Indiana News Update

August 19, 2009

Indiana to Extended $24 Million Youth Work Program
A multi-million-dollar program in Indiana is so successful the state is extending it.  The Young Hoosier Conservation Corps employed almost 1,900 low-income young adults this summer, and, now, this fall, too.  Gov. Daniels talked with corps members at Harmonie State Park in New Harmony Tuesday afternoon.  And, he announced the state would continue to fund the program, which was supposed to end next month, through the middle of October.  A clearing near the river, where picnic tables and other amenities will soon go – Jon Craig and Drew Seitz played a big part in making it happen.  “The first two days, I would say were pretty rough,” said Craig. “We had to get all the brush and weeds down – all that stuff. Once we got in there, we were able to see which trees needed to come down. And, we’re still working o it right now. But, we’ve cleared a lot of it out.”

Chamber seeks top businesses
The Indiana Chamber of Commerce is seeking nominations for the top small business in the state. The competition is open to all Hoosier companies with 250 employees or less. Out-of-state parent companies are eligible to participate if at least 25 full-time employees are in Indiana. Businesses can nominate themselves or be nominated by a third party. The deadline is Sept. 30. Nomination forms are available online at www.indianachamber.com/ awardsprograms.

Daniels plans job announcements
Gov. Mitch Daniels has a pair of jobs announcements planned for today. He will join executives from an undisclosed company in Rushville at 10:30 a.m. And he will join Fleetwood RV executives at 2:30 p.m. for an economic development event at the company’s Decatur headquarters.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

August 18, 2009

State letter reaffirms support of teachers who discipline students
Indiana teachers are receiving letters this month informing them that when they discipline students, they’ll have the state on their side.  Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller is mailing the letters out as part of a new state law aimed at protecting teachers who follow school policies in efforts to keep order in their classrooms.  If teachers have been reluctant to discipline out of fear of litigation, they can rest assured that the attorney general’s office will aggressively defend them in court,” Zoeller said. Evansville school officials and teacher representatives said Monday that though they appreciate the support, they are still somewhat unclear as to how the law will help.

Activists again seek moratorium on death penalty in Indiana

Indiana hasn’t executed a prisoner for more than two years, and a slowdown in new death sentences has resulted in a dwindling Death Row.  But the issue is hardly dormant.  Activists are renewing a call for a moratorium on executions until the system’s fairness and massive costs can be examined.  Leading the charge: a 24-year-old recent University of Notre Dame graduate who has recruited former state government officials, activists, professors and lawyers to his nascent effort, called the Indiana Coalition Acting to Suspend Executions, or InCASE.

Panel thirsts for facts in Sunday alcohol sales debate

Need to stock your cooler for the Colts’ season opener? Better have the beer on ice the night before. That’s because Indiana prohibits the sale of carry-out liquor on Sundays.  This and other liquor laws — including that cold beer can be sold only in liquor stores — will be discussed when the Indiana Legislature Interim Study Committee on Alcoholic Beverages meets later this summer.

I-69 project: Can state finish what it started?
Construction on the I-69 extension from Indianapolis to Evansville has entered its second year, but state reports show early stages of the project could run at least $120 million over budget.  Building the new highway from the state’s capital to its southwestern corner has been controversial because of the farmland, forests and homes it will swallow. But as the first of the 141 miles of new highway is paved near Evansville, state officials are facing fresh scrutiny that the $700 million they have to build the first three sections of the highway may not be enough to finish those sections. That amount was set aside for the project when Gov. Mitch Daniels and lawmakers approved a lease of the Indiana Toll Road in 2006.

Lawmakers getting late start on study issues
Indiana lawmakers are getting a late start on some weighty, interim homework assignments, including a thorough review of legalized gambling, a study on alcohol sales and a look at whether school start dates should be moved back.  Legislative leaders assigned more than 60 topics to be studied in the coming weeks, even though the special session in June delayed the assignments and some committee appointments have yet to be announced. Some panels are supposed to report their findings by Nov. 1, but some have until Dec. 1 and others are two-year studies.  Senate President Pro Tem David Long, R-Fort Wayne, said the ramp-up to the special session, and the overtime period in June itself, means there has to be a sense of urgency for some of the interim panels.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

August 11, 2009

Daniels plans charity motorcycle ride
Gov. Mitch Daniels and members of the group American Bikers Aimed Toward Education are gearing up for a charity motorcycle ride through southern Indiana.  Daniels will ride his Fat Boy Harley Davidson motorcycle in Friday’s ride from the Statehouse, through the scenic roads of southern Indiana and ending in French Lick.

