Monthly Archives: August 2017

Ivy Tech Partners With Local Schools Offering Courses To Students

 

Hamilton County Reporter

Ivy Tech Community College is partnering with high schools in Hamilton County to offer Career and Technical Education Pathways to students. Participating schools include: Fishers High School, Hamilton Southeastern High School, Eman School, Options Charter School-Noblesville, Options Charter School-Carmel and Westfield High School

Students in the program will attend high school in the morning and take classes at Ivy Tech Hamilton County in Noblesville in the afternoon. Over the course of one year, students can earn 12 to 13 college credits, which count toward a Core 40 or high school Honors Diploma and can be transferred to an associate or bachelor’s degree. Students can also earn industry recognized certifications. The program is free of cost to students.

The Duke Energy Foundation directed a $75,000 grant to Ivy Tech Community College to help create these Career and Technical Education (CTE) Pathways. The grant is providing scholarships for students in Hamilton County to pursue higher education and training in STEM programs at Ivy Tech. In addition to scholarships, the grant covers the costs of books and supplies, industry certification assessments, career readiness activities, and training for current Ivy Tech and high school STEM teachers in Hamilton County.

“We are grateful to Duke Energy Foundation for partnering with us to support this important initiative in Hamilton County,” said Dr. Kathleen Lee, chancellor of Ivy Tech Central Indiana. “This is another example of how Ivy Tech is making strategic efforts to align with the regional workforce. Through this initiative we are partnering with schools and organizations to prepare students for in-demand jobs in key industries including construction, information technology and advanced manufacturing.”

Specific STEM programs that Ivy Tech will offer these students include Computing and Informatics, Visual Communications and Building Construction Technology. Students start classes at Ivy Tech Hamilton County today, Aug. 10.

Eddie Moore Announces Run For Hamilton County Sheriff

Eddie Moore

Hamilton County Reporter

A 30 year veteran law enforcement officer, Eddie Moore, officially announced his intention to become a candidate for Hamilton County Sheriff on Wednesday, increasing the field of candidates to four.

A statement from Moore’s campaign team read:

“Eddie Moore, M.Ed. and friends completed paperwork to enter the race for Hamilton County Sheriff. Eddie has been a deputy for the county law enforcement agency since July of 1987 and currently serves as a Lieutenant in the patrol division. His vast experience has been represented not only through time, but also in the variety of positions he has been entrusted. This, combined with his academic studies in organizational leadership, provides him with the leadership perspective other candidates don’t exhibit. This enables him to be able to lead the agency and community in the changes coming and needed to stay ahead of crime and safety issues facing ALL Hamilton County residents, visitors and businesses.”

It is a little unclear what Lieutenant Moore is referring to when saying he has “completed paperwork” to enter the sheriff’s race.  Candidates cannot officially file candidacy for the 2018 primary election until January 10, 2018, at the earliest.  It is possible he has formed an exploratory committee or a committee to run for the office.

Smooth First Day of School in HSE District

“It’s been a long day but it’s been a great day.”  That’s how Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) School Superintendent Allen Bourff described the first day of classes in his school district.

Dr. Bourff told school board members Wednesday night that one way to gauge enrollment in the new school year can be measured in no shows and new enrollments.  In the buildings he visited on the first day of school, there were as many new enrollments as there were no shows.

Chief Financial Officer (CFO) for HSE Schools, Mike Reuter, told the board his data indicated just over 400 new students this school year, with a total of about 100 no shows so far.  The enrollment on the third Friday of September will be turned into the state as the official enrollment figure.

The kindergarten class looks to be at 1,472 pupils.  The senior class for the 2017-2018 school year is at 1,621.  The largest class is the 8th grade this school year.

Reuter told the board enrollment numbers at HSE Schools are beginning to stabilize.

In other school board news, approval was given to negotiate with the architectural firm Fanning-Howey to design plans at New Britton Elementary School, replacing the mechanical, heating, and air conditioning systems, as well as provide updates to the interior spaces bringing the school up to HSE-21 standards.  The work, budgeted at $5.3 million, is scheduled to begin during the summer of 2018 and be finished about a year later.    This project is one component of a ten-year plan to maintain buildings throughout the HSE district.

HSE School Board Member Objects to the Book “Kite Runner” for High School Students

What at first appeared to be a routine discussion about procedures in approving curriculum in Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) Schools turned into a passionate speech by school board member Amanda Shera.  The center of the controversy was a teacher assigning the book Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini to Shera’s daughter.

The book has been the center of controversy in some parts of the nation because of the author’s fictional depiction of a young boy from Afghanistan enduring the Russian invasion of his country and the later rule of the Taliban.  Reviewers of this book refer to the passages describing scenes of homosexual rape, murder, beatings, and a suicide attempt.

Some parents in localities in certain areas of the country have objected to Kite Runner being on required reading lists.  Many educators argue the book is about complex adult issues and can be taught at the high school level

Shera made clear at Wednesday night’s school board meeting she does not approve of her 16-year-old daughter being required to read Kite Runner.

“I am embarrassed that my child had to read it,” Shera told fellow board members.  “I apologize to my constituents that I did not read it ahead of time.”  Shera added she wants to have “an extra set of eyes” on the required reading book lists.

The school board does not approve required reading book lists, but school administrators establish procedures for such approvals, based on the policy the board passed Wednesday night.

