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HAPPY NEW YEAR TO EVERYONE!

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The new year has finally come and we pray that every reader has a beautiful year and fulfill all their dreams. It is when we look back at the past year, celebrate, and prepare for a fresh start.

Saying goodbye to the ups and downs of the previous year, we’re ready for 2024 and all the possibilities it brings.

Vanderburgh County Council Meeting JANUARY 3, 2024

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Vanderburgh County Council Meeting
JANUARY 3, 2024

3:30 P.M.

AGENDA

1. OPENING OF MEETING

 

2. ATTENDANCE ROLL CALL

 

3. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE

 

4. INVOCATION

 

5. ELECTION OF PRESIDENT

 

6. ELECTION OF VICE PRESIDENT

 

7. APPOINTMENT OF COUNTY COUNCIL ATTORNEY

 

8. APPOINTMENT OF COMMITTEE CHAIRPERSONS          Personnel Chairman and Finance Chairman

 

9. APPROVAL OF MINUTES:

 

A. Personnel & Finance Meeting November 29, 2023
B. County Council Meeting December 13, 2023
10. ORDINANCE CO.01-24-001            To suspend the hiring of County Employees and establish procedures to fill vacancies

 

11. PERSONNEL REQUESTS:

 

A. Clerk
1. Request to fill vacancy for M/T Subpoena Summons Clerk 10001010-101158
B. Assessor
1. Request to fill vacancy for Real Estate Deputy Transfer 10001090-109155
2. Request to fill vacancy for Real Estate Deputy Residential II 10001090-109156
C. Cumulative Bridge
1. Request to fill vacancy for Laborer 11350000-113515
D. Highway Department
1. Request to fill vacancy for Trash Container Driver 11760000-117650
E. Health Department
1. Request to amend hourly pay for PT Medical Lab Technologist 11590000-115964
F. Local Public Health Services
1. Request to create and fill vacancy for (2) PT Public Health Nurse 11610000-199000 (Extra Help)
G. Prosecutor
1. Request to fill vacancy for Investigator 10001080-108123
H. Prosecutor – Victim Witness Assistance (Federal Grant)
1. Request to fill vacancy for Victim Advocate 82050000-820517
12. PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION REVIEW REQUESTS:

 

A. Prosecutor IV-D
1. Enforcement Officer Supervisor 10001400-140012
2. Enforcement Officer Supervisor 10001400-140013
B. Prosecutor IV-D – Incentive Fund
1. Director of Operations 88970000-889716
13. APPROPRIATION ORDINANCE:  None

 

14. REPEALS:  None

 

15. TRANSFERS:

 

A. Area Plan Commission
B. Public Health Funds
16. OLD BUSINESS – None

 

17. NEW BUSINESS:

 

A. Approval of the 2024 Amended Salary Ordinance
B. Appointment of Liaisons
C. Appointment to ABC Board
D. PTABOA: Waiver of requirement regarding political affiliation and certified level II or III Indiana Assessor-Appraisers to serve on PTABOA Board
E. Other County Council Appointments
F. Approval of 2024 Meeting Dates and Filing Deadlines
18. AMENDMENTS TO SALARY ORDINANCE

 

19. PUBLIC COMMENT

 

20. REMINDER OF UPCOMING MEETING DATES/TIMES:

 

A. No Personnel & Finance Meeting for January
B. County Council Meeting – February 7, 2024 @3:30 PM
21. ADJOURNMENT

USI MBB posts big win at Lindenwood

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ST. CHARLES, Mo. – University of Southern Indiana sophomore guard/forward AJ Smith (Edwardsville, Illinois) scored a career-high 27 points and led the Screaming Eagles to a 73-62 victory over Lindenwood University Sunday afternoon at Hyland Arena in St. Charles, Missouri. The Eagles rise to 4-11 overall and start OVC play 1-1, while the Lions are 6-8 overall, 0-1 OVC.
 
The victory marked the 50th USI career win for Eagles’ Head Coach Stan Gouard. Gouard is 50-41 at USI and 277-158 for his coaching career.
 
