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City Council Meeting August 28, 2023 Agenda

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City Council Meeting
AUGUST 28, 2023

5:30 P.M.

AGENDA

I. INTRODUCTION

 

08-28-2023 Agenda Attachment:
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDUM

 

08-14-2023 Memo Attachment:
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS

 

IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

V. CONSENT AGENDA:  FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

A. ORDINANCE F-2023-12 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville Authorizing Transfers of Appropriations, Additional Appropriations and Repeal and Re-Appropriation of Funds for Various City Funds Sponsor(s): Beane Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Beane Discussion Date: 9/11/2023 Notify: Russ Lloyd, Jr., Controller
F-2023-12 Attachment:
VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

VII. REGULAR AGENDA:  SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

 

A. ORDINANCE G-2023-16 An Ordinance Amending Sections 2.10.070, 2.10.080, 2.10.100, 2.10.110, 2.108.050, 2.108.060, 2.208.060, 18.175.020 and 18.175.040 of the Evansville Municipal Code Sponsor(s): Heronemus Discussion Led By: ASD Chair Mosby Discussion Date: 8/28/2023 Notify: Josh Claybourn, Jackson Kelly
G-2023-16 Attachment:
B. ORDINANCE G-2023-17 An Ordinance of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana, Appropriating the Proceeds of Bonds of the City of Evansville Redevelopment Authority, Including Investment Earnings Thereon, and Related Matters Sponsor(s): Beane Discussion Led By: Finance Chair Beane Discussion Date: 8/28/2023 Notify: Marco DeLucio, ZSWS (Ordinance G-2023-17 will be tabled until September 11th, 2023)
G-2023-17 Attachment:
C. ORDINANCE R-2023-21 AMENDED An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 809 N Ninth Ave Owner: Majic LLC Requested Change: M3 to C2 Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Representative: Mark S Albini
R-2023-21 Amended Attachment:
D. ORDINANCE R-2023-22 An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 4404 Washington Ave Owner:KK Washington Properties, LLC Requested Change: CO2 to C4 w/ UDC Ward: 3 Heronemus Representative: Scott Buedel, Cash Waggner & Associates, PC
R-2023-22 Attachment:
E. ORDINANCE R-2023-23 AMENDED An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as Part of 2200 Oak Hill Rd Owner:Briar Pointe Development, LLC Requested Change: R1 & M2 to C2 Ward: 5 Koehler Lindsey Representative: Scott Buedel, Cash Waggner & Associates, PC
R-2023-23 Amended Attachment:
F. ORDINANCE R-2023-24 AMENDED An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as Part of 3400 N Green River Rd Owner: Evansville Day School Requested Change: R1 to C4 w/UDC Ward: 5 Koehler Lindsey Representative: Matt Lehman, RLehman & Son Consulting
R-2023-24 Amended Attachment:
G. ORDINANCE R-2023-26 AMENDED An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 927 Lincoln Ave Owner:Levels and Company, LLC Requested Change: C1 to C2 w/ UDC Ward: 4 Burton Representative: Bret Sermersheim, Morley
R-2023-26 Amended Attachment:
VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET

 

A. RESOLUTION C-2023-22 A Resolution Renaming a Portion of South Garvin Street Between Bellemeade Avenue and the Due North South Garvin Street to Sondra L. Matthews Way Sponsor(s): Burton, Heronemus, Trockman Discussion Led By: President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/28/2023 Notify: Josh Claybourn, Jackson Kelly
C-2023-22 Attachment:
B. RESOLUTION C-2023-23 A Resolution Renaming a Portion of East Mulberry Street to Timmy Thomas Way Sponsor(s): Burton, Heronemus, Trockman Discussion Led By: President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/28/2023 Notify: Josh Claybourn, Jackson Kelly
C-2023-23 Attachment:
IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

 

A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, September 11, 2023 at 5:30 p.m.
B. TAX PHASE IN COMPLIANCE REPORT; Robert Grewe, Evansville Regional Economic Partnership
C. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS
X. COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

XI. ADJOURNMENT

The intruder fantasy devotees fear most

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The intruder fantasy devotees fear most

All these things happened within a little more than a day.

