SENATOR BRAUN CELEBRATES PASSAGE OF BILL TO REDUCE MILITARY OVERDOSESÂ
WASHINGTON – Senator Mike Braun joins fellow bill sponsors Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), chair of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Subcommittee on Primary Health and Retirement Security, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) celebrating Congress passing the Department of Defense Overdose Data (DOD) Act as part of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
The bill will address the impacts of the opioid epidemic among members of the U.S. military and their family. It requires the Department of Defense to keep a collect an array of data needed to track and address the problem of military overdoses and require that drugs to reverse opioid overdose like naloxone are available on all military installations and operational environments.
“The federal government has a responsibility to protect the lives of service members, many of whom are impacted by the overdose crisis that has reached every corner of our country,â€Â said the Senators. “Over the last five years, we’ve lost hundreds of members of the military to overdose. This is a preventable crisis, and failing to act is immoral and a betrayal of the commitment we made to our servicemembers. By requiring the Department of Defense to track and report on overdose data and distribute overdose reversal medication to service members, we will help ensure no one else loses a loved one in uniform to a drug overdose. We look forward to this essential legislation being signed into law and the lives it will save in communities all across our country.â€
Specifically, the DOD Act as passed by Congress would require the Department of Defense to:
- Report annually on overdoses among members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, or Space Force and related data, including demographic data, substances involved, number of intentional overdoses, number of members prescribed or provided naloxone prior to overdose, previous prescriptions, co-morbid mental health diagnoses, referral to treatment, history of positive drug tests, analysis of discernible patterns in overdoses, existing and anticipated response efforts, access to treatment, and available treatment programs, and;
- Ensure naloxone and any other medication to reverse opioid overdose is available on all military installations and in each operational environment.
Cosponsors in the Senate include Senators Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Angus King (I-Maine), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Ted Budd (R-N.C.), and John Fetterman (D-Pa.).
Biden Administration Announces $600M to 11 Grantmakers to Fund Environmental Justice Projects
Grantmakers selected to reduce barriers to federal funds and issue thousands of environmental justice grants over the next three years
WASHINGTON (Dec. 20, 2023) – As part of President Biden’s Investing in America agenda, the Biden-Harris Administration announced on Wednesday $600 million for 11 selected Grantmakers under EPA’s Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking program, created by President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, the largest investment in climate action in history. This new grant program, which will make it easier for small community-based organizations to access federal environmental justice funding, responds to community feedback about the need to reduce barriers to federal funds and improve the efficiency of the awards process to ensure communities that have long faced underinvestment can access the benefits of the largest climate investment in history. Communities will be able to apply to a Grantmaker for a subgrant to fund a range of different environmental project activities, including (but not limited to) small local clean ups, local emergency preparedness and disaster resiliency programs, environmental workforce development programs for local jobs reducing greenhouse gas emissions, fenceline air quality and asthma related projects, healthy homes programs, and projects addressing illegal dumping.
President Biden is delivering the most ambitious environmental justice agenda in our nation’s history. Vice President Kamala Harris and EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan were joined by Dr. Robert Bullard, a Distinguished Professor of Urban Planning and Environmental Policy at Texas Southern University to announce the historic Grantmaker awards.
“Every person has a right to drink clean water, breathe clean air, and live in a community that is healthy and safe,†said Vice President Kamala Harris. “For too long, however, low-income communities, immigrant communities, Native communities, and communities of color have endured disproportionate levels of air, water, and soil pollution. That is why President Joe Biden and I have put equity at the center of our nation’s largest investment in climate in history. Today’s announcement puts that commitment into action by ensuring critical resources to fund environmental justice projects across the country reach the organizations that know their communities best.â€
“For years, community advocates have been calling for federal support and resources to help address our country’s most pressing environmental justice concerns,†said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “Thanks to President Biden and Vice President Harris’ leadership, we’re responding to these calls by removing barriers that have traditionally held communities and applicants back from accessing these historic investments in America. Together, in partnership with these Grantmakers, we are taking a giant step toward a future where every person in America has equal opportunity to breathe clean air, drink clean water, and live a healthy, productive life.â€
The Grantmakers will work in collaboration with EPA’s Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights to issue subgrants to community-based nonprofit organizations and other eligible organizations representing disadvantaged communities. The 11 Grantmakers will design comprehensive application and submission processes, award environmental justice subgrants, implement tracking and reporting systems, and provide resources and support to communities. The subgrants are expected to become available by summer of 2024.