USI was the fast out of the gate, posting a 15-5 lead before seven minutes were gone in the game. The Eagles, who were four-of-seven from the field, including a pair of three-pointers, and five-of-six from the stripe in the opening run, was led by junior forward Nick Hittle (Indianapolis, Indiana), who had six of the 15 points during the opening run.
 
The Lions would battle back, responding with a 12-1 run, and took a 17-16 lead with 8:14 before halftime. The squads would trade buckets and leads from that point before USI grabbed a 31-30 lead at the intermission on a runner in the lane by junior guard Jeremiah Hernandez (Chicago, Illinois) with eight seconds on the clock.
 
The second half would belong to USI and Smith, who scored 18 of his 27 points in the final 20 minutes.
 
After the lead changed hands 12 times in the first 13 minutes of the final half, the Eagles took control with a 7-1 run to lead 60-55 with 6:48 to play. Junior forward Jack Mielke (Downers Grove, Illinois) gave the Eagles the lead for good with a pair of free throws, while Smith scored the final five points of the run to put USI up five.
 
Through all of the lead changes in the second half, Smith kept the Eagles moving forward with 11 of the first 24 USI points. Sophomore forward Kiyron Powell (Evansville, Indiana) also contributed to keeping USI in the contest with an additional six points.
 
The Lions would cut the USI advantage to one, 60-59, with 5:06 left, but that would be close as they would be the rest of the contest. The Eagles, who are 7-0 all-time against Lindenwood, sealed the 73-62 win with a 13-3 surge in the final five minutes, led by six points from Hernandez.
 
Overall for the game, Smith would posts his career-high and game-high 27 points on nine-of-16 from the field, four-of-seven from beyond the arc, and five-of-eight from the stripe. He also tied for a game-high with nine rebounds, missing his seventh double-double of the season by one.
 
Hernandez followed Smith in the scoring and rebound columns with 16 points and eight rebounds. The junior guard was four-of-10 from the field and eight-of-12 from the line.
 
Powell rounded out the double-figure scorers with 11 points off the bench. The sophomore was a blistering five-of-six from the field.
 
As a team, USI dominated the glass with a 43-25 advantage in rebounds and held the Lions to 36 percent from the field (18-50).  The Eagles offensively shot 45.1 percent from the field in the game (23-51), 51.7 percent in the second half (15-29).
 
Next Up For USI:
USI opens the 2024 calendar year with a pair of OVC home games at Screaming Eagles Arena next week. The Eagles will be hosting Tennessee State University Thursday for Fan Appreciation Night and Tennessee Tech University Saturday for Faculty Appreciation Night.
 
Both games are scheduled for a 7:30 p.m. tipoff. The USI Women’s Basketball will lead off the doubleheaders at 5 p.m. each night.
 
TSU is 8-7 to start the year and 1-1 after the first weekend of OVC play. The Tigers, who 2-4 in the last six games, opened OVC play at home with a 91-75 loss to the University of Tennessee at Martin before bouncing back to defeat the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, 90-82.
 
USI and TSU split its OVC games last year with both winning on the others home court. The Tigers took the first meeting, 80-76, at Screaming Eagles Arena, while the Eagles won in Nashville, 93-81.  
 
The Golden Eagles of TTU are 5-10 in 2023-24 and 0-2 in the OVC. TTU, which is also 2-4 in the last six games, start conference action with an 81-75 loss to Little Rock and an 81-73 loss to UT Martin at home last week.
 
TTU took both meetings with USI last year, winning in Cookeville, Tennessee, 84-69, and at Screaming Eagles Arena, 82-79.
 

DCS releases 2022 fatality report

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The Indiana Department of Child Services investigated 308 child deaths in 2022 and determined 61 were a result of abuse or neglect.

The Annual Report of Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities in Indiana details the circumstances leading to each fatality and highlights the risk factors that put children in danger.

According to the report, 17 of the fatalities were due to abuse, and 44 were the result of neglect. More than two-thirds of the fatalities involved a child 3 years old or younger, which is consistent with national trends.

