out by Caden Hostetler who placed 10th in the mile with a time of 4:38.41 and Tanner Spence and Bryaun Manuel took part in the 800 meters.

Spence posted a time of 2:02.34 for 11th overall, while Manuel finished at 2:03.67 for 13th.

“As promised, the new facility at the Fall Creek Pavilion in Indianapolis was amazing,” VU Head Track and Field Coach Marty Rogier said. “Along with great competition, it was a good opportunity for our team to start finding out what we are all about. Unfortunately, we were still down several of our key members because of illness that hit the whole team hard this week. The distance group was really impacted. Even those that could compete were running at less than full force.”

Just another American story

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Just another American story

HOLLIS, New Hampshire—Charles Dean finds a seat in the back row of the stackable chairs set in the Alpine Grove Event Center.

He’s here to listen to Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley speak. More than that, he’s come hoping to find something he hasn’t seen for a long time … hope.

“It’s the first time I’ve ever done this,” Dean, 82, tells me after we shake hands.

The event center’s sound system blasts songs designed to energize the crowd before the candidate arrives for the 9 a.m. meet-and-greet. Blake Shelton’s “God’s Country” slips into the Rolling Stones’ “Let’s Spend the Night Together,” the mishmash of musical styles and moral messaging serving as a kind of symbolic homage to the dissonance in American life these days.

It is that dissonance that disconcerts Dean.

“We are too divided,” he says, shaking his head. “The whole country is divided.”

He has been, he explains, an independent his whole voting life, albeit one that leaned more toward Republicans than Democrats. He voted for Donald Trump in 2016 and then for Joe Biden in 2020, praying each vote would pull Americans closer so they could begin facing the nation’s problems together.

He’s traveled through the snow and cold from his home in Nashua to give Haley a hearing. He wants to like her. He wants to be impressed by her, to believe that she has the character and the strength to lead.

“I’ve had a good life,” Deans says, then gives me the condensed version of his biography.

He lived much of his life in Boston. He has an accounting background and ascended comfortably in business.

When he retired, he and his wife moved to Florida. They came back to New England when she developed dementia. She since has died.

He stays now in the cold north because of family.

“I’ve got three kids, seven grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren,” he says, smiling.

He notes that the room in which we sit, the room where he waits to see if Haley could be the president he hopes for, is where one of his granddaughters got married. He worries that his children, his grandchildren and his great-grandchildren won’t be able to build “good lives” like his because they won’t have the opportunities he did.

He wanted, he says, to see both Trump and Biden succeed. Biden disappointed him by not finding more common ground.

Trump disturbs him. The former president’s legal troubles distress him, and the way Trump has treated women offends him, because they show a lack of character.

“A president is supposed to think about the country, not just himself,” Dean says.

He can’t bring himself to vote for Trump again and he isn’t sure he wants to vote for Biden.

When she comes to the small stage as the sound system pounds out Survivor’s “Eye of the Tiger,” Dean locks in, eager to listen.

Her speech is a greatest-hits medley, a series of assertions designed to stroke her audience. She pounds away at the national debt, noting that $8 trillion of the $34 trillion Americans owe was racked up during Trump’s presidency. She says the solution to getting the debt down is to shift more of the load to the states. How the states will fund delivering services the federal government now does she does not say.

She calls for an expanded school-choice program and for parental vetoes of any classroom curricula. She demands better care for veterans. She pledges to stand tough against Russia, China and Iran. She vows to shut both the northern and southern borders.

Most significantly, she lumps Biden and Trump together as agents of dysfunction, a linking that is bound to get under the skin of both men.

After she finished, I ask Dean what he thought.

“Good and bad,” he says.

He liked, he explains, that she seemed to focus on what the country needs and not just what she wants. But he wonders if she’ll be able to do any of the things she promised she would.

I ask him how he’s going to cast his ballot in the New Hampshire primary.

“She’s got my vote on Tuesday,” he says. “I still need to think about it after that.”

Then, he shakes my hand and heads back into the cold, one more American trying to find his way home in a country he thinks has lost its way.

FOOTNOTE:  John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.

 

Todays City Council Meeting Agenda

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JANUARY 22, 2024

5:30 P.M.

