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Eagles 4th at OVC Indoor Championships as Austin named Freshman of Year

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Eagles 4th at OVC Indoor Championships as Austin named Freshman of Year

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.—University of Southern Indiana Women’s Track & Field freshman Hadessah Austin was named the Ohio Valley Conference Indoor Freshman of the Year after winning a pair of titles at the OVC Indoor Championships Tuesday and Wednesday.

Austin cruised to a win in the 5,000 meters Tuesday to claim her first-career OVC championship. She finished the race in 17 minutes, 10.30 seconds, nine seconds in front of teammate Elle Hall, who was second with a time of 17:19.87.

On Wednesday, Austin raced to her second title of the meet as she finished first in the 3,000 meters with a time of 9:47.76.

Austin’s wins were two of three first-place finishes for the Screaming Eagles, who placed fourth as a team with 60 points.

USI’s distance medley relay team of freshmen Addison Applegate and Abrielle Richard, junior Emily Rempe and senior Audrey Comastri finished first Tuesday evening. The quartet clocked a time of 11:57.47 to claim the Eagles’ first-ever relay title at the Division I level.

Richard nearly came up with a second win on the week as she finished second in the finals of the 800 meters. The Newburgh, Indiana, native clocked the fastest time in the prelims Tuesday and had the lead going into the final turn Wednesday; but she stumbled slightly in the final stretch, allowing Southeast Missouri State University’s Erika Mellor to claim the win by a quarter of a second margin.

As a team, the Eagles had six podium finishes. Comastri earned a third-place finish in the mile on Wednesday, while Hall had the second-place showing in the 5,000 meters before finishing fifth in the 3,000 meters.

Sophomore Zoe Seward also scored for the Eagles with a fifth-place showing in the 5,000 meters.

USI opens the 2025 outdoor season March 27-29 with meets scheduled at the Raleigh Relays March 27-29 in Raleigh, North Carolina, the WashU Distance Carnival in St. Louis March 27-28, and the Pacesetter Sports Invitational March 29 in Terre Haute, Indiana.

USI opens home schedule with huge win over SLU

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USI opens home schedule with huge win over SLU

Next Game: vs. Bowling Green State University • 2/28/2025 | Noon

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Baseball opened the 2025 home schedule with a dominating 11-4 win over Saint Louis University Wednesday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. USI ends the day 5-2 overall in 2025, while SLU is 3-5 to begin its season.

The USI offense set the tone for the contest, scoring four in the first, and one in the third to take a 5-2 lead. USI junior first baseman Kannon Coakley started the scoring with a RBI double, while sophomore designated hitter Cameron Boyd highlighted the four-run frame with a RBI triple. Boyd would strike again in the third with a RBI single to produce the fifth run of the contest.

After a scoreless fourth for USI, the Eagles put the game out of reach with three runs in the fifth and three in the sixth to lead 11-2. Junior shortstop Clayton Slack had the big RBI triple in the fifth and junior leftfielder BJ Banyon had a two-run single in the sixth to lead the rallies.

The Billikens would get an unearned run in the seventh and a final tally in the ninth before USI closed the door on the 11-4 victory.

Overall at the plate, Banyon, Coakley, and sophomore third baseman Parker Martin had three hits each, while Boyd had a team-high three RBIs.

On the mound, freshman right-hander Sage Stout picked up his second win of the season in relief. Stout (2-0) threw 1.2 innings of scoreless baseball and allowed a walk in facing five batters.

Senior right-hander Hiroyuki Yamada started for the Eagles and picked up the no-decision. Yamada allowed two runs on two hits and four walks, while striking out four in four innings of work.

USI sent a total of six hurlers to the mound and finished with a combined nine strikeouts.

Up Next for the Eagles:
The Eagles are away from the USI Baseball Field for the next eight games, beginning this weekend when they play two games against Bowling Green State University and Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, Illinois. USI will play BGSU Friday at noon and Saturday at 4 p.m. while taking on SIU Friday at 4 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m.

USI will be playing BGSU, which is 4-2, for the first time in the baseball program’s history. SIU, which was 4-3 to start the year, leads the all-time series with USI, 4-1, after winning last year’s meeting in Carbondale, 7-5.

