Repair work resulting from a sewer line collapse may need to continue, causing 106th Street to remain closed east of Allisonville Road through the first week of February. That’s the word from Fishers Assistant Director of Public Works Rick Farnham speaking before the City Board of Public Works and Safety Monday.
Farnham now says the repairs could cost as much as $175,000.
The sewer collapsed on December 27th and created a sinkhole. It has wreaked havoc on the sewage lift station in the area of 106th Street and Allisonville Road, and decimated a section of sidewalk in the area. It also resulted in limited traffic flow, with the eventual closing of 106th Street east of Allisonville Road.
Swimming and the United States Constitution were featured at the January 11th Hamilton Southeastern School Board session.
Two Fishers High School swimmers, Junior Lauryn Parrish and Lauren Edelman, have their eyes on an Olympic sized prize, as both have qualified for the Olympic Swimming Trials in Omaha, Nebraska. They both spoke before the board.
In “We the People” competition, Fishers High School’s team won the state championship and plans to represent the state of Indiana at the national finals in Washington DC. HSE High School finished second in state competition, just behind Fishers.
The Fishers “We the People” team put on a demonstration for the board.
We the People consists of high school student teams preparing a 4-minute presentation on a constitutional issue, then fielding questions from the judges.
Fishers HS We the People Team demonstrates before the school board
At the start of the calendar year, boards and commissions in Indiana must decide who will preside over the governmental body, and the Hamilton Southeastern School Board voted to install Karen Harmer as president for 2016. Howard Stevenson will serve as board vice president, with Sylvia Shepler voted as Treasurer.
The board has also decided to move its meetings from Mondays to Wednesdays. The sessions will be held on the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each month, starting in February.
The board received some good news on the College & Career Academies at each high school campus. The financial status of the project is currently “$900,000 to the good,” according to HSE Chief Financial Officer Mike Reuter, following board approval of a change order list. HSE Facilities Manager Harry Delks did tell the board there are about 500 “punch list items” to be worked out with the contractor on both academy projects.
Superintendent Allen Bourff told the board the administration will have a recommendation on how to move forward with the planned tax referendum to be held at part of the May primary election this year.
On December 27th, a sewage line collapsed at 106th and Allisonville Road. Crews continue to work on repairing the damage, which includes a sinkhole created by the collapse.
Here’s what city officials posted Friday about that intersection:
“106th Street west of Allisonville Road and the southbound lane of Allisonville Road will be closed until further notice for repairs to the sanitary sewer line.”
The city has promised regular updates, but for now, you cannot access 106th Street west of Allisonville Road as this work continues.
You can access my story posted on December 31st about the collapse at this link.
It has always been amazing to me how many people venerate the United States Constitution, yet many of those same people have little or no actual knowledge about the document, its history and how it has developed into what it has become in today’s world.
People in Fishers now have an opportunity to sharpen their knowledge of the underlying legal document governing our nation. A class, Constitution 101, will be offered beginning on Wednesday, Feb. 24, and will take place on Tuesdays, ending on Tuesday, Mar. 29. Classes are free to attend and take place from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the City Hall Auditorium or the Fishers Fire Department. You must be at least 18 years of age.
Each participant will receive the We the People: The Citizen and The Constitution textbook and a pocket constitution. “We the People” is sponsored by the Fishers City Council, Hamilton Southeastern Schools and the Indiana Bar Foundation. The class is free, but registration is required.
I have had the honor of being a volunteer judge for the HSE High School We the People team. That experience alone has kept me up to date on constitutional issues.
For more information, and a link to the registration form, go to this link.
Whenever the Indianapolis Colts are in the news, it is more than a sports story. Based on an August, 2014 article from TheStreet.com, Central Indiana taxpayers subsidized Lucas Oil Stadium to the tune of $620 million.
So whenever there is news from the Colts complex on West 56th Street in Indy, we all need to pay attention, fan or no NFL fan. That was the case when Colts owner Jim Irsay was arrested by Carmel police about 2 years ago and underwent a rehabilitation program (Mr. Irsay’s struggles with addiction are well known and I wish him well in dealing with those demons).
The fact that the Irsay family is profiting handsomely from the public subsidy makes many Colts stories a news story. Even when it’s about a coach.
I have never met Chuck Pagano, but his bout with Leukemia has been well publicized. The coach has been in remission and appears to be in good health after the horrible scare of a few years ago of undergoing cancer treatments.
