EVANSVILLE, Ind. – On Thursday, October 12, Evansville Country Club will be the site of the Aces Basketball Tipoff Dinner. Making its return for the first time in several years, the dinner will give attendees the opportunity to meet members of the University of Evansville men’s and women’s basketball teams.
Purple Aces head men’s basketball coach David Ragland and head women’s basketball coach Robyn Scherr-Wells will discuss their respective squads and introduce team members.
A reception opens the evening at 5:30 p.m. before dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. The dinner is open to the public and features three ticket options. A table of eight attendees along with a UE VIP is $1,000. Cost for a regular table of eight is $750 while individual tickets are $100. All proceeds support the Purple Aces Club.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
BOARD OF PARK COMMISSIONERS REGULAR MEETING In ROOM 307, CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX On WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2023 At 12:00 NOON
 AGENDA
1.   CALL TO ORDER
2.   MEETING MEMORANDUM July 5, 2023 (Revised) July 19, 2023 (meeting date corrected) Aug. 2, 2023
3.   CONSENT AGENDA
    a. Request Re: Approve and Execute Kitchen Facilities Use Agreement with QB’s Famous BBQ at Swonder Ice Arena. – Pariman             Â
    b. Request Re: Permission to change C.K. Newsome Security requirement from 3 hours to 4 hours to match FOP minimum requirement.Â
4. Â Â OLD BUSINESSÂ
     N/A
5.   NEW BUSINESS  Â
     a. Request Re: Approve and Execute Agreement with Randy’s Tree Service to remove 3 trees
       at Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden.- Beck*  Â
     b. Request Re: Permission to place trail counters at various spots along the Greenway.-Van Hook
     c. Request Re: Any Other Business the Board Wishes to Consider and Public Comments
6.   REPORTS Â
     a. Steve Schaefer- Interim Parks Department Director          Â
Planned Parenthood vows to continue to fight as Indiana abortion ban takes effect
By Marilyn Odendahl, The Indiana Citizen
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Katie McHugh, OB/GYN, (left) and Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawai’i, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, Inc., spoke to reporters Tuesday about Indiana’s new abortion law.Photo by Marilyn Odendahl
Speaking at the Planned Parenthood facility in Indianapolis Tuesday morning, the organization’s leader and physicians emphasized while abortion services have now stopped in the state of Indiana, the clinic is open and continuing to offer a range of medical care, including assisting patients in traveling to a state where abortion remains legal.
“No matter what extremists are doing to attack your right and your choices about your own bodies, Planned Parenthood will be here for you now more than ever,†Rebecca Gibron, CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Northwest, Hawai’i, Alaska, Indiana, Kentucky, Inc., said during an early morning press conference. “Planned Parenthood health care centers in Indiana are here with open doors, and we’ll be here tomorrow and every single day after.â€
Indiana’s near-total abortion ban was given the green light following a June 30 ruling by the Indiana Supreme Court which vacated a preliminary injunction that had been blocking the new law. Planned Parenthood and others filed a petition for a rehearing Monday, asking the justices to impose another preliminary injunction while the trial court reviews the constitutionality of the law’s limited exception for the health of the mother.
The Indiana General Assembly passed the new abortion statute, Senate Enrolled Act 1, during a special session last summer, weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade which had given women the right to abortion care. S.E.A. 1 allows an abortion if the woman’s health is in danger, if the fetus has a lethal anomaly or if the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest.
Although Gov. Eric Holcomb signed the law in August 2022, the abortion restrictions were put on hold in September. The Monroe County Circuit Court granted a preliminary injunction after finding the new prohibitions violated the Indiana Constitution’s guarantee of liberty.
As abortion was banned in other states, including Kentucky, Planned Parenthood has recorded a 25% increase in out-of-state patients coming to Indiana for care over the past year.
Katie McHugh, an OB/GYN at Planned Parenthood, said the clinic will now tell Hoosier women they have to leave the state to obtain an abortion and will help arrange travel and care in those other states.
“Abortion is here to stay and so is abortion care,†McHugh said. “We are here to help the people in Indiana access the health care that they need, and we invite the community to join us. We challenge all Hoosiers to stand up against this oppression and to reclaim the rights to control our bodies and our futures.â€
Indiana Right to Life called on the Indiana Supreme Court to clarify the status of the new abortion law, saying for thousands of unborn babies, it is a life and death issue.
