Thursday, December 24, 2020

AGENDA- DC Redevelopment Commission Dec 28th Meeting

 

 AGENDA

DEARBORN COUNTY REDEVELOPMENT COMMISSIONS MEETING

December 28, 2020

9:00 a.m. 1st Floor Henry Dearborn Room

Public Hearing 9:10 a.m.

Dearborn County Government Center

165 Mary Street, Lawrenceburg, Indiana


EXECUTIVE SESSION @ 8:00 a.m. 

IC 5-14-1.5-6.1(b) (4) to discuss interviews and negotiations with industrial or commercial prospects or agents of industrial or commercial prospects by the Indiana economic development corporation, the office of tourism development, the Indiana finance authority, an economic development commission, a local economic development organization (as defined in IC 5-28-11-2(3)), or a governing body of a political subdivision 

As well as IC 5-14-1.5-6.1(b) (9) to discuss job performance evaluation of individual employees and/or to receive information about and interview prospective employees deemed confidential under Indiana 


  1.     Call to order


  1.     Title VI Statement for Compliance


  1.     Memorandum for Executive Session


  1.     Begin Public Hearing at 9:10 a.m.
  • Open Public Hearing -RE Amendment of W. Aurora Economic Development Plan
  • Comment and Questions from the Public
  • Close Public Hearing 


  1.     Consideration of Confirmatory Resolution for W. Aurora 


  1.     Action from Executive Session
  2.     Approval of Minutes for November 12, 2020 Meeting


  1. VIII.1.  Claims – Register Publications Ads for Public Hearings (run twice) $76.04; Barnes & Thornburg for reviewing & answering various question $556.00; Seitz Agency for 2021 Commission Board Bond $100.00; Drake Lawn & Landscape for 5 mowings $350.00 and Ewan Law Office $3982.50 for Andrea’s services 1/9 thru 12/21/2020.


2.  Financials - Review


  1.     Old Business 


  1.     New Business


  1.     One Dearborn Report


  1.     Attorney’s Report


  1. XIII.Other Business


  1. XIV.Adjournment

DC Redevelopment Commission Executive Session Dec 28th 2020

 


PUBLIC NOTICE

Executive Session & Meeting


The Dearborn County Redevelopment Commission 

has called an Executive Session for 

Monday, December 28, 2020 at 8:00 a.m.


A public meeting will take place at 9:00 a.m.

A public hearing will take place beginning at 9:10 a.m.  




The purposes for the Executive Session are to: 

(1)   Discuss job performance evaluation of individual employees and/or to receive information about and interview prospective employees deemed confidential under Indiana Code IC 5-14-1.5-6.1(b) (9) and


(2)  Discuss interviews and negotiations with industrial or commercial prospects or agents of industrial or commercial prospects by the Indiana economic development corporation, the office of tourism development, the Indiana finance authority, an economic development commission, a local economic development organization (as defined in IC 5-28-11-2(3)), or a governing body of a political subdivision, classified confidential by state and federal statute IC 5-14-1.5-6.1(b) (4).



The meetings will take place at the

Dearborn County Government Center, 

Henry Dearborn Room,

165 Mary Street,

Lawrenceburg, IN  47025

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Christmas Hope for Us

 A Christmas Hope for Us — 'Every One!'


by Mark Franke
republished with permission of IPR

A good friend of mine, now sainted, was a professor of theology at our local Lutheran seminary. He had a brilliant mind that was manifested in a pastoral heart. He was known for his pithy statements, expressing profound points in a handful of words. Recently I was reminded of one such. It is quite apropos today, probably more so than when he said it.

“Hatred is simply chilled and hardened anger.”

Why write about hatred in the week of Christmas? Blame it on the book I am currently reviewing for the Indiana Policy Review’s quarterly Journal.

“Divided We Fall: America’s Secession Threat and How to Restore Our Nation” by journalist David French addresses the chasm that is widening between red and blue, urban and rural, coastal and inland. One frequently recurring word in French’s counterfactual scenarios is “rage.” Extremists on both ends of the ideological spectrum respond with rage at others’ political actions, rage that is all too infectious to contain once it starts. It is my friend’s “chilled and hardened anger” run amok. 

This is the third book about a potential breakup of our union that I have reviewed, all projecting a dystopian future for America, should America even survive. Yet each also proposes a way out of this crisis. That way out is predicated on a major attitudinal shift for all of us, a shift away from anger and hatred and intolerance, and toward understanding and constructive engagement and kindness. 

In a word: Hope.