The 11 Grantmakers consist of regional selectees (i.e., Regional Grantmakers) who will issue subgrants to communities in specific EPA Regions, as well as national selectees (i.e., National Grantmakers) who will provide additional support, coordination, and oversight to the subgrantees, applicants, and the Regional Grantmakers themselves, as well as issue additional subgrants to fill potential gaps in the regions. Ten Grantmakers are receiving $50 million each with one selectee, Research Triangle Institute, receiving $100 million to serve as both a Regional Grantmaker serving communities in EPA Region 4 and as a National Grantmaker in which part of their responsibility is providing subgrants to communities in EPA Region 7. Collectively, the 11 Grantmakers will issue thousands of subgrants to disadvantaged communities over the next three years.
EPA has selected the following nine organizations to serve as Regional Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmakers:
- Health Resources in Action, Massachusetts (EPA Region 1)
- Fordham University, New York (EPA Region 2)
- Green & Healthy Homes Initiative Inc., Maryland (EPA Region 3)
- Research Triangle Institute, North Carolina (EPA Region 4)
- The Minneapolis Foundation, Minnesota (EPA Region 5)
- Texas Southern University, Texas (EPA Region 6)
- JSI Research and Training Institute, Inc., Colorado (EPA Region 8)
- Social and Environmental Entrepreneurs (SEE), Inc., California (EPA Region 9)
- Philanthropy Northwest, Washington (EPA Region 10)
In addition, EPA has selected three National Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmakers, including:
- Institute For Sustainable Communities, Vermont (EPA Regions 1-3)
- Research Triangle Institute, North Carolina (EPA Regions 4-7)
- Climate Justice Alliance, California (EPA Regions 8-10)
Grantmakers are expected to begin opening competitions and awarding subgrants by summer 2024. Community-based nonprofit organizations and other eligible organizations seeking subgrant funding will be able to apply for subgrants through three concurrent tiers offered by the Grantmakers. Tier One will consist of grants for $150,000 for assessment, Tier Two will consist of grants for $250,000 for planning, and Tier Three will consist of grants for $350,000 for project development. In addition, $75,000 will be available for capacity-constrained community-based organizations through a noncompetitive process under Tier One. Each Grantmaker will design and implement a distribution program best suited for their region and communities.
The Grantmakers program is part of the Federal Interagency Thriving Communities Network and delivers on the Biden-Harris Administration’s Justice40 Initiative which set the goal that 40% of the overall benefits of certain federal investments flow to disadvantaged communities that are marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution. Grantmakers will work in collaboration with the Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Technical Assistance Centers (EJ TCTACs) to create a robust support network to assist eligible entities when applying.
UE Men’s basketball earns 10th victory with win over TTU
Aces improve to 10-2 on the season
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – For the first time in five seasons, the University of Evansville men’s basketball team has won double digit games, earning its 10th win over 2023 with an 82-51 victory over Tennessee Tech at the Ford Center.
With the win, UE clinched its first 10-win season since earning 11 victories in 2018-19. The 10th win also doubled the win total from the entirety of last season. The 31-point win margin was the most for the Purple Aces against a Division I program since Feb. 24, 2018 when UE defeated Southern Illinois by a final of 75-44 at the Ford Center.
“Credit our group for having the right approach as we played three games in five days. We talked about mindset this morning and I feel like we had great urgency and executed well,†Aces head men’s basketball coach David Ragland exclaimed. “We took a lead and kept building on it. Sometimes you can get complacent, but every time out, our group stayed connected and kept building.â€
Chuck Bailey III led a trio of double figure scorers with 18 points. The 3-time Missouri Valley Conference Freshman of the Week was 2-for-2 from outside and converted all four free throw tries. Ben Humrichous had a perfect 5-of-5 effort from long range on his way to 15 points while Yacine Toumi earned his first double-double of the year with 10 points and 10 boards. David Early and Jayvis Harvey led the Golden Eagles with 13 and 12 points, respectively.
Tennessee Tech opened the evening with a triple while Humrichous tied it up at 5-5 with a triple at the 18:02 mark. After the Golden Eagles knocked down another triple to go up 8-5, the Purple Aces turned it on, scoring 10 in a row to go up 15-8 just over eight minutes in. Tennessee Tech missed eight in a row as the Aces made their run.