Due to ever-changing weather in February and March, USI encourages fans to watch for potential schedule changes on USIScreamingEagles.comX, and Facebook.

OP-ED: Who is Moving Evansville’s Cheese?

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Image created in 2 minutes by Jason leveraging AI (DALL-E)

Who is Moving Evansville’s Cheese?

By Jason Salstrom

February 27, 2025

For generations, Evansville’s economy ran on a strong foundation: factories produced, paychecks arrived, and families built their futures. Our “cheese”—the prosperity of stable industries—was secure. But just as electricity rewrote our way of life a century ago, AI, automation, and digital manufacturing are doing the same today, and it’s just the beginning. The shift is happening whether we acknowledge it or not. The only question that matters is: will we
act now and shape our future, or hem and haw, stuck, clinging to a disappearing past?

Our situation reminded me of Spencer Johnson’s classic business fable Who Moved My Cheese? The story is about four residents of a maze: two mice, Sniff and Scurry, and two little people, Hem and Haw. Every morning, the four headed out into the maze to get their
cheese, their livelihood, at the Cheese Station. Below is my adaptation, staying true to the spirit of the tale.

Cheese Station E was built during the last great shift in the maze, when electricity, the primary driver of the Second Industrial Revolution, changed how we worked, and where we lived, and triggered the growth of government.

In those days, the mice and the little people were more alike than they are today. Mice, being mice, were always on their toes, ever alert to any change, threat, or new opportunity. The little people, born at a time of change, had the pioneering culture of self-reliance to lean into a changing maze, learn, make hard choices, and adapt.

However, as time went by and the maze stabilized into the economy we know, getting cheese from Cheese Station E became a way of life. Mice, being mice, remained vigilant, ever ready for any disruption or new opportunity. Most of the little people, being little people, grew comfortable, even complacent, and developed beliefs to justify a sense of entitlement to their way of life.

One day, Sniff and Scurry began noticing that slight changes in the maze were multiplying. The corridors that brought skills and material into Cheese Station E and moved product out, once a miracle of efficiency, began slowly tilting against the flow of inputs and outputs. Productivity was in decline, as was the supply of cheese—the prosperity of stable industries.

In fact, Sniff and Scurry noticed changes multiplying across the maze. Some seemingly insignificant changes proved to be weak signals of change coming. Some change came out of nowhere. New corridors emerged, some steep, some dark, and old ones shrank, grew steep, or even sloped down to a sudden cliff.

The mice, being mice, remained vigilant, probing for threats to their well-being and new opportunities to prosper. Many of the little people, fearing the uncertainty, blamed others for the changing maze, expected the government to re-level the corridors back to their favor, and otherwise disregarded the accelerating change to the maze where their livelihood had long been found.

Sniff and Scurry were not surprised when Cheese Station E suddenly stopped producing cheese. They quickly moved on, having been probing the changes to the maze in their trial-and-error way.

Hem and Haw were unprepared. Hem protested, “Who moved my cheese?” Denial turned to anger, as he demanded that someone “make things right again.”

Haw, initially side-by-side with Hem, increasingly thought of the mice, always pioneers, reflecting on the enterprising spirit he once dismissed. But he still felt stuck. Much like America experienced a century ago, uncertainty, anxiety, and fear drove questions and fueled protests. “Why weren’t we warned?” “Why aren’t we prepared?” “Who’s responsible?” Mobs soon surrounded City Hall, until the mayor emerged and pointed her finger down Main Street at the office where decades of economic development strategic plans sat on shelves collecting dust.

The pointing of fingers may soon begin. The future of Cheese Station E is at a turning point, actually unprecedented, due to the never-before-seen rate of technology-driven change to the maze. The many hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars in “strategic plans” sitting on shelves (no Return On Investment) sit there collecting dust largely because the business model of consultants is incompatible with solving complex challenges.

Lots of data from government websites or other sources made pretty, is largely useless. Given that it is backward-looking, it often fuels biases, false assumptions, and strategic blind spots.

Strategic (enabling) management systems are what is needed. For this, we must start with clarity on the actual living system whose assets, capabilities, and constraints interact to shape outcomes here every day.