A private plane carrying Wagner Group chieftain Yevgeniy Prigozhin crashes. Video of the crash shows the plane seeming to stop in mid-air, then tumbling into a freefall.

U.S. intelligence officials say the plane was not shot down by a missile. The leading speculation is that someone placed a bomb aboard the aircraft.

At one time, Prigozhin was a confidant and close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. But Putin’s costly and murderous war in Ukraine divided the two men.

Prigozhin launched an abortive rebellion against Putin in June. Publicly, the two thugs made peace and linked arms again.

Privately, it seems, Putin decided not to let bygones be bygones.

His official statement acknowledging Prigozhin’s death spoke of the departed’s mistakes in life and expressed little sympathy for the man’s passing.

That Putin would assassinate a rival so publicly demonstrates that an already volatile part of the world stands to become even more unstable. Putin’s war in Ukraine has ground to a standstill, leaving him in the position of the man who holds a wolf by the ears.

He does not dare let go but he also cannot afford to hold on.

The fact that a man who has an arsenal of nuclear arms and other weapons of mass destruction at his disposal feels increasingly desperate should be a matter of grave concern.

Not long after Prigozhin’s plane fell from the sky, though, eight Republican contenders for the presidency of the United States took the stage for their first debate.

These would-be commanders-in-chief actually argued about whether the United States should continue to support Ukraine and work to contain Putin. They focused more attention on poor people crossing the border with Mexico than the mass murderer with a stable of nuclear missiles at his command.

At the same time that the Republican debate started, the platform once known as Twitter dropped an interview former Fox News host Tucker Carlson did with the man who leads the race to become the Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump.

The 46-minute interview was an exercise in both flattery and fiction, a conversation that indulged the two trust-fund-bred self-styled populists’ beliefs that the world somehow has been unfair to them.

This was not out of character for them.

Trump, of course, faces four different indictments on 91 counts, all of them stemming from the man’s inability or refusal to either speak or acknowledge the truth that he lost the 2020 presidential election.

Carlson lost his cushy job, big audience and huge paycheck with Fox because even that truth-challenged network no longer could bear the cost of his constant lying. Fox already had been forced to cough up more than $787 million in one defamation suit and likely will have to surrender even more cash in another one the network is attempting to settle.

Then, the day after Prigozhin died, the eight Republicans debated and Trump and Carlson got together to swap lies, the former president surrendered to authorities in Georgia, where he will go on trial for trying to steal the 2020 election.

Trump spent 20 minutes at the Fulton County Jail, where he was fingerprinted and given a number in the county’s criminal justice system. For the first time in U.S. history, a president had a mug shot taken.

Afterward, Trump—who cemented his fame by hosting a TV show in which contestants performed made-up tasks that enabled him to pretend to fire them—conjured up still more fantasies.

He was the victim of a grave injustice, he told the cameras and microphones.

Then, the man who tried to steal the 2020 presidential election accused those working to hold him accountable for his actions of “election interference.”

While a sizable slice of the American public continued to indulge its apparently insatiable appetite for make-believe, the process of clearing the debris from Prigozhin’s plane crash and identifying the human remains began.

And the war in Ukraine—a war about principles all Americans supposedly hold dear—grinds on, stacking up misery and grief hour after hour.

That is the thing about reality.

No matter how hard we try to deny it, it always intrudes.

It always reasserts itself.

Sometimes, all we need is a day to remind us of that.

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.

All these things happened within a little more than a day.

A private plane carrying Wagner Group chieftain Yevgeniy Prigozhin crashes. Video of the crash shows the plane seeming to stop in mid-air, then tumbling into a freefall.

U.S. intelligence officials say the plane was not shot down by a missile. The leading speculation is that someone placed a bomb aboard the aircraft.

At one time, Prigozhin was a confidant and close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. But Putin’s costly and murderous war in Ukraine divided the two men.