Cam Haffner connected on back-to-back field goals to give Evansville its first advantage of the evening at 9-8 while Chuck Bailey III added the final four points of the run. TTU ended the stretch with a bucket, but the UE run continued with another 7-0 run. Five of those tallies came from Tanner Cuff as the lead extended to 22-10 at the halfway mark of the period.
Over the next three minutes, the Golden Eagles cut the deficit to eight before Humrichous took matters into his own hands. Consecutive 3-pointers saw the Aces take their largest lead of the half (41-22) before holding an 18-point advantage at the break.
Evansville’s defense was the story in the second half, holding TTU scoreless for the first six minutes while holding them to 0-for-8 shooting and forcing three turnovers. Humrichous made it a perfect 5-for-5 start from 3-point range as the offense hit 5 of its first 8 second-half attempts to go up 56-26. Bailey added a triple to push the lead to 37 points (66-29) with 12:13 left in the game.
With 4:55 remaining in the contest, UE took a game-high 82-42 lead with the Golden Eagles closing in the final minutes to the final score of 82-51. The Aces shot 48.5% for the night with Tennessee Tech finishing at 32.1%. In the rebounding battle, UE finished with a 45-30 advantage. Evansville dished out a season-high 22 assists in the win; the team has recorded 16 or more helpers in 10 of the last 11 games.
One more non-conference game awaits the Aces when they travel to Cincinnati on Dec. 29. The new year opens with a road game at Indiana State on Jan. 3 before UE is back at the Ford Center on the 6th to face Murray State.
Two-time All-Region 24 VUVB Libero Morgan Netcott signs with University of Montevallo
VINCENNES, Ind. – Two-time All-Region 24 honoree and VUVB libero Morgan Netcott (Montague, Mich.) signed her letter of intent to continue her volleyball career this spring at NCAA Division II University of Montevallo in Alabama this week.
“After I had a really great phone call with Coach Haven, I went down to visit and the school and program just checked all of my boxes,†Netcott said. “I loved the girls and the coaches and with a great Psychology and volleyball program, there was no way I could turn it down.â€
Netcott leaves Vincennes University with a trail of many athletic and academic accomplishments over her two years with the Blue and Gold.
Netcott helped guide the Trailblazers to a combined record of 61-16 including an unbeaten 26-0 record against Region 24 opponents and two Region 24 Championships.
Netcott also helped the 2023 VUVB team record the best season in program history since moving to Division I, ending with 32 wins, being ranked No. 18 in the country and VU’s first appearance in the Division I Midwest District Championship game.
Netcott had another big year running the Trailblazers back row defense, leading the Blazers with 692 digs, fifth most in the country this season.
Netcott closed out her Trailblazer career by surpassing the 1,000 digs milestone, becoming the third VUVB player in the 25-point rally-scoring era (2008-present) to reach this milestone and set a new school record with 1,389 digs.
Netcott also finished her Trailblazer career with a long list of recognitions as well, twice earning First Team All-Region 24 honors.
Off the court Netcott also has a long list of academic recognitions as well, earning 2023 First Team Academic All-American honors and being named the Top Student in the Psychology Department at VU in April.
“When I think of my accomplishments, the one that stands out the most is making it to the Division I District finals with the team,†Netcott added. “Although we would have loved to go further, this was something tat we worked towards the entire season and it was so fulfilling to see our hard work get us somewhere.â€
“Going into the year Morgan wasn’t really sure if she wanted to continue playing or just continue with her academics, so it had to be a really good situation for her to continue to play,†VUVB Head Coach Gary Sien said. “We’re really glad that she found a University that is a really good situation for her, both academically and athletically.â€
“Because Morgan was so far ahead academically, she was able to graduate in December, so we began looking for opportunities for her to sign and transfer in January,†Sien added. “Morgan, of course, had a great year and there was some interest, but just before finals week she got a message from Montevallo that they were really interested in her and they wanted her to come down for a visit. I know Montevallo years ago when they were in the NAIA were a National power and now, they are Division II playing a really tough schedule against a lot of Florida schools, so I thought this sounded like a really good situation for her.â€
“Because of the short notice, it seemed like she had to make a quick visit, going down and back in about 32 hours and everything went well,†Sien said. “She met the coaches and met the team, saw the campus and spoke to people in admissions and it turned out to be a perfect situation for her and it made it almost like a no-brainer.â€
“Morgan is someone who has her life very well thought out and twice over the last year and a half she had to reconsider whether or not she was going to pursue volleyball,†Sien added. “And because she has twice decided yes, Montevallo is going to get a person that is not only committed to her studies but also very committed athletically.â€