Mold Found At Fishers Fire Station, Firefighters and Equipment Moved Temporarily

Bunk Room at the Fire Stattion 92, 116th & Brooks School Rd

 

The Fishers Fire Department is dealing with a mold problem at Station 92, located along 116th Street near Brooks School Road.  Chief Steve Orusa has ordered firefighters out of that facility until the mold problem is remedied.

This will require equipment and personnel to be moved temporarily.  Ladder 392 will be moved to Station 96 located on 104th St. and Florida Rd.  Engine 392 has been moved to Station 95 located on 131st and Promise Rd.  A fire department news release calls this move “a short-term solution that will create a minimal response issue for our community while protecting our firefighter’s safety.”

More tests have been done on this fire station and results are expected in the next few days.  “Currently, air quality monitoring shows the sleeping quarters to be greater in mold spores than is “typical” in a building, while outside the sleeping area, readings are “normal” or ‘typical,'” according to the news release.

Remediation at Station 92’s bunk room has already started.  Fire department officials are hoping to have equipment and firefighters back at their normal duty stations by the weekend, but not until testing verifies it is safe.

The Fishers Fire Department plans to begin testing all remaining stations in Fishers for any mold issues.

 

 

 

Chief Thompson Updates Fishers Police Merit Commission

Chief Thompson briefs the Merit Commission

Police Merit Commissions mainly function as a bodies charged with administering proposed discipline for members of a police department.  The Fishers Police Merit Commission must meet a minimum of 2 times per year, once in August and again in February.  Recently, the local commission has had no discipline cases to consider, so Chief Mitch Thompson uses the occasion to update commission members on what is happening around his department.

Here are some of the items covered in the Wednesday morning session:

 

Proposed Nickel Plate Trail Security 

Chief Thompson says he doesn’t see the trail as a burden on his department, but an amenity for the entire community.  The new Police Headquarters building will be located next to the trail.  “From a crime perspective, I don’t see it (as  problem),” Thompson told commission members.

 

Diversity

Fishers Police are making every effort to keep the department ethnically diverse. Thompson says if there is any shortage locally it is in female officers, but state physical requirements for new recruits, which are the same for both males and females, make recruiting female police officers a challenge.  The Chief says Fishers Police currently employ 6 African-Americans, 4 females, 1 Asian and 1 Hispanic.

 

2018 Budget

The Chief says he will propose a flat operating budget for his department for 2018.  He will ask for additional staffing.  Fishers Police are currently authorized for 111 sworn, uniformed officers. There are 108 on duty now, with new prospects in the hiring process. Thompson lauded work done by civilian personnel in the department’s Intelligence Unit, which has effectively used social media in locating crime suspects.

 

New Police Headquarters Building

The adjacent parking garage for the new police headquarters building is already under construction and if everything is completed on schedule, department staff will begin moving into the new headquarters facility at this time next year.  The city is forced to rent space in two additional locations due to the growth of the department.  Thompson says there will be some cost savings when the entire Police Department is under one roof in the new facility.

 

 

Fishers Police Ask For Help In Finding Peeping Tom

 

 

Fishers Police are looking for a peeping tom, and officers are asking for your help in finding the culprit.  The reported incidents happened in the 14000 block of Meadow Lake Drive, just south of 141st Street between Cumberland and Howe Roads.

Residents report to authorities that a man was seen looking into windows of a home in at least one instance.  Police do not know how many other homes may have been targeted.

Home surveillance photos were released by police, and are shown above.   The suspect is described as a while male with a average build. Home security videos show the person as wearing a dark hooded sweatshirt

Tuesday night, a man matching this description was seen walking toward the residence. Fishers Police Officers attempted to make contact with that subject, but he quickly fled on foot. Officers were unable to find him.

If you recognize the man in the pictures above or have any information, please contact Fishers Police Detective Ruble at 317-595-3319.

 

 

HSE Teachers, Staff Prepare For The New School Year

 

HSE staff members gathered in the Fishers High School Gymnasium Tuesday morning

Classes at Hamilton Southeastern (HSE) Schools start Wednesday, August 9th, but the teachers and other staff members of the HSE School Corporation assembled at Fishers High School for the new school year kickoff Tuesday morning.  One could feel the excitement and energy in the gymnasium as teachers and other staff members began the preparation for yet another school year.

HSE Superintendent Allen Bourff welcomed the staff and gave an overview of what has been happening with the school system during the weeks of summer, sharing goals the school board is prepared to finalize soon.

Board President Matt Burke talked to the crowd about building and maintaining what we do, and asked all to think about who invested in you.

Transportation Director Jim White received a standing ovation.  White will be retiring in December.

Hamilton Southeastern Education Association President Janet Chandler told a series of stories, some good, some not so good, about arranging repairs on her house before the start of school, using the examples to ask whether teachers have passion for their students.

The Fall Creek Intermediate School Falconettes were a  crowd favorite, with a song and dance routine centered around the lunch menu.

 

Local Cops Join The Public For Coffee At Starbucks

Fishers Police Chief Mitch Thompson talks to a local resident during Coffee With A Cop

The Fishers Police Department is continuing its program of scheduling coffee session and inviting the public.  The latest was Tuesday morning, held at the Starbucks near I-69’s Exit 210 interchange.  Police scheduled this event one day before the start of school to allow local students to be a part of it.

Below are a few pictures take at this Coffee With A Cop.

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