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EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

 

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.

COMMISSIONER CHERYL MUSGRAVE COMMENTS CONCERNING THE AIRPORT OVERLAY ORDINANCE

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COMMISSIONER MUSGRAVE COMMENTS CONCERNING THE AIRPORT OVERLAY ORDINANCE

August 11, 2023

Cheryl Musgrave

The proposed Airport Overlay Ordinance starts out so well.  If you only read the “WHEREAS” section of the beginning, you would believe the intent is to regulate two things: 1) The height of structures on runway approaches/exits and 2) Wildlife that could strike aircraft.

We are led to believe the Federal Aviation Authority has issued an order to require us to enact a local ordinance, but this directive has not been made available to the County Commissioners.  it is unclear whether the Airport Board actually voted to request this Ordinance or give the Director authority to pursue its enactment.

As you read this complex Ordinance, the stated goals of regulating height and wildlife are not clear.  At no point are we clearly given heights that must not be exceeded in any particular geographic area.  It may be that there is a document referred to, but it is difficult to discern.  Instead, we are told building permits will not be issued for new construction – even in newly added subdivisions with vacant residential lots.  These property owners and developers have adhered to the arduous process to create lots in beautiful new subdivisions only to face this Ordinance that will prohibit building anything on these lots, no matter what the height is.

Upon researching the Ordinance, we learn that building permits will not be issued to property that burns down or is otherwise destroyed.  In these cases, the property owner is left with virtually worthless land, depriving families of their hard-earned property without any remedy for compensation by the airport authority or local government.

The secondary role of discouraging problematic wildlife is no easier to understand from a plain reading.  The Ordinance never identifies exactly what kind of wildlife it seeks to prevent from coming in contact with aircraft. 

Let’s look at the broader picture.  As best I can discover, the Ordinance affects 8,226 parcels of privately-owned property in the unincorporated county described in Zones B1, B2, C1, and C2.  Adding in the city property, an additional 3,178 properties, the total parcels affected comes to 11,404.  All these owners are directly affected by this Ordinance.  None of them were officially notified of the hearing that the Area Plan Commission held.  None of them were officially notified of the hearing that the City Council held.  The Ordinance passed both these bodies and is in effect in the City of Evansville right now.  

Property owners in the unincorporated county received a notice from the Area Plan Commission containing a vague letter from the Airport Authority referencing the scope of the Ordinance for the now-canceled hearing.  The letter from the Area Plan Commission was sent only because the Commissioners requested that a notice be sent to all property owners.

Since the notice was sent scheduling a now-canceled meeting for 5pm today, the Airport Authority’s Executive Director has agreed that a future revised Ordinance is desirable.  In effect, the Airport wishes to withdraw the proposed Ordinance.  As a result, the public meeting scheduled for 5 pm today has been canceled.  Our legal advisors have suggested that a vote to deny the Ordinance is the preferred legal route to withdraw the Ordinance.

Because the Airport Authority has indicated that a new and improved Ordinance will be drafted, let’s return to reviewing the content of the proposed Ordinance.  If the Airport/Area Plan Commission plans to create a revised Ordinance, it is crucial to outline the problematic issues in the current document.

First, official individual notification of all affected property owners of the future Area Plan Commission hearing is required.  This mirrors statutory requirements when rezoning property.

Second, the Ordinance is too broad.  It should be limited to flight line structural height requirements. With respect to height restrictions, if building permits will be denied, market value compensation should be paid to property owners as inverse condemnation by the Airport Authority.  

With respect to wildlife, it must be proven to be attracted by the local topography and landscaping and be harmful to aircraft.  For example, Cardinal birds may not be an issue, but Canadian Geese may well be.  Please be specific about exactly what type of harmful landscape features are prohibited and back it up with data.

I will now review specific Ordinance sections and issues:

IN 17.18.020

Boundaries shall not be moved at the whim of the Airport but shall be subject to the same process as adopting the original Ordinance – with notice to all affected property owners and public hearings.

IN 17.18.030 

The property owner will be compensated for the market value of any land value taken by Airport by refusal of building permits or failure to purchase undevelopable land, as per the Fifth Amendment of the US Constitution.

There shall be a timeline of 10 business days for the Airport to review building permits.

The provision of 2A on page 6 describing that “a significant concentration of people” is an example of the overreach and lack of specificity of this proposed Ordinance.

It is unclear why people, no matter how many, pose a threat to aircraft arriving or leaving the Airport.  This provision instead appears to attempt to transfer risk from the aircraft to the people and property owner.  In other words, to transfer liability for loss from a crashed aircraft to those who are damaged by the crash.  Does this provision seek to set an acceptable number of casualties from an aircraft crash?