Causes of death were taken from state death certificates. Death by weapon, including body part, was the leading cause of death, listed in 36 percent of cases. Unsafe sleeping arrangements, caregiver substance abuse, failure to supervise a child (especially near a body of water), driving while intoxicated and poisoning or overdose also were factors.

DCS reviews all child fatalities that meet the following circumstances:

  • For children under 3 years of age: The death is sudden, unexpected or unexplained, or involves allegations of abuse and neglect.
  • For children age 3 or older: The death involves allegations of abuse or neglect.

The full report can be found here.

Valley Meats, LLC, Recalls Ground Beef Products Due to Possible E. Coli O157:H7 Contamination

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PRODUCT RECALL
PRODUCT RECALL

WASHINGTON, Dec. 31, 2023 – Valley Meats, LLC, a Coal Valley, Ill. establishment, is recalling approximately 6,768 pounds of raw ground beef products that may be contaminated with E. coli O157:H7, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced today.

The raw ground beef items were produced on December 22, 2023. The following products are subject to recall [view labels]:

  • 12-lb. box package containing “ANGUS GROUND BEEF PATTIES” with product code 1208PL, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, Use By 01/15/2024, and time stamps between 7:36:38AM to 08:00:48AM.
  • 16-lb. box packages containing “ANGUS GROUND BEEF PATTIES” with the product code 1253PL, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, Use By 01/15/2024, and time stamps between 7:25:50 AM to 08:00:36AM.
  • 28-lb. box package containing “Ground Beef Patties” with product code 72287, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, Use By 01/15/2024, and time stamps between 12:44:00PM to 12:54:32PM.
  • 28-lb. box packaging containing “Ground Beef Patties” with product code 72287, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, Use By 01/15/2024, and time stamp 1:02:55PM.
  • 24-lb. box packaging containing “Ground Beef Patties” with product code 72284, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, Use By 01/15/2024, and time stamps between 1:10:09PM to 1:10:17PM.
  • 13.5-lb. box packaging containing “GROUND BEEF PATTIES” with product code 1103, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, Use By 01/15/2024, and time stamps between 1:41:55:55PM to 1:57:53PM.
  • 20-lb. box packaging containing “GROUND BEEF” with product code 8515, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, and time stamps between 1:16:24PM to 1:31:15PM.
  • 40-lb. box packaging containing “GROUND BEEF” with product code 8020VP, Run No. 3356GRDB, date code 231222, and time stamps between 1:34:54PM to 2:00:49PM.

The products subject to recall bear establishment number “EST. 5712” inside the USDA mark of inspection. These items were shipped to distributor locations in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Michigan for further distribution to restaurants and other institutional users.

The problem was discovered when the establishment notified FSIS that samples of ground beef products submitted to a third-party laboratory for microbiological analysis tested positive for E. coli O157:H7. There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products.

Anyone concerned about an injury or illness should contact a healthcare provider. E. coli O157:H7 is a potentially deadly bacterium that can cause dehydration, bloody diarrhea and abdominal cramps 2–8 days (3–4 days, on average) after exposure the organism. While most people recover within a week, some develop a type of kidney failure called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). This condition can occur among persons of any age but is most common in children under 5-years old and older adults. It is marked by easy bruising, pallor, and decreased urine output. Persons who experience these symptoms should seek emergency medical care immediately.

FSIS is concerned that some product may be in institutional or restaurant refrigerators or freezers. Restaurants and institutions are urged not to serve these products. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers. When available, the retail distribution list(s) will be posted on the FSIS website at www.fsis.usda.gov/recalls.

FSIS advises all consumers to safely prepare their raw meat products, including fresh and frozen, and only consume ground beef that has been cooked to a temperature of 160 F. The only way to confirm that ground beef is cooked to a temperature high enough to kill harmful bacteria is to use a food thermometer that measures internal temperature, https://www.fsis.usda.gov/safetempchart.