What are the enabling and inhibiting factors shaping outcomes, today? What is or is not possible to change today? What is or is not easier to change, today? Where are we vulnerable and where are we feeling the pressure to change today?

Understanding this is what informs us where to start to create the desired outcomes for tomorrow. In other words, given the state of the maze, what could we actually do? What should we do? What will we do? Then, measure progress. Monitor for change. Learn. Adapt. Prosper.

Strategic management is necessarily agile, constantly sensing and making sense of change. Instead of hiring another consultant to “create” (pay them to repurpose) another strategic plan or roadmap—that fails to inform even the first step—we need to start by accepting the fact that five-year plans and roadmaps are only useful when the destination in known; for example specs for roads and bridges are largely known, as well as segments of energy (2030 is 60-80% knowable), automaker supply chains (50-70% knowable), and Healthcare (40-60% knowable). The unknowable percentage is being disrupted by 2030.

Like a century ago, the “pioneers” among us must lead the way. Necessity is the mother of invention. Small (safe-to-fail) experiments (opportunities) emerge out of real understanding of our living ecosystem (especially its constraints)—the maze on which our well-being depends.

Effective experiments are developed into pilots, some of which are developed into new economic assets that establish a competitive advantage for regional industry and workers—a cheese station that adapts to an evolving maze as a feature of its operating system. The challenges are complex. Five-year plans to address “complex” challenges, fail. But the consultant will point his finger at you, “failed execution.” It is a mismatch of a strategic approach.

A complex challenge is when you are building toward an uncertain outcome; critical future specs are unknown, like raising a kid, moving to a new country, launching a new product, or integrating AI into your value chains. This necessarily requires an agile approach and must be developed internally.

A merely complicated challenge is like building a car, requiring special expertise, but you are building something that was designed in the past, can be disassembled and reassembled, and can continue to be what it was designed to be perpetually (being a contained, ordered system)—even if suddenly obsolete.

A social-economic-political-workforce-industrial system is not complicated, it is complex, and, like a teenager, is best developed indirectly by shaping the maze shaping their future.

The complexity we face is made exponential by the added complexity of emerging, cascading, recombining technologies changing everything—whether we like it or not.

A century ago, electricity combined and recombined with steel, petroleum, and the telegraph, to remake society, the economy, and government—our maze. Henry Ford dominated because he led in leveraging four of the five transformational technologies of the day, enabling everything from mass production to vertical integration—and 5X wages. Corporations that did not, fail.

Henry Ford collaborated with other leaders to shape their maze into an ecosystem that enabled adaptation and innovation. Activating an ecosystem takes leadership. “When everybody boosts everybody wins,” repeated Mayor Benjamin Bosse as he rallied
Evansville’s pioneers as they adapted to the Second Industrial Revolution and shaped the maze on which we prospered for generations.

Today, in the near term, AI and automation alone will impact the US manufacturing base at a pace faster than any mass industrial shift in history. The cliff is coming for Hem and Haw. The impact of emerging technologies is hard to imagine given the exponential unknowable
unknowns—and Quantum Computing and Fusion Energy may be around the corner. Decades of transformation comparable to the Second Industrial Revolution may be compressed to years—for the places that survive.

A century ago, it took decades for emerging technologies to affect most Americans. Today, ChatGPT had one million users in 5 days, one hundred million in 2 months, with AI already transforming every industry—whether Hem and Haw are paying attention or not. In Who Moved My Cheese? Haw eventually realizes, “The quicker you let go of old cheese, the sooner you find new cheese.” Strategy is about hard choices. Hem is left to his fate. Like a century ago, we face social, economic, and political disruption. The question is not who moved our cheese, but who is leading our adaptation to the new maze?

Evansville still has opportunities where we can lean in and prosper. Our manufacturing cluster, logistics infrastructure, and healthcare systems can leverage emerging technology to give us an edge—if we act now and “everyone boosts.” Regional leaders must lead by creating the conditions to collaboratively develop new models of workforce re-training, and scaffolding to enable the leveraging of Industry 4.0, AI, blockchain, etc., etc., etc., and ensure that we are ahead of the curve on building the enabling infrastructure.

