Monthly Archives: January 2021

Fishers Health Dept provides first COVID innoculation

The Moderna COVID  vaccine has arrived at the Fishers Health Department, with 400 doses on hand and more on the way.  Meanwhile, the city is readying the site at the former Marsh Supermarket on 116th Street near Brooks School Road.  It is scheduled to be operational by the end of January and has the ability to vaccinate up to 1,000 individuals per day.

“We are thrilled to have COVID-19 vaccinations available to our residents beginning today,” said Public Health Director Monica Heltz in a health department news release. “This vaccine gets us one step closer to controlling the spread of COVID-19 and eventually experiencing some normalcy in our daily lives. I urge each of our residents to get this vaccine and continue to stay vigilant by washing hands, masking up, and distancing from those outside your household.”

The Fishers Health Department urges city residents to submit the online vaccine interest form and will be notified when it is your turn to receive the shot in the arm.  This is optional.  For more information, use this link. 

Catching up during a busy news time

It is dangerous to be away from my trusty computer equipment, but that is what has happened to me the past few days.  There is news to catch-up on, so let’s do that right now.

The COVID numbers continue to deteriorate over the past few weeks, so the Fishers Health Department has extended the strict rules that went into effect on Christmas day and is continuing the public health order through February 8.  For a review of those rules, use this link.

The Fishers Health Department is converting the vacant former Marsh Supermarket on 116th Street, near Brook School Road, into a mass COVID vaccination center.  It is hoped the larger facility can provide shots-in-the-arms more efficiently for those currently qualified.

Finally, The City of Fishers has handed-out 1,100 $50 gift certificates to local residents for their acts of kindness.  People in Fishers nominate local residents they believe are deserving of the recognition due to their kind acts.  The goal is to recognize 2,000 people in Fishers for their kind deeds.  You can nominate a Fishers resident by submitting the online form at this link.

The city’s challenge ends on Martin Luther King Day.

Fred Swift: Public outcry sometimes needed to get action

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)

Shortly after the November election, I listed three issues that I think deserve attention in this year’s state legislative session. They are matters that would benefit our citizens, namely the elimination of Pay to Play, stopping the gerrymandering of Hamilton County, and opening of the political party caucus when filling a vacancy in a public office.

Unfortunately, I don’t see much chance of success for my suggestions despite the fact that most people would probably agree these are corrections that should be made by state legislation. The trouble is that these are not matters on which the public pressures the legislature.

Regarding the first of these, Pay to Play, is the game whereby some corporations or individuals make campaign contributions to political candidates with the hope they will reward the donor with contracts for goods or services.

I spoke earlier this week with State Rep. Tony Cook of Cicero. Now in his fourth term, Cook is chairman of the House Ethics Committee. He agrees he “would like to see some of that curtailed.”

He points out it might be easier said than done. Each legislator can only submit 10 bills for consideration, and apparently none has authored one to curtail the pay to play scheme.

But, Cook says he will check with other legislators to see if there is a bill that could somehow tackle or include this issue. But, if there is something that could be found on the subject, a hearing on any bill is at the discretion of the Speaker of the House.

Then, there is a matter of definition and enforcement of something like pay to play. There is a fine line between legitimate lobbying and paying a legislator for his support, Cook notes.

But, Cook agrees he “does not feel it’s right” to offer obviously excessive contributions from folks hoping to get favored status.

So, without the public’s involvement, I don’t look for major change on this issue at this time. And, on the issues of gerrymandering and closed caucuses, look for even less action unless there is a public outcry.

We’ll try to keep watch, and hope that others do too.

Massillamany elected president of Hamilton County Council

Hamilton County Reporter

Newly-elected Councilors Maki, Nation begin their terms

Massillamany

Amy Massillamany has been elected president of the Hamilton County Council. She replaces Rick McKinney in the role. Steve Schwartz will serve as Vice President. Election of officers is an annual practice at the first meeting of each year.

Massillamany was elected to the Hamilton County Council in 2011. She represents District 2, which includes Delaware, Fall Creek and Wayne townships.

Massillamany works in sales and is currently the Director of Client Development at RGP, a worldwide consulting firm specializing in Finance, Accounting, Governance, Risk & Compliance, Information Management, Human Capital, and Corporate Advisory.

Prior to serving on the Council, Massillamany served as a Precinct Committeewoman, a volunteer for the Hamilton County Republican Party as well as a volunteer for multiple grassroots initiatives for local, state and national races. She has been instrumental in advocating for partnerships with local cities, towns and school systems, supporting the county’s technological advances and initiatives, spearheading a market driven analysis of the county’s employee pay structure, and represents the council as a member of the Workforce Recovery Taskforce, created as a result of the pandemic, connecting businesses and job seekers.

Nation

Maki serves as the Manager of Environmental Initiatives & Education for Carmel Utilities.Sue Maki and Steve Nation also joined the Hamilton County Council for its first meeting. The pair won at-large seats in the November election.

Nation retired as a Hamilton County Judge two years ago after serving 24 years on the bench and 16 years as a prosecutor.

