Monthly Archives: February 2018

Monday Evening I-69 Crash Results Injury, Snarled Traffic

Traffic tie-ups along Interstate 69 in Fishers are not unusual during the evening rush hour, but a serious crash at the 208 mile marker, just south of Hamilton Town Center, a little after 6pm Monday, blocked the southbound lanes of the interstate for hours.  One person was injured and taken to a local hospital by helicopter.

Fishers Police say, in a news release, that based on evidence at the scene and witness statements, authorities determined that the crash occurred after a semi-truck, driven by Maximino Cardenas, 56, from Mexico, slowed and then stopped due to heavy traffic.  Although the semi-truck came to a stop in congested traffic, the driver of a vehicle, described as an SUV, did not slow down and struck the back end of the semi-truck’s trailer, according to police.  The SUV driver, Brent Olson, 49, from Indianapolis, was the injured party.  Police say the extent of Olson’s injuries are not known.

Fishers Police continue to investigate the accident.

Police say no alcohol or drugs appear to have been a contributing factor in this crash.

 

Fred Swift On The May 8th Primary Election

by

Fred Swift

Hamilton County Reporter

(NOTE: This is a commentary written by Fred Swift of the Hamilton County Reporter. The views expressed are those of Fred Swift and do not necessarily reflect the views of LarryInFishers.com.  This opinion piece is posted here as part of a partnership between the Reporter and LarryInFishers.com) 

The stage is now set for Hamilton County’s May 8 primary election
where local officeholders are traditionally selected. And, most incumbents
seem headed for a free ride since the deadline for filing passed at noon Friday
leaving them unopposed for Republican nominations.

There are exceptions, such as the county sheriff’s position where four candidates will
vie for the GOP nomination. There will also be a contest for judge of Superior Court 1,
and a state legislative contest shapes up to determine who will succeed retiring State
Rep. Kathy Richardson.

Unopposed for the Republican nomination are Prosecutor Lee Buckingham,
Judge Gail Bardach, County Councilor Amy Massillamany, County Assessor Robin
Ward, County Recorder Jennifer Hayden and County Coroner John Chalfin. In addition,
Richardson is unopposed in her bid for county clerk.

Democrats will say ‘wait a minute, we will have some candidates,’ but for county
office they have aspirants for only the county council in Districts 1,3 and 4, and only
a partial ticket is expected to be eventually fielded by party leadership as allowed by
law before the November general election. History is not on the side of the Democrats
in one of the nation’s most Republican counties.

In the GOP primary a spirited four-way contest is set for sheriff between Bill Clifford,
Eddie Moore, Dennis Quakenbush and Mitch Russell.

There will be a contest for judge of Superior Court 5 where Judge Steve Nation
has decided against running again. Candidates are Michael Casati and Will Riley.

There are races for county council in District 1 where incumbent Fred Glynn is being challenged by Sue Maki, in District 3 where incumbent Steve Schwartz faces Mark Hall,
and in District 4 where Ken Alexander, Sheldon Barnes, Christine Pauley and Rick
Sharp are seeking to succeed retiring Councilman Paul Ayers.

Hamilton County Commissioner Christine Altman will be challenged by Matt
Milam in the District 1 race.

A competitive race is seen for the open state representative seat being vacated
by Rep. Richardson. It features Brad Beaver, Garen Bragg, Charles Goodrich
and Gregory O’Connor.

Contests elsewhere in the county find State Sen. Mike Delph being challenged
by Corrie Meyer, and State Rep. Jerry Torr facing Tom Linkmeyer.

At the township level, there are GOP primary contests between Chris Miller
and Robyn Cook for Jackson Township trustee, Fall Creek Township between
Doug Allman and Ben Slota for trustee and in Washington Township Marla Ailor
will run against Daniel Carey Tolan.

While Democrats have not filed at the top of their primary ballot, numerous
candidates for precinct committeeman and state convention delegate have filed. But,
these are party positions and actually not public offices. Republicans also have filed
in large numbers for their state convention, but GOP precinct committeeman
posts were filled two years ago and not up for election this year

Meyer-Najem Approved As Contract Manager For Amphitheater Renovation

Construction is well underway on the Nickel Plate Amphitheater

Meyer-Najem is the construction manager for the Nickel Pate Amphitheater project already underway at the Fishers municipal complex.  The Board of Works approved the pact, which will pay the firm $565,621.  Meyer Construction was awarded the bid for the $6 million project January 21st.  The goal is to have the upgrades complete by the time concert season rolls around this summer.

