Monday, September 14, 2009

Debate about nuclear power returns to legislature

Chicago Tribune
There are no nuclear power plants in Indiana, but lawmakers are expected to wrestle next year with whether to offer an incentive that could boost prospects for building reactors in the state.

Members of the legislature's Regulatory Flexibility Committee are scheduled to discuss nuclear energy in Indiana on Sept. 22, and panel's co-chairmen -- Rep. Win Moses, D-Fort Wayne, and Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis -- have already staked out opposing positions.

The debate centers on whether utilities should be able to charge customers for the cost of building a nuclear plant as soon as construction begins, rather than having to wait until the reactor is operating. Current state law only allows utilities building so-called "clean coal" power plants -- those that release less carbon dioxide -- to charge customers for construction that is still in progress.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Marvin Harrison’s accuser dies

Philly.com
Dwight Dixon, who accused former Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Marvin Harrison last year of shooting him in the hand, died Friday at Hahnemann University Hospital of gunshot wounds he received in another shooting.

Dixon, of West Philadelphia, was shot multiple times July 21 as he sat in the driver's seat of a car in front of a Valu-Plus store in the city's Fairmount section.

Police said an unknown gunman approached Dixon on the 2800 block of Girard Ave. about 11 a.m. and peppered him with bullets from both sides of the car.

Dixon, 33, claimed he had been shot by Harrison during an altercation in April 29, 2008 outside a garage and car wash owned by Harrison at 25th and Thompson Streets in North Philadelphia.

Indianapolis’ Adult Business Ordinance Is Tossed

XBiz Newswire
A federal appeals court, ruling that the city of Indianapolis has failed to offer evidence supporting tighter restrictions for adult video and bookstores, has struck down its six-year-old ordinance that broadens the definition of an “adult entertainment business.”

The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in its decision, said that the city’s ordinance was flawed from the get-go because it mixed all adult establishments, including those that involve public booths, into one lump category.

“If there is more misconduct at a bar than at an adult emporium, how would that justify greater legal restrictions on the bookstore — much of whose stock in trade is constitutionally protected in a way that beer and liquor are not,” the court said in its ruling. “Indianapolis has approached this case by assuming that any empirical study of morals offenses near any kind of adult establishment in any city justifies every possible kind of legal restriction in every city.”

The 7th Circuit added that Indianapolis city leaders failed to offer "an iota of evidence" supporting stricter regulations on adult book and video stores.

The six-year-old ordinance expanded the definition of an adult business to include any retailer that devotes at least 25 percent of its space or inventory to adult books, magazines, films and sex toys. The definition also covered retailers who earned at least 25 percent of their sales from adult items. The threshold was 50 percent before 2003.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Senator wants to know if school starts too soon

Chicago Tribune
A state senator wants to know whether Indiana residents think public schools start their fall semesters too early.

Sen. Dennis Kruse, a Republican from Auburn who heads the Senate Education Committee, wants people to take an online survey and offer comments on a new Web site: www.IndianaEducationForum.com.

The site is paid for by Save Indiana Summers, a group of parents and businesses pushing for a law that would prohibit school from starting before the last week in August. But Kruse says he welcomes all opinions on the issue.

Kruse will also hear from the public at the Statehouse during a Sept. 30 meeting at which a legislative study committee will consider the feedback from web comments and survey results.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

SW Indiana county looks to revive old rail line

Chicago Tribune
A southwestern Indiana county is working on plans to seek federal funding to revive a rail line that has been inactive since the 1970s.

Gibson County Commissioners unanimously agreed Tuesday to sponsor a grant application to study the possible rail line connecting the communities of Skelton, Owensville and Fort Branch.

The business development director for the Morley and Associates engineering firm says several shippers could be interested in using the line.

Pfizer Inc. to pay Indiana nearly $3.7 million in historic settlement

Muncie Free Press
In one of the largest settlements of a healthcare-fraud case in U.S. history, the federal government, Indiana and other states have reached an agreement with Pfizer Inc. to settle allegations of kickback payments and illegal off-marketing campaigns that had improperly promoted drugs Pfizer manufactures.

Pfizer agreed to pay state and federal governments a total $1 billion in civil damages as compensation to Medicaid, Medicare and other federal healthcare programs harmed by the company’s conduct, the federal and state governments announced today.

Under the settlement with Pfizer, the total obtained for the Indiana Medicaid program -- including both the federal and state share -- will be $9,520,231.16 in restitution and other recovery. Of that, the state’s share of the multi-state settlement will be $3,694,888.19.

RNC chair to visit Indiana to discuss health care

Chicago Tribune
The chairman of the National Republican Committee is making stops in Indiana and Ohio targeting the health care positions of Indiana Rep. Baron Hill and three Ohio representatives.

RNC Chairman Michael Steele plans to visit the Physician Associates of Southern Indiana in Floyds Knobs on Thursday morning to discuss health care. Later, he'll travel to Ohio to target the positions of three Ohio Democratic members of congress.

Hill held a town hall meetings on health care in New Albany on Monday night and another one in Bloomington Wednesday night ahead of Steele's visit.

Federal rule similar to Indiana robo-call ban

Chicago Tribune
There's a new federal regulation similar to an Indiana law that prohibits the use of autodialing machines to make prerecorded telephone calls.

Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller says he welcomes the federal rule that took effect Tuesday, but says Indiana's law is stronger and is not pre-empted by the federal law.

Both laws prohibit the use of prerecorded telemarketing calls unless the consumer has given written permission to be called.
.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Indiana lottery says revenue drops 11 percent

Chicago Tribune
Hoosier Lottery revenue dropped 11 percent in the latest fiscal year, marking the weakest sales of lottery tickets in five years.

Lottery officials say revenue for the year that ended June 30 was $732 million, down from $822 million in fiscal 2008.

Hoosier Lottery spokesman Andrew Reed says the economy was a factor. He also says Hoosier Lotto sales were down from a "phenomenal" year in 2008.

St. Francis Hospital staff donates 200 DVDs to military clinic in Iraq

The Indianapolis Star
While serving in Iraq, Army Staff Sgt. Andrea Cowden saw a need for a variety of DVDs to entertain military personnel awaiting treatment in a clinic at Camp Liberty, near Baghdad.

She contacted her mother, Kathleen Cowden, a Westside Indianapolis resident and staff dietitian at St. Francis Hospital in Beech Grove, for help.

Cowden's mother got the attention of hospital leaders. Staff at St. Francis' hospitals in Beech Grove, Mooresville and on Indianapolis' Far Southside then donated 200 new and used DVDs in the spring, and they were shipped to Cowden.

"It really meant a whole lot to us to have more than five movies to show," Cowden said Wednesday during a hospital visit, while she was on a two-week break from duty at Camp Liberty.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Indianapolis Colts Odds to Win 2010 Super Bowl

Gambling 911
The Indianapolis Colts odds to win the 2010 Super Bowl have been set early at +1300 meaning that a $100 bet will pay $1300 at Sports Interaction.com (a $10 bet will pay out $130). These are pretty good payout odds all things considered. As long as Peyton Manning is on this team, the Colts always have a shot at going to the Super Bowl. Unfortunately they are also one Peyton injury away from going under .500.

There are a few concerns for the Indianapolis Colts, the biggest of which is the coaching change. Tony Dungy retired after last season and the club promoted long time assistant Jim Caldwell. Gambling911.com does not see this as having any major negative impact on the Colts chances in 2009/2010 however. Caldwell, after all, has been a key component of the Colts success over the years. But whenever there is a coaching change, there is always the potential for some glitches.

Jackson hometown left out of pocket

Google News
The mayor of Michael Jackson's home town, Gary, Indiana, has revealed how the cash-strapped community paid US $5,000 to fly Michael Jackson's father and seven other people from Los Angeles to attend a July memorial service for his son.

Mayor Rudy Clay insisted Joe Jackson wasn't paid any money to attend the July 10 memorial in downtown Gary, near the Jackson family's former two-bedroom boyhood home.

"Joe Jackson came here for one reason: his son," he said. "He wanted to be with his 31 other family members who live in Gary. There was no fee for Joe Jackson to appear. Absolutely not."

Hayhurst Will Challenge Indiana GOP Rep. Souder

CQ Politics
Indiana Democrat Tom Hayhurst will challenge Republican Rep. Mark Souder in the 2010 election, in what would be a rematch of their competitive 2006 matchup in the Fort Wayne-based 3rd District.

Hayhurst, a former Fort Wayne city councilman, this week filed a statement of candidacy with the Federal Election Commission to initiate a 2010 campaign in Indiana's 3rd, which Souder has represented since 1995.

"I've been thinking about it a lot and talking it over with my family and other folks who supported me along the way and decided -- especially considering what's going on in this congressional district now and also in our entire country -- that it was my duty, my job, my obligation to file and run," Hayhurst told CQ Politics Friday afternoon.

Indiana's 8.4% spike in foreclosure filings worrisome

Indianapolis Star
Indiana's high jobless levels could be behind an unhealthy jump in mortgage foreclosures in the state last month.

Lenders carried out 5,186 foreclosure filings last month in Indiana, an 8.4 percent upswing from the same month last year, according to a report from RealtyTrac, a California seller of distressed properties.

Indiana's rate of foreclosure filings now ranks it 17th on RealtyTrac's national list. That's far better than Indiana's top 10 showings several years ago.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Indiana wins Miss America 2009


People
Denim-clad beauties stood in marked contrast to the traditional, more formal mood at this year's Miss America pageant, as young women from around the country vied for the crown at the Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino in Las Vegas.

And the winner was? Miss Indiana Katie Stam, 22, a communications major at the University of Indianapolis.

Highway workers find 100k

IndyStar.com
Three Indiana state highway workers picking up trash Friday along I-70 found a little something extra inside an abandoned tire: more than $100,000 in cash.

Police spent hours unfolding, separating, counting and drying the thousands of wet bills at the Indiana State Police post at Pendleton. Investigators are checking the abandoned tire's tread marks to see if they can help determine a possible source of the cash.

Sale of 26 Marsh stores approved by bankruptcy court, remaining 18 stores to close

From Fox59 On Tuesday, FOX59 learned two companies won the bidding war: Topvalco and Generative Growth II. Topvalco is a Kroger subsidiary...