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Willis Transfers To USI For 2024

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Volleyball has signed freshman outside hitter Ashby Willis for the 2024 campaign. Willis becomes a Screaming Eagle after transferring from Purdue University Fort Wayne.

“We’re excited to welcome Ashby to our USI family,” says USI Volleyball Head Coach, Jeffrey Aucoin. “Ashby made an immediate impact with her previous program garnering All-Conference honors in her first year. She is a stand-out on the court, in the classroom, and connected with our team immediately. We look forward to having Ashby join us this spring.”

Ashby Willis | 6’0″ | Outside Hitter | Mt. Carmel, Illinois
Willis transfers to USI from Purdue-Fort Wayne after being named to the 2023 Horizon League All-Freshman Team. She played in 29 matches during her freshman year for a total of 102 sets and finished with 277 kills with 2.72 kills per set for the Mastodons. During her days as a Mt. Carmel High School Golden Ace, Willis garnered IVCA All-State Honorable Mention, AVCA All-Region, All-Little Illini Conference, and News Gazette All-State in her only season at MCHS. She led the Aces to a conference and regional championship in 2022 while holding a perfect 4.0 GPA. Willis played club volleyball most recently with Elite Tsunami in 2023.

The Eagles completed a successful season last week by making their first Ohio Valley Conference Championship berth and earning their first tournament victory while going 15-16 overall and 10-8 in conference play.

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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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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.

UPDATE 12/21/2023: Danica Short has been located and is safe. 

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 UPDATE: Missing Juvenile / Attempt to Locate 

UPDATE 12/21/2023: Danica Short has been located and is safe. 

On December 10, around 8:50pm, fifteen-year-old white female Danica Short left Hillcrest Youth Home. To this date, we are still requesting assistance from the public; if you have any information that could help locate Danica, you are asked to contact 9-1-1. Attached are photos of Danica, including photos of her leaving Hillcrest Youth Home. She is roughly 5’8” with shoulder length blonde har. She was last seen wearing a black shirt, dark colored jacket, black pants and Adidas style tennis shoes. (12/18/2023) 

PRIMARY THOUGHTS

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Primary thoughts

You know, I thought I was done with 2023.

I was planning to relax and be on autopilot for the next few weeks. What’s the phrase, “the best-laid plans of mice and men…”

Yes, everything was fine until Judge Patrick Dietrick ruled that Indiana’s rules for running in the primary violated the state and federal constitutions.

A quick recap: Republican U.S. Senate candidate John Rust was denied ballot access because he hadn’t voted in two previous primaries, as required by law. Nor could he get the sign-off from his Jackson County GOP chairwoman that he was a Republican in good standing. S0, Rust exercised his God-given right and filed a lawsuit.

And he won.

Marion County Judge Dietrick ruled that the law violated the U.S. and state constitutions.

Dietrick held the law violated the 1st, 14th, and 17th Amendments (yes, the one that changed how U.S. Senators were selected). But it also violated the state constitution by putting more qualifications to run for office than the constitution allowed.

Dietrick pointed out that if a qualification for office was that a person had to be a resident and 18 years old, there was no way they could run in a primary because they could not have voted in the last two. And there’s no legal standard for a county chairman to use when deciding whether to sign off on the candidate.

That decision sent shockwaves through Indiana’s political universe. The state appealed, and the Supreme Court decided to hear the case on Feb. 12 (Lincoln’s birthday, which I find somewhat ironic, but I’m digressing).

What’s interesting is that the state asked for a stay in the order while it was being appealed, which the court denied. That means we can expect a proverbial free-for-all this season, for now. Unless the court comes back and says the law is unconstitutional, which would technically have to be put out in four days after the oral arguments as the day to withdraw from the primary is Feb. 16.

All this could have been avoided.

First, it could have been avoided had county chairwoman Amanda Lowery just signed the damn letter and let Rust on the ballot. But she didn’t, so here we are.

Second, and more important, this would not be happening if Republicans and Democrats just followed the lead of Libertarians and paid for their own primaries.

I have argued this for years: Why should taxpayers foot the bill for political parties to nominate their candidates for a general election? Why should Democrats pay for Republicans to pick their candidates? Why should Republicans have to pay for how Democrats nominate theirs? And why should any of us have to pay for either party?

Political parties should have their own process for selecting candidates, which I am all for, and they should have to foot the bill.

If taxpayers are going to foot the bill, then Indiana should move to a more open primary system. Let everyone run on a combined ballot, and then let the top two candidates run in a general election. And for fun, if a candidate gets more than 60 percent of the vote, they automatically win. Problem solved. Issue addressed.

Hopefully, Indiana lawmakers will look at this next session, and the state will finally fix this broken system. Of course, it was Indiana lawmakers and politicians who broke it in the first place, so good luck with that one.

We now return to being done with 2023.

FOOTNOTES: Abdul-Hakim Shabazz is the editor and publisher of Indy Politics. He is also a licensed attorney in both Indiana and Illinois.

 

SENATOR BRAUN CELEBRATES PASSAGE OF BILL TO REDUCE MILITARY OVERDOSES 

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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,” 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.”

Specifically, the DOD Act as passed by Congress would require the Department of Defense to:

  1. 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;
  2. 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

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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.”

“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.”

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.