- Southwestern Indiana
Southwestern Indiana is a 11-county region of
Indiana located at the southernmost and westernmost part of the state. As of the 2000 census, the region's combined population is 465,338. Evansville is the largest city and the regional hub for a tri-state area which includesKentucky andIllinois .Counties
Geography
Southern Indiana's topography is considerably more varied and complex than central and northern Indiana, including large tracts of forest, rolling fields, flat valleys, and a chain of low mountains and high hills. Every county in Southwestern Indiana is bounded by a river at one point, whether it be by the
Wabash River along the west, TheOhio River by the south, theWhite River , dividing the six northern counties or other smaller rivers. More tha 50% of the boundaries of Gibson, Knox, Posey, and Spencer Counties are dictated by a river. 80% of Knox County's boundaries are dictated by either theWabash River or theWhite River .Southwestern Indiana has clusters of separate towns of varying sizes and layouts. Vincennes is laid out in the French quadranglar while Jasper and Princeton are laid out in a standard grid. Evansville is laid out in both modes of survey, with its downtown being mapped out from the river and the rest of the city being laid out in the standard grid.
Timezone
From 1966 to 2006, the five southwesternmost counties—Gibson, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick—observed
Central Daylight Time . The six northern and eastern counties—Daviess, Dubois, Knox, Martin, and Perry—observed a year-roundEastern Standard Time as did the rest of the state.In 2006, Indiana Governor
Mitch Daniels pushed through legislation that would put the counties onEastern Time ontoEastern Daylight Time . This action threw both Southwestern and Northwestern Indiana into chaos as counties started to argue with one another as to whether to return toCentral Time or remain onEastern Time and start observingEastern Daylight Time . On March 15, 2006 (The first year of the extendedDaylight Savings Time ), Southwestern Indiana was once again united in one Time Zone,Central Daylight Time .Not even a month after the change, people began to complain about some of the same problems that people that lived in the original
Central Daylight Time counties had been complaining about for years. Most prevalent was the complaint that theCrane Naval Surface Warfare Center had become a "time island". The worker's union of the base subsequently petitioned the Martin County Commissioners to repetition for a change back toEastern Time . The resulting chain reaction resulted in all of the former Eastern Time counties, along with two Central Time counties, Gibson and Spencer, petitioning for a change to Eastern Time.On September 20, 2007 after only 15 months and only one winter on
Central Time the DOT returned only five of the eight applicants to Eastern Time. Gibson, Perry and Spencer counties did not have enough support to return or to go toEastern Time . However, three of the five counties, Daviess, Knox, and Pike counties there wasn't that much support either, but "convenience of commerce" was given as the reason for their time changes, despite commute patterns into Evansville and theToyota Motor Manufacturing Indiana plant in Gibson County. In Dubois County, there is a heated disagreement between Huntingburg and Jasper over the topic. Most of Huntingburg's industry and economy is geared towards theCentral Time Zone whereOwensboro, Kentucky and Spencer County, where the Huntingburg area's largest employers,AK Steel andHoliday World are located. Jasper, on the other hand, insists that the majority of its business is aimed at theEastern Seaboard and it would be in the interest of the county to return toEastern Time . [cite web | title=Some counties get OK to move back to Eastern Time zone| publisher= Evansville Courier & Press | url=http://www.courierpress.com/news/2007/sep/20/some-counties-get-ok-move-back-eastern-time-zone | accessdate=2008-09-19]So whether it was supported or not, Daviess, Dubois, Knox, Martin, and Pike returned to
Eastern Daylight Time on November 4, 2007, once again dividing Southwestern Indiana. The DOT has stated that it will not hold any more hearings on the subject until the fall of 2008. [cite web | title=Indiana does time warp again | publisher=Evansville Courier & Press | url=http://www.courierpress.com/news/2007/nov/03/indiana-does-time-warp-again/| accessdate=2008-09-19] [cite web| title=DOT Moves Five Indiana Counties from Central to Eastern Time | publisher=U.S. Department of Transportation | url=http://www.dot.gov/affairs/dot10007.htm | accessdate=2008-09-19]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.