In addition, I have been told that the school corporation has long planned a new school at the current golf course on Petersburg Road.  This Ordinance would prevent this in at least two ways – it would be a new structure (and a permit won’t be granted) in the geographical flight path, and secondly, it would result in a concentration of people in this same geography.  The loss of a new school in this geographic area would be very harmful to the people who live there and to our economic development.

2B prohibits vaguely defined visual obstructions.  This is completely unclear and needs specific definitions.  

2C appears to regulate the noise levels that can be heard inside structures within the zone.  It is entirely unclear how to comply with this requirement or the purpose of it.  Who and how would this be enforced?

2D is too broad and too vague as to what type or size of water feature is prohibited and whether this extends to all types of property or what exact wildlife is presenting a danger to aircraft.  Under the current language, land turtles would be included.  It is unclear whether this is enforced by the Drainage Board or the Airport.

Part C is so overly broad that the hapless applicant would have to be an expert in all applicable laws.  This places too great a burden on developers and property owners.  Unless the applicable laws are specified, the burden should not be transferred to the citizens and taxpayers.

This provision and the following adversely effect economic development to the point that they effectively outlaw it.

17.18.040 

“B. No legal nonconforming use or associated structure in the AIR-O shall be enlarged, extended, constructed, reconstructed, or structurally altered to increase its nonconformity in a manner that would facilitate the assembly or occupancy of more people on the lot or parcel containing the non-conforming use.”

It’s important to note here that the proponents of the Ordinance have not been able to identify which properties would be “non-conforming.”  This provision prohibits hiring additional staff or increasing the number of people on any non-conforming use.  This provision prohibits the reconstruction of damaged or destroyed property and leaves the underlying land worthless.

This is further emphasized in C1 that prohibits enlarging all existing buildings to accommodate additional employment or business expansion.

This Ordinance effectively prohibits economic development near the Airport.

The map on page 8 is extremely difficult to read.  For example, map section overlays in unclear ways and at least one area, C2, is described here and not referenced anywhere else in the Ordinance.

Overall, the Ordinance is an invitation to lawsuits from property owners deprived of the use of their property without compensation as a form of inverse condemnation.  There is lack of clear relationships between its provisions and the safety of aircraft and people on the ground.  It lacks due process to adjudicate its provisions.

The Ordinance appears to give the Airport Authority the right to inspect without the permission of the property owner.  Unless we are suspending the state and federal Constitutions, this provision is unacceptable.

I reserve the option to revise any objections to this Ordinance as clarifications of its provisions arise.

FOOTNOTES  

The AREA PLANNING COMMISSION voted to pass the AIRPORT OVERLAY ORDINANCE and recommended that members of the Evansville City Council approved this ordinance.  Members of the Evansville City Council passed this ordinance as recommended by the AREA PLANNING COMMISSION. 

Members of the Vanderburgh County Board Of Commission wisely voted down this overreaching bureaucratic ordinance by a unanimous vote.

EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL MEETING AGENDA FOR AUGUST 14, 2023

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civic center

EVANSVILLE CITY COUNCIL MEETING AGENDA FOR AUGUST 14, 2023

ROOM 301, CIVIC CENTER 5:30 P.M.

VISIT EVANSVILLE.IN.GOV/ACCESSEVC TO VIEW LIVE AND ARCHIVED MEETINGS, PENDING ORDINANCES, RESOLUTIONS, AND MEETING MEMORANDA

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CITY OF EVANSVILLE COMMON COUNCIL

I. INTRODUCTION
II. APPROVAL OF MEETING MEMORANDUM
III. REPORTS AND COMMUNICATIONS
IV. SPECIAL ORDERS OF THE DAY
V. CONSENT AGENDA: FIRST READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

ORDINANCE G-2023-16

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE G-2023-17

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

ORDINANCE R-2023-27

Owner:
Requested Change: Representative:

ORDINANCE R-2023-28

Owner:
Requested Change: Representative:

VI. COMMITTEE REPORTS

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
Heronemus

ASD Chair Mosby Discussion Date: 8/28/2023 Josh Claybourn, Jackson Kelly

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

Beane
Finance Chair Beane Discussion Date: 8/28/2023 Marco DeLucio, ZSWS

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 1821 Buchanan Rd
Tim Smith

M2 to R1 Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer Tim Smith

An Ordinance to Rezone Certain Real Estate in the City of Evansville, State of Indiana, More Commonly Known as 4407 & 4319 Broadway Ave
Fasttrack Enterprises, LLC
R1 & C1 to C4 w/ UDC Ward: 6 Brinkmeyer
Scott Buedel, Cash Waggner & Associates, PC