In other items approved by the board during the Monday meeting:

–The city has entered into an agreement with Community Health to provide discounts for city employee medical claims.

–Non-profit organizations receiving financial support from the city are required to sign contribution agreements.  You can access the agreements at this link.

–A bid was accepted from 3D Company to clear trees along Allisonville Road, in preparation for the road resurfacing and intersection improvement project on
Allisonville between 126th Street and 131st Street.  The tree-clearing operation will cost the city  $210,984.00.

Fishers High School Cheer Team Picks Up First Place In National Competition

Fishers High School Cheer Squad at Walt Disney World (photo provided by HSE Schools)

Early February is a good time to visit Florida weather-wise, but the Fishers High School Cheerleaders were for more than the warm temperatures, they were seeking a national title – and they won!

This is the school’s first Universal Association National High School Cheerleading  championship.  They finished in 7th place last year.

The competition was held at Walt Disney World in Orlando.  The Fishers cheerleaders won their title in in Large Varsity, Division I.

Fishers High School Cheerleaders pose for a picture at the competition (photo provided by HSE Schools)

New Parking Rules Coming To Fishers Nickel Plate District

Fishers Board of Works listens to parking proposal (L-R) Jeff Lantz, Mayor Scott Fadness & Jason Meyer

Apartment dwellers in the downtown Fishers area will soon face a $20 fine for parking their vehicles overnight in certain areas of downtown.  The Board of Public Works and Safety approved the amendment to the parking schedule at their Monday meeting.

Apartment residents have parking set aside in adjacent garages, but many find it more convenient to park in nearby surface areas.

There was a great deal of discussion about whether this rule could encourage some people to drive under the influence rather than risk a $20 fine for parking overnight.  Fishers Police Chief Mitch Thompson told board members he believes there are ways to handle that situation by working with the establishments in the area serving alcoholic beverages, and that special event committees could deal with parking issues for big events.

City officials say it will take at least 30 days to make and place the signs warning of the fines if a vehicle is parked between 3am and 6am in the Nickel Plate District areas designated.  Also, those living in downtown apartments will be notified of the change in parking regulations before police begin enforcing the new rules.

 

The areas shaded in red will prohibit parking from 3am to 6am, 7 days a week

 

 

It’s 2018 and Politics Is Back!

Indiana has an interregnum from politics the year after a presidential election.  Since 2016 was a presidential election year, 2017 was quiet on the political front.  That quiet will now be filled with political activity.  The filing deadline has come and gone for the 2018 primary election set for May 8th.  We now know the names of the candidates on the primary ballot.

There are plenty of offices up for grabs at the state and county level.  For purposes of this missive, I’ll discuss a few county offices, but focus on what impacts Fishers most directly, the township races.

Township governments in Indiana mainly provide poor relief and fire service for its residents not located in a city.  Delaware and Fall Creek Townships contract with the City of Fishers to provide fire protection service to areas of each township not within the city limits of Fishers.

Fishers is contained within two townships…Delaware to the west and Fall Creek to the east.  Each township has a 3-person board and a trustee.  Delaware Township Trustee Debbie Driskell is unopposed in the Republican primary election.  However, the primary contest for Delaware Township Board has a wrinkle we haven’t seen in many years locally – a primary election race in the Democratic Party.

Four Democrats have filed for three spots on the November ballot.  They are: Dayna Colbert, former City Council candidate Kent Nelson, Mary E. Ray and Bianca Zaklikowski.

The Republicans have a primary race for Delaware Township Board as well.  All three current board members….Rick Fain, Ed Pierce and Marilyn Shenkel….are running for re-election.  They are being challenged in the GOP primary by David Giffel.  With four hopefuls on the GOP ballot, the top three vote-getters will appear on the November 6th general election ballot.

Moving over to Fall Creek Township, incumbent Trustee Doug Allman is being challenged in the primary by Ben Slota.  All three incumbent board members, Brian Baehl, Chad Garrard and Jason Meyer, have filed for re-election.  They are being challenged by two fellow Republicans, Michael J. Brown and Greg Dewald.

No Democrats filed for Fall Creek Township office.

Bottom line, the only township office-holder unopposed in the Delaware & Fall Creek Township primary election is Delaware Township Trustee Debbie Driskell.