PRODUCT RECALL
PRODUCT RECALL

Eagles earn gritty win Sunday against Lions

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ST. CHARLES, Mo. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Basketball notched a gritty 71-68 road victory at Lindenwood University Sunday afternoon, completing a sweep on the opening weekend of the Ohio Valley Conference season.
 
Southern Indiana moved to 2-0 in conference play and 7-5 this season, while Lindenwood went to 0-1 in the OVC and 2-9 overall. It is USI’s first 2-0 start in league action since the 2021-22 season in the Great Lakes Valley Conference. On Sunday, the Screaming Eagles joined the University of Tennessee at Martin as the only teams to start 2-0 in the OVC.
 
Following the opening tip, the Eagles’ offense started efficiently from outside and inside. USI’s first two buckets came on three-pointers from junior guard Vanessa Shafford (Linton, Indiana) and graduate guard Tori Handley (Jeffersonville, Indiana). Just over three minutes into the contest, senior forward Meredith Raley (Haubstadt, Indiana) gave Southern Indiana an 11-6 lead after completing a three-point play with a basket and the foul. Near the three-minute mark of the first, Lindenwood knotted the game up at 15 after a third consecutive make from beyond the arc. Southern Indiana went on to take a 22-17 lead after the opening frame, as the Screaming Eagles’ pressuring defense created 14 points off nine turnovers by the Lions in the first 10 minutes.
 
The back-and-forth battle continued in the second quarter, as a three-point shot helped the Lions close the five-point gap and later tie the game at 22. Minutes later, sophomore guard Ali Saunders (Depauw, Indiana) connected on her second triple of the game to slow the Lions’ momentum and put the Eagles back in front, 27-24. USI generated a five-point lead again later in the period, but Lindenwood responded, refusing to let USI create any significant separation on the scoreboard. The two squads exchanged baskets in the remaining first-half minutes with Southern Indiana taking a one-point lead, 34-33, into halftime.
 
Now in their second season in the OVC, the two former GLVC foes continued to go at it out of the intermission. The game remained a one-possession contest for most of the third quarter, and the Lions grabbed their first lead before the midway point of the third. Past halfway in the quarter, Raley crossed into double figures with a layup to give USI a 43-40 advantage. With 2:20 on the clock in the period, Shafford reached a dozen points in the game on a layup that put the Eagles up by four, 48-44. However, Lindenwood kept Southern Indiana within reach, as USI maintained a four-point lead, 53-49, entering the fourth quarter.
 
At the beginning of the fourth stanza, Raley took control for the Screaming Eagles. The senior scored seven consecutive points for Southern Indiana, surpassing the 20-point plateau for the second time in the last three games. Raley gave USI its largest lead of the game of seven points, 60-53, at the 7:33 mark. USI led by seven on multiple occasions in the fourth, but the Lions clawed back inside the final two minutes. Lindenwood made it a one-point game, 69-68, on a three-pointer with under a minute left. After Shafford hit two clutch free throws with 10 seconds remaining, the Lions missed two final chances to end the game.
 
Southern Indiana shot an efficient 54 percent (27-50) from the floor, hitting five triples and 12 free throws. Four Screaming Eagles registered double figures scoring. Raley led all scorers with 21 points, one off her season high, with five boards. Shafford tallied 17 points and a team-best eight rebounds. For Shafford, Sunday was her 10th straight game to score 10-plus points this season, matching her best such streak from 2022-23. Senior forward Madi Webb (Bedford, Indiana) posted 12 points, and Saunders recorded a season-high 10 points and five assists.
 
Lindenwood was 25-53 (47.2 percent) shooting with eight threes and 10 makes at the charity stripe. The Lions had two players score double digits. In a competitive, evenly-matched ballgame, Lindenwood tied Southern Indiana on the glass with 28 rebounds.
 
