The Press-Dispatch

September 2, 2020

The Press-Dispatch

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Call:1-877-257-1084 or Locally Call: 1-812-354-2814 • Free pregnancy testing • Free counseling and info. on pregnancy options. • Confi dential counseling for women & men who are suff ering from post-abortion syndrome. • Residential Care • Health and assistance referrals. • Training and education. • Assistance in getting baby and maternity clothes washpcc@sbcglobal.net www.washingtonpregnancycenter.com By Andy Heuring One person was injured in a two-vehicle crash on High- way 56, near Cato, early Fri- day evening. Within minutes of that crash, another person escaped injury in a crash on Highway 61, but was arrested. Austin Ashby, 21, of 1110 N. Hill St., West Baden Springs, may have broken his wrist in the crash that happened at about 7:20 p.m. Pike Coun- ty Sheriff's Deputy Paul Col- lier said Kathy M. Hayes, 58, of 188 N. CR 60, Winslow, was driving west on Highway 56 and slowed to turn south on CR 625 E. Ashby was follow- ing her and crashed into the back of Hayes. The impact knocked Hayes' 2002 Ponti- ac Bonneville off the north side of the road and caused heavy rear-end damage. Ash- by's 2012 Toyota Camry spun off to the left and came to rest facing east in the eastbound lane of 56. Deputy Collier in his report, a witness that was driving east said Ashby had pulled out to pass and then when he saw the witness' vehicle, he pulled back into the west lane and hit Hayes' vehicle. Deputy Collier's report stat- ed Ashby complained of arm pain and may have had a bro- ken wrist. Hayes was unin- jured. Damage was estimated at between $10,000 and $25,000. About 10 minutes later, a Washington man escaped in- jury when he ran off of High- way 61 in Campbelltown, spun backwards and hit a pickup trucked parked in a driveway. Jason M. Greentree, 26, of 1711 McCormick Ave., Wash- ington, was driving a 2010 Dodge Avenger south on Highway 61 when he lost con- trol and spun backwards, go- ing off the east side of High- way 61, hitting a mailbox and then a parked pickup truck, before taking out a speed limit sign and coming to rest in the ditch, according to Pike Coun- ty Sheriff's Sgt. Buck Seger. The pickup truck Green- tree hit was a 2003 Chevro- let Silverado owned by Jere- my Howald. It was parked in front of his house at 941 S. SR 61. During the investigation, Sgt. Seger learned Greentree did not have a driver's license. He was taken into custody on a charge of operating a ve- hicle while never having re- ceived an operator's license, with a prior conviction, a class B misdemeanor. Damage was estimated at between $5,000 and $10,000. it is a case of COVID until you rule it out." She said all three buildings are being affected. "It is kind of going in little clusters. Most of what we have encountered is individuals being exposed to someone outside of school, then they and their family members are having to stay at home" She said she has been in contact with several other school corporations and most are experiencing similar prob- lems. "We are mostly talking with each other about how we are handling it. Occasionally, you hear something someone is doing differently and think that might work here. Other times, it just wouldn't be prac- tical here." She said they started back in the summer trying to devel- op plans on how to deal with different scenarios they were going to face this year. So far, it is going as well as could be expected. "Our nurses are doing a great job. Our families are responding and cooperating. Kids are doing a great job. The younger ones, who we thought might not want to wear a mask are doing fine. It is a tough sit- uation, but it seems like every- one is going above and beyond so we can make this work," said Blake. Two wrecks minutes apart injures one yeah, it's that fast! net edition Z M www.PressDispatch.net/Subscribe The Press-Dispatch. No matter where you live. SCHOOLS Continued from page 1 Indianapolis Power & Light Company (IPL) has reached a settlement agreement with the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) resolv- ing purported violations of the Clean Air Act. "We are pleased to have worked with federal and state officials to conclude long- standing discussions with an agreement that recogniz- es our progress in accelerat- ing a safer and greener energy future through pollution con- trol measures and a signifi- cant reduction in emissions," said Lisa Krueger, president of the U.S. strategic business unit for The AES Corpora- tion (NYSE: AES), the par- ent company of IPL. "Settling this matter now solidifies en- vironmental contributions we will make in Indiana commu- nities, and avoids expensive and lengthy litigation." As part of the settlement, IPL will spend $5 million on a non-emitting generation source at Petersburg Gener- ating Station to provide sup- port for the plant's auxiliary load requirements and partial- ly offset emissions from units at Petersburg, pending EPA and IDEM approvals. "We don't know the source type yet. An example could be solar. Keep in mind the non-emitting source is a $5M requirement but is auxiliary load, so there is a continued need for units at Petersburg under the terms of the consent decree," said Courtney Aran- go, Manager, External Com- munications for IPL. She added, "The generation portfolio submitted in our inte- grated resource plan remains the same. Units 1 and 2 will retire early—2021 and 2023." The agreement also calls for IPL to acquire and do- nate ecologically significant lands, in accordance with the 15 -year wildlife refuge hab- itat management plan. The agreement contemplates that IPL will fund land that meets IDEM's criteria of provid- ing value in an area with the greatest ecological signifi- cance. Plans may also include providing funding for plant- ing native trees, grasses and wildflowers on acquired lands in future years. Over the last decade, IPL has reduced emissions from its generation facilities to bet- ter protect the environment, while continuing to deliver safe and reliable electric ser- vice to its customers. Most notably, IPL replaced coal- fired operations at Eagle Val- ley and Harding Street Gen- erating Stations with cleaner natural gas operations, and the company improved oper- ations and installed new con- trols at Petersburg. Together, these measures substantial- ly reduced IPL's emissions of NOx, SO2, CO2, mercu- ry and particulate matter. Today's settlement comple- ments IPL's latest integrated resource plan (IRP), which provides customers the most affordable, diversified gener- ation portfolio. In response to the IRP, a request for propos- als was issued for replacement capacity, which will likely in- crease IPL's renewable gener- ation in future years. In September 2009, Septem- ber 2015 and February 2016, IPL received notices of vio- lation from the EPA alleging that IPL violated the Clean Air Act at Petersburg. While IPL believes the actions at is- sue were taken in full compli- ance with the Act and appli- cable permits, it entered into the settlement agreement to resolve EPA's claims and avoid uncertainties associated with litigation. The settlement agreement covers Petersburg and in- cludes annual caps on NOx and SO2 emissions and more stringent emissions limits than IPL's current Title V air permit. Settlement negotia- tions resulted in a consent de- cree lodged today with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana. The settlement is subject to fi- nal review and approval by the Court, following a 30 -day pub- lic comment period. IPL reaches agreement with EPA Austin Ashby's 2012 Toyota Camry suffered heavy front end damage when he crashed into a car that was slowing to make a turn. Austin suffered a hand injury. Kathy Hayes escaped injury when her 2002 Bonneville was hit from behind while she was attempting to turn off of Highway 56. Jason Greentree was arrested for not having a driver's license after he crashed his 2010 Dodge Avenger into a parked pickup truck Friday night. We're not afraid to shed some light on the truth. 812-354-8500 SUBSCRIBE TODAY!

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