David Oldham-Heidenreich
Patrick John
Jason Fetcher
Alex Jarvis
Kendra Hodges Goodge
Richard Hale
Mona Gibbens
Cindy Halbig
Judy Gibbs
Angie Richey-Bevins
Jim Brown
Kate Farmer
Mark Warren
David Oldham-Heidenreich
Patrick John
Jason Fetcher
Alex Jarvis
Kendra Hodges Goodge
Richard Hale
Mona Gibbens
Cindy Halbig
Judy Gibbs
Angie Richey-Bevins
Jim Brown
Kate Farmer
Mark Warren
CITY-COUNTY OBSERVER GETTING A MAJOR UPGRADE
Wow! We are so appreciative of the major increased traffic by the Evansville and Vanderburgh County citizens.
In the new year, we have seen a huge increase in traffic and are doing some upgrades on our web server. The load has been refreshing, but we need to do some major upgrades to handle the additional load.
Please be patient as we upgrade our servers over the next several days.
City County Observer
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WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – No. 6-ranked Indiana swimming and diving earned half of the 500-yard freestyle championship final spots during Thursday (Feb. 22) preliminary action at the 2024 Big Ten Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships inside the Morgan J. Burke Aquatic Center on the campus of Purdue University.
IU totaled 17 finalists in four events via eight A finalists, five B finalists and four C finalists. The Hoosiers also the No. 2-seeded 400-yard medley relay in the final event of the night.
Senior Anna Peplowski is the top qualifier in the 500 free, posting a personal best and NCAA A cut 4:37.63 – the seventh-best time in the country. The 500 free is a new event for Peplowski, who swam the 100 back at her previous two conference meets. Her personal best coming into this season was 4:48.80.
Fellow juniors Ching Hwee Gan (4:42.52) and Elyse Heiser (4:42.98) and senior Ella Ristic (4:42.98) also earned spots in the championship final, while Mariah Denigan (4:44.69) got into the B heat with her first collegiate swim of the season.
Indiana added three more A finalists on the 1-meter springboard, as senior and reigning conference champ Anne Fowler finished third in the prelim with a 291.05 mark – just 9.85 points behind the leader. Freshmen Lily Witte and Ella Roselli also made the top final in their first championship event with scores of 272.65 and 267.25, respectively. Junior Skyler Liu will dive in the B final after posting a 250.50.
IU’s program record holder in the 50 free, Kristina Paegle will swim the championship final Thursday night with the third best time in prelims, a 21.99. That’s 23 hundredths short of her school standard time set at midseason. Senior Ashley Turak (22.34) and junior Kacey McKenna (22.53) reached the consolation final, and Chiok Sze Yeo (22.81) made the C.
Two Hoosier freshmen led the way in the 200 IM prelim as MacKenna Lieske (1:59.65) will swim the B and Reese Tiltmann (2:00.02) earned a C final swim. Junior Brearna Crawford also reached the C just behind her in 2:00.04.
TEAM SCORES
1. Indiana – 118
RESULTS (PRELIMS)
500 FREESTYLE
50 FREESTYLE
1-METER DIVING
UE travels to Monroe, La. this weekend
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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Week three of the season for the University of Evansville softball team will see the Purple Aces in Monroe, La. for the Best on the Bayou Tournament. UE will face Northwestern State, Syracuse, Sam Houston and UL Monroe over the next three days.
Friday’s action opens with a contest at 11 a.m. against Northwestern State, who is 5-7 on the season. Two weeks ago at the Texas State Tournament, NSU defeated Missouri Valley Conference rival Southern Illinois by a 6-3 final. Following the first game, UE is right back on the field for a 1:30 p.m. game versus Syracuse. The Orange stand at 6-3 on the season with a pair of wins over Maryland last weekend at the Southeastern Louisiana Lion Classic.
On Saturday, the Aces take to the field for a 2 p.m. match-up versus Sam Houston, who stands at 3-6 this season before facing host UL Monroe. Evansville faces the Warhawks at 7 p.m. on Saturday evening before taking them on again on Sunday at 11:30 a.m. ULM enters the weekend with a record of 8-4.
Evansville hosted a home tournament last weekend with Austin Peay and Miami Ohio coming to Tri-State Orthopaedics Field at James & Dorothy Cooper Stadium. Batting .444 in the weekend home tournament, Marah Wood raised her season batting average to .409. With two weekends in the books, Wood has accumulated nine hits in 22 trips to the plate. Her .480 on-base tally also leads the squad.
Freshman Abby Bode made the first start of her career on Sunday against Austin Peay and provided an immediate spark in the lineup. She picked up two hits in three at-bats and accumulated three assists on the defensive side.
Zoe Frossard has enjoyed a solid start to the year and checks in with a .353 batting average. She leads the squad with four RBI and is tied for the team-high with four walks.