What better time of year to talk about hope than Christmas? For us Christians it is a time to reflect on that ineffable miracle of God becoming flesh to redeem a rebellious creation. We may try to limit God’s grace through our unkind thoughts, words and actions but God can’t be marginalized by our failures. Even non-Christians benefit from the feeling of good will that comes about each year at this time.

If one finds all this too Christian to be universal, then recall the Greek myth of Pandora’s box. After she unleashed all sort of evil into the world, with the best of intentions to be sure, Pandora was left with just one thing in the box — hope. 

Whatever one’s faith or lack thereof, this season should give us hope that we can rise above our basest inclinations. It must start in our hearts where we hold what is most dear, hearts that have room even for those with whom we disagree. The human condition requires that we open our hearts to those we want to shut out, and our nation desperately needs for all of us to do so if we want to avoid the apocalyptic scenarios in French’s book.

For my own mental health I put French’s book aside until after Christmas. Instead, I watched the "Muppet Christmas Carol" with my youngest grandchild. I’m not sure what message a four-year-old took from it but I find something different to ponder each time I read the story or watch a movie based on it. This year I focused on the Cratchit family, impoverished by Victorian standards and certainly by our modern ones, yet thankful for and content with what blessings they received. Bob’s Christmas dinner toast honoring Ebenezer Scrooge is instructive. We may find Scrooge despicable and past redemption but Bob sees good in the miser who provides him employment.

It is Tiny Tim, although facing a life of crippling pain and financial dependency, who sums it up best: “God bless us, every one!”

Or even better, as the angels proclaimed to the shepherds that night: “Glory to God in the highest, and on the earth peace, good will toward men.” (Luke 2:14 KJV)

Even though this is the darkest of my 70 Christmases, the simple message of the angels hasn’t changed. We need peace and good will now more than ever. Looking back to that historical event of 2,000 years past is where we will find it. There is the source of my hope.

I know of no other place where it can be found. 

Mark Franke, an adjunct scholar of the Indiana Policy Review, is formerly associate vice chancellor at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne.
 

 
The Indiana Policy Review Foundation is a nonprofit education foundation focused on state and municipal issues. It is free of outside control by any individual, organization or group. It exists solely to conduct and distribute research on Indiana issues. Opinions expressed in signed articles do not necessarily represent the views of the editors, the Indiana Policy Review Foundation, or its board of directors. Nothing in this journal, whether in print or pixels, is an attempt to aid or hinder the passage of any bill or influence the election of any candidate.

Monday, December 21, 2020

DC Health Dept Weekly Covid Report

 Dearborn County Health Department 

COVID-19 Morbidity and Mortality Report: 12/14/2020 – 12/20/2020

Number of Dearborn County Residents Reported Tested with Results (HPH, ISDH, Bethesda North, Mercy Health, Christ Hospital, Urgent Care, UC Health, St Elizabeth, VA, LHI…):  653

Number of Negative Tests: 372

Number of Positive Tests: 281 

Positive Tests By age: 

18 yrs and under: 36

19-30 yrs: 43

31-50 yrs: 88

51-80 yrs: 110

81+yrs:  4

Number of Deaths Recorded This Week: 2


Ongoing Dearborn County Statistics:

Confirmed Positive Cases: 3,416

Reported Tested with Results: 16,924

Total Deaths: 37 (+ 2 probable on ISDH website)

By age: 60-69 yrs: 1

                           70-79 yrs:  3

                           80-89 yrs:  19

                           90-99 yrs:   12

                           100+ yrs:  2

             By Gender: Female: 24

                      Male:  13

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

15 DECEMBER 2020 DEARBORN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS MEETING NOTES

 15 DECEMBER 2020 DEARBORN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS MEETING NOTES


Present: Jim Thatcher, President, Art Little, and Rick Probst


Also present: Connie Fromhold, Auditor, Andy Baudendistel, Attorney, and Sue Hayden, Administrator


TITLE VI STATEMENT FOR COMPLIANCE was read by Baudendistel as legally required.


OLD BUSINESS


NEW BUSINESS

Address Changes for Chapel Thorne- Nicole Daily, Zoning Administrator - National emergency numbering so that we can be more accurate for emergency response- desiring 98% accuracy. Some of these addresses are out if order or are on the wrong side of the road fro even or odd addresses. They can do just the 7 for permits or do the entire road to make the entire road accurate. These errors that affect 12 properties to be corrected off Yorkridge. This road is a U shaped road which affected the old numbers. Daily passed out a map to show the issues to commissioners. Commissioners approved having a public meeting to inform the property owners and decide how to address the area. 