Hotel tax in Indy will be 1 of nation’s highest
A measure to help the struggling Capital Improvement Board by increasing the county hotel tax squeaked by the City-County Council on Monday. But approval came with a consensus that the $21 million boost is not a complete solution.   Council members spent about a half-hour complaining about what all agreed was a partial fix but ultimately voted 15-14 to pass the measure. Marion County’s hotel tax will jump to 10 percent from 9 percent, making it among the nation’s highest.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Public Policy


Indiana News Update

August 6, 2009

Indiana Falling Short on Policies to Prevent and Fight Cancer

According to a new report, Indiana is falling short for its legislative efforts to combat cancer. How Do You Measure up?: A Progress Report on State Legislative Activity to Reduce Cancer Incidence and Mortality evaluates each state’s legislative activity on six issues key to winning the fight against cancer. Developed by the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN), the advocacy affiliate of the American Cancer Society, the report finds that Indiana measured up to benchmarks in one of the six issues. “Our state legislators can play an important role in the war against cancer by passing legislation that can help reduce the toll this disease  takes on our state and save lives,” said Judy Stewart, American Cancer  Society Director of State Government Relations for the Great Lakes  Division. “We all have a responsibility to fight back against a disease  that kills 12,820 people in Indiana each year by enacting laws and policies that eliminate barriers for the proper diagnosis, treatment and care of cancer patients.”

Privatized welfare’s poor results
Amid rising costs and frequent complaints about Indiana’s efforts to privatize its welfare system, the General Assembly must thoroughly review not only the financial aspects of the state’s contracts with IBM Corp. but also how the new operation has been administered.  The Associated Press, in a story published in The Star on Monday, revealed that the state will pay IBM $180 million more than originally planned — only two years into the original 10-year, $1.16 billion contract. The additional funding represents a 15-percent increase in the cost of the contract, signed by Gov. Mitch Daniels in 2006.

State to get $400M for green autos

Long touted as a potential hotbed for hybrid-electric cars, Indiana finally started to warm up Wednesday, but it’s going to be a long, hard haul to gin up a high-tech U.S. car industry.  President Barack Obama showered more than $400 million in high-tech grants on Indiana enterprises to develop cars and trucks with powerful batteries and big electric motors by 2016. Although the cash is regarded as enough to bring the electric-car business to life — and create or save as many as 5,000 jobs in the state — analysts say it will take far more money to create a green-car industry in Indiana and the nation.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Public Policy


Indiana News Update

July 30, 2009


Daniels To Lead Trade Mission To China, Japan

Gov. Mitch Daniels will lead a delegation of Indiana business leaders and elected officials on the first economic development mission to China by an Indiana governor in more than a decade.  Daniels will also make economic development stops in Japan and attend the Japan-U.S. Midwest Conference during his fourth visit to the country since 2005.  Daniels will meet with government and business leaders in both countries and will host three business receptions for potential investors.

Schools chief wants tighter teacher licensing
Indiana’s state schools chief plans to announce proposed teacher licensing changes he says would improve the quality of teachers at public schools.  Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett wants to require elementary education majors to minor in core subjects such as math or English while limiting undergraduate coursework in education.

Ind. ordered to pay $42 million in back pay to state workers

A $42 million judgment against the state over back pay to state workers won’t quite break Indiana’s bank, but it’s hardly welcome news in a tight budget year.  The ruling Tuesday by a Marion County judge — one of the largest ever against the state — resolved a 16-year-old class-action lawsuit by current and former state workers who said they were underpaid going back to 1973.  A plaintiffs’ attorney said as many as 15,000 people potentially affected by the ruling won’t see a penny while the state pursues appeals — a route Gov. Mitch Daniels supports.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

July 23, 2009

Toll road operators say finances are in order
The owners of the Indiana Toll Road apparently are not on the verge of bankruptcy, but even if they were in financial trouble, there are safeguards in the lease contract with the state that would protect the highway for Hoosiers.  State Rep. Patrick Bauer, D-South Bend, speaker of the Indiana House, told WNDU-TV, The Elkhart Truth’s newsgathering partner, on Monday that the foreign consortium that operates the roll road is “on the verge of bankruptcy.”  His source for the information is a July 8 story in The Australian that quotes financial analysts as saying that the debt taken on by Macquarie Infrastructure Group to buy the toll road and the Chicago Skyway is too high, given their performance and that the roads could be sold “for a nominal amount …” — $1 — to allay investor fears that more money will have to be pumped into all Macquarie’s U.S. assets. The assets also include the Dulles Greenway in northern Virginia and the South Bay Expressway in San Diego.

Minimum wage hike coming Friday
The minimum wage for Indiana workers is going up.  The state’s minimum wage will increase from $6.55 per hour to $7.25 per hour on Friday. It coincides with a 10.7-percent increase in the federal minimum wage to $7.25 per hour.  The Indiana Minimum Wage Law applies to the minority of Hoosier employers and employees not covered by the federal minimum wage.  Employers of workers who receive tips must still pay them at least $2.13 per hour on top of their tips. If their tips combined with the employer’s wage of $2.13 per hour fall short of the minimum wage, the employer must make up the difference.

