Home Blog Page 981

SERIAL CAR PARTS THIEF CONVICTED

0

Evansville, IN –Daniel Eugene Payne, a habitual offender, was found guilty of catalytic converter theft this week in a jury trial before Magistrate Judge Celia Pauli of the Vanderburgh County Circuit Court. Payne faces a sentence minimum of 2.5 years up to 8 years in prison.

Payne’s conviction comes after a thorough investigation of catalytic converter thefts by Evansville Police Department Sergeant Anna Gray who was assisted by Detective Vonderscher, and Vanderburgh County Sheriff Sergeant Hertwick. Payne was developed as a suspect when his distinctive Chevrolet Blazer was caught on surveillance at the sites of the thefts. Payne was eventually linked to several thefts –stealing nearly $9,000 of car parts in three commercial vehicles during one sweep, as one example.

At trial, Deputy Prosecutor Joshua Hutcheson presented crime scene photos and surveillance videos to the jury. After the guilty verdict, Hutcheson thanked internal staff in the Prosecutor’s Office, especially legal secretary Tiffany Lubbehusen, Victim Advocates Melissa McCutchan and Teresa Wink, and Kennadi Hagan for assisting in trial preparation.

Prosecutor Diana Moers thanked her staff and law enforcement for a thorough investigation and prosecution of this theft: “While violent crimes concern us all, these thefts also affect the everyday life, peace, and dignity of Vanderburgh County in a negative way. We will continue to investigate and use all of the resources we have to drive out those who wish to take from others. At sentencing, we will argue for Mr. Payne to leave this county to reside in the Department of Correction where he will be unable to profit from our citizens by stealing.” Sgt. Gray responded: “This was a complicated case involving multiple agencies, but it is a great example of teamwork at its best. I would like to thank the Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office, the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office, and my colleagues at the Evansville Police Department for the many hours spent working on these cases.”

Sentencing is scheduled for August 30, 2023 in front of Magistrate Judge Celia Pauli of the Vanderburgh County Circuit Court.

 

Senator Mike Braun welcomes National Guard members home from Iraq in Evansville

0

Senator Mike Braun welcomes National Guard members home from Iraq in Evansville

JASPER, IN — Yesterday, Senator Mike Braun welcomed members of the 1st Battalion of the 163rd Field Artillery of the Indiana Army National Guard back home after a 9-month deployment in Iraq.

“It was my honor to help Brigadier General Lusk welcome home the 1st Battalion of the 163rd Field Artillery of the Indiana Army National Guard in Evansville. They’ve been in Iraq providing air defense support for the last year. Welcome home, God bless, and thank you for your service!” – Senator Mike Braun

 

Researchers Discover Young Hellbender In Blue River

0

Biologists with the Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and Purdue University recently documented a very young hellbender salamander, a gilled larva, in the Blue River while conducting routine surveys in south-central Indiana. This discovery is significant because over the past three to four decades, only adult hellbenders have been documented in the Blue River. The presence of a young salamander suggests that conservation efforts and rearing programs are accomplishing their goals for the recovery of this endangered species.

The hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis) is a large, fully aquatic salamander. Hellbenders do not reach sexual maturity until they are 7-8 years old and require specific habitats to thrive and reproduce. Their decline statewide has been documented as far back as the early-to-mid 1900s as a result of habitat loss and poor water quality. Hellbenders play an important role in aquatic ecosystems and are indicators of clean water.

“Finding hellbender larvae is a huge benchmark of the program’s success,” said DNR’s Nate Engbrecht, the state herpetologist. “It tells us that there has been successful breeding, hatching, and recruitment in the wild. It’s a wonderful sign that captive-reared and released hellbenders are doing what we want them to do at this site.”

The Indiana Hellbender Partnership is a collaboration between the Indiana DNR and Purdue University with funding support from the Indiana DNR Nongame Wildlife Fund, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and partners in local governments, universities, non-governmental organizations, and zoos that are working to recover the state-endangered hellbender. Developed over 15 years, the Indiana Hellbender Partnership is the largest and most comprehensive group working to recover an imperiled amphibian in Indiana.

Since 2017, Purdue University’s Help the Hellbender Lab and its conservation partners have reared and released nearly 500 juvenile hellbenders into the Blue River. Lab director Rod Williams says, “This finding, the result of nearly two decades of collective effort, signifies a milestone for our conservation program. While we have much left to do, we have evidence our approach is working.”

In the event anglers accidentally hook a hellbender, they are reminded to cut the line and let the salamander go unharmed.