“It’s hard to pick just one memory to say is my favorite,†Netcott said. “But I’m sure that it would involve all of the friends I have made here. From the sophomores last year, the freshmen this year and the people I’ve been with both years, they are definitely what has made my time at VU most worthwhile. Between practicing with teammates and studying with my classmates, my most cherished memories will be with the people that I’ve met.â€
“Athletically, Vincennes University has given me the on the court experience against talented players that underclassmen usually don’t get at four-year schools,†Netcott added. “This has allowed me to build my confidence as a player while gaining in game experience as a collegiate athlete.â€
“Academically, VU has provided a great transition point while moving away from home,†Netcott said. “Moving so far from everyone I knew was scary, but the homelike feel of the professors in the Psych program made the transition much easier than expected.â€
“I also just want to say that I couldn’t have done it without my teammates and coach,†Netcott added. “The Vincennes volleyball program has taken such good care of me for these past three semesters and I don’t know where I would be without them.â€
“Morgan will definitely be missed in our program,†Sien said. “I always say, ‘you can replace the position, but you can never replace the person’ and that definitely applies to Morgan. We can talk about her abilities as a player, but you have to also talk about her leadership and the example that she sets. She is a real leader on the court that I always really depended on to communicate things to everyone else on the team. So just looking at the leadership side and as a person, not even looking at the volleyball part of it, that’s Morgan.â€
“Volleyball wise, I said after the District tournament that Morgan has helped set the standard for the liberos in this program,†Sien added. “Her two years here, as the saying goes, the next person who steps into that position has some immense shoes to fill. She has really defined what we look for in that position.â€
“She’s someone who the game and the team mean a lot to her,†Sien said. “And you know that she loves the game because she made two big-time decisions on whether or not to play and I don’t think most people would make that same choice. Morgan defines the libero position on the court not only with her ability to read the setter and pick up shots coming in at a million miles per hour but as someone who can direct our defense and as someone who is going to be very vocal.â€
“When we were down two sophomores during the season, Morgan really willed us to a couple of wins,†Sien added. “When you talk about a libero, you don’t usually get that type of leadership out of your libero. Normally it will be a big time hitter or a setter, those will be your leaders but that didn’t define Morgan. If Morgan were a hitter, she’d still be a leader. It wouldn’t matter what position Morgan played, she would be a leader and that’s a reason why we recruited her, not just because of her skills, but because of all the other things that she brings to the court.â€
“Her high school coaches raved about her and in talking to them we knew we were getting someone who could really help establish the culture we want in this program,†Sien said. “I have no doubt that Morgan is going to do wonders for Montevallo. She is going to pick them up. She is going to lead. They are getting a good one, that’s for sure.â€
Netcott is joining a Falcons squad who finished this past season with a record of 13-18 and a 10-6 record in Gulf South Conference play under Head Coach Haven O’Quinn.
The Vincennes University Athletic Department would like to congratulate Morgan Netcott on her signing with the University of Montevallo and wishes her good luck as she continues her volleyball career in the spring.
Big first half by Ryan Oliver leads No. 6 Trailblazers to win over Southwest Tennessee
VINCENNES, Ind. – The No. 6-ranked Vincennes University Trailblazers hit the floor for the final time in 2023 Wednesday night when the Blazers hosted Southwest Tennessee Community College in the Physical Education Complex.
VU rode a big first half scoring run to a big 95-61 victory over the Saluqis, aided by 17 first half points by sophomore Ryan Oliver (Antioch, Tenn.).
The Trailblazers got off to a fast start over Southwest Tennessee, outscoring the Saluqis 31-7 in the early part of the first half to take a big 31-9 lead.
The two teams traded baskets for most of the remainder of the first half, with Vincennes growing their largest lead of the half at 49-22 before Southwest Tennessee scored the final basket of the half.
Vincennes headed into the locker room at the halftime break leading Southwest Tennessee 49-24.
The Trailblazers looked to put the game away early in the second half and continued to add on to their lead, VU used a 15-5 scoring run to take a 66-32 lead.
Southwest Tennessee looked to close the margin with a 12-2 scoring run of their own to cut the deficit down to 72-46.
The VU lead would get down to 25 before the Blazers picked up a late 8-0 scoring run to finish out the 95-61 victory over the Saluqis.
