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Could 2022 be the year for marijuana legalization in Indiana? - Indianapolis Business Journal

Eyes will once again be on Indiana to see if lawmakers will loosen the state’s marijuana laws as neighboring states continue to cash in on legal weed.

State grants give green light for local road improvements – Corydon Democrat

State grants give green light for local road improvements – Corydon Democrat
corydondemocrat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from corydondemocrat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Indiana Republicans give up on election reform, strip bill

by Margaret Menge, The Center Square contributor  | April 12, 2021 01:00 PM Print this article What started as an attempt at election law reform in Indiana has been pared down to a single provision that would write into law something that is already being done – require voters give either a driver’s license number or the last four digits of their Social Security number when requesting an absentee ballot online. Senate Bill 353, authored by Sen. Erin Houchin, R-Salem, originally required proof of citizenship to register to vote and required risk-limiting audits be done after every election – something that’s been recommended by election integrity experts for years but has never been done in Indiana, as a way to verify the number of votes tabulated by voting machines.

Here are the 2021 marijuana reform bills filed in the Indiana General Assembly

Millennial members not waiting their turn to legislate

The Millennials made me mad. So mad, in fact, that I cannot bring myself to admit I am one of them and will rather refer to them in the third person. Why am I upset? Thanks for asking. I am upset because state Representatives Ethan Manning, Jake Teshka, Zach Payne and Blake Johnson, four of the 16 Millennials serving in the Indiana General Assembly, wouldn’t tell me what I wanted to hear. America is evenly split, right down the middle, between political ideologies and urban and rural divides. We are grappling with racial and civil unrest in our cities. Children are leaving schools with less knowledge and skills than generations before. A virus has claimed the lives of nearly two million around the world and over a quarter of a million here at home. And all they wanted to talk about was working together to solve our problems.

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