At the Hamilton County level, the sheriff’s race is sure to get lots of attention.  Four Republicans are vying for the nomination in the May 8th primary: Bill Clifford, Eddie Moore, Dennis Quakenbush and Mitch Russell.  Jason Sloderback had filed to run for sheriff, but withdrew his candidacy in mid-January.

Incumbent Hamilton County Commissioner Christine Altman is being challenged by Matt Milam.  Milam led the (unsuccessful) Home Place battle to prevent annexation into Carmel.

Of the four district races for County Council, only one is unopposed, that is District 2 Councilor Amy Massillamany.

Although Democrats filed for only a few offices in the primary, the county Democratic Chairman, Joe Weingarten, has the right under Indiana law to appoint candidates for the general election, if done so by a deadline in the law, normally in mid-summer.

It should also be noted that the candidate listing I have is the one posted on the Hamilton County Election office Web site of Sunday night, February 11th.  If there were any last-minute filings that didn’t make it on that list, I would not know of it.

Because Hamilton County is so heavily Republican, most of the contentious political campaigns have been waged in the primary, and 2018 will be no exception.  Democrats are beginning to see signs that 2018 could be a generally good year for them.  It’s way too early to know whether that will have any impact on Hamilton County.

Let the election campaigns begin.

Tigers Pick Up Overtime Win At Franklin Central

Hamilton County Reporter

Fishers won an overtime game on the road Saturday night,
beating Franklin Central 59-58.

The Tigers won on a last-second 3-pointer by Terry Hicks. Fishers led 26-
18 at halftime, but the Flashes scored 20 points in the fourth quarter to force the
extra period.

Josiah Matthews scored 14 points, while Willie Jackson added 11.

Fishers is now 10-9 and travels to Zionsville on Friday for a Hoosier
Crossroads Conference game.

 

Royals Upset By Westfield

Hamilton County Reporter

Westfield scored an upset of Class 4A No. 6 Hamilton Southeastern on Saturday,
beating the Royals 57-50 in a Hoosier Crossroads Conference and all-county game
at The Rock.

The Shamrocks trailed 25-22 at halftime, but slowly took over in the second half.
Westfield took a 39-38 lead going into the fourth quarter, and outscored HSE 18-12 in
that final period.

Four Shamrocks finished the game in double figures. Zach Banks scored 15
points, Caleb Welch added 13, Camden Simons threw in three 3-pointers on his way
to 11 points and Josh Van Dyke added 10.

Welch led the boards with six rebound, with Chris Chin and Van Dyke both collecting
five.

Chaz Birchfield led the Royals with 11 points, followed by Nick Bowman’s 10
points. Noah Smith corralled eight rebounds, with Birchfield pulling five.
Bowman handed out four assists, and Birchfield and Smith each made four steals.

The Shamrocks are 2-4 in the HCC and 8-10 overall. They travel to Western Boone
for a Tuesday game. Southeastern is 17-4 and hosts Brownsburg on Friday, both
schools are on top of the conference at 4-1.

 

 

 

Fred Swift On Primary Election Candidate Filings

by

Fred Swift

Hamilton County Reporter

There are races for county council in District 1 where incumbent Fred Glynn is being challenged by Sue Maki, in District 3 where incumbent Steve Schwartz faces Mark Hall,
and in District 4 where Ken Alexander, Sheldon Barnes, Christine Pauley and Rick Sharp are seeking to succeed retiring Councilman Paul Ayers.

Hamilton County Commissioner Christine Altman will be challenged by Matt Milam
in the District 1 race.

A competitive race is seen for the open state representative seat being vacated by
Rep. Richardson. It features Brad Beaver, Garen Bragg, Charles Goodrich and Gregory
O’Connor.

Contests elsewhere in the county find State Sen. Mike Delph being challenged by
Corrie Meyer, and State Rep. Jerry Torr facing Tom Linkmeyer.

At the township level, there are GOP primary contests between Chris Miller and
Robyn Cook for Jackson Township trustee, Fall Creek Township between Doug Allman
and Ben Slota for trustee and in Washington Township Marla Ailor will run against Daniel
Carey Tolan.

While Democrats have not filed at the top of their primary ballot, numerous candidates
for precinct committeeman and state convention delegate have filed. But, these
are party positions and actually not public offices. Republicans also have filed in large
numbers for their state convention, but GOP precinct committeeman posts were filled two
years ago and not up for election this year.

(Below are the candidate filings for Hamilton County office and the two townships encompassing Fishers, Delaware & Fall Creek):

Continue reading Fred Swift On Primary Election Candidate Filings