“I thought we had to go to our grind package early to get a little bit of solidity to us,†VU Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin said. “We were a little sloppy early. We had opportunities, we knew where they were, we were just a little sloppy or a little jittery. We knew they were going to double us and attack and we see that all the time. We know where we are supposed to look and what’s there and once we got solid, you could see that we could get whatever we wanted. So the doubles are not going to be a problem for us, it’s just whether or not we’re locked in.â€
“And then Ryan Oliver got going,†Franklin added. “The opportunities were there and he took advantage of them and he took advantage of them aggressively and that was really the difference. Once he did that we got up by eight or 10 and we were on and life was good, it kind of followed from there. Then we started acting like we were solidly getting to the spots and, for the most part, protecting the ball and getting it where it needed to go.â€
“In the first half, we probably defended a little better,†Franklin said. “We were down in the stance and able to keep them out a bit better. We didn’t give up as many offensive rebounds, so we were getting plenty of stops. I thought there was a stretch there for about six or eight minutes where I thought we were pretty good in the first half. Then we got anything we wanted in the last eight minutes, we just didn’t finish and finalize.â€
“We could have had a big half,†Franklin added. “We could have had 65 or 70 points, we had a lot of opportunities in those last eight minutes coming off of a pretty good eight minutes. It wasn’t necessarily that we were playing bad, we just weren’t focused hard enough, tough enough on the finishes. They weren’t scoring much so it stayed about 22 to 25 points that whole stretch when we really had a chance to really take off.â€
“We came out in the second half and offensively had a little bit of a spurt and put it all the way away and then it got a little bit sloppy,†Franklin said. “We were forcing some passes on the front side instead of swinging it. We gave up some back cuts and a few offensive rebounds when we should have gotten the box out. But for the most part it was a good get-away game. We shared the ball and shot a good percentage. Our turnovers weren’t forced, they were us getting a little sloppy with a big lead and trying to get some guys some shots. I think we tried to force the ball instead of swinging it.â€
“But it was a good get out game,†Franklin added. “Now we get to go home and they will have seven days then we have to have a tremendous time starting on the 28th on. It’s all on the line now. If this ball club wants to be National Champs, if they want to be in that real run, it has to be real. It has to be every day, all of the time, on the floor, off the floor, holding each other accountable, focusing on those things that we need to focus on and just hard edging it. I know what it takes to be in that run. I know what it takes to be in Final Fours and Elite Eights and National Championships and we have an opportunity to do it, but we have to hard edge it. We’ve got to have everybody committed for the next three to four months and if we do then we can make a heck of a run if we stay healthy. So we’ll see if guys are ready to come back with that kind of focus. They say they are. They act like they are and that’s all fine and good. But you have to do it.â€
The Trailblazers were led offensively by Ryan Oliver who finished with 19 points, six rebounds and five assists.
Sophomore Karyiek Dixon (Enfield, London, UK) had a big game in the low post, finishing with 16 points and seven rebounds, while fellow sophomore big man Michael Osei-Bonsu (Bolingbrook, Ill.) just missed out on a double-double with 12 points, nine rebounds and a pair of assists.
Freshman Gerard Thomas (Henderson, Ky.) came off the bench to add 16 points for the Trailblazers, including dishing out five assists.
Freshman Damarien Yates (Somerville, Tenn.) was the fifth VU scorer in double-figures, ending with 12 points and seven rebounds.
Freshman Lebron Thomas (Bishopville, S.C.) had a big all-around game, leading the Blazers with seven assists and five steals to go along with five points and five rebounds.
Sophomore Victor Lado (Louisville, Ky.) picked up some big second half minutes to score seven points and grabbed four rebounds.
Freshman Vilhelm Bodingh (Akersberga, Sweden) also got some good minutes off the bench for the Blazers Wednesday night, scoring his first collegiate points as part of a five-point, two rebound outing.
Freshman Mathieu Nader-Kalombo (Longueuil, Quebec) rounded out the VU box score, connecting on a three-point shot to finish with three points, three rebounds and five assists.