2021 One Dearborn Agreement- Mike Perleberg, Executive Director One Dearborn-  $15,000/year for LEDO - Lead Economic Development Officer- Baudendistel looked over the contract and this is already in the budget. This is same as 2020 contract. This came up when they were working on the West Aurora TIF. One Dearborn responds to the leads for businesses coming in. Continuing execution of the 2018 strategic plan, which they plan to update in 2021. Continuing to be liaison on county’s behalf. They do a web page on zoom prospector and site selectors. They meet with the local businesses about barriers they have faced and how to help. More emphasis on business expansion and retention now. Labor can be difficult to come by and so they try to show where the work force is for business. They try to market regionally and sell locally. They are in REDI Cincinnati as the only SE IN member. They have to look at them for some of our labor too. Perleberg delineated the local EDIs in the region. More focus on education for local elected officials to learn more about economic development. DCRC Dec 28th meeting for west Aurora TIF. They will have presentation there from Baker Tilley. Commissioners  approved the contract and signed.  


Grant Application for Veteran’s Services- Connie Fromhold for David Currence Veteran’s Officer- $6,000 from Lawrenceburg for Transportation for Veterans. This is every year. Commissioners approved the grant application.


ADMINISTRATOR – Sue Hayden- Jessica Rayburn from Soil and Water District who is on the county payroll needs a bond. Approved for cost of $100 for a $15,000 bond. 


AUDITOR – Connie Fromhold  -Claims/Payroll and December1st Minutes approved.


ATTORNEY – Andy Baudendistel- Proclamation to renew the local emergency until January 19th meeting. 1117cases last month 3159 cases this month 365 new cases per week. 28 deaths became 38 this month. Proclamation signed.  

Special meeting  probably being short one for Thursday at 5 PM for OCRA grant to be approved and they will consider what the local match is. 


COMMISSIONER COMMENTS

Rick Probst- compliments to maintenance dept for festive look in the building. Best wishes for the holidays and stay safe.


Art Little-Remember WHY we celebrate Christmas. Enjoy your family at a safe distance and in small groups. Wish everyone a merry Christmas and Prosperous new year. 


Jim Thatcher - Never stand on a stool to change a light bulb. And a Merry Christmas.


Saved the best till last- Plaque for 20 years of dedicated service to County Council to Bill Ullrich. Ullrich said 20 years was amazing and it’s been quite a ride. We are blessed in Dearborn County to have the people working for the county that we do. 


LATE ARRIVAL INFORMATION- Jared Teaney 911 Director- certification of compliance for the grant $68,241.95. GIS and Modules for computers. Certification of compliance - Approved.  


PUBLIC COMMENT- none


ADJOURN- 5:45 PM


Christine Brauer Mueller

Lawrenceburg Township

COVID and Domination by Fear- Leo Morris

 COVID and Domination by Fear- 

reprinted with permission of IPR


by Leo Morris

Go ahead and get the COVID-19 vaccine if you’ve made up your mind, but, mark my words, you’ll be playing with fire.

Just consider all the harm we have already caused from trying to mitigate the damage of risky behavior, which has had the unintended consequence of encouraging that very behavior.

We provide condoms in high schools to cut down on teenage pregnancy, which sends the message that we approve of underage sex.

We provide those same teens with safe rides on prom night, which lets them know we’re sort of OK with them drinking at the dance.

Seat belts. You think people would drive as crazily as they do if they didn’t have seat belts to save them from their foolish habits? Don’t laugh, I’ve seen the studies.

And insurance. Don’t get me started on insurance. How different this world would be if people weren’t forever taking stupid chances, secure in the knowledge that a huge risk pool will ease the burden of failure.

Here’s what will happen. First, a few people will get vaccinated, then a few more, and before you know it people will be talking about “herd immunity” and start losing the rational fear of close human contact.

And then, people will stop wearing masks. They will drift closer than 6 feet apart and, even worse, might even be tempted to touch one another. They will nod and smile and talk too loudly, spraying deadly poison with every word.

Once again, there will be indiscriminate confabulation and rampant rapport and promiscuous social intercourse. And look where that got us.

Oh, relax, I’m just pulling your leg. Figuratively, of course, I’d never get close enough actually do it these days.

The truth is, we’re becoming such a frightened people – and passing the panic on to our remote-learning children – that not even mass immunization is likely to drag us kicking and screaming back into normality.

I imagine people being turned away from home front doors or shunned at church or walked around on the sidewalk unless they display the big “V” embroidered somewhere on their clothing. Not a scarlet one. We have to avoid all shades of blue and red in these divisive times – black and white for the same reason.