“While we are pleased that some Indiana abortion businesses, at least, indicate that they are ceasing operations today, the status of the new Indiana law remains unclear,†Mike Fichter, president and CEO of Indiana Right to Life, said in a video statement released Tuesday. “We are hopeful that the Indiana Supreme Court quickly affirms that the new law is in effect, ending 95% of abortions in our state.â€
 ‘Race to the top’
McHugh said Planned Parenthood has already seen people become desperate since S.E.A. 1 was signed into law even though it was not being enforced. Patients have attempted to end their pregnancies “through dangerous means†and assault survivors have struggled to meet the deadline imposed by the new abortion law to terminate a pregnancy.
With the ban now cleared to take effect, McHugh said the impact will spread beyond pregnant women and be felt by the entire state. The community’s health will suffer as the people who are pregnant cannot work and are busy taking care of their families that expanded before they were ready to provide for more children.
In addition, both McHugh and Gibron expect the state’s maternal mortality rates to increase as people “are forced to carry pregnancies†they do not want or that put their health and life at risk. They said the state’s maternal mortality rate has increased 58% in the last three years.
“We are third in the nation right now for maternal mortality,†McHugh said. “I fear that we will be in a race to the top with the other states that are banning abortion access.â€
While Planned Parenthood is adjusting to the new restrictions, Gibron said the organization would continue its effort to overturn the state’s abortion law.
“We will fight every lawsuit and every ban as far as we can take it in the state of Indiana,†Gibron said. “Patients deserve access to vital reproductive health care in their home state. It is unconscionable to think that patients have to leave their community, their home, their state to access basic health care. So yes, we will continue to fight as far as we can fight every battle that needs to be fought on this front in the state of Indiana.â€
Crossing state lines
Planned Parenthood’s pledge to help patients travel to another state for an abortion comes as Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita and 18 other attorneys general are trying to stop a proposed federal rule that seeks to strengthen reproductive health care privacy. Under the potential new rule, government officials would be restricted from reviewing health information for an investigation against any individual who seeks, obtains, provides or facilitates lawful reproductive health care.
Rokita and the other attorneys general wrote a letter to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services , asserting the proposed new rule would upset a “careful, decades-old balance†between patient privacy and the state’s need to protect public health, safety and welfare.
“The proposed rule would interfere with States’ ability to obtain evidence that could reveal violation of their laws,†the letter stated. “This intrudes on core state authority.â€
Asked if Planned Parenthood was concerned about any repercussions from the Indiana Attorney General for assisting patients with out-of-state care, Gibron replied, “Absolutely not.â€
She then added the clinic would protect patient privacy.
“What I want to make crystal clear is under no circumstances will we turn over any kind of patient data,†Gibron said. “Your records, your medical information is private and protected and confidential. And it will remain that way.â€
The Indiana Attorney General’s office countered Gibron’s comment by saying the state’s top lawyer is not seeking more access but just wants the current rule to stay in place.
“Once again, Planned Parenthood is seeking to take advantage of another 15 minutes of fame,†Kelly Stevenson, a spokesperson for the attorney general’s office, said in an emailed statement. “We are not asking for any patient records. We are saying the existing law should stay in place, keeping intact the law enforcement authority that states have had for decades.â€
The attorney general’s office highlighted its case against Caitlin Bernard, an OB/GYN who provides abortions, as proof it respects patient privacy. Rokita’s team filed a complaint against Bernard for relaying to the media she provided an abortion on a 10-year-old Ohio rape victim.
“In fact,†Stevenson continued, “our office has always defended patient privacy. As you know, the Medical Licensing Board found Caitlin Bernard liable for violating state and federal patient privacy law on three separate counts, plus issued a formal letter of reprimand. We will argue just as vehemently for any other patient whose privacy is violated by their doctor.â€
Gibron called Bernard “a hero†for the care she provided to the 10-year-old and said Rokita’s effort to politicize the incident for his own gain “was despicable.â€
“We will continue to support Dr. Bernard as we always have,†Gibron said. “And if the AG decides he wants to do something else and come after any other physicians that work with Planned Parenthood, he will be met with the full force and weight of our legal team and our support behind our providers.â€
This article was published by TheStatehouseFile.com through a partnership with The Indiana Citizen (indianacitizen.org), a nonpartisan, nonprofit platform dedicated to increasing the number of informed, engaged Hoosier citizens.
FOOTNOTE: Â Marilyn Odendahl has spent her journalism career writing for newspapers and magazines in Indiana and Kentucky. She has focused her reporting on business, the law and poverty issues.
Subsidized housing does not mean substandard housing
Following an investigation by his team, Attorney General Todd Rokita has obtained legal commitments from the Indianapolis Housing Agency (IHA) to rectify miserable living conditions at the Lugar Tower Apartments and to extend new protections to tenants.Â
The problems stem from the IHA’s alleged mismanagement of the 17-story, 250-unit apartment building in Downtown Indianapolis, which serves elderly and disabled residents.