Lobbying has a near-record year at the Statehouse
From lawyer salaries to pricey dinners and prime seats at Colts and Pacers games, lobbyists spent more than $24 million trying to influence this year’s legislative session.  Late and amended lobbying reports still are coming in. Sarah Nagy, executive director of the Indiana Lobby Registration Commission, said she expected the final amount will grow by as much as $5 million, which she expected will be a new record, easily topping last year’s total of $25.4 million.

IPS educators say they’d welcome changes
Indianapolis Public Schools teachers and principals say burdensome personnel policies and an inefficient human resources department are having a negative impact in the classroom, according to a survey to be released today.  Teachers and principals faulted both the central office and policies cemented in the district’s contract with the teachers union, according to a copy of the report obtained by The Indianapolis Star.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

July 14, 2009


Conference to focus on Indiana wind energy growth

The Indiana Office of Energy Development will host a statewide conference on wind farming July 21-22 at the Indiana Convention Center in downtown Indianapolis.  Windiana 2009 focuses on utility scale and small wind systems for use at homes, businesses and farms.


Child advocate too weak?

Although state lawmakers included funding for an ombudsman’s bureau within Indiana’s Department of Child Services, family rights advocates worry that whoever is chosen for the post won’t have the power to make a difference.  Proponents say child services need added oversight after 11 children in state care died in less than two years.  But even though lawmakers included funding for the ombudsman in the recently passed budget, those who sought a watchdog now say the legislation was watered down.  “It was just an appeasement,” said Carole Davis, who runs Kiddos First, a child advocacy organization based in Evansville. “It’s just a joke as far as I’m concerned.” 

State has no alternative to current welfare system

Indiana welfare officials considering canceling the state’s privately run welfare system have no backup plan in place, and critics say it will be hard to undo the privatization of 1,500 state case workers more than two years ago.  Anne Murphy, secretary of the Family and Social Services Administration, confirmed recently that the system led by IBM Corp. and Dallas-based Affiliated Computer Services Inc. has so many problems that Indiana could cancel the 10-year, $1.16 billion contract. She asked IBM to submit a “corrective action plan” as part of a process that could result in cancellation of the contract if changes aren’t made by the end of September.


Indiana sizes up its gambling competition

Concerned in part about potential competition from Kentucky and Ohio, Indiana lawmakers will study the state’s gambling industry to see how best to position the casinos and protect state revenue.  Although the Kentucky General Assembly failed to pass a bill last month to allow slot-like video terminals at racetracks, Hoosier officials think the commonwealth will eventually act to stop Indiana riverboats from siphoning dollars from Kentuckians’ pocketbooks.  And Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland announced Friday that he will sign an executive order authorizing video lottery terminals at the state’s racetracks. He said he will direct the Ohio Lottery to move quickly to have the terminals installed as a way to shore up state revenues.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

July 9, 2009

State Chamber president to speak
Kevin Brinegar, president and chief executive officer of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce, will discuss major issues that are expected to affect the economy and economic development in the region, during a “Lunch With Brinegar” at 11:30 a.m., Aug. 19, at the University of Evansville.  The program for business and economic development leaders will mark Brinegar’s fifth stop on a seven-city statewide tour as part of the lunch series.  Brinegar is expected to update attendees on how actions, taken by the 2009 Indiana General Assembly, will impact Hoosier businesses.

Plan would cut number of poll sites
If Allen County’s director of elections has anything to say about it, the number of polling places will be cut by nearly two-thirds – a cut Beth Dlug insists would benefit political parties, voters and taxpayers alike.  Dlug is expected to present today to members of the County Election Board a plan that would replace 146 precinct-specific polling locations with 40 larger “vote centers” open to all registered county voters regardless of address. Although the change would require approval by the state General Assembly – meaning it could not be implemented until next year at the earliest – Dlug said it’s not too early to start planning for the day Allen County residents can vote wherever is most convenient for them.

Press continues for tweaks in Sunday liquor sale laws
State laws that prevent Hoosiers from buying alcohol on Sundays have baffled many drinkers for years. “Why shouldn’t they? We can drink it on Sundays,” said Edward Johnson, a Chalmers resident.  Hoosiers for Beverage Choices, a group pushing for changes in the laws, visited West Lafayette Wednesday to tout its current membership drive and its efforts to sway lawmakers. More than 25,000 people have signed up to support the cause, said Matt Norris, the group’s director.

