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Vincennes University hosts U.S. senator and discussion on Indiana’s rapidly-evolving agbioscience economy

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VINCENNES, Ind., August 10, 2023 – U.S. Senator Todd Young of Indiana, Indiana experts, and Hoosier leaders gathered at the Vincennes University Agricultural Center on Wednesday, Aug. 9, for a fireside chat about 21st-century agriculture and the rapid growth Indiana’s agbioscience economy has experienced over the last decade. The discussion was presented by AgriNovus Indiana and VU.

According to VU President Dr. Chuck Johnson, “It is so exciting to talk about agbioscience innovation because agriculture is so important to this region that we call home. The University extends its gratitude to Senator Todd Young and Mitch Frazier of AgriNovus Indiana for shining the spotlight on the exciting future of this industry for VU and our many partners in this region and state.” 

Agbioscience, also known as agriculture bioscience, is at the intersection of where food, agriculture, science, and technology meet. The industry focuses on leveraging cutting-edge advancements to enhance agricultural production; animal health and nutrition; agricultural equipment and technology; plant science and crop production; and value-added food and nutrition, and addresses challenges related to food security, environmental sustainability, and resource efficiency. 

Indiana is a national leader in agbioscience research, development, and innovation, according to AgriNovus Indiana and the Indiana Economic Development Corporation (IEDC).

The fireside chat featuring Senator Young and AgriNovus Indiana President and CEO Mitch Frazier served as a vibrant platform for them to share their expertise about where agbioscience sits today, Indiana maintaining its competitive edge globally, and the continued pursuit of new initiatives to expand the workforce to grow and support a key sector of the state’s economy.

Young is well-versed in agriculture economics. His master’s degree thesis focused on the economics of Midwestern agriculture.

“Indiana leads the way across the United States not just in food production, but also in food science,” Young said. “Ag research is where I see a real opportunity to change the game. Indiana is better positioned than perhaps anyone else to grab this and run with it.”

The chat fostered insightful conversations, collaborative networking, enabling participants to forge meaningful connections and catalyze enterprises that drive the agbioscience sector forward.

VU is empowering a modern workforce by offering specialized education in an array of agbioscience-related bachelor’s degrees, associate degrees, and certificates, including Agriculture; Cellular Biology and Genetics; Food Process Engineering; Pre-Veterinary and Pre-Veterinary Technology; Agricultural and Biological Engineering; Sustainable Foods and Farming Systems; Horticulture and Landscape Design; Agribusiness; Animal Husbandry; Agronomy; and Urban Agriculture.

These programs are educating VU graduates for 21st-century careers by equipping them with the latest knowledge and essential skills to contribute to the agbioscience industry’s needs. Graduates can become innovators, researchers, entrepreneurs, and professionals in agbioscience fields.

Johnson said, “Indiana’s skilled and diverse workforce in farming, food production, and related industries, along with all that is happening in automation and robotics, are among the many reasons agbioscience companies are growing in Indiana. Just as every seed requires a specific environment to grow, Vincennes University is working with great partners like AgriNovus Indiana to plant the seeds of success in students and provide unique pathways that lead to life-changing careers in the agbioscience industry.”

Indiana’s agbioscience economy employs around 157,000 directly and more than 300,000 more broadly, according to Frazier, and those numbers are accelerating.

Frazier said, “Indiana’s agbioscience economy has momentum behind it, and it’s not just in big cities. There is growth happening across the state. Indiana’s agbioscience economy is more than a $90 billion contributor to the state’s economy. If we look at employment in the state, it employs about 157,000 people directly in this economy. If we take a broader view of what’s the real impact, it’s over 300,000. It’s about 10 percent of the state’s workforce. Ten percent of the state’s workforce, driving 20 percent of the state’s economy…that is our agbioscience economy.”

Helping Hoosiers get access to high-speed broadband

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Are you among the nearly 1 million Hoosiers without access to high-speed internet? If so, the state is asking for your help by reporting your address and applying to have broadband efforts expanded to your area.

According to the 2022 Indiana Broadband Performance Trends data, over 230,000 locations are unserved and over 740,000 locations are underserved when it comes to broadband access.

To close the digital divide, the Indiana Connectivity Program aims to connect residents and businesses that lack access to broadband internet service with service providers and assist in the expense of extending broadband to those locations.