Chasing what other places did a decade ago will only slow our pace, in the fog, to a sudden cliff. Those ahead of the curve on electricity dominated for a century. It is time to make hard choices before we have no choices to make.

The future belongs, once again, to the pioneers making the most of what the maze affords them. Evansville, who is leading the way?

FOOTNOTE:  Jason Salstrom works at the intersection of strategy and technology, helping organizations shape the maze.  https://www.linkedin.com/in/jsalstrom

BREAKING NEWS: New Bill Would Force Deaconess and Ascension to Reduce Prices

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New Bill Would Force Deaconess and Ascension to Reduce Prices

CCO STAFF

One of the bills introduced in this legislative session will crack down on nonprofit hospitals that exploit their tax-exempt status while charging some of the highest prices in the country.

HB 1004 would strip nonprofit status from hospitals that charge more than 200% above what Medicare pays for services.

Devin Anderson, a board member of Hoosiers for Affordable Healthcare, applauded the bill, calling it a bold move to address Indiana’s ninth-highest hospital prices in the nation.

“HB 1004 puts real teeth into the effort to hold nonprofit hospitals accountable for the 9th highest prices while having billions in cash reserves,” said Anderson. “This bill sends a clear message from the Indiana House of Representatives Leadership: Lowering prices is not optional—a demand on behalf of the Hoosiers they represent who can’t afford skyrocketing prices from hospitals who masquerade as nonprofits.”

Indiana’s Big Five Hospitals Face Major Price Cuts 

The bill, authored by Representative Martin Carbaugh (R-Fort Wayne) and co-authored by Representatives Ben Smaltz (R-Auburn) and Julie McGuire (R-Indianapolis), would force major price adjustments in healthcare. In the Evansville area, Ascension St. Vincent would need to reduce prices by 40.5%, and Deaconess Health System would have to reduce prices by 23%.

“Nonprofit hospitals have enjoyed tax exemptions for years, yet many are charging more than triple what Medicare pays for the same services,” said Anderson. “HB 1004 forces these hospitals to decide—either behave as a nonprofit hospital by lowering your prices or lose the benefits of nonprofit status.”

Key Provisions of HB 1004

Nonprofit Status at Risk: Hospitals charging over 200% of Medicare rates will lose their nonprofit status.

Stricter Community Benefit Standards: Limits what hospitals can claim as community benefits to justify their tax exemptions.

Mandatory Transparency: Hospitals must disclose pricing data compared to Medicare rates and make unredacted Form 990 Schedule H publicly available.

Annual Audits: Nonprofit hospitals will face yearly audits by the Secretary of State to verify compliance.

“This bill is a wake-up call for Indiana hospitals: stop exploiting Hoosiers, or lose your nonprofit status. It’s that simple,” said Anderson.

USI School of Graduate Studies spotlighting workforce and career development

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The University of Southern Indiana is proud to announce the Graduate Student Colloquium, an annual event celebrating the innovative research and scholarly achievements of current and former graduate students.

The colloquium will take place Wednesday, March 19 at Roeder Traditions Lounge in University Center East, providing a platform for students to present their research findings to faculty, peers and the broader academic community. Presentations will also be available virtually.

Hosted by the School of Graduate Studies, the colloquium is in its eighth year of bringing intellectual exchange to the community, focused on the unique needs and motivations of adult learners and career professionals. This year’s topic will focus on how a graduate education supports career success and improves workforce navigation.

“The upcoming Graduate Student Colloquium is a testament to the thought leadership and innovation that define our students and alumni,” says Dr. Michael Dixon, Dean of the School of Graduate Studies. “This event will highlight emerging trends in workforce development and showcase meaningful advancements in graduate studies and professional opportunities.”

The event is open to the public, and attendees will have the chance to explore new offerings in continuing education, career enhancements and ways to maintain a competitive edge in today’s dynamic workforce. Participants will have the opportunity to share their experiences through in-p

This Saturday – Meeting & Party Reorganization

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  • March 1 — Meeting & Party Reorganization
  • New Logo!
  • New T-Shirts!
  • March 8 — Meet Your Legislators
  • March 18 — March Madness Bash
  • Legislative Lowdown

MARCH 1 – 10:00 AM

Join us for our March 1 meeting at the Plumbers & Steamfitters Local 136 Union Hall (2300 N. St. Joseph Industrial Park Drive). Doors open at 9:30 AM, and the meeting will begin at 10 AM. We’ll elect officers, hear from Mayor Terry, discuss exciting plans for 2026, and get an update from our Deputy Chair of Fundraising, Rob Henson.