“I thought Ryan, for about a 10 minute stretch in the first half, was really good,†Franklin said. “Then he got a little flat. He didn’t play bad, he was just flat from then on. I just thought we had different guys at different times going up or down. There were good stretches from guys, then they would lose focus for a little bit.â€
“We’re getting time from Gerard,†Franklin added. “We’re getting time from Dink obviously here and that’s important. They are making freshman mistakes still but they are making more good plays than they were and they are making less freshman mistakes and we’ll see what they’ve learned when they come back. But you can see the potential and they’ve had to step up. Dink has moved in there, Gerard has started to move here lately, so it’s good to see them continue that.â€
“Karyiek had a pretty good game,†Franklin said. “I thought Karyiek could have had a monster game. So when you look at the end of the game and he has 16 and seven, seven for 11 from the floor, you say that’s a really good game. I thought Karyiek could have had 35 or 36 points tonight. We’ve got to get Karyiek to have a more dominant gene. You can’t just play along. That’s fine, but if you want to be a National Champion, you have to be abnormal. Everybody always talks about trying to keep everything where it’s normal, you’re trying to be a National Champ, that’s not normal. Being the last one standing out of everybody, when everybody all over the world wants to be that it’s not normal and you don’t have normal behavior. So we’ve got to get him out of the normal and get him to have an abnormal level of tenacity. If he does, he’s got opportunities to really get some stuff done. He’s going to put up decent numbers and be a solid player. But we need him to be a monster sometimes and he’s in position to be a monster.â€
“Overall it was good,†Franklin added. “We got Victor some minutes. I thought Victor, in the second half started to get there. If he had protected the ball on a couple of plays, he really would have had a better night. But I thought he got on the defensive glass a little better and presented himself a little better, so we have to build on that.â€
“It was good to see Vilhelm get time,†Franklin said. “He’s just been knocked off because he was hurt and our depth there that we’ve kept is on the inside guys. Where we are thin is on the perimeter, so sometimes is opportunity and his injury, which really kept him out and then you are walking up a pecking order that is still pretty full with some older guys in front of you. But it was good to see him get out there tonight and get a couple of buckets. A couple of jump hooks. Get out and play a little bit and feel. Now he has something to register in his brain when he comes back after Christmas, hopefully he’s healthy. It’s amazing what a couple of buckets, or a couple of plays can do for these guys when they’re freshmen especially. Because they’ve got game in them, it’s just what will open it up and let them get it out. So hopefully he’ll come back and be ready to go for us.â€
The Trailblazers will return to the floor after the holiday break when VU travels to Chicago, Ill. Saturday, Jan. 6 to face-off against Malcolm X College at 4 p.m. eastern.
The Blazers defeated the Hawks 91-57 earlier this season in Vincennes behind 29 points by Lebron Thomas.
“We’ve faced a lot of things this season,†Franklin said. “We’ve set up a schedule that was as good as anybody in the country. We haven’t just played the top-20 type teams, we’ve played them on their floor. We’ve gone there and played the Moberly’s and Indian Hills and we’ve played all Division I games except for a couple D-II’s. We’ve tested our team. We did that in our jamborees. We played Parkland, who is No. 1 in Division II as the first jamboree game you play. We played Triton, we played Southeastern Iowa, our back end of our team played Mineral Area. All from the start we’ve been in the fire and then we’ve added in having to deal with really not having everybody really the whole season or certainly not being 100-percent.â€
“Sickness, injuries, now we’ve had some guys do some silly stuff and get themselves where they couldn’t play,†Franklin added. “We literally haven’t had our group. We’ve had to go through about three weeks of having a hard time getting any of our group out there for practice because of a sickness that was just here and hung around us forever. So they’ve experienced a lot and we’ve seen different styles of play.â€
“We’ve seen all kinds of zones,†Franklin said. “We’ve seen all kinds of different zones. We’ve seen all kinds of people trying to trap us in the post. You name it, we’ve seen it. We’ve seen teams defensively press us and traps. We’ve probably seen less man-to-man than we have anything else. So our team has been exposed to a lot in a semester and has had to deal with a lot of things.â€
“Now what we need to deal with is, we know the levels, we know where we need to be, now what we need to be dealing with is a bunch of dudes coming together determined to go in one direction for about three months,†Franklin added. “But I think we’ve seen plenty. With our schedule and different things we’ve had to go through, different guys have had to step up and different guys have had to play. We’ve had different guys all up and down all over the charts. So experiences, we’ve had them. They’ve tasted it. They’ve felt it. They know and they know they can be a good basketball team. I don’t think there’s a doubt that we could be a good basketball team. But are we going to be the best basketball team in the country? That’s the question and I think we’ve got to go up a couple of notches to do it, but so does everybody else.â€
“I think we are in a position to do it,†Franklin said. “But we’re a team built on discipline, intensity, tenacity and fundamentals. Always have been. So we can’t cruise. We have to lock in. That’s who we are. That’s our strength. That’s what makes us special. So we have to play to what makes us special. Our toughness. Our coachability. Our intensity. Our tenacity and to do that, you have to be that. We’ve been better than most but we haven’t been National Championship level of that and the guys know that and if we want to be National Champs, we have to be that from now on. For their sake I hope they do, I think we can and we’ll really start to find out on the 28th when we get back.â€
VINCENNES BOX SCORE
VINCENNES (95): Damarien Yates 5-9 0-0 12, Michael Osei-Bonsu 5-8 2-3 12, Karyiek Dixon 7-11 1-2 16, Ryan Oliver 6-12 4-4 19, Lebron Thomas 2-6 1-1 5, Gerard Thomas 7-10 0-0 16, Mathieu Nader-Kalombo 1-5 0-0 3, Victor Lado 3-6 1-3 7, Vilhelm Bodingh 2-3 1-3 5, Team 38-70 10-16 95.