Hamilton County moves to COVID red

Hamilton County Reporter

The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) has placed Hamilton County under RED according to its county-based advisory level for determining community spread of COVID-19. RED means community spread is high and the county has a point score of 3.0 or higher on ISDH’s monitoring scale. In order to reach a score of 3.0, a county must have 200 or more weekly cases per 100,000 residents AND a seven day all test positivity rate of 15 percent or greater.

“Unfortunately, the new designation doesn’t come as a huge surprise,” said Jason LeMaster, interim administrator for the Hamilton County Health Department. “Our local positivity rate has been fluctuating near the 15 percent threshold for days and we’re only just now seeing the swell of cases from over the holiday season.”

Under Governor Eric Holcomb’s Executive Order 20-50, a RED designation:

  • Limits social gatherings to 25 people with no exceptions from the local health department;
  • Limits attendance at recreational sporting events to participants, required personnel, parents, guardians, siblings, spouses and minor children of participants or personnel;
  • Allows for indoor dining, but encourages businesses to promote curbside pick-up or online ordering;
  • Suggests K-12 school officials review and reevaluate their plans based on the recommendations of the Department of Education and ISDH;
  • Suspends activities at senior centers; and,
  • Allows hospitals, long-term care and other congregate settings to impose visitation limits.

Hamilton County must meet the metrics of ORANGE for two consecutive weeks before it will be allowed to move to back to that designation. In order to meet that criteria, Hamilton County must have 100 to 199 weekly cases per 100,000 residents AND a seven day all test positivity rate of 10 to 14.9 percent.

“That means Hamilton County will remain in RED for at least the next three weeks,” LeMaster added. “The only way we can reverse course is to lower our numbers, so we’re asking the community to be incredibly vigilant. Wash your hands. Social distance. Avoid indoor gatherings and get tested if you think you may have been exposed to the virus. We all have the power to right this ship.”

Mayor Fadness: “Leadership Matters”

The violence at the United States Capitol building has drawn a statement from Fishers Mayor Scott Fadness.

The mayor says the “events” in the nation’s capital January 6 “demonstrated a complete disrespect for our country’s cherished institutions and ideals.”

Fadness did not refer to President Trump by name, but said “leadership matters.”

Here is the full statement from Scott Fadness, released during the evening of January 6.

===========

Today’s events in Washington, D.C. demonstrated a complete disrespect for our country’s cherished institutions and ideals. We, as a country, are better than the lawless actions we bore witness to today.
Leadership matters. We must reinstall faith in our institutions and ideals. To do so will require the type of selfless, courageous, and humble leadership that defines American democracy. Civil discourse and servant leadership are skill sets that must be renewed.
For our children’s sake, we must commit ourselves to do better and be better.

Conservatism and the attack on the Capitol

While watching the January 6 insurrection attempt at the United States Capitol, it brought to mind a question I have asked myself a number of times – what is a conservative?

In my teen years, I would describe myself as a conservative.  Those calling themselves conservatives generally supported the Vietnam war.  I had a class project in high school about Vietnam and after studying everything about that conflict, I found the conservative view on the war to be wrong.  In the end, about seven years after that project, the Vietnam war ended quite badly for the United States.

I spent a number of years where I would switch my political view to much more on the liberal side.  Then I began to cover politics as a reporter and discovered a fact that changed my view on politics forever – there are really good and really bad people in government both conservatives and liberals.

It was that experience that transformed me not into a moderate necessarily, but a recognition that most people are liberal on some issues and conservative on others.  No political philosophy has a corner on truth.

I am much more likely to study an issue and review what the true professionals are saying.  I look at data, verifiable facts and science.  Relying on what is true is the best way to decide my stance on any issue.

Being tied to a political ideology is confining to me.  If you believe yourself to be conservative, you are expected to have the same core values as other conservatives.  Same goes for liberals.  I prefer to take each issue and subject, analyze and study it, then come up with my view.

Why did the January 6 Capitol Hill event bring back those memories?  Because I am more confounded than ever on how to define a conservative.

One reason I feel compelled to write this commentary relates to one of my home state U.S. Senators, Mike Braun.  He presents himself as a conservative.  Yet he took a recent stance that does not seem conservative to me.

Braun signed-on to challenge the Electoral College results for some states.  There are about 12 other senators, all Republicans, that would describe their political philosophy as conservative, that have joined Braun in this effort.

The Constitution gives clear authority to the states to conduct elections and appoint their electors to vote for the presidential candidate their state supported in the election (there are a couple of exceptions, but we won’t get into that here).  To question that process by making arguments rejected by all the states where challenges were filed, and to set aside the fact that many judges, appointed by presidents of both parties, have found nothing wrong in the vote counts of any state, makes no sense to me.

I was on the debate team in college, where you learn the difference between assertions and fact.  Anyone can make assertions about anything, but you must have verifiable facts to back it up or you lose the debate.

The president and his supporters have been making plenty of assertions, but once in court, they produced no verifiable facts or evidence to support their claims.  But that hasn’t stopped assertions from flying outside the courtrooms.

Senator Braun signed-onto the effort to challenge the election results, but with no evidence, in a proceeding that is essentially nothing more than the announcement of a vote count.