More time, more proof and more security for state IDs
Motorists who renew their Indiana driver’s licenses or obtain new ones will have to present documents to prove their identities beginning next year.  Bureau of Motor Vehicles Commissioner Andy Miller said Wednesday the one-time requirement is part of an effort to stem identity theft by complying with the 9/11 commission’s recommendations and federal law.  Anyone who gets a new license or state ID or renews one after Jan. 1 will have to prove his or her identity, Social Security number, citizenship or immigration status and state residency. Documents that can be used include birth certificates or passports, Social Security cards or W2 forms, and bank statements or utility bills issued within 60 days.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

July 2, 2009

Arrest warrant issued for former candidate
An arrest warrant has been issued for Indiana’s 2008 Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, who is charged with misrepresenting himself as a state legislator to avoid arrest for public intoxication.  A spokesman for the Marion County prosecutor’s office said former state Rep. Dennie Oxley II was to have surrendered by 1 p.m. Wednesday but had not turned himself in by mid-evening.  Earlier Wednesday, prosecutors filed misdemeanor charges of public intoxication and impersonating a public servant against Oxley, who was found drunk with a 21-year-old legislative intern at a downtown gas station last week.

Governor: No more laws to help Indy sports board
State lawmakers from Indianapolis say a plan to help the city’s struggling sports agency is a temporary fix, but Gov. Mitch Daniels says he doesn’t want any future legislation to deal with the Capital Improvement Board. The Republican governor said Wednesday that city officials changed their minds more than once about what they wanted to help overcome a projected $47 million deficit for next year.

Gov: Session was worth it
Indiana taxpayers came out ahead in the special legislative session because it resulted in a two-year budget that increases overall funding for public schools while preserving much of the state’s reserves, Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels said Wednesday.  Daniels said the $27.8 billion budget passed by the General Assembly on Tuesday spends a little more than he would have liked. But he said enough lawmakers made tough choices and compromised on a responsible bill that he quickly signed into law.  “It was a good process of give-and-take,” he said. “There are things in there for everybody to feel pleased about and everybody to disagree with.”

Use caution when setting off fireworks
With the fireworks season in full swing and many temporary stores popping up, state officials want to remind Indiana citizens of the state laws governing fireworks. In addition, the Indiana Department of Homeland Security (IDHS) Fire & Building Safety division has issued some tips for Hoosiers hoping to play it safe when using fireworks this summer.

Daniels is poised to resume fight for local government reform

A day after Indiana’s lawmakers passed a new two-year state budget, Gov. Mitch Daniels was already looking ahead to his next legislative goal: reforming local government, including a push to merge the state’s smallest school districts.  Daniels had sought a slew of reforms — including eliminating township government and creating a single county chief executive to replace commissioners — earlier this year.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs


Indiana News Update

June 30, 2009

Hoosier Park faces possible shutdown
Hoosier Park could be a victim of Indiana’s budget crisis, at least temporarily.  “We are all watching and waiting and hopeful we don’t have to broach that subject,” said Jim Brown, general manager for gaming at Hoosier Park.  The casino and racetrack — and all other licensed gambling operations in Indiana — could be forced to close if lawmakers in Indianapolis are unable to approve a new state budget or pass a continuing resolution to pay for state operations. Indiana’s biennial budget expires at midnight tonight.

Indiana prison population hits 99 percent of capacity
Indiana is running so short on prison space that it has just 26 beds available for its worst offenders. Inmates are already sleeping in beds stacked three high in one prison, and officials are considering renovating common areas like gymnasiums into cells.  Department of Correction leaders thought their prison crowding problem would be alleviated – at least a bit – when Gov. Mitch Daniels proposed expanding two prisons to add 1,200 beds. Daniels said it was a priority because Indiana’s prisons are at about 99 percent of capacity.

Partial state government shutdown looms if no budget
State lawmakers are due back at work today as they face a deadline of midnight Tuesday to pass a new state spending plan.  Without a budget or a stopgap funding measure, much of state government would shut down on Wednesday. That includes state parks, BMV branches and most state offices.  Lawmakers return to work Monday with little time left to settle their differences and reach a budget agreement.  Gov. Mitch Daniels says there is legal authority to keep essential services like state police and prisons running, but most of the state’s nearly 31,000 employees would be furloughed.

Daniels credited for nudge on welfare
Though he opposed efforts by Southwestern Indiana lawmakers dealing with the subject, Gov. Mitch Daniels played a key role in convincing contractors hired by Indiana’s welfare agency to take steps to bolster a modernization project.  During a stop in Evansville last week, Daniels said he has been “very dissatisfied with at least certain aspects” of the plan to have the state’s Family and Social Services Administration use call centers and process documents online.  The state signed a 10-year, $1.16 billion contract with a team led by IBM Corp. and Affiliated Computer Services Inc. to complete the project.  “And that’s why we’ve had more than one very direct conversation with IBM and their partners,” he said.

Sam Turpin – Indiana Governmental Affairs