This is a great opportunity to get involved, share your voice, and stay informed. Everyone is welcome to attend—don’t miss out!

New Logo!

Thank you to Shane Ritz designing our new logo which was unveiled at our Feb. 6 Cocktails & Conversations event!

We Have T-Shirts!

Get your hands on our brand-new T-shirts featuring our updated logo design! Shirts are just $20 each and come in two styles: a classic crew neck and a V-neck option for women. To order, simply use the form below. Don’t miss out on showing your support in style.

Upcoming Events

March 8 — Meet Your Legislators

9:15 AM @ Central Library Browning Room

March 17 — Paul Green’s St. Paddy’s Celebration

March 18 — March Madness Bash

with Commissioner Mike Goebel and Sheriff Noah Robinson

Save the Date! — April 12

Our next meeting is on April 12 at 10:00 AM at the Iron Workers Local 103 (5313 Old Boonville Highway). Be sure to mark your calendars—we look forward to seeing you there!

A few bills were amended with substantial changes, including:

  • HB1633 – originally moved all municipal elections to even-numbered years. NOW, it was stripped and replaced with text for the SOS to conduct three regional meetings in 2025 to discuss moving municipal elections to even-numbered years AND whether all counties should move to a vote center model; and

  • SB355 – originally moved all municipal elections to even-numbered years. NOW, an amendment would require all towns with a population of 10,000 or less to move their elections to even-numbered years. Towns with a population of more than 10,000 will move their elections to even-numbered years UNLESS they opt-out by December 1, 2025, to keep their elections in the odd-numbered years. Cities would keep their elections to odd-numbered years but can opt-in and move their elections to even-numbered years by December 1, 2025.

A few “live” bills still have some concerning changes like:

  • SB10 – includes language where a university ID could no longer be used for voting purposes. It also forces counties to send a mailing to voters who have not voted in the last two federal elections, which in my view is duplicative to the state’s requirement to do a (much broader) program under state law.

  • HB1680 – would not permit a voter registration form to be completed by anyone other than the voter, unless the individual has a disability. It would also require any absentee ballot to be rejected if the voter’s signature line does not include an “accurate” date. Expands who can challenge a voter in a primary election to any voter (before it was just a voter of the precinct – assuming this is due to the issue in Perry County last May where a Republican official was found to have violated state law by the county election board for improperly challenging a voter).

  • HB1643 – Starting January 1, 2027, all local office candidates and PACs that file with campaign finance reports with a county election board will have to file their reports using the state campaign finance database and county election boards will have to have access to the database to manage their campaign finance filings. As many of you know our current CFA database system is too old to handle this change and will require us to replace the system. The bill leaves IED with limited time to find a new system and stand it up for both state and county use.

  • SB287 – Makes school board offices partisan and candidates will file to run for office like any other local office candidates. For Ds and Rs, school board candidates would be nominated at the primary election.

Dead bills

Senate Bill 284 would have cut the period of in-person early voting from 28 days to 14 days. Again, the month-long early voting has been around for years. Many people stop at their county office and vote during the week and some counties have satellite locations on the weekends.

Senate Bill 201, which would’ve closed Indiana’s primary system. Right now, Indiana’s is partially open, meaning you can ask for whichever partisan ballot you want when you vote in a primary. No one registers specifically as a Democrat or a Republican. But a move to get Democrats to vote in the Republican gubernatorial primary last year riled up the GOP and they want to close the primary completely.

House Bill 1662, authored by Rep. Michelle Davis, R-Whiteland, would have created a criminal penalty for “camp(ing), sleep(ing), or us(ing) for long term shelter land owned by the state or a political subdivision, unless the land has been authorized for that use by law.”

An Indiana bill that sought to tackle homelessness effectively died in the House after it was not called for a vote on Thursday, a key deadline. But bill language could still reappear elsewhere before the legislative session ends in late April.