“Just like private companies, public agencies must meet their obligations to Hoosiers,†Attorney General Rokita said. “Our team works tirelessly to ensure our laws are followed. This is one more instance in which we were honored to serve that mission.â€
At least 40 tenants filed complaints earlier this year which detailed deteriorating conditions at the property. A lack of building security at the property has attracted criminal activity, including assaults and robberies. Squatters have inhabited vacant units and common areas of the property.
The building at times has also lacked hot water service, working elevators and even secure locking devices on residents’ doors.
Other problems have included fecal matter in common stairwells and rampant pest infestations.
Attorney General Rokita’s Homeowner Protection Unit (HPU) responded to tenants’ complaints — communicating with IHA, inspecting the building, interviewing residents and engaging with other stakeholders to ensure issues were remedied.
The IHA agreed to address the issues as part of an Assurance of Voluntary Compliance (AVC) that Attorney General Rokita’s office filed with the Marion County Superior Court.
Attorney General Rokita commended IHA Chief Executive Officer Marcia Lewis for taking the residents’ concerns seriously and working constructively with his team to implement solutions.
Already, crews have cleaned common areas, fixed doors and locks, installed new water heaters and repaired elevators. Management also has increased on-site security.
“What happened at Lugar Tower Apartments was the culmination of years of neglect and mismanagement,†Attorney General Rokita said. “That should anger anyone who cares about fairness and justice. Subsidized housing does not mean substandard housing. Our office will not hesitate to hold any landlord accountable that seeks to deny tenants equal protection of our laws.â€
The AVC requires IHA to agree to a two-year compliance period in which they must maintain a licensed broker company as property manager of the building, maintain a reasonable security presence, allow access for future inspections and submit quarterly compliance reports to the Attorney General.
The AVC also includes an agreement that IHA will follow the Indiana landlord-tenant statutes and local health and housing codes. Â
Attorney General Rokita thanked his HPU team for their work in this matter — including Investigator Molly Jefford; Deputy Attorney General and Assistant Section Chief Timothy Weber; and Deputy Attorney General and Section Chief Chase Haller.
The HPU’s mission is to protect the rights of all individuals involved in the housing market — including tenants, homeowners, and aspiring homeowners — by investigating and redressing deceptive acts in connection with mortgage lending and violations of relevant state and federal laws.
WASHINGTONÂ — Senator Mike Braun released the following statement on indictment former President Donald Trump in Georgia.
“Another week, another attempt by President Biden and his party’s prosecutors to put their leading political rival behind bars and interfere with the 2024 presidential election. President Biden’s weaponization of the justice system will cause irreversible damage to our nation and divide us further.†– Senator Mike Braun
IEDC Chief Strategy Officer Ann Lathrop appointed to join Rosenberg on Governor’s Cabinet
INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb today named David Rosenberg, Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC) chief operating officer and chief of staff, as the state’s Secretary of Commerce effective immediately. Ann Lathrop, IEDC’s chief strategy officer, will continue to lead the agency’s integrated business development strategy while assuming more of the agency’s strategy-focused responsibilities. Lathrop will join Rosenberg on Gov. Holcomb’s cabinet.
“David has been instrumental in guiding the IEDC team over the last two years, and I am confident in his ability to continue to lead the strong team and Indiana’s extraordinary economic momentum,†said Gov. Holcomb. “Under Ann’s leadership of the IEDC’s business development team, Indiana has pivoted its focus to attracting the economy of the future. I am thrilled to have both David and Ann join my cabinet, and I know their leadership will help solidify more wins that will provide opportunities to Hoosiers for decades to come.â€
Rosenberg, who joined the IEDC in August 2021, began his career as deputy chief of staff and director of enterprise development for former Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard. He also previously served as operations officer for Indianapolis Public Schools and vice president of operations for Market Street Group. As chief operating officer and chief of staff for the IEDC, Rosenberg oversaw the agency’s operations, cultural and young professional development team, as well as several strategic IEDC initiatives, including the Indiana Regional Economic Acceleration and Development Initiative (READI), and the LEAP Innovation and Research District in Boone County.