Hot Jobs

0
Secretary to Middle School Principal 
Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation 3.7 3.7/5 rating – Evansville, IN
$18.77 – $21.77 an hour
It is scheduled 5 days per week at 8 hours per day. This position works 196 days per year. During the school year, the position follows the approved calendar…
2 days ago
Medical Office Receptionist (6:30a-3:00p) 
Tri-State Orthopaedic Surgeons 4 4/5 rating – Evansville, IN
 Easily apply
Flexibility to work between the hours of 6:30am and 3:00pm, as well as some Saturdays. The Front Desk employee, under the direction of the Business Office…
1 day ago
Medical Office Assistant 
Deaconess Health System 3.5 3.5/5 rating – Evansville, IN
Flexible work schedules – There are a variety of full, part-time and supplemental positions along with varying shifts in our health system.
Just posted
Receptionist/HR Associate 
Wabash Plastics, Inc. 4.1 4.1/5 rating – Evansville, IN
This valued team member will be responsible for greeting all visitors and various HR functions. Medical, Dental and Vision Insurance.
1 day ago
MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT – BREAST CENTER Full-time 
Deaconess Women’s Hospital 5 5/5 rating – Evansville, IN
 Easily apply
Benefits include: tuition reimbursement, PTO accrual starting at hire, health, vision, dental, disability and life insurance, 401(k) with match, and much more!
2 days ago
Office Administration 
John Friend and Company PC – Evansville, IN
$15 – $16 an hour
 Easily apply
General office administration – answer phones, assist customers, filing records, etc. , processing tax returns. Customer service: 2 years (Required).
2 days ago
Receptionist/Office Assistant 
Reference Services, Inc – Evansville, IN
$15.50 – $16.50 an hour
 Easily apply
Complete daily mailings to job candidates. Assist with ordering office supplies. Keep up with industry best practices and company procedures.
Just posted

Screaming Eagles honored with OVC Medals of Honor

0

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Screaming Eagles had 26 student-athletes recognized with Ohio Valley Conference Medals of Honor, six earning the award twice.

The OVC Academic Medal of Honor is given annually to the student-athletes who achieve the highest grade point average (GPA) in a conference-sponsored sport. Every Academic Medal of Honor recipient for the 2022-23 academic year carried a perfect 4.0 GPA.

Of the 291 award winners, 51 were awarded Academic Medals of Honor for multiple sports (and counted just once in the final recipients list). USI’s 26 Medal of Honor student athletes was fifth most in the OVC. Eastern Illinois ranked first in the OVC with 48 honorees.

The Screaming Eagles receiving of the OVC Medal of Honor awards are:

Academic Medal of Honor:
Baseball (2)
Tyler Hutson
Lucas McNew

Men’s Cross Country (2):
Mitchell Hopf*
Joseph Russler*

Women’s Cross Country (4):
Emma Brown*
McKenna Cavanaugh*
Carmen Rodriguez*
Aubrey Swart*

Women’s Golf (1):
Kelci Katterhenry

Women’s Soccer (5):
Madison Cady
Mia Rose Daly
Elizabeth Lippert
Peyton Murphy
Peyton Wilkinson

Softball (4):
Mackenzie Bedrick
Hailey Gotshall
Hannah Long
Jordan Rager

Men’s Tennis (2):
Omar ElSamahy
Lucas Sakamaki

Women’s Tennis (1):
Rachel McCorkle

Men’s Track and Field (3):
Tyler Garrett
Mitchell Hopf*
Joseph Russler*

Women’s Track & Field (5):
Emma Brown*
McKenna Cavanaugh*
Hadley Fisher
Carmen Rodriguez*
Aubrey Swart*

Volleyball (2):
Leah Anderson
Keira Moore

EPA Awards $1.3M in Research Funding to the University of Wisconsin-Madison to Develop Nanosensors to Detect Pesticides and Mitigate Their Harmful Impacts

0

WASHINGTON (July 31, 2023) — Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced over $1.3 million in funding to a team of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, in Madison, Wisconsin, to develop nanosensor technology that can detect, monitor, and degrade commonly used pesticides found in water that can harm human health.

“Nanotechnology advances are creating a new future for environmental monitoring,” said Chris Frey, Assistant Administrator for EPA’s Office of Research and Development. “The cutting-edge nanosensor technology that is being developed by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison will help detect pesticides in water at extremely low levels and mitigate the harmful impacts of these pesticides.”

Environmental pollutants such as pesticides can adversely affect human health. Simple and reliable sensors to detect pesticides in water sources can help reduce human exposure. The unique properties of nanomaterials have enabled advances in sensor design, such as portability and rapid signal response times, and provided more cost-effective, efficient, and selective detection and monitoring methods.

Using funding from this grant, researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison will develop an integrated, portable, sensor-controlled water treatment technology that itself generates the chemicals needed for treatment. The researchers will distribute and deploy the treatment technology across rural communities in Alabama that rely on private and/or community wells for drinking water that have been impacted by neonicotinoids, a commonly used type of pesticide.

Otters mount comeback beat Boomers in tiebreaker

0

Evansville, Ind. – The Evansville Otters mounted a two-out ninth inning rally and won the game in a sudden death tiebreaker 5-5 over the Schaumburg Boomers Friday night at Bosse Field.

