EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT
October 15 – October 21 |
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Indiana Quick Quiz1. What is the Beast of ‘Busco? 2. Where in Indiana, during the last week of October and the first week of November, can you see 12,000 sandhill cranes, as they stop on their way south for the winter? 3. In which Indiana city was foot care pioneer, Dr. William Scholl born? 4. Which Indiana city is known as the Casket Capital of the World? Answers Below
Did You Know???A law was passed in 1923 in South Bend, making it illegal to force a monkey to smoke a cigarette.
Answers1. A 400 pound turtle, the size of a dining room table. The turtle named Oscar, was said to have been seen in a lake in Churubusco, in 1949. 2. Jasper-Pulaski State Fish and Wildlife Area 3. LaPorte 4. Batesville
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INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb today applauded the U.S. Department of Energy for awarding up to $1 billion in grant funding to the Midwest Alliance for Clean Hydrogen (MachH2), which aims to develop a regional clean hydrogen hub that would include projects in Indiana.
MachH2, which consists of more than 70 Midwest public and private organizations that support the energy transition, has proposed a regional hydrogen hub that would include blue-hydrogen production at or near bp’s Whiting, Indiana refinery. Its plan also supports development of a hydrogen mobility corridor in Indiana and across neighboring states.
Blue hydrogen is a low carbon fuel that can be used to reduce carbon emissions from many difficult-to-decarbonize sectors of the economy, including steelmaking, power generation, agriculture, cement, aviation, and long-haul transportation. It is made by converting natural gas into carbon dioxide and hydrogen, capturing the carbon dioxide, then safely and permanently storing it deep underground.
“We are ecstatic that Indiana is a beneficiary of this monumental investment,†Gov. Holcomb said. “This funding has the potential to support the unprecedented economic investment proposed by BP that will cement Indiana’s pole position in the new energy economy. This grant could propel forward this project as a critical piece of this new hydrogen ecosystem.
“We are thrilled that the US Department of Energy awarded this grant to the MachH2 coalition,†said Tomeka McLeod, bp vice president – US Hydrogen and CCS. “Our proposed Midwest hydrogen hub can help decarbonize America’s industrial heartland while enhancing Indiana’s economy, creating jobs and attracting new businesses and investments to the state. Governor Holcomb and the Indiana state legislature thankfully had the foresight last year to create a policy framework that allows us to seize this historic opportunity, and we are excited to do our part in making the Midwest hydrogen hub a reality.â€
On March 18, 2022, Governor Holcomb signed into law HB 1209, which established a regulatory framework for Indiana carbon-storage projects that would support clean-hydrogen production in the state.
Governor Holcomb has recognized the need for Midwest collaboration to obtain federal funds directed at creating hydrogen ecosystems throughout the United States. This is why in September 2022 he signed a partnership with 7 other Midwest governors to establish a regional hydrogen coalition to encourage collaborative efforts to expand this economic opportunity.
And on September 27, 2022, alongside key state and federal lawmakers, Governor Holcomb ceremonially signed HB 1209 in Whiting, Indiana joined by leadership from BP, the Indiana Farm Bureau, Purdue University, Indiana Manufacturers Association, the Indiana Chamber of Commerce, NW Indiana Forum and others.
Gov. Holcomb has shared far and wide how Indiana is a leader in the energy transition. He was the first Indiana governor to participate in a UN COP event when he delivered two keynote addresses at COP27 in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt in November of 2022. On the global stage he shared Indiana’s collaborative strategies for being a leader in the energy transition through an all-of-the-above approach which continues to attract investments that have contributed to Indiana’s ranking as No. 4 in the U.S. for new clean energy projects.
This most recent announcement by the U.S. DOE to award the MachH2 coalition is an acknowledgement that the Midwest possesses all the components critical for a successful hydrogen economy, including new opportunities to incorporate hydrogen into existing and new manufacturing processes. The award promotes opportunities to support Indiana’s manufacturing sector, especially in the northwest Indiana region, to remain globally competitive and support thousands of Hoosier jobs in these critical sectors.
Indiana has been home to bp’s Whiting refinery for more than 130 years and continues to be a strong supporter of responsible investments by the company, which also has a vast network of fuel-and-convenience locations, three wind farms and a renewable natural gas plant in the state.