Prigozhin launched an abortive rebellion against Putin in June. Publicly, the two thugs made peace and linked arms again.

Privately, it seems, Putin decided not to let bygones be bygones.

His official statement acknowledging Prigozhin’s death spoke of the departed’s mistakes in life and expressed little sympathy for the man’s passing.

That Putin would assassinate a rival so publicly demonstrates that an already volatile part of the world stands to become even more unstable. Putin’s war in Ukraine has ground to a standstill, leaving him in the position of the man who holds a wolf by the ears.

He does not dare let go but he also cannot afford to hold on.

The fact that a man who has an arsenal of nuclear arms and other weapons of mass destruction at his disposal feels increasingly desperate should be a matter of grave concern.

Not long after Prigozhin’s plane fell from the sky, though, eight Republican contenders for the presidency of the United States took the stage for their first debate.

These would-be commanders-in-chief actually argued about whether the United States should continue to support Ukraine and work to contain Putin. They focused more attention on poor people crossing the border with Mexico than the mass murderer with a stable of nuclear missiles at his command.

At the same time that the Republican debate started, the platform once known as Twitter dropped an interview former Fox News host Tucker Carlson did with the man who leads the race to become the Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump.

The 46-minute interview was an exercise in both flattery and fiction, a conversation that indulged the two trust-fund-bred self-styled populists’ beliefs that the world somehow has been unfair to them.

This was not out of character for them.

Trump, of course, faces four different indictments on 91 counts, all of them stemming from the man’s inability or refusal to either speak or acknowledge the truth that he lost the 2020 presidential election.

Carlson lost his cushy job, big audience and huge paycheck with Fox because even that truth-challenged network no longer could bear the cost of his constant lying. Fox already had been forced to cough up more than $787 million in one defamation suit and likely will have to surrender even more cash in another one the network is attempting to settle.

Then, the day after Prigozhin died, the eight Republicans debated and Trump and Carlson got together to swap lies, the former president surrendered to authorities in Georgia, where he will go on trial for trying to steal the 2020 election.

Trump spent 20 minutes at the Fulton County Jail, where he was fingerprinted and given a number in the county’s criminal justice system. For the first time in U.S. history, a president had a mug shot taken.

Afterward, Trump—who cemented his fame by hosting a TV show in which contestants performed made-up tasks that enabled him to pretend to fire them—conjured up still more fantasies.

He was the victim of a grave injustice, he told the cameras and microphones.

Then, the man who tried to steal the 2020 presidential election accused those working to hold him accountable for his actions of “election interference.”

While a sizable slice of the American public continued to indulge its apparently insatiable appetite for make-believe, the process of clearing the debris from Prigozhin’s plane crash and identifying the human remains began.

And the war in Ukraine—a war about principles all Americans supposedly hold dear—grinds on, stacking up misery and grief hour after hour.

That is the thing about reality.

No matter how hard we try to deny it, it always intrudes.

It always reasserts itself.

Sometimes, all we need is a day to remind us of that.

FOOTNOTE: 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. 
This article was posted by the City-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

Gov. Holcomb rolls out first four training sites as part of state-wide fire training expansion 

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Historic $17.7M for fire training and volunteer PPE was part of Holcomb’s NextLevel Agenda

Aug. 25, 2023 – Governor Eric J. Holcomb was joined by the Indiana Department of Homeland Security (IDHS) and firefighting leaders from across Indiana on Friday to announce the first phase of a large-scale plan to expand physical firefighting training for Hoosiers. Gov. Holcomb prioritized more training site funding as part of his 2023 Next Level Agenda.

“Indiana will always support its public safety personnel, who selflessly risk their lives to protect the communities in which they live,” Gov. Holcomb said. “This plan will ensure that Hoosier firefighters have the skills and the equipment necessary to do their job safely and effectively.”