AGENDA

I. INTRODUCTION

 

01-22-2024 Agenda Attachment:
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDUM

 

01-08-2024 Memo Attachment:
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS

 

IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

A. Department Liaisons
V. CONSENT AGENDA:  FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

VII. REGULAR AGENDA:  SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

A. ORDINANCE R-2023-39 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 907 N Governor St Owner:JRW Realty, LLC by James Wright Requested Change:  C1 to R1 Ward: 4 Burton Representative: Steven L Bohleber, Law Office of Steven L Bohleber
R-2023-39 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE R-2023-40 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 1524 W Louisiana St Owner:KJ Realty, LLC by James Wright Requested Change:  M3 to R1 Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: Steven L Bohleber, Law Office of Steven L Bohleber
R-2023-40 Attachment:
C. ORDINANCE R-2023-41 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 414 E Illinois St Owner:JRW Realty, LLC by James Wright Requested Change:  C4 to R1 Ward: 4 Burton Representative: Steven L Bohleber, Law Office of Steven L Bohleber
R-2023-41 Attachment:
VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET

 

IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

 

A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, February 12, 2024 at 5:30 p.m.
B. BOARD AND COMMISSION APPOINTMENTS
C. 2023 INVESTMENT REPORT; Russ Lloyd, Jr., City Controller
D. STORM WATER PRESENTATION; Karan Barnhill, MS4 Director
E. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
X. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

XI. ADJOURNMENT

House bill seeks to loosen rules about when and how much teens can work

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House bill seeks to loosen rules about when and how much teens can work

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Hoosier teenagers could work more hours under House Bill 1093, which passed the House Employment, Labor and Pensions Committee 8-3 on Thursday.

Rep. Kendall Culp, R-Rensselaer, authored the bill, which would update Indiana state regulations to match federal restrictions for teenage workers.

Currently, the Indiana Code does not allow those between 14 and 16 to work past 7 p.m. on a school night. HB 1093 would reverse that and allow them to work later while also repealing restrictions on the hours 16- to 18-year-olds can work, including in farm labor. The bill removes the prohibition for working with hazardous materials for farm laborers.

There was an amendment that noted that if a child is 14 or older and they have completed the 8th grade, they are eligible to work traditional hours with a parent’s approval. A large push for this bill is from the Amish and Mennonite communities. Rep. David Abbot, R-Rome City, said this bill is beneficial for them as most children only go to school until 8th grade.

“I work with many, many Amish in business and employees,” Abbot said. “I know them to be quite entrepreneurs.”

A representative from that community, Stephen Jones, testified that learning does not end when a student leaves school. He said they teach their children to be productive citizens who continue to learn and that his community cares nothing more than for the safety of children.

“As a minister and a grandfather in our community, every Amish family, Mennonite family, does everything they can to protect the wellbeing of their child,” Jones said.

He added that the members of his community are more than open to being audited by the state as they try to follow the state and federal standards.

While the bill had many supporters, many individuals testified against HB 1093.

“This bill is an attempt to roll back child labor protections that have been fought for generation after generation,” said Sean Crist, secretary-treasurer of the Indiana State AFL-CIO, which represents more than 300,000 Hoosiers in trade unions.

Crist said children should focus more on improving their educations and working on skills that can be transferable to the workplace. The removal of work hour restrictions for 16- and 17-year-olds could lead to possible abuse by being overworked by employers, which is at the expense of their education, he said.

“The individual without a high-school diploma or GED will likely face careers of limited job choice at a lower-than-average wage and possibly without meaningful benefits,” Crist said.

Many of the testimonies that supported the bill were from smaller businesses that claimed the current hours teenagers are allowed to work are not good for the business or the children.

Jennifer Owsley works with Indiana Beach Amusement Park, which employs many young people, and the hour restrictions make it difficult for them to work, she said.

“I get excited about this because we are struggling at Indiana Beach because we are open from May to past Labor Day, so the law that’s in place for our employment after 9 p.m. and after 7 p.m. on school days affects us,” she said. “And to remedy that, we’ve had to turn to J-1 Visa workers.”

According to U.S. News & World Report, “A movement to weaken American child labor protections at the state level began in 2022. By June 2023, Arkansas, Iowa, New Jersey and New Hampshire had enacted this kind of legislation, and lawmakers in at least another eight states had introduced similar measures.”