If you’re a homeowner or business owner and your location is unserved or underserved (access to actual speeds less than 100 Mbps download and 20 Mbps upload), you can apply for consideration by creating an account with the Next Level Connections portal and entering your information to initiate your interest in receiving broadband internet service.

You can also register by phone at 833-639-8522 or by mail to the following address: Indiana Broadband Connect Center The Office of Community and Rural Affairs,1 N. Capitol Ave., Suite 600, Indianapolis, IN 46204.

Internet service providers will have the opportunity to review your location and submit bids to the state on the cost of providing service to your area. The state will evaluate these bids and make awards to the providers whose bid presents the lowest cost per Mbps to the state for extension of the service. In the most recent round of funding, the program awarded over $890,000 to expand broadband to 216 addresses across 23 counties.

Whether you’re learning, working or accessing critical services, having affordable and reliable high-speed internet service can be a necessity. As your state representative, I’ll continue to look for ways to help connect more residents and businesses, especially in our rural communities.

Otters’ 16 hits not enough in defeat to Wild Things 

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Evansville, Ind. – Evansville tied a season-best 16 hits but fell to the Washington Wild Things 8-6 Friday night at Bosse Field.

The Otters scored in five innings but stranded 11 runners and never led in Friday’s game. The Wild Things worked nine walks and scored in five innings.

Evansville stole eight bases – tied for the second most in a game in Otters’ history.

Washington hit a two-out two-RBI base hit in the ninth inning that amounted to the game winning runs.

The Otters notched three hits in the ninth inning to score two runs but the game-tying run at the plate struck out to end the game.

Jomar Reyes led Evansville’s offense with a four-hit night and three runs. Kona Quiggle also batted for four hits and led the Otters’ with three RBIs.

The two teams traded runs in the first inning. Gary Mattis made his season debut, leading off the game with a hit and scoring the Otters’ first run.

Washington retook the lead on a two-run home run in the third and added another run in the fourth.

Evansville answered with a run in the fourth on a Quiggle RBI single.

However, the Wild Things took advantage of three walks in the fifth inning and plated two runs to push the lead to four.

Another Quiggle RBI hit in the sixth inning trimmed the deficit and an eighth inning Jake Green RBI single cut the lead back to two runs. The Otters’ left the game tying run stranded in the eighth inning.

Jon Beymer worked 2.2 scoreless innings from the bullpen with two strikeouts.

Eighth of nine Otters’ recorded at least a hit as Evansville placed a runner in scoring position in every inning. Ethan Skender hit a double to advance his on-base streak to 17 games.

The Otters and Wild Things face off in the middle game of the series as part of Back to School Night on Saturday. Fans who donate an unopened, unused school supply item will receive a free GA ticket to the game. First pitch is slated for 6:35 PM CT.

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.

Vanderburgh County Commissioners Award God is Good Foundation, Inc. With ARPA Funds

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With the support of the Vanderburgh County Council, the Vanderburgh County Commissioners were proud to award God is Good Foundation, Inc. with $5,000 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.

The God is Good Foundation, Inc., is Christian ministry that strives to live out the words of Jesus in how they serve our community, immigrants, and refugees. God Is Good has been helping people from all walks of life by giving them a hand up when they need help. Immigrants and refugees are often groups that slip through the cracks. God Is Good helps refugees begin new lives here in the Evansville area by serving their needs through resettlement and placement, employment, language and cultural orientation, mental wellness, women and youth programs, and intensive case
management.

 

USI receives over $500,000 from ICHE to recruit and train STEM teachers

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The University of Southern Indiana Pott College of Science, Engineering, and Education has received two grants from the Indiana Commission for Higher Education (ICHE) totaling $528,000 with a goal of advancing the quality of STEM instruction throughout the state.

One grant will fund the Teaching Eagles Scholarship Program which gives students majoring in STEM or education with a minor in STEM fields the opportunity to receive a tuition stipend and attend regional conferences. Led by Dr. Kelly Sparks, Associate Professor of Education, this grant totals $240,000.

The other grant, NExIDE, will fund New Experiences in Mathematics Education which offers support for future dual credit teachers in Indiana public schools who are seeking dual credit credentialing, including their Master of Science in Education. The grant will also support elementary teachers who want to deepen their understanding of mathematics content, pedagogy and leadership, and it will continue to fund the annual Quantitative Reasoning Conference for high school teachers. Led by Dr. Rick Hudson, Professor of Mathematics, the NExIDE grant totals $288,000.

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