HISTORY HIGHLIGHT: Sen. Birch Bayh’s pioneering effort for permanent federal disaster relief
By Marilyn Odendahl
The Indiana Citizen
October 15, 2023
After every natural disaster, Americans now expect the federal government to lead the relief effort and provide aid to the victims.
But federal help was not always the norm. Washington, D.C., rarely got involved in the recovery and rebuilding process before the middle of the 20th century.
The legislation that created a permanent federal response to major disasters started in Elkhart County in 1965 with an initiative by the late Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Indiana.
During the 2023 Birch Bayh Lecture on Tuesday evening at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law, Andrew Morris, associate professor of history at Union College in Schenectady, New York, detailed Bayh’s role in pushing for federal disaster relief. His lecture, “Birch Bayh, Hurricane Camille, and the New Politics of Disaster Relief in Nixon’s America,†was based on his forthcoming book about disaster relief policy.
Morris’ book takes a broad look at how events and political maneuverings produced the federal Disaster Relief Act of 1970 that President Richard Nixon signed.
“My book is not focused on the senator solely,†Morris told the IU McKinney audience, “but I think, and I hope, one of the outcomes of that is it justly recognizes this part of his legacy.â€
A key part of that legacy was how Bayh, who died in 2019, was able to marshal diverse interests to support national disaster relief legislation. The coalition that championed the bill to Nixon’s desk included Great Society liberals and their staunch opponents, southern Democrats.
Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine, “got a lot of the credit in the short term (for the passage of the bill),†Morris said, “but Bayh deserves more of it in terms of just the legislative craftsmanship.â€
Tornado victims in Indiana
The tornado that barreled through Elkhart County on Palm Sunday in 1965 was part of a large outbreak of tornadic activity across the Midwest that day. In Elkhart County alone, 137 people were killed and 1,700 were injured.
Bayh, eyeing federal assistance, got President Lyndon Johnson to visit Elkhart and see, first hand, the devastation. At that time, whenever a natural disaster hit, victims did not get help from the federal government. They had to rebuild their lives by using their savings and insurance, along with whatever resources their state, their community and the American Red Cross had available.
However, Congress did pass special legislation offering federal aid to the survivors of the 1964 earthquake in Anchorage, Alaska, and Hurricane Betsy, which slammed New Orleans in 1965. Bayh advocated for “quake-type aid†for his constituents in northern Indiana, too, but Capitol Hill did not have the political will.
In an interview with Morris about 10 years ago, Bayh said the resources being offered were “utterly inadequate†and the Elkhart County residents were not getting the kind of meaningful assistance that would enable them to become productive citizens again.
“It was nothing to what the great purse strings of Uncle Sam could provide,†Bayh was quoted as saying.
Morris said Bayh was a “Great Society liberal,†who believed that the United States, as a wealthy and powerful country, could do more for disaster victims.
Appalled by what Hoosiers were going through, Morris said Bayh “made it part of his legislative mission to pursue a policy that would create an ongoing federal program that would be available to victims of any major disaster, not just the disasters in places that happened to have the most politically connected people in Congress.â€
The Indiana Democrat’s advocacy, Morris pointed out, came at a political moment of growing expectations of federal government action. Congress had enacted legislation creating Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, along with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Bayh introduced his federal disaster relief bill in 1966. When it died, he brought it back in 1967, and, again, in 1968 and 1969.
Morris said the political incentives tied to natural disaster relief caused Bayh’s bill to stall. Those senators who sat on the House Public Works Committee, which oversaw any disaster relief legislation, liked writing very specific bills for their colleagues whose constituents were stricken by a tornado, earthquake, hurricane or other disaster. Primarily, the committee members knew that in return for the federal assistance, they would extract political favors.
“It was simple congressional log rolling,†Morris said.
‘Glorious hurricane’
Having studied Bayh’s senatorial papers stored in the Modern Political Papers Collection at Indiana University-Bloomington, Morris said he could see Bayh’s frustration spilling into his memos. His disaster bill could not overcome politics.