The Screaming Eagles return home this week for their OVC home opener against Tennessee State University Thursday at 5 p.m. from Screaming Eagles Arena. USI will also host Tennessee Tech University Saturday at 5 p.m. Tickets for the TSU and TTU games are on sale and can be purchased by visiting the USI Ticket Office online. For more information, call the USI Ticket Office at 812-465-1189.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

 

FOOTNOTE:  EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

2024 In Review – Best of “IS IT TRUE?”

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2024 has been a busy year for the CCO moles, and here are some highlights from this year in “IS IT TRUE”?

March 4, 2024

IS IT TRUE that the Vanderburgh County Chairpersons for the Republican and Democratic parties recently suggested that people wanting to become involved in politics should attend the party’s breakfast? …how can one attend a political party breakfast since they weren’t informed about it?

IS IT TRUE that the Ford Center has been many million dollars in the red for many years and Mayor Terry should consider it a prime candidate for a forensic audit so she can find out how to make it profitable?

July 29, 2024

IS IT TRUE that Roberts Park in Evansville was the scene of an event promoted as the “Kentuckiana Freaknik Hoedown” on June 29?  …that the Evansville Parks Department use permit listed the purpose of the June 29 event as a “rodeo”?

IS IT TRUE that after the “Kentuckiana Freaknik Hoedown” left Roberts Park, the crowd went to Washington Square Mall and abruptly left, and 911 dispatchers received a call reporting shots fired at an establishment on Covert and Greenriver Road? …that when officers responded, they discovered that three people had been wounded by gunfire? …that the youngest victim was 16 years old and was seriously injured? …that police have arrested two suspects so far, and the investigation is ongoing?

September 24, 2024

IS IT TRUE that Democrats, Republicans, and Independents can break bread together? …that well over 200 people of all political beliefs dined together at the sold-out City-County Observer Community Service Awards luncheon last Friday? …that political and philosophical differences were set aside?

IS IT TRUE that Ryan Hatfield was a fantastic emcee for the event and kept the program moving? …that former Vanderburgh County Clerk and former Vanderburgh County Treasurer Susan Kirk did an outstanding job asking pointed questions of Senator Mike Braun? … that Marilyn Cosby and the staff at Bally’s should be commended for organizing this sold-out event?

October 10, 2024

IS IT TRUE that city officials are seeking 10 million dollars to build a new hotel in Evansville? …that the “Longneck Hotel” would provide a warm and safe place at Mesker Park Zoo for breeding giraffes?

IS IT TRUE that the proposed $24 million Parks bond could impact taxes in the county while assuring that the city tax rate will remain constant?

October 22, 2024

IS IT TRUE that after the CCO pointed out deplorable conditions in the Evansville Animal Control Center, a city crew has been at work addressing the issues? …that a few champions like Mark Albini and Missy Mosby have been speaking out on behalf of the animals at the shelter? …that the problem for Animal Control is that they need to go beyond a fresh coat of paint and cleaned drains? …that limited space in the Evansville Animal Control shelter is to kill them. …that, while several excellent no-kill shelters are in the area, we sadly still kill unwanted dogs and cats at Evansville City Animal Control Shelter?

December 9, 2024

IS IT TRUE that the only events scheduled in the Ford Center during December are Thunderbolts Hockey and Aces Basketball?

Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm works with Indiana NRCS to build high tunnel, improve cro

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December 31, 202

Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm worked with Indiana NRCS to add a needed high tunnel to their farm, improving the quality of their plants, extending their growing season and helping their farm to grow.

Jeffery Garland had spent years living in Los Angeles and then Colorado building a successful content creation business. He worked on tv and movie sets taking photographs, filmed commercials and built a network of contacts across multiple industries.

Then, like so many others, his life came to a screeching halt in March 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic began raging throughout the world and the industries he relied on shut down. So, he picked up the phone, called his dad and pitched him on a radical idea.

Jeff Garland (right) gives Indiana NRCS district conservationist Lee Schnell a tour of Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm in Crawford County, IN June 23, 2022

“I said, ‘Dad, have you ever thought about maybe growing hemp,’” Jeffery recalled of the conversation that led to the creation of Papa G’s Organic Hemp.