When Pagano was asked about his tenuous job situation as the Colts season began to head south, his answer was always the same: I have a job today, I’m going back tomorrow to work as hard as I can to win.
That’s a trait of being a cancer survivor, a moniker Pagano wears proudly (as he should). After you have battled the possibility of death, losing a head coaching job in the NFL pales by comparison.
But there has been an added part of this equation. Stories published by Bob Kravitz of WTHR and others clearly indicate Pagano and his boss, Ryan Grigson, were not on the same page and were barely speaking of late.
One thing that tells me is that Colts employees at the West 56th Street complex had had enough and began leaking inside stuff to reporters. That’s a clear indication all was not well in the Colts family.
As I watched Irsay announce a 4-year contract extension for Coach Pagano, along with a promise to extend Grigson past the one year remaining on his deal, it appears all parties have decided to make amends. I am guessing that Grigson and Pagano have reached agreement about how decisions will be made in the future.
When things are not well for the Colts, that puts Indiana’s investment in that incredible stadium at risk. If the Colts become perennial losers (think Cleveland Browns) people will stop attending games, TV ratings would go down and the fortunes of the team would be in jeopardy.
What Jim Irsay has attempted to do is to show his tilt toward continuity if at all possible. Pagano said he planned to fight for his job, and it is clear he did. Irsay was hearing the message sent by the fans and players that most of them wanted Pagano to return.
Will this stabilize the ship? Will the Colts avoid the massive injuries of 2015 next NFL season and get back into the playoffs? Time will tell.
But remember we have an interest in a successful Colts organization that transcends football. We have a major public investment in these Colts.
When I moved to Fishers in May of 1991, the municipality had a population of about 11,000. I lived in the first planned subdivision in the community, Sunblest. I have seen Fishers move from a small and growing suburban town into a city approaching a population of 90,000.
How did Fishers get to this point and how is the city poised to deal with the future? Reporter Chris Sikich of the Indianapolis Star has a lengthy a front page story in the January 3rd edition of the Star exploring how Fishers got to where it is, and where the city plans to go from here.
Sikich begins his piece with a couple living in Fishers planning to downsize. They looked at all their options and decided to locate in the Depot downtown apartment development because of its walk-ability and access to work and basic needs, such as grocery stores and restaurants.
Mayor Scott Fadness’ vision for the city is explained. Former Fishers Town Council President Walt Kelly is quoted in the story as being skeptical of Fadness’ strategy of having the city support private development. This was a throwback to the 2014 mayoral campaign which Scott Fadness won.
The Fishers Town Council had no comprehensive plan and only looked at whether the private developers met certain minimum standards when developing the area. Impact fees paid by developers were utilized to finance parks, sewage hookups and other services.
Current Fishers Mayor Scott Fadness makes the point that if the city does not create a planned core in the downtown area, and have local employment opportunities, once development begins to move further north, property values could go down as a result.
Sikich does a good job of explaining that many long-time residents of Fishers are not happy with all the development. Anyone attending a forum or public hearing will tell you there are voices in opposition to the size and pace of development in Fishers. Many say Fishers has lost the identity it once had, and that is largely true. Mayor Fadness makes it clear he hears those people and wants to work with them.
Sikich writes about Launch Fishers and the successful small businesses hatched from that operation, reviews all the infrastructure work planned in the next few years and looks at what the future may hold for the city.
One expert is quoted in Sikich’s piece, Arthur C. Nelson, a University of Arizona professor of urban planning and real estate development. Sikich says Nelson has written extensively about managing growth. The academic praised the approach taken by Mayor Fadness.
“What’s interesting in Fishers is you have a mayor who is on the ball and looking ahead,” Nelson told Sikich. “That growth pattern will wind down, the houses there now will age, and the population will change. Smart suburban communities do eventually what the mayor is planning to do now, and that is create a downtown.”
When the Depot and Switch developments were approved by the Fishers Town Council, one council member told me at the time that Fishers was taking a big risk by taking on these projects, but he emphasized that doing nothing could be just as risky.
Sikich ends his story with this sentence: “Time will tell whether the bold, new approach will pay off.”
I think that sums up where Fishers is now.
My compliments to the editors at the Indianapolis Star and reporter Chris Sikich for taking on a long-form story to explore the status of Fishers, Indiana.
You can read the story at this link. (NOTE: If you are not an Indianapolis Star subscriber, there is a limit on the number of times you can access a story online)