FOOTNOTE: Samuel Maurer is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

O’Brien authors legislation to boost EMS workforce

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STATEHOUSE (Jan. 19, 2024) –
State Rep. Tim O’Brien (R-Evansville) recently filed legislation to help address the growing shortage of emergency medical services personnel in Indiana.

O’Brien said his bill calls for a comprehensive study on the status of EMS and how to better support first responders throughout the state.

“One of the most recurring issues I hear from constituents, from everyday Hoosiers who experienced a medical emergency to the first responders who helped them in that critical time, is that these services need extra help to keep up with demand,” O’Brien said. “EMS providers play an important role, and it’s our job to do all that we can to ensure they have the resources they need to save lives.”

According to O’Brien, his legislation would require county executives to report on the status of each local EMS provider in the county to the state, which would utilize the data to explore ways to improve services and address workforce shortages. Emergency medical services are provided by fire departments and public hospitals as well as private entities that have been contracted through local communities and health care providers.

According to a report from the Governor’s Health Commission, there are over 800 EMS provider agencies in Indiana. From 2018 to 2021, Indiana lost more than 300 paramedics and 1,000 emergency medical technicians, with requests for services increasing by 66% in that time, according to testimony given to the commission.

Biden-Harris Administration Strengthens Safeguards to Protect Families and Children from Lead in Contaminated Soil at Residential Sites

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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is lowering recommended screening levels and strengthening guidance for investigating and cleaning up lead-contaminated soil in residential areas where children live and play. As a result of lower screening levels, EPA expects to investigate more residential properties for potential cleanup under the Superfund law and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. Today’s action delivers on the Biden-Harris Administration’s ongoing commitment to protect communities from lead poisoning, particularly in disadvantaged and overburdened communities facing multiple sources of lead exposure, advancing President Biden’s environmental justice goals. 

“Every family and child, regardless of their zip code, deserves to live without worrying about the life-long health effects from exposure to lead pollution,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “Today’s action ensures that EPA uses the latest, best available science to protect children living and playing near sites contaminated by lead in soil.”

EPA is lowering the screening level for lead in soil at residential properties from 400 parts per million (ppm) to 200 ppm. At residential properties with multiple sources of lead exposure, EPA will generally use 100 ppm as the screening level. 

Screening levels are not cleanup standards. While this update will help EPA site teams make site-specific cleanup decisions to protect nearby communities, EPA makes cleanup decisions specific to each site, using site-specific factors, including risk factors and community input that can vary from site to site. 

The science is clear: there is no known safe blood lead level in children. In infants and children, lead can severely harm mental and physical development—slowing down learning and damaging the brain. In adults, lead can cause increased blood pressure, heart disease, decreased kidney function, and cancer. Communities often face multiple sources of lead exposure, including from lead-based paint, lead in soil, and lead in drinking water. 

From day one, the Biden-Harris Administration has made protecting public health and advancing environmental justice a top priority, including by delivering on long overdue updates that follow the science. Updating the residential soil lead guidance is a significant milestone in EPA’s agencywide Strategy to Reduce Lead Exposures and Disparities in U.S. Communities, and aligns with the goals outlined in the Federal Lead Action Plan. 

Joe Kiefer II To Run For County Council In 2024

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Joe Kiefer II To Run For County Council In 2024

JANUARY 22, 2024

Joe Kiefer II, age 34, recently filed to run for the Vanderburgh County Council At-Large seat in 2024.  He would be filling the seat, his father, Joe Kiefer has held for the last 2 terms.  Joe II will be running as a Republican but prefers to be identified as someone who cares deeply about  Vanderburgh County and the people and businesses who reside in our community.  As a board member since 2015 of the Evansville Visitor & Convention Bureau, he has helped lead the convention bureau as its board president from 2019 – 2023.  He also has volunteered at Memorial High School as a track and fitness coach for 6 years and has served several years as president of the Memorial Booster Club.  In 2020 he was recognized in the Rotary Club’s, 20 Under 40, leaders in the community.

Joe II, since graduating with his MBA from Bellarmine University in 2013, has worked in wealth management and currently manages/leads a local wealth services team.  He is well-positioned to serve his community on the county’s fiscal body.  In addition to his Master’s in Business Administration, he also has a Bachelor’s in Economics.

Joe II is married to Emily and together they have 3 children.  He is excited about the opportunity to run for County Council and to serve his community.  It’s a family tradition!