The Otters were down to their last out in the ninth inning when Austin Bost bashed a solo home run over the left field wall to trim the deficit to one.

Bryan Rosario followed with a base hit and stole second base. Noah Myers walked and then both runners advanced on a wild pitch.

Another wild pitch reached the backstop and scored Rosario, tying the ballgame. The walk off run was stranded at third base.

Jake Polancic entered on the mound for Evansville in the 10th inning and struck out the first two batters. Schaumburg’s Will Prater went 12 pitches with Polancic before blooping a ball down the left field line, scoring the Boomers’ Commissioner’s Runner.

The bottom of the 10th put Kona Quiggle as the Commissioners’ Runner at second base. He advanced to third base on a balk. Jeffrey Baez drove home Quiggle on a sacrifice fly to right field.

Evansville elected to pitch in the sudden death tiebreaker, bringing Polancic back to the mound. The Commissioner’s Runner started at first base and advanced to second base on a bunt.

Polancic then struck out the next two batters to win the game for the Otters.

Schaumburg scored three runs in the first two innings while Evansville scored one apiece in the first two innings.

Myers notched a leadoff hit for Evansville in the first and Baez drove him home.

The Otters hit three straight singles in the second inning and a run scored before the final out of a Boomers’ triple play.

Tim Holdgrafer pitched a quality start for Evansville, allowing three runs over six innings – his 10th quality outing of the year.

Rosario extended his on-base streak to 19 games while Bost notched two hits, the first hits of his pro career.

Evansville battles Schaumburg in the middle game of the series Saturday evening at 6:35 PM CT. Gates open at 5:30 for fans to enjoy Hoosier Lottery and 44 News Star Wars Night.

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.

EPA Proposes to Deny Alabama’s Coal Ash Permit Program and Better Protect Local Communities from Pollution

0
FILE - This April 28, 2009 file photo shows smog covering downtown Los Angeles. In its first major regulation since the election, the Obama administration will impose a new air quality standard that reduces by 20 percent the maximum amount of soot released into the air from smokestacks, diesel trucks and other sources of pollution. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is set to announce the new standard on Friday, meeting a court deadline in a lawsuit by 11 states and public health groups. (AP Photo/Nick Ut, File)

Denial is latest EPA action to protect overburdened communities and water sources from coal ash contamination, advancing environmental justice

WASHINGTON (Aug. 3, 2023) – Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued a proposed denial of Alabama’s permit program to manage coal combustion residuals – commonly known as CCR or coal ash – in landfills and surface impoundments. In its first proposed denial of a state coal ash permit program, EPA finds that the Alabama permit program is significantly less protective of people and waterways than the federal regulations require. Under the federal regulations, surface impoundments cannot be closed if, once closure is complete, the coal ash continues to be saturated by groundwater. Facilities must prevent groundwater from infiltrating and flowing out of the closed unit to prevent additional groundwater contamination. In contrast, Alabama does not require that groundwater infiltration be adequately addressed during the closure of these coal ash units.

Today’s action advances the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to protect all communities from pollution and advance environmental justice, with a strong focus on the need to address health and environmental impacts, including for marginalized and overburdened communities that bear a disproportionate burden of pollution.

“Exposure to coal ash can lead to serious health concerns like cancer if the ash isn’t managed appropriately,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “Low-income and underserved communities are especially vulnerable to coal ash in waterways, groundwater, drinking water, and in the air. This is why EPA works closely with states to ensure coal ash is disposed of safely, so that water sources remain free of this pollution and communities are protected from contamination.”

EPA has approved three other state CCR permitting programs. However, EPA is proposing to deny the Alabama CCR permit program application because it does not meet the standard for approval under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. Under this law, each CCR unit (i.e., landfills or surface impoundments) in the state must achieve compliance with either the federal CCR regulations or state criteria that EPA has determined are at least as protective as the federal criteria. The Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) largely adopted the language in the federal CCR regulations into its state regulations. However, when EPA reviewed Alabama’s CCR permits, EPA found that the permits were not as protective as the federal CCR regulations.

EPA identified deficiencies in ADEM’s permits with closure requirements for unlined surface impoundments, groundwater monitoring networks, and corrective action requirements. EPA discussed these issues with ADEM; however, the state agency has not revised its permits or supplemented its application to explain how such permits are as protective as the federal CCR requirements.

Should EPA’s proposed denial of Alabama’s coal ash permit program be finalized, the consequence would be that facilities will still be required to comply with the federal CCR regulations. If EPA determines that there are any immediate threats to human health or the environment posed by CCR facilities (whether unpermitted or currently permitted by the state), EPA will consider using all available authorities, including enforcement and response authorities provided under federal law.

EPA is soliciting comments on this proposal for 60 days, during which an in-person public hearing will be held for interested persons to present information and comments about this proposed program. To learn about this proposed denial, visit our Alabama Coal Combustion Residuals Permit Program webpage.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

0

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.