But then on Aug. 17, 1969, Hurricane Camille, a Category 5 hurricane, wiped out the Gulf Coast. A staffer on the public works committee called it a “glorious hurricane.â€
“It was not glorious in terms of death and destruction,†Morris explained, “but in terms of how it disrupted the policy environment and created an opportunity for them to seize the moment and push through this legislation.â€
The hurricane’s destruction overwhelmed the ability of local and state governments to respond, especially in the little Mississippi towns that were devastated by the storm. Powerful congressmen from the Gulf Coast started clamoring for a federal relief package.
Their call for disaster assistance came at the same moment Nixon’s aides were trying to strengthen the Republican Party in the South, Morris said. As part of this southern strategy, Nixon was wooing conservative Southern Democrats to get them to join the Republicans.
Nixon capitalized on the opportunity by visiting Mississippi in September 1969 and promising the full force of federal resources to rebuild from Camille. The president and southern congressmen picked up Bayh’s bill. They kept all the programs and support written into the legislation but stripped the language making the relief a permanent function of the federal government and, as they had done in the past, limited the assistance to current disaster victims.
In November of 1969, two civil rights organizations released a report chronicling the aid programs for Camille victims. The study showed Blacks and poor whites were not receiving the same level of federal funds or support as middle class and wealthy whites.
The revelations created a political firestorm. Bayh and Muskie held hearings in Mississippi in January 1970 and for three nights on national television, the stories of unequal suffering and discrimination were told.
Bayh used the momentum from those hearings to build support and finally pass the bill he first crafted after the 1965 tornado that caused havoc in Indiana.
After the lecture, Morris explained to The Indiana Citizen how Bayh was able to form the coalition that pushed his bill forward.
Bayh and Muskie, Morris said, engaged in a “good cop bad cop†routine. Muskie was hammering at the hearings and decrying the discrimination by the Red Cross and the state. Meanwhile Bayh decided to “play the inside game to be more diplomatic.â€
Bayh realized if his bill was going to move, he needed the support of his much more racially conservative colleagues in Congress. He had discussions behind closed doors with powerful southern Democrats, telling them all he wanted was a national disaster relief bill, and he let Muskie take the heat from the southern lawmakers over the civil rights issues.
“It’s actually strategically quite good,†Morris said. “(Bayh) had genuine civil rights credentials. He was taken seriously by the civil rights community. But once he got into … the legislative deal-making, he was able to thread that needle in a really, really interesting way.â€
Dwight Adams, a freelance editor and writer based in Indianapolis, edited this article. He is a former content editor, copy editor and digital producer at The Indianapolis Star and IndyStar.com, and worked as a planner for other newspapers, including the Louisville Courier Journal.Â
The Purple Aces couldn’t find any offense in the first half of Saturday’s game in a tough road contest against the Flames. Freshman midfielder David Hernandez was one of UE’s bright spots in the grueling 90 minutes, scoring his first collegiate goal in the 61st minute off a corner kick. Midfielder Carlos Barcia also helped Evansville’s offense in the second half with two shots on goal.
The first half of Saturday night’s game was all UIC as the Flames found the back of the net four times in 45 minutes. The Aces had the first two shots of the half in the third and eighth minutes from Barcia and forward Kai Phillip. But UIC scored in the 13th, 31st, 36th, and 42nd minute to dominate on their home field.
Facing a wide deficit, UE didn’t back down as Evansville found it’s offensive spark early in the second half. The Aces peppered the Flames goalkeeper with shots early on, taking three shots in under four minutes. UE snapped its scoreless streak in the 61st minute when Hernandez took a corner kick for the Aces after a touch from UIC’s goalkeeper went out of bounds.
Hernandez corner kick rocketed into the bottom left corner of the net for his first goal as a Purple Ace. Evansville kept the offensive pressure up after the goal as Hernandez fired off another shot. But the Flames were able to get past goalkeeper Aidan Montoure one more time to seal the game. UE had two close shots in the final 12 minutes as defender Tobias Bak forced a diving save from UIC’s keeper in the 78th minute, while winger Auden Engen Vik had a shot in front of the net that went just wide left in the 82nd minute.
Evansville returns to Arad McCutchan Stadium next week on Wednesday, Oct. 18. The Aces will face the current Missouri Valley Conference leaders Missouri State in a weeknight matchup. Kick-off from McCutchan Stadium on the 18th is set for 7 p.m.Â