Yellow – a big, yellow V, as if to say, “Yes, I admit it, I’m scared, so I got the shot.”

Or perhaps we can just flash a V with index and middle finger. If it was good enough for Churchill to proclaim victory and unwashed hippies to wish us “peace, man,” it’s good enough to tell our chicken-hearted neighbors we have been vaccinated.

My brother is passing around a C.S. Lewis passage someone posted on Facebook. It’s from his essay, “On Living in an Atomic Age,” and we are advised to replace “Atomic Age” with “COVID-19 Age” as we consider it:

In other words, do not let us begin by exaggerating the novelty of our situation. Believe me, dear sir or madam, you and all whom you love were already sentenced to death before the atomic bomb was invented: and quite a high percentage of us were going to die in unpleasant ways. We had, indeed, one very great advantage over our ancestors — anesthetics; but we have that still. It is perfectly ridiculous to go about whimpering and drawing long faces because the scientists have added one more chance of painful and premature death to a world which already bristled with such chances and in which death itself was not a chance at all, but a certainty.

This is the first point to be made: and the first action to be taken is to pull ourselves together. If we are all going to be destroyed by an atomic bomb, let that bomb when it comes find us doing sensible and human things — praying, working, teaching, reading, listening to music, bathing the children, playing tennis, chatting to our friends over a pint and a game of darts — not huddled together like frightened sheep and thinking about bombs. They may break our bodies, but they need not dominate our minds.

I do not think that Lewis meant for us to ignore danger or pretend that risk does not exist. The fact that we might succumb to cancer or keel over any minute from a heart attack or an embolism is not a valid reason to go stand in traffic and dare the cars to hit us. And as individuals, we have more control over a virus than we do over a possible impeding nuclear holocaust.

But his central point is one to live by. We don’t have to choose between defying risk or being paralyzed by it. We can give it the weight it is due, take whatever precautions are warranted, then simply live our lives, doing the “sensible and human things” that give the world its worth.

It shouldn’t take a pandemic to remind us, but it’s understandable that it did. To be born is to die. It’s what’s in between that counts.

Leo Morris, columnist for The Indiana Policy Review, is winner of the Hoosier Press Association’s award for Best Editorial Writer. Morris, as opinion editor of the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, was named a finalist in editorial writing by the Pulitzer Prize committee. Contact him at leoedits@yahoo.com.
 

DC Health Dept Weekly Covid Report

 Dearborn County Health Department 

COVID-19 Morbidity and Mortality Report: 12/07/2020 – 12/13/2020

Number of Dearborn County Residents Reported Tested with Results (HPH, ISDH, Bethesda North, Mercy Health, Christ Hospital, Urgent Care, UC Health, St Elizabeth, VA, LHI…):  785

Number of Negative Tests: 420

 Number of Positive Tests: 365 

Positive Tests By age: 

18 yrs and under: 41

19-30 yrs: 61

31-50 yrs: 122

51-80 yrs: 130

81+yrs:  11

Number of Deaths Recorded This Week: 0


Ongoing Dearborn County Statistics:

Confirmed Positive Cases: 3,135

Reported Tested with Results: 16,271

Total Deaths: 33

By age: 60-69 yrs: 1

                           70-79 yrs:  3

                           80-89 yrs:  18

                           90-99 yrs:   9

                           100+ yrs:  2

             By Gender: Female: 20

                      Male:  13

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Special Meeting Notice DC Commissioners December 17th 2020

 DEARBORN COUNTY

BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS


PUBLIC NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING


As permitted by Indiana Code § 36-2-2-8, notice is hereby given that the Dearborn County Board of Commissioners have called a Special Meeting to be held on Thursday, December 17, 2020 at 5:00 P.M.  

This meeting has been called by the President of the Dearborn County Board of Commissioners to conduct a second Public Hearing on a grant from the State Community Development Block Grant COVID-19 Response Program being administered by the Indiana Office of Community and Rural Affairs and to consider an Addendum to Resolution 2020-004.  No business unrelated to this purpose will be conducted at this meeting.


