EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Evansville Otters athletic trainer Dr. Mandy Flaig, LAT, ATC has been hired by the Baltimore Orioles to work alongside their MiLB teams for the upcoming season.
Flaig, a native of Frankfort, Kentucky, served as the Otters’ athletic trainer for the last two seasons, traveling with the team for all road games as well.
“My time with the Otters has been one of my favorite experiences,” Flaig said. “My memories here will never be forgotten.”
Following the 2022 season, Flaig was named the Frontier League Athletic Trainer of the Year, voted upon by the other team field managers and staff members from around the league.
“We are very thankful for all of the work Mandy put in to keep our guys healthy all season long,” Otters Field Manager Andy McCauley said. “We are excited to see her succeed at the MiLB level with the Orioles.”
Flaig is a three-time college graduate, receiving degrees from Georgetown College (Bachelors of Science: Athletic Training), Western Kentucky University (Masters of Science in Sports Administration) and Indiana State University (Doctorate of Athletic Training).
She was also recently published in Internet Journal Allied Health Sciences and Practice with her research work titled ‘The Knowledge of Complementary and Integrative Health.’
The Evansville Department of Parks & Recreation will hold a groundbreaking for the new Wesselman Playground today, January 8, at 11:00 a.m.
The playground, designed with the help of Play Pros and Morley was created to focus on inclusion, making it an ideal play area for children and adults of all ages, with or without unique physical or developmental needs.
“We are incredibly excited to make this playground a reality for our community,†said Danielle Crooks, executive director of the Department of Parks & Recreation. “I hope that this is just the beginning of a renewed focus on inclusion in our parks and recreational spaces.â€
The wise and caring souls who form the gun lobby have told us for years that the more guns we have, the safer we will be. If we listened to them, they reassured us, that the numbers of gun-related deaths were bound to get better.
In the aftermath of a school shooting in Iowa that left a sixth-grader dead, five other students wounded, and the 17-year-old shooter also dead, it’s clear the NRA geniuses were right.
The numbers of gun deaths in America keep going up.
Every year.
Every.
Year
Just 10 years ago, in 2014, there were 33,594 gun-related deaths in the United States. That represented a slight decline from the prior year, when 33, 636 died in incidents involving firearms.
The gun lobby brain trust knew, though, that there was room for growth.
And—once again—they were correct.
By 2022, we had inched reasonably close to 50,000 firearms-related deaths per year in the United States. The actual number was 48,830.
The final numbers for 2023 aren’t in yet, but we passed the 40,000 mark in the autumn.
Any way one slices it, that means we have achieved 50% growth in gun-related deaths in only 10 years.
That’s remarkable.
Now, there are cynical souls out there who say that the gun lobby did not do all this for principled, selfless reasons. It is hard to believe that anyone would be so jaded as to think that the people in the firearms industry have anything other than the purest and most benevolent motives.
The most conservative estimates calculate that the U.S. gun industry has a net worth of $28 billion. Other, more expansive calculations peg the number at more than $50 billion.
Those are such trivial sums that it is hard to believe anyone—even the most amoral and grasping soul—would be motivated solely by greed.
I mean—really—it’s not like there are corruption trials involving the NRA going on in which prosecutors argue that the organization’s top dogs have been bilking members for decades and hundreds of thousands, perhaps even millions, of dollars.
If the leaders of the gun lobby didn’t go around wearing $10,000 suits while they flew from place to place in large private jets, one could easily mistake them for the late Mother Teresa.
No, the efforts of those in and dependent on the firearms industry aren’t driven by avarice or commerce. They’re charitable acts.
As the shooting in Iowa demonstrates, thanks to the NRA, the gun lobby, and lapdog legislators around the country who follow the company line, American children have a much different experience than their counterparts in other parts of the world.
In most industrialized nations, children go to school in blissful ignorance. They sit in their classrooms and think about their lessons, the boy or girl seated next to them, a sport they love to play or the movie they saw the night before.
They don’t worry about having a classmate or a former student show up with a gun and start shooting. They don’t fret that they will have to go to funerals for their schoolmates or have their schoolmates attend their funerals.
The NRA decided such innocence—er, ignorance—was intolerable for American schoolchildren.
Because residents of the United States are 20 times more likely to die in a gun-related incident than citizens in other industrialized nations, students here experience education differently.
They get to go through metal detectors on the way to their classrooms. They walk past armed guards in many places as they stroll through the schoolhouse doors. Many also have the glorious experience of taking part in active shooter drills.
And many of them get to be part of active-shooter experiences.
The gun lobby sees this as an essential part of the educational experience. The NRA and its foot soldiers believe that having students live and learn in varying states of dread only enhances their growth.
The NRA and the gun industry have spent millions and millions of dollars helping to create a nation and a society in which having a 17-year-old shoot and kill a sixth-grader for no apparent reason no longer shocks us.
How can we ever thank the NRA and the gun lobby for all they have done?
FOOTNOTE: Â John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.
The City-County Observer posted this article without bias or editing.
CONSENT AGENDA:Â FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A.
ORDINANCE R-2024-01 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 717 N Alvord Blvd Owner: Century Home Builders, LLC Requested Change: R2 & M2 to R2 Ward: 3 Heronemus Representative: Scott Buedel, Cash Waggner & Associates, PC
REGULAR AGENDA:Â SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS
A.