For example, Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell and Senator Mitt Romney have pretty solid conservative credentials.  Yet both rejected the arguments put forth by the president about the election and those senators of which Braun is one.  McConnell, Romney and Braun all call themselves conservatives, yet they view the election differently.

This presidential election’s aftermath has split Republicans and conservatives.  You belong to a political party but being a conservative is not exactly the same thing.

With what one can only describe as an attempted insurrection as the Electoral College vote count was proceeding in Washington was a very tough thing for me to witness.  Many news reporters that spent time in places like Egypt where an insurrection was attempted, are describing the January 6 violence at the Capitol as reminiscent of their days abroad.  That is sad.  America will not be seen by the rest of the world as a beacon of democracy for a long time to come, if ever.

I do not think I would be writing about this had one of my own senators not joined into a failed effort to reverse an election that was as clean and fair as an American election can be, based on verifiable facts, not mere assertions.

There are many conservative writers, George Will comes to mind, that have split with the president often in the past four years.  So, there will be a continued debate about the future of the Republican Party and conservatism – will these political concepts be Trumpian or based on other values?

In light of the violent attack on the Capitol Building January 6, Republicans, be they local or national figures, must explain to their constituents where they stand.  Having a political philosophy is fine, but when violence attacks our democratic institutions and our democracy itself, I believe we need to know.

It makes no difference whether you ascend to the presidency, serve in congress or are elected to the Fishers City Council.  Voters need to know where you stand on the state of our democracy.  If the Republican Party wishes to continue as a viable institution, some major soul-searching is in order.  Let your constituents know where your soul stands at this point in the history of our nation.

Parks, Commissioners explain photo fees

Hamilton County Reporter

The Hamilton County Parks Department (HCPR) announced on Monday that photography permits will now be required for professional portrait and commercial photography conducted at county-owned parks.

The announcement was made on social media, which drew more than 1,600 comments, most of which were critical of HCPR’s decision to charge taxpayers to take photographs.

County officials on Tuesday said the decision was made by the Hamilton County Parks Board.

“I found about it just like everyone else,” County Commissioner Mark Heirbrandt said. “It wasn’t a decision made by the commissioners or the county council.”

The Hamilton County Parks Board, which oversees county park operations, is an independent board with no elected officials.

Heirbrandt said his understanding of the board’s action was to limit potential liability concerns and to help reduce conflict between competing photographers, as well as photographers and park guests.

Parks officials indicated the permits are only required for professional and commercial photography and videography.

Descriptions of those required to obtain a permit are:

  • Portrait photography: Individual portrait photographers hired for personal wedding, family, children or senior photographs.
  • Commercial photography: A business, photography studio, production company, or advertising/publicity firm hired by a client to create a product for profit, or to photograph a product that will be sold for profit.
  • Commercial videography: Filming of commercials for sales of products, advertising, video, television, and other filming (except for news media, park publicity or for an education requirement).

To obtain a permit click on the links below:

 

Here is a statement issued from Hamilton County Parks & Recreation:

Continue reading Parks, Commissioners explain photo fees

Fishers remains in COVID red, HAMCO may be there soon – 3 additional Fishers deaths reported

Monica Heltz

Fishers remains in the red, or highest, category for COVID community transmission rate in the past week.  Fishers Public Health Director Monica Heltz says, in her most recent video update, that based on the state’s measurement criteria, Hamilton County will soon move into red status as well, which will trigger further restrictions county-wide based on guidance from the office of Governor Eric Holcomb.

Three additional COVID deaths have been confirmed among Fishers residents, raising the total to 58.  Those numbers reflect the confirmed cases for the city, while many others are possibly linked to COVID but not confirmed by health officials.

In one day last week, Heltz says Fishers experienced its highest number of reported cases since the pandemic began.  She was not specific about which day or how many cases were reported in that day.

If you want a COVID test through the Fishers Health Department, the availability is there.  You can get a testing appointment the same day or the next day.  The average wait for test results is 2.7 days, although there are a few outlier situations where the wait time is longer.  This means the entire testing process for most is done in 1-3 days.

Health care capacity is mostly  unchanged.  Intensive Care Unit capacity at 20.9% in our geographic area, roughly the same as the previous week.  However, the non-COVID patient count has decreased and the COVID patient count has increased.  “This is a troubling sign,” said Heltz.

Each of the past three months, October, November and December, have seen increases in the number of positive cases.  The count for December is roughly 2,800.

“We continue to expect that we will have an increase in January, February and March,” Ms. Heltz said.  “We do have good news on the horizon.  The vaccine is coming.  We expect to get our first shipment this week. We’re very excited about that.”

She reminded Fishers residents that a survey is available to put yourself in line when vaccinations are available, with the order ultimately decided by the state of Indiana.  That guidance from the state is not yet available.

It is known that health care workers, first responders, police and fire employees will be among the first to receive the vaccination.

“We do hope to start putting those needles in arms as early as next week,” said Heltz.

To place yourself in line for the vaccination, complete and submit the survey at this link.

You may view the entire video by Monica Heltz at this link.