Even while building a successful photography and cinematography business, Jeffery had always found time to garden. It was a passion he developed as a child working in his grandparents’ garden and from his dad Jeff, who has spent his life farming. And now, with his life turned upside down he was ready to turn that passion into a full-time career.

Jeffery’s dad Jeff Garland had grown corn, soybeans and hay on a farm in Noblesville, Indiana for years before moving south to Crawford County. There, Jeff mostly focused on building wildlife habitat on the nearly 200 acres he owns, but he stayed connected to farming through a small vegetable operation on a few acres outside his home with a single small high tunnel.

But by March 2020 he was considering selling the farm before Jeffery called and suggested they start growing hemp. It had been legalized federally, Indiana had just started issuing growing licenses and from his time living in Colorado and developing content for a major hemp producer, Jeffery had built contacts he could lean on to get them started.

While the process of growing hemp was unfamiliar to Jeff, the final CBD based products derived from hemp’s oil were not. A severe car accident had left him hampered by multiple medical issues, but even after 13 surgeries and ongoing complications that impacted his quality of life, he was hesitant to use opioid based medications. He’d watched too many people who had been negatively impacted by opioids. So instead, Jeff turned to CBD products.

Jeff Garland (right) gives Indiana NRCS district conservationist Lee Schnell a tour of Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm in Crawford County, IN June 23, 2022

Starting the hemp farm with Jeffery would mean they would have full control over the products Jeff relies on daily and the ability to ensure their quality. It would also mean his son moving home to Indiana and getting to spend more time with Jeffery, his wife and their young daughter.

“I thought, if this stuff works, why not grow it myself and grow it organically,” Jeff said. “That way, I know what I’m putting in my body and what I’m producing and how it’s going to be used. So, it was a win-win for me.”

The start-up costs were substantial due to the need to source mother plants and seeds, but the Garlands were committed to making it work. Jeff took charge of getting the necessary permissions and on his second round of application was approved for an Indiana hemp license. Jeffery, who was still based in Colorado at the time, worked to source their initial crop from contacts he’d made through his content business.

They identified a few different varieties they thought would flourish in Indiana’s climate and Jeffery began cultivating them while preparing to move to Indiana.

Papa G’s Organic Hemp was officially started in time for the 2020 growing season when Jeff and Jeffery drove their initial mother plants from Colorado to Indiana and started planting in Jeff’s former vegetable field outside his house.

Jeff Garland checks on hemp growing in a high tunnel at Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm in Crawford County, IN June 23, 2022

Outwardly, the cannabis plants used to produce hemp oil are nearly identical to those used to produce marijuana. What differs is the internal chemistry. While marijuana plants are bred to produce the maximum amount of the psychoactive compound THC, hemp plants can be bred to maximize the non-psychoactive compound CBD, which is known for its medicinal uses, and can also be bred for fiber and grain products. Cannabis plants are required to remain below 0.3% THC to be considered hemp. Any higher levels and it is considered to be marijuana. The strict regulation creates a constant balancing act for growers such as the Garlands to maximize the lifespan of their crop while keeping it from going “hot.”

“You go hot with a hemp crop, you just lost your whole season maybe,” Jeff said. “A hemp grower has a lot on the line opposed to a cannabis grower. A cannabis grower, he hopes it goes hot, as hot as he can get it. Whereas I have to watch it and check it every week.”

The goal for hemp growers like the Garlands is to take the plant as close to “full-term” as they can without letting it go hot. That requires managing many of the environmental factors that can stress the plant including temperature, wind and the amount of water it receives.

That first season they grew a small portion in Jeff’s existing high tunnel but most of their crop was cultivated in an open field which gave them very little control. At the end of the season, they tested the quality of the plants and the ones grown in the high tunnel had well-outperformed the ones in the field. They had grown longer and larger, which led to more oil being produced, and the oil itself was a better quality.