The first phase of this Hub-and-Spoke training model will include four new physical training locations to be built in Corydon, Linton, Rensselaer and Wabash. These new sites are expected to be completed and ready for use in the first quarter of 2024.  In total, the state will be investing $7.7M in new training sites like the four sites announced today. The goal with these funds is to provide high-quality, physical training structures within 30 miles or 45 minutes of all career and volunteer departments. The new sites will join more than a dozen sites already utilized for state firefighter training.

“When you look at the gaps we have in fire training, it’s primarily in rural areas,” said Steve Jones, Indiana State Fire Marshal. “Volunteers do not have the flexibility to travel for hours to attend trainings. We selected these first sites to address some of these ‘training deserts,’ and there was significant local buy-in for the need for these sites.”

The updated training model includes a live burn training structure on the sites by IDHS, home to the Indiana State Fire Marshal. The sites will be locally owned and maintained, although the state will construct the training facility and help with site preparation where necessary. Any fire department interested in more information and expressing interest in setting up a new training site should click here.

In addition to the $7.7M provided by the General Assembly in the most recent two-year budget, IDHS was also granted an additional $10M to provide new personal protective equipment (PPE) for volunteer firefighters across the state. Of the nearly 870 fire departments across the state, over 600 of these are volunteer fire departments. The goal with these funds is to fully outfit close to 900 volunteer firefighters with essential sets of PPE Volunteer departments often operate with outdated equipment and little funding to replace it as needed.

Volunteer fire departments interested in acquiring new PPE through this program should sign up here. Following the award of a bid, IDHS will reach back out to those expressing interest to determine specific needs, and eligibility and make final awards.

USI Essence of Excellence Summit to focus on “Excellence as a Mindset,” feature first-generation educator

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The 12th annual University of Southern Indiana Multicultural Center Essence of Excellence Summit is set for 3 p.m. Friday, September 29 in Carter Hall, located in University Center West. This year’s theme, “Excellence is a Mindset,” aims to provide all college students, especially those of historically underrepresented backgrounds, the knowledge, tools and skills to achieve better versions of themselves.

The 2023 keynote speaker will be Dr. Lamara Warren, Founder and CMO of Mustard Seed Motivation, LLC. Warren is an innovative practitioner-scholar with over 20 years of experience in higher education in the areas of admissions, sorority and fraternity life, student affairs, multicultural affairs and residential life. She has spent her professional career leveraging leadership development, stakeholder engagement and program improvement to accelerate change and achieve strategic aims within large, complex organizations.

Warren has a strong research background and professional experience in diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging. She is adept at collaborating with faculty, staff and administrators across disciplines to identify and implement inclusive practices and policies that nurture a sense of belonging and help students succeed. She is also the co-creator of “The Game of Oppression,” an interactive tool available through NASPA (Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education), that encourages and challenges individuals from diverse backgrounds to engage in authentic dialogue.

The Essence of Excellence Summit is an inclusive program designed to address topics relevant to students at the University, especially those of African American and/or Latinx heritage. All students are welcome. Workshops discuss, teach and provide students with knowledge and application pertaining to a specific skill or topic that will aid in students’ success during their collegiate journey and beyond.

“At this event, students have the opportunity to engage and learn with their peers and professionals for the purpose of focusing on their goals, improving themselves and exploring their own personal development,” says Jada Hogg, Outreach Coordinator and Student Mentor for the USI Multicultural Center. “It is the Multicultural Center’s hope that students take steps towards exceling at becoming the best version of themselves while here at USI.”

Intern with the Indiana Senate

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The Indiana Senate Republican Caucus is offering paid spring-semester internships in its communications, information technology, legal, legislative, page and policy offices during the 2024 legislative session.

Qualified candidates may be of any major and must be at least a college sophomore. Recent college graduates, as well as graduate and law school students, are also encouraged to apply. Positions are open to Indiana residents, as well as nonresidents who attend an Indiana college or university.

Interns earn a $900 biweekly stipend and benefit from scholarship and academic credit opportunities, professional development, community involvement and networking. 

Senate internships are full-time positions at the Statehouse in Downtown Indianapolis that typically begin with a mandatory orientation in late December and conclude at the end of the legislative session in March 2024.