VII. REGULAR AGENDA: SECOND READING OF ORDINANCES AND RESOLUTIONS

ORDINANCE F-2023-11 AMENDED

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

VIII. RESOLUTION DOCKET RESOLUTION C-2023-15

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

RESOLUTION C-2023-16

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

RESOLUTION C-2023-18

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

RESOLUTION C-2023-19

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

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 Beane
Finance Chair Beane Discussion Date: 8/14/2023 Russ Lloyd, Jr., Controller

A Confirmatory Resolution of the Evansville City Council Declaring an Economic Revitalization Area for Property Tax Phase-In for the Rehabilitation of Real Property and Installation of New Equipment 5818 Vogel Rd (KCG Development, LLC)

Heronemus, Burton, Mosby
President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/14/2023 Bob Grewe, Evansville Regional Economic Partnership

A Confirmatory Resolution of the Evansville City Council Declaring an Economic Revitalization Area for Property Tax Phase-In for the Rehabilitation of Real Property and Installation of New Equipment 501 NW 3rd St (KCG Development, LLC)

Heronemus, Burton, Mosby
President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/14/2023 Bob Grewe, Evansville Regional Economic Partnership

A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana, Authorizing Affordable Housing Funds for the Development of Five (5) Newly Constructed Affordable Housing Units (Known as Memorial Villas Phase 8) by Memorial Community Development Corporation in the City of Evansville, Indiana in an Amount Not to Exceed Six Hundred and Seventy-Five Thousand Dollars ($675,000). Burton, Koehler Lindsey, Mosby
President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/14/2023
Kelley Coures, DMD

A Confirmatory Resolution of the Evansville City Council Declaring an Economic Revitalization Area for Property Tax Phase-In for the Installation of New Equipment 2301 St. George Rd (Fisher Dynamics, Inc)

Heronemus, Mosby, Koehler Lindsey, Burton
President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/14/2023 Bob Grewe, Evansville Regional Economic Partnership

RESOLUTION C-2023-20 Sponsor(s):
Discussion Led By: Notify:

RESOLUTION C-2023-21

Sponsor(s): Discussion Led By: Notify:

IX. MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

A Resolution in Support of the Ohio River Crossing Grant Funding Heronemus, Burton, Mosby, Trockman
President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/14/2023 Josh Claybourn, Jackson Kelly

A Resolution of the Common Council of the City of Evansville, Indiana, Approving a Lease Between the City of Evansville Redevelopment Authority and the City of Evansville Redevelopment Commission, and Addressing Other Matters Related Thereto

Beane, Brinkmeyer, Weaver
President Heronemus Discussion Date: 8/14/2023 Marco DeLucio, ZSWS

A. THE NEXT MEETING of the Common Council will be Monday, August 28, 2023 at 5:30 p.m.
B. TAX PHASE IN COMPLIANCE REPORT; Robert Grewe, Evansville Regional Economic Partnership C. ADDITIONAL MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS

X. COMMITTEEREPORTS

City Council Budget Hearings will be held Tuesday, August 15th at 3:00 p.m. Time will also be allotted for Friday, August 18th at 2:00 p.m. if needed. Joint Department Hearings will be held Wednesday, August 16th at 3:00 p.m. All meetings will be held in Room 301. Public input will not be permitted at this time, but will be available at a later date. City Council will simply be receiving information from Department Heads.

XI. ADJOURNMENT

CenterPoint Energy recognizes National 811 Day as a reminder to contact 811 before digging  

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CenterPoint Energy recognizes National 811 Day as a reminder to contact 811 before digging  

The Company encourages homeowners and professionals to make
a free request before digging to avoid damaging buried utilities 

Evansville — Aug. 10, 2023 – CenterPoint Energy is proud to take part in National 811 Day on Aug. 11 (8/11). This day serves as a reminder for anyone who plans to dig to contact 811 prior to any digging project to have underground utility lines marked.

“On Aug. 11 and throughout the year, we remind homeowners and professional contractors to use the free 811 service before digging to reduce the risk of striking an underground utility line,” said Chasta Martin, Vice President, Field Services for CenterPoint Energy. “Calling 811 or visiting Call811.com is the only way to know which utilities are buried in your area so that you can dig safely and keep your community safe and connected.” 

Every few minutes, an underground utility line is damaged because someone began digging without first contacting 811.  Customers should contact 811 to request that local utility companies mark the approximate location of buried electric, natural gas, water, telecommunications, and cable lines in the designated project space and minimize the risk of injury or disruption of utility service.

Every digging project, no matter how large or small, requires contacting 811 by phone or online to notify utility providers of planned digging and to allow for marking of underground utilities before digging.  Striking a single line can cause repair costs, inconvenient service outages and fines, severe injuries and even death. 