ORDINANCE G-2024-01 An Ordinance to Vacate Certain Storm Drainage Easements within the City of Evansville, Indiana, Commonly Known as Storm Drainage Easements Located within Crossroads Commercial Center Section 7 Sponsor(s): Trockman Discussion Led By: Public Works Chair Brinkmeyer Discussion Date: 1/8/2024 Notify: Jim Farney, Lochmueller Group, Inc
RESOLUTION C-2024-01 A Resolution Approving an Agreement Concerning Legal Representation (Tuley) Sponsor(s): Green, Heronemus, Mosby Discussion Led By: President Heronemus Discussion Date: 1/8/2024 Notify: Dan Tuley, Tuley Law Office
RESOLUTION C-2024-03 A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Ratifying, Confirming, Authorizing and Approving a Memorandum of Understanding Between the City of Evansville and International Association of Firefighters Evansville Local 357, Inc (January 1, 2024 – December 31, 2024) Sponsor(s): Mosby, Brinkmeyer, Heronemus Discussion Led By: President Heronemus Discussion Date: 1/8/2024 Notify: Marco DeLucio, ZSWS
In recognition of outstanding academic achievement, the University of Southern Indiana Dean’s List has been released for the 2023 Fall Semester. Dr. Shelly Blunt, USI Interim Provost, announced a total of 2,008 undergraduate students were named to the Dean’s List.
Undergraduate students must achieve a 3.5 or better semester GPA (on a 4.0 system) to be named to the list. Students earning no incomplete (IN) or missing (Z) grades for the term and earning letter grades of computable point value (Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory and Pass/No Pass graded courses do not apply) in 12 or more semester hours, with a semester GPA between 3.5 and 4.0, are named to the list.
The list is arranged by state and city, according to the mailing address each student has provided to the University. A student’s name may be listed under Evansville if the student supplied an Evansville mailing address. The Dean’s List may be accessed by clicking the link below.
If you expected your name to be on the list and you cannot find it, use the search function in the PDF document. Type your name to search the entire list. If you still do not find your name, email Tracy Sinn in the Registrar’s Office using your myUSI email address (include your full name and student ID number). If it can be verified you did qualify for the Dean’s List, the Registrar’s Office will give University Strategic Communication your name and hometown.
INDOT Resolution – Acquisition of County Right-of-Way: Parcel 37Â
Approval to Submit Indiana Department of Health (IDOH) Grant Funding Application – Planning Grants for Community Bicycle and Pedestrian ImprovementsÂ
Health Department Subcontractor Business Associate Agreement: OneBridge and Pre to 3Â
Old National Events Plaza Harding, Shymanski & Company, P.S.C Engagement LetterÂ
Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA): County Highway, Burdette, Old National Events Plaza, Superintendent of County Buildings, Weights & Measures – Effective January 1, 2024-December 31, 2026Â
Resolution No. CO.R01-24-001 – Resolution of the Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County, Indiana Concerning Authorization for Execution of INDOT AgreementsÂ
Second Reading of Ordinance No. CO.12-23-028 – An Ordinance Prohibiting Firearms and Certain Dangerous Items Inside Public Buildings Containing A Court RoomÂ
Ordinance Repealing Chapter 2.65, Initiative Based Assistance Program, of the Vanderburgh County CodeÂ
Ordinance Adding Section 8.05, Regulating Tall Structures as Codified in State LawÂ
Department Head Reports Burdette Park 2023 Year-End ReportÂ
New Business 2024 Roads Hearing – March 5, 2024Â
Old BusinessÂ
Consent Items Approval of December 19th Board of Commissioners Meeting MinutesÂ
Employment ChangesÂ
Drainage Board Immediately FollowingÂ
Auditor Claims Voucher Reports December 18, 2023 – December 22, 2023Â
December 25, 2023 – December 29, 2023Â
January 1, 2024 – January 5, 2024Â
Engineer Report and ClaimsÂ
Treasurer November 2023 Innkeepers Tax ReportÂ
Health Department Request to Rollover Accrued HoursÂ
Prosecutor Surplus RequestÂ
Kraftwerks, Inc. Old Courthouse Craft Show 2023 Financial ReportÂ
Southwestern Behavioral Healthcare, Inc. 2023 ReportÂ
Board Appointments Alcoholic Beverage Board Chad SullivanÂ
Board of Examiners of Construction and Roofing Peter WinzelerÂ
Eric WagemannÂ
Commission on Homelessness in Vanderburgh County Gregory PeeteÂ
Mayor Stephanie Terry will reconvene the city’s Traveling City Hall next month.
The first Traveling City Hall of the Terry administration will be held in partnership with United Neighborhoods of Evansville on Thursday, February 22, at 5:30 p.m. in the C.K. Newsome Community Center. It will precede the regular United Neighborhoods of Evansville meeting, scheduled for 6:30 p.m., where Mayor Terry also will speak.
“One of the best parts of running for mayor was having the opportunity to hear directly from the people of Evansville – to hear their concerns, answer their questions, and to just listen to what they have to say about our city,†Mayor Terry said. “The Traveling City Hall is an opportunity for me and the department heads from across the city to continue not only doing that, but to take their concerns back to the office the next day and do what we can to address them in real time.â€
Mayor Terry’s administration will host quarterly Traveling City Hall meetings throughout 2024, with each being held in a different part of the city, in conjunction with different community partners.
“United Neighborhoods of Evansville is excited to partner with Mayor Terry’s administration for the first of her Traveling City Hall programs,†said Joe Ballard, United Neighborhoods of Evansville operations manager. “This kind of direct dialogue between citizens and city officials is critical to a strong, thriving Evansville, and we’re proud to be part of making that happen.â€
Future Traveling City Hall meetings will be held in May, August, and November 2024. The dates, locations, and community partners associated with those events will be announced at the February 22 event.