For more information or to apply, click here. 

NOTICE OF EXECUTIVE SESSION EVV

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 Notice is hereby given that the Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Authority District Board’s Executive Session will be: 

DATE: Monday, August 28, 2023 

TIME: 3:00 pm, Local Time 

PLACE: Evansville Regional Airport 7801 Bussing Drive 

Evansville, IN 47725 

Purpose: To discuss personnel matters as permitted under IC 5- 

14-1.5-6.1 (b)(9). 

NOTICE OF REGULAR BOARD MEETING 

Notice is hereby given that the Evansville-Vanderburgh Airport Authority District Board’s Regular Board Meeting will be: 

DATE: Monday, August 28, 2023 

TIME: 4:00 pm, Local Time 

PLACE: Evansville Regional Airport 

7801 Bussing Drive 

Evansville, IN 47725 

Regina Herman 

Otters win late night thriller over Y’alls

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Evansville, Ind. – The Evansville Otters scored two go-ahead runs in the eighth inning and held on in the ninth for a 4-3 victory on Saturday night at Bosse Field.

The game start was delayed two hours and eight minutes due to wet field conditions before an eventual 8:45 p.m. first pitch. The game concluded at 11:41 PM CT.

Tied at two in the bottom of the eighth, Jomar Reyes started off the Otters’ charge with a leadoff single. Kona Quiggle followed with a walk.

A fielders’ choice followed with Reyes out at third and Quiggle replacing him at second base.

Bryan Rosario then batted a ball to the left side. The Y’alls second baseman threw the ball under the glove of the first baseman and to the backstop with Quiggle scoring the go-ahead run on the error.

George Callil capped the inning by driving in Rosario on his RBI single for what amounted to the game winning run.

Florence brought some drama to the ninth inning with a single and an error leading to a run. The game-tying run reached scoring position but Jake Polancic induced a strikeout and flyout to give the Otters the win.

Tim Holdgrafer did not factor into the decision but was brilliant from the mound tossing seven shutout innings. He retired the first ten batters of the game. The Evansville ace struck out five batters and allowed just five baserunners, all on singles.

Kevin Davis earned his fourth win of the season for recording two outs in the eighth inning.

Evansville scored the first runs of the ballgame in the sixth. Two walks and a HBP followed by a Florence infield error led to two runs.

The Y’alls tied the game in the eighth with two runs courtesy of a walk and two singles with the runs scoring on a fielders’ choice and sacrifice fly.

Callil led the Otters with three hits while Reyes notched a two-hit night. Polancic earned his league-leading 17th save of the season.

Evansville’s magic number to make the 2023 Frontier League playoffs is down to two with the Otters needing a win and Washington loss on Sunday to clinch their playoff spot at Bosse Field.

The Otters and Y’alls will face off in the series finale at 12:35 PM CT on Sunday at Bosse Field. The final regular season home game of the season is Warrick County and Little League Day along with a Dog Days of Summer with fans encouraged to bring their dogs and discounted hot dogs. Sunday is the final regular season home game at Bosse Field.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY COMMISSIONERS AWARD LITTLE LAMBS OF EVANSVILLE WITH ARPA FUNDS

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With the support of Vanderburgh County Council, the Vanderburgh County Commissioners were proud to award Little Lambs of Evansville with $9,000 in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) Funds.

To respond to the public health emergency impact with respect to COVID-19 and its negative economic impacts, Vanderburgh County appropriated funds to non-profit organizations whose missions focus on arts, culture, and educational initiatives benefiting the County’s residents.

Encouraging healthy parenting acts that will increase the physical and mental development, health, and safety of infants, Little Lambs believes that a critical ingredient in our community’s ability to thrive and grow is a culture in which every infant is guaranteed the opportunity to grow up in a safe and healthy environment. Since 1995, Little Lambs has helped safeguard the health and well-being of infants and small children by creating alliances with professional organizations that provide prenatal and pediatrics care, behavioral services, nutrition, drug and alcohol education and rehabilitation, and more. When parents obtain services from partnering organizations, they are rewarded for positive acts on behalf of their children with vouchers that can be traded for baby and child items offered through Little Lambs’ store. Little Lambs is also a Child Passenger Safety Inspection Station and offers a Safe Sleep Program.