Special thanks to our In to Win monthly donors!

Blue — Glenn Boberg, Tamara Wilder
Gold — Jim Butler
Silver — Cheryl Schultz, Karen Reising, Jonathan McGovern, Noah Robinson, Nick Iaccarino, Ann Wallis, Janet Hollis, Melissa Vandeveer, Freda Vossburg, Jane Duesterberg, Sally Busby, Caroline Nellis
Bronze — Edie Hardcastle, Connie Parker, Valerie Ewers, Kristi Roll, Genny Tenbarge, Nancy Higgs, Melissa Moore, Pearl Quartey, Hope Fussner

CenterPoint Energy launches 2025 Integrated Resource Plan process

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Evansville, Ind. – CenterPoint Energy’s Indiana electric business launched its 2025 Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) process, which will assist the company in setting its long-term strategy for electric generation and power needs for its 150,000 customers in southwestern Indiana. The IRP process, which takes place every three years, includes an analysis of electric generation options and involves a comprehensive stakeholder engagement component.  

While evaluating Indiana’s future power generation needs through this process, CenterPoint remains committed to providing reliable energy using dispatchable and renewable generation as it transitions to a diverse energy portfolio. The new Posey County 191 MW solar array and A.B. Brown’s new 460 MW natural gas-fired generation are targeted to be operational in 2025.  

The company plans to continue operating F.B. Culley Generating Station Unit 3 using coal through 2027. This approach provides time to evaluate future generation needs and the energy mix. It also considers the affordability impact of electric customers’ bills and supports increasing energy demand in the region. 

“We are excited to continue addressing our customers’ energy needs by bringing new, diverse generation resources online as part of CenterPoint’s long-term transformation in southwestern Indiana,” said Shane Bradford, Vice President of Indiana Electric. “Pausing the Culley Unit 3 conversion from coal to natural gas lets us reassess long-term energy solutions while balancing affordability and reliability. Our upcoming IRP will involve a comprehensive review of generation resources for the next 20 years.” 

CenterPoint remains focused on meeting customers’ energy needs while adapting to evolving market and regulatory conditions. Through the IRP process, the company will evaluate strategies to support long-term reliability, affordability, resiliency, sustainability and regional growth while considering market trends and system needs. As part of this effort, the company will continue working with stakeholders to assess its generation mix and potential future needs of renewables, natural gas infrastructure and grid modernization.  

CenterPoint will host a series of public stakeholder meetings in 2025 to provide updates and gather input: 

·       Public stakeholder meeting #1 – March 19, 2025 

·       Public stakeholder meeting #2 – May 14, 2025 

·       Public stakeholder meeting #3 – July 23, 2025 

·       Public stakeholder meeting #4 – Sept. 23, 2025 

Sen. Becker welcomes local students to Statehouse

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Sen. Becker welcomes local students to Statehouse

STATEHOUSE (Feb. 26, 2025) – State Sen. Vaneta Becker (R-Evansville) welcomed the following local students to the Statehouse who served as Senate pages in January and February.

  • Ethan Bauer, from Newburgh, attends Reitz Memorial High School
  • Charlotte Czaplicki, from Newburgh, attends Reitz Memorial High School
  • Nicole Diab, from Newburgh, attends Signature School
  • Ella Clare Engbers, from Evansville, attends Holy Rosary Catholic School
  • Andrew Foster, from Evansville, attends Reitz Memorial Catholic High School
  • Marcston King (pictured with State Sen. Ed Charbonneau (R-Valparaiso)), from Boonville, attends Boonville High School
  • Alice Meny, from Newburgh, attends Castle High School
  • Evelyn Wu, from Newburgh, attends Signature School

Pages spend a day at the Statehouse touring the historic building, observing debates from the Senate floor and interacting with their state senator.

“Being a Senate page is a wonderful opportunity for Hoosier students to learn firsthand how our state government operates,” Becker said. “I enjoy meeting with local students who traveled all the way to the Statehouse to experience the legislature up close, and I encourage all eligible students to take advantage of this program.”

Students in grades six through 12 participate in the page program on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays during the legislative session. Groups serve on Wednesdays.