With that data in hand, they began looking for ways to add an additional high tunnel prior to their second growing season. That search led them to USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). Jeff already had a preexisting relationship with NRCS from enrolling 81 acres of the property surrounding his house into the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). That program combines financial assistance from the Farm Service Agency (FSA) with technical assistance from NRCS and provided Jeff with an annual payment on the acres in order to establish permanent wildlife habitat.

Jeff Garland (left) gives Indiana NRCS district conservationist Lee Schnell a tour of Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm in Crawford County, IN June 23, 2022.

Jeff then heard from a vegetable grower that NRCS has a program available to assist with the building of high tunnels on small and urban farms, much like the Garlands’ budding hemp farm. They applied for an EQIP contract in 2021 and were approved with construction on the tunnel slated to take place in time for the 2022 growing season. Not content to wait, the Garlands self-financed a tunnel prior to the 2021 season and then utilized the EQIP contract to build an additional one giving them three in all.

“We’ll have to pull early (in the field). Two to three weeks earlier in the field than we do in a high tunnel,” Jeff said. “When you let them go longer, you’re going to produce more oil. It’s important to have that high tunnel.”

Because of the ability to control the growing environment for their plants, the high tunnels enable the Garlands to extend their season by multiple weeks on both sides. It a major part of turning their hemp operation into a truly year-round operation. They plant in early spring and keep the plants growing as far into the fall as they can, before immediately starting to prepare for the next season.

Jeff Garland checks on baby hemp plants in the propagation room at Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm in Crawford County, IN June 23, 2022.

While they do start some plants from seeds, the vast majority of their plants each growing season are propagated as clones from mother plants they keep alive year-round. As the growing season ends, they move the mother plants into their climate-controlled propagation room where they are kept alive throughout the winter before being cloned in January to create the 4-5,000 plants they’ll use the next season.

As the plants are going through their propagation and then growing cycle, the Garlands are constantly working to make sure they stay within acceptable limits in terms of internal chemistry and not getting stressed to the point where they start pollinating. A major factor in that is controlling the inputs the plants receive and ensuring they have the nutrients they need to survive and flourish.

It is through that process where Jeffery’s mad scientist side comes out. The plants are nourished with a mix of teas, fermented solutions and organic materials such as worm casings and mushroom compost to create healthy “physically alive” soils and, in turn, healthy plants while staying within the bounds of their certified organic practices.

“It all starts with the soil,” Jeffery said. “If you don’t have good soil, you’re not going to have good plants and then you’re not going to have the best oil. So, we really put lots and lots of organic matter back into our soil.”

Although they had already introduced multiple forms of compost and fertilizer to build the soil organic matter, the Garlands wanted to go further so they turned to NRCS for technical advice and worked with their local district conservationist Lee Schnell to develop a cover crop plan.

“I had to do my own research on what kind of cover crops we needed to build mycorrhizae for the hemp to basically just stop erosion because of the tillage,” Schnell said. “The tillage is kind of a ‘have to’ case with this crop. We wanted to cut down erosion, we wanted to fix nitrogen, we wanted to build mycorrhiza and we wanted to increase the soil biology.”

Jeff Garland shows off the diverse cover crop seed mix they use at Papa G’s Organic Hemp Farm in Crawford County, IN during a tour June 23, 2022.

They came up with a diverse mix, which the Garlands added to, creating a 17 species mix in all. Despite the need to lightly till the ground the Garlands utilize a modified process of planting green into the cover crop stand in order to maximize its benefits. And despite starting over from near scratch with all new varieties of hemp plants for the 2022 season, it is working.

On a hot June day a few months after transplanting their new varieties, the air at the farm is thick with the scent of growing cannabis plants. The iconic shaped leaves have grown to dinner plate sized and the plants are well on their well to reaching their maximum height of over six feet tall. In time, the plants will be dried and taken for processing where they’ll be turned into salves, tinctures, gel tablets and more. It is all part of their commitment to making the best products possible to help people like Jeff.

“Each season we learn more and we do more experiments of what works and what didn’t work,” Jeffery said. “Here we are on our third season, and I honestly think this is going to be our most productive year. Our plants are super healthy and they’re just going to be monsters.”