Cardona’s career match helps UE defeat CMU

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Aces improve to 1-1 on the season 

CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Junior Giulia Cardona recorded a career-high 28 kills on Saturday to lead the University of Evansville volleyball team to a come-from-behind victory over Central Michigan in five sets inside Houck Field House.

Cardona’s unbelievable effort saw her hit .311 while adding 10 digs, six service aces and two block assists.  Melanie Feliciano picked up 12 kills, eight digs and two blocks while Madisyn Steele tallied eight kills and a team-high six total blocks.  Freshman Luana Gazda Kuhn completed the victory with seven kills and nine digs.  Defensively, Ainoah Cruz had a match-high 15 digs.  Pacing the Chippewas was Devon Bright, who had 14 kills and seven digs.

Game 1 – UE 25, CMU 17

It was Central Michigan taking the early 3-1 lead before Evansville took control.  An 8-1 rally saw the Purple Aces take a 9-4 edge.  Luana Gazda Kuhn registered two kills to put UE in control.  The Chippewas battled back with four in a row to cut their deficit to 9-8 with the Aces quickly countering.  Maddie Hawkins registered an ace with Madisyn Steele notching a kill to push the lead back to five points at 14-9.

Already up 19-14, Kora Ruff followed with an ace to give her team a 6-point advantage.  Two more Steele kills and an ace by Giulia Cardona solidified a 25-17 win to give the Aces the early 1-0 match advantage.

Game 2 – CMU 26, UE 24

Another early start by the Chippewas gave them a 3-0 edge and their solid play continued with the lead going to seven points at 12-5.  Evansville slowly chipped away at the deficit with Cardona picking up a pair of kills to chop the lead to four points (14-10).

After CMU countered to establish an 18-12 advantage, the Aces had an answer of their own.  Utilizing a 7-1 stretch, UE stormed back to tie the game at 19-19.  The defense for Evansville forced four Central Michigan errors while Melanie Feliciano added a kill and ace.  Cardona added another kill that gave Evansville a 22-21 lead.  The squads battled to a 24-24 tie and CMU was able to post the final two points to knot the match at 1-1.

Game 3 – CMU 25, UE 20

For the third game in a row, Central Michigan had the upper hand at the start.  A pair of kills by Claire Ammeraal saw the Chippewas open a 7-3 edge.  After Evansville got within three at 13-10, CMU responded with four in a row to take their largest lead of the frame.  Despite cutting the deficit to three in the final moments, the Chippewas fended off the challenge, taking a 25-20 win to win their second set of the afternoon.

Game 4 – UE 26, CMU 24

Looking to finish the match, the Chippewas took the early 6-3 lead.  Ainoah Cruz picked up an ace with UE tying things up at 7-7 and a Cardona kill put UE in front, 10-9.  Tied up at 11-11, CMU posted three in a row before Evansville did the same, resulting in a 14-14 deadlock.

Over the ensuing stretch, Central Michigan continued to fend off the challenges and take multiple leads.  A solo block put CMU up 22-20 and they would later have match point, up 24-23.  Down to their final point, the Aces staged a clutch rally.  A kill from Cardona and another ace by Cruz resulted in a 26-24 UE win to force a fifth set.

Game 5 – UE 15, CMU 12

Central Michigan started on a 3-1 stretch, but it was Cardona continuing her career day with two kills and two more aces to put UE on top – 5-4.  After CMU rallied to tie the score at 8-8, Evansville put forth its most important stretch of the day.  Two kills apiece from Feliciano and Cardona comprised a 4-0 rally.  From there, UE held strong, taking a 15-12 decision to clinch the match.

Next up for the Aces is a home match against USI on Tuesday evening at 7 p.m.