The Special Meeting will be held at:


Dearborn County Government Center

Henry Dearborn Meeting Room

165 Mary Street

Lawrenceburg, Indiana 47025



Date:  December 11, 2020

AGENDA Dec 15th DC Commissioners Meeting

 



AGENDA

DEARBORN COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS MEETING

December 15, 2020

5:00 p.m., Henry Dearborn Room

Dearborn County Government Center

165 Mary Street, Lawrenceburg, Indiana



I. CALL TO ORDER


II. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE

III. TITLE VI STATEMENT FOR COMPLIANCE


IV. OLD BUSINESS 

V. NEW BUSINESS

1.  Address Changes for Chapel Thorne – Nicole Daily, Zoning Administrator


2.  2021 One Dearborn Agreement – Mike Perleberg, One Dearborn Executive Director


3.  Grant Application for Veteran’s Services – Connie Fromhold 


VI. ADMINISTRATOR – Sue Hayden

VII. AUDITOR – Connie Fromhold

  1. Claims/Payroll/Minutes

VIII. ATTORNEY – Andy Baudendistel


IX. LATE ARRIVAL INFORMATION


X. PUBLIC COMMENT


XI. COMMISSIONER COMMENTS


XII. ADJOURN

Tuesday, December 08, 2020

Dearborn County Health Department COVID-19 Morbidity and Mortality Report: 12/01/2020 – 12/06/2020


 Dearborn County Health Department COVID-19 Morbidity and Mortality Report: 12/01/2020 – 12/06/2020

Number of Dearborn County Residents Reported Tested with Results (HPH, ISDH, Bethesda North, Mercy Health, Christ Hospital, Urgent Care, UC Health, St Elizabeth, VA, LHI…):  748

Number of Negative Tests: 420

 Number of Positive Tests: 328 

Positive Tests By age: 

18 yrs and under: 34

19-30 yrs: 80

31-50 yrs: 101

51-80 yrs: 106

81+yrs:  7

Number of Deaths Recorded This Week: 1


Ongoing Dearborn County Statistics:

Confirmed Positive Cases: 2,770

Reported Tested with Results: 15,486

Total Deaths: 33

By age: 60-69 yrs: 1

                           70-79 yrs:  3

                           80-89 yrs:  18

                           90-99 yrs:   9

                           100+ yrs:  2

             By Gender: Female: 20

                      Male:  13

Wednesday, December 02, 2020

Subscribers to the Dearborn County Public Forum Blog - IMPORTANT NOTICE

Subscribers to the Dearborn County Public Forum Blog - IMPORTANT NOTICE

Our email from yahoo groups that we send to subscribers whenever a new post is made on  Dearborn County Public Forum blog is closing as of Dec 15. From that date one all subscribers will need to go to the blog itself to view postings at



Please bookmark that for your use. 

We are looking for another way to set up an easy to use subscriber list. If we find one it will be linked on the blog so that you can see how to subscribe. The notice below is from a press release from Yahoo Groups announcing the termination of that service.

We have used their service since 2004.

The blog itself will continue without the subscriber list for now.


Press Release

Yahoo has put the final nail in the coffin for its social media platform Yahoo Groups, announcing in October that the 20 year-old service will shut down on Dec. 15, 2020.

Yahoo Groups, which was aimed to help users stay connected to their community and friends, has seen a “steady decline in usage over the last several years,” the Yahoo Groups team shared with users in an email.

“Over that same period we’ve witnessed unprecedented levels of engagement across our properties as customers seek out premium, trustworthy content. To that end, we must sometimes make difficult decisions regarding products that no longer fit our long-term strategy as we hone our focus on other areas of the business,” the email continued.

Starting Dec.. 15, the Yahoo Groups website will be inaccessible as will its services, including sending and receiving emails.

“Thank you for helping us build one of the earliest digital communities — we’re proud and honored to have forged countless connections over the last 20 years and played a small part in helping build your communities,” the Yahoo team concluded.

An FAQ about the Yahoo Groups shutdown can be accessed here.

DC Health Dept Weekly COVID Report

 Dearborn County Health Department 

COVID-19 Morbidity and Mortality Report: 11/25/2020 – 11/30/2020

Number of Dearborn County Residents Reported Tested with Results (HPH, ISDH, Bethesda North, Mercy Health, Christ Hospital, Urgent Care, UC Health, St Elizabeth, VA, LHI…):  696

Number of Negative Tests: 444

Number of Positive Tests: 252 

Positive Tests By age: 

18 yrs and under: 25

19-30 yrs: 42

31-50 yrs: 84

51-80 yrs: 97

81+yrs:  4

Number of Deaths Recorded This Week: 2


Ongoing Dearborn County Statistics:

Confirmed Positive Cases: 2,442

Reported Tested with Results: 14,738

Total Deaths: 32

By age: 60-69 yrs: 1

                           70-79 yrs:  2

                           80-89 yrs:  18

                           90-99 yrs:   9

                           100+ yrs:  2

             By Gender: Female: 20

                      Male:  12