“I’m incredibly humbled and grateful to Governor Holcomb for the opportunity to lead the IEDC and serve Hoosiers as Indiana’s next secretary of commerce,†Rosenberg said. “Over the last two years, we’ve executed against a strategic vision that enables businesses and talent to be successful in Indiana while setting new committed capital investment records and unprecedented investments in communities throughout the state. Our focus on the economy of the future will impact generations as we ensure Indiana continues competing to win.â€
Rosenberg serves as a board member for BSA’s Crossroads of America Council, Visit Indy and KIPP Indy Public Schools. He has been recognized as one of Indiana’s 250 most influential leaders and a Forty Under 40 leader by the Indianapolis Business Journal. He and his wife, Ali, reside in Zionsville with their children, Will and Lily.
Lathrop joined the IEDC in November 2021 with more than 30 years of combined experience in business development, sales, finance and brand management. She began her career as an auditor for KPMG and went on to serve as deputy mayor for the city of Indianapolis before transitioning to city controller. Most recently, she served as Crowe’s first chief marketing officer, where she led marketing and brand strategy and realigned the Inside Sales team deployment. As chief strategy officer of the IEDC, Ann oversees Indiana’s integrated approach to business development aligning external engagement, workforce, business development, foreign direct investment, federal engagement, government-to-government relations, defense, foreign policy and trade to meet the speed and needs of the market.
“Our future-focused economic strategy has produced historic results, created quality careers for Hoosiers, modernized and professionalized our economic tools and built a highly motivated, highly engaged team that truly loves the work and service they deliver,†said Lathrop. “I am thankful for the opportunity to serve alongside David on Gov. Holcomb’s cabinet and continue this incredible work with the IEDC team.â€
Evansville, In.:  The Evansville Thunderbolts and Head Coach/Director of Hockey Operations Jeff Bes are pleased to announce the signing of forward Lincoln Hatten for the 2023-24 season.  The Thunderbolts’ 2023-24 season will get underway on Saturday, October 21st at Ford Center as they host the Huntsville Havoc.
Hatten, a native of Sarasota, Florida, comes to the Thunderbolts following three seasons of junior hockey with the NAHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Knights from 2017-20, and one season of NCAA hockey with the U.S. Military Academy’s Army team in 2020-21.  With the Knights, Hatten tallied 31 goals and 78 points in 121 total games and was named to the NAHL All-East Division Team in the 2019-20 season, in which he scored 27 goals and 61 points in 50 games.  In 22 games with Army, Hatten scored 4 goals and 13 points, and was named Atlantic Hockey Rookie of the Year for 2020-21.  Upon signing with Evansville, here is what Hatten had to say: “I’m extremely grateful for the opportunity that the staff and Coach Bes have given me, and I’m excited about playing at Ford Center and getting to meet all the fans! I’m looking forward to getting to Evansville this season and getting to work!â€
In reaction to signing Hatten, Head Coach and Director of Hockey Operations Jeff Bes commented: “Lincoln is a big, strong power forward that skates well and has a nice scoring touch.  He works hard and does all the little details that will help him be successful, and we are excited to see him this season.â€
Florence, KY. – The Evansville Otters scored four runs in the final three innings but fell 6-4 to the Florence Y’alls on a drizzly Tuesday night at Thomas More Stadium.
Evansville trailed 6-4 entering the ninth. Jomar Reyes led off by reaching on a hit-by-pitch. Kona Quiggle then smashed a ground rule double to the right field wall to put two in scoring position with no outs.
However, an Otters’ groundout, pop out and flyout ended the ballgame.
The Otters started their comeback in the seventh inning trailing 4-0. Dakota Phillips led off with a double and scored on a sacrifice fly.
Quiggle then hit a 400 foot solo blast to right field, cutting the lead to 4-2.
Florence answered in the bottom of the seventh with a two-run homer.
Evansville continued to fight back in the eighth. Jeffrey Baez blasted a two-run home run to center field, trimming the lead back to two runs.
Florence scored in the first inning chipping across a run on a two out single.
The Y’alls mounted three runs in the third inning. A leadoff walk followed by four singles built a 4-0 lead for Florence.
Tim Holdgrafer started for Evansville, pitching five innings. He allowed four runs on nine hits and took the loss. Florence’s Carter Spivey pitched six shutout innings to earn the win.
Gary Mattis earned his first multi-hit day of the season in his fourth game back with Evansville. George Callil and Quiggle joined him with two-hit days.
Evansville aims to even up the series against Florence on Wednesday evening with a 5:31 PM CT first pitch from Thomas More Stadium. The game can be heard on the Evansville Otters Digital Network.
All home and road Otters games this season are televised on FloSports with audio-only coverage available for free on the Evansville Otters YouTube page.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions.
The Otters play all home games at historic Bosse Field, located at 23 Don Mattingly Way in Evansville, Ind. Stay up-to-date with the Evansville Otters by visiting evansvilleotters.com, or follow the Otters on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.