STATEHOUSE (Feb. 22, 2024) – Vanderburgh County native Savannah Strieter is gaining experience as an intern with State Rep. Matt Hostettler (R-Patoka) and his fellow members of the Indiana House of Representatives during the 2024 legislative session.
Strieter, a graduate of North High School in Evansville, is the daughter of Scott and Shannon Strieter. She is currently a senior at Taylor University, majoring in politics, philosophy and economics.
“I wake up every day excited to come to work,” Strieter said. “This experience has immersed me in the legislative process and reinforced my calling.”
As a legislative intern, Strieter corresponds with constituents through phone calls, letters and emails while also staffing committee hearings and floor proceedings.
“I’m impressed with the professionalism and dedication shown by Savannah during her internship,” Hostettler said. “She has shown commitment and a positive attitude while helping constituents through answering calls and emails.”
Each year, the House of Representatives offers paid internship opportunities to college students, law school students, graduate students, and recent college graduates for the duration of the legislative session.
HB 1412, authored by Rep. Beau Baird, R-Greencastle, provides new regulations for the retail sale of dogs. Pet stores, animal care facilities and animal rescue operations would be required to register with the Board of Animal Health. Other new regulations would include mandatory disclosures and warranties for retail pet stores selling dogs and a random inspection program for commercial dog breeders, commercial dog brokers and retail pet stores. If passed, the new rules would begin July 1, 2025.
Opponents of the bill fear HB 1412 would limit local regulation of dog breeders and pet stores.
In a Senate session Monday, Sen. Blake Doriot, R-Elkhart, said provisions of the bill are being misunderstood. Rather than limiting local regulations, he said the bill increases breeding standards. Dogs will have to be bred according to the canine care certifications by Purdue University.
He mentioned his family’s generational experience breeding and showing dogs and said he “would not impune†his and his family’s reputation as “man’s best friend.â€
“House Bill 1412 is not a puppy mill bill. The reason I know this is because my family history has a lot to do with dogs,†he said.
In puppy mills, dog breeders sell puppies for profit, mother dogs breed until they are no longer physically able to, and dog are raised in cruel living conditions.
Many animal welfare organizations have spoken out against House Bill 1412 because it will remove local ordinances prohibiting the sale of dogs at pet stores, which opponents have said will discourage from adopting shelter animals. Others claim the bill provides no guarantee that funding or support will be given to help the Indiana Board of Animal Health to handle the expected increase in monitoring breeders and facilities.
Sen. Fady Qaddoura, D-Indianapolis, said the language in the bill reflects a divide between rural, urban and suburban communities.
“If we preserve the law the way that it is today, then let local communities control,†Qaddoura said. “If you live in a community that wants to do this, they can do it. If you live in Columbus, Indiana, and you don’t want to outsource puppies from puppy mills, they will ban it.â€
He said it’s not a commerce argument, it’s a local control argument.
Social media posts from opponents of the bill also expressed concerns with losing local control and urged people to “take action†by calling and emailing legislators. The Humane Society of the United States – Indiana posted on its social media feed encouraging people to stop the passing of “this dangerous bill that protects puppy mills by allowing pet stores to continue sourcing from inhumane commercial breeders. The bill also voids 21 local ordinances that regulate the sale of cats and dogs in Indiana communities.â€
Jill Ellis, executive director of Hoosier Fix, a nonprofit focused on providing low- to no-cost spay, neuter and vaccines for cats and dogs in Indianapolis and surrounding areas, opposes the bill.
“HB 1412 is taking away local control to regulate what is being sold in pet stores in places like Indianapolis and Carmel. Indianapolis is overflowing with dogs who need homes,†said Ellis.
She said there aren’t enough inspectors in the state to go out to the facilities, and there’s no money involved in the bill to add additional people.
Candace Croney, director for Center for Animal Welfare Science at Purdue University who created the standards for Canine Care Certified, a voluntary program addressing the health and overall welfare of dogs in the care of breeders, took no position on the bill.
Instead she highlighted the complexities of regulating dog breeders in the U.S. and the demand for dogs exceeding the supply in shelters.
“The data shows the problem is the U.S. public wants choices on where they can get dogs from because there’s a supply and demand imbalance,†Croney told The Statehouse File. “If people are told they can only get dogs from a shelter or rescue, but they decide for whatever reason they do not want a dog from that source, they go and find other places to get dogs, some of which are not regulated at all. Some people go to the internet.â€
In Doriot’s closing remarks, he said the Indiana General Assembly is “not breaking new ground†as other places have passed similar bills.
In the end, the bill passed the Senate 31-18. Nine of the 18 nays came from Republicans, and no Democrats voted for the bill to pass.
Because the Senate committee that heard the bill opted to amend it, those changes must be approved by the House Chamber, either through a concurrence vote or through a conference committee, according to The Indiana Capital Chronicle.
DeMarion Newell is a reporter for TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.