Southwest Tennessee – 24   37 – 61
VU (13-1, 1-0) – 49   46 – 95
Three-point goals: VU 9 (Oliver 3, Yates 2, G. Thomas 2, Dixon, Nader-Kalombo). Rebounds: VU 45 (Osei-Bonsu 9). Assists: VU 30 (L. Thomas 7). Steals: VU 10 (L. Thomas 5). Blocked Shots: VU 6 (L. Thomas 2). Turnovers: VU 17. Personal Fouls: VU 13. Fouled out: Osei-Bonsu.
Attorney General Todd Rokita announces $700 million settlement with Google over Play Store misconduct
Attorney General Todd Rokita today announced a $700 million agreement with Google in a lawsuit over Google’s anticompetitive conduct with the Google Play Store.
“When companies unlawfully monopolize markets, they cause real harm to Hoosiers,†Attorney General Rokita said. “They rob consumers of the ability to choose from a wider array of product options that would otherwise be available, and they artificially inflate the prices of the choices that remain available. This settlement demonstrates our commitment to protect consumers and hold companies accountable.â€
A bipartisan group of 53 attorneys general sued Google in 2021 alleging that Google unlawfully monopolized the markets for Android app distribution and in-app payment processing. Specifically, the states claimed that Google signed anticompetitive contracts to prevent other app stores from being preloaded on Android devices, induced key app developers who might have launched rival app stores, and created technological barriers to deter consumers from directly downloading apps to their devices.
The states announced a settlement in principle on Sept. 5, 2023, and today released the finalized terms of that deal.
Google will pay $630 million in restitution, minus costs and fees, to consumers who made purchases on the Google Play Store between August 2016 and September 2023 and were harmed by Google’s anticompetitive practices. Google will pay the states an additional $70 million in penalties.
People eligible for restitution do not have to submit a claim. They will receive automatic payments through PayPal or Venmo, or they can elect to receive a check or ACH transfer. More details about that process will be forthcoming.
The agreement also requires Google to reform its business practices in the following ways:
- Give all developers the ability to allow users to pay through in-app billing systems other than Google Play Billing for at least five years.
- Allow developers to offer cheaper prices for their apps and in-app products for consumers who use alternative, non-Google billing systems for at least five years.
- Permit developers to steer consumers toward alternative, non-Google billing systems by advertising cheaper prices within their apps themselves for at least five years.
- Not enter contracts that require the Play Store to be the exclusive, pre-loaded app store on a device or home screen for at least five years.
- Allow the installation of third-party apps on Android phones from outside the Google Play Store for at least seven years.
- Revise and reduce the warnings that appear on an Android device if a user attempts to download a third-party app from outside the Google Play Store for at least 5 years.
- Maintain Android system support for third-party app stores, including allowing automatic updates, for four years.
- Not require developers to launch their app catalogs on the Play Store at the same time as they launch on other app stores for at least four years.
- Submit compliance reports to an independent monitor who will ensure that Google is not continuing its anticompetitive conduct for at least 5 years.
For much of this case, the attorneys general litigated alongside Epic Games and Match, two major app developers. Match announced a separate settlement earlier this year, while Epic Games took its case to trial. Early last week, a jury unanimously found that Google’s anticompetitive conduct violated federal antitrust laws.
Attorneys general from all 50 states participated in this lawsuit — along with attorneys general from the District of Columbia and the territories of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.