The depth of utility lines can vary for several reasons, such as erosion, previous digging projects and uneven surfaces. Even when digging only a few inches or digging in a location that’s previously been marked, the risk of striking an underground utility line still exists. Some examples of digging projects that require a free 811 request at least a few days before breaking ground include, installing a mailbox, building a deck, planting a tree and laying a patio.

Additional information about pipeline safety can be found at www.centerpointenergy.com/callbeforeyoudig.

 

Attorney General Todd Rokita fights for Hoosier farmers and food consumers

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Congress must prevent California from imposing radical agenda onto Indiana and other states

Attorney General Todd Rokita this week called on Congress to enact legislation preventing states such as California from dictating rules to farmers and ranchers in Indiana.

“California’s got every right to regulate agricultural practices within its own borders,” Attorney General Rokita said. “But it shouldn’t have the authority to impose restrictions on farmers here in Indiana. If the U.S. Supreme Court doesn’t recognize this basic reality, then Congress needs to take action.”

In a letter sent Wednesday to congressional leaders, Attorney General Rokita and other attorneys general call for passage of the Ending Agricultural Trade Suppression (EATS) Act — H.R.4417 in the U.S. House and S.2019 in the U.S. Senate.

In May, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a California law that outlaws the sale of pork originating from sows housed in less than 24 square feet — even if such pork comes from out-of-state producers.

Attorney General Rokita led a 26-state coalition in that case supporting the National Pork Producers Council and other petitioners contesting the California law.

“This law hurts Hoosier hog farmers by forcing them to change their livestock systems in order to sell to California markets,” Attorney General Rokita said. “Beyond that, it also hurts Indiana families everywhere by increasing the costs of bacon and ham at grocery stores.”

Some small- and medium-sized pork producers could be forced to go out of business. California buys about 13 percent of the nation’s pork.

Extending beyond the pork industry, the Supreme Court’s decision paves the way for California and other states to similarly impose their will pertaining to other types of livestock production — and even other types of industries altogether.

On a philosophical level, Attorney General Rokita said, the court’s decision flies in the face of American federalism and free enterprise.

In the letter to congressional leaders, Attorney General Rokita and the other attorneys general noted that U.S. farmers already follow prudent techniques in raising livestock.

“American farmers and ranchers raise massive amounts of animal protein as affordably and humanely as possible,” the letter states. “American farmers’ techniques have developed over generations to constitute global best practices. No other country raises anywhere near as much delicious and high-quality pork.”

The letter is attached.

This case is not the only one in which Attorney General Rokita has stood strongly for the interests and liberties of Hoosier farmers. Among other things, he has led efforts to curtail federal bureaucrats from riding roughshod over farmers’ property rights through such power grabs as the EPA’s expansion of its own powers under the Water of the United States rule. In this scenario, the EPA has used a rule intended to apply to navigable waters as a blunt instrument with which to smash property rights anytime a ditch crossed a land parcel or heavy rains caused flooding.

Planned Parenthood Leaders Emphasize Abortion Services Have Now Stopped In Indiana,

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Planned Parenthood Leaders Emphasize Abortion Services Have Now Stopped In Indiana

By Marilyn Odendahl, The Indiana Citizen

AUGUST 11, 2023

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.”

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.”

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.”

 ‘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.”

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, and 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.”

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 a violation of their laws,” the letter stated. “This intrudes on core state authority.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

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.”

“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.”

UE holds Groundbreaking Ceremony for Lincoln Commons

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EVANSVILLE, IND. (08/10/2023) The University of Evansville (UE) on Thursday held a groundbreaking ceremony for a new student housing apartment complex, Lincoln Commons. Demolition of the site originally began in November 2022, and foundation work started in March.

When completed, the four-story building located on campus at the corner of Weinbach Avenue and Lincoln Avenue will house approximately 123 upperclassman students.

All four levels will include a total of 55 units with a mix of one, two, and four-bedroom options. Each apartment will include a full kitchen with appliances, washer and dryer, full size beds, couches, chairs, and desks.

The first level of Lincoln Commons will feature an approximately 3,500 square foot restaurant with outdoor patio. An 87 spaced parking lot will also be developed across the street, just south of Lincoln Avenue.

“Today marks a significant milestone in the continued growth and development of the University of Evansville. With its prime location at the corner of Weinbach Avenue and Lincoln Avenue, we are excited that Lincoln Commons will offer a modern and comfortable home for over 100 upperclassman students,” said University President, Christopher Pietruszkiewicz. “I look forward to the day when we welcome our students to their new home at Lincoln Commons, and witness firsthand the positive impact it will have on their personal and academic growth.”

The project is expected to be completed by August 2024 just in time for the start of the academic year. To learn